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                  <text>.: Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Weclnesday, September 19. 2007

144th Gal1ia County

'

Auxiliary remembers
·
soldier, A6

Emancipation
Celebration, A7

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
jCill'\1"" •\ul .."i-

SPORTS

~

'\t LJ I

llllRSil\' · ""li'II\IBII(:.!O . :..!Oo -·

\1\\\\, lll\ d.i d ~,,· "ltnvl.ton•

.

Work to resume at
Racine boat ramp.
I

• Meigs nets win over
· Fed J-lock. See Page 81

on the completion time ·
according to Smithhisler
who said the contractor still
hopes to have the project
done by the end of the year
though the contract's completion date remains May
2008. The added cost of the
redesigned cofferdam has
not been calculated yet but
Smithhisler said ODNR is
working on an "equitable
trade" with general contractor Alan Stone Company of
Cutler where both sides contribute to the added costs.
Although passerbys will
notice major construction on
. Beth Ser&amp;ont/plloto
the ramp this month, they
Work
will
resume
on
the
Racine
boat
ramp
on
Monday
after
a
cofferdam
was redesigned .
may also notice the parking
The contractor hopes to have the project done by the end of the year (weather permitting)
Please ... Ramp,A5
though the completion date remains· May 2008.
·

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Work is to
resume at the Racine boat
ramp along Ohio 124 on
Monday after a cofferdam
was redesigned. ~
A cofferdam keeps water
oilt of the ramp area and due
to finding rock resting deeper than· anticipated the dam
had to be redesigned which
resulted .in a delay of a
"couple weeks" 'according
to Gus Smithhisler of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
.
· ODNR has been trying to
launch the ramp since 1999
arid this small bump in the
road has had no real affect

Wellness Center
observes Active
Aging Week
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

September 29, 2007

AMIX- 9p.m.
1st Bike Out At Noon
Food
50/SO
CR 7A • POMEROY, OH
740-992-7986

Page AS
. • Mary Alice Bise, 93

INSIDE
:. Pilot Club's antique
sale set for Sept. 28-30.
See P11ge AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
· .. OU presents free
· live broadcast
.· of'L.a Boheme.'
· See P.age A6
·.. • Catfish tournament
.
·is Saturday.
.See Page A7
: • Deer archery
season begins
Sept. 29.
See Page AB

WEATIIER

·,

B~an

J. Rood/photo

Janice Caldwell weber, Eastern's first homecoming queen, Guidance Couns~lor Sheryl Roush and Sandra Massar, the
school's first prom queen, review early Easterner yearbooks in search of part1c1pants for the Oct. 5 homecomtng celebratlon.of the school's 50th anniversary.

Eastent
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - The committee organizing Eastern High School's
50th birthday celebration is looking
tor members of the football team,
cheerleading squad and marching
band from the first school year, and
members of the school's first football
team, from 1955.
This year's homecoming celebration will be on Oct. 5, during the
Eagles' game against Federal
Hocking. Homecoming floats created

by each class will be dedicated to ~he
participants in the first homecorrung
ai Eastern in fall, 1958, including
football players, cheerleaders, band
members and staff and faculty from
the fust ' school year. The committee
has located some of those alumni, but
not others.
Students first attended school at the
new Eastern High School in January,
1958. The first homecoming was held
the following fall. The first Eagles
football team, created as a resu It of the
consolidation of Chester and OliveOrange High School in Tuppers

Plains.' won the league championship
in 1955, and as the first team, will be
honored along with the first Eagles
team to play on the Eastern football
field during the 1958 season.
Anyone involved in that first
homecoming celebration or with
information about students who participated is asked to contact Sheryl
Roush or Carmen Mitche II at the
high school. at 985-3329 .
The anniversary observance will be
a pre-game event_. The 2007 homecoming show wtll be a half-nme
event, as usual.

Details on Pago AS

INDEX
2 SEcriONS- 16 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox

A6

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

A7

Sports

B Section

AB

Weather
~

2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

,

,

Chadene Hoench/photo

Joan Wolfe, manager of Peoples Bank, Pomeroy, presents a $500 check to' Jo
Ann Ritchie for use in the restoration work on the Chester Academy.

,.

'

•

POMEROY -A check for $500
from the Peoples Bancorp Foundation
was presented to JoAnn Ritchie for ~ se
in the Chester Academy restoration
work Wednesday.
. .
The Foundation accepts requests tor
grants which will enhance the qualit~ of
life for individuals served by organtzations located in the communities served
by Peoples Bancorp and its affiliates.
The Chester Shade Historical
Association requested assistance for
funds to further work on the Academy
building. The grant award of $500 will
serve as a match for another $500 from
a federal $237.000 "Save American's
Treasures Grant"
According to Ritchie, the Peoples
Bancorp grant of $500 means that the
entire federal grant has been matched
and can now be accessed for finishing
the project. Plans call for the work to be
completed in late October.

POMEROY Older
Meigs County residents
can discover ways to
choose an active lifestyle
by joining others in the
observance of Active
Aging Week taking place
at the Wellness· Cen~~r of
the Meigs Senior &lt;;enter
next week.Bryan Hoffman, director
of the Wellness Center,
said a variety of activities
have been planned and he
encouraged seniors to get
involved in a healthier
lifestyle by participating .
Hoffman remmded seniors
that they need to keep
active in order to get the
most enjoyment from life
and that choosing an
active lifestyle is a low
cost way of staying independent and healthy.
He pointed out that staying active is the low cost
way of staying independent
and healthy and contributes
to being able to do the
things you want to do.
Activities which have
been planned for the week
include an hour of walking
on the riverfront path in
Pomeroy after meeting on
the upper parking lot on
Monday. Wednesday and
Friday of next week.
Other activities to take
place at the Senior Center
include balance training for
fall prevention 10 a.m. on
Tuesday; Pilates demonstration,
6 p.m . on
Chi
Wednesday:
Tai
demonstration at I0:30a.m.
on Thursday; 20/20/20
class demonstration, 5 :30
on Thursday; and a two
mile walking challenge at
the Center 8 a.m . to noon
on Saturday.
Hoffman noted that
Wellness Center fees are
being waived for the week
for new Wellness Center
pan icipan ts. For those
who decide they want to
join in reg ular activities at
the Center, the only
requirement is a phy sician's med1 ca l release
from their prim'ary physician.
"The
World
Hea.!th
Org•nization, the national
health agencies and local
health organizations are all
sending the same message :
' By staying active and
involved in life, aging
adults are more happy and
ab le to contribute to the
com munit y.· At the Meigs
Wcllness Ce nter. we know
it's true , and we want to
help baby boomers and
their , elders choose an
ac ti ve Ii fe' ' concluded
HolTman .

,,

�The Daily $entinel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2.;

Thursday, September 20, 2007

wwwmydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Thursday, September ao, aoo7~
~

Alaska residents will f.·..get annual oil royalty .:~
dividend of $1,654 each}
.-

8Y STEVE QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP plloto
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne take a cognitive skills test in preparation for deployment to Iraq in Fort Campbell, Ky., Friday,
Sept. 7. Before they leave for Iraq, thousands of troops with the 101st line up at laptop computers to take a test: basic
math, matching numbers and symbGis, and identifying patterns. They press a button quickly to measure response time.
It's all part of a fledgling Army program that records how soldiers' brains work when healthy, giving doctors baseline data
to help diagnose and treat them if they come back with a traumatic brain injury.

Army begins testing brains of soldiers
before sending them to Iraq, Afghanistan
BY KRISTIN M. HALL

match numbers and symbols, or complete simple
addition and subtractton
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. problems.
- Before they leave for . ''Everybody functions a
Iraq, thousands of troops bit differently in terms of
with the I0 Ist Airborne how quickly !hey react to
Division line up at laptop things, how well they
computers to take a test: process things and remembasic math, matching num- ber things and so ford!,"
bers and symbols, and iden- Schle~el said.
tifying patterns. They press
Bram injuries caused by
a button quickly to measure explosions have become
response time.
some of the most common
It's all part of a fledgling combat wounds suffered in
Army
program
that Iraq. Thirty percent of solrecords how soldiers' diers taken to Walter Reed
brains work when healthy, Army Medical Center
giving doctors baseline since 2003 suffered traudata to help diagnose and matic
brain
mJunes,
treat the soldiers if they according to the Defense
suffer a traumatic brain and Veterans Brain Injury
injury - the signature Center.
injury of the Iraq war.
The brain-injury center,
. "This allows the Army to which has seven facilities
be much more proactive," · around the · country, has
said Lt. Col. Mark seen
2,669
patients
McGrail, division surgeon between 2003 and 2007.
for the lOlst. "We don't But doctors believe many
want to wait until the sol- less obvious brain-injury
dier is getting out of the cases go undetected. ·
Army to say, 'But I've had
Sgt. Adam Wyat.t, 22, has
these symptoms."'
been close to 20 to 30 blasts
The mandatory brain- from homemade bombs,
function tests are starting rocket-propelled ·grenades
with the IOlst at Fort ormortarfrreduringhislast
Campb"ell and are expect- two deployments. But he's
ed to spread to other mili- never been directly hit.
tary bases in the next cou"The initial shock is a
pie
of
months. little disorienting," Wyatt
Commanders at each base said. "Your first thought is
will decide whether to seeing if anyone is
adopt tlie program.
wounded and suppressing
The tests provide a stan- enemy fire."
dard, objective measureSoldiers sometimes walk
ment for each soldier's away from explosions with
reaction time, their short- no obvious injuries. But the
term memory and other concussion from the blast
cognitive skills. That data can have a lingering effect
would be used when the that is not always immedisoldiers come home to ately apparent.
identify mild brain trauma
"They look physically
that can often go unnoticed normal, but their neurocogand untreated.
nitive performance is off,"
One veterans group said Col. Mary Lopez, a
wants to ensure the Army physician specializing in
doesn't use the results to · occupational therapy.
deny treatment by claiming
Most brain injuries are
that soldiers ' problem s · mild, and soldiers can
came from pre-existing recover wid! rest and time
conditions.
away from the battlefield.
"We certainly think these But the military estimates
tests should not be used to that one-fifth of the trooP.s
reduce the responsibility with these mild injuries wtll
that the Army has to treat have prolonged or lifelong
the soldters who have symptoms requiring continserved,"
said
Jason uing care.
Forrester, director of policy
So little is known about
traumatic brain injuries
for Veterans for America.
About
7,500
Fort that these baseline readCampbell soldiers have ings could become an
completed the tests, said Dr. important cornerstone for
Robert
Schlegel,
a future study.
University of Oklahoma
Even the parameters of
researcher who administers the injury are not known,
the 10-minute exams to sol- like how close a soldier
diers as they file quickly must be to a blast to suffer
through a testing center.
damage, or whether being
One question asks sol- knocked
unconscious
diers to memorize patterns makes a difference, said
on the screen and then [den- Jordan Grafman, a neurotify them later among sever- science researcher at the
al different patterns. Other National
Institutes of
questions require soldiers to Health. Without baseline
'
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

information, it is hard to say
soldiers are more impaired
after !hey suffer a serious
brain injury.
The Army has faced criticism .for treatment of Iraqi
war veterans after complaints !hat some soldiers
with brain damage were
Tht;
misdiagnosed.
Government AccountabilitY.
Office is investigating
reports !hat as many as 40
soldiers at Colorado's Fort
Carson were misdiagnosed
wid! personality disorders
after suffering brain damage
or stress-related injuries.
Lt. Col. Mark McGrail,
division surgeon for the
lOlst, said mild brain
injury is difficult to diagnose because soldiers often
don't report . symptoms
· such · as headaches, dizziness, memory problems
and irritability.
"The soldiers are by and
large very motivated, and
they don't want their team .
to go back out ·there without them, even though !hey
knbw they had their bell
rung and might not be at
the toP. of their game,"
McGratl said.
Some symptoms of traumatic .brain injury also overlap with post-traumatic

stress disorder, another
common condition among
Iraq war veterans. The
brain-injury test could also
help doctors differentiate
between !hose conditions,
Lopez said.
Sandy Schneider, direcof
Vanderbilt
tor
University's brain injury
rehabilitation
program,
said !hat while it's too early
to tell how effective !he
tests might be at helping
diagnose and treat brain
injuries, tbe data could be
extremely · helpful for
researchers.
"We're finding out so
much more about this injury
because of !his war, unfortunately," Schneider said.
The brain tests have
already been tried in pilot
programs at Fort Bragg,
N.C.• with paratroopers who
often suffer concussions
during jumps, as well as
with some soldiers who
have deployed to Iraq,
Afghanistan and Bosnia.
But the 10 I st is !he frrst
unit to use them on a large
scale for every soldier
preparing to deploy. The
divtsion is leaving for its
third deployment, splitting
between battlefronts in Iraq
and Afghanistan.

JUNEAU, Alaska
Nearly every Alaskan will
soon receive a check for
$1,654, !heir share of !he
state's oil riches, Gov. Sarah
Palin announced Wednesday.
Tbe divi&lt;lend checks !1fC
derived from !he state's oil
royalty investment program
and dtstributed each year to
eli~ible residents -JUSt for
livmg here for a full calendar year.
Slightly
more
than
600,000 men, women and
children in 248 communities
will receive the dividend
this year, according to the
. Revenue Department. The
state's estimated population
is just over 670,000 people.
Anyone who has lived in
Alaska for a full calendar
year can apply for the money
- includin~ children. Of
those receivmg checks ·this
year, about 41 percent,- or
244,695 of the state's residents- were born in Alaska.
"I want you guys.to invest
!his wisely," Palin told the
large crowd !hat ga!hered
for the announcement of
this year's dividend in
Valdez, !he terminus of !he
state's 800-mile transAlaska oil pipeline.
It's a perk !hat separates
Alaska from !he rest of the
union and was recently parodied in "The S,impsons
Movie," which prominently
features !he tel¢vlsfon cartoon family's journey to
Alaska.
The movie depicts Alaska
almost as a separate countr)'.
As Homer Simpson crosses
!he border wid! Canada, he's
greeted by a customs agent
who says, ""Welcome to
Alaska," then hands Homer
a wad of cash, saying every
Alaskan gets a stack of bills
so oil companies can exploit
!he environment.
·
But· for many residents,
!he check is no JOke.
It means getting caught
up on bills and supplementing income !hat for some is
a week-to-week living in
Alaska, where !he cost of
• fRII2417liCIIMIIIIalrt
living is high due in part
• .,........._. . •
because of its distance from
• 10NIIIIIdlhue&amp; llllii\VMmelll
shipping centers in the
Cullom SQr1 fliV' • fMWI, WNiher ' mort!
Lower48.
A up"'
ao 6X Ml , ,
In Galena, a town of 600 ( Surf
/Uit ......
residents located 250 miles
SltnU,Onllnll
.....
. . -.... ·
west of Fairbanks, air taxi ·
pilot Colin Brown pilot said
!he money will help cover
rising fuel costs !hat have
beset !he state's isolated

.,

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AFree Lunch!
Enter Here For A

$30 Gift Certificate
To One Of These Great Restaurants

Drawing Each Week!
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Phone'--------,-- Mail to: Free Lunch
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825 3rd Ave.
OH 45631

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:PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE: ·
'

rural villages. Brown says::
he pays about $4.70. for a.gallon of gasoline, a\)out $2::
per gallon more than nation-~
al average, accordin~ to me·:
Energy Department s most •
recent data. ·
.
:
O!hers use the bonus to.:
supplement !heir subsistent ~
lifestyles.
·
· :;-.
"A lot of times village~
pie will spend it on fishne~ ~
to renew their equipment. ~
!hat's worn out," he srud. ; •
The state established tiu::~
Alaska Permanent Fund iq;:
1976 after Nord! Slope oit:
was discovered. DividendS:
have been paid since 1982; •
ranging from $331 to q:~
record high of $1,963 ill';
2000. Last year's dividen"·
check was $1 ,106.
·· ;
· The fund is valued at ·~:
near-record $38.7 billion,.~
wid! total returns .lit 17.1!~
percent in !he. trscaJ yeru::
!hat ended June 30: In th~~
last fiscal year, the fund:!
earned $622,000 an liour; :•
Dividend totals are not;~
directly tied to lh~· fund:So~:
total value or 'robqst ' oi'·
prices, said fund spokes.:;:
woman Laura Achee. Oil.
prices, ~~ich topped $80
barrel thts week, can bQost.~
the fund's principal. but me:'"
money must ~?e jiwested.;%
Payouts then ,get calculated;:
on a five-year average of:
investment'income. ·
·.~
The fund.'s stock invest-;~
R;~enis include high-profilerZ
brands such as Pepsico Inc.,::
Microsoft Corp. and Apple!;
Inc., along wid! North Slo~
oil producers Exxon Mobilj:
Corp., ConocoPhillips and:E
BP PLC.
.·
'"
More than $15.2 billion has~~
been distributed to eligible~
residents since the dividend~
program began, five y~
after oil began flowing m ~
state's pipeline 30 years ago: ,

'

�The Daily $entinel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2.;

Thursday, September 20, 2007

wwwmydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Thursday, September ao, aoo7~
~

Alaska residents will f.·..get annual oil royalty .:~
dividend of $1,654 each}
.-

8Y STEVE QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP plloto
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne take a cognitive skills test in preparation for deployment to Iraq in Fort Campbell, Ky., Friday,
Sept. 7. Before they leave for Iraq, thousands of troops with the 101st line up at laptop computers to take a test: basic
math, matching numbers and symbGis, and identifying patterns. They press a button quickly to measure response time.
It's all part of a fledgling Army program that records how soldiers' brains work when healthy, giving doctors baseline data
to help diagnose and treat them if they come back with a traumatic brain injury.

Army begins testing brains of soldiers
before sending them to Iraq, Afghanistan
BY KRISTIN M. HALL

match numbers and symbols, or complete simple
addition and subtractton
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. problems.
- Before they leave for . ''Everybody functions a
Iraq, thousands of troops bit differently in terms of
with the I0 Ist Airborne how quickly !hey react to
Division line up at laptop things, how well they
computers to take a test: process things and remembasic math, matching num- ber things and so ford!,"
bers and symbols, and iden- Schle~el said.
tifying patterns. They press
Bram injuries caused by
a button quickly to measure explosions have become
response time.
some of the most common
It's all part of a fledgling combat wounds suffered in
Army
program
that Iraq. Thirty percent of solrecords how soldiers' diers taken to Walter Reed
brains work when healthy, Army Medical Center
giving doctors baseline since 2003 suffered traudata to help diagnose and matic
brain
mJunes,
treat the soldiers if they according to the Defense
suffer a traumatic brain and Veterans Brain Injury
injury - the signature Center.
injury of the Iraq war.
The brain-injury center,
. "This allows the Army to which has seven facilities
be much more proactive," · around the · country, has
said Lt. Col. Mark seen
2,669
patients
McGrail, division surgeon between 2003 and 2007.
for the lOlst. "We don't But doctors believe many
want to wait until the sol- less obvious brain-injury
dier is getting out of the cases go undetected. ·
Army to say, 'But I've had
Sgt. Adam Wyat.t, 22, has
these symptoms."'
been close to 20 to 30 blasts
The mandatory brain- from homemade bombs,
function tests are starting rocket-propelled ·grenades
with the IOlst at Fort ormortarfrreduringhislast
Campb"ell and are expect- two deployments. But he's
ed to spread to other mili- never been directly hit.
tary bases in the next cou"The initial shock is a
pie
of
months. little disorienting," Wyatt
Commanders at each base said. "Your first thought is
will decide whether to seeing if anyone is
adopt tlie program.
wounded and suppressing
The tests provide a stan- enemy fire."
dard, objective measureSoldiers sometimes walk
ment for each soldier's away from explosions with
reaction time, their short- no obvious injuries. But the
term memory and other concussion from the blast
cognitive skills. That data can have a lingering effect
would be used when the that is not always immedisoldiers come home to ately apparent.
identify mild brain trauma
"They look physically
that can often go unnoticed normal, but their neurocogand untreated.
nitive performance is off,"
One veterans group said Col. Mary Lopez, a
wants to ensure the Army physician specializing in
doesn't use the results to · occupational therapy.
deny treatment by claiming
Most brain injuries are
that soldiers ' problem s · mild, and soldiers can
came from pre-existing recover wid! rest and time
conditions.
away from the battlefield.
"We certainly think these But the military estimates
tests should not be used to that one-fifth of the trooP.s
reduce the responsibility with these mild injuries wtll
that the Army has to treat have prolonged or lifelong
the soldters who have symptoms requiring continserved,"
said
Jason uing care.
Forrester, director of policy
So little is known about
traumatic brain injuries
for Veterans for America.
About
7,500
Fort that these baseline readCampbell soldiers have ings could become an
completed the tests, said Dr. important cornerstone for
Robert
Schlegel,
a future study.
University of Oklahoma
Even the parameters of
researcher who administers the injury are not known,
the 10-minute exams to sol- like how close a soldier
diers as they file quickly must be to a blast to suffer
through a testing center.
damage, or whether being
One question asks sol- knocked
unconscious
diers to memorize patterns makes a difference, said
on the screen and then [den- Jordan Grafman, a neurotify them later among sever- science researcher at the
al different patterns. Other National
Institutes of
questions require soldiers to Health. Without baseline
'
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

information, it is hard to say
soldiers are more impaired
after !hey suffer a serious
brain injury.
The Army has faced criticism .for treatment of Iraqi
war veterans after complaints !hat some soldiers
with brain damage were
Tht;
misdiagnosed.
Government AccountabilitY.
Office is investigating
reports !hat as many as 40
soldiers at Colorado's Fort
Carson were misdiagnosed
wid! personality disorders
after suffering brain damage
or stress-related injuries.
Lt. Col. Mark McGrail,
division surgeon for the
lOlst, said mild brain
injury is difficult to diagnose because soldiers often
don't report . symptoms
· such · as headaches, dizziness, memory problems
and irritability.
"The soldiers are by and
large very motivated, and
they don't want their team .
to go back out ·there without them, even though !hey
knbw they had their bell
rung and might not be at
the toP. of their game,"
McGratl said.
Some symptoms of traumatic .brain injury also overlap with post-traumatic

stress disorder, another
common condition among
Iraq war veterans. The
brain-injury test could also
help doctors differentiate
between !hose conditions,
Lopez said.
Sandy Schneider, direcof
Vanderbilt
tor
University's brain injury
rehabilitation
program,
said !hat while it's too early
to tell how effective !he
tests might be at helping
diagnose and treat brain
injuries, tbe data could be
extremely · helpful for
researchers.
"We're finding out so
much more about this injury
because of !his war, unfortunately," Schneider said.
The brain tests have
already been tried in pilot
programs at Fort Bragg,
N.C.• with paratroopers who
often suffer concussions
during jumps, as well as
with some soldiers who
have deployed to Iraq,
Afghanistan and Bosnia.
But the 10 I st is !he frrst
unit to use them on a large
scale for every soldier
preparing to deploy. The
divtsion is leaving for its
third deployment, splitting
between battlefronts in Iraq
and Afghanistan.

JUNEAU, Alaska
Nearly every Alaskan will
soon receive a check for
$1,654, !heir share of !he
state's oil riches, Gov. Sarah
Palin announced Wednesday.
Tbe divi&lt;lend checks !1fC
derived from !he state's oil
royalty investment program
and dtstributed each year to
eli~ible residents -JUSt for
livmg here for a full calendar year.
Slightly
more
than
600,000 men, women and
children in 248 communities
will receive the dividend
this year, according to the
. Revenue Department. The
state's estimated population
is just over 670,000 people.
Anyone who has lived in
Alaska for a full calendar
year can apply for the money
- includin~ children. Of
those receivmg checks ·this
year, about 41 percent,- or
244,695 of the state's residents- were born in Alaska.
"I want you guys.to invest
!his wisely," Palin told the
large crowd !hat ga!hered
for the announcement of
this year's dividend in
Valdez, !he terminus of !he
state's 800-mile transAlaska oil pipeline.
It's a perk !hat separates
Alaska from !he rest of the
union and was recently parodied in "The S,impsons
Movie," which prominently
features !he tel¢vlsfon cartoon family's journey to
Alaska.
The movie depicts Alaska
almost as a separate countr)'.
As Homer Simpson crosses
!he border wid! Canada, he's
greeted by a customs agent
who says, ""Welcome to
Alaska," then hands Homer
a wad of cash, saying every
Alaskan gets a stack of bills
so oil companies can exploit
!he environment.
·
But· for many residents,
!he check is no JOke.
It means getting caught
up on bills and supplementing income !hat for some is
a week-to-week living in
Alaska, where !he cost of
• fRII2417liCIIMIIIIalrt
living is high due in part
• .,........._. . •
because of its distance from
• 10NIIIIIdlhue&amp; llllii\VMmelll
shipping centers in the
Cullom SQr1 fliV' • fMWI, WNiher ' mort!
Lower48.
A up"'
ao 6X Ml , ,
In Galena, a town of 600 ( Surf
/Uit ......
residents located 250 miles
SltnU,Onllnll
.....
. . -.... ·
west of Fairbanks, air taxi ·
pilot Colin Brown pilot said
!he money will help cover
rising fuel costs !hat have
beset !he state's isolated

.,

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rural villages. Brown says::
he pays about $4.70. for a.gallon of gasoline, a\)out $2::
per gallon more than nation-~
al average, accordin~ to me·:
Energy Department s most •
recent data. ·
.
:
O!hers use the bonus to.:
supplement !heir subsistent ~
lifestyles.
·
· :;-.
"A lot of times village~
pie will spend it on fishne~ ~
to renew their equipment. ~
!hat's worn out," he srud. ; •
The state established tiu::~
Alaska Permanent Fund iq;:
1976 after Nord! Slope oit:
was discovered. DividendS:
have been paid since 1982; •
ranging from $331 to q:~
record high of $1,963 ill';
2000. Last year's dividen"·
check was $1 ,106.
·· ;
· The fund is valued at ·~:
near-record $38.7 billion,.~
wid! total returns .lit 17.1!~
percent in !he. trscaJ yeru::
!hat ended June 30: In th~~
last fiscal year, the fund:!
earned $622,000 an liour; :•
Dividend totals are not;~
directly tied to lh~· fund:So~:
total value or 'robqst ' oi'·
prices, said fund spokes.:;:
woman Laura Achee. Oil.
prices, ~~ich topped $80
barrel thts week, can bQost.~
the fund's principal. but me:'"
money must ~?e jiwested.;%
Payouts then ,get calculated;:
on a five-year average of:
investment'income. ·
·.~
The fund.'s stock invest-;~
R;~enis include high-profilerZ
brands such as Pepsico Inc.,::
Microsoft Corp. and Apple!;
Inc., along wid! North Slo~
oil producers Exxon Mobilj:
Corp., ConocoPhillips and:E
BP PLC.
.·
'"
More than $15.2 billion has~~
been distributed to eligible~
residents since the dividend~
program began, five y~
after oil began flowing m ~
state's pipeline 30 years ago: ,

'

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Thursday, September 20, 2007

ALL
BUSINESS:
Leveraged
buyouts
in
question,
The Daily Sentinel
as banks struggle to sell deal-related loans
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallylefltlnel.com

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congrgs shall make no law rupecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
frte exercise thereof; or abridging the frttdom of
speech, or of the prus; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redrus of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Unprofessional
Unhappy with twtk
Dear Editor:
In response to Kathy Jeffers' letter about shoddy work on
Aug. 28, you are not alone. I also received the CHIP grant
for home repairs. At fustthey tell you you have a choice of
contractors, which you do not. then you have a choice of
flooring and trim, which you do not. They not only use
chipped wood flooring, which they did not repair the whole
· floor, only the really bad parts you could see, they use duct
tape on the seams, which you can see through the linoleum,
. that the nails are coming throtrgh:"
They ripped the linoleum moving the refrigerator back.
The flOQr trim is falling off, plumbing leaks, hand rail
falling apart, ceiling trim falling down. The list goes on.
1l1ey do not do what the list says they will do, only enough
to get by.
You do not get professional work as you are told, unless
you watch every move they make. Well, the government
paid for it. I do work every day and I pay taxes, but unless
you're tich and can pay for the work yourself, I guess that
is what we get.
Donna Meadows
MUldleport

NEW
YORK
Inve stors can forget about
breathtaking profits from
leveraged buyQuts. The
credit market 's turbulence
has all but shut down that
busi ness, perhaps for
quite so me time, and
many announced deals
may also crater.
Wall Street banks are
facing the worst credit
conditions in years as they
JrY to sell reluctant buyers
more than $'300 billion of
LBO-related
debt
to
finance . private-equity
takeovers. As a result, the
underwriters are doing
what they can to get out of
deals or are trying to force
the buyout firm s to make
concessions on the ·debt.
That 's why LBOs still in
the pipeline shouldn ' t be
considered a done deal. In ·
some cases, they seem to
be far from it.
·
Shareholders in Reddy
Ice Holdings Inc . are
learning that fast. Ju st
days ago, it looked like
the Dallas- based packaged ice maker would be
bought by GSO Capital
Partners for $31.25 a
share, a I0 percent premium above its .stock price
before the July 2 takeover
bid.
.
Now
underwriter
Morgan Stanley is trying
to get out of its financing
commitment. The sides
are
wrangling
over
whether Reddy and GSO
had the right to amend
their buyout agreement,
which was changed after
conditions in the debt
market deteriorated, without Morgan Stanley' s consent, according to a Reddy
securities filing on Sept. ·
12.

downsized to $13 billion
Morgan
Stanley
is Group.
claiming that such a move
For example, Claire's and will be sold in pieces
by the buyers "disabled Stores' senior pay-in-kind over the coming months.
themselves from satisfy- toggle notes due in 2015 The first will total only $5
ing certain conditions to · - which allows the com- bill ion, and the arrangers
Morgan St anley 's com- pany to cover its interest have the right to sell
mitment to provide the costs by issuing additional another $3 billion by year
according
to
debt financing. " accord- bonds rather than paying end,
CreditSights.
ing to the filing . Morgan cash - now trade around
KKR agreed to add a
Stanley declined further 83 cents on the dollar,
comment: Reddy dido ' t S&amp;P said. That's a 17 per- covenant to the Joan that
return a c all requesting cent haircu t si nce they will dictate how much
comment.
were originally sold in debt First ·Data can
assume relative to earnThat Morga n Stanley late May.
•
In
addition,
delved into the deal's fine
Dollar General's notes, ings .
print to try to wriggle free also due in 2015, sold for investors will be ~iven
from its financing com- 98.03 cents on the dollar "most favored nation' stamitment should raise a red in late June, but now trade tus through the end of the
flag about what's to come arou nd 91.5 cents. OSI year, which means if more
in LBOs .
Restaurant Partners' loans debt is sold at a lower
It 's a drastic change have fallen 13 percent price then the holders will
from the first six months si nce their early June be compensated, accordof this year, when the debut to now trade around ing to CreditSights.
The $5 billion portion is
in ves tment banks were 87 cents, according to
being offered at a dis·
tripping over each other to S&amp;P.
earn huge fees by underGiven the dismal state counted rate of 96 cents
writing LBOs and then of affairs, underwriters on the dollar, 4 cents
quickly unloading the are scrambling to piece below where the banks
debt
to
institutional deals .rogether. They are had originally hoped it
asking
private-equity would be priced but not as
investors.
Now. a financial world firms to make concessions low as some had expected
plagued by the surge · in on the debt that was com- in recent weeks given currisky borrowers default- mined, which would give . rent market conditions.
ing on fheir home loans investors better protection Still, if that price sets the
standard for the entire $13
has sparked fears of a in case of default.
widespread credit crisis
Consider what's gone billion loan offer, it could
and largely paralyzed on in the financing for the result in an estimated
dealings in debt markets.
$2c;i billion buyout of First $260 million in losses for
What 's more, · LBO Data Corp ., the most the underwriters, accordloans that made it to mar- closely watched loan deal ing to Robert L. Lee, a
ket before the credit col- of the year given the size credit analyst at KDP
lapse are now being bat- of the debt and the solid Investment Advisors Inc.
Clearly, the banks can't
tered, so underwriters reputation
of
the
don't have much to show Greenwood
Village, afford to take such a hit
for their past work. .
Colo.-based data proces- on every deal. While some
of their losses would be
Since May I, the aver- sor.
age price in a sample of
Buyout shop Kohlberg offset by their. underwrit15 LBO bond issues with Kravis Roberts &amp; Co. has ing fees, they must be
21 pieces has dropped to finally agreed to some looking for ways out of
90.0 I cents, a decline of changes in its loans after their underwriting com8.78 points in principal. weeks of huddled discus- mitments - just like in
Investors in those issues sions with its banks, the Reddy Ice case.
That's why stockowners
on average have lost 2.41 incl uding lead arrangers
points . of principal more Credit
Suisse
and can't rely on deals getting ·
than the market average, Citigroup.
done. Everi if a buyout
according to Standard &amp;
Instead of a $!4 billion offer is approved, don't
Poor's
Leveraged loan being brought to count the money until the
Commentary and Data market at once, it has been check clears.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day of 2007. There
are I 02 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 20, 1519, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand
Magellan and his crew set out from Spain on five ships on a
voyage to find a western passage to the Spice blands in
Indonesia. (Magellan was killed en route, but one of his
ships eventually circled the world.)
On this date:
In 1857, Delhi, India, fell to British forces
In 1870, Italian troops took control of the Papal States,
leading to the unification of Italy.
. In 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st pres. ident of the United States, succeeding the assassinated
· James A. Garfield.
· .
In 1957, Finnish composer Jean Sibelius died.
Thought for Today: "Men hate those to whom they have
to lie."- Victor Hugo; French author (1802-1885).
.
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - '

So here's the latest bulletin from the . psych
department: According to
the
journal
Nature
Neuroscience, liberals are
smarter and more adapt·
able than conservatives.
It's a scientific fact, or
what passes for one in the
world of lab rats and
mazes. Needless to say,
this discovery was greeted
with a yawn on the rustic
campus of Unsolicited
L E T E R S T 0 THE
Opinions Inc. - the oneman , five-dog think tank
where this column origi·
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less nates.
Yo, professor, tell us
tha11 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
· sig11ed, and include address and telephone number. No something we don '.t know.
: unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in
Actually, several profes· good faste, addressing issues. not per~onalities. Letters of sors at two universities,
thanks to organizations anti individuals will not be accept- New York University and
ed for publication.
University of California,
Los Angeles, concocted
this foolishness. First, the
experimenters asked stu·
dent subjects to self-iden(USPS
213-960)
tify as liberals or conse(V·
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
atives. Then they sat them
Correction Polley
Co.
at computer monitors .
Half were asked to push a
Our main concern in all stories is Ia Published ovol'( afternoon, Monday
through
Friday,
111
Cou
rt
Street.
button
every time the letbe accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Second-class
in a story. can the newsmom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
ter "M" appeared on the
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Member: The Associated Press and
screen, but to ignore " W."
the Ohio Newspaper AsSociation.
The others were asked to
Poatmaster:
Send
address
correc~
respond
to '•W,n but ignore
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Sentin~, 111 Court
"M" - to rule OUI unrea(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
soning contempt for the
Department extensions are:
letter "W," I suppose .
Subscription Rates
Anyway, the liberals made
By carrier or motor route
News
fact-based
responses far
One month
'1 0.27
more often than conservaEditor: Chanene Hoeflich. Ext 12
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
tives, who tended to react
Reporter: Brian Reed, E~et. 14
Senior Citizen rates
every time they saw any
Aeponer: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
letter, like a chimpanzee
One year
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trying to tune in the Ru~h
Advertising
Subscribers should remit in advaroe
Limbaugh
program on a
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ex1. 15 direct to the Daity Sentinel. No subcar
radio
.
·
scri p tion by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis , Ext 16 where home carrier service is avail"S tronge r liberalism,''
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
they wrote, "was correlat·
ed with greater accuracy."
Mail Subscription
The experimenters conGeneral Manager
lnaide·Melgs County
cluded
that,"(l)iberals are
Cha ~ene Hoeflich. Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
more responsive to infor·
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'127.11
mationa]
.
complexity,
E-mail:
ambiguity
and
novelty,"
news@mydailysentinel .com
Outalda Meigs County
while "a more conserva13 Weeks
'53.55
tive
orientation is related
Web :
26Weeks
'107.10
to greater persi stence in a
52 Weeks
'214.21•
www.myda1lysentinel.com
habitual respon se pattern,

T

EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007

·Deaths
Mary Alice Bise
REEDSVILLE - Mary Alice Bise, 93, of Reedsville,
died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2007 at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.

Local Briefs
God's NET evening service
POMEROY - God's NET Youth Center Ministry is hav.ing Sunday evening worship at the Mulberry Community
Center in the gymnasium. Called "Sunday Evening
Blessings" the service begins at 7 p.m. every Sunday. This
is an ecumenical worship service designed for all people.

Bass tournament slated
POMEROY - The Meigs· County Council on Aging is
sponsoring a Buddy Bass Tournament at the Pomeroy
Levee O!J. Oct. 14 to raise money for the home delivered
meals program.
The event will get underway at 7 a.m. and conclude at 4
p.m. The entry fee is $70 per boat with prizes to be awarded in five places $1,200 for first, $720 for second, $400 for
third, $320 for fourth , and $160 for fifth.
Copies of the · rules and regulations for the tournament
· and applications for participation are available from the
Meigs County Council on Aging.

Benefit auction set for Saturday
·

.

POMEROY - An auction sale to benefit the Meigs
County Historical Society's museum operation will be held
at the fairgrounds beginning at I 0 a.m.
Amorig the many items ~o be auctioned off is Volume I
·of the Meigs County History which carries a reserve of
. $200. Items for the sale are still being accepted and can be
, brought to the fairgrounds Friday or before the sale gets
underway on Saturday.
Books, good furniture and appliances, and many miscellaneous items will be for sale.

Association plans fish fry
. WILKESVILLE - The annual fisjJ fry dinner of the
: Wilkesville Firemen's Association will be held at the
Wilkesville Community Center on Oct. 6 with serving from
· II a.m. to 3 p.m.
Proceeds from the dinner will go to support the
Wilkesville Township Volunteer Firemen's Association,
Inc. Donations will also be accepted at that time toward the
· cost of a new fire truck which arrived in January and will
. be on display for the public to see. This is the first new
truck for the Wilkesville department since 1980.
Donations can also be mailed to the Wilkesville
Township Volunteer Firemen's Association, Inc., P.O. Box
180, Wilkesville, Ohio 45695 c/o Don Newsom, treasurer.

For the Record
Highway Patrol

Are liberals smarter?
NYU and UCLA students
to
self-identify,
then
assigning specious objectivity to those declarations,
resembles . the
learned
"projectors"
in the
Gene
third voyage of Swift's
Lyons
"Gulliver's
Travels,"
gravely distilling sunbeams out of cucumbers.
In politics', context is all.
despite signals that this In, say, 1970, the same
response pattern should study would have h~d very
change."
different results. At this
According to the Los moment
in
history,
Angeles Times, assistant Bushism has knocked the
professor David Amodio liberal - versus-conservaof NYU , "explained the tive debate totally out of
difference in terms of a whack. On overwhelmingcommuter who drives the ly liberal campuses like
same way home from NYU and UCLA, persons
work every day. If he 's a calling themselves "con"
liberal, he is more likely servatives" are more liketo be alert to a detour. If ly Bush dead-enders. That
he ' s a conservative, he' s is, they're quite like the
more like] y to, well, stay (left-wing)
sheep
in
the course."
Orwell 's "Animal Farm,"
Now as political com- chanting, " Four legs good,
mentary, this strikes me as two legs bad!" to drown
plausible . Last time I out criticism of Comrade
checked, the Bush admin- Napoleon, the head pig.
istration had floated eight
Conservatism as a politor nine contradictory ical philosophy has nothrationales for invading ing to do with the presiand occupying Iraq , start- dency of George W. Bush.
ing with make-believe Don't take my word for it.
nuclear weapons, bestow- Read conservative pundits .
ing the gift of democracy such as George Will or
on our grateful Middle Patrick Buchanan on the
Eastern brethren , standing futility of the Iraq war.
up until they sit down (or Former
Nixon White
whatever it was), all House official John Dean
trending
toward
the has made a veritable
inevitable destination of &lt;_:areer out of warning
"exterminate
all
the against the decay of
brutes." Few loyalists Republican principles into
appear to have noticed.
an authoritarian cult of
But prese nted as science personality.
in a periodical otherwise
" For more than 40
devoted to articles titled years," Dean writes, "I
"Activation of EGFR and have con sidered myself a
ER K by rhomboid signal- 'Goldwater conservative,'
ing regulates the consoli- and am thoroughly famil dation and maintenance of iar with the movement's
sleep in Droso phila?" canon. But I can find noth(Fruit flies sleep? Who ing conservative about the
knew?) Give me a break. Bush/Cheney
White
To begin with, "liberal " House, which has created
and "conservative" are a Nixon 'imperial presisubjective terms with no dency ' on steroids, while
fixed niea nin g. Askin g acting as if being tutored

by the best and brightest
of the Cosa Nostra."
Dean's
book
"Conservatives Without
Conscience" summarizes
the psychological evidence, arguing that the
predominant wings of
today 's GOP Biblebeating fundamentalists
and
neo.c onservati ve
empire-builders - exhibit
similar personality types.
Followers think tribally,
submitting to political or
religious authority mostly
from
fear:
"(T)hey
become very aggressive in
pushing that world view of
that authority. .. . It helps
them remove the ambiguities of life. And if they're
frightened by events, then
this gives them a sense of
security,"
Authoritarian leaders,
Dean contends, "are typically men whose desire in
life is to dominate others
and to be in charge. .. .
They are highly manipulative. They are also people
who have absolutely no
appreciation of equality of
others. They see themselves as superior, and
they are amoral in their
thinking."
Sound like anybody we
know?
Like Orwell 's sheep,
cultists can't change their
minds no matter · how
badly their theories fare in
the visible world. To alier
course is to show weakness .
So, yeah, the Nature
Neuroscience team measured something real. It
just wasn't conservatism.
(Arkansas Democrat·
Ga zette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national maga·
zine award winner and coauthor of "The Hunting of
the
President"
(St.
Martin:~ Press, 2000). You
can e-mail Lyons at gene·
lyons2 @sbcglobal.net.)

POINT ROCK -A Gallipolis woman was injured in a
motorcycle accident on Ohio 689 un Sunday, the ·Gallia. Mei~s Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Wtlma C. Gooch, 48, I 127 Ohio 588, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by the Vinton County EMS following the 12:06 p.m. accident, according to the patrol.
Troopers said Gooch was northbound in Columbia
. Township when she failed to navigate a lefr ·curve with the
motorcycle she rode. The motorcycle went off the right side
· of the road and Gooch jumped while it was still moved.
· The motorcycle then struck some brush and a tree before
coming to a stop, the report said. The motorcycle had disabling d&amp;mage.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Iran president asks to lay wreath
at ground zero, request denied
BY PAT MILTON
ASSOciATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad asked pennission to lay a wreath at the
World Trade Center site
when he comes to New York
City next week, but the
request was denied, a police
official said Wednesday.
The U.S. also has denied a
visa to Iran's United Nations
ambassador in Geneva to
attend next week's General
Assembly meeting because
he was involved in the 1979
U.S. hostage crisis, a U.N.
official said.
Ahmadinejad , who is
arriving Sunday to address
the United Nations' General
Assembly, had asked this
month for permission to
visit the site of the Sept. I I,
200 I , terrorist attacks,
police spokesman Paul
Browne said.
·
The request to enter the
fenced-in site was rejected
because of ongoing construction there, Browne said.
"Requests for the Iranian
president to visit the
immediate area would also
b~ opposed bY. the NYPD
on security grounds,"
Browne said.
The U.S. ambassador . to
the United Nations, Zalmay
Khalilzad, told reporters
Wednesday that the United
States would not support
Iran's attempt to use the site
fur a "photo op."
"Iran can demonstrate its
seriousness ·about concern
with regard to terrorism by
taking concrete actions,"
such as dropping support
for Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah and suspending
their uranium enrichment
program, Khalilzad said.
Browne
said
Ahmadinejad had asked

AP photo

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. left, addresses
the media as he leaves the parliament after delivering a
report of his activities on Iran's fourth development plan
during an open session of parliament in Tehran, Iran,
Tuesday. Ahmadinejad on Tuesday shrugged off a French
watning of war if lrari develops a nuclear weapon, saying the
comments were not to be taken seriously.
permission from the Port
Aut)lority of New York and
New Jersey, U.S. Secret
Service and police department. The police and the
Secret Service provide
security to visiting heads
of state .
The Port Authority, which
owns the trade center site
and is the only agency that
could grant permission to
go inside, said it attended a
meeting with police regarding dignitary visits, not
specifically
about
Ahmadinejad. At that meeting, it was determined that
no dignitaries would be
allowed inside the site due
to ongoing construction,
said
Port
Authority
spokesman Steve Coleman.
It wasn't clear whether
Ahmadinejad wanted to
descend to the base of the
trade center site, where the
'twin towers once stood, or
Jay a wreath on a public
sidewalk outside the site.

Mohammad Mir Ali
Mohammadi, spokesman
for the Iranian mission to
the U.N., said he was not
notified otlically
that
Ahmadinejad would not be
allowed at the site, but said
it was unfortunate.
"President Ahmadinejad
intended to lay a wreath at
the site of ground zero in
order to pay tribute to the
victims of the terrorists
attack of Sept. 11 , 200 I. We
are hopeful that we can still
work something out with the
police department," he said.
White House spokesman
Gordon Johndroe said a
visit to ground zero "is a
matter for the city of New
York, but it seems more
than odd that the president
of a country that is a state
sponsor of terror would visit
ground zero."
It was not clear what role
Ali Reza Moaiyeri, Iran's
U.N.
ambassador
in
Geneva, played in the 1979

Pilot Club's antique sale set for Sept. 28-30
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- For the 55th year, the
Pilot Club of Huntington
will bring its annual
Antiques Show &amp; Sale to the
Big Sandy Superstore Arena
tm Sept. 28, 29 and 30.
Pilot Club is a service
organization and is part of
Pilot Club International.
Individual clubs select and
direct theor own civic and
service projects. In recent
years, Pilot Club funds have
supported many local projects,
such
as
the
Alzheimer's Association,
Branches,Faith in Action,
Hospice House (to . name
only a few) to enhance services' to community member with disadvartages and ·
disabilities and the elderly.

Members of the club also Services Organization. This niture, pottery, porcelains,
donate generously of their equipment was donated by cut glass, linen, clocks, jewPilotr
Club
of elry and more. The show, as
time to local organizations to the
always will be very diversigive back to our community. Huntington.
The Pilot Club Antiques fied with something of
Project Lifesaver is an
example of one of its Show &amp; Sale's hours are interest for everyone.
endeavcm. This is an active 6:30 to · 9 p.m. Friday, 10
Licensed
appraisers
locating system thai .relies a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and Roger and Steve Mullins,
on technology and a spe- nNoon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. will be on site Sunday from
cially trained search and If you want a "first peek" at noon to 4 p.m. to evaluate
rescue team to locate per- all the fine tiems and the your heirloom pieces also
sons with mental disorders first opportunity to buy, (limit two per customer at
who might wander away then the Preview Party on $5 for each item).
·
Friday evening is a must do.
from their caregivers.
For ·more information.
People enrolled in this Tickets sell for $15 for the call (304) 522-3747 or
program wear a personal- party and are good all week- (304) 522-0998.
Ized bracelet that emits a end. Tickets for both
tracking signal to special- Saturday and Sunday are $6
ized equipment maintained per seron.
.'?-1\N C14&gt;J'
Over 40 select dealers
by the Cabell County
Q;,~ 1\
0
Sheriff's
Department, from I I states and West
..-r:
I r' '
);-L,:..l
,' '
~
~
EMS/9- I -I, and Cabell Virginia will be atten~ing to
._:·::
~
;:;
bring
you
their
finest
in
furCounty
Community
~ /

~ ~: ql
.,. ):-

·Ramp
from PageA1
lot has been brought up to
grade and will be ready for
its base in a few weeks.
· Wetland areas near the road
at the ramp 's entrance have
also been dug though a total

.•

-----··-·····-·-····-··· .

.HSO announces opening weekend
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- although the puppets will
The Huntington Symphony only accompany Sunday's
Orchestra announces its performance for the children.
opening weekend at .the Saturday night's performance
Keith Albee Performing Arts will also include Bernstein's
Center beginning Saturday, "Candide Overture," Ravel 's
"Mother Goose Suite" and
Sept. 22 at 8 p.m.
Saturday night's concert, Stravinsky's "Fire Bird
"Once Upon a Time," is the Suite."
Season tickets are still
first event of the 2007-08
available
at a · 10 percent
winter season . Tbe firstever Children's Concert is discount; individual prices
on Sunday, Sept. 23 at 3 for Saturday night range
p.m., featuring I 0· foot tall from $16 to $31 ; college
puppets accompanied by the students will be admitted
free with a valid ID for the
orchestra.
The story of "Peter and opening weekend. Tickets
the Wolf' will be narrated for the Children's Concert
by Carrie Cline from are $5 for kids, $10 for
· WSAZ· TV. There will be an adults. Tickets may be pur. activity hour in the lobby chased on the website.
The HSO is also pleased to
. beginning at 2pm including
art projects and a mustcal announce a pre-concert
reception with wine and
· instrument "petting zoo."
The HSO is particularly cheese included at Rocco's
excited about performing in 21 Cluh just across the street
its new home and presenting from the Keith. The reception
a new event. the Children's begins at 6:30 p.m. and the
· Coocert.
The
season, cost is $I 5 per person. These
Symphonic Tales opens with receptions will precede each
music from legendaty stones. winter season concert and
"Peter and the Wolf' by take place at downtown busi·
Prokotlev will be performed nesses. Details for each my
and narrated both days, be found on the website.

hostage cnsts. The U.N.
official who said his visa
was denied spoke on condition of anonymity because
there has been no public
announcement.
Richard
Grenell ,
spokesman for the U.S .
Mission to the United
Nations, said, "although we
don't comment about specific
visa cases we certainly would
not allow a person into the
United States who has taken
Americans as hostages."
Iran and the U.S. have not
had diplomatic relations
since Washington cut its ties
with Tehran during the
hostage crisis in'which U.S. ·
diplomats
were
held
hostage for 444 days. The
Bush administration has
accused Iran of arming
Shiite Muslim militants in
Iraq and seeking to develop
nuclear weapons.
In a television appearance
earlier
this
week,
Ahmadinejad said his country wanted peace and
friendship with the United
States, as tensions contin.ued to mount between the
two countries.
The deputy commander
of Iran's air force said
Wednesday that plans have
been drawn up to bomb
Israel if the Jewish state ·
attacks Iran, according to
the semiofficial Fars ntws
agency.
.
The United States and its
key European allies are calling for a new round of U.N.
sanctions against Iran over
its disputed nuclear program, but Russia has
warned against the use of
force in Iran and opposes
new ·sanctions to punish
Tehran.
Associated Press Writer
Edith M. Lederer COil·
tributed to this report from
the United Nations.

Pt:Rff)R.\1"1; "-RTS CE'illU.

Homestead celebration·set for Sept. 22
GREENBOTTOM, W.Va.
- The Jenkins Plantation
Museum, located in the
Green Bottom Wildlife
Management Area of Cabell
County, will celebrate its
172nd year at the annual
Homestead Gathering on
Saturday, Sept. 22, from II
a.m. until 4 p.m. The day's
activities are free and open
to the public.
•
Visitors can enjoy presentations Gf costumed craftsmen, including a woodworker. They also can see
1800s-era farming equipment and hear about agricultural pursuits for that time
period. In addition, they can
settle back . for a hay ride
around the plantation.
Special hands-on activities will help children
explore life in the 1860s.
Grace Nida, a costumed
tour guide for the Capitol
Complex, will lead kids in
parlor games such as "Last
Man Standing," now called
" Musical Chairs,'' and

"Button, Button, Who's got
the Button." Children also
can learn how to make buttons and enjoy textile crafts
like knitting or weaving. ·
The hiStoric Jenkins family home will be open for
self-guided tours. Visitors
can enjoy pork barbecue
sandwiches, chips, lemonade and iced tea during the
festivities.
For more information
about
the
Homestead
Gathering at the Jenkins
Plantation Museum, contact
Matt Boggess, site manager,
at (304) 762-1059.
The Jenkins Plantation
Museum is located on
W.Va. Route 2 between
Huntington and
Point
Pleasant. A facility of the
West Virginia Division of
Culture and Hi story, the
museum features the former
home of Confederate Brig.
Gen.
Albert
Gallatin
Jenkins. The 1835 house,
built in the tradition of
Tidewater Virginia, is note-

of three wetland areas are facility in Gallia County.
Alan Stone Company's $2.3
planned for the project with
the third one being located million bid on the project was
accepted back in April. The
near the Ohio .River.
. "There's nothing like this boat ramp will include a four
in this pool of the Ohio River lane ramp into the river,
between the two dams," restroom facilities, lighting,
Smithhisler said of the size handicap accessible ramps, 73
and scope of the proposed car and trailer parking spaces,
boat ramp which is said to be 14 automobile spaces includsimilar to the KH Butler ing handicapped spaces.

Construction also includes
extending the water line for
Racine and the addition of a
fire hydrant.
Other costs for the project
fnclude $350,000 for consulting services and preliminarily
archeological surveys though
a grand total on the ongoing,
ODNR project won't be
known until it's completed.

worthy for its architecture
and was built by slaves
between 1830 and 1835. It
is listed in the National
Register of Historic Places
and on the Civil War
Discovery Trail. The muse·
urn's regular hours are
Thesdays through Saturdays
from 10 a.m. to4 p.m.

Robin Hood
Jr Theater

9/29-30
The Ohio Valley
Symphony
10/6
Mark McVey- Tenor
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
·Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

.

Serving you since 1946 with
Quality Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices.
We Honor Most Third Party
Prescription Plans
OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 :a.m. • 9:00 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Sunday • Closed

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Thursday, September 20, 2007

ALL
BUSINESS:
Leveraged
buyouts
in
question,
The Daily Sentinel
as banks struggle to sell deal-related loans
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallylefltlnel.com

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congrgs shall make no law rupecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
frte exercise thereof; or abridging the frttdom of
speech, or of the prus; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redrus of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Unprofessional
Unhappy with twtk
Dear Editor:
In response to Kathy Jeffers' letter about shoddy work on
Aug. 28, you are not alone. I also received the CHIP grant
for home repairs. At fustthey tell you you have a choice of
contractors, which you do not. then you have a choice of
flooring and trim, which you do not. They not only use
chipped wood flooring, which they did not repair the whole
· floor, only the really bad parts you could see, they use duct
tape on the seams, which you can see through the linoleum,
. that the nails are coming throtrgh:"
They ripped the linoleum moving the refrigerator back.
The flOQr trim is falling off, plumbing leaks, hand rail
falling apart, ceiling trim falling down. The list goes on.
1l1ey do not do what the list says they will do, only enough
to get by.
You do not get professional work as you are told, unless
you watch every move they make. Well, the government
paid for it. I do work every day and I pay taxes, but unless
you're tich and can pay for the work yourself, I guess that
is what we get.
Donna Meadows
MUldleport

NEW
YORK
Inve stors can forget about
breathtaking profits from
leveraged buyQuts. The
credit market 's turbulence
has all but shut down that
busi ness, perhaps for
quite so me time, and
many announced deals
may also crater.
Wall Street banks are
facing the worst credit
conditions in years as they
JrY to sell reluctant buyers
more than $'300 billion of
LBO-related
debt
to
finance . private-equity
takeovers. As a result, the
underwriters are doing
what they can to get out of
deals or are trying to force
the buyout firm s to make
concessions on the ·debt.
That 's why LBOs still in
the pipeline shouldn ' t be
considered a done deal. In ·
some cases, they seem to
be far from it.
·
Shareholders in Reddy
Ice Holdings Inc . are
learning that fast. Ju st
days ago, it looked like
the Dallas- based packaged ice maker would be
bought by GSO Capital
Partners for $31.25 a
share, a I0 percent premium above its .stock price
before the July 2 takeover
bid.
.
Now
underwriter
Morgan Stanley is trying
to get out of its financing
commitment. The sides
are
wrangling
over
whether Reddy and GSO
had the right to amend
their buyout agreement,
which was changed after
conditions in the debt
market deteriorated, without Morgan Stanley' s consent, according to a Reddy
securities filing on Sept. ·
12.

downsized to $13 billion
Morgan
Stanley
is Group.
claiming that such a move
For example, Claire's and will be sold in pieces
by the buyers "disabled Stores' senior pay-in-kind over the coming months.
themselves from satisfy- toggle notes due in 2015 The first will total only $5
ing certain conditions to · - which allows the com- bill ion, and the arrangers
Morgan St anley 's com- pany to cover its interest have the right to sell
mitment to provide the costs by issuing additional another $3 billion by year
according
to
debt financing. " accord- bonds rather than paying end,
CreditSights.
ing to the filing . Morgan cash - now trade around
KKR agreed to add a
Stanley declined further 83 cents on the dollar,
comment: Reddy dido ' t S&amp;P said. That's a 17 per- covenant to the Joan that
return a c all requesting cent haircu t si nce they will dictate how much
comment.
were originally sold in debt First ·Data can
assume relative to earnThat Morga n Stanley late May.
•
In
addition,
delved into the deal's fine
Dollar General's notes, ings .
print to try to wriggle free also due in 2015, sold for investors will be ~iven
from its financing com- 98.03 cents on the dollar "most favored nation' stamitment should raise a red in late June, but now trade tus through the end of the
flag about what's to come arou nd 91.5 cents. OSI year, which means if more
in LBOs .
Restaurant Partners' loans debt is sold at a lower
It 's a drastic change have fallen 13 percent price then the holders will
from the first six months si nce their early June be compensated, accordof this year, when the debut to now trade around ing to CreditSights.
The $5 billion portion is
in ves tment banks were 87 cents, according to
being offered at a dis·
tripping over each other to S&amp;P.
earn huge fees by underGiven the dismal state counted rate of 96 cents
writing LBOs and then of affairs, underwriters on the dollar, 4 cents
quickly unloading the are scrambling to piece below where the banks
debt
to
institutional deals .rogether. They are had originally hoped it
asking
private-equity would be priced but not as
investors.
Now. a financial world firms to make concessions low as some had expected
plagued by the surge · in on the debt that was com- in recent weeks given currisky borrowers default- mined, which would give . rent market conditions.
ing on fheir home loans investors better protection Still, if that price sets the
standard for the entire $13
has sparked fears of a in case of default.
widespread credit crisis
Consider what's gone billion loan offer, it could
and largely paralyzed on in the financing for the result in an estimated
dealings in debt markets.
$2c;i billion buyout of First $260 million in losses for
What 's more, · LBO Data Corp ., the most the underwriters, accordloans that made it to mar- closely watched loan deal ing to Robert L. Lee, a
ket before the credit col- of the year given the size credit analyst at KDP
lapse are now being bat- of the debt and the solid Investment Advisors Inc.
Clearly, the banks can't
tered, so underwriters reputation
of
the
don't have much to show Greenwood
Village, afford to take such a hit
for their past work. .
Colo.-based data proces- on every deal. While some
of their losses would be
Since May I, the aver- sor.
age price in a sample of
Buyout shop Kohlberg offset by their. underwrit15 LBO bond issues with Kravis Roberts &amp; Co. has ing fees, they must be
21 pieces has dropped to finally agreed to some looking for ways out of
90.0 I cents, a decline of changes in its loans after their underwriting com8.78 points in principal. weeks of huddled discus- mitments - just like in
Investors in those issues sions with its banks, the Reddy Ice case.
That's why stockowners
on average have lost 2.41 incl uding lead arrangers
points . of principal more Credit
Suisse
and can't rely on deals getting ·
than the market average, Citigroup.
done. Everi if a buyout
according to Standard &amp;
Instead of a $!4 billion offer is approved, don't
Poor's
Leveraged loan being brought to count the money until the
Commentary and Data market at once, it has been check clears.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day of 2007. There
are I 02 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 20, 1519, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand
Magellan and his crew set out from Spain on five ships on a
voyage to find a western passage to the Spice blands in
Indonesia. (Magellan was killed en route, but one of his
ships eventually circled the world.)
On this date:
In 1857, Delhi, India, fell to British forces
In 1870, Italian troops took control of the Papal States,
leading to the unification of Italy.
. In 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st pres. ident of the United States, succeeding the assassinated
· James A. Garfield.
· .
In 1957, Finnish composer Jean Sibelius died.
Thought for Today: "Men hate those to whom they have
to lie."- Victor Hugo; French author (1802-1885).
.
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - '

So here's the latest bulletin from the . psych
department: According to
the
journal
Nature
Neuroscience, liberals are
smarter and more adapt·
able than conservatives.
It's a scientific fact, or
what passes for one in the
world of lab rats and
mazes. Needless to say,
this discovery was greeted
with a yawn on the rustic
campus of Unsolicited
L E T E R S T 0 THE
Opinions Inc. - the oneman , five-dog think tank
where this column origi·
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less nates.
Yo, professor, tell us
tha11 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
· sig11ed, and include address and telephone number. No something we don '.t know.
: unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in
Actually, several profes· good faste, addressing issues. not per~onalities. Letters of sors at two universities,
thanks to organizations anti individuals will not be accept- New York University and
ed for publication.
University of California,
Los Angeles, concocted
this foolishness. First, the
experimenters asked stu·
dent subjects to self-iden(USPS
213-960)
tify as liberals or conse(V·
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
atives. Then they sat them
Correction Polley
Co.
at computer monitors .
Half were asked to push a
Our main concern in all stories is Ia Published ovol'( afternoon, Monday
through
Friday,
111
Cou
rt
Street.
button
every time the letbe accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Second-class
in a story. can the newsmom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
ter "M" appeared on the
992·2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
screen, but to ignore " W."
the Ohio Newspaper AsSociation.
The others were asked to
Poatmaster:
Send
address
correc~
respond
to '•W,n but ignore
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Sentin~, 111 Court
"M" - to rule OUI unrea(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
soning contempt for the
Department extensions are:
letter "W," I suppose .
Subscription Rates
Anyway, the liberals made
By carrier or motor route
News
fact-based
responses far
One month
'1 0.27
more often than conservaEditor: Chanene Hoeflich. Ext 12
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
tives, who tended to react
Reporter: Brian Reed, E~et. 14
Senior Citizen rates
every time they saw any
Aeponer: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
letter, like a chimpanzee
One year
'103.90
trying to tune in the Ru~h
Advertising
Subscribers should remit in advaroe
Limbaugh
program on a
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ex1. 15 direct to the Daity Sentinel. No subcar
radio
.
·
scri p tion by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis , Ext 16 where home carrier service is avail"S tronge r liberalism,''
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
they wrote, "was correlat·
ed with greater accuracy."
Mail Subscription
The experimenters conGeneral Manager
lnaide·Melgs County
cluded
that,"(l)iberals are
Cha ~ene Hoeflich. Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
more responsive to infor·
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'127.11
mationa]
.
complexity,
E-mail:
ambiguity
and
novelty,"
news@mydailysentinel .com
Outalda Meigs County
while "a more conserva13 Weeks
'53.55
tive
orientation is related
Web :
26Weeks
'107.10
to greater persi stence in a
52 Weeks
'214.21•
www.myda1lysentinel.com
habitual respon se pattern,

T

EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007

·Deaths
Mary Alice Bise
REEDSVILLE - Mary Alice Bise, 93, of Reedsville,
died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2007 at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.

Local Briefs
God's NET evening service
POMEROY - God's NET Youth Center Ministry is hav.ing Sunday evening worship at the Mulberry Community
Center in the gymnasium. Called "Sunday Evening
Blessings" the service begins at 7 p.m. every Sunday. This
is an ecumenical worship service designed for all people.

Bass tournament slated
POMEROY - The Meigs· County Council on Aging is
sponsoring a Buddy Bass Tournament at the Pomeroy
Levee O!J. Oct. 14 to raise money for the home delivered
meals program.
The event will get underway at 7 a.m. and conclude at 4
p.m. The entry fee is $70 per boat with prizes to be awarded in five places $1,200 for first, $720 for second, $400 for
third, $320 for fourth , and $160 for fifth.
Copies of the · rules and regulations for the tournament
· and applications for participation are available from the
Meigs County Council on Aging.

Benefit auction set for Saturday
·

.

POMEROY - An auction sale to benefit the Meigs
County Historical Society's museum operation will be held
at the fairgrounds beginning at I 0 a.m.
Amorig the many items ~o be auctioned off is Volume I
·of the Meigs County History which carries a reserve of
. $200. Items for the sale are still being accepted and can be
, brought to the fairgrounds Friday or before the sale gets
underway on Saturday.
Books, good furniture and appliances, and many miscellaneous items will be for sale.

Association plans fish fry
. WILKESVILLE - The annual fisjJ fry dinner of the
: Wilkesville Firemen's Association will be held at the
Wilkesville Community Center on Oct. 6 with serving from
· II a.m. to 3 p.m.
Proceeds from the dinner will go to support the
Wilkesville Township Volunteer Firemen's Association,
Inc. Donations will also be accepted at that time toward the
· cost of a new fire truck which arrived in January and will
. be on display for the public to see. This is the first new
truck for the Wilkesville department since 1980.
Donations can also be mailed to the Wilkesville
Township Volunteer Firemen's Association, Inc., P.O. Box
180, Wilkesville, Ohio 45695 c/o Don Newsom, treasurer.

For the Record
Highway Patrol

Are liberals smarter?
NYU and UCLA students
to
self-identify,
then
assigning specious objectivity to those declarations,
resembles . the
learned
"projectors"
in the
Gene
third voyage of Swift's
Lyons
"Gulliver's
Travels,"
gravely distilling sunbeams out of cucumbers.
In politics', context is all.
despite signals that this In, say, 1970, the same
response pattern should study would have h~d very
change."
different results. At this
According to the Los moment
in
history,
Angeles Times, assistant Bushism has knocked the
professor David Amodio liberal - versus-conservaof NYU , "explained the tive debate totally out of
difference in terms of a whack. On overwhelmingcommuter who drives the ly liberal campuses like
same way home from NYU and UCLA, persons
work every day. If he 's a calling themselves "con"
liberal, he is more likely servatives" are more liketo be alert to a detour. If ly Bush dead-enders. That
he ' s a conservative, he' s is, they're quite like the
more like] y to, well, stay (left-wing)
sheep
in
the course."
Orwell 's "Animal Farm,"
Now as political com- chanting, " Four legs good,
mentary, this strikes me as two legs bad!" to drown
plausible . Last time I out criticism of Comrade
checked, the Bush admin- Napoleon, the head pig.
istration had floated eight
Conservatism as a politor nine contradictory ical philosophy has nothrationales for invading ing to do with the presiand occupying Iraq , start- dency of George W. Bush.
ing with make-believe Don't take my word for it.
nuclear weapons, bestow- Read conservative pundits .
ing the gift of democracy such as George Will or
on our grateful Middle Patrick Buchanan on the
Eastern brethren , standing futility of the Iraq war.
up until they sit down (or Former
Nixon White
whatever it was), all House official John Dean
trending
toward
the has made a veritable
inevitable destination of &lt;_:areer out of warning
"exterminate
all
the against the decay of
brutes." Few loyalists Republican principles into
appear to have noticed.
an authoritarian cult of
But prese nted as science personality.
in a periodical otherwise
" For more than 40
devoted to articles titled years," Dean writes, "I
"Activation of EGFR and have con sidered myself a
ER K by rhomboid signal- 'Goldwater conservative,'
ing regulates the consoli- and am thoroughly famil dation and maintenance of iar with the movement's
sleep in Droso phila?" canon. But I can find noth(Fruit flies sleep? Who ing conservative about the
knew?) Give me a break. Bush/Cheney
White
To begin with, "liberal " House, which has created
and "conservative" are a Nixon 'imperial presisubjective terms with no dency ' on steroids, while
fixed niea nin g. Askin g acting as if being tutored

by the best and brightest
of the Cosa Nostra."
Dean's
book
"Conservatives Without
Conscience" summarizes
the psychological evidence, arguing that the
predominant wings of
today 's GOP Biblebeating fundamentalists
and
neo.c onservati ve
empire-builders - exhibit
similar personality types.
Followers think tribally,
submitting to political or
religious authority mostly
from
fear:
"(T)hey
become very aggressive in
pushing that world view of
that authority. .. . It helps
them remove the ambiguities of life. And if they're
frightened by events, then
this gives them a sense of
security,"
Authoritarian leaders,
Dean contends, "are typically men whose desire in
life is to dominate others
and to be in charge. .. .
They are highly manipulative. They are also people
who have absolutely no
appreciation of equality of
others. They see themselves as superior, and
they are amoral in their
thinking."
Sound like anybody we
know?
Like Orwell 's sheep,
cultists can't change their
minds no matter · how
badly their theories fare in
the visible world. To alier
course is to show weakness .
So, yeah, the Nature
Neuroscience team measured something real. It
just wasn't conservatism.
(Arkansas Democrat·
Ga zette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national maga·
zine award winner and coauthor of "The Hunting of
the
President"
(St.
Martin:~ Press, 2000). You
can e-mail Lyons at gene·
lyons2 @sbcglobal.net.)

POINT ROCK -A Gallipolis woman was injured in a
motorcycle accident on Ohio 689 un Sunday, the ·Gallia. Mei~s Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Wtlma C. Gooch, 48, I 127 Ohio 588, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by the Vinton County EMS following the 12:06 p.m. accident, according to the patrol.
Troopers said Gooch was northbound in Columbia
. Township when she failed to navigate a lefr ·curve with the
motorcycle she rode. The motorcycle went off the right side
· of the road and Gooch jumped while it was still moved.
· The motorcycle then struck some brush and a tree before
coming to a stop, the report said. The motorcycle had disabling d&amp;mage.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Iran president asks to lay wreath
at ground zero, request denied
BY PAT MILTON
ASSOciATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad asked pennission to lay a wreath at the
World Trade Center site
when he comes to New York
City next week, but the
request was denied, a police
official said Wednesday.
The U.S. also has denied a
visa to Iran's United Nations
ambassador in Geneva to
attend next week's General
Assembly meeting because
he was involved in the 1979
U.S. hostage crisis, a U.N.
official said.
Ahmadinejad , who is
arriving Sunday to address
the United Nations' General
Assembly, had asked this
month for permission to
visit the site of the Sept. I I,
200 I , terrorist attacks,
police spokesman Paul
Browne said.
·
The request to enter the
fenced-in site was rejected
because of ongoing construction there, Browne said.
"Requests for the Iranian
president to visit the
immediate area would also
b~ opposed bY. the NYPD
on security grounds,"
Browne said.
The U.S. ambassador . to
the United Nations, Zalmay
Khalilzad, told reporters
Wednesday that the United
States would not support
Iran's attempt to use the site
fur a "photo op."
"Iran can demonstrate its
seriousness ·about concern
with regard to terrorism by
taking concrete actions,"
such as dropping support
for Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah and suspending
their uranium enrichment
program, Khalilzad said.
Browne
said
Ahmadinejad had asked

AP photo

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. left, addresses
the media as he leaves the parliament after delivering a
report of his activities on Iran's fourth development plan
during an open session of parliament in Tehran, Iran,
Tuesday. Ahmadinejad on Tuesday shrugged off a French
watning of war if lrari develops a nuclear weapon, saying the
comments were not to be taken seriously.
permission from the Port
Aut)lority of New York and
New Jersey, U.S. Secret
Service and police department. The police and the
Secret Service provide
security to visiting heads
of state .
The Port Authority, which
owns the trade center site
and is the only agency that
could grant permission to
go inside, said it attended a
meeting with police regarding dignitary visits, not
specifically
about
Ahmadinejad. At that meeting, it was determined that
no dignitaries would be
allowed inside the site due
to ongoing construction,
said
Port
Authority
spokesman Steve Coleman.
It wasn't clear whether
Ahmadinejad wanted to
descend to the base of the
trade center site, where the
'twin towers once stood, or
Jay a wreath on a public
sidewalk outside the site.

Mohammad Mir Ali
Mohammadi, spokesman
for the Iranian mission to
the U.N., said he was not
notified otlically
that
Ahmadinejad would not be
allowed at the site, but said
it was unfortunate.
"President Ahmadinejad
intended to lay a wreath at
the site of ground zero in
order to pay tribute to the
victims of the terrorists
attack of Sept. 11 , 200 I. We
are hopeful that we can still
work something out with the
police department," he said.
White House spokesman
Gordon Johndroe said a
visit to ground zero "is a
matter for the city of New
York, but it seems more
than odd that the president
of a country that is a state
sponsor of terror would visit
ground zero."
It was not clear what role
Ali Reza Moaiyeri, Iran's
U.N.
ambassador
in
Geneva, played in the 1979

Pilot Club's antique sale set for Sept. 28-30
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- For the 55th year, the
Pilot Club of Huntington
will bring its annual
Antiques Show &amp; Sale to the
Big Sandy Superstore Arena
tm Sept. 28, 29 and 30.
Pilot Club is a service
organization and is part of
Pilot Club International.
Individual clubs select and
direct theor own civic and
service projects. In recent
years, Pilot Club funds have
supported many local projects,
such
as
the
Alzheimer's Association,
Branches,Faith in Action,
Hospice House (to . name
only a few) to enhance services' to community member with disadvartages and ·
disabilities and the elderly.

Members of the club also Services Organization. This niture, pottery, porcelains,
donate generously of their equipment was donated by cut glass, linen, clocks, jewPilotr
Club
of elry and more. The show, as
time to local organizations to the
always will be very diversigive back to our community. Huntington.
The Pilot Club Antiques fied with something of
Project Lifesaver is an
example of one of its Show &amp; Sale's hours are interest for everyone.
endeavcm. This is an active 6:30 to · 9 p.m. Friday, 10
Licensed
appraisers
locating system thai .relies a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and Roger and Steve Mullins,
on technology and a spe- nNoon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. will be on site Sunday from
cially trained search and If you want a "first peek" at noon to 4 p.m. to evaluate
rescue team to locate per- all the fine tiems and the your heirloom pieces also
sons with mental disorders first opportunity to buy, (limit two per customer at
who might wander away then the Preview Party on $5 for each item).
·
Friday evening is a must do.
from their caregivers.
For ·more information.
People enrolled in this Tickets sell for $15 for the call (304) 522-3747 or
program wear a personal- party and are good all week- (304) 522-0998.
Ized bracelet that emits a end. Tickets for both
tracking signal to special- Saturday and Sunday are $6
ized equipment maintained per seron.
.'?-1\N C14&gt;J'
Over 40 select dealers
by the Cabell County
Q;,~ 1\
0
Sheriff's
Department, from I I states and West
..-r:
I r' '
);-L,:..l
,' '
~
~
EMS/9- I -I, and Cabell Virginia will be atten~ing to
._:·::
~
;:;
bring
you
their
finest
in
furCounty
Community
~ /

~ ~: ql
.,. ):-

·Ramp
from PageA1
lot has been brought up to
grade and will be ready for
its base in a few weeks.
· Wetland areas near the road
at the ramp 's entrance have
also been dug though a total

.•

-----··-·····-·-····-··· .

.HSO announces opening weekend
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- although the puppets will
The Huntington Symphony only accompany Sunday's
Orchestra announces its performance for the children.
opening weekend at .the Saturday night's performance
Keith Albee Performing Arts will also include Bernstein's
Center beginning Saturday, "Candide Overture," Ravel 's
"Mother Goose Suite" and
Sept. 22 at 8 p.m.
Saturday night's concert, Stravinsky's "Fire Bird
"Once Upon a Time," is the Suite."
Season tickets are still
first event of the 2007-08
available
at a · 10 percent
winter season . Tbe firstever Children's Concert is discount; individual prices
on Sunday, Sept. 23 at 3 for Saturday night range
p.m., featuring I 0· foot tall from $16 to $31 ; college
puppets accompanied by the students will be admitted
free with a valid ID for the
orchestra.
The story of "Peter and opening weekend. Tickets
the Wolf' will be narrated for the Children's Concert
by Carrie Cline from are $5 for kids, $10 for
· WSAZ· TV. There will be an adults. Tickets may be pur. activity hour in the lobby chased on the website.
The HSO is also pleased to
. beginning at 2pm including
art projects and a mustcal announce a pre-concert
reception with wine and
· instrument "petting zoo."
The HSO is particularly cheese included at Rocco's
excited about performing in 21 Cluh just across the street
its new home and presenting from the Keith. The reception
a new event. the Children's begins at 6:30 p.m. and the
· Coocert.
The
season, cost is $I 5 per person. These
Symphonic Tales opens with receptions will precede each
music from legendaty stones. winter season concert and
"Peter and the Wolf' by take place at downtown busi·
Prokotlev will be performed nesses. Details for each my
and narrated both days, be found on the website.

hostage cnsts. The U.N.
official who said his visa
was denied spoke on condition of anonymity because
there has been no public
announcement.
Richard
Grenell ,
spokesman for the U.S .
Mission to the United
Nations, said, "although we
don't comment about specific
visa cases we certainly would
not allow a person into the
United States who has taken
Americans as hostages."
Iran and the U.S. have not
had diplomatic relations
since Washington cut its ties
with Tehran during the
hostage crisis in'which U.S. ·
diplomats
were
held
hostage for 444 days. The
Bush administration has
accused Iran of arming
Shiite Muslim militants in
Iraq and seeking to develop
nuclear weapons.
In a television appearance
earlier
this
week,
Ahmadinejad said his country wanted peace and
friendship with the United
States, as tensions contin.ued to mount between the
two countries.
The deputy commander
of Iran's air force said
Wednesday that plans have
been drawn up to bomb
Israel if the Jewish state ·
attacks Iran, according to
the semiofficial Fars ntws
agency.
.
The United States and its
key European allies are calling for a new round of U.N.
sanctions against Iran over
its disputed nuclear program, but Russia has
warned against the use of
force in Iran and opposes
new ·sanctions to punish
Tehran.
Associated Press Writer
Edith M. Lederer COil·
tributed to this report from
the United Nations.

Pt:Rff)R.\1"1; "-RTS CE'illU.

Homestead celebration·set for Sept. 22
GREENBOTTOM, W.Va.
- The Jenkins Plantation
Museum, located in the
Green Bottom Wildlife
Management Area of Cabell
County, will celebrate its
172nd year at the annual
Homestead Gathering on
Saturday, Sept. 22, from II
a.m. until 4 p.m. The day's
activities are free and open
to the public.
•
Visitors can enjoy presentations Gf costumed craftsmen, including a woodworker. They also can see
1800s-era farming equipment and hear about agricultural pursuits for that time
period. In addition, they can
settle back . for a hay ride
around the plantation.
Special hands-on activities will help children
explore life in the 1860s.
Grace Nida, a costumed
tour guide for the Capitol
Complex, will lead kids in
parlor games such as "Last
Man Standing," now called
" Musical Chairs,'' and

"Button, Button, Who's got
the Button." Children also
can learn how to make buttons and enjoy textile crafts
like knitting or weaving. ·
The hiStoric Jenkins family home will be open for
self-guided tours. Visitors
can enjoy pork barbecue
sandwiches, chips, lemonade and iced tea during the
festivities.
For more information
about
the
Homestead
Gathering at the Jenkins
Plantation Museum, contact
Matt Boggess, site manager,
at (304) 762-1059.
The Jenkins Plantation
Museum is located on
W.Va. Route 2 between
Huntington and
Point
Pleasant. A facility of the
West Virginia Division of
Culture and Hi story, the
museum features the former
home of Confederate Brig.
Gen.
Albert
Gallatin
Jenkins. The 1835 house,
built in the tradition of
Tidewater Virginia, is note-

of three wetland areas are facility in Gallia County.
Alan Stone Company's $2.3
planned for the project with
the third one being located million bid on the project was
accepted back in April. The
near the Ohio .River.
. "There's nothing like this boat ramp will include a four
in this pool of the Ohio River lane ramp into the river,
between the two dams," restroom facilities, lighting,
Smithhisler said of the size handicap accessible ramps, 73
and scope of the proposed car and trailer parking spaces,
boat ramp which is said to be 14 automobile spaces includsimilar to the KH Butler ing handicapped spaces.

Construction also includes
extending the water line for
Racine and the addition of a
fire hydrant.
Other costs for the project
fnclude $350,000 for consulting services and preliminarily
archeological surveys though
a grand total on the ongoing,
ODNR project won't be
known until it's completed.

worthy for its architecture
and was built by slaves
between 1830 and 1835. It
is listed in the National
Register of Historic Places
and on the Civil War
Discovery Trail. The muse·
urn's regular hours are
Thesdays through Saturdays
from 10 a.m. to4 p.m.

Robin Hood
Jr Theater

9/29-30
The Ohio Valley
Symphony
10/6
Mark McVey- Tenor
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
·Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

.

Serving you since 1946 with
Quality Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices.
We Honor Most Third Party
Prescription Plans
OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 :a.m. • 9:00 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Sunday • Closed

�PageA6

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thur~day,

September 20, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

OU presents free live

Don't let relationship choices rule

broadcast of 'La Boheme'

BY KATHY MtTCHB.L
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: Recently our
daughter moved to our
town. She is divorced and
has two children. We provided for them for six
months and never asked for
any money. We wanted her
to have her own place, so
we bought an older home
with the agreement that she
would pay us only the
amount of the j monthly
mongage.
We filled ort regular rental
forms, which she signed,
stating that the only ones living in the house would be
her and her two children.
The very frrst day she moved
in, she had a guy stay
overnight. Sometimes he
stays several days at a time.
Should we ask that he pay
the difference between what
we are charging her and
what we would charge
someone else to rent the
house? My daughter says
she can do whatever she
pleases because she is paymg what we agreed on. But
we never, agreed she could
have a guy living there.
Please give us your advice.
-New Mexico
Dear N.M.: If the lease
states that she cannot have
anyone else living there, it

doesn't mean you can
charge more rent. It means
you ~an evict her for violating the lease. However, we
don't believe you want to
throw her out. And frankly,
you shouldn' t be overly
involved in her relationship
choices. She's a grown
woman and she is going to
have bor,friends, some of
whom wtll spend the night.
Instead, try impressing
upon her the poor example
she is setting for her children and the emotional
harm she may be doing by
having a man sleep over
when there is no commitment in place. (Perhaps you
can offer to have the kids
stay with you on some of
those evenings when she
wants male company.)
Dear Annie: A few years
ago, my beautiful wife lost a
mammoth amount of weight
by being careful with her
diet and adopting a very
active lifestyl~ , which
mcluded a great deal of
walking. However, she has
since regained 'nearly all of
what she lost and now
spends most of her waking
hours sitting in front of the
computer.
I love her and would like
to be able to spend many
more years together in good
health. I worry daily that

she is heading straight for
cancer, heart problems,
and/or disability. Surely she
realizes the state that she
hitS placed herself in, and I
am concerned that if I raise ·
the issue, she will resent it.
Is there any point telling
her of my grave concerns'/
- Troubled Husband · ·
Dear Husband: Of course
she will resent.it because she
knows she has re!iained the
weight, but health IS a legitimate issue for spouses to discuss. Tell your wife how
much you love her and ask
what you can do to help her
maintain her health. Don't
criticize her current shape.
Suggest she get into an exercise program with you. Also,
offer to cook dinner and prepare low-cal meals. The rest
IS up to her.
Dear Annie: I applaud
your response to "Torn in
Michigan ," regarding the
loss of her daughter. I, too,
am a grieving mother who
lost my oldest son at the a~e
of 19. I hope "Tom" w11I
contact
Compassionate
Friends as you suggested. I
found them very caring. It
makes no difference how the
child died or at what age.
One additional piece of
advice I would like to give
"Torn" is that everyone
mourns differently and

ATHENS
Ohio
lHlderstanding that makes University is showing a
living a bit easier. I also free, I i ve broadcast of
sought help from my family Washington
National
doctor, who prescribed Opera's edgy new producmedication to get me tion of Puccini's "La
through some very hard Boheme" at I :30 p.m.
times. We just passed the Sunday. Se~t. 23.
14th anniversary of my ·
Ohio Umversity is one of
son's death, and although 32 schools across the coundifficult, with the help of try presenting the live
my friends and family, we simulcast from the Opera
move on. My son is never House stage at The
forgotten, yet I am once K.ennedy
Center
in
again a happy wife to my Washington, D.C.
husband and mother to both
This event is the largest
of my sons, Chris in heaven simultaneous viewing ·of an
and · Jeremy on earth. ·opera in the world , with the
Charlestown, Ind.
possibility of more than
Dear Charlestown: We 45,000 viewers, Because
know it must have taken a admission is free and open
great deal of strength to to the public , organizers
write this letter. Please - hope that the production
know it surely will help oth- will open the doors to the
ers who are facing such a world of opera for younger,
terrible loss. Bless you.
first-time audiences while
Annie's Mailbox is writ- also attracting seasoned
ten bl Kathy Mitchell and opera fans.

Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions · to anniesmailbox@comcast. net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find oui more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at ww.w.creators.com.
/

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 24
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media center.
·
POMEROY -Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - · Meigs
County Library Board, 3
· p.m., Pomeroy Library.
. Thesday, Sept. 25
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee, II: 30
a.m., conference room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular meeting, 7
p.m., Rutland Civic Center.

·Clubs and
Qrganizations
Thursday, Sept. 20
RACINE
- Regular
meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge #164, 7:30 p.m .
Officers anticipate discussion on dues costs for the
upcoming year. All members are encouraged to
attend. Those with examinaHons that need to be
returned in any degree may
do so at this meeting.
Anypne with questions contact lodge officer.

Digital photography exhibit opens :
'

. been exhibited around the 1

country and is enjoyed by i
people of all ages and back- ~
grounds.
.
.
Klutenkamper is known &gt;
for her photographs of ~ ·
women who are set in :
depersonalized domestic ;
spaces. The images do not ~
show the women's faces or ~
the individual characteris- "
tics. The settings in the :
images often represent feel- 1
ings such as isolation, anxi- !
ety despair. while still ·:
adding to the beauty of the :
artworks.
!
The
exhibit
will
be
on
•
.
'
display at the Greer ,;
Museum until Oct. 12. The •
museum is open to the pub- ~
lie from I to 5 p.m. ~
Tuesdays through Sundays, :
and admission is free .
~
For more information, :
call Allen at (800) 282- :
7201.
•

-a --.... ..

''Here's
---·-llolr-·--Our
..•., ,_..,.
Card''

.•••
•••

•••
••
•
••

m

Clbtlllifr6~

Special advertising page found only in
the

Auxiliary remembers soldier

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
tallipoU' latl~ lrlbttnt
l}olnt·l)Iea,ant leuister
Tbi.s is a special page which will be published SeptemhA••
28th. Do you know how many phone caDs the Area
Chamber of Commerce, as weD as the newspapers and
other businesses ~il'e asking for the .name of a
plumber~ contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc.
This spec:ial section wiD be easier to use than a regular
directory and cards will be arranged by category.
We wiU be glad to use th~ information on .y9ur business
card or we can create one for you.

Linda McTurnerjphoto •

The Racine American Legion Auxiliary Post 602 recently remembered soldier Tom Brougher ,
who is serving in Iraq by mailing him a care package. The care package included food and
phone cards to phone home. Pictured is Julie Campbell, president of the auxiliary with the
items of the care package. Brougher is the son of Bev (Price) Brougher formerly of Portland.
Cards can be sent to Tom at LCPL, Brougher, Thomas, Keith, 3/ l .Kilo Co., WPNSPLT.. Unit
40230, FPOAP, 96610-0230.

Think bow long it would take you to band out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is cali740.992--21SS
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be September 26. 2007

Submitted photo

Flanked by Civil War re-enactors, President Lincoln greets Frederick Douglass in one of the historical re-creations to
be found at the 144th Gallia County Emancipation Proclamation celebration this weekend.

I 44th Gallia County
Emancipation Celebration

.

.

School and
Youth

CARE catfish tournament ....~
slated for Saturday

•'

RIO GRANDE- A new
art exhibit at the Greer
Museum at the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College has
opened.
The exhibit, "Domicile,"
is by art\st Allyson
Klutenkamper, who works
in digital photography
prints. Klutenkamper is an
acclaimed artist who also
teaches at Shawnee State
University. She is also
·active with the Society for
Photographic Education.
"Her work is beautiful,"
said James Allen, a .fine arts
professor at Rio Grande.
Allen added that the artist's
work is also very conceptual and very pertinent.
Klutenkamper earned her
MFA from the University of
Notre Dame and earned her
BFA from the University of
Missouri. Her work has

Thursday, September 20, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

:

,........

Church events

Daily Sentinel ·

i

.. .·----.

Reunions

Page A7 • The

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742-2372 or Lisa McDaniel,
CHESTER
Shade p.m. Public invited.
992-6985.
Saturd!ly, Sept. 22
River Lodge will hold speSTIVERS VILLE
cial meeting, 7 p.m. for the
Community •
purpose of conferring Stiversville
Entered Apprentice degree Church, community picnic, '
on
two
candidates. 4:30p.m. with gospel sing.
Sunday, Sept. 23
Sunday Sept. 23
• RACINE
Refreshments,
- Edna Knopp
POMEROY
- Jerry · will observe her 90th binhMonday, Sept. 24·
POMEROY- A meeting Frederick will be at the day on Sept. 23. Cards may
of the OH-KAN Coin Club Laurel Cliff Free Methodist be sent to her at 49880
will be held at 7 p.m. at the Church preaching at 10 Portland Road, Racine.
Pomeroy Library. An update a.m. and 6 p.m.
STIVERS VILLE
will be given on the dct. 7
coin show to be held at 'me Stiversville Community
Church, Portlanq, revival
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
Sunday service, 10 a.m. and
Monday through Thursday,
7 p.m. with Sherri and Bill
Villers.
Saturday, Sept. 22
, POMEROY- Mt. Union
RACINE - · Thomas and Baptist · Church, "New
CIIIH,
Isabelle Stobart family Creation" concert, 6:30
S
'5
-n-'117
reunion will be held at I p.m., 39091 Carpenter Hill
L
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Take Road.
........... _ . ....a... ........
covered dish and family hisSunday, Sept. 30
tory and photos.
REEDSVILLE
"Delivered" to sing at
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
.. J . . .._..=
Friday, Sept. 21
POMEROY - Outdoor
hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church, State Route
143, 7 p.m. featuring Chuck
· Compton, Gospel Bluegrass
Sunday, Sept. 23
Gentlemen,
Jamie
RUTLAND
The
Humphrey and Valerie Rutland Youth League will
Clonch. Take lawn chairs.
be holding a meeting at the
POMEROY- There will Rutland Fire Department 3
I
be a community dinner at the . p.m. to elect pfficers, new
Pomeroy Unit~d Methodist coaches and discuss next
Church, serving a baked season. For those who have
stead dinner from 4:30 to 6 questions call Danny David,

Birthdays

The event will take place
in the Ohio Uni versl'ty
Baker Center Ballroom.
The opera is a human •
drama of loss and love, as •
the characters struggle with
their careers and connecting i
with each other in a world :
that is increasingly techno!- :
ogy driven. It is part of :
effons by the Washington :
National Opera to broaden ~
the appeal of opera and to :
introduce opera to the next :
generation.
:
Said Kenneth Feinberg, •
president of Washington :
National Opera, "We are :
excited to use simulcast :
technology to give the gift :
of opera to the American :
public in a way that has ; ·
never been done before." ~
President Roderick J. :
McDavis and First Lady •
Deborah McDavis will be :
attending the live perfor- :
mance in Washington.
~

Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
SATURDAY. SEPT, 22
Opening ceremony, 10:30 a.m.
Welcome - Andrew Gibnore,
President
Invocation - The Rev. Calvin
Minnis
' Song - Negro National Anthem,
sung by the Rev. Calvin Minnis
Pledge o~Ailegiance- Raymond
Cousms
·
Solo - Mark Miller
Offering
Special Remarks - Historical
Re-enactors
Solo - Mark Miller
Praise Team Dancers from
Portsmouth
Recognition of Poster Contest
Winners by Karen syrague
Afternoon program, :30 p.m.
Welcome - Glenn Miller
Karaoke - Under the direction. of
Jeff North

Special Music - Burlington Male
Chorus
·
.
·
Emancipation Story - "Free At
Last"
Introduction of Speaker- Andrew
Gilmore
Keynote Speaker - Harold Mills,
Chief Executive Officer, Zero
Chaos
Offeling
.
Closing Remarks - Glenn Miller
Homecoming Reception, everyone
·welcome
Dance following reception
SUNDAY. SEri. 23
Morning worsbip service, 10 a.m.
Weclome -Andrew Gilmore,
President
Music selection -- Combined Choir
under the direction of Joanne Bass
Devotional - Deacon Glenn Miller
Music - Brothers in Spirit from
Columbus
Offering

Music - Brothers in Spirit
Introduction of Minister - Glenn
Miller, Vice President
Sennon - The Rev. Wayne
McLaughlin, Zion Baptist
Church, Chillicothe
. Afternoon program,l:30 p.m.
Welcome/Special Remarks- ·
Andrew Gilmore
Special Music - Brothers in Spirit
Recognition of Dignitaries Andrew Gilmore
Recognition of Emancipation Board
- Andrew Gilmore
.Scholarship Presentation- Arthur
Clark
Music - Dr. J.W. Smith, Ohio
University
Offering
Introduction of Speaker - Dr. Carl
Denbow, Ohio University
Keynote Speaker- Dr. David
Zang, author/biographer
Music - Brothers in Spirit
Closing Remarks - Andrew
Gilmore

MASON, W.Va.- Don't
put up those fishing poles
JUSt yet.
Just because summer is
winding 'down and fall is
nearly here doesn't mean
there isn't a chalice to get
in some quality, lastminute fishing .
With the Bend Area
CARE
Fall
Catfish
Tournament Saturday, Sept.
22, that chance is available.
Not only will you get in
good fishing time, but you
also · will be supporting a
good cause, as proceeds from
the event are going to the
CARE Christtnas toy drive,
which will benefit needy chil,
dren and other charity causes.
According to Jason
Roush, tournament director,
this tournament is smaller
than the organization's
annual Spring Catfish
Tournament and has been
around for about 10 years.
Roush stressed the importance of the tournament's
charity as a reason for people to come out and fish.
"We are hoping to make
enough money to supply
four families with a
Christmas. We provide food
and everything for the families," Roush said. "This is
not our biggest charity, but
it really helps."
Roush added that the fall
tournament is different than
the spring because there are
no teams, which means as
many people can fish on one
boat as they want, compared
to the spring tournament,
during which only two people are allowed on one boat.
"A bunch of people could
come out and sit on a boat
and just have a fun, great
day of fishing," Roush said:
To participate in the tour-

nament and be on a boat, a·
legal fishing license is ·
required. The boat and···
equipment mu st also be ·
DNR and Coast Guard ;.
approved. Life jackets are :·
required to be worn during ·'·
takeoff on the morning of the··.
tournament. All fishermen
must leave in a boat from the ·!
Mason Levy. There will be ..
no bank fishing permitted, as ,:
all fishing must be done-"
from a boat. Each boat will
be assigned a starting posi- ,·
tion by a random drawing of ' ·
all entries that were received r:
Sept. 12, and all other entries
will be assigned boat num- ':
bers as entries are received. ·
There will be no mini- "
mum lenllths established for '
eligible fish. All species of "
catfish are legal and can be •
weighed. Only one catfish ·
per fisherman will be ·
weighed. The fish must be·
alive in order to be weighed. ~
Cash prizes will be award- ~
ed to wmners. To enter, each ·
individual fisherman must
fill out an application; they '
also must provide the name ·
of the boat owner on the
application. Applicatiops
can be picked up at Roush's •
Body Sho~ and Nationwide _•
Insurance m Mason.
Check-in . for the tournament will be 6-7:45 a.m.
Every participant · must :
check in at the registration
table prior to the beginning
of the tournament and
check-In with tournament :
officials by 3 p.m. in order ;,
to get fish weighed. All ·
boats will be inspected and
marked before the event ,
begins. Fishing hours will
be 8 a.m.-3 p.m., with the .
scales set to open at 2 p.m.
For more information, call ·
Roush at (304) 882-2456.

Jackson Apple Festival ends Saturday ~.
is all free.
Featured are apples, ·
homemade apple butter .
made on the streets, apple '
pies, apple jelly, apple ·
dumplings, apple sauce,
candy and caramel apples,
apple cider and apple JUice.
The festival has four
parades, including the grand
final parade at 7:45 p.m.
Saturday, the largest lighted
parade in Ohio.

JACKSON -The 2007
Jackson County Apple
Festival continues through
Saturday on seven city blocks
of downtown Jackson.
Bags of apples and jugs of
cider from the orchards of
Jackson County set the scene
for the 67th annual festival.
The annual event draws
some 210,000 people from
the surrounding area, states,
and all over the U.S. and it

.•
'

. Entertainm-ent Briefs
'Spiritual
, Visions' on
display
GALLIPOLIS
"Spiritual Visions With a
Twist:
Artworks
of
Margaret McAdams and
Mairyann Wrentmore" will
be on display in the gallery
of the French Art Colony,
530 First Ave., Gallipolis,
from Aug. 31 until Sept. 28.
McAdams' three-dimensional vessels depict human
and animal form, from her
"Cinerary Urns," symbolizing Egyptian goddesses in
the style of Tutelar_y urns
(once used to contat.n specific internal organs of each
deity/.godi:less), to her Dyad
series,
representing
a
humanistic and animalistic
side of the human spirit.
Wrentmore's vivtd symbols and depictions stem
from studying Shamanism
and mythology, deepening .
her understanding of .life .
"Symbols are the language
used to give clues to hidden
meanings from Shamanic
journeys or dreams," and she
binds these symbols iiito the
composition of her works.
More information about
the FAC and its upcoming
events can be found at
www.FrenchArtColony.org
or by calling (740) 4463834. The Ohio Arts
Counqil helped fund this
program or organization
with state tax dollars to
encourage
economic
growth, educational excellence and cultural enrich•

ment for all Ohioans.
Local sponsors for this
exhibit are Steve Chapman,
CPA, and Willis Funeral
Home.

. Fiber Guild
workshop
GALLIPOLIS -- The
Woolen
Willow
from
Williamstown, W.Va., will
be the feature fiber artists
for the Appalachian Ohio
Fiber Guild on Saturday,
Sept. 22 at the French Art
Colony, second floor, from
I to 4 p.m.
. They will give an
overview of their successful
business, the history of the
art of rug hooking and a
workshop. The cost of the
class will be $30 and this
includes a kit and hook.
This workshop is open to
both members and nonmembers of the fiber guild.
For more infonnation, contact Marlene Gruetter at
256-1866
or
(7 40)
info@trfohio.com.

Biker benefit
POMEROY
The
Inaugural All-Ohio Valley
Bikers Berlefit Run begins
at the same time in both
Pomeroy and Marietta and
benefits two local charities,
including God's NET and
Old Man Rivers of Wood
County.
Tile first bike is out at I I
a.m. on Saturday at both the
Pomeroy parking lot and
S&amp;P Harley Davidson in

The show begins at 7 p.m.
Call (304) 273-3228 for
Marietta, with the last bike
and
tickets are $10 for adult
out by I p.m. Bikers leaving more information.
and
$5
for kids. The show is
from each destination will
said to feature professional
follow two separate paths
wrestlers with all the chairwith both ending_ at the
and stage-diving
throwing
National Guard Armory on
POR1LAND -The Ohio
the
crowd
can handle .
Front Street in Marietta.
River Producer's Horse
The last bike is due in at Show Series continues with · Tite crowd is also encourthe armory hy 5 p.m., where the arena opening for aged to participate by makthere will be live music, warm ups at I 0 a.m: this· ing signs and cheering their
auctions, cash prizes and Saturday and the show favorites (or not so
drawings as well as food. beginning at II a.m. at the favorites) from ringside.
All proceeds benefit the two Portland Show Arena.
charities which help less
This Saturday's show also
fortunate children and fami- includes reining exhibitions
lies by providing food , during intermission, which
NELSONVILLE
clothing and the necessities are free for particiP.ants. Stuart's Opera House and
for life and both are 501(3) There is a $3 per horse the Hocking Valley Scenic
and
tax grounds fee and the majori- Railway will be hosting a
c
exempt
deductible. ·
ty of entry fees for each square dance on Saturday
There are severai motor- event are $2, with open from 8 to II f .m. in the
cycle clubs from throughout poles and.open barrels cost- parking · lot o the train
the Ohio Valley which are mg $5 each though these depot in Nelson ville.
participating in the event. have an 80 percent payback
The depot is located at the
The cost to ride in the bene- for the first three-places.
intersection of U.S. 33 and
fit is $10 per rider.
The show is a family Hocking Parkway. Music
event and no alcohol is per- will be provided br Athens'
mitted. The ORP are also own Rattletrap Stnngband.
Tickets are $5 and more
asking for donations of
information
is available at
school
supplies
of
any
kind
RIPLEY, W.Va. -· Mid(740)
753-1924
or. on the
to
be
donated
to
Southern
Ohio Valley Autism Support
web,
at
www.stuartsoperaGroup will sponsor· an Elementary School. Call
Autism Walk from II a.m. 843-5216 or 590-9936 for house.org.
to 6 p.m. on Saturday at more information.
Directions to the Penland
Cedar Lakes. ,
Community
Center from
The eveni is free and will
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
include singing perfor- Pomeroy are U.S. 33 toward
Ravenswood,
turn
left
on
- Poet Marianne Boruch
mances by Morehead Sisters
from II a.m. to noon, Ohio 124 at the Hot Spot, will read from her work at 8
Jackson Coun(f Senior then follow signs to Portland p.m. on Monday, Sept. 24 in
Room 2WI6 of the
Choir from noon to I p.m., Community Center.
Memorial Student Center
to be announced from I to 2
on Marshall University's
p.m., Patchwork Bank from
Huntington campus.
2 to 3 p.m., Pot Luck Pickers
Boruch's
appearance,
POR1LAND - Wrestlers
from 3 to 4 p.m.. and
sponsored
"by
the Marshall
from Pure Impact Wrestling
Dunamis from 4 to 6 p.m:
There will also be a silent return for a third engage- English d~anment and the
auction, door· prizes, food ment Friday at the Portland College of Liberal Arts, is
free to the public.
Community Center.
and activities for the kids.

Boruch's latest collection .'
is Poems: New and
Selected, from Oberlin :·
College Press. She is the :
author of four other books: '
of poetry, including. A Stick ·
that Breaks and Breaks and ·
Moss ·Burning. She also is
the author of two books of
essays on poetry - In the
Blue Pharmacy: Essays on
Poetry
and
Other --.
Transformations,
and
Poetry's Old Air.
Boruch has taught at
Purdue University since 1
1987 and directed the MFA. ,
pro~ram there from its·;!
begmning in 1987 until ::0:
2005.
~
' For more information: :~
call .Art Stringer in tfte:;;
English department at (304)::~
696-2403.

· .Horse show

Square dance

..•

.-------------.... .••
'·

Autism walk

•
Poetry reading

Wrestling returns

'

'

·
Ftamethat Mwspape~
photo 01 prot kon a
mug or mouse pad.

�PageA6

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thur~day,

September 20, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

OU presents free live

Don't let relationship choices rule

broadcast of 'La Boheme'

BY KATHY MtTCHB.L
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: Recently our
daughter moved to our
town. She is divorced and
has two children. We provided for them for six
months and never asked for
any money. We wanted her
to have her own place, so
we bought an older home
with the agreement that she
would pay us only the
amount of the j monthly
mongage.
We filled ort regular rental
forms, which she signed,
stating that the only ones living in the house would be
her and her two children.
The very frrst day she moved
in, she had a guy stay
overnight. Sometimes he
stays several days at a time.
Should we ask that he pay
the difference between what
we are charging her and
what we would charge
someone else to rent the
house? My daughter says
she can do whatever she
pleases because she is paymg what we agreed on. But
we never, agreed she could
have a guy living there.
Please give us your advice.
-New Mexico
Dear N.M.: If the lease
states that she cannot have
anyone else living there, it

doesn't mean you can
charge more rent. It means
you ~an evict her for violating the lease. However, we
don't believe you want to
throw her out. And frankly,
you shouldn' t be overly
involved in her relationship
choices. She's a grown
woman and she is going to
have bor,friends, some of
whom wtll spend the night.
Instead, try impressing
upon her the poor example
she is setting for her children and the emotional
harm she may be doing by
having a man sleep over
when there is no commitment in place. (Perhaps you
can offer to have the kids
stay with you on some of
those evenings when she
wants male company.)
Dear Annie: A few years
ago, my beautiful wife lost a
mammoth amount of weight
by being careful with her
diet and adopting a very
active lifestyl~ , which
mcluded a great deal of
walking. However, she has
since regained 'nearly all of
what she lost and now
spends most of her waking
hours sitting in front of the
computer.
I love her and would like
to be able to spend many
more years together in good
health. I worry daily that

she is heading straight for
cancer, heart problems,
and/or disability. Surely she
realizes the state that she
hitS placed herself in, and I
am concerned that if I raise ·
the issue, she will resent it.
Is there any point telling
her of my grave concerns'/
- Troubled Husband · ·
Dear Husband: Of course
she will resent.it because she
knows she has re!iained the
weight, but health IS a legitimate issue for spouses to discuss. Tell your wife how
much you love her and ask
what you can do to help her
maintain her health. Don't
criticize her current shape.
Suggest she get into an exercise program with you. Also,
offer to cook dinner and prepare low-cal meals. The rest
IS up to her.
Dear Annie: I applaud
your response to "Torn in
Michigan ," regarding the
loss of her daughter. I, too,
am a grieving mother who
lost my oldest son at the a~e
of 19. I hope "Tom" w11I
contact
Compassionate
Friends as you suggested. I
found them very caring. It
makes no difference how the
child died or at what age.
One additional piece of
advice I would like to give
"Torn" is that everyone
mourns differently and

ATHENS
Ohio
lHlderstanding that makes University is showing a
living a bit easier. I also free, I i ve broadcast of
sought help from my family Washington
National
doctor, who prescribed Opera's edgy new producmedication to get me tion of Puccini's "La
through some very hard Boheme" at I :30 p.m.
times. We just passed the Sunday. Se~t. 23.
14th anniversary of my ·
Ohio Umversity is one of
son's death, and although 32 schools across the coundifficult, with the help of try presenting the live
my friends and family, we simulcast from the Opera
move on. My son is never House stage at The
forgotten, yet I am once K.ennedy
Center
in
again a happy wife to my Washington, D.C.
husband and mother to both
This event is the largest
of my sons, Chris in heaven simultaneous viewing ·of an
and · Jeremy on earth. ·opera in the world , with the
Charlestown, Ind.
possibility of more than
Dear Charlestown: We 45,000 viewers, Because
know it must have taken a admission is free and open
great deal of strength to to the public , organizers
write this letter. Please - hope that the production
know it surely will help oth- will open the doors to the
ers who are facing such a world of opera for younger,
terrible loss. Bless you.
first-time audiences while
Annie's Mailbox is writ- also attracting seasoned
ten bl Kathy Mitchell and opera fans.

Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions · to anniesmailbox@comcast. net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find oui more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at ww.w.creators.com.
/

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 24
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media center.
·
POMEROY -Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - · Meigs
County Library Board, 3
· p.m., Pomeroy Library.
. Thesday, Sept. 25
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee, II: 30
a.m., conference room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular meeting, 7
p.m., Rutland Civic Center.

·Clubs and
Qrganizations
Thursday, Sept. 20
RACINE
- Regular
meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge #164, 7:30 p.m .
Officers anticipate discussion on dues costs for the
upcoming year. All members are encouraged to
attend. Those with examinaHons that need to be
returned in any degree may
do so at this meeting.
Anypne with questions contact lodge officer.

Digital photography exhibit opens :
'

. been exhibited around the 1

country and is enjoyed by i
people of all ages and back- ~
grounds.
.
.
Klutenkamper is known &gt;
for her photographs of ~ ·
women who are set in :
depersonalized domestic ;
spaces. The images do not ~
show the women's faces or ~
the individual characteris- "
tics. The settings in the :
images often represent feel- 1
ings such as isolation, anxi- !
ety despair. while still ·:
adding to the beauty of the :
artworks.
!
The
exhibit
will
be
on
•
.
'
display at the Greer ,;
Museum until Oct. 12. The •
museum is open to the pub- ~
lie from I to 5 p.m. ~
Tuesdays through Sundays, :
and admission is free .
~
For more information, :
call Allen at (800) 282- :
7201.
•

-a --.... ..

''Here's
---·-llolr-·--Our
..•., ,_..,.
Card''

.•••
•••

•••
••
•
••

m

Clbtlllifr6~

Special advertising page found only in
the

Auxiliary remembers soldier

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
tallipoU' latl~ lrlbttnt
l}olnt·l)Iea,ant leuister
Tbi.s is a special page which will be published SeptemhA••
28th. Do you know how many phone caDs the Area
Chamber of Commerce, as weD as the newspapers and
other businesses ~il'e asking for the .name of a
plumber~ contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc.
This spec:ial section wiD be easier to use than a regular
directory and cards will be arranged by category.
We wiU be glad to use th~ information on .y9ur business
card or we can create one for you.

Linda McTurnerjphoto •

The Racine American Legion Auxiliary Post 602 recently remembered soldier Tom Brougher ,
who is serving in Iraq by mailing him a care package. The care package included food and
phone cards to phone home. Pictured is Julie Campbell, president of the auxiliary with the
items of the care package. Brougher is the son of Bev (Price) Brougher formerly of Portland.
Cards can be sent to Tom at LCPL, Brougher, Thomas, Keith, 3/ l .Kilo Co., WPNSPLT.. Unit
40230, FPOAP, 96610-0230.

Think bow long it would take you to band out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is cali740.992--21SS
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be September 26. 2007

Submitted photo

Flanked by Civil War re-enactors, President Lincoln greets Frederick Douglass in one of the historical re-creations to
be found at the 144th Gallia County Emancipation Proclamation celebration this weekend.

I 44th Gallia County
Emancipation Celebration

.

.

School and
Youth

CARE catfish tournament ....~
slated for Saturday

•'

RIO GRANDE- A new
art exhibit at the Greer
Museum at the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College has
opened.
The exhibit, "Domicile,"
is by art\st Allyson
Klutenkamper, who works
in digital photography
prints. Klutenkamper is an
acclaimed artist who also
teaches at Shawnee State
University. She is also
·active with the Society for
Photographic Education.
"Her work is beautiful,"
said James Allen, a .fine arts
professor at Rio Grande.
Allen added that the artist's
work is also very conceptual and very pertinent.
Klutenkamper earned her
MFA from the University of
Notre Dame and earned her
BFA from the University of
Missouri. Her work has

Thursday, September 20, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

:

,........

Church events

Daily Sentinel ·

i

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Reunions

Page A7 • The

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742-2372 or Lisa McDaniel,
CHESTER
Shade p.m. Public invited.
992-6985.
Saturd!ly, Sept. 22
River Lodge will hold speSTIVERS VILLE
cial meeting, 7 p.m. for the
Community •
purpose of conferring Stiversville
Entered Apprentice degree Church, community picnic, '
on
two
candidates. 4:30p.m. with gospel sing.
Sunday, Sept. 23
Sunday Sept. 23
• RACINE
Refreshments,
- Edna Knopp
POMEROY
- Jerry · will observe her 90th binhMonday, Sept. 24·
POMEROY- A meeting Frederick will be at the day on Sept. 23. Cards may
of the OH-KAN Coin Club Laurel Cliff Free Methodist be sent to her at 49880
will be held at 7 p.m. at the Church preaching at 10 Portland Road, Racine.
Pomeroy Library. An update a.m. and 6 p.m.
STIVERS VILLE
will be given on the dct. 7
coin show to be held at 'me Stiversville Community
Church, Portlanq, revival
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
Sunday service, 10 a.m. and
Monday through Thursday,
7 p.m. with Sherri and Bill
Villers.
Saturday, Sept. 22
, POMEROY- Mt. Union
RACINE - · Thomas and Baptist · Church, "New
CIIIH,
Isabelle Stobart family Creation" concert, 6:30
S
'5
-n-'117
reunion will be held at I p.m., 39091 Carpenter Hill
L
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Take Road.
........... _ . ....a... ........
covered dish and family hisSunday, Sept. 30
tory and photos.
REEDSVILLE
"Delivered" to sing at
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
.. J . . .._..=
Friday, Sept. 21
POMEROY - Outdoor
hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church, State Route
143, 7 p.m. featuring Chuck
· Compton, Gospel Bluegrass
Sunday, Sept. 23
Gentlemen,
Jamie
RUTLAND
The
Humphrey and Valerie Rutland Youth League will
Clonch. Take lawn chairs.
be holding a meeting at the
POMEROY- There will Rutland Fire Department 3
I
be a community dinner at the . p.m. to elect pfficers, new
Pomeroy Unit~d Methodist coaches and discuss next
Church, serving a baked season. For those who have
stead dinner from 4:30 to 6 questions call Danny David,

Birthdays

The event will take place
in the Ohio Uni versl'ty
Baker Center Ballroom.
The opera is a human •
drama of loss and love, as •
the characters struggle with
their careers and connecting i
with each other in a world :
that is increasingly techno!- :
ogy driven. It is part of :
effons by the Washington :
National Opera to broaden ~
the appeal of opera and to :
introduce opera to the next :
generation.
:
Said Kenneth Feinberg, •
president of Washington :
National Opera, "We are :
excited to use simulcast :
technology to give the gift :
of opera to the American :
public in a way that has ; ·
never been done before." ~
President Roderick J. :
McDavis and First Lady •
Deborah McDavis will be :
attending the live perfor- :
mance in Washington.
~

Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
SATURDAY. SEPT, 22
Opening ceremony, 10:30 a.m.
Welcome - Andrew Gibnore,
President
Invocation - The Rev. Calvin
Minnis
' Song - Negro National Anthem,
sung by the Rev. Calvin Minnis
Pledge o~Ailegiance- Raymond
Cousms
·
Solo - Mark Miller
Offering
Special Remarks - Historical
Re-enactors
Solo - Mark Miller
Praise Team Dancers from
Portsmouth
Recognition of Poster Contest
Winners by Karen syrague
Afternoon program, :30 p.m.
Welcome - Glenn Miller
Karaoke - Under the direction. of
Jeff North

Special Music - Burlington Male
Chorus
·
.
·
Emancipation Story - "Free At
Last"
Introduction of Speaker- Andrew
Gilmore
Keynote Speaker - Harold Mills,
Chief Executive Officer, Zero
Chaos
Offeling
.
Closing Remarks - Glenn Miller
Homecoming Reception, everyone
·welcome
Dance following reception
SUNDAY. SEri. 23
Morning worsbip service, 10 a.m.
Weclome -Andrew Gilmore,
President
Music selection -- Combined Choir
under the direction of Joanne Bass
Devotional - Deacon Glenn Miller
Music - Brothers in Spirit from
Columbus
Offering

Music - Brothers in Spirit
Introduction of Minister - Glenn
Miller, Vice President
Sennon - The Rev. Wayne
McLaughlin, Zion Baptist
Church, Chillicothe
. Afternoon program,l:30 p.m.
Welcome/Special Remarks- ·
Andrew Gilmore
Special Music - Brothers in Spirit
Recognition of Dignitaries Andrew Gilmore
Recognition of Emancipation Board
- Andrew Gilmore
.Scholarship Presentation- Arthur
Clark
Music - Dr. J.W. Smith, Ohio
University
Offering
Introduction of Speaker - Dr. Carl
Denbow, Ohio University
Keynote Speaker- Dr. David
Zang, author/biographer
Music - Brothers in Spirit
Closing Remarks - Andrew
Gilmore

MASON, W.Va.- Don't
put up those fishing poles
JUSt yet.
Just because summer is
winding 'down and fall is
nearly here doesn't mean
there isn't a chalice to get
in some quality, lastminute fishing .
With the Bend Area
CARE
Fall
Catfish
Tournament Saturday, Sept.
22, that chance is available.
Not only will you get in
good fishing time, but you
also · will be supporting a
good cause, as proceeds from
the event are going to the
CARE Christtnas toy drive,
which will benefit needy chil,
dren and other charity causes.
According to Jason
Roush, tournament director,
this tournament is smaller
than the organization's
annual Spring Catfish
Tournament and has been
around for about 10 years.
Roush stressed the importance of the tournament's
charity as a reason for people to come out and fish.
"We are hoping to make
enough money to supply
four families with a
Christmas. We provide food
and everything for the families," Roush said. "This is
not our biggest charity, but
it really helps."
Roush added that the fall
tournament is different than
the spring because there are
no teams, which means as
many people can fish on one
boat as they want, compared
to the spring tournament,
during which only two people are allowed on one boat.
"A bunch of people could
come out and sit on a boat
and just have a fun, great
day of fishing," Roush said:
To participate in the tour-

nament and be on a boat, a·
legal fishing license is ·
required. The boat and···
equipment mu st also be ·
DNR and Coast Guard ;.
approved. Life jackets are :·
required to be worn during ·'·
takeoff on the morning of the··.
tournament. All fishermen
must leave in a boat from the ·!
Mason Levy. There will be ..
no bank fishing permitted, as ,:
all fishing must be done-"
from a boat. Each boat will
be assigned a starting posi- ,·
tion by a random drawing of ' ·
all entries that were received r:
Sept. 12, and all other entries
will be assigned boat num- ':
bers as entries are received. ·
There will be no mini- "
mum lenllths established for '
eligible fish. All species of "
catfish are legal and can be •
weighed. Only one catfish ·
per fisherman will be ·
weighed. The fish must be·
alive in order to be weighed. ~
Cash prizes will be award- ~
ed to wmners. To enter, each ·
individual fisherman must
fill out an application; they '
also must provide the name ·
of the boat owner on the
application. Applicatiops
can be picked up at Roush's •
Body Sho~ and Nationwide _•
Insurance m Mason.
Check-in . for the tournament will be 6-7:45 a.m.
Every participant · must :
check in at the registration
table prior to the beginning
of the tournament and
check-In with tournament :
officials by 3 p.m. in order ;,
to get fish weighed. All ·
boats will be inspected and
marked before the event ,
begins. Fishing hours will
be 8 a.m.-3 p.m., with the .
scales set to open at 2 p.m.
For more information, call ·
Roush at (304) 882-2456.

Jackson Apple Festival ends Saturday ~.
is all free.
Featured are apples, ·
homemade apple butter .
made on the streets, apple '
pies, apple jelly, apple ·
dumplings, apple sauce,
candy and caramel apples,
apple cider and apple JUice.
The festival has four
parades, including the grand
final parade at 7:45 p.m.
Saturday, the largest lighted
parade in Ohio.

JACKSON -The 2007
Jackson County Apple
Festival continues through
Saturday on seven city blocks
of downtown Jackson.
Bags of apples and jugs of
cider from the orchards of
Jackson County set the scene
for the 67th annual festival.
The annual event draws
some 210,000 people from
the surrounding area, states,
and all over the U.S. and it

.•
'

. Entertainm-ent Briefs
'Spiritual
, Visions' on
display
GALLIPOLIS
"Spiritual Visions With a
Twist:
Artworks
of
Margaret McAdams and
Mairyann Wrentmore" will
be on display in the gallery
of the French Art Colony,
530 First Ave., Gallipolis,
from Aug. 31 until Sept. 28.
McAdams' three-dimensional vessels depict human
and animal form, from her
"Cinerary Urns," symbolizing Egyptian goddesses in
the style of Tutelar_y urns
(once used to contat.n specific internal organs of each
deity/.godi:less), to her Dyad
series,
representing
a
humanistic and animalistic
side of the human spirit.
Wrentmore's vivtd symbols and depictions stem
from studying Shamanism
and mythology, deepening .
her understanding of .life .
"Symbols are the language
used to give clues to hidden
meanings from Shamanic
journeys or dreams," and she
binds these symbols iiito the
composition of her works.
More information about
the FAC and its upcoming
events can be found at
www.FrenchArtColony.org
or by calling (740) 4463834. The Ohio Arts
Counqil helped fund this
program or organization
with state tax dollars to
encourage
economic
growth, educational excellence and cultural enrich•

ment for all Ohioans.
Local sponsors for this
exhibit are Steve Chapman,
CPA, and Willis Funeral
Home.

. Fiber Guild
workshop
GALLIPOLIS -- The
Woolen
Willow
from
Williamstown, W.Va., will
be the feature fiber artists
for the Appalachian Ohio
Fiber Guild on Saturday,
Sept. 22 at the French Art
Colony, second floor, from
I to 4 p.m.
. They will give an
overview of their successful
business, the history of the
art of rug hooking and a
workshop. The cost of the
class will be $30 and this
includes a kit and hook.
This workshop is open to
both members and nonmembers of the fiber guild.
For more infonnation, contact Marlene Gruetter at
256-1866
or
(7 40)
info@trfohio.com.

Biker benefit
POMEROY
The
Inaugural All-Ohio Valley
Bikers Berlefit Run begins
at the same time in both
Pomeroy and Marietta and
benefits two local charities,
including God's NET and
Old Man Rivers of Wood
County.
Tile first bike is out at I I
a.m. on Saturday at both the
Pomeroy parking lot and
S&amp;P Harley Davidson in

The show begins at 7 p.m.
Call (304) 273-3228 for
Marietta, with the last bike
and
tickets are $10 for adult
out by I p.m. Bikers leaving more information.
and
$5
for kids. The show is
from each destination will
said to feature professional
follow two separate paths
wrestlers with all the chairwith both ending_ at the
and stage-diving
throwing
National Guard Armory on
POR1LAND -The Ohio
the
crowd
can handle .
Front Street in Marietta.
River Producer's Horse
The last bike is due in at Show Series continues with · Tite crowd is also encourthe armory hy 5 p.m., where the arena opening for aged to participate by makthere will be live music, warm ups at I 0 a.m: this· ing signs and cheering their
auctions, cash prizes and Saturday and the show favorites (or not so
drawings as well as food. beginning at II a.m. at the favorites) from ringside.
All proceeds benefit the two Portland Show Arena.
charities which help less
This Saturday's show also
fortunate children and fami- includes reining exhibitions
lies by providing food , during intermission, which
NELSONVILLE
clothing and the necessities are free for particiP.ants. Stuart's Opera House and
for life and both are 501(3) There is a $3 per horse the Hocking Valley Scenic
and
tax grounds fee and the majori- Railway will be hosting a
c
exempt
deductible. ·
ty of entry fees for each square dance on Saturday
There are severai motor- event are $2, with open from 8 to II f .m. in the
cycle clubs from throughout poles and.open barrels cost- parking · lot o the train
the Ohio Valley which are mg $5 each though these depot in Nelson ville.
participating in the event. have an 80 percent payback
The depot is located at the
The cost to ride in the bene- for the first three-places.
intersection of U.S. 33 and
fit is $10 per rider.
The show is a family Hocking Parkway. Music
event and no alcohol is per- will be provided br Athens'
mitted. The ORP are also own Rattletrap Stnngband.
Tickets are $5 and more
asking for donations of
information
is available at
school
supplies
of
any
kind
RIPLEY, W.Va. -· Mid(740)
753-1924
or. on the
to
be
donated
to
Southern
Ohio Valley Autism Support
web,
at
www.stuartsoperaGroup will sponsor· an Elementary School. Call
Autism Walk from II a.m. 843-5216 or 590-9936 for house.org.
to 6 p.m. on Saturday at more information.
Directions to the Penland
Cedar Lakes. ,
Community
Center from
The eveni is free and will
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
include singing perfor- Pomeroy are U.S. 33 toward
Ravenswood,
turn
left
on
- Poet Marianne Boruch
mances by Morehead Sisters
from II a.m. to noon, Ohio 124 at the Hot Spot, will read from her work at 8
Jackson Coun(f Senior then follow signs to Portland p.m. on Monday, Sept. 24 in
Room 2WI6 of the
Choir from noon to I p.m., Community Center.
Memorial Student Center
to be announced from I to 2
on Marshall University's
p.m., Patchwork Bank from
Huntington campus.
2 to 3 p.m., Pot Luck Pickers
Boruch's
appearance,
POR1LAND - Wrestlers
from 3 to 4 p.m.. and
sponsored
"by
the Marshall
from Pure Impact Wrestling
Dunamis from 4 to 6 p.m:
There will also be a silent return for a third engage- English d~anment and the
auction, door· prizes, food ment Friday at the Portland College of Liberal Arts, is
free to the public.
Community Center.
and activities for the kids.

Boruch's latest collection .'
is Poems: New and
Selected, from Oberlin :·
College Press. She is the :
author of four other books: '
of poetry, including. A Stick ·
that Breaks and Breaks and ·
Moss ·Burning. She also is
the author of two books of
essays on poetry - In the
Blue Pharmacy: Essays on
Poetry
and
Other --.
Transformations,
and
Poetry's Old Air.
Boruch has taught at
Purdue University since 1
1987 and directed the MFA. ,
pro~ram there from its·;!
begmning in 1987 until ::0:
2005.
~
' For more information: :~
call .Art Stringer in tfte:;;
English department at (304)::~
696-2403.

· .Horse show

Square dance

..•

.-------------.... .••
'·

Autism walk

•
Poetry reading

Wrestling returns

'

'

·
Ftamethat Mwspape~
photo 01 prot kon a
mug or mouse pad.

�OHIO
·neer archery season begins Sept. 29

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

bow and crossbow harvest.
Coshocton,
Holmes,
Thscarawas and Guernsey
POMEROY
rounded out the top five
Approximately
300,000 counties in crossbow harbowhunters, representing vest; while Coshocton,
more than half of all Knox , Muskingum and
Ohioans who hunt deer, are Holmes completed the list
expected to participate in the of top five counties in vertistatewide archery deer hunt- cal bow harvest.
ing season that opens Sept.
This year, hunters who'
29, according to experts purchase · an Ohio hunting
.with the Ohio Department of license and $24 deer permit
Natural Resources Division will be eligible to buy the
.Of Wildlife.
, new $15 antlerless deer perDuring last year's four- mit, which replaces the
month archery season, urban deer permif and is
bowhunters killed 67,912 valid Sept. .29-Nov. 25.
deer, an increase of 13 per'The intent of the reduced
cent from the previous year. price antlerless deer permit is
Crossbow hunters took · to focus additional pressure
38,489 of that number and on the antlerless segment of
longbow hunters took a the population. Expanding
record 29,423 deer.
antlerless huntin~ opportuni, Overall, archers account- ties not only rudS m herd
ed for nearly 29 percent of management, but has the
237,316 deer taken during added benefit of improving
Ohio's combined 2006-07 the buck age sttucture by
archery, muzzleloader and reducing pressure on the
gun seasons.
antlered segment of the popLicking County led the ulation,"
said
Mike
state in both the vertical Tonkovich. deer biologist for
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

the Division of Wildlife.
This year's statewide
"By limiting the use of archery season remains
the antlerless deer permit to open through Feb. 3, includthe first two months of the ing the week of deer-gun
season, the division can season Nov. 26 through
safely evaluate it as a mart- Dec. 2. Deer-gun hunters
agement
tool,
while will also be able to enjoy an
encouraging hunters to additional 'weekend of huntcommit to harvesting an ing Dec. 15 and 16.
Archers may hunt one
antlerless deer early," said
Tonkovich.
half-hour before sunrise to
· After Nov, 25, archery "' one-half hour after &amp;upSet,
hunters must use a deer per- except during the statewide
rilit for antlerless deer. gun, youth and muzzleUnder the new regulation, loader seasons when they
hunters carl take one addi~ are one-half hour before
tiona! antlerless deer in sunrise to sunset. Archers
Zone A, up to two addition- hunting during the statewide
al in Zone B, and up to threC gun, youth or muzzlelqalier
additional in Zone C. seasons must meet the
Details on this new opportu- hunter orange requirementS
nity for archery hunters can of those seasons.
be reviewed on the diviTo hunt deer in Ohio,
sjon's
Web
site
at hunters must possess a
http:/lwildohio .com/and deer permit inaddition to a
click on · the "Frequently valid hunting license. State
Asked Questions" link.
· · law allows hunters to take
The antlerless deer ~rmits only one antlered buck per
will also be vahd for year, regardle.ss the type Of
Division of Wildlife con- deer season, deer permit or
troll~ deer, hunts AAd f~r wea~on used for deet
hunting deer man .urban umt. hunttng.
·

Todd Snider.coming to ~~art's Opera House
. NELSONVILLE
$ongwriter Todd Snider will
!Jerform at Stuart's Opera
House today at 8 p.m.
Snider has been somewhat of a wanderer in his
musical career. the Portland
native has called Austin,
:Nashville, Memphis, and
Atlanta home, all the while
continuing to tour relentlessly. He has been record-

ing for 13 years, producing
eight critically acclaimed
albums including 2004's
"East Nashville Skyline"
and 2006's "The Devil You
Know" botli released by
John Prine's Oh Boy
Records.
Snider continues to blend
bluegrass, blues, folk-rock
and country-rock to forge
his own distinctive sound.

Jr ·~,

He IS regarded as one of !he
best '"lluys with a ~uitar"
acts around by many mcluding Johnnie Walker of BBC
Radio, who ·said, "When
Todd Snider played, it was
absolutely ohe of the best
gigs I'd ,ever seen. He has a
wonderful take on the world
and the craziness that ~oes
on and he tells it like It is
with a great sense of humor.

'

--&lt;

He's a. rebel with a cause
and I love him."
Tickets to Snider's performance are still available
and are $20 in advance and
$25 at the door and box
seats are $25 in advance or
$28 at the door.

For more information call
(740) 753-1924 or visit the
website at www.stuartsoperahi:Juse.or.g.

.

.

Passenger trains pitched as way to ease traffic, po11ution
. BY JUUE· CARR SMYTH
/IP STATEHOUSE

CORR~PONOENT

COLUMBUS - A little
noticed state commission
believes it has a way for
commuters to beat congestion, high ~as prices and
global wa~mmg all at once:
Take a tram.
. A regional high-speed rail
system - called the Ohio
Hub - would also save
millions spent building and
fixing roads each year.
So why, after I 0 years in
the works, is such a useful
idea still on the drawing
board?
A tangled web of environmental rules, property
issues, turf battles and the
hefty price tag of $3.8 billion could help explain it.
But that soon may
change, said Don Damron, a
planner for the Ohio Rail

Development Commission.
A recent economic study
commissioned by the panel
found that · such ·a system
could draw 9.3 million passengers a year by 2025 and
offsetting $2 bilfion in road
maintenance expenses forthe cash-strapped state.
Freight and passenger
trains · from hubs in
Columbus, Cleveland and
Toledo would link to other
stops throughout Ohio and
in nearby states.
Evidence is also strong
that the system could make
enough from fares to pay its
own bills.
"I absolutely believe that
the stars are aligning and
we have a J?Crfect s.torm of a
transportallon cns1s on our
hands to make this happen," Damron said. "That's
in addition to the global
warming and other environ-

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

The Extra Point, Page B2
'

Bearcats host Marshall, Page B3

Locarweather
Today's Forecast
Forecast for ThuiWdlly, ~· 211

Point hosts Wmfleld, Page B4
City/RegiOn
High I Low temps

Thursday, September 20, 2007

i.ocAL Scm:nULE
..... ._Co\ny.
-"" ....... ._""""'

""""'-

POMEROY -A~ d~lt'ldhi~Jl

Todlv'• Q!lltlt'

Volloyboll
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastem at Trimble, 6 p.m.
~uthem al Federal Hocldng, 6 p.m.
Cro11 Country
Eastern, Southern, Meigs at Jackson
Invite, 4 p.m.

*Cotumbua
157" ~

S.ptambtr 21
Footblll

FddiY.

86' 156'

Meigs at Fairland
Southam al Wlrt Counly (WV)
Belpre at Eastem
fledera1 Hocking at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Cols. Bishop Ready
~inford at VInton County
Wellston at Rock Hill
Alver VaUey at Waterford
Gallla Academy at Logan
South Gallla at Man fYN)
Hannan (WV) at Wahol)la (WV)
Winfield (WV) at Point Pleasant (WV)

Saturday Stpttmbtr 22
Football

Weolhor UndO&lt;ground • AP

Thursday•••Surmy. Highs clear. Lows around 60.
in the upper 80s. Light and South windS around 5 mph ..
Saturday
through
variable windS ...Becoming
southeast around 5 mph in Thesdar...Mostly
.clear:
the afternoon.
Highs m the upper 80s:
Thursday nlldlt...Mostly Lows in the lower 60s.
clear. Lows in ilie mid 50s. .· . Thesday nlght...Partly
Southeast winds around 5 cloudy. A chance of showj:rS
mph
in
the after midnight. Lows in the
evening ... Becoming light lower 60s. Chance ,o f rain
and variable.
30 percent.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in "" Wednesday ... Partly
the mid 80~ . Southeast sunny with
,30 percent
winds around 5 mph.
chance of showers. Coolef
Friday nlght ... Mostly with highs in the upper 70s,

a

'

Local Stocks
·

.

.
,
. AEP (NYSE) - 48.51
mental issues, as well aS:
Privately owned railroad , ': Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79
thinking about what kind o{ companies would have to .Aihl8ncl Inc. (NYSE) cities we want to build for buy in, and let the sta~ '· i'82.87 ·
our children."
develop and use their prop- BIII.Ota (NYSEl- 30.34
erty
for a price. Federal and Bob Evans (NASDAQ)Ohio
Gov.
Ted
Strickland's staff has ·been state money would need to 33.09
briefed on the proposal and flow, &amp;Jid a·host of approvals Borg\Vamer (NySE) - ·
Strickland supports seeking · W&amp;lfki411We· to be secured. , ,, · :l~· . ....,., .,....,. ..,.-......~-· "' "
,Also, attracting the high- Century Aluminum (NAS.
federal money to take the
est
-·number of passengers DAQ)- 49.30
next step, spokesman Keith
Dailey said Wednesday. In pr~Q.ed~,by 11),1) raii_,SQ,~-.., .CIJ.amp,k!n (NASDAQ)- 5.95 ""
2006
campaign, IDlssioo: would, requue · ~!"- ~'t~
his
. .
Strickland
supported offering high-speed trains ...., '9.19
expanding Ohio's rail - rather than traditional City Holdln&amp;: (NASDAQ) resources to help the econo- 79~mpb qnes, Damron said. ,.39.59
my, but he is not yet con- It would also require trains · ,.Collins (NYSE) - 69.42
.
. ·DuPont (NYSE) - 49.88
vinced the Ohio Hub plan is t? look mce,
run a~ le~st SIX us Bank (NYSE) _ 33.98
feasible, Dailey said.
Urnes a day begmmn~ at Gannirtt (NYsE) - 45.97
The vision is ambitious.
6:30a.m., ~nd to be on urn~. General Electric (NYSE) Some 1,200 miles of track
Damron s uncle was m, .41. 77
·
- some crossing state lines the petroleum busmes~. ~e; Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- would whisk 110-mph older man was predicting',, 1 48.59
trains filled with passengers :y:ears ago that ml .produc-;. JP Morgan (NYSE) - 47.57
from Cincinnati, Columbus, t10n would r~ach Its peak · Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 29
Cleveland, Toledo and Lima around this time, Damron . Umlted Brand• (NYSE) to in-state and out-of-state said, and those projections 23.47
destinations.
are now coming ttue.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

U.SO
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
- 33.10
·
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 25.10
BIT (NYSEI- 42.78
Peoplet (NASDAQ)- 27.97
Pep1lco (NYSE) - 71.11
Premier (NASDAQ) ,...,.,14.1&amp;
Rockwell (NYSE) - 71.69 ·
Rocky Boote (NASDAQ)10.44
Royal Dutch Shell- 82.76
Seara Holdln&amp;: (NASDAQ) 134.88
Wai-M~rt (NYSE) - 44.75
Wendy a (NYSE) - 34.22
Worthington (NYSE) 21..74
Dally stock report&amp; ara the 4
p.m. ET clo11n1 qu\ltBS of
transactions for Sept. 19,
2007, provided by ~ard
Jones financial advllora
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Le1ley
Marrero In Point Pleal8nt at·
(304) 874-0174. Member
SIPC.

Miller at Grove City Christian
Trimble at Shadyside
·:·
Golf
Riverside Invitational, 11 a.m.

.,

Monda¥* Soptomblr 24
Volle~att

NelsonvU1e-Yor1c. at Eastern, 6 p.m.
SOuthern at Vinton County,
. 6.p.m.

,,

SPORTS
,. . BRIEFS

'

Meigs basketball
program to bold
golf scramble
.,

&gt;POMEROY

The
Meigs boys basketball program will be holding a golf
scramble at Pine Hills Golf
Course
on
Saturday,
September 22, at 8:30 a.m.
' The IS-hole scramble will
consist of four-person teams
and ·no handicaps, and the
fj.eld is limited to the first 20
teams that sign-u~The entry fee IS $50 for
~h player and $200 per
tearti. Food and beverages
are included in the entry fee.
Not included in .the . entry
fee are $5 mulligans and the
$5 skins game.
There is a cash P&lt;IYOUt for
the ·top three teams and a
$10,000 hole-in-one opportunity from the front tee box
on the 18th hole. You may
also sponsor a hole for $75,
All other proceeds will go
towards the Meigs basketball program for new uniforms •. ·warm-ups, equipment and other needs. For
more information or to regIster, coritacr MHS coach
J;Jen Ewing at 740-416-0824
or Pine Hills owner Mike
White at 740-992-6312.

Meigs nets win over
Federw Hocking in 3
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAtLYTRISUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - It
wasn ' t easy, but Meigs.
volleyball came away from
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasium on Wednesday
night with 25-23, 25-23,
25-14 straight-game victory over Federal Hocking in
VIning
Wolfe
a Tri- Valley Conference
non-divisional contest.
The Lady Marauders Yining with perfect servimproved to 7-3 overall mg performances .
this season, producing
Bailey led the Meigs' net
team totals of 30 kills, 24 ,;lttack with 14 kills, folassists and three blocks in lowed
by
freshman
the triumph. The Maroon Morgan Howard with
and Gold were also 96 per- seven kills . Sophomore
cent from the service line Holly Jeffers chipped in
after finishing the night five kills to the winning
70-of-73.
cause , with · Wolfe also
. Senior Patti Vining led adding four.
the MHS scoring attack
Barr paced the passing
with 11 points, finishing game with a team-high 22
the contest a perfect 18-of- assists, with Vining and
18 at the service line. Pratt each adding one.
Junior Catie Wolfe fol- Bailey, Barr and Howard
lowed with nine points for also had a block in the trithe victors, while seniors umph.
Amy Barr and Hannah
Meigs, which is 3-1 in
Pratt each added five league play, completes the
points.
first go-round of TVC
Sophomofe Tricia Smith Ohio competition today
and fresHman Shellie when · it hosts Vinton
Bailey rounded out the County at Larry R.
scoring with three points Morrison Gymnasium. The
apiece. Barr, Smith and junior varsity game will
senior Talisha Beha joined start at 6 p.m.

Brad Sha,rmanlpt&gt;oto

Meigs' Holly Jeffers spikes the ball over a Federal Hocking blocker during a high school volleybafl match Wednesday in Rock Springs. Meigs won the match in straight games.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSii&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Week five. The midway
point of the football season
- not to mention the final
tune-up before the start of
Tri- Valley Conference divisional play - begins this
Friday night when a trio of
Meigs County teams take
the gridiron in intriguing
match ups .
Two programs - Meigs
and Southern - will be on
the road in respective battles
with Fairland and Wirt
County (W.Va.), while
Eastern serves as the lone
home sq4ad when it squares
off with Belpre. Each contest kicks off Friday at 7:30
p.m. Here's a brief look at
those individual matchups.

Punt, Pass and Kick
coming to Pomeroy

POMEROY - The 6th
annual NFL Pepsi Punt,
Pass aud Kick competition,
sponsored by the Meigs
High Athletic Boosters, w1ll
be held Sunday September
23 at Bob Roberts Field.
Meigs (3-1)
Registration begins at ·
at
Fairland (1-3)
moon with the competition
PROCTORVILLE
- The
·
starting at I p.m.
. effects of last week's shockThe competitio.. is open
ing 16-14 home loss to Point
to boys and girls ages 8 to
Pleasant are yet to be seen.
15 and is free of charge. All
but Meigs will have little
contestants must register
time to dwell on the, past as
and provide a copy of their
birth certificate.
· it heads to Lawrence County
Age groups are as folthis weekend to take on a
lows, 8-9, 10-IJ , 12-13, 14potentially
dangerous
15. Age groups are based oii
·Fairland squad looking for
the contestanls age as of
its first home win of the
December 31. 2007.
year.
All kicking tees and footDespite the losing record,
Qalls will be provided and
the Dragons are still averag)lontestants must wear tening 28.3 points-per-game
dis shoes, no football cleats
offensively while allowing
allowed.
26 per outing. FHS has lost
:: Winners of each age
to
three teams with a comllroup will be eligible to
bined
9-3 record and also
compete in sectional comLarry
Crurn/photo
beat
winless
Franklin
j)etiiiQn in October with a
Chance to advance to a Meigs' Aaron Story drops back to pass during a high school Furnace Green 49-15 back
Cincinnati Bengals game in football game against Point Pleasant Friday, September 14 in week three.
In their home opener last
in Pomeroy.
pecember.
· For more information
contact Ji mmer Soulsby at
992-6728.
"

US

; OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
:· 1-740446-2342 ext. 33
.Pax- 1-740-446-3008 •
~-mall - sportsOm~dailysenlinel . co m

Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
1740) 446·2342, e•t. 3:l
bshe rman @ mydailytribune.com

.

larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342, e•t. 23
Ierum@ mydallyregister.com
'

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

,,

i740) 446-2342. eXt. 33
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

•

The Marauders, averaging
32.5 points-per-game, managed only two founh quarter
scores last week against the
Big Blacks. The Maroon and
Gold also had 185 yards of
total offense, including just
81 rushing yards.
Also uncharacteristic was
a defense, aliowing jusl 15
points-per-game, that surrendered 273 rushing yards
on 49 attempts in that set·
back.
MHS, which lost last
week's home game on a 30yard field goal with 1wo seconds left in regulation,
begins a three-game road
trip this Friday before meetings with Wellston and
Nelsonville- York to start
TVC Ohio competition .
Belpre (2-2) .
at Eastern (0-4)
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern will once again look
lo end its losing streak now 14 games - this Friday
when it hosts Belpre at East
Shade River Stadium.
The Eagles are coming off
another hard-fought setback,
a 21-14 decision to Van
(W.Va.) last Saturday after
traveling three-plus hours
south of Charleston.
If nothing else, first-year
EHS coach Kevin Welsh is
glad that his guys don't have
to do that again.
"We are excited to be back
in front of the home crowd.
After such a long trip last
week, we are just really glad
to be home," Welsh commented.
Please see Football, 84

Wahama, Hannan set to meet in battle of Mason County

,.

CoNTACT

week against Tolsia (W.Va.),
the Green and White racked
up 427 yards of total offense
during a heartbreaking 3528 loss. Tolsia connected 011
a 47-yard TD pass with 12
seconds remaining to come
away victorious.
Junior quarterback Cole
Hatfield
(6-foot,
165
pounds) produced 361 of
those yards through the air
on 16-of-24 passing, connecting on three scoring
passes of 65, 19 and 77
yards while not being intercepted. Hatfield connec1ed
with six different receivers
in the setback and also ran in
a score from one yard out.
Junior Michael Lam!J (65, 200), the team's main
receiving target, caught only
two passes in that contest and both went for points.
Lamb finished with 96 yards
after grabbing the 19-yard
and 77-yard touchdowns.
Sophomore running back
Matt Bloomfield (5-9, 150),
who led FHS with 43 yards
on five carries, hauled in the
other TD score of 65 yards.
Also catching 'passes last
week were Jordan Kersey
(6-1 , 180), Trier Duty (5-8.
160), Chad F1sher (5-9. 150)
ar;~d Derek Richendollar (59, 145). Kersey also had
seven totes for 19 rushing
yards.
Fairland produced only 65
rushing yards on 22 carries
and lost two fumbles - the
only turnovers in the con·
test. FHS also surrendered
232 rushing yards on 56
attempts (4. I yards-percarry) and allowed 390 total
yards defensively.

By GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPOND6NT

MASON, W.Va. - Coach
Ed Cromley 's unbeaten
Wahama White Falcon football.!! returns to the Bend
Area campus at 7:30 p.m.
Friday to resume its fall grid
card when WHS rolls out the
welcome mat for Mason
County neighbor Hannan as
the 2007 season reaches its
halfway mark of the c urrent
I 0 game schedule.
The
White
Falcons
squeaked by in three of its
four games against oppo-

nents from the Buckeye
State to harvest four successive wins and acquire an
early third place ranking
among West Virginia's 32
Class A football teams.
WHS received a 38-yard
field goal as time expired to

[!'eat season opening foe
terford before scoring 21
nts in the final 8:34 the
owing week to beat a
nned Federal Hocking
team. A 28 point second half
performance against Eastern
snapped a 7-7 halftime deadlock with another second
half score being the difference in a 14-7 win over previously unbeaten South
Gal\ia.
Wahama now sets its
sights on the six remaining
in-state opponents on its
2007 fall card beginnin g
wi1h a home dale with

- - ---

Hannan thi s week.,. The
White Falcons recently coneluded a three game road
trip and will return home for
the firsl time since its season
opener on Friday bUI th e
Wildcats are currently in the
middle of a gruesome, fi ve
game road swing .
Hannan opened the season
with a 40-6 home loss to
South Gallia before drop-ping consecutive road tills to
Van (46-0) and Southern
(39-0). The Wildcats must
travel to Wahama this week
before trekking to Wirt
County and Gilmer Coun1y

-·--------- -

.

----·-·

!Jefore returning to the
soulhern Maso n · County
campu s to face Bishop
Donahue on October 12.
Sophomore running back
Micaiah Branch (5-foot-8,
160 pounds ) enjo yed a
!Jreakout game in the
Falcons hard fou ght 14-7
win over South Gallia last
week wilh Branch ru shin g
for a career high 107 yards·
and a touchdow n. Senior
Derek Veazey (5-8, 170), the
Bend Area teams go-to guy
throughout the first three
Please see Falcons, BJ

�OHIO
·neer archery season begins Sept. 29

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

bow and crossbow harvest.
Coshocton,
Holmes,
Thscarawas and Guernsey
POMEROY
rounded out the top five
Approximately
300,000 counties in crossbow harbowhunters, representing vest; while Coshocton,
more than half of all Knox , Muskingum and
Ohioans who hunt deer, are Holmes completed the list
expected to participate in the of top five counties in vertistatewide archery deer hunt- cal bow harvest.
ing season that opens Sept.
This year, hunters who'
29, according to experts purchase · an Ohio hunting
.with the Ohio Department of license and $24 deer permit
Natural Resources Division will be eligible to buy the
.Of Wildlife.
, new $15 antlerless deer perDuring last year's four- mit, which replaces the
month archery season, urban deer permif and is
bowhunters killed 67,912 valid Sept. .29-Nov. 25.
deer, an increase of 13 per'The intent of the reduced
cent from the previous year. price antlerless deer permit is
Crossbow hunters took · to focus additional pressure
38,489 of that number and on the antlerless segment of
longbow hunters took a the population. Expanding
record 29,423 deer.
antlerless huntin~ opportuni, Overall, archers account- ties not only rudS m herd
ed for nearly 29 percent of management, but has the
237,316 deer taken during added benefit of improving
Ohio's combined 2006-07 the buck age sttucture by
archery, muzzleloader and reducing pressure on the
gun seasons.
antlered segment of the popLicking County led the ulation,"
said
Mike
state in both the vertical Tonkovich. deer biologist for
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

the Division of Wildlife.
This year's statewide
"By limiting the use of archery season remains
the antlerless deer permit to open through Feb. 3, includthe first two months of the ing the week of deer-gun
season, the division can season Nov. 26 through
safely evaluate it as a mart- Dec. 2. Deer-gun hunters
agement
tool,
while will also be able to enjoy an
encouraging hunters to additional 'weekend of huntcommit to harvesting an ing Dec. 15 and 16.
Archers may hunt one
antlerless deer early," said
Tonkovich.
half-hour before sunrise to
· After Nov, 25, archery "' one-half hour after &amp;upSet,
hunters must use a deer per- except during the statewide
rilit for antlerless deer. gun, youth and muzzleUnder the new regulation, loader seasons when they
hunters carl take one addi~ are one-half hour before
tiona! antlerless deer in sunrise to sunset. Archers
Zone A, up to two addition- hunting during the statewide
al in Zone B, and up to threC gun, youth or muzzlelqalier
additional in Zone C. seasons must meet the
Details on this new opportu- hunter orange requirementS
nity for archery hunters can of those seasons.
be reviewed on the diviTo hunt deer in Ohio,
sjon's
Web
site
at hunters must possess a
http:/lwildohio .com/and deer permit inaddition to a
click on · the "Frequently valid hunting license. State
Asked Questions" link.
· · law allows hunters to take
The antlerless deer ~rmits only one antlered buck per
will also be vahd for year, regardle.ss the type Of
Division of Wildlife con- deer season, deer permit or
troll~ deer, hunts AAd f~r wea~on used for deet
hunting deer man .urban umt. hunttng.
·

Todd Snider.coming to ~~art's Opera House
. NELSONVILLE
$ongwriter Todd Snider will
!Jerform at Stuart's Opera
House today at 8 p.m.
Snider has been somewhat of a wanderer in his
musical career. the Portland
native has called Austin,
:Nashville, Memphis, and
Atlanta home, all the while
continuing to tour relentlessly. He has been record-

ing for 13 years, producing
eight critically acclaimed
albums including 2004's
"East Nashville Skyline"
and 2006's "The Devil You
Know" botli released by
John Prine's Oh Boy
Records.
Snider continues to blend
bluegrass, blues, folk-rock
and country-rock to forge
his own distinctive sound.

Jr ·~,

He IS regarded as one of !he
best '"lluys with a ~uitar"
acts around by many mcluding Johnnie Walker of BBC
Radio, who ·said, "When
Todd Snider played, it was
absolutely ohe of the best
gigs I'd ,ever seen. He has a
wonderful take on the world
and the craziness that ~oes
on and he tells it like It is
with a great sense of humor.

'

--&lt;

He's a. rebel with a cause
and I love him."
Tickets to Snider's performance are still available
and are $20 in advance and
$25 at the door and box
seats are $25 in advance or
$28 at the door.

For more information call
(740) 753-1924 or visit the
website at www.stuartsoperahi:Juse.or.g.

.

.

Passenger trains pitched as way to ease traffic, po11ution
. BY JUUE· CARR SMYTH
/IP STATEHOUSE

CORR~PONOENT

COLUMBUS - A little
noticed state commission
believes it has a way for
commuters to beat congestion, high ~as prices and
global wa~mmg all at once:
Take a tram.
. A regional high-speed rail
system - called the Ohio
Hub - would also save
millions spent building and
fixing roads each year.
So why, after I 0 years in
the works, is such a useful
idea still on the drawing
board?
A tangled web of environmental rules, property
issues, turf battles and the
hefty price tag of $3.8 billion could help explain it.
But that soon may
change, said Don Damron, a
planner for the Ohio Rail

Development Commission.
A recent economic study
commissioned by the panel
found that · such ·a system
could draw 9.3 million passengers a year by 2025 and
offsetting $2 bilfion in road
maintenance expenses forthe cash-strapped state.
Freight and passenger
trains · from hubs in
Columbus, Cleveland and
Toledo would link to other
stops throughout Ohio and
in nearby states.
Evidence is also strong
that the system could make
enough from fares to pay its
own bills.
"I absolutely believe that
the stars are aligning and
we have a J?Crfect s.torm of a
transportallon cns1s on our
hands to make this happen," Damron said. "That's
in addition to the global
warming and other environ-

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

The Extra Point, Page B2
'

Bearcats host Marshall, Page B3

Locarweather
Today's Forecast
Forecast for ThuiWdlly, ~· 211

Point hosts Wmfleld, Page B4
City/RegiOn
High I Low temps

Thursday, September 20, 2007

i.ocAL Scm:nULE
..... ._Co\ny.
-"" ....... ._""""'

""""'-

POMEROY -A~ d~lt'ldhi~Jl

Todlv'• Q!lltlt'

Volloyboll
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastem at Trimble, 6 p.m.
~uthem al Federal Hocldng, 6 p.m.
Cro11 Country
Eastern, Southern, Meigs at Jackson
Invite, 4 p.m.

*Cotumbua
157" ~

S.ptambtr 21
Footblll

FddiY.

86' 156'

Meigs at Fairland
Southam al Wlrt Counly (WV)
Belpre at Eastem
fledera1 Hocking at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Cols. Bishop Ready
~inford at VInton County
Wellston at Rock Hill
Alver VaUey at Waterford
Gallla Academy at Logan
South Gallla at Man fYN)
Hannan (WV) at Wahol)la (WV)
Winfield (WV) at Point Pleasant (WV)

Saturday Stpttmbtr 22
Football

Weolhor UndO&lt;ground • AP

Thursday•••Surmy. Highs clear. Lows around 60.
in the upper 80s. Light and South windS around 5 mph ..
Saturday
through
variable windS ...Becoming
southeast around 5 mph in Thesdar...Mostly
.clear:
the afternoon.
Highs m the upper 80s:
Thursday nlldlt...Mostly Lows in the lower 60s.
clear. Lows in ilie mid 50s. .· . Thesday nlght...Partly
Southeast winds around 5 cloudy. A chance of showj:rS
mph
in
the after midnight. Lows in the
evening ... Becoming light lower 60s. Chance ,o f rain
and variable.
30 percent.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in "" Wednesday ... Partly
the mid 80~ . Southeast sunny with
,30 percent
winds around 5 mph.
chance of showers. Coolef
Friday nlght ... Mostly with highs in the upper 70s,

a

'

Local Stocks
·

.

.
,
. AEP (NYSE) - 48.51
mental issues, as well aS:
Privately owned railroad , ': Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79
thinking about what kind o{ companies would have to .Aihl8ncl Inc. (NYSE) cities we want to build for buy in, and let the sta~ '· i'82.87 ·
our children."
develop and use their prop- BIII.Ota (NYSEl- 30.34
erty
for a price. Federal and Bob Evans (NASDAQ)Ohio
Gov.
Ted
Strickland's staff has ·been state money would need to 33.09
briefed on the proposal and flow, &amp;Jid a·host of approvals Borg\Vamer (NySE) - ·
Strickland supports seeking · W&amp;lfki411We· to be secured. , ,, · :l~· . ....,., .,....,. ..,.-......~-· "' "
,Also, attracting the high- Century Aluminum (NAS.
federal money to take the
est
-·number of passengers DAQ)- 49.30
next step, spokesman Keith
Dailey said Wednesday. In pr~Q.ed~,by 11),1) raii_,SQ,~-.., .CIJ.amp,k!n (NASDAQ)- 5.95 ""
2006
campaign, IDlssioo: would, requue · ~!"- ~'t~
his
. .
Strickland
supported offering high-speed trains ...., '9.19
expanding Ohio's rail - rather than traditional City Holdln&amp;: (NASDAQ) resources to help the econo- 79~mpb qnes, Damron said. ,.39.59
my, but he is not yet con- It would also require trains · ,.Collins (NYSE) - 69.42
.
. ·DuPont (NYSE) - 49.88
vinced the Ohio Hub plan is t? look mce,
run a~ le~st SIX us Bank (NYSE) _ 33.98
feasible, Dailey said.
Urnes a day begmmn~ at Gannirtt (NYsE) - 45.97
The vision is ambitious.
6:30a.m., ~nd to be on urn~. General Electric (NYSE) Some 1,200 miles of track
Damron s uncle was m, .41. 77
·
- some crossing state lines the petroleum busmes~. ~e; Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- would whisk 110-mph older man was predicting',, 1 48.59
trains filled with passengers :y:ears ago that ml .produc-;. JP Morgan (NYSE) - 47.57
from Cincinnati, Columbus, t10n would r~ach Its peak · Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 29
Cleveland, Toledo and Lima around this time, Damron . Umlted Brand• (NYSE) to in-state and out-of-state said, and those projections 23.47
destinations.
are now coming ttue.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

U.SO
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
- 33.10
·
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 25.10
BIT (NYSEI- 42.78
Peoplet (NASDAQ)- 27.97
Pep1lco (NYSE) - 71.11
Premier (NASDAQ) ,...,.,14.1&amp;
Rockwell (NYSE) - 71.69 ·
Rocky Boote (NASDAQ)10.44
Royal Dutch Shell- 82.76
Seara Holdln&amp;: (NASDAQ) 134.88
Wai-M~rt (NYSE) - 44.75
Wendy a (NYSE) - 34.22
Worthington (NYSE) 21..74
Dally stock report&amp; ara the 4
p.m. ET clo11n1 qu\ltBS of
transactions for Sept. 19,
2007, provided by ~ard
Jones financial advllora
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Le1ley
Marrero In Point Pleal8nt at·
(304) 874-0174. Member
SIPC.

Miller at Grove City Christian
Trimble at Shadyside
·:·
Golf
Riverside Invitational, 11 a.m.

.,

Monda¥* Soptomblr 24
Volle~att

NelsonvU1e-Yor1c. at Eastern, 6 p.m.
SOuthern at Vinton County,
. 6.p.m.

,,

SPORTS
,. . BRIEFS

'

Meigs basketball
program to bold
golf scramble
.,

&gt;POMEROY

The
Meigs boys basketball program will be holding a golf
scramble at Pine Hills Golf
Course
on
Saturday,
September 22, at 8:30 a.m.
' The IS-hole scramble will
consist of four-person teams
and ·no handicaps, and the
fj.eld is limited to the first 20
teams that sign-u~The entry fee IS $50 for
~h player and $200 per
tearti. Food and beverages
are included in the entry fee.
Not included in .the . entry
fee are $5 mulligans and the
$5 skins game.
There is a cash P&lt;IYOUt for
the ·top three teams and a
$10,000 hole-in-one opportunity from the front tee box
on the 18th hole. You may
also sponsor a hole for $75,
All other proceeds will go
towards the Meigs basketball program for new uniforms •. ·warm-ups, equipment and other needs. For
more information or to regIster, coritacr MHS coach
J;Jen Ewing at 740-416-0824
or Pine Hills owner Mike
White at 740-992-6312.

Meigs nets win over
Federw Hocking in 3
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAtLYTRISUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - It
wasn ' t easy, but Meigs.
volleyball came away from
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasium on Wednesday
night with 25-23, 25-23,
25-14 straight-game victory over Federal Hocking in
VIning
Wolfe
a Tri- Valley Conference
non-divisional contest.
The Lady Marauders Yining with perfect servimproved to 7-3 overall mg performances .
this season, producing
Bailey led the Meigs' net
team totals of 30 kills, 24 ,;lttack with 14 kills, folassists and three blocks in lowed
by
freshman
the triumph. The Maroon Morgan Howard with
and Gold were also 96 per- seven kills . Sophomore
cent from the service line Holly Jeffers chipped in
after finishing the night five kills to the winning
70-of-73.
cause , with · Wolfe also
. Senior Patti Vining led adding four.
the MHS scoring attack
Barr paced the passing
with 11 points, finishing game with a team-high 22
the contest a perfect 18-of- assists, with Vining and
18 at the service line. Pratt each adding one.
Junior Catie Wolfe fol- Bailey, Barr and Howard
lowed with nine points for also had a block in the trithe victors, while seniors umph.
Amy Barr and Hannah
Meigs, which is 3-1 in
Pratt each added five league play, completes the
points.
first go-round of TVC
Sophomofe Tricia Smith Ohio competition today
and fresHman Shellie when · it hosts Vinton
Bailey rounded out the County at Larry R.
scoring with three points Morrison Gymnasium. The
apiece. Barr, Smith and junior varsity game will
senior Talisha Beha joined start at 6 p.m.

Brad Sha,rmanlpt&gt;oto

Meigs' Holly Jeffers spikes the ball over a Federal Hocking blocker during a high school volleybafl match Wednesday in Rock Springs. Meigs won the match in straight games.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSii&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Week five. The midway
point of the football season
- not to mention the final
tune-up before the start of
Tri- Valley Conference divisional play - begins this
Friday night when a trio of
Meigs County teams take
the gridiron in intriguing
match ups .
Two programs - Meigs
and Southern - will be on
the road in respective battles
with Fairland and Wirt
County (W.Va.), while
Eastern serves as the lone
home sq4ad when it squares
off with Belpre. Each contest kicks off Friday at 7:30
p.m. Here's a brief look at
those individual matchups.

Punt, Pass and Kick
coming to Pomeroy

POMEROY - The 6th
annual NFL Pepsi Punt,
Pass aud Kick competition,
sponsored by the Meigs
High Athletic Boosters, w1ll
be held Sunday September
23 at Bob Roberts Field.
Meigs (3-1)
Registration begins at ·
at
Fairland (1-3)
moon with the competition
PROCTORVILLE
- The
·
starting at I p.m.
. effects of last week's shockThe competitio.. is open
ing 16-14 home loss to Point
to boys and girls ages 8 to
Pleasant are yet to be seen.
15 and is free of charge. All
but Meigs will have little
contestants must register
time to dwell on the, past as
and provide a copy of their
birth certificate.
· it heads to Lawrence County
Age groups are as folthis weekend to take on a
lows, 8-9, 10-IJ , 12-13, 14potentially
dangerous
15. Age groups are based oii
·Fairland squad looking for
the contestanls age as of
its first home win of the
December 31. 2007.
year.
All kicking tees and footDespite the losing record,
Qalls will be provided and
the Dragons are still averag)lontestants must wear tening 28.3 points-per-game
dis shoes, no football cleats
offensively while allowing
allowed.
26 per outing. FHS has lost
:: Winners of each age
to
three teams with a comllroup will be eligible to
bined
9-3 record and also
compete in sectional comLarry
Crurn/photo
beat
winless
Franklin
j)etiiiQn in October with a
Chance to advance to a Meigs' Aaron Story drops back to pass during a high school Furnace Green 49-15 back
Cincinnati Bengals game in football game against Point Pleasant Friday, September 14 in week three.
In their home opener last
in Pomeroy.
pecember.
· For more information
contact Ji mmer Soulsby at
992-6728.
"

US

; OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
:· 1-740446-2342 ext. 33
.Pax- 1-740-446-3008 •
~-mall - sportsOm~dailysenlinel . co m

Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
1740) 446·2342, e•t. 3:l
bshe rman @ mydailytribune.com

.

larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342, e•t. 23
Ierum@ mydallyregister.com
'

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

,,

i740) 446-2342. eXt. 33
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

•

The Marauders, averaging
32.5 points-per-game, managed only two founh quarter
scores last week against the
Big Blacks. The Maroon and
Gold also had 185 yards of
total offense, including just
81 rushing yards.
Also uncharacteristic was
a defense, aliowing jusl 15
points-per-game, that surrendered 273 rushing yards
on 49 attempts in that set·
back.
MHS, which lost last
week's home game on a 30yard field goal with 1wo seconds left in regulation,
begins a three-game road
trip this Friday before meetings with Wellston and
Nelsonville- York to start
TVC Ohio competition .
Belpre (2-2) .
at Eastern (0-4)
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern will once again look
lo end its losing streak now 14 games - this Friday
when it hosts Belpre at East
Shade River Stadium.
The Eagles are coming off
another hard-fought setback,
a 21-14 decision to Van
(W.Va.) last Saturday after
traveling three-plus hours
south of Charleston.
If nothing else, first-year
EHS coach Kevin Welsh is
glad that his guys don't have
to do that again.
"We are excited to be back
in front of the home crowd.
After such a long trip last
week, we are just really glad
to be home," Welsh commented.
Please see Football, 84

Wahama, Hannan set to meet in battle of Mason County

,.

CoNTACT

week against Tolsia (W.Va.),
the Green and White racked
up 427 yards of total offense
during a heartbreaking 3528 loss. Tolsia connected 011
a 47-yard TD pass with 12
seconds remaining to come
away victorious.
Junior quarterback Cole
Hatfield
(6-foot,
165
pounds) produced 361 of
those yards through the air
on 16-of-24 passing, connecting on three scoring
passes of 65, 19 and 77
yards while not being intercepted. Hatfield connec1ed
with six different receivers
in the setback and also ran in
a score from one yard out.
Junior Michael Lam!J (65, 200), the team's main
receiving target, caught only
two passes in that contest and both went for points.
Lamb finished with 96 yards
after grabbing the 19-yard
and 77-yard touchdowns.
Sophomore running back
Matt Bloomfield (5-9, 150),
who led FHS with 43 yards
on five carries, hauled in the
other TD score of 65 yards.
Also catching 'passes last
week were Jordan Kersey
(6-1 , 180), Trier Duty (5-8.
160), Chad F1sher (5-9. 150)
ar;~d Derek Richendollar (59, 145). Kersey also had
seven totes for 19 rushing
yards.
Fairland produced only 65
rushing yards on 22 carries
and lost two fumbles - the
only turnovers in the con·
test. FHS also surrendered
232 rushing yards on 56
attempts (4. I yards-percarry) and allowed 390 total
yards defensively.

By GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPOND6NT

MASON, W.Va. - Coach
Ed Cromley 's unbeaten
Wahama White Falcon football.!! returns to the Bend
Area campus at 7:30 p.m.
Friday to resume its fall grid
card when WHS rolls out the
welcome mat for Mason
County neighbor Hannan as
the 2007 season reaches its
halfway mark of the c urrent
I 0 game schedule.
The
White
Falcons
squeaked by in three of its
four games against oppo-

nents from the Buckeye
State to harvest four successive wins and acquire an
early third place ranking
among West Virginia's 32
Class A football teams.
WHS received a 38-yard
field goal as time expired to

[!'eat season opening foe
terford before scoring 21
nts in the final 8:34 the
owing week to beat a
nned Federal Hocking
team. A 28 point second half
performance against Eastern
snapped a 7-7 halftime deadlock with another second
half score being the difference in a 14-7 win over previously unbeaten South
Gal\ia.
Wahama now sets its
sights on the six remaining
in-state opponents on its
2007 fall card beginnin g
wi1h a home dale with

- - ---

Hannan thi s week.,. The
White Falcons recently coneluded a three game road
trip and will return home for
the firsl time since its season
opener on Friday bUI th e
Wildcats are currently in the
middle of a gruesome, fi ve
game road swing .
Hannan opened the season
with a 40-6 home loss to
South Gallia before drop-ping consecutive road tills to
Van (46-0) and Southern
(39-0). The Wildcats must
travel to Wahama this week
before trekking to Wirt
County and Gilmer Coun1y

-·--------- -

.

----·-·

!Jefore returning to the
soulhern Maso n · County
campu s to face Bishop
Donahue on October 12.
Sophomore running back
Micaiah Branch (5-foot-8,
160 pounds ) enjo yed a
!Jreakout game in the
Falcons hard fou ght 14-7
win over South Gallia last
week wilh Branch ru shin g
for a career high 107 yards·
and a touchdow n. Senior
Derek Veazey (5-8, 170), the
Bend Area teams go-to guy
throughout the first three
Please see Falcons, BJ

�PageB2-

ScOREBOARD

The Daily ~entinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailyseritinel.eom

At 3-0,-Bearcats stai:tlng to Winebrenner still leads Riverside
sell tickets, get national notice Seniors going into last week of play

Thursday, September 20, 2007.

STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYDAI LYSENTINELCOM

BY JoE KAY
AA SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Three games, three
emphatic wins . A defense ranked among the
nation's be&amp;t. More than a few votes for the
Top 25. Cobwebbed ticket windows starting
to do a brisk business.
The opening month has gone close to perfect for the University of Cinci nn ati, where
things have been so-so at best for a long
time.
·
Tbe Bearcats (3-0) have forced themselves into the national conversation with
their strong early showing under coach
Brian Kelly, who has turned an 8-5 team
into one that believes it deserves better.
_A run at a Big East title, perhaps?
''That's something we didn't really think
about here," safety Haruki Nakamura said.
"We · knew Loui sville, Rutgers and West
Virginia were always going to be in the top
half of the bracket. We were just trying to fit

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES

Larry Crum

Brad Sherman
Sports Editor
Record: 30- 10
Last Wet:k: 7-3
(wmners in

Bryan Walters

Sports Writer
Sports W riter
R ecord: 27- 13
Record 26- 14
Las t Week: 5-5
Last Week: 4- 6
(w inners in hold} {winners in hold)

)lg1d)

Record: 26- t4
Last Week: j-7
(~inners in .h id)

Galli;~

at Lllilll

~

~

South Gallia

at M an

at M an

MoW at

MoW
"
-fairland

Fairfand

at

MAn

Mliaat

MoWat

Fairfand

Fairrond
Hann~n

Hannan

iltWabemf

Yal:f
:nWaterfO

Rjyuy,n~

River Valley
at W.trrfqrd

.IHiiuo at

.lltlpu at

'

lkbtR at,

Win6eld at
Pgjnt Pluaoot

Winfield at
Pojot Pleasant

Southern at
Wjrt County

Southern at
Wirt ¢gugty

Jackson at .
Port•mouth

Porpmgutb

· Stssdnville

Stssonville
at Jfo):Dt

Cormpondem
Record: 26- 14

Gallia Acadc:my

Gct llia Audemy

at

L!liiJl

Slllllh.ilAIIia

MAn

at Man

MoWat

Mliaat

• Fairrond

Foirfand

W.b•me
BiverY•u;zt · '
at

atWaterfo

.lltlpu at

at

Charlie Shepherd

Last Week: 5-5
(winners in lwld)

L!liiJl

South Galli a
at MAn

(winners in

Gallia Academy
at l&amp;pa

Galli.! Academy

R eporter
R ecord: 24- 16
Lm Week: 3- 7
(winners in .b.W._4)

at LRP11

Galli a Academy
. .at lQpn

Gallia Academy

~

~

~

Sgyth Gallia
&lt;It Man

Mliaat

MoW at

MoW at

Foirrond

Fairfand

Mlia at
Fi ii-fand

at Man

at Man

at Man

Fairfand

H an ru~n

Hannan

Hannan

atW•bejma

atWthemt

at Wabeme

at Wabgmo

RivirValley

River Valley
at Wttcrfgrd

River Valley
at Waterford

River Valley

at. Waterford

at Waterford

R iver Valley
at Waterford

River Vall~

1ltliiR at

.IHiiuo at

~at

IW&amp;&gt;rt at

Eastern

Eastern

Eoastern

Eastern

Winfield at

Winfield at
Point Plea11nt

Winfield at
Point PJeaypt

Wjpfield at
Poim Pleasant

Southern at

So~thern n

Southern at
Wjrt Cougty

Southem at

Wjrt Coypty

South ern at
Wirt CourUy

Southern at

Wirt County

Wjrt Cgunty

Wjrt County

at
ort\mouth

Ja~kson at
Pgfhm(lutb

Jacktoo at
Po rtsmouth

Sj,.oQYiQe ,
at Wayne

S1ssonville

Stss oaWJlle

at~ .

at~

Jackson at

,It

Pprtlmoutb

Ja ck.~on

at

~ockagg

Porhmoyth

SJssonvtlle

Sissonville

Sissonville

SJ s~ onvillc

"~

"~ -·

at~

at ~

Hannan

at WaterfO

,.

Eoastern
W infield at
Pojnt Pl1f11pt

- So uthern at
Wirt County

at

Sissonville
at

lfaxm.

revious Cbamps- 2001: Butcb Cooi&gt;er --- 2002:
. Butch. Cooper-·- 2003: Brad Sherman--- 2004: Brad Sherman--- 2005: Bryan Walters--- 2006: Brad Sherman ·~
)

78; Pierre, los Angeles, .6 0; HaRamirez,
~lorida , 50; Bymes, Arizona, 45;
Victorino, Philadelphia, 37; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 37; Taveras, Colorado, 33.
PITCHING (15 Oecislons)-Hetang,
Cincinnati, 16-4, .800, 3.61; Penny, Los
Angeles, 16-4, .800, 2.93; Peavy, .San
Diego, 18-6, .750, 2.39; Hamels,
Philadelphia, 14-5, .737, 3.59; CVargas,
Milwaukee, 11-4, .733, 4.89: BShaals,
Milwaukee, 12-5• .706. 3.82; Billingsley.
Los ""gales, ·11-5 • .687. 3.16.
·
STf!IKEOUTS- Paavy. San Diego,
225; Harang, Clnolnna11, 198: Webb.
Anzona,186:.,Smoi1Z,A11an1a, 181 ; RHIII,
9hiCago,, 175; .Snell , Pittsburgh, 171 :
lilly, Cl1icago, 168.
SAVE8-Va1Verde,
Arizona,
46;
FCordero, ""lwaukee, 43; Saito, los
Angelos, 39: Hoffman. San Diego, 39;
CCOrdero, Washington, 35; BW8gner,
New Ya.rk, 34; Weathers, Cincinnati, 31.

PRo BASEBALL
American League
Eaat Olvlalon
W L Pet
Boston
90 63 .588
New York\
88 64 .579
Toronto
77 75 .507
Baltimore
64 87 .424
Tampa Bay
63 90 .412
Central Dlvlalon

GB

n.

12~
25
27 .

W L PCt GB
90 62 .592
83 70 .542 7'h

Cleveland
Detroit
Minnesota
Chicago ,.
. Kansas City

n

75
.493
66 86 .434
65 86 .430

w..t Dlvlakm
W
90
81
7470

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

L
62
70
80
82

Pc1
.592
.536
.481
461

15
24
24 ~~

GB
8~1

17
20

PRo FOOTBALL

Tuaday's Games •
Cleveland 7, Detroit 4
NY. Yankees 12, Baltimore 0
Toronto 4 , Boston 3
Minnesota 4, Texas· 2
Kansas City 3, Chicago White Sox 2
Seattle 8, Oakland 7
LA Angels 2. Tampa Bay 1
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland 4, Detroit 2
Seattle 9, Oakland 5
L.A. Angels 2, Tampa Bay 1
N.Y. Yankees 2, Baltimore 1
Toronto 6, Boston 1

Notlonol Foo1blotllaogue
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

·Eut

I

._ ,

oi

~

•

Wattr19rd
T~ ~ · ' r:
· : ~. :.f......
· • .'1"'~· • ' ""~ .• •
Federal Hocl&lt;Ing ..••• • . • .

Minnesota
4, Texas
2 Kansas City 0
Chicago White
Sox 7.
Thursday's Games

E6sterrt .'.. , •... •'•,.
· , ,,' ·

30.

·~·yo

'
"• ·

f.

,

,;

•

•

SissOtlvltfe .. ,,..'--. ' :- •.• '"". ·' .•

.. .., ..l' ..·. ......

I~"
.v-

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t ~ ~

_(";J{&gt;)&lt;.~ 'A•U •• ,.

Poe$ ..... , .. , . ._. ... .

Point f'le,uairt . , . .... . : ..,
: . ·, . . . -: . . : .\ :c\''.c''f!.

~It
I

HeiberrHdo-Jer', , . , , . , ~ . :~:. '

o

Winft• ., .,..,,.: , .,. ~ , ..•. . : , •
•

••

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••

1

1
I

1

National League
East Division
W L Pel
New York
84 67 .556
Philadelphia
82 70 .539
Atlanta
79 73 .520
Washington
68 84 .447
Florida
65 87 .428
Central Division
W L Pet
Chicago
ao 73 .523
Milwaukee
78 73 .517
St.louis
71 80 .470
Cincinnati
69 83 .454
Pit1sburgh
66 86 .434
Houston
66 86 .434
West Dlvlllon
L Pet
Arizona
86 67 .562
San Diego
94 67 .556
Colorado
ao 72 .526
Los Angeles
79.73 .520
San Francisco
67 95 .441

w

2~
5 ~:
16~2
19~

GB
1

8
10'11

13'1~

13'/v

G~
1
5'/z
5~11
18'~

Tuesday's Gamea
Colorado 3, L.A Dodgers 1, 1st game
Colorado 9, L.A . Dodgers 8, 2nd game
Washington 9, N.Y. Mets 8
\ Atlanta 4, Florida 3
· Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 2
, Milwaukee 9, Houston 1
' Philadelphia 7, St. Louis 4 , 14.1nnlngs
Arizona 5, San Franc isco a
. San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 3
1
•
Wednesday 's Games
N.Y. Mars a, Washin gton 4
Atlanla 5, Florida 1
Chicago Cubs Cincinnati 2
Houston 5, Milwaukee 4. 10 innings
St. Louis 2. PhiladelPhia 1, tO inn 1ngs
Colorado 6, L.A. Dodgers 5
1 Arizona 6. Sen Francisco 4
San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 3
Thursday's Games
LA Dodgers (Lowe 12· I 2) at Colorado
1 (Jimenez 3. 4), 3:05 p.m.
Pittsburg h (Morris 9· 10) at San Diego
I (Tom ko 3·11)
3:35 p.m.
Ny
'G .
.
- . Mats ( lavme 13·6) at Flonda
: (Willis 9-15},7:05p.m.
Philadelphia
(Lohse
8-12)
at
Washington (Bergmann 5-5) 7: 05 p.m.

I

I

· · · · · ·.

a

6f~t~ta~d~

O

1 37

5

'i

s
~ : 19~ ~Y;~:

a.

2 6 7 35

(Looper 12-1 0), 8:10pm.
Cindnnall (Bailey 2·2) at San Francisco
(Cain 7-15). 1"0:15 p,m.
Friday's Games
PittsbUrgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:20p.m.
N.Y. Mats at Florida. 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Houston' at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Cmci,nnatl at San Francisco, 10: 15 p.m.

GB

PITCHING (1 5 Deci sions) - Be ckett .
Boston 19 6 760 3 20· Verlander
Oetro11 17-6
739 3 70 Bedard
Baltim~re 13
722 · 3 16· Wang Ne~
7 - ,7.20 . 3. 82,
b. h"
' 18.·7. ·.720.
Cleveland. 15-6, .714, 4.36: KEscobar.
Los Angeles. 17-7. 7a8, 3.46.
STR IKEOU TS- Bedard,
Ba ltimore ,
221 ; K azm ir, Tampa Bay, 22 0 ;
JoSanlana, Minnesota, 22a; Sabathia,
Cl v land 205· JVazguez, Chh;; ago,
~
. S .
.
e .e
'
'
193, Matsuzaka, Boston, 186, h1elds,
TampaBay, 184.
SAVES- Borowskl, Cleveland, 42;
J k Chicago 38· Pulz Seattle 38·
' •
• . ' ' 1
e n s, .
•
FrAo~r rg u s z_. l pos Anbgeles,Bo37,t TJones: (C
M11w~uke e )(S up p an 10-11) at Atlanta
3
5
1
son.
, , ormer - . : p.m.
etro1.
,
ape on.
Nathan, Minnesota. 34. "
Houston (Rodnguez 8-13) at St. Louis

.'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eaaf
WLTPc1 PF PA
Dallas
2 0 0 1.00082 55
Washington
2 0 0 1.00036 25
020 .0004880
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia 020 .0002536
South
WLTPcl PF PA
·1 1 ·.500 37 34
Tampa Bay
Carolina
1 1 0 .500 48 47
Atlanta
0 2 0 .000 10 37
New Orleans 020 .0002472
North
WLTPCI PF PA
Detroit
2 0 0 1.00056 38
Green Bay ·
2 0 0 1.00051 26
1 1 0 .500 41 23
Minnesota
1 1 0 ..500 23 24
Chicago
W.o1
WLTPot PF PA
San Francisco 2 0 0 1.000 37 33
Arizona
1 1 0 .500 40 40
1 1 0 .500 40 29
Seattle
St. Louis
0 2 0 .000 29 44

..

W•YM .... ... ..... .'..-.

a.

1

)j'f'il~;j.~~·.~~~~!:li~r~·~:

~· ::~! ::::·:?; ::.:.:;;:,;~:),::;

Chicago While Sox (Garland 9·12) at
Kansas City (Greinke 6-6), 2:10p.m.
Baltimore (Zambrano 0·2) at Texas
(McCar1hy 5-10), 8 05 p.m
Seattle (Feierabend 1-4) at LA Angels
(Jer.Weaver 12·7), 10:05 p.m.
Frlday'a Gamaa
Oakland at Clev61and, 7:05p.m.
laronto at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05·p .m.
Kansas City at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
Boston at Tampa Say, 7:10p.m.
Ballimore at Texas, 8:05p.m.
Chicago Wh"lte Sox at Minnesota. 8:10
p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
TODAY'S MLB LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-ISuzuki, Seattle, .354;
MOrdonez, Detro it, .353; Polanco,
Detroit , .342; Posada, New York, .335;
Lowell, Boston, .327; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles , .323; DOrtiz, Boston, .319.
AUN8-ARodrlguez, New York, 134;
Granderson, Detroit, 115; Sizemore,
Clevelend. 115: MOrdonez. Detroit, 112:
BAbreu, NewYork.111 ; !Suzuki. Seatue,
108; DOrtlt, Boston, 107.
ABI-ARodriguez, New York , 142;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 132: VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 120; CPena, Tampa Bay, 112;
lowell.
Boston .
109:
Morneau,
Minnesota, 108; DOrtiz, Boston, 107.
HITS-ISuzuki ,
Seattle,
223;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 2a1 , Jeter, New York,
191 ; MYoung, Texas, 19a; Polanco,
Detroit, 189; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 184;
OCabrera, Los Angeles, 184.
OOUBLES-MOrdonez, Detroit, 49;
DOrtlz, Boston , 47; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 45; THunter, Minnesota. 43:
Markakis, Baltimore, 42; AHill. Toronto.
42; BAoberts. Baltimore, 41 .
TRIPLES- Granderson. Detroit. 22 :
Crawford, Tampa Bay. 9: CGuillen ,
Delroil, 9; lwamura, Tampa Bay,
MeCabrera, New York , 8; DeJesus.
Kansas City, 8.
HOME RUNS- ARodrigllez, New York.
52; CPena, Tampa Bay, 40; OOrtiz.,
Boston, 31 ; Morneau, Minnesota, 30,
Thome, Chicago, 30; Konerko Chicago,
29; THunter, Minnesota, 28.
STOLEN BASES-Crawford , Tampa
Bay, 50; SRoberts, Baltimore, 46;
Figgin s, Los Angeles, 40; ISuzukl,
seattle, 37; CPatterson, Baltimore , 37;
Sizemore, Cleveland, 33: JLugo, Boston,

WLTPct PF PA
New England 2 001.00076 28
0 2 0 .000 17 41
euffalo
Miami
020 .0003353
N.Y. Jets
020 .0002758
South
WLTPc1 PF PA
Indianapolis
2 0 0 1.000 63 . 30
Houston
2 0 0 1.000 54 24
Tennessee
1 1 0 .500 33 32
Jacksonville 110 .5002320
North
WlTPc1 PF PA
Pittsburg!&gt;
2 0 0 1.00060 10
Cleveland
110 .5005879
1 1 0 .500 72 71
Cincinnati
1 1 0· .500 40 40
Baltimore
Wool
WLTPcl PF PA
Denver
2 001.00038 34
San Diego
1 1 0 .500 28 41
Kansas City 0 2 0 .000 13 40
Oakland
0 2 0 .000 41 59

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEAD·
ERS
NAT10NALLEAGUE
BATTING-HoUidey, Colorado, 340;
CJones, Atlanta., .~39; Renteria , Atlanta,
.338;
Utley,
Philadelphia,
.333;
HaRamlrez , Florida, .331 ; DYoung,
Washington , .323; MiCabrera, Florida,
.321 ; Pujols, St. Louis, 321
RUNS- Rollins, Philadelphia, 129;
HaRamirez, Florida, 116; JBAeyes, New
York , 112 ; Holliday, Colorado, 111 ;
BPhilllps, Onclnnall. 105; Uggla, Florida,
103; Wright, New York, 103.
RSI-Holliday, Colorado, 128; Howard,
Philadelphia, 120; GaLee, Hooston , 113;
1 Fielder, Milwaukee, 112; MiCabrera,
Florida, 106; Dunn , Cincinnati , 106;
, Atkins, Colorado, 103.
HITS- Holliday,
Colorado,
204;
' HaRamirez , Florida, 197; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 197; Pierre, Los Angeles,
184; JBReyes. New York, 182; BPhiUips,
Cincinnati, 182: FSanchez, Pit1sburgh,
1
180.
. DOUBLES- Holliday. Colorado, 48:
Utley, Philadelphia, 46; Ungta,
Florida,
"'
! 44: HaAamirez , Florida , 43; Rowand,
I Philadelphia, 43; FSanchez. Pittsburgh,
42;
KGreene,
San
D1egoCJ. 41 ;
I AdGonzalez. San Diego. 41 ;
ones,
I Atlanta. 41
.
TRIPLES-Rollins, Philad_elphta. 1a,
: JBReyes, N_ew York, 12. Johnson :
' Atlanta. 10, . Pe~ce, Housto ~ . 9,
, Amezaga, Flonda. 9, O~udson. Arizona.
9; DRoberts. San FranciSCO, 9.
HOME RUNS 'leld
M'l
k
.
I
.- r
~r, lwau ee. 47 ·
4
I H?,nw~rd ,. P h~ladel,~h, a,
Dunn:
1
-~ CM1.Ca
eonnal,, 0· Hoi iday, Co orado, 35•
brera,
Flonda ,
32;
Braun,
Milwaukee, 31 , Pujols, St. l:ouis, 31 _ .
1
, STOLEN BASE$-JBAeyes New Yorle
'
'
·

I

i
1.

I

4

°;

NlllonaiLAegue
ATLANTA BRAVES-Purchased the
contract of RHP Jeff BenneH from
Richmond (IL). Re~alled RHP Joey
Devine and OF Brandon Jones from
Richmond. Designated RHP Kevin Barry
for assignment
BASKETBALL
No1lonol S.oltolball Aaooclo11on
NBA--Nomed Tim Chen CEO of NBA
China.

. FOOTBALL
Nlllona!-11LHgue

.CAROLINA PANTHER5-'-Acllva1ed G
Jeremy Bridges off 1118 raeerve-suspende&lt;l Jls1. Pliced S Na1e
on Injured
r""""'e.
OL Kevin Sampson
lrom 1ha prac1lce oquad. Signed DB
Tanard Davia 10 1he praefloa alluad.
CHICAGO" BEAR5-Termlna1erl tho
contract of P Dirk Johnaon. Re·slgned
CB Ada Jimoh.
CINCINNATI BENGAL5-Signad "LB
Ohani JOnes to a one-year contract.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs--Placed S
Gerald Sensabaugh on injured reserve.
Re-signed S Jarnaal Fu~ge .
NEW
ENG~ND
PATRIOT8-Released OT Clint Oldenboutll trom lha
pnlctlce squad. ,Signed QB Dayld
Greene and DB Raymond Ventrone .to
the practice squad.
NEW YORK GIANT$-Signed Dj:

R-

s,ney

I

NEW YORK JET5-Signed OL Will
Montgomery.
·
· PHILADELPHIA EAGLE5-Ra-slgned
S J.R. Reed. .
ST. LOUIS RAM5-Signed CB Justin
Phinlaee and DE EriC Moore to lhe practice squad .• Released DT Keith JaCkson ·
from the practice &amp;quad.
HOCKEY
Nl11oniil Hockey Loague
CAROLINA HURRICANEs-Retumed i
F Drayson Bowman, F Justin McCra'e, F
HarriSOn Reed and F Chris Terry to their !
juiliOr teams.
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Assigned 0
Keatoo Elerby 1o Kamloops (WHL), C
Michael Frollk to Rlmouskl (QMJHL), C
Shawn ·Matlhlas 10 Bellsvilla (OHL) and
RW Michal Replk to Vancouver (WHL). •
LOS ANGELES KINGs-Assigned D
Richard Pe1101 10 Manchester (AHL).
Returned AW Wayne Simmonds to
SOUnd (OHL,). .
MINNESOTA WILD-Reasalgned F
Danny lrmen, F Cel CluHertuck, F Ryan
Hamilton, F Roman Voloshenko, F Stave
Kelty, .F Morten Madsen, F Molses
Gutierrez, F ...k&gt;el Ward, D Paul Albers, D
J.eff May, D Clayto" Stoner, D Fredljlric
St. Denis and G Barry Brust to Houston
(AHL). Released F Ryan Graham and 0
Maxim Noreau.
NASHVIllE .
PREOATORSReas$ignad F Mark SantDrEIIII to
Chilliwack (WHL), F Vlk1or S)odln 1o
Penland (WHL), F Nick Spallng 10
Kltchener {OHL), 0 Jonathon Blum to
Vanc:Ouver (WHL) and G Jeremy Smith
to Plymouth (OHL). Reassigned F Pa1ric
Homqvls1 10 Djurgardsn. Sweden,
Robe~ Dietrich 10 Ouaseldorl. Germany.
and D T&lt;iemu Laakso 10 HIFK Hel~nkl ,
Finland.
,
PHOENIX COYOTES--Assigned 0 Nlck Ross to Reglno (WHl).
PITTSBURGH PENGUIN5-Asslgnsd
G John Curry to Wllke~·Barr&amp;Scranton
(AHL).
ST. LOUIS BLUE5-Asslgned F Hans
Benson, F Nicholas Drazenovlc, F
Francois-Pierre Guenette. F Tomas
Kana , F Cam Keith, F Nikolay
Lemtyugov, F Charles Lingle!, F Ryan
Reaves, F Josh Soares, F Tim Spencer, •
F Julian Talbot, F Jean-Guy Trudel, ·o
Ryan Glenn, D Alexander Hallstrom, D
Nell Komadoskl, D Aaron Mackenzfa, 0
Bryan Miller, G Mike McKenna and G
Marek Schwarz to Peoria (AHL).
Assigned
Jonas Junland to Llnkoplng
of the Swedish Elite League.
COLLEGE
CLARION-Named Mike Brown baseball coach .
. STONEHILL- Named Garry Hoban
men's hockey coach.

I

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Falcons
fromPageBl

1

National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division ·
W L OLSLPts GF GA ..
PiHsburgh
1 0 1 0 3
7 5
7 8
N.Y. Islanders 1 1 1. 0 3
·',
Philadelphia 1 1 0 0 2
3 6
N.Y. Rangers 0 0 0 0 0
0 0
NewJersey 01000
2 3
· Northeoo1 Division '
W L OLSLPts GF GA
Toronto
1010355
Boston
1000231
Ottawa
1000240
1 2 0 0 2
6 .10 . '
Montreal
Bunalo
0000000
Southaaat Dlvlllan
W L OlSLPts GF GA
Atlanta
20004
7 4
Florida
2 1 0 0 4
10 7
carolina
1000243
Tarfl)a Bay
1000243
Washington 0 0 1 0 1 3 4
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OLSLPts GF GA ••
Detroit
1000261
Nashville
100 02
3 1
Ch~ago
1100277
Columbus
1 2 0 0 ·2
8 10
St.Louis
02000
6 9
Northwest D1vl11on
W L OLSLPts GF GA
Colorado
2 0 0 0 4 10 6
Edmonton
20004
8 6
Vancouver
1
1
3 6 3
Calgary
o 2 o 1 1 2 10
Minnesota
0 1 a 0 0
1 6
'.
Pacific Division
W l OLSLPts GF GA
Anaheim
2 2 0 1 5
11 12
16 18 . •·
Los Angeles 2 2 0 0 ~
Dallas
1 010399
San Jose
1001366
Phoemx
1 ·.1 1 0 3 7 8

o

expected for the rest of the1home games.
"lt's a lot different," senior running pack
Doug Jones said. " You look at the success
we' ve had in the past - it hasn't been very
good.
. "I've been throu gh hard times, been
throu gh good times . This is the best team
and the most disciplined team I' ve ever
been part of. We felt we deserved a little
national recognition, and we' re finally getting it. It's a great feeling for us."
The defense is getting the bulk of the
attention from opposing coaches. The
Bearcats have a lot of speed on a unit that
m.
"When he came in and said, ' Hey, we're returns seven starters and was among the
going to try to win a ·championship,' we Big East's best last season. So far, it's been
were like, 'Oh, he believes we can be one of
have given up only one
those teams.' Now everybody's got that
confidence, and we understand lhat .we can touchdown in the first three games. They
do it."
.
·
lead the nation in turnover margin, thanks to
'The early results suggest it's not only day- a defense that has II interceptions and six
fumbles already. The 16 points allowed
. dreaming.
The Bearcats put themselves on the map overall is the second-fewest among bowl
last season with their 30- 11 victory over subdivision teams.
"Most of the people on this defense have
Rutgers under coach Mark Dantonio, who
left for Michigan State after the last regular been (:\laying together for three years,"
season game. Kelly got the job, led the junior end Anthony Hoke said. "We've got
Bearcats to their .International Bowl victory that camaraderie. We can trust each other.
over Western Michigan, then overhauled a So I think we've got a lot going for us."
A victory on Saturday ·against winless
conservative offense that failed to capture
Marshall would leave them 4-0 for the first
the fans' imagination.
For the past 13 years, the Bearcats had time since 1954.
They' ll get a better feel for where they
been coached by former defensive coordinators. It showed in their plodding offense . rank in the Big East hierarchy when they
Even thou~h the Bearcats had one of the play at Rutgers , home against Louisville
conference s best defenses last season, they and at Pittsburgh in consecutive weeks.
struggled to score points in the most impor- Uritil then, the idea is to learn how to handle
high expectations and high praise- sometant games. .
•·
Kelly installed the no-huddle, spread thing totally foreign to the Bearcats.
"We talk about it now," Kelly said. "We
offense that he polished at Central
Michigan. He raised the standards, saying _a talk about it every day. Last week, we talked
middle-of-the-pack finish wasn't good about: Don' t become infected with success.
enough .. And he started promoting a=pro- This week we talked about: That bandwaggram that was an afterthought locally - an on is starting to fill up a little bit. So with
average of 21,000 .fans showed up for that come other things:·
"There's going to be some adversity,
games last season.
there's no question about that. The road and
They're starting to notice .
On Monday, the school sent out a notice the climb to the top is difficult. We used the
informing fans that they won't be allowed to analogy yesterday of the climb on Mount
stand on concourse areas of Nippert Everest. The top is a championship. We've
Stadium anymore because large crowds are just started."

and the tea m of Mike
Bragg. Tom McNeely. Nick
Salem and Jack Fox.
The closes! to the pin
winners were Ph il Burton
on hole No. 7 and Bub
Stivers on ho le No. I 4. A
total of 139 di ffe rent players have attended at least
one week of play with one
week remaining.

Mt\SON, W.Va.- Mick
Winebrenner has all but
clinched the 2007 championship in the Ri vers ide
Senior Me n's Golf League.
Winebrenner has amassed
a total of 292.5 points to
lead the defending champi on, Paul Somerville, by 17
points with o ne week
remaining. Two points back
of Somervjlle is Jack
' · ·
After i4 Weelq ·
·
Maloney with 273.5 points
.
.
.
for his season.
.
1. MiCk Wlt1ebrenner 292.5; 2. PtiUI -$0tnorvllle 275.5: 3. Jock Ma~ 2'73.5; 4 .
A total of 67 players were Ken Whi1«1 !112; 5. Joe LDng 244; 8. Clte1 Tl'&lt;&gt;r11ao 2&lt;12: 7. Kenny Greeno 239.5;
(tit) Pat Willamson and Re!&gt;h 5oyrlt 234.5: 10. Cha~~ Hargravu ~. 5; 11 .
in attendance Tuesday to e.
BHI W1nabMnnar 22e.5: 12. Cat1-5tpne 224.5: 13. Claude Prolfl11222.5; 14. Tom
form 16 four man teams and l.lcNoely 220: ,15. Bob Brooks 219.5; 16. Gary Mln10n 218.6: 17. Ja~ Fooc 215:
8 . - Jone&amp; 213; 19, ~Grubb 211 ; 20. Bob Hysell 2101 21 . Ed Coon
one three man team to make 1
20$.5; e2. Bill~ 20$; 23. Ciel&lt; ~ n 20$.5:' 24. Jim Turley 204.5; 25. Bill
f7 points available to the Yl&gt;h!&gt; 297.5; 26. t;;larl&lt;~ 196: !11. Riel&lt; Northup 190: 28. Don Waldie 189; 29.
low score. The low round of I rom f'letior .187; 30. fiOyOtlver 1&amp;8.5; 31 . Frank Brown 185. 5; 32. Gone Gray 1a4;
Cricl1 Mlnton .178; 34. .(tie) Bob Oliver and Harioy RM:e 175.5; 36. Don Fields
58 was shot by the team of 33.
175; 37:. Jim Cu~~·m 111:5
'
•
4~ ..·~- ,. .
.
Ken Whited, Phil Burton,

.2007 Senior League StandiUgs
~

Q

1

1

~

L'

nee again, time lOr Ittle Brown Jug

COLUMBUS (AP)
Trainer Joe Holloway likes
his chances in the Little
Brown Jug.
Holloway has two of the
top contenders, including
the heavy favorite Always A
Virgin, in Thursday's Little
Brown . Jug for 3-year-old
pacers at th.: Delaware
County Fairgrounds .
The race is the second leg
of the Triple Crown for pacers - with Always A Virgin
already winning the first, the
Cane Pace.
Always A Virgin is the
horse to beat in the second
elimination heat while
Holloway' s other entry,
Fresh Deck, is a strong contender in the first elimination. What Holloway fears
more than the other 14 hors es in the race is a bad break .
" Both of my colts are
good right now, but you just
can't afford to have bad raeing luck in this race,"
Holloway said. "I think
Always A Virgin is the best
in his elimination heat and I
think he's good enough to

make his own racing· luck,
bul you never know."
With 16 horses entered,
the Little Brown· Jug will be
contested in two elimination
heats with eig ht starters in
each. The first four finishers
in each elimination heat will
return for a second heat. If
one of the elimination heat
winners is not the winner of
the-second heat , then a raceoff will be contested among
the three heat winners.The
total purse is $480 ,000.
"You pretty much have to
win your elimination heat in
the Jug and hope that you
draw the post one in the second heat," Holloway said.
Holloway has good reason
to have confidence' in
Always A Virgin . The brown
colt has won eight of 12
starts this year, including his
last five races by substantial
margins. His most recent
win was a five :length romp
in the $297,500 Cane Pace.
In the Cane, Always A
Virgin overcame a No. 8
post on the outside to get
good position early and then

sprint away from his rival s.
Starting out of the No. 3
post in the Jug, Always A
Virgi n is listed at morning
line odds of 8-5 in the second division and has Brian
Sears in the sulky.- Both
Sears an(j Holloway will be
looking for their fir st win at
the Little Brown Jug, contested on a half-mile track at
a picturesque county fair.
Holloway was pleased
with Always A Virgin ' s
train ing efforl over the
Demware half-mile on
Tuesday as the colt responded with a fast quarter-mile at
the fini sh.
Always A Virgin's name is
derived from his dam, a
mare
named
Neverhaveneverwill.
Holloway said that Fresh
Deck is "better than he.'s
ever been" and has th e
advantage of starting from
the inside post in the first
division. Fresh Deck fin ished third behind Always A
Virgin in the Cane . He is 4- 1
in the morning line.

-9n .

PRo HocKEY

Marquiss Gunn from the practice squad.

Sundey'aGeme•
Miami at N.Y. Jets. 1 p.m.
Arizona at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Green Bay, 1 p .m.
Buffalo at New Englan", 1 p .m.
Indianapolis at Houston, 1 p .m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
SanFrenciscoatPittsburgh, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Philadelphia, 1 p.m
Cleveland at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
Cincinnati at Seat11e , 4:a5 p.m.
j Jacksonville at Denver. 4:05p.m
Carolina at Atlanta, 4:15 p.m.
1
NY Giants at Washington , 4:1 5p.m.
Dallas at Ch icago, 6:15p.m.
Monday'a Game
1 Tenne ssee at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
I
Sunday, s.-pt. 30
Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m.
St Louis al Dallas, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Mtami, 1 p.m.
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p .m.
N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Minnesota , 1 p .m.
2007 NIX.tll Cup Point Standing•
Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p .m.
After New Hampshire
Seattle at San Francisco, 4:05p.m .
ampa Say adt. Carolina, 4:05p.m .
Name
Wins
Pts.
eh-ver at In lanapolis. 4:15p.m.
1. Jimmie Johnson
6
52 10
I Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
1. Jeff Gordon
4
52 10
, Pi~burgh _at Arizona, 4:15 P -~·
3. Tony Stewart
3
-10
1 Ph11a~eiph1B ~~ N. V. Giants, 8.15 p.m.
4_Clint Bowyer
1
-15
: Open. Washmgton, Jacksonville, New 5. Kyle Busch
1
-35
Orleans , Tennessee
16. Martin Truex Jr.
1
-40
Monday, Oct. 1
1
-54
.
1 N
E 1 d t Cl .
7.
Matt
Kenseth
;
ew ngan a nclnna 11. 8 ·30 p.m
8. Car1 Edwards
2
·63
!
9. Denny Hamlin
1
-82
TRANSACTIONS
1o. Kevin Harvick
I
·88
I
·91
11 . Jeff Burton
2
· 102
Wednelday'e Spart1 Transactions
12. Kurt Busch
BASEBALL
----- - ·- · ·- ·--- ·- ·--- ·----- •

I

13. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
14. Ryan Newman
15. Casey Mears
16. Greg Biffle
17. Bobby Labonte
18. Jamie McMurray
19. J .J. Veley
20. Juan Pablo Montoya
21 . David Ragan
22. Kasey K.ahne
23. Read Sorenson
24. David Stremme
25. Ellllott Sadler
26. Mail&lt; Martin
27. Robby Gordon
28. David Gilllaland
29. JeN Green
30. Johnny Sauter
31 . Tony Raines
· 32. Ricky Audd
33. Dave Bl$n8Y
34. Paul Menard
35. Joe Nemechek
36. Sterling Ma~in
37. Scott Riggs
38. Kyle Petty
39. Brian Vickers
40. David Reutlmann

Marshall (0-3) at Cincinnati (3-0)

ev~~ebe~:~rcats

J.

Hannan

.IWiztt at

,,

ldiiiD

at Wabwe

Point PJeiiBnt

Jackson

at

Hannan

Eastern

Porhmguth

Paginator
Record : 25- t S
l ast Week: 4-6
(win ner:; in JuWI)

at W,bama

.IWiztt

Eastern

Jacbon at

at ~

Scott Wolfe

Correspondent
R ecord : 27-13
Last Week: 6-4
(winners in hllld)

South GaUia

Eastern

Eastern

Easter n

Gary Clark

R eporter ·
Record: 24-1 6
Last Week: 5-5
(winners in hD.ld)

Haflnaq

&lt;~ tW'•b•m•

atWaterfO

Beth Sergent

GaUia Academy ,
at l.gpn '·
at

ftannan
at »bema

Binr

(winners in

Gallia Ac_ademy .

Academy
at l.d&gt;pa

Gallia Academy
at Li;zpn

Gallia Academy
at l.gpn

Stacry Walters
Paginator

.J

Bob Hysell and Ralph
Say re.
In second place with a
score of 60 was the team of
Steve
Stove r,
Kenny
Gree ne, Dick Duga n and
Jac k Ma)oney. In th ird
pl ace with a score of 6 1 was
a tie be tween the teams of
Bub Stivers, Dewey Bird,
Don Field s and Joe Long

o

Two points for a win , one point for O\ler- .
time loss or shootoutloss.

"·
TUeaday·e Games
Boston 3, N.Y. Islanders 1
Ottawa 4, Philadelphia 0
Chicago 4, Columbus 3
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 2
Detroit 6, Minnesota 1
.
Dallas 6, St. Louis 5
Edmonton 3, Toronto 2, OT
Flor~a 3, Calgary 2, SO
Los Angeles 6. San Jose 5, SO
WedMIIdly'l Gamel
N.Y. Islanders 3, Montreal 1
Tampa Bay 4, Dallas 3, OT
Columbus 4, Chicago 3
Toronto 3, PhoeniM 2
Colorado 6, Los Angeles 3
San Jose 1, Anaheim 0
Vancou\ler 4, Calgary 0
ThuriCiay 'a Games
.New Jersey vs. Boston at Manchester;
N.H , 6 p .m.
Washington at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Delroit, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta at Nastwllle, 8 p.m.
Florida at ChiCago, 8:30p .m.
Colorado at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Edmonton at Vancouver. 10 p m.
Frklay'a. G1me1
Columbus at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Nashville at Carolina, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers , 7 p.m.
Pit1sburgh at Detroit , 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Montreal . 7:30 p .m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 8:30 p .m.
Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p m

'

weeks of the season, picked
up 93 yards on the ground
thanks to a vast week-byweek improvemei1t of lhe
locals interior line play.
Led by senior regulars
Brent Jones (5-10, 190) and
Caleb Roach (5-7, 220) the
White Falcons have boosted their rushing average to
166 yards per game after
experiencing a slow start.
Also figuring heavily in the
improved line play for
WHS is junior Tr-ey
Anderson
(6-0,
165),
sophomore
Kevin
Klingensmith (6- 1, 295),
junior Colby Davis (5-8,
150), senior James Gray (60, 165), junior Kasey White
(5-10, 180), sophomores
Luke Ingels (5-8 , 190) and
Kevin Lauder milt (5-1 0,
230) and fre shman Scott
Roush (5-10, 260) .
Veazey is the Bend Area
teams leading scorer and
ground gainer with 42
points on the season and
342 yards rushing. Branch
has 195 yards toting the
pigskin with senior Josh
Pauley (5-9, 170) totaling
125 yards on the ground
through the first four
games.
Sophomore quarterback
William Zuspan (5-9, 145)
has connected on 15-of-29
aerials on the year for 174
yards and a touchdown
with Veazey tossing I 0
completions in 20 tries for
168 yards and two scores.
Zuspan has been picked off
twice and Veazey once .
Junior wide receiver
Garrett Underwood (5- 10,
160) lead s the Falco"n
receiving corp with 12
catches for 176 yards and
two touchdown s while
senior Gabe Roush (6- 1,
170) has fiv e g(abs for 99
yards and one score .
Defensively
Jone s,
Branch , Gabe Roush and
Trey Anderson are th e
defensive leaders with
Veazey interceptin g three
passes on the season and
Klingensmith comi ng up
with a pair of enemy fumble recoveries.
•
Hannan, under the guid-·
ance of Keith Taylor, will

be seeking some offensive
firepower
when
the
Wildcats VISit Bacthel
Stadium in Mason. Hannan
. has scored only one touchdown this year with junior
quarterback Nathan Payne
(6-1, 241) sneaking in from
three yards out in its season
South
opener
against
Gallia. The Wildcats were
shutout the' past two weeks
by Van aitd Southern.
Taylor, the fourth Hannan
coach in three years, is
looking for improvement
week-by-week from his
young
Wildcat
squad
despite a tough sched\Jle
through the first half of the
season. Heading into the
midway point of the season
the record for the Wildcats
first five opponents is an
impressive 12-8 while the
final five dates on its fall
card has a combined 3-17
mark.
Senior running back Zach
Sturgeon (5-6, 150) and
sophomore Jared Cobb (55, 130) . along with junior
Joe Kelly (6-0, 195) are
expected to. join Payne in
.the HHS backfield with
juniors Patrick Flora (6-0,
145) and Travis Elowman
(6-4, 145) being the
Wildcats leading receivers.
A mammoth front line
features seniors Jeff Martin
(5-8, 162), Carl Waugh (61, 296) and Andy Sowards
(6-1, 314), junior Jared
Taylor (6-0 , 250) and
sophomore Shawn Kauffer
(6-0, 280).
Payne threw the ball 31
times for 98 yards against
South Gallia but only tried
five passes for 18 yards
against Southern so the
White Falcons mu st pre- .
pare for both an aerial barrage or a featured ground
attack from the Wjldcats on
Friday.
·
Wahama owns a 5-0 edge
in the series with its Mason
County nei g hbors with
WHS defeating Hannan by
a 28 -6 margin last year. The
White Falcons average 21 .5
points per game offensively
while allowing 8.5 points
per contest to the combined
foe . Hannan is scoring 3.0
points per outing offensively whil e giving up 41.6
points to the opposition.
Kick -off time for Friday
night 's Maso n Count y clash
is 7:30 p.m.

..
' .

·.·

.., ..

I~ • &gt;

,: ',

·I·

/I,

.i

. . ......

•'

...

Office of Economic and
Workforce Development
' '~

'&lt;

Hometown
· Market

QJCK ON THE ·UNKS
Tb VIEW SPONSORS .

405'Peari Street
M~feport, Ohio

AD/WEBSlfES

.:740-992·3471

PUAS£ SUPPORT THESE L.roJ.
BUSINESSES WHO SUPPORT
OUR HOMEfOWN NEWSPAPER!

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Member FDIC

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�PageB2-

ScOREBOARD

The Daily ~entinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailyseritinel.eom

At 3-0,-Bearcats stai:tlng to Winebrenner still leads Riverside
sell tickets, get national notice Seniors going into last week of play

Thursday, September 20, 2007.

STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYDAI LYSENTINELCOM

BY JoE KAY
AA SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Three games, three
emphatic wins . A defense ranked among the
nation's be&amp;t. More than a few votes for the
Top 25. Cobwebbed ticket windows starting
to do a brisk business.
The opening month has gone close to perfect for the University of Cinci nn ati, where
things have been so-so at best for a long
time.
·
Tbe Bearcats (3-0) have forced themselves into the national conversation with
their strong early showing under coach
Brian Kelly, who has turned an 8-5 team
into one that believes it deserves better.
_A run at a Big East title, perhaps?
''That's something we didn't really think
about here," safety Haruki Nakamura said.
"We · knew Loui sville, Rutgers and West
Virginia were always going to be in the top
half of the bracket. We were just trying to fit

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES

Larry Crum

Brad Sherman
Sports Editor
Record: 30- 10
Last Wet:k: 7-3
(wmners in

Bryan Walters

Sports Writer
Sports W riter
R ecord: 27- 13
Record 26- 14
Las t Week: 5-5
Last Week: 4- 6
(w inners in hold} {winners in hold)

)lg1d)

Record: 26- t4
Last Week: j-7
(~inners in .h id)

Galli;~

at Lllilll

~

~

South Gallia

at M an

at M an

MoW at

MoW
"
-fairland

Fairfand

at

MAn

Mliaat

MoWat

Fairfand

Fairrond
Hann~n

Hannan

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:nWaterfO

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River Valley
at W.trrfqrd

.IHiiuo at

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'

lkbtR at,

Win6eld at
Pgjnt Pluaoot

Winfield at
Pojot Pleasant

Southern at
Wjrt County

Southern at
Wirt ¢gugty

Jackson at .
Port•mouth

Porpmgutb

· Stssdnville

Stssonville
at Jfo):Dt

Cormpondem
Record: 26- 14

Gallia Acadc:my

Gct llia Audemy

at

L!liiJl

Slllllh.ilAIIia

MAn

at Man

MoWat

Mliaat

• Fairrond

Foirfand

W.b•me
BiverY•u;zt · '
at

atWaterfo

.lltlpu at

at

Charlie Shepherd

Last Week: 5-5
(winners in lwld)

L!liiJl

South Galli a
at MAn

(winners in

Gallia Academy
at l&amp;pa

Galli.! Academy

R eporter
R ecord: 24- 16
Lm Week: 3- 7
(winners in .b.W._4)

at LRP11

Galli a Academy
. .at lQpn

Gallia Academy

~

~

~

Sgyth Gallia
&lt;It Man

Mliaat

MoW at

MoW at

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Mlia at
Fi ii-fand

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at Man

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H an ru~n

Hannan

Hannan

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at Wabeme

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RivirValley

River Valley
at Wttcrfgrd

River Valley
at Waterford

River Valley

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R iver Valley
at Waterford

River Vall~

1ltliiR at

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Eastern

Eastern

Eoastern

Eastern

Winfield at

Winfield at
Point Plea11nt

Winfield at
Point PJeaypt

Wjpfield at
Poim Pleasant

Southern at

So~thern n

Southern at
Wjrt Cougty

Southem at

Wjrt Coypty

South ern at
Wirt CourUy

Southern at

Wirt County

Wjrt Cgunty

Wjrt County

at
ort\mouth

Ja~kson at
Pgfhm(lutb

Jacktoo at
Po rtsmouth

Sj,.oQYiQe ,
at Wayne

S1ssonville

Stss oaWJlle

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at~

Jackson at

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at

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Sissonville

Sissonville

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Eoastern
W infield at
Pojnt Pl1f11pt

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Wirt County

at

Sissonville
at

lfaxm.

revious Cbamps- 2001: Butcb Cooi&gt;er --- 2002:
. Butch. Cooper-·- 2003: Brad Sherman--- 2004: Brad Sherman--- 2005: Bryan Walters--- 2006: Brad Sherman ·~
)

78; Pierre, los Angeles, .6 0; HaRamirez,
~lorida , 50; Bymes, Arizona, 45;
Victorino, Philadelphia, 37; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 37; Taveras, Colorado, 33.
PITCHING (15 Oecislons)-Hetang,
Cincinnati, 16-4, .800, 3.61; Penny, Los
Angeles, 16-4, .800, 2.93; Peavy, .San
Diego, 18-6, .750, 2.39; Hamels,
Philadelphia, 14-5, .737, 3.59; CVargas,
Milwaukee, 11-4, .733, 4.89: BShaals,
Milwaukee, 12-5• .706. 3.82; Billingsley.
Los ""gales, ·11-5 • .687. 3.16.
·
STf!IKEOUTS- Paavy. San Diego,
225; Harang, Clnolnna11, 198: Webb.
Anzona,186:.,Smoi1Z,A11an1a, 181 ; RHIII,
9hiCago,, 175; .Snell , Pittsburgh, 171 :
lilly, Cl1icago, 168.
SAVE8-Va1Verde,
Arizona,
46;
FCordero, ""lwaukee, 43; Saito, los
Angelos, 39: Hoffman. San Diego, 39;
CCOrdero, Washington, 35; BW8gner,
New Ya.rk, 34; Weathers, Cincinnati, 31.

PRo BASEBALL
American League
Eaat Olvlalon
W L Pet
Boston
90 63 .588
New York\
88 64 .579
Toronto
77 75 .507
Baltimore
64 87 .424
Tampa Bay
63 90 .412
Central Dlvlalon

GB

n.

12~
25
27 .

W L PCt GB
90 62 .592
83 70 .542 7'h

Cleveland
Detroit
Minnesota
Chicago ,.
. Kansas City

n

75
.493
66 86 .434
65 86 .430

w..t Dlvlakm
W
90
81
7470

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

L
62
70
80
82

Pc1
.592
.536
.481
461

15
24
24 ~~

GB
8~1

17
20

PRo FOOTBALL

Tuaday's Games •
Cleveland 7, Detroit 4
NY. Yankees 12, Baltimore 0
Toronto 4 , Boston 3
Minnesota 4, Texas· 2
Kansas City 3, Chicago White Sox 2
Seattle 8, Oakland 7
LA Angels 2. Tampa Bay 1
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland 4, Detroit 2
Seattle 9, Oakland 5
L.A. Angels 2, Tampa Bay 1
N.Y. Yankees 2, Baltimore 1
Toronto 6, Boston 1

Notlonol Foo1blotllaogue
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

·Eut

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oi

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Wattr19rd
T~ ~ · ' r:
· : ~. :.f......
· • .'1"'~· • ' ""~ .• •
Federal Hocl&lt;Ing ..••• • . • .

Minnesota
4, Texas
2 Kansas City 0
Chicago White
Sox 7.
Thursday's Games

E6sterrt .'.. , •... •'•,.
· , ,,' ·

30.

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,;

•

•

SissOtlvltfe .. ,,..'--. ' :- •.• '"". ·' .•

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_(";J{&gt;)&lt;.~ 'A•U •• ,.

Poe$ ..... , .. , . ._. ... .

Point f'le,uairt . , . .... . : ..,
: . ·, . . . -: . . : .\ :c\''.c''f!.

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•

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National League
East Division
W L Pel
New York
84 67 .556
Philadelphia
82 70 .539
Atlanta
79 73 .520
Washington
68 84 .447
Florida
65 87 .428
Central Division
W L Pet
Chicago
ao 73 .523
Milwaukee
78 73 .517
St.louis
71 80 .470
Cincinnati
69 83 .454
Pit1sburgh
66 86 .434
Houston
66 86 .434
West Dlvlllon
L Pet
Arizona
86 67 .562
San Diego
94 67 .556
Colorado
ao 72 .526
Los Angeles
79.73 .520
San Francisco
67 95 .441

w

2~
5 ~:
16~2
19~

GB
1

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10'11

13'1~

13'/v

G~
1
5'/z
5~11
18'~

Tuesday's Gamea
Colorado 3, L.A Dodgers 1, 1st game
Colorado 9, L.A . Dodgers 8, 2nd game
Washington 9, N.Y. Mets 8
\ Atlanta 4, Florida 3
· Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 2
, Milwaukee 9, Houston 1
' Philadelphia 7, St. Louis 4 , 14.1nnlngs
Arizona 5, San Franc isco a
. San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 3
1
•
Wednesday 's Games
N.Y. Mars a, Washin gton 4
Atlanla 5, Florida 1
Chicago Cubs Cincinnati 2
Houston 5, Milwaukee 4. 10 innings
St. Louis 2. PhiladelPhia 1, tO inn 1ngs
Colorado 6, L.A. Dodgers 5
1 Arizona 6. Sen Francisco 4
San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 3
Thursday's Games
LA Dodgers (Lowe 12· I 2) at Colorado
1 (Jimenez 3. 4), 3:05 p.m.
Pittsburg h (Morris 9· 10) at San Diego
I (Tom ko 3·11)
3:35 p.m.
Ny
'G .
.
- . Mats ( lavme 13·6) at Flonda
: (Willis 9-15},7:05p.m.
Philadelphia
(Lohse
8-12)
at
Washington (Bergmann 5-5) 7: 05 p.m.

I

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a

6f~t~ta~d~

O

1 37

5

'i

s
~ : 19~ ~Y;~:

a.

2 6 7 35

(Looper 12-1 0), 8:10pm.
Cindnnall (Bailey 2·2) at San Francisco
(Cain 7-15). 1"0:15 p,m.
Friday's Games
PittsbUrgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:20p.m.
N.Y. Mats at Florida. 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Houston' at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Cmci,nnatl at San Francisco, 10: 15 p.m.

GB

PITCHING (1 5 Deci sions) - Be ckett .
Boston 19 6 760 3 20· Verlander
Oetro11 17-6
739 3 70 Bedard
Baltim~re 13
722 · 3 16· Wang Ne~
7 - ,7.20 . 3. 82,
b. h"
' 18.·7. ·.720.
Cleveland. 15-6, .714, 4.36: KEscobar.
Los Angeles. 17-7. 7a8, 3.46.
STR IKEOU TS- Bedard,
Ba ltimore ,
221 ; K azm ir, Tampa Bay, 22 0 ;
JoSanlana, Minnesota, 22a; Sabathia,
Cl v land 205· JVazguez, Chh;; ago,
~
. S .
.
e .e
'
'
193, Matsuzaka, Boston, 186, h1elds,
TampaBay, 184.
SAVES- Borowskl, Cleveland, 42;
J k Chicago 38· Pulz Seattle 38·
' •
• . ' ' 1
e n s, .
•
FrAo~r rg u s z_. l pos Anbgeles,Bo37,t TJones: (C
M11w~uke e )(S up p an 10-11) at Atlanta
3
5
1
son.
, , ormer - . : p.m.
etro1.
,
ape on.
Nathan, Minnesota. 34. "
Houston (Rodnguez 8-13) at St. Louis

.'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eaaf
WLTPc1 PF PA
Dallas
2 0 0 1.00082 55
Washington
2 0 0 1.00036 25
020 .0004880
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia 020 .0002536
South
WLTPcl PF PA
·1 1 ·.500 37 34
Tampa Bay
Carolina
1 1 0 .500 48 47
Atlanta
0 2 0 .000 10 37
New Orleans 020 .0002472
North
WLTPCI PF PA
Detroit
2 0 0 1.00056 38
Green Bay ·
2 0 0 1.00051 26
1 1 0 .500 41 23
Minnesota
1 1 0 ..500 23 24
Chicago
W.o1
WLTPot PF PA
San Francisco 2 0 0 1.000 37 33
Arizona
1 1 0 .500 40 40
1 1 0 .500 40 29
Seattle
St. Louis
0 2 0 .000 29 44

..

W•YM .... ... ..... .'..-.

a.

1

)j'f'il~;j.~~·.~~~~!:li~r~·~:

~· ::~! ::::·:?; ::.:.:;;:,;~:),::;

Chicago While Sox (Garland 9·12) at
Kansas City (Greinke 6-6), 2:10p.m.
Baltimore (Zambrano 0·2) at Texas
(McCar1hy 5-10), 8 05 p.m
Seattle (Feierabend 1-4) at LA Angels
(Jer.Weaver 12·7), 10:05 p.m.
Frlday'a Gamaa
Oakland at Clev61and, 7:05p.m.
laronto at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05·p .m.
Kansas City at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
Boston at Tampa Say, 7:10p.m.
Ballimore at Texas, 8:05p.m.
Chicago Wh"lte Sox at Minnesota. 8:10
p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
TODAY'S MLB LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-ISuzuki, Seattle, .354;
MOrdonez, Detro it, .353; Polanco,
Detroit , .342; Posada, New York, .335;
Lowell, Boston, .327; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles , .323; DOrtiz, Boston, .319.
AUN8-ARodrlguez, New York, 134;
Granderson, Detroit, 115; Sizemore,
Clevelend. 115: MOrdonez. Detroit, 112:
BAbreu, NewYork.111 ; !Suzuki. Seatue,
108; DOrtlt, Boston, 107.
ABI-ARodriguez, New York , 142;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 132: VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 120; CPena, Tampa Bay, 112;
lowell.
Boston .
109:
Morneau,
Minnesota, 108; DOrtiz, Boston, 107.
HITS-ISuzuki ,
Seattle,
223;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 2a1 , Jeter, New York,
191 ; MYoung, Texas, 19a; Polanco,
Detroit, 189; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 184;
OCabrera, Los Angeles, 184.
OOUBLES-MOrdonez, Detroit, 49;
DOrtlz, Boston , 47; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 45; THunter, Minnesota. 43:
Markakis, Baltimore, 42; AHill. Toronto.
42; BAoberts. Baltimore, 41 .
TRIPLES- Granderson. Detroit. 22 :
Crawford, Tampa Bay. 9: CGuillen ,
Delroil, 9; lwamura, Tampa Bay,
MeCabrera, New York , 8; DeJesus.
Kansas City, 8.
HOME RUNS- ARodrigllez, New York.
52; CPena, Tampa Bay, 40; OOrtiz.,
Boston, 31 ; Morneau, Minnesota, 30,
Thome, Chicago, 30; Konerko Chicago,
29; THunter, Minnesota, 28.
STOLEN BASES-Crawford , Tampa
Bay, 50; SRoberts, Baltimore, 46;
Figgin s, Los Angeles, 40; ISuzukl,
seattle, 37; CPatterson, Baltimore , 37;
Sizemore, Cleveland, 33: JLugo, Boston,

WLTPct PF PA
New England 2 001.00076 28
0 2 0 .000 17 41
euffalo
Miami
020 .0003353
N.Y. Jets
020 .0002758
South
WLTPc1 PF PA
Indianapolis
2 0 0 1.000 63 . 30
Houston
2 0 0 1.000 54 24
Tennessee
1 1 0 .500 33 32
Jacksonville 110 .5002320
North
WlTPc1 PF PA
Pittsburg!&gt;
2 0 0 1.00060 10
Cleveland
110 .5005879
1 1 0 .500 72 71
Cincinnati
1 1 0· .500 40 40
Baltimore
Wool
WLTPcl PF PA
Denver
2 001.00038 34
San Diego
1 1 0 .500 28 41
Kansas City 0 2 0 .000 13 40
Oakland
0 2 0 .000 41 59

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEAD·
ERS
NAT10NALLEAGUE
BATTING-HoUidey, Colorado, 340;
CJones, Atlanta., .~39; Renteria , Atlanta,
.338;
Utley,
Philadelphia,
.333;
HaRamlrez , Florida, .331 ; DYoung,
Washington , .323; MiCabrera, Florida,
.321 ; Pujols, St. Louis, 321
RUNS- Rollins, Philadelphia, 129;
HaRamirez, Florida, 116; JBAeyes, New
York , 112 ; Holliday, Colorado, 111 ;
BPhilllps, Onclnnall. 105; Uggla, Florida,
103; Wright, New York, 103.
RSI-Holliday, Colorado, 128; Howard,
Philadelphia, 120; GaLee, Hooston , 113;
1 Fielder, Milwaukee, 112; MiCabrera,
Florida, 106; Dunn , Cincinnati , 106;
, Atkins, Colorado, 103.
HITS- Holliday,
Colorado,
204;
' HaRamirez , Florida, 197; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 197; Pierre, Los Angeles,
184; JBReyes. New York, 182; BPhiUips,
Cincinnati, 182: FSanchez, Pit1sburgh,
1
180.
. DOUBLES- Holliday. Colorado, 48:
Utley, Philadelphia, 46; Ungta,
Florida,
"'
! 44: HaAamirez , Florida , 43; Rowand,
I Philadelphia, 43; FSanchez. Pittsburgh,
42;
KGreene,
San
D1egoCJ. 41 ;
I AdGonzalez. San Diego. 41 ;
ones,
I Atlanta. 41
.
TRIPLES-Rollins, Philad_elphta. 1a,
: JBReyes, N_ew York, 12. Johnson :
' Atlanta. 10, . Pe~ce, Housto ~ . 9,
, Amezaga, Flonda. 9, O~udson. Arizona.
9; DRoberts. San FranciSCO, 9.
HOME RUNS 'leld
M'l
k
.
I
.- r
~r, lwau ee. 47 ·
4
I H?,nw~rd ,. P h~ladel,~h, a,
Dunn:
1
-~ CM1.Ca
eonnal,, 0· Hoi iday, Co orado, 35•
brera,
Flonda ,
32;
Braun,
Milwaukee, 31 , Pujols, St. l:ouis, 31 _ .
1
, STOLEN BASE$-JBAeyes New Yorle
'
'
·

I

i
1.

I

4

°;

NlllonaiLAegue
ATLANTA BRAVES-Purchased the
contract of RHP Jeff BenneH from
Richmond (IL). Re~alled RHP Joey
Devine and OF Brandon Jones from
Richmond. Designated RHP Kevin Barry
for assignment
BASKETBALL
No1lonol S.oltolball Aaooclo11on
NBA--Nomed Tim Chen CEO of NBA
China.

. FOOTBALL
Nlllona!-11LHgue

.CAROLINA PANTHER5-'-Acllva1ed G
Jeremy Bridges off 1118 raeerve-suspende&lt;l Jls1. Pliced S Na1e
on Injured
r""""'e.
OL Kevin Sampson
lrom 1ha prac1lce oquad. Signed DB
Tanard Davia 10 1he praefloa alluad.
CHICAGO" BEAR5-Termlna1erl tho
contract of P Dirk Johnaon. Re·slgned
CB Ada Jimoh.
CINCINNATI BENGAL5-Signad "LB
Ohani JOnes to a one-year contract.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs--Placed S
Gerald Sensabaugh on injured reserve.
Re-signed S Jarnaal Fu~ge .
NEW
ENG~ND
PATRIOT8-Released OT Clint Oldenboutll trom lha
pnlctlce squad. ,Signed QB Dayld
Greene and DB Raymond Ventrone .to
the practice squad.
NEW YORK GIANT$-Signed Dj:

R-

s,ney

I

NEW YORK JET5-Signed OL Will
Montgomery.
·
· PHILADELPHIA EAGLE5-Ra-slgned
S J.R. Reed. .
ST. LOUIS RAM5-Signed CB Justin
Phinlaee and DE EriC Moore to lhe practice squad .• Released DT Keith JaCkson ·
from the practice &amp;quad.
HOCKEY
Nl11oniil Hockey Loague
CAROLINA HURRICANEs-Retumed i
F Drayson Bowman, F Justin McCra'e, F
HarriSOn Reed and F Chris Terry to their !
juiliOr teams.
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Assigned 0
Keatoo Elerby 1o Kamloops (WHL), C
Michael Frollk to Rlmouskl (QMJHL), C
Shawn ·Matlhlas 10 Bellsvilla (OHL) and
RW Michal Replk to Vancouver (WHL). •
LOS ANGELES KINGs-Assigned D
Richard Pe1101 10 Manchester (AHL).
Returned AW Wayne Simmonds to
SOUnd (OHL,). .
MINNESOTA WILD-Reasalgned F
Danny lrmen, F Cel CluHertuck, F Ryan
Hamilton, F Roman Voloshenko, F Stave
Kelty, .F Morten Madsen, F Molses
Gutierrez, F ...k&gt;el Ward, D Paul Albers, D
J.eff May, D Clayto" Stoner, D Fredljlric
St. Denis and G Barry Brust to Houston
(AHL). Released F Ryan Graham and 0
Maxim Noreau.
NASHVIllE .
PREOATORSReas$ignad F Mark SantDrEIIII to
Chilliwack (WHL), F Vlk1or S)odln 1o
Penland (WHL), F Nick Spallng 10
Kltchener {OHL), 0 Jonathon Blum to
Vanc:Ouver (WHL) and G Jeremy Smith
to Plymouth (OHL). Reassigned F Pa1ric
Homqvls1 10 Djurgardsn. Sweden,
Robe~ Dietrich 10 Ouaseldorl. Germany.
and D T&lt;iemu Laakso 10 HIFK Hel~nkl ,
Finland.
,
PHOENIX COYOTES--Assigned 0 Nlck Ross to Reglno (WHl).
PITTSBURGH PENGUIN5-Asslgnsd
G John Curry to Wllke~·Barr&amp;Scranton
(AHL).
ST. LOUIS BLUE5-Asslgned F Hans
Benson, F Nicholas Drazenovlc, F
Francois-Pierre Guenette. F Tomas
Kana , F Cam Keith, F Nikolay
Lemtyugov, F Charles Lingle!, F Ryan
Reaves, F Josh Soares, F Tim Spencer, •
F Julian Talbot, F Jean-Guy Trudel, ·o
Ryan Glenn, D Alexander Hallstrom, D
Nell Komadoskl, D Aaron Mackenzfa, 0
Bryan Miller, G Mike McKenna and G
Marek Schwarz to Peoria (AHL).
Assigned
Jonas Junland to Llnkoplng
of the Swedish Elite League.
COLLEGE
CLARION-Named Mike Brown baseball coach .
. STONEHILL- Named Garry Hoban
men's hockey coach.

I

Dwen

o

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I

NASCAR

I1
0
I

I

0
0

3074
-41
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fromPageBl

1

National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division ·
W L OLSLPts GF GA ..
PiHsburgh
1 0 1 0 3
7 5
7 8
N.Y. Islanders 1 1 1. 0 3
·',
Philadelphia 1 1 0 0 2
3 6
N.Y. Rangers 0 0 0 0 0
0 0
NewJersey 01000
2 3
· Northeoo1 Division '
W L OLSLPts GF GA
Toronto
1010355
Boston
1000231
Ottawa
1000240
1 2 0 0 2
6 .10 . '
Montreal
Bunalo
0000000
Southaaat Dlvlllan
W L OlSLPts GF GA
Atlanta
20004
7 4
Florida
2 1 0 0 4
10 7
carolina
1000243
Tarfl)a Bay
1000243
Washington 0 0 1 0 1 3 4
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OLSLPts GF GA ••
Detroit
1000261
Nashville
100 02
3 1
Ch~ago
1100277
Columbus
1 2 0 0 ·2
8 10
St.Louis
02000
6 9
Northwest D1vl11on
W L OLSLPts GF GA
Colorado
2 0 0 0 4 10 6
Edmonton
20004
8 6
Vancouver
1
1
3 6 3
Calgary
o 2 o 1 1 2 10
Minnesota
0 1 a 0 0
1 6
'.
Pacific Division
W l OLSLPts GF GA
Anaheim
2 2 0 1 5
11 12
16 18 . •·
Los Angeles 2 2 0 0 ~
Dallas
1 010399
San Jose
1001366
Phoemx
1 ·.1 1 0 3 7 8

o

expected for the rest of the1home games.
"lt's a lot different," senior running pack
Doug Jones said. " You look at the success
we' ve had in the past - it hasn't been very
good.
. "I've been throu gh hard times, been
throu gh good times . This is the best team
and the most disciplined team I' ve ever
been part of. We felt we deserved a little
national recognition, and we' re finally getting it. It's a great feeling for us."
The defense is getting the bulk of the
attention from opposing coaches. The
Bearcats have a lot of speed on a unit that
m.
"When he came in and said, ' Hey, we're returns seven starters and was among the
going to try to win a ·championship,' we Big East's best last season. So far, it's been
were like, 'Oh, he believes we can be one of
have given up only one
those teams.' Now everybody's got that
confidence, and we understand lhat .we can touchdown in the first three games. They
do it."
.
·
lead the nation in turnover margin, thanks to
'The early results suggest it's not only day- a defense that has II interceptions and six
fumbles already. The 16 points allowed
. dreaming.
The Bearcats put themselves on the map overall is the second-fewest among bowl
last season with their 30- 11 victory over subdivision teams.
"Most of the people on this defense have
Rutgers under coach Mark Dantonio, who
left for Michigan State after the last regular been (:\laying together for three years,"
season game. Kelly got the job, led the junior end Anthony Hoke said. "We've got
Bearcats to their .International Bowl victory that camaraderie. We can trust each other.
over Western Michigan, then overhauled a So I think we've got a lot going for us."
A victory on Saturday ·against winless
conservative offense that failed to capture
Marshall would leave them 4-0 for the first
the fans' imagination.
For the past 13 years, the Bearcats had time since 1954.
They' ll get a better feel for where they
been coached by former defensive coordinators. It showed in their plodding offense . rank in the Big East hierarchy when they
Even thou~h the Bearcats had one of the play at Rutgers , home against Louisville
conference s best defenses last season, they and at Pittsburgh in consecutive weeks.
struggled to score points in the most impor- Uritil then, the idea is to learn how to handle
high expectations and high praise- sometant games. .
•·
Kelly installed the no-huddle, spread thing totally foreign to the Bearcats.
"We talk about it now," Kelly said. "We
offense that he polished at Central
Michigan. He raised the standards, saying _a talk about it every day. Last week, we talked
middle-of-the-pack finish wasn't good about: Don' t become infected with success.
enough .. And he started promoting a=pro- This week we talked about: That bandwaggram that was an afterthought locally - an on is starting to fill up a little bit. So with
average of 21,000 .fans showed up for that come other things:·
"There's going to be some adversity,
games last season.
there's no question about that. The road and
They're starting to notice .
On Monday, the school sent out a notice the climb to the top is difficult. We used the
informing fans that they won't be allowed to analogy yesterday of the climb on Mount
stand on concourse areas of Nippert Everest. The top is a championship. We've
Stadium anymore because large crowds are just started."

and the tea m of Mike
Bragg. Tom McNeely. Nick
Salem and Jack Fox.
The closes! to the pin
winners were Ph il Burton
on hole No. 7 and Bub
Stivers on ho le No. I 4. A
total of 139 di ffe rent players have attended at least
one week of play with one
week remaining.

Mt\SON, W.Va.- Mick
Winebrenner has all but
clinched the 2007 championship in the Ri vers ide
Senior Me n's Golf League.
Winebrenner has amassed
a total of 292.5 points to
lead the defending champi on, Paul Somerville, by 17
points with o ne week
remaining. Two points back
of Somervjlle is Jack
' · ·
After i4 Weelq ·
·
Maloney with 273.5 points
.
.
.
for his season.
.
1. MiCk Wlt1ebrenner 292.5; 2. PtiUI -$0tnorvllle 275.5: 3. Jock Ma~ 2'73.5; 4 .
A total of 67 players were Ken Whi1«1 !112; 5. Joe LDng 244; 8. Clte1 Tl'&lt;&gt;r11ao 2&lt;12: 7. Kenny Greeno 239.5;
(tit) Pat Willamson and Re!&gt;h 5oyrlt 234.5: 10. Cha~~ Hargravu ~. 5; 11 .
in attendance Tuesday to e.
BHI W1nabMnnar 22e.5: 12. Cat1-5tpne 224.5: 13. Claude Prolfl11222.5; 14. Tom
form 16 four man teams and l.lcNoely 220: ,15. Bob Brooks 219.5; 16. Gary Mln10n 218.6: 17. Ja~ Fooc 215:
8 . - Jone&amp; 213; 19, ~Grubb 211 ; 20. Bob Hysell 2101 21 . Ed Coon
one three man team to make 1
20$.5; e2. Bill~ 20$; 23. Ciel&lt; ~ n 20$.5:' 24. Jim Turley 204.5; 25. Bill
f7 points available to the Yl&gt;h!&gt; 297.5; 26. t;;larl&lt;~ 196: !11. Riel&lt; Northup 190: 28. Don Waldie 189; 29.
low score. The low round of I rom f'letior .187; 30. fiOyOtlver 1&amp;8.5; 31 . Frank Brown 185. 5; 32. Gone Gray 1a4;
Cricl1 Mlnton .178; 34. .(tie) Bob Oliver and Harioy RM:e 175.5; 36. Don Fields
58 was shot by the team of 33.
175; 37:. Jim Cu~~·m 111:5
'
•
4~ ..·~- ,. .
.
Ken Whited, Phil Burton,

.2007 Senior League StandiUgs
~

Q

1

1

~

L'

nee again, time lOr Ittle Brown Jug

COLUMBUS (AP)
Trainer Joe Holloway likes
his chances in the Little
Brown Jug.
Holloway has two of the
top contenders, including
the heavy favorite Always A
Virgin, in Thursday's Little
Brown . Jug for 3-year-old
pacers at th.: Delaware
County Fairgrounds .
The race is the second leg
of the Triple Crown for pacers - with Always A Virgin
already winning the first, the
Cane Pace.
Always A Virgin is the
horse to beat in the second
elimination heat while
Holloway' s other entry,
Fresh Deck, is a strong contender in the first elimination. What Holloway fears
more than the other 14 hors es in the race is a bad break .
" Both of my colts are
good right now, but you just
can't afford to have bad raeing luck in this race,"
Holloway said. "I think
Always A Virgin is the best
in his elimination heat and I
think he's good enough to

make his own racing· luck,
bul you never know."
With 16 horses entered,
the Little Brown· Jug will be
contested in two elimination
heats with eig ht starters in
each. The first four finishers
in each elimination heat will
return for a second heat. If
one of the elimination heat
winners is not the winner of
the-second heat , then a raceoff will be contested among
the three heat winners.The
total purse is $480 ,000.
"You pretty much have to
win your elimination heat in
the Jug and hope that you
draw the post one in the second heat," Holloway said.
Holloway has good reason
to have confidence' in
Always A Virgin . The brown
colt has won eight of 12
starts this year, including his
last five races by substantial
margins. His most recent
win was a five :length romp
in the $297,500 Cane Pace.
In the Cane, Always A
Virgin overcame a No. 8
post on the outside to get
good position early and then

sprint away from his rival s.
Starting out of the No. 3
post in the Jug, Always A
Virgi n is listed at morning
line odds of 8-5 in the second division and has Brian
Sears in the sulky.- Both
Sears an(j Holloway will be
looking for their fir st win at
the Little Brown Jug, contested on a half-mile track at
a picturesque county fair.
Holloway was pleased
with Always A Virgin ' s
train ing efforl over the
Demware half-mile on
Tuesday as the colt responded with a fast quarter-mile at
the fini sh.
Always A Virgin's name is
derived from his dam, a
mare
named
Neverhaveneverwill.
Holloway said that Fresh
Deck is "better than he.'s
ever been" and has th e
advantage of starting from
the inside post in the first
division. Fresh Deck fin ished third behind Always A
Virgin in the Cane . He is 4- 1
in the morning line.

-9n .

PRo HocKEY

Marquiss Gunn from the practice squad.

Sundey'aGeme•
Miami at N.Y. Jets. 1 p.m.
Arizona at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Green Bay, 1 p .m.
Buffalo at New Englan", 1 p .m.
Indianapolis at Houston, 1 p .m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
SanFrenciscoatPittsburgh, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Philadelphia, 1 p.m
Cleveland at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
Cincinnati at Seat11e , 4:a5 p.m.
j Jacksonville at Denver. 4:05p.m
Carolina at Atlanta, 4:15 p.m.
1
NY Giants at Washington , 4:1 5p.m.
Dallas at Ch icago, 6:15p.m.
Monday'a Game
1 Tenne ssee at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
I
Sunday, s.-pt. 30
Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m.
St Louis al Dallas, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Mtami, 1 p.m.
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p .m.
N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Minnesota , 1 p .m.
2007 NIX.tll Cup Point Standing•
Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p .m.
After New Hampshire
Seattle at San Francisco, 4:05p.m .
ampa Say adt. Carolina, 4:05p.m .
Name
Wins
Pts.
eh-ver at In lanapolis. 4:15p.m.
1. Jimmie Johnson
6
52 10
I Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
1. Jeff Gordon
4
52 10
, Pi~burgh _at Arizona, 4:15 P -~·
3. Tony Stewart
3
-10
1 Ph11a~eiph1B ~~ N. V. Giants, 8.15 p.m.
4_Clint Bowyer
1
-15
: Open. Washmgton, Jacksonville, New 5. Kyle Busch
1
-35
Orleans , Tennessee
16. Martin Truex Jr.
1
-40
Monday, Oct. 1
1
-54
.
1 N
E 1 d t Cl .
7.
Matt
Kenseth
;
ew ngan a nclnna 11. 8 ·30 p.m
8. Car1 Edwards
2
·63
!
9. Denny Hamlin
1
-82
TRANSACTIONS
1o. Kevin Harvick
I
·88
I
·91
11 . Jeff Burton
2
· 102
Wednelday'e Spart1 Transactions
12. Kurt Busch
BASEBALL
----- - ·- · ·- ·--- ·- ·--- ·----- •

I

13. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
14. Ryan Newman
15. Casey Mears
16. Greg Biffle
17. Bobby Labonte
18. Jamie McMurray
19. J .J. Veley
20. Juan Pablo Montoya
21 . David Ragan
22. Kasey K.ahne
23. Read Sorenson
24. David Stremme
25. Ellllott Sadler
26. Mail&lt; Martin
27. Robby Gordon
28. David Gilllaland
29. JeN Green
30. Johnny Sauter
31 . Tony Raines
· 32. Ricky Audd
33. Dave Bl$n8Y
34. Paul Menard
35. Joe Nemechek
36. Sterling Ma~in
37. Scott Riggs
38. Kyle Petty
39. Brian Vickers
40. David Reutlmann

Marshall (0-3) at Cincinnati (3-0)

ev~~ebe~:~rcats

J.

Hannan

.IWiztt at

,,

ldiiiD

at Wabwe

Point PJeiiBnt

Jackson

at

Hannan

Eastern

Porhmguth

Paginator
Record : 25- t S
l ast Week: 4-6
(win ner:; in JuWI)

at W,bama

.IWiztt

Eastern

Jacbon at

at ~

Scott Wolfe

Correspondent
R ecord : 27-13
Last Week: 6-4
(winners in hllld)

South GaUia

Eastern

Eastern

Easter n

Gary Clark

R eporter ·
Record: 24-1 6
Last Week: 5-5
(winners in hD.ld)

Haflnaq

&lt;~ tW'•b•m•

atWaterfO

Beth Sergent

GaUia Academy ,
at l.gpn '·
at

ftannan
at »bema

Binr

(winners in

Gallia Ac_ademy .

Academy
at l.d&gt;pa

Gallia Academy
at Li;zpn

Gallia Academy
at l.gpn

Stacry Walters
Paginator

.J

Bob Hysell and Ralph
Say re.
In second place with a
score of 60 was the team of
Steve
Stove r,
Kenny
Gree ne, Dick Duga n and
Jac k Ma)oney. In th ird
pl ace with a score of 6 1 was
a tie be tween the teams of
Bub Stivers, Dewey Bird,
Don Field s and Joe Long

o

Two points for a win , one point for O\ler- .
time loss or shootoutloss.

"·
TUeaday·e Games
Boston 3, N.Y. Islanders 1
Ottawa 4, Philadelphia 0
Chicago 4, Columbus 3
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 2
Detroit 6, Minnesota 1
.
Dallas 6, St. Louis 5
Edmonton 3, Toronto 2, OT
Flor~a 3, Calgary 2, SO
Los Angeles 6. San Jose 5, SO
WedMIIdly'l Gamel
N.Y. Islanders 3, Montreal 1
Tampa Bay 4, Dallas 3, OT
Columbus 4, Chicago 3
Toronto 3, PhoeniM 2
Colorado 6, Los Angeles 3
San Jose 1, Anaheim 0
Vancou\ler 4, Calgary 0
ThuriCiay 'a Games
.New Jersey vs. Boston at Manchester;
N.H , 6 p .m.
Washington at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Delroit, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta at Nastwllle, 8 p.m.
Florida at ChiCago, 8:30p .m.
Colorado at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Edmonton at Vancouver. 10 p m.
Frklay'a. G1me1
Columbus at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Nashville at Carolina, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers , 7 p.m.
Pit1sburgh at Detroit , 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Montreal . 7:30 p .m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 8:30 p .m.
Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p m

'

weeks of the season, picked
up 93 yards on the ground
thanks to a vast week-byweek improvemei1t of lhe
locals interior line play.
Led by senior regulars
Brent Jones (5-10, 190) and
Caleb Roach (5-7, 220) the
White Falcons have boosted their rushing average to
166 yards per game after
experiencing a slow start.
Also figuring heavily in the
improved line play for
WHS is junior Tr-ey
Anderson
(6-0,
165),
sophomore
Kevin
Klingensmith (6- 1, 295),
junior Colby Davis (5-8,
150), senior James Gray (60, 165), junior Kasey White
(5-10, 180), sophomores
Luke Ingels (5-8 , 190) and
Kevin Lauder milt (5-1 0,
230) and fre shman Scott
Roush (5-10, 260) .
Veazey is the Bend Area
teams leading scorer and
ground gainer with 42
points on the season and
342 yards rushing. Branch
has 195 yards toting the
pigskin with senior Josh
Pauley (5-9, 170) totaling
125 yards on the ground
through the first four
games.
Sophomore quarterback
William Zuspan (5-9, 145)
has connected on 15-of-29
aerials on the year for 174
yards and a touchdown
with Veazey tossing I 0
completions in 20 tries for
168 yards and two scores.
Zuspan has been picked off
twice and Veazey once .
Junior wide receiver
Garrett Underwood (5- 10,
160) lead s the Falco"n
receiving corp with 12
catches for 176 yards and
two touchdown s while
senior Gabe Roush (6- 1,
170) has fiv e g(abs for 99
yards and one score .
Defensively
Jone s,
Branch , Gabe Roush and
Trey Anderson are th e
defensive leaders with
Veazey interceptin g three
passes on the season and
Klingensmith comi ng up
with a pair of enemy fumble recoveries.
•
Hannan, under the guid-·
ance of Keith Taylor, will

be seeking some offensive
firepower
when
the
Wildcats VISit Bacthel
Stadium in Mason. Hannan
. has scored only one touchdown this year with junior
quarterback Nathan Payne
(6-1, 241) sneaking in from
three yards out in its season
South
opener
against
Gallia. The Wildcats were
shutout the' past two weeks
by Van aitd Southern.
Taylor, the fourth Hannan
coach in three years, is
looking for improvement
week-by-week from his
young
Wildcat
squad
despite a tough sched\Jle
through the first half of the
season. Heading into the
midway point of the season
the record for the Wildcats
first five opponents is an
impressive 12-8 while the
final five dates on its fall
card has a combined 3-17
mark.
Senior running back Zach
Sturgeon (5-6, 150) and
sophomore Jared Cobb (55, 130) . along with junior
Joe Kelly (6-0, 195) are
expected to. join Payne in
.the HHS backfield with
juniors Patrick Flora (6-0,
145) and Travis Elowman
(6-4, 145) being the
Wildcats leading receivers.
A mammoth front line
features seniors Jeff Martin
(5-8, 162), Carl Waugh (61, 296) and Andy Sowards
(6-1, 314), junior Jared
Taylor (6-0 , 250) and
sophomore Shawn Kauffer
(6-0, 280).
Payne threw the ball 31
times for 98 yards against
South Gallia but only tried
five passes for 18 yards
against Southern so the
White Falcons mu st pre- .
pare for both an aerial barrage or a featured ground
attack from the Wjldcats on
Friday.
·
Wahama owns a 5-0 edge
in the series with its Mason
County nei g hbors with
WHS defeating Hannan by
a 28 -6 margin last year. The
White Falcons average 21 .5
points per game offensively
while allowing 8.5 points
per contest to the combined
foe . Hannan is scoring 3.0
points per outing offensively whil e giving up 41.6
points to the opposition.
Kick -off time for Friday
night 's Maso n Count y clash
is 7:30 p.m.

..
' .

·.·

.., ..

I~ • &gt;

,: ',

·I·

/I,

.i

. . ......

•'

...

Office of Economic and
Workforce Development
' '~

'&lt;

Hometown
· Market

QJCK ON THE ·UNKS
Tb VIEW SPONSORS .

405'Peari Street
M~feport, Ohio

AD/WEBSlfES

.:740-992·3471

PUAS£ SUPPORT THESE L.roJ.
BUSINESSES WHO SUPPORT
OUR HOMEfOWN NEWSPAPER!

'

·c

' ' 1

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.

!

~ Home

·~ National

·Bank

AHome Bank For Home People
Member FDIC

I

~
"*"

�'
Pag~ 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Gallia Co. teams hit the road for Week 5 Point set to take on.
tough Winfield team
school's Hall of Fame this
weekend, as this Friday is
being billed as the Hall of
Fame Game by the Logan
Countians. Arms led Man to
playoff appearances in 2004
and 2005,

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

All three local gridiron
teams are hitting the road
for lengthy road trips in
Week 5 of the high school
football season.
Gallia Academy will face
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League power Logan on the
hilltop. Sout~ Gallia will
trJ:Ivel deep into southern
West Virginia to take on
winless Man and River
Valley will go to Waterford
in search of back -to-back
wins for the first time since
2003.
· Only River · Valley was
successful last week, beating Alexander in the llf\nual
homecoming game. Gallia
Academy and South Gallia,
meanwhile, dropped close
contests to Chillicothe and
Wahama respectively.
The fo llowing is a look at
this week's match-ups:

Football
from PageBl
The Green and White,
with the e;o;ception of the
Wahama contest (35-0),
have been . one play away
from turning an 0-4 start
into a 3- 1 beginning after
very competitive losses to
Alexander (17-13), South
Galli a (7 -0) and now Van.
The Eagles, which are
ave ragi ng less than seven
points (6.75) per contest
offe nsively. made major
strides last week after producing the largest point total
of the season with 14.
Eastern also ended a consecuti ve-quaner streak of II
without a point.
EHS is also allowing an
average of 20 points-pergame defensively, although
only two of its opponents
have managed to hit or
exceed that plateau this fall.
This is also the.third Eastern
home game of 2007.
Belpre, on the other hand,
enters Friday on a twoga me winning streak after
an 0-2 start. The Golden
Eagles
ended
Williamstown 's 57-game
regular season wi nning
streak during week three
with a 14-7 decision at
WHS. then beat defendi ng
TVC Hocking champion
Federal Hocking last week
at home with a ti-0 shutout.
The Orange and Black

•

age of 4.3 yards-per-carry.
Junior running back
Ashton Packard (6-2. 170)
led the receivers with 29
yards on two grabs. The
offense also committed two
fumbles in the win.
Belpre 's defense surn~ n­
dered 20 I total yards of
offense last week, but just
97 of those came through
the running game. Fed Hock
attempted 29 rushes against
Belpre, an average of just
over 3.3 yards per try.
Belpre also allowed I 04
yards on 5-of-17 passing.
picking off two errant Fed
Hock attempts. BHS is
playing its third road game
of 2007.

Southern (1-3)
at Wirt County (2-2)
ELIZABETH. W.Va. Think a ll is well for
Southern after it picked up
its first win of the season ·
last week during a 39-0
shutout of Hannan (W.Va.).
Think again.
After a fall fu ll of injuries
that saw thi s roster get
healthy just one week ago,
the Tornadoes were again
hurt by bad fortunes after
losi ng startin g runnin g
backs Greg Jenkins and
Anthony
Shamb lin
to
injuries thi s week in practice.
That means an offense
that produces just 16.li
points-per-game will be
wit h two new. relatively
inexperienced bodies in the
I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

\Ertbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

BY WRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
No
one
was more
'
excited
about
last
week's
big
Gallia Academy (2-2)
win over Meigs than fi!St
at Logan (3-1)
LOGAN - From the ath- year Point Pleasant head
leticism of quarterback coach Dave Darst.
But even with the first win
Caleb Knights, to the smash
behind
Darst has little
mouth running of Justin time to him,
rest as a new week
Frye. The Gallia Academy brings a new OJlWnent. and
Blue Devils will certainly the start of - · Cardinal
face a very different type of Conference play when
test this week.
Winfield visits Sanders Field
And the Blue Devils. who Friday night. Kick-off is slatdid well in containing ed for 7:30 p.m.
Knights in last week's loss
And if a wiq wasn't enough
to Chillicothe, will undoubtc of a motivating factor the Red
edly face a tougher chal- and Black will be even more
lenge this Friday in Frye and . fired up when they return
the
loaded
Logan home for the first annual Hall
of Fame game. Thanks to
Chieftains.
Kick-off
for
the Darst and several other comSoutheastern Ohio Athletic munity members who got the
League contest is set 'for elite club started, the fi!Stclass for the Point
7:30 p.m. at Bill Sauer ever
Pleasant
Athletic Hall of
River Valley (1-3)
Field.
Fame
will
be honored during
at Waterford (3-1)
The Chiefs enter the fray halftime activities during
WATERFORD - River
riding the wave of three what is expected to be a very
· Valley, which finally put
straight wins since a Week I large crowd.
everything together last
loss at Lancaster. Logan has
'There will be a lot of peoweek in a 29-7 win over
blown out its last three ple in town, we are playing a
Alexander, will undoubtedopponents: Chillicothe (47- conference school and can
ly head to Waterford this
18), Pi ckerington North (24- get right back into the conferweek with a lot of confience at 1-1 and back in the
7) and Athens (62-6).
dence.
Frye has rushed for 456 mix so there is a lot of things
riding on this week," Dilrst
The Raiders used their
OVP File yards on 76 carries with six
size up front to dominate River Valley's Tyler Canaday runs a toss right against Meigs touchdowns so far on the said.
But with all the festivities
Alexander, and will look to during a week three loss in Rock Springs.
season, and because of the
place this week, PPHS
taking
do more of the same this
lopsided results, he has sat
before
getting
on
track
last
will
need
to make sure it
schools in unbeaten Logan out parts of some games. He
week against the Wildcats
(33-14) and Westside (I 0-, is the workhorse, as No. 2 doesn't overlook a very hunTri-Valley week.
of
the
The
Raiders
had
many
6). The other two setbacks rusher Mark Potter has only · gry Winfield team sitting in
Conference
Hocking
an almost identical boat as
offensive
contributors
to
the
have come at the hands of 87 yards on 25 totes.
Division.
The Blue Devils will also the Big Blacks. The Generals
Kick-off for the high victory as Ryan Henry, Mount View (22-8) and
also have just one win after
school football contest is set Tyler Canaday, Jordan Dell most recently No. 5 Saint have 10 prepare for two dif- playing a tough early schedand Cody McAvena all Mary's (30-16).
ferent quarterbacks this ule and are hoping to get back
for 7:30 p.m.
the
shared
the
load
running
Man
actually
week, as Logan has success- into the conference race with
Last
week;
Waterford is a new oppofootball
.
Sean
Sands
had
a
held the lead in the third fully been using brothers an upset win Friday night.
nent on the Raiders' slate,
and is ac tually the third 23-yard touchdown recep- quarter, but St. Mary's Michael and Patrick Angel
With two teams trying to
team to fill the spot in as tion from Clayton Curnutte. returned a Man interception under center. Michael has get their seasons back on
The game will be the final 80 yards to swing the thro wn for 237 yards, three track, Friday will be a tough
many years. River Valley
non-league
encounter of the momentum.
faced Athens in 2005 and
touchdowns and five inter- battle in the trenches between
The Billies have an ceptions - but Patrick has two talented teams.
Pike County Central (Ky.) season for both clubs. River
Valley begins Ohio Valley offense that has shown it is been more effi cient, comOverall, Point Pleasant
this time last season.
Conference
play
next
week
capable of both running and pleting 6-of-7 for 65 yards holds a 7-I overall record
,Waterford is having a
Rock Hill
while throwing the football sue- and two scores.
against the Generals in a
good year so far, as it was at
series
TVC
dating back to 1989.
Waterford
opens
cessfully. Quarterback Cory
Lucas Wright is the top
won three straight since an
The
Big
Blacks opened the
Hocking
action
against
Spence runs the Billie receiving target while Jon
opening week loss to
series
with
six stratght wins,
Miller.
offense from under center Bapst, Corey Kissling,
unbeaten Wahama. But what
losing
for
the
fi!St time in the
and h~s a pair of talented Jeshiah Eggers and Frye
remains to be seen is if the
series
in
2005
by a score of
South Gallia (3-1)
much-smaller Wildcats can
backs to take pressure off of have all caught multiple
27-7.
Point
then
got back on
at Man (0-4)
match up physically with
him.
balls.
track with an exciting last
the massive Raiders.
MAN, W.Va. - South
Timmy Browning, who
Gallia Academy can ill minute. 21-20 win last season.
Waterford is a Division VI Gallia is crossing the river returned from a severe con- afford to give Logan the During the eight game series,
school while River Valley is into West Virginia to take on cussion to play last week, is same type of opportunities Point has ouiscored Winfield
some Hillbillies - the Man expected to see carries. that it gave to Chillicothe 165-89.
two divisions larger.
Also, junior Khris Tolliver and expect to stay in the
The biggest challenge fac- Hillbillies.
Along with the recent dom~
The two schools are simi- is a threat. Tolliver, a South game. The Blue Devils ination in the series, Point
ing the River Valley defense
will be containing versatile lar in size, but have gone in Charleston transfer, rushed turned the ball over five Pleasant is also coming off a
huge win over previously
Waterford athlete Derek different directions so far in for 131 yards in a close loss times last week .
in
Meigs
Hoge, who burned Fort Frye 2007. The Rebels will be to Westside.
Logan leads the all-time undefeated
Pomeroy
with
a
last
second,
for 123 yards on just 18 car- trying to bounce back from
But Man will be playing a series over Galli a Academy
ries last week. He also threw their first loss of the season South Gallia defensive unit 36-35-3 and has won the last 30-yard field goal by kicker
for a touchdown on a half- ( 14-7 to Waharna) last week, that has beeR stubborn so far three meetings. The Blue Jus tin Weaver.
While the Marauders carne
back pass.
while Man will be searching in 2007.
Devils beat the Chiefs in
into the game with the preHoge was a second team for its first taste of victory.
South Gallia's defense 2002 and 2003.
All-Ohio selection at wide
Kick-off is set for 7:30 will need another solid
It will also be Gallia mier back in Cornelis
who was averaging
receiver last fall.
p.m. at Man's George A. effort this week. So far the Academy's final trip to old English,
nearly
215
yards per game
River Valley was an upset Queen Memorial Field.
Rebels have surrendered Sauer Field, which has before Point Pleasant, PPHS
The Hillbillies, while win- just 26 points over the first housed the Chieftains for back Tyler Grant stole the
victim to Southeastern 2320 in overtime in Week I , less, have played a tough four weeks, which is around the past 83 years. Logan show with 163 yards and a
then suffered back-to-back schedule thus far. Two of one touchdown per game. . could be playing in a new score on 24 carries. ·
41-14
lopsided
losses those los ses have come
Man coach Harvey Arms football stadi um as early as
But even with such a huge
(Nelsonv ille -York , Meigs) against bigger Class ·AA will be inducted into the next season.
~in. Darst says that dwelling
have lost to both Warren
and at Fort Frye by a combined four points and are
also outscoring opponents
40-31 this season.
Welsh believes picking up
that elusive first triumph is
possible this weekend, but
he also knows it won't be
easy.
"Belpre is a team coming
in with a 2-2 record, . but
they could very easily be
coming into this one 4-0.
They have a very good ball
team that is well-coached,"
Welsh said. "This is the last
week of non-league and
we're hoping to get over the
hump so that these kids can
get some confidence. The
kids are still battling and
working hard for that fi rs t
win."
Belpre b'attled the Lancers
to a scoreless tie at intermission last week before breaking out in the third quarter
when senior quarterback
·R.J. Walker (6-1. 180)
added the game's only score
on a eight-yard run to paydirt.
Walker led the team with
77 yards on 13 rushes and
was also 3-of-9 passing for
31 yards in the triumph.
Senior running back Mike
Waderker (6-1, 2 15 ) also
added 70 rushing yards on
19 totes for BHS, which
churned out 194 total yards
of offense agai nst the
Lancers. The Golden Eagles
also produced 163 rushing
yards on 38 carries, an aver-

www.mydallysentlnel.com

OVP File

A Southern defender wraps up South Gallia quarterback
John Wells during a week three high school football game in
Mercerville
. The 'Does travel to Elizabeth, W.Va .. this Friday
..
when they tackle Wirt County.
backfie ld . The 'Does will put in new kids and fresh
also be without two of their faces. Hopefull y they' ll
main offensive \veapons.
come along and do well ."
"The injury bug has really
The Purple and Gold will
hun us thi s year. and we've need a major collective
lost a couple more key kids effort against Wirt County
for thi s week,'' Teaford said. thi s week if they hope to
"We' ll just keep trying to make it two-in-a-row.

Galli a
County
OH
on that victory could hinder
the team. He hopes that the
team got the celebrations out
of therr system and are now
focused on their next opponent.
Helping shut down English
and the rest of the Marauder
attack was an iron-tough
defense that featured very
strong games from defensive
ends Anthony Jeffers and
Derek Pinson, defensive
tackle Clay Krebs, linebackers Eric Veith and Matt
Thompson and Troy Lepon
in the secondary.
On offense Grant leads the
team in rushinj! with 228
yards on 44 carnes andjeads
the receiving corp with seven
catches for 58 yards. Derek
Mitchell scored the other
touchdown for the Big
Blacks and · has rushed for
137 yards on 37 carries.
Caleb Wasonga has added
II I yards on 23 carries.
B.J. Uoyd has done a nice
job in his fi!St year at quarterback, completing I I passes in
30 tries for 105 ~ards.
· Point comes mto Friday's
contest having seen tough
losses to Sissonville (40-7)
and Gallia Academy (28-0)
befof~: the big win last week.
Winfield faced similar losses
to undefeated Class AAA
school Hurricane (44-7) and
Cardinal. Conference .~eading
Wayne (32-0). Sissonville,
who pounded Point in week
one, barely edged the
Generals 13-9 two weeks ago
and Winfield's lone win carne
over Lincoln County 38-20 in
week two.
The Generals have a very
strong back in Steven
Gaydosz who is averaging
big numbers in the four
g_arnes played this season.
Quarterback Taylor Farley
will also be a tough test for
the Big Blacks second~,
throwing for 345 yards this
season mcluding 175 yards
against Wayne last week.
But if it comes down to
who scores last, Darst hopes
that his unique offense will
throw teams off and allow
him to control the clock and
the ball for most of the game.
"The thing about this
offense is that I wanted it to
be something that is unique
and I wanted it to be something that defensive coordinators are going to have to do
:something compl~tely ~er­
ent for one week m therr season to prepare for us," Darst
said.
After last week's morale
boosting win, Point will now
try to feed off of a big crowd
and the Hall of Fame festivities as it tries to get back into
the Cardinal Conference race
when Winfield visits Friday.
The Tigers- after an 0-2
stan .- have won their last
two contests convincingly,
outscoring Gilmer County
(66-12) and Doddridge
County by a combined 9318 margin. WCHS is also
averaging 26.8 points offensively while allowing just
15.3 points-per-contest.
The Orange and Blac)c
won at DCHS last week by
a 27-6 outcome, spearheaded by junior quarterback
Josh Valentine (6-0, I 50).
Valentine completed I 0-of22 passes last week for 125
yards and also added a rushmg score.
Wirt County gained 178
rushing yards on 39 totes,
an average of 4.6 yards-percarry. WCHS also produced
303 yards of total offense
· against the Bulldogs.
Sophomore running back
Devin Dye (5-7, 171) led
the ground attack with 86
yards on nine carries, while
senior Mike Davis (6-1,
173) added 53 yards on 18
attempts. Valent.ine, Davis,
Dye and junior Tom McCoy
(5-9, 178) each chipped in a
rushing score.
Sophomore wideout Zach
Moore (5 -11 , 180) led the
Tigers last week with five
grabs for 91 yards. All five
of
those
individual
recpetion s went for 10 yards
or more.
~outhern.
despite
a
~utout last week. is still
allowing 28.3 points-pergame defensively.
.

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OhloVallay
Publishing reeerves
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kitncarlyle@comcast.net
a dOwn payment. 4 bedrooms. l8rge yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 74().
367-7129.

reject or cancel any

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~$1' ~olt A

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ori than the cost
a apace occuple

5bd 2be GALLIPOLIS
Foreclo1urel Buy tor
$84,9001
5%dn,
20yre08%. More local
homn from $199/mol For
~fl ng1 Cl II8G0-"59Ioca ll ••
01
• F254

'--G-IV&amp;\•
' •W•:I.Y-,.J

'·the error and on

rl.o·-~i i ~i i i SioiAJ.E.i i i i_.l

'tlo6G1e

~Mi .

l&gt;o(O{:i 1~ c;
1&gt;1&lt;5~12-Via-

If .

-------86 Pine, Gallipolis. New
roof, heat pump, electrical, 2

4 Family Sale. October 20 &amp;
21 . 1695 Lincoln Pike.

llrst lnoertlon. w
holt not be lleble fq
ny loaa or expen
11 multo lrom t

~~0)~:~~;20lot,

ubllcatlon or omla

ion of an advertla

ent. COrrections wll
made In tha II
alloble edition.
Sept. 20·221rom 9·6 at Clay
Townhouse on lovers lane.
Plus slze clothes, to much to
list. 740·446·0987

Current rate ca
ppllel.
All . Real

Elltat

dvertlaementt

ar

ubtect to tho Fe&lt;ln

B·wk old, indoor kittens
w/1st vac, wormed &amp; litter
trai ned. Call 441-1100 after
5:30pm.

Yard Sale, Fri 9/21 &amp; Sat
9122, 9am-4pm. 18750 SA
Www.comlc1 .com
279, just past Centerpoint
Rei, maternity clothes, kids 11'111"'"_ _ _ _ _., nln
\ \ " ' " " - - - - - . , l!tr_ _ _ _ _...,

air Houalng Act o
INI8.

FREE:
Puppies coals 0·3T. Boys winter 11 tO
Lab/Springer Spaniel mix. clothes 0·6, Gi~ls winter
3M 1F Ready NbW 304· clothes 0-2T. Van~us adult

Thla
new1pape
ccepto only hoi
anted ads maetln
OE llandardo.

675.2925 or 304·593-8173

liEl.P WANTm

I lito

11170
• •
11ELP WANTED . .
..__ _ _ _ _ _..

Courtside Bar and Grill
Overbrook Center Is now
Now taking JWplications tor
exceptional people for bar- eccepting resumes for the
position of Director of
ial
teriding, waitslaftfservers
Services. The qualified canand all kitchen positions. It didate must be a Ucensed
FOUND: Cat on 2nd St. Pl. Big 3 Family Yard Sole 82 you are a motivated people
SOuth
top
of
Dsed
Man••
Social Worker and possess
Pl. brown, &amp; cream colored
Hill Friday the 21 ot l person ptease come fill out
Obfiviously indoor cat 1Oam·
strong verbal and writlen
Saturday the 22nd 8:30 flll an application or call to set
9pm 304·675·2040
skills,
communication
up
an
interview.
4:00
d
M d. 'd M8 dl
e ICB I •
care an
3082ndAve
WANDD
MDS knowledge. Long term
740-441 ·937t
care experience preferred
toBIN
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring but not required. Qualified
4xh For Sale .............................................. 725
candidates
may
send
Announcement ............................. ............... 030
20+ acres of reasonably all locations Point Pleasant. resumes to Charla BrownAntlques .......................................................530
priced land tor residential Gallipolis, Eleanor Pomeroy McGuire,
AN ,
lNHA,
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
building site. Gallipolis area apply in Person
Ad · · t t
333 p
mmes ra or,
age
. Auction and Flea Mark8t.. ........................... 080
only. Call740·441 -5171
--D-. - .- E-d- -lo- Street, Middleport, Oh.
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. ........................ 760
E.:citlng revers
ucat n 45760 OBC .
E0 E
Absolute Top DollAr: U.S. position open in the
·
IS an
' · ·
Auto Repair.................................................. 770
'l
d
G
ld
C
.
Gallipolis
area.
Flexible
and
a
participant
of
the
Drug
S1
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 71
ve,r
anG
ldoR
,
.
opms,
h""rs.
Must
be
able
work
Free
Work
Place
Program
.
10
P
Boats &amp; Motora for Sale ............................. 750
roo sets, o
lnQS, re· ""
-------1935
U.S.
Currency. evenings and weekends. 20
· Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S. to 25 hours a week. Job
POST OFFtCE NOW
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Coin Shop, 151 . Second entails dassroom work and
HIRING
Buslneaa Opportunity ................................. 21 0
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· behind the wheel instruction
Avg. Pay S20ihr or
Buslnesa Training ....................................... 140
2642.
for new drivers. Qualified lnclud$5
1· ng7KFedeamraulaiBen~ et•s
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
"
candidates must have a Hs
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
OTPaid 11 . .
Looking for land . priced rea· Diploma, valid driver lice nse,
a~
~;~~ng,
Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010
sonable. Cal' 740·645·6299. Pass background checks.
aca IOns·
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
••• 542. tsa 1
Leave a message. 74G-645· EOE. Mail resumes to: AAA,
1·ouv·
EleclrlcaURefrlg.,.,tlon ................. .............. 84l)
6299
1414
121h
Stree t,
USWA
Equipment for Rent..................................... 480
Paw Paws, black walnu1s, Portsmo uth, Ohio 45662 -R-es-p-on-sibl-e-.-ft-e,-lb-le-lu- 11
Excavating .................................... ............... 830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 61 0
hickories, please call first, Attn: Al, or Fax resume to: time ba~ siHer needed ,
(740)698 -6060
Ann: Al. 740-351 ·0537
(?40)992•2329
Farms for Rent.............................................430
_.:._______
Farms for Sale ................ ............................. 330
Property to build home In Experienced
Bartender
For Lease ................................................., .. , 490
Gallia county. Prefer , 5·10 needed.
Apply withi n.
For Sale ........................................................ 585
acres, high and dry. Call Gallipolis Elks. 408 2nd Ave.
For Sale or Trade ........ ........................ ......... 590
Marty collect @ 321-453· .
FruHs &amp; Yagetebles ..................................... 580
Full·tlme Toddler Assistant.
1351 evenings.
Furnished Room a............. ........................... 450
$6.70/hr. limited benefits.
General Hauling .............:...... .......................850
~ · Junk
Sen d resume to Ea"
Wan1 1o Make a
Want
to
lJUY
rs,
call
uy
Giveaway......................................................040
St
t'o
2122
Ed
I.
740·366.()864
uca 1on
a 1 n,
0 Ifference 1n
Happy Ada ....................................................050
..-~!'i!oi!!'!"!'!!!!'!!!"'•
JefferSon
Ave
.
by
rl ?
Hay &amp; Grain .......................................... ........ 640
WE BUY USED
Ame ca
September 25. 2007
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
MOBILE HOMES
Help moko 01111 to&lt; 1
ttomelmprovements ...................................810
Gary (740)828·2750
Half Tlffl6 business office
Leading Republican
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
position available, wltfl some Presidential candidate!
Household Goods ....................................... 510
computer Knowledge.
Houses for Rent ...................... .................... 410
I \l l 'l tJ\ \ 11 \ I
Some medicaUdentalexperi·
tn Memoriam ................................................ 020
ence helpful.
• Earn up 10 S8.501hour
"' 1\\ I( I '
Insurance ....................................... .............. 130
Reply
to:
TSC
Box
17
do
•$300 Hiring Bonut
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
110
tiFJJ&gt;
WANJ'D)
Point
Pleasant
Register
200
•Full and ParHime
Livestock...................................................... 630
1
Main , Point Pleasant. WV
schedules
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
25550
•Paid vacations
Lolli &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Mlacellaneous ......... ..................................... 170
Assemble crafts, wood Need a person to paint a
•Paid holidays
Miscellaneous Merchandlae .......................540
lJ •Paid training
items.To $480/wk Materials Mobile Home roof. Call 740·
Mobile Home Repalr ..... ...............................860
provided . Free inlormalion 446-7039
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
pkg. 24Hr. 801·428-4649
Give us a call and start
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
- - - - - - - - Ohio Valley Home Health ,
making a difference
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
An E1C 9ellent way to earn Inc. hiring STNA's. CNA's.
today!
Motorcycles &amp;4 Wheelers .......................... 740
money. The New Avoo.
CHHA's, PCA's. Accepting
Musical Instruments ........... ........................ 570
Call Marilyn 304-882·264.5 applications tor LPN 's . 1-Bn-46!H2•7 eK\.2321
Personals ................ ............... ... J .................. oos
Competitive Wages and
• IIIIWW.intoci5ion .cm~
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Haatlng ............................ ........ B20
Benefits including hea lth ';;::::;;::===~
insurance and mi!aage. r:
Professional Sarvlces ............... .................. 230·
1480
Radio, TV II CB Repair ............................... 160
Apply at
Pike. 1'!10
ScuoOI.s
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Gallipolis or phone toll free
~l!CilON .
1·866·441·1393
•
Schoo Ia Instruction..................................... 150
Seed , Plant II Fertilizer .............................. 650
Gallipolis Career College
Situations Wanted ...... ................................. 120
The Village 01 Rio Grande is (Careers Close To Home)
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
laking applications for the Call Today! 740-446-4 367 .
Sporting Goods .................................. :........ 520
position of part lime poli ce
-80 • ..()4
1 0 214 52
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720
officer. The applicant must
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
be certified in the Ohio - .gaHipoli!ICareerWiege.com
Accrediled t.lembe• Accrediling
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Peace
Officer · Basic Counc~ tor lr.depel'ldent ColleQes
vans For Sale ...............................................730
Trainlng. Applications can be and Schools m•s.
Wanted to Buy ......... ,........·.................. ......... 090
picked up at the Rio Grande
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620
Municipal Building Monday Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Friday, 8:30am until 4:30pm
Wanted to Rent. ........................................... 470
Applications are due back to
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .......... ..........................072
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or the MuniCipal Building by
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Mtddle ... ...................... 074
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· noon
on
Monday. L~!f';!Jl!':;_~;_;_:_j
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076
September 24. 2007
~
675·1429.

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'sizes, older chest treezer

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CLASSIFIED INDEX·

$72.!JOO

-------Anentlon1
local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
grams for you to buy your
home inS1ead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit

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Candle wax 'bUsiness, VHS
Videos &amp; VIdeo poste'rs,
work benches. large &amp;
small, USA Wolfe tanning 24
bulb, vacuum cleaner busi·
ness, Hanginn"' shelf for parts
&amp; many old coins, call

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Caring for Children in my
home Monday thru Friday
d 11 - e &amp; after schooi
ay. m
hours. All ages. CALL 740 .
949-2526·

ito

~

~ .........,
vrn.mt lJ~•••

r--~~~~-"1
•NOTICE•
OH IO VALlEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
lha1 you do businass with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the ma~ until you
·nvest
have 1
. •·gatad tha
:o:ff=er:ing:,:· ;:===~

i~:::m:l..o:e&gt;\N::~
MONE\'

1

**NOTICE**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
lns1itutlon·s
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you reli·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call !he
Office ol Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·666·
278·0003 to learn ~ the
mortgage broker or
lender
properly
15
lice nsed. (This is a pub~c
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
PubliShing Company)

r ...

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L

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS11
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

r16

Hor.IDi
FOR SALE

38R. 1 bath . 2-story older
farm house on SA 554 Bidweii/RV
schools
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pels
under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
deposit. Available 10·13·07.
Call 446·3644 for applica·
tlon.

r--,-·,'!""-,-""1

=

t..------· ,. ,

...,
Professionally
Clean,
Ottice! Housecleaning .
Reasonable
Rates,
References
-446·22&amp;2
740

3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy. large &amp; very clean,
1 112 bath. ale, hardwood
flo ors, lull basement w/2 car
garage, small back yard.
$635, (741' 19 -~·2 303
---3 Be droom House in
Syracuse . SSOOfmonth · +
deposit No Pets. (304)675·
5332 weekends 7~0-591·
0265

3BA, 1.5 bath, 2·storv on
Cedar St · $575/r~nl. $575 ·
sec. dep. Pets less than 20
lbs w/$575 per deposit. Call
accepted
New 3 Bedroom homes from 446·3644 for application.
• Payment co uld be the $214 .36 per month. Includes
69 Garfield · 28R, 1BA
same as rent.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
$460/month + sec . dep.
Mortgage
l ocators. set-up. (740)385·2434
You pay all utilities. Call 446(740)367·0000
Nice used 3 bedroom home 3644
vinyVshing\e. Will help with - - -A
: -tte
:-nt.,-lo-n"t - delivery. 740 ' 385'4367
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
OWNER FINANCING
grams lor yoo to buy your
Nk:e 312 singlewides
home instead ol renting.
From $1,800 down
' 100% financing
All realntllle advertlelng
In thle newepeper I•
payment
' Less than per1ect credit
•ub}ect to the Federtl
Gary (740) 828·2750 '
accepted
Fair Hou1lng Act of 1988
• Payment co uld be the ,
1
which m.k•• 1t 1191
to
same as rent.
tdvertiH "any
Locators.
Mortgage
-~
flmltotl on or
Lots&amp;
tn .........nce,
(740)367·0000
dl~ertmln•tlon b..td on
ACRFAGE
r.ce, color, religion, HX
For sale or rent, 3 bedroom ,
fomH'-1 •tatus or n~ttonal
1 b th ne I remodeled
~
7+ acres on le" FaA Ad
a '
wy
orJuln,oreny.lnUntionto
"
'"
house In ROdney Village 11.
any auch
near Jackson Pike, priced to &amp;y lor $64,000 with possi·
~ee, llmltiiUon or
sell. Call 740·446·7525
ble owner assist or rent tor
dlserlmlnttlon."
MOBilE HOME lOT FOR $500 per month wtlh securi·
1y de-" N · 'de t
Thll ntwiPIIIMI' will not
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
.,.._.. o ms• pes.
knowingly accept
Ad, 44 1-11 11
call (740)645·1383
advertiHmentt for real
...;.;._______ HUD HOMES! 3bd onl'
Mobile Home lot tor rent. SA
,
ealltewhlch lain .
141 &amp; 775 area. Some $13,2501
More
1~4bd
violation or the law. Our
homeo available! From
relderaare hertby
restrictions apply. $ 12 5. per
9/mol
S%dn ,
519
lnrormect -•••rt
month. 740·446·4053
u•
----~--- 20yraGI%. For listings
ctweiUnus adventaed In
Sites avaUabfe up to 16X80 •nn55" •tot xF144
thllnewspaperare
mobile homes $ 130.00 per --~
-----available on an equal
month. Call 740·992-5639
Nice 2br Home on Redmond
opportunity blltl.
Ridge Ad 304-675-6406
~::::::::::::~ Trailer lot lor ren t in after 5pm
For sale by owner. 38A Harrisonville, $125/month. ::N:. -':3:::B::R:--t--:B:::A--:C::IA
::
Call (740)742·1504 at1er 6 •ce
.
.
·
Ranch. 1 bath. Fa mil~
IF
'd
5love · nS 9e, MurnD
1 . 1 ~1
Room, Stove/Fridge. WID p.m.
60o. O+ eposll ,
A kl
$
lease.
included. s ng 70,000.
k.
CaU 740·709-6339
references, no sma tng. no
-------pets. 105 Bastiani. 7'40-446·
For salefland contract. 3 BA Cr10
H&lt;llSFS
1 _
36_6_7 _ _ _ _ __
house in Gallipolis, W/0
Inn n.........
Off SA 141 , 3BA, 2BA .
vn. ntJ'i 1
connection $1500 down
appltances, basement , 1 ca r
$400/mo or rent $475/mo.
garage, $500/mo plus
Al so 1 BR in Gallipolis $750 $191/mot Buy 3bd HUO deposit. f614 )226·0859
down $200fmo or rant home! 5%dn, 20yra@8%.
$275/mo.Call Wayne 404· For Listing&amp; 80().559-4109 Pomer9Y, 2-3 br. apL 0 1
1
xt709
house, partially furnished.
456·380 21o r 1no.
- - c - - - - - - - HUD aPproved.. near patio; .
House for sale in Raci ne 2 BR Duplex · 644 2nd Ave no pets. (740)992·6B86
area. Ap pr())C . 4 acres. aII $425/mo plus deposit &amp; utili· Preuy. 3BR.
Batt1
·
11y 1andscaped ties. Stove &amp; fridge, WfD Downtown Gallipolis. Very
profess1ona
Ranch style house with 4 hookup, No pets. Lease.
446-()332 eam to 5pm Man· close to WaShington Etem.
bedrooms, llving room , din·
and GAHS. 695
81
· - - - - - - No smok,ng Utilities 001
ing room. knchen. large lam· :5::::...
ily room, central air, gas heat 2 story Farm House. located included.
and 1 fireplace . Addition of a 3 miles from Rio Grande 645 _6378 ask tor Kelly
large Florida room co m- Univ.. No Pels, References
pletely cedar opens onto requ1red 304·675·7624
Moou .E Hmtl:'i
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
lliR lbl\T
ground pool enclosed by pri· 2BA. WfD. Slove. refridg. 88
vacy lenc1·ng and 1and· Gartie ld. $ 400/month $ Trailer tor ren t, 38A. 2 BA.
scaped. Finished 2 ca r 400/dep+ulililies. 6 month Cal/ 367 _7762 or 446 -4 060
garage attached to house lease. Call 740·446·2515
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
Ellcellent condition ready to
move in . $255,000.00, Call·
(740)949·2217

I :::;::::::::::~
S.111V1Cfli~.-~-.. I

Ja~n

...

Ml'lcruANEous

00 Clayton 14X60. 28A. 2
Covered Porches, Very Nice.
Must be Moved. $13,000.
Call after 5pm, 740·339·
4570 or 441 ·5294
- - - - - - -1975, 14 X 70 Governor, 3
Bd., 1 1/2 bath. 740-247_04_0_2._ _ _ _ _ _
2000 14x70, 3BA. 2BA. l ols
of ,.... grades . on rented lot
~
34
Kraus·Beck
Ad .
Gallipolis. 3 miles from
Gallipolis qtf SA 588. 446·
8435
-20-00-CI-ayt_on
_24X-5-6.-3-B-A-.
2BA, 3/4 acre in Green
Township. 579,900 _ Call
740•645•7113
__:c..:c.;~------Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16.:80 with vinyl/shing le.
Must sell, Only $25,995 whh
delivery. Call (740)385-4367

t

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Lw------

COUPONS

HUD HOMES! lbd only
$13,2501 More 1-4bd
homes available I From
$199/mo t
5%dn,
20yrs08%. For listings
BD0-559-4109 II:Fl44
Oak Hiii-Anractive 1-story.
2BA. 1.25ba . NEW updates·
energy efficien t windows
doors &amp; kitchen appliances
Hardwood &amp; ceramic floors,
full basement (partially 'fin ·
ished) . central air, forced
gas t1eal, city water &amp;
sewage, off street parking.
large level backyard . A
MUST
SEE!
A~king
sao.ooo. 740-645·1863 or
740-352·2645

REDUCE D! Brand new
House for Sale 1905 N. Main home in Gallipolis. 2BR ,
Street, 4 bedroom 304-675· 2BA wf3 acres rntl. SB2500.
1545
Caii74Q.446·7029

_________

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Pag~ 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Gallia Co. teams hit the road for Week 5 Point set to take on.
tough Winfield team
school's Hall of Fame this
weekend, as this Friday is
being billed as the Hall of
Fame Game by the Logan
Countians. Arms led Man to
playoff appearances in 2004
and 2005,

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

All three local gridiron
teams are hitting the road
for lengthy road trips in
Week 5 of the high school
football season.
Gallia Academy will face
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League power Logan on the
hilltop. Sout~ Gallia will
trJ:Ivel deep into southern
West Virginia to take on
winless Man and River
Valley will go to Waterford
in search of back -to-back
wins for the first time since
2003.
· Only River · Valley was
successful last week, beating Alexander in the llf\nual
homecoming game. Gallia
Academy and South Gallia,
meanwhile, dropped close
contests to Chillicothe and
Wahama respectively.
The fo llowing is a look at
this week's match-ups:

Football
from PageBl
The Green and White,
with the e;o;ception of the
Wahama contest (35-0),
have been . one play away
from turning an 0-4 start
into a 3- 1 beginning after
very competitive losses to
Alexander (17-13), South
Galli a (7 -0) and now Van.
The Eagles, which are
ave ragi ng less than seven
points (6.75) per contest
offe nsively. made major
strides last week after producing the largest point total
of the season with 14.
Eastern also ended a consecuti ve-quaner streak of II
without a point.
EHS is also allowing an
average of 20 points-pergame defensively, although
only two of its opponents
have managed to hit or
exceed that plateau this fall.
This is also the.third Eastern
home game of 2007.
Belpre, on the other hand,
enters Friday on a twoga me winning streak after
an 0-2 start. The Golden
Eagles
ended
Williamstown 's 57-game
regular season wi nning
streak during week three
with a 14-7 decision at
WHS. then beat defendi ng
TVC Hocking champion
Federal Hocking last week
at home with a ti-0 shutout.
The Orange and Black

•

age of 4.3 yards-per-carry.
Junior running back
Ashton Packard (6-2. 170)
led the receivers with 29
yards on two grabs. The
offense also committed two
fumbles in the win.
Belpre 's defense surn~ n­
dered 20 I total yards of
offense last week, but just
97 of those came through
the running game. Fed Hock
attempted 29 rushes against
Belpre, an average of just
over 3.3 yards per try.
Belpre also allowed I 04
yards on 5-of-17 passing.
picking off two errant Fed
Hock attempts. BHS is
playing its third road game
of 2007.

Southern (1-3)
at Wirt County (2-2)
ELIZABETH. W.Va. Think a ll is well for
Southern after it picked up
its first win of the season ·
last week during a 39-0
shutout of Hannan (W.Va.).
Think again.
After a fall fu ll of injuries
that saw thi s roster get
healthy just one week ago,
the Tornadoes were again
hurt by bad fortunes after
losi ng startin g runnin g
backs Greg Jenkins and
Anthony
Shamb lin
to
injuries thi s week in practice.
That means an offense
that produces just 16.li
points-per-game will be
wit h two new. relatively
inexperienced bodies in the
I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

\Ertbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

BY WRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
No
one
was more
'
excited
about
last
week's
big
Gallia Academy (2-2)
win over Meigs than fi!St
at Logan (3-1)
LOGAN - From the ath- year Point Pleasant head
leticism of quarterback coach Dave Darst.
But even with the first win
Caleb Knights, to the smash
behind
Darst has little
mouth running of Justin time to him,
rest as a new week
Frye. The Gallia Academy brings a new OJlWnent. and
Blue Devils will certainly the start of - · Cardinal
face a very different type of Conference play when
test this week.
Winfield visits Sanders Field
And the Blue Devils. who Friday night. Kick-off is slatdid well in containing ed for 7:30 p.m.
Knights in last week's loss
And if a wiq wasn't enough
to Chillicothe, will undoubtc of a motivating factor the Red
edly face a tougher chal- and Black will be even more
lenge this Friday in Frye and . fired up when they return
the
loaded
Logan home for the first annual Hall
of Fame game. Thanks to
Chieftains.
Kick-off
for
the Darst and several other comSoutheastern Ohio Athletic munity members who got the
League contest is set 'for elite club started, the fi!Stclass for the Point
7:30 p.m. at Bill Sauer ever
Pleasant
Athletic Hall of
River Valley (1-3)
Field.
Fame
will
be honored during
at Waterford (3-1)
The Chiefs enter the fray halftime activities during
WATERFORD - River
riding the wave of three what is expected to be a very
· Valley, which finally put
straight wins since a Week I large crowd.
everything together last
loss at Lancaster. Logan has
'There will be a lot of peoweek in a 29-7 win over
blown out its last three ple in town, we are playing a
Alexander, will undoubtedopponents: Chillicothe (47- conference school and can
ly head to Waterford this
18), Pi ckerington North (24- get right back into the conferweek with a lot of confience at 1-1 and back in the
7) and Athens (62-6).
dence.
Frye has rushed for 456 mix so there is a lot of things
riding on this week," Dilrst
The Raiders used their
OVP File yards on 76 carries with six
size up front to dominate River Valley's Tyler Canaday runs a toss right against Meigs touchdowns so far on the said.
But with all the festivities
Alexander, and will look to during a week three loss in Rock Springs.
season, and because of the
place this week, PPHS
taking
do more of the same this
lopsided results, he has sat
before
getting
on
track
last
will
need
to make sure it
schools in unbeaten Logan out parts of some games. He
week against the Wildcats
(33-14) and Westside (I 0-, is the workhorse, as No. 2 doesn't overlook a very hunTri-Valley week.
of
the
The
Raiders
had
many
6). The other two setbacks rusher Mark Potter has only · gry Winfield team sitting in
Conference
Hocking
an almost identical boat as
offensive
contributors
to
the
have come at the hands of 87 yards on 25 totes.
Division.
The Blue Devils will also the Big Blacks. The Generals
Kick-off for the high victory as Ryan Henry, Mount View (22-8) and
also have just one win after
school football contest is set Tyler Canaday, Jordan Dell most recently No. 5 Saint have 10 prepare for two dif- playing a tough early schedand Cody McAvena all Mary's (30-16).
ferent quarterbacks this ule and are hoping to get back
for 7:30 p.m.
the
shared
the
load
running
Man
actually
week, as Logan has success- into the conference race with
Last
week;
Waterford is a new oppofootball
.
Sean
Sands
had
a
held the lead in the third fully been using brothers an upset win Friday night.
nent on the Raiders' slate,
and is ac tually the third 23-yard touchdown recep- quarter, but St. Mary's Michael and Patrick Angel
With two teams trying to
team to fill the spot in as tion from Clayton Curnutte. returned a Man interception under center. Michael has get their seasons back on
The game will be the final 80 yards to swing the thro wn for 237 yards, three track, Friday will be a tough
many years. River Valley
non-league
encounter of the momentum.
faced Athens in 2005 and
touchdowns and five inter- battle in the trenches between
The Billies have an ceptions - but Patrick has two talented teams.
Pike County Central (Ky.) season for both clubs. River
Valley begins Ohio Valley offense that has shown it is been more effi cient, comOverall, Point Pleasant
this time last season.
Conference
play
next
week
capable of both running and pleting 6-of-7 for 65 yards holds a 7-I overall record
,Waterford is having a
Rock Hill
while throwing the football sue- and two scores.
against the Generals in a
good year so far, as it was at
series
TVC
dating back to 1989.
Waterford
opens
cessfully. Quarterback Cory
Lucas Wright is the top
won three straight since an
The
Big
Blacks opened the
Hocking
action
against
Spence runs the Billie receiving target while Jon
opening week loss to
series
with
six stratght wins,
Miller.
offense from under center Bapst, Corey Kissling,
unbeaten Wahama. But what
losing
for
the
fi!St time in the
and h~s a pair of talented Jeshiah Eggers and Frye
remains to be seen is if the
series
in
2005
by a score of
South Gallia (3-1)
much-smaller Wildcats can
backs to take pressure off of have all caught multiple
27-7.
Point
then
got back on
at Man (0-4)
match up physically with
him.
balls.
track with an exciting last
the massive Raiders.
MAN, W.Va. - South
Timmy Browning, who
Gallia Academy can ill minute. 21-20 win last season.
Waterford is a Division VI Gallia is crossing the river returned from a severe con- afford to give Logan the During the eight game series,
school while River Valley is into West Virginia to take on cussion to play last week, is same type of opportunities Point has ouiscored Winfield
some Hillbillies - the Man expected to see carries. that it gave to Chillicothe 165-89.
two divisions larger.
Also, junior Khris Tolliver and expect to stay in the
The biggest challenge fac- Hillbillies.
Along with the recent dom~
The two schools are simi- is a threat. Tolliver, a South game. The Blue Devils ination in the series, Point
ing the River Valley defense
will be containing versatile lar in size, but have gone in Charleston transfer, rushed turned the ball over five Pleasant is also coming off a
huge win over previously
Waterford athlete Derek different directions so far in for 131 yards in a close loss times last week .
in
Meigs
Hoge, who burned Fort Frye 2007. The Rebels will be to Westside.
Logan leads the all-time undefeated
Pomeroy
with
a
last
second,
for 123 yards on just 18 car- trying to bounce back from
But Man will be playing a series over Galli a Academy
ries last week. He also threw their first loss of the season South Gallia defensive unit 36-35-3 and has won the last 30-yard field goal by kicker
for a touchdown on a half- ( 14-7 to Waharna) last week, that has beeR stubborn so far three meetings. The Blue Jus tin Weaver.
While the Marauders carne
back pass.
while Man will be searching in 2007.
Devils beat the Chiefs in
into the game with the preHoge was a second team for its first taste of victory.
South Gallia's defense 2002 and 2003.
All-Ohio selection at wide
Kick-off is set for 7:30 will need another solid
It will also be Gallia mier back in Cornelis
who was averaging
receiver last fall.
p.m. at Man's George A. effort this week. So far the Academy's final trip to old English,
nearly
215
yards per game
River Valley was an upset Queen Memorial Field.
Rebels have surrendered Sauer Field, which has before Point Pleasant, PPHS
The Hillbillies, while win- just 26 points over the first housed the Chieftains for back Tyler Grant stole the
victim to Southeastern 2320 in overtime in Week I , less, have played a tough four weeks, which is around the past 83 years. Logan show with 163 yards and a
then suffered back-to-back schedule thus far. Two of one touchdown per game. . could be playing in a new score on 24 carries. ·
41-14
lopsided
losses those los ses have come
Man coach Harvey Arms football stadi um as early as
But even with such a huge
(Nelsonv ille -York , Meigs) against bigger Class ·AA will be inducted into the next season.
~in. Darst says that dwelling
have lost to both Warren
and at Fort Frye by a combined four points and are
also outscoring opponents
40-31 this season.
Welsh believes picking up
that elusive first triumph is
possible this weekend, but
he also knows it won't be
easy.
"Belpre is a team coming
in with a 2-2 record, . but
they could very easily be
coming into this one 4-0.
They have a very good ball
team that is well-coached,"
Welsh said. "This is the last
week of non-league and
we're hoping to get over the
hump so that these kids can
get some confidence. The
kids are still battling and
working hard for that fi rs t
win."
Belpre b'attled the Lancers
to a scoreless tie at intermission last week before breaking out in the third quarter
when senior quarterback
·R.J. Walker (6-1. 180)
added the game's only score
on a eight-yard run to paydirt.
Walker led the team with
77 yards on 13 rushes and
was also 3-of-9 passing for
31 yards in the triumph.
Senior running back Mike
Waderker (6-1, 2 15 ) also
added 70 rushing yards on
19 totes for BHS, which
churned out 194 total yards
of offense agai nst the
Lancers. The Golden Eagles
also produced 163 rushing
yards on 38 carries, an aver-

www.mydallysentlnel.com

OVP File

A Southern defender wraps up South Gallia quarterback
John Wells during a week three high school football game in
Mercerville
. The 'Does travel to Elizabeth, W.Va .. this Friday
..
when they tackle Wirt County.
backfie ld . The 'Does will put in new kids and fresh
also be without two of their faces. Hopefull y they' ll
main offensive \veapons.
come along and do well ."
"The injury bug has really
The Purple and Gold will
hun us thi s year. and we've need a major collective
lost a couple more key kids effort against Wirt County
for thi s week,'' Teaford said. thi s week if they hope to
"We' ll just keep trying to make it two-in-a-row.

Galli a
County
OH
on that victory could hinder
the team. He hopes that the
team got the celebrations out
of therr system and are now
focused on their next opponent.
Helping shut down English
and the rest of the Marauder
attack was an iron-tough
defense that featured very
strong games from defensive
ends Anthony Jeffers and
Derek Pinson, defensive
tackle Clay Krebs, linebackers Eric Veith and Matt
Thompson and Troy Lepon
in the secondary.
On offense Grant leads the
team in rushinj! with 228
yards on 44 carnes andjeads
the receiving corp with seven
catches for 58 yards. Derek
Mitchell scored the other
touchdown for the Big
Blacks and · has rushed for
137 yards on 37 carries.
Caleb Wasonga has added
II I yards on 23 carries.
B.J. Uoyd has done a nice
job in his fi!St year at quarterback, completing I I passes in
30 tries for 105 ~ards.
· Point comes mto Friday's
contest having seen tough
losses to Sissonville (40-7)
and Gallia Academy (28-0)
befof~: the big win last week.
Winfield faced similar losses
to undefeated Class AAA
school Hurricane (44-7) and
Cardinal. Conference .~eading
Wayne (32-0). Sissonville,
who pounded Point in week
one, barely edged the
Generals 13-9 two weeks ago
and Winfield's lone win carne
over Lincoln County 38-20 in
week two.
The Generals have a very
strong back in Steven
Gaydosz who is averaging
big numbers in the four
g_arnes played this season.
Quarterback Taylor Farley
will also be a tough test for
the Big Blacks second~,
throwing for 345 yards this
season mcluding 175 yards
against Wayne last week.
But if it comes down to
who scores last, Darst hopes
that his unique offense will
throw teams off and allow
him to control the clock and
the ball for most of the game.
"The thing about this
offense is that I wanted it to
be something that is unique
and I wanted it to be something that defensive coordinators are going to have to do
:something compl~tely ~er­
ent for one week m therr season to prepare for us," Darst
said.
After last week's morale
boosting win, Point will now
try to feed off of a big crowd
and the Hall of Fame festivities as it tries to get back into
the Cardinal Conference race
when Winfield visits Friday.
The Tigers- after an 0-2
stan .- have won their last
two contests convincingly,
outscoring Gilmer County
(66-12) and Doddridge
County by a combined 9318 margin. WCHS is also
averaging 26.8 points offensively while allowing just
15.3 points-per-contest.
The Orange and Blac)c
won at DCHS last week by
a 27-6 outcome, spearheaded by junior quarterback
Josh Valentine (6-0, I 50).
Valentine completed I 0-of22 passes last week for 125
yards and also added a rushmg score.
Wirt County gained 178
rushing yards on 39 totes,
an average of 4.6 yards-percarry. WCHS also produced
303 yards of total offense
· against the Bulldogs.
Sophomore running back
Devin Dye (5-7, 171) led
the ground attack with 86
yards on nine carries, while
senior Mike Davis (6-1,
173) added 53 yards on 18
attempts. Valent.ine, Davis,
Dye and junior Tom McCoy
(5-9, 178) each chipped in a
rushing score.
Sophomore wideout Zach
Moore (5 -11 , 180) led the
Tigers last week with five
grabs for 91 yards. All five
of
those
individual
recpetion s went for 10 yards
or more.
~outhern.
despite
a
~utout last week. is still
allowing 28.3 points-pergame defensively.
.

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Sentinel

ca~r~::v (74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

/}e,ar/tir~

Offee, !lowe-~
Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Display Ads

Dally In - Column: 1:00 p.m.
MQnd•Y·Frlday for ln•ertlon

All Dl•pley: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Dey• Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper

Publication

Sunday ln-Coklmn : 1 :00 p . m.

Sunday Dl•play~ 1 : 00

frh~ay

Thu~day

For Sunday• Paper

Now yo1,1 can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

POUCif.S: Ottlo V•hy Publl•hlng ~the rlfht to Milt, r-tect. or Clneel any ld It tnv time. Error• mu•t be rtpOMtd on the flr•t city
Trlbu,..&amp;entlnef.Aegl•ter will t. ~'*lor no men tun the co.t of the ~occupied by the lln'or •nct only 1M tlret lnHnlon. WI
II
anv 1oM or expenM thlt multi froln the pubtlcttlon.QI' omlllllon of 1n MvertiMment. Correction will tNt mtde In lhl flr•l•v•ll•bl• edition. • Bo•
tre tiWIIVt conflflntlll. •Current rD card lppiiH. • All,.., ...... actvertiHIMflte tre •ubJect to the F.cHrtl fllr Hou.lng Ad of 1H8. •Thl•
. We will not knowingly ~~ecept tny tdYtrtlalng In v6oJttlon or tM ltw.

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete
Desc:rtptlon • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Jndude Phone Number And Addrea When Needed

Items

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

' \ \ t )l \t 1 \ II \ I &gt;.,

*PO ICIES*

Word Ads

OhloVallay
Publishing reeerves
the right Io edft,

kitncarlyle@comcast.net
a dOwn payment. 4 bedrooms. l8rge yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 74().
367-7129.

reject or cancel any

ad a1 any lime.
Errors

Muat

B

oported on the II
of publication an
Trlbu•Sentlne

~$1' ~olt A

eglller
will b
aponalble for n

ori than the cost
a apace occuple

5bd 2be GALLIPOLIS
Foreclo1urel Buy tor
$84,9001
5%dn,
20yre08%. More local
homn from $199/mol For
~fl ng1 Cl II8G0-"59Ioca ll ••
01
• F254

'--G-IV&amp;\•
' •W•:I.Y-,.J

'·the error and on

rl.o·-~i i ~i i i SioiAJ.E.i i i i_.l

'tlo6G1e

~Mi .

l&gt;o(O{:i 1~ c;
1&gt;1&lt;5~12-Via-

If .

-------86 Pine, Gallipolis. New
roof, heat pump, electrical, 2

4 Family Sale. October 20 &amp;
21 . 1695 Lincoln Pike.

llrst lnoertlon. w
holt not be lleble fq
ny loaa or expen
11 multo lrom t

~~0)~:~~;20lot,

ubllcatlon or omla

ion of an advertla

ent. COrrections wll
made In tha II
alloble edition.
Sept. 20·221rom 9·6 at Clay
Townhouse on lovers lane.
Plus slze clothes, to much to
list. 740·446·0987

Current rate ca
ppllel.
All . Real

Elltat

dvertlaementt

ar

ubtect to tho Fe&lt;ln

B·wk old, indoor kittens
w/1st vac, wormed &amp; litter
trai ned. Call 441-1100 after
5:30pm.

Yard Sale, Fri 9/21 &amp; Sat
9122, 9am-4pm. 18750 SA
Www.comlc1 .com
279, just past Centerpoint
Rei, maternity clothes, kids 11'111"'"_ _ _ _ _., nln
\ \ " ' " " - - - - - . , l!tr_ _ _ _ _...,

air Houalng Act o
INI8.

FREE:
Puppies coals 0·3T. Boys winter 11 tO
Lab/Springer Spaniel mix. clothes 0·6, Gi~ls winter
3M 1F Ready NbW 304· clothes 0-2T. Van~us adult

Thla
new1pape
ccepto only hoi
anted ads maetln
OE llandardo.

675.2925 or 304·593-8173

liEl.P WANTm

I lito

11170
• •
11ELP WANTED . .
..__ _ _ _ _ _..

Courtside Bar and Grill
Overbrook Center Is now
Now taking JWplications tor
exceptional people for bar- eccepting resumes for the
position of Director of
ial
teriding, waitslaftfservers
Services. The qualified canand all kitchen positions. It didate must be a Ucensed
FOUND: Cat on 2nd St. Pl. Big 3 Family Yard Sole 82 you are a motivated people
SOuth
top
of
Dsed
Man••
Social Worker and possess
Pl. brown, &amp; cream colored
Hill Friday the 21 ot l person ptease come fill out
Obfiviously indoor cat 1Oam·
strong verbal and writlen
Saturday the 22nd 8:30 flll an application or call to set
9pm 304·675·2040
skills,
communication
up
an
interview.
4:00
d
M d. 'd M8 dl
e ICB I •
care an
3082ndAve
WANDD
MDS knowledge. Long term
740-441 ·937t
care experience preferred
toBIN
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring but not required. Qualified
4xh For Sale .............................................. 725
candidates
may
send
Announcement ............................. ............... 030
20+ acres of reasonably all locations Point Pleasant. resumes to Charla BrownAntlques .......................................................530
priced land tor residential Gallipolis, Eleanor Pomeroy McGuire,
AN ,
lNHA,
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
building site. Gallipolis area apply in Person
Ad · · t t
333 p
mmes ra or,
age
. Auction and Flea Mark8t.. ........................... 080
only. Call740·441 -5171
--D-. - .- E-d- -lo- Street, Middleport, Oh.
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. ........................ 760
E.:citlng revers
ucat n 45760 OBC .
E0 E
Absolute Top DollAr: U.S. position open in the
·
IS an
' · ·
Auto Repair.................................................. 770
'l
d
G
ld
C
.
Gallipolis
area.
Flexible
and
a
participant
of
the
Drug
S1
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 71
ve,r
anG
ldoR
,
.
opms,
h""rs.
Must
be
able
work
Free
Work
Place
Program
.
10
P
Boats &amp; Motora for Sale ............................. 750
roo sets, o
lnQS, re· ""
-------1935
U.S.
Currency. evenings and weekends. 20
· Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S. to 25 hours a week. Job
POST OFFtCE NOW
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Coin Shop, 151 . Second entails dassroom work and
HIRING
Buslneaa Opportunity ................................. 21 0
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· behind the wheel instruction
Avg. Pay S20ihr or
Buslnesa Training ....................................... 140
2642.
for new drivers. Qualified lnclud$5
1· ng7KFedeamraulaiBen~ et•s
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
"
candidates must have a Hs
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
OTPaid 11 . .
Looking for land . priced rea· Diploma, valid driver lice nse,
a~
~;~~ng,
Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010
sonable. Cal' 740·645·6299. Pass background checks.
aca IOns·
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
••• 542. tsa 1
Leave a message. 74G-645· EOE. Mail resumes to: AAA,
1·ouv·
EleclrlcaURefrlg.,.,tlon ................. .............. 84l)
6299
1414
121h
Stree t,
USWA
Equipment for Rent..................................... 480
Paw Paws, black walnu1s, Portsmo uth, Ohio 45662 -R-es-p-on-sibl-e-.-ft-e,-lb-le-lu- 11
Excavating .................................... ............... 830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 61 0
hickories, please call first, Attn: Al, or Fax resume to: time ba~ siHer needed ,
(740)698 -6060
Ann: Al. 740-351 ·0537
(?40)992•2329
Farms for Rent.............................................430
_.:._______
Farms for Sale ................ ............................. 330
Property to build home In Experienced
Bartender
For Lease ................................................., .. , 490
Gallia county. Prefer , 5·10 needed.
Apply withi n.
For Sale ........................................................ 585
acres, high and dry. Call Gallipolis Elks. 408 2nd Ave.
For Sale or Trade ........ ........................ ......... 590
Marty collect @ 321-453· .
FruHs &amp; Yagetebles ..................................... 580
Full·tlme Toddler Assistant.
1351 evenings.
Furnished Room a............. ........................... 450
$6.70/hr. limited benefits.
General Hauling .............:...... .......................850
~ · Junk
Sen d resume to Ea"
Wan1 1o Make a
Want
to
lJUY
rs,
call
uy
Giveaway......................................................040
St
t'o
2122
Ed
I.
740·366.()864
uca 1on
a 1 n,
0 Ifference 1n
Happy Ada ....................................................050
..-~!'i!oi!!'!"!'!!!!'!!!"'•
JefferSon
Ave
.
by
rl ?
Hay &amp; Grain .......................................... ........ 640
WE BUY USED
Ame ca
September 25. 2007
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
MOBILE HOMES
Help moko 01111 to&lt; 1
ttomelmprovements ...................................810
Gary (740)828·2750
Half Tlffl6 business office
Leading Republican
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
position available, wltfl some Presidential candidate!
Household Goods ....................................... 510
computer Knowledge.
Houses for Rent ...................... .................... 410
I \l l 'l tJ\ \ 11 \ I
Some medicaUdentalexperi·
tn Memoriam ................................................ 020
ence helpful.
• Earn up 10 S8.501hour
"' 1\\ I( I '
Insurance ....................................... .............. 130
Reply
to:
TSC
Box
17
do
•$300 Hiring Bonut
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
110
tiFJJ&gt;
WANJ'D)
Point
Pleasant
Register
200
•Full and ParHime
Livestock...................................................... 630
1
Main , Point Pleasant. WV
schedules
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
25550
•Paid vacations
Lolli &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Mlacellaneous ......... ..................................... 170
Assemble crafts, wood Need a person to paint a
•Paid holidays
Miscellaneous Merchandlae .......................540
lJ •Paid training
items.To $480/wk Materials Mobile Home roof. Call 740·
Mobile Home Repalr ..... ...............................860
provided . Free inlormalion 446-7039
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
pkg. 24Hr. 801·428-4649
Give us a call and start
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
- - - - - - - - Ohio Valley Home Health ,
making a difference
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
An E1C 9ellent way to earn Inc. hiring STNA's. CNA's.
today!
Motorcycles &amp;4 Wheelers .......................... 740
money. The New Avoo.
CHHA's, PCA's. Accepting
Musical Instruments ........... ........................ 570
Call Marilyn 304-882·264.5 applications tor LPN 's . 1-Bn-46!H2•7 eK\.2321
Personals ................ ............... ... J .................. oos
Competitive Wages and
• IIIIWW.intoci5ion .cm~
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Haatlng ............................ ........ B20
Benefits including hea lth ';;::::;;::===~
insurance and mi!aage. r:
Professional Sarvlces ............... .................. 230·
1480
Radio, TV II CB Repair ............................... 160
Apply at
Pike. 1'!10
ScuoOI.s
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Gallipolis or phone toll free
~l!CilON .
1·866·441·1393
•
Schoo Ia Instruction..................................... 150
Seed , Plant II Fertilizer .............................. 650
Gallipolis Career College
Situations Wanted ...... ................................. 120
The Village 01 Rio Grande is (Careers Close To Home)
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
laking applications for the Call Today! 740-446-4 367 .
Sporting Goods .................................. :........ 520
position of part lime poli ce
-80 • ..()4
1 0 214 52
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720
officer. The applicant must
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
be certified in the Ohio - .gaHipoli!ICareerWiege.com
Accrediled t.lembe• Accrediling
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Peace
Officer · Basic Counc~ tor lr.depel'ldent ColleQes
vans For Sale ...............................................730
Trainlng. Applications can be and Schools m•s.
Wanted to Buy ......... ,........·.................. ......... 090
picked up at the Rio Grande
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620
Municipal Building Monday Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Friday, 8:30am until 4:30pm
Wanted to Rent. ........................................... 470
Applications are due back to
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .......... ..........................072
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or the MuniCipal Building by
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Mtddle ... ...................... 074
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· noon
on
Monday. L~!f';!Jl!':;_~;_;_:_j
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076
September 24. 2007
~
675·1429.

t

'sizes, older chest treezer

~: It~~

I

S
.
oc

t

CLASSIFIED INDEX·

$72.!JOO

-------Anentlon1
local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
grams for you to buy your
home inS1ead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit

o

i·

@"wJl

ea

I.

Candle wax 'bUsiness, VHS
Videos &amp; VIdeo poste'rs,
work benches. large &amp;
small, USA Wolfe tanning 24
bulb, vacuum cleaner busi·
ness, Hanginn"' shelf for parts
&amp; many old coins, call

I

t..--··---_.l

111111 ..., __ ,.,
.._.~~~y
\....J\Im

Caring for Children in my
home Monday thru Friday
d 11 - e &amp; after schooi
ay. m
hours. All ages. CALL 740 .
949-2526·

ito

~

~ .........,
vrn.mt lJ~•••

r--~~~~-"1
•NOTICE•
OH IO VALlEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
lha1 you do businass with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the ma~ until you
·nvest
have 1
. •·gatad tha
:o:ff=er:ing:,:· ;:===~

i~:::m:l..o:e&gt;\N::~
MONE\'

1

**NOTICE**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
lns1itutlon·s
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you reli·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call !he
Office ol Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·666·
278·0003 to learn ~ the
mortgage broker or
lender
properly
15
lice nsed. (This is a pub~c
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
PubliShing Company)

r ...

___

.,_

__

,

.....,. •....,"""'

L

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS11
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

r16

Hor.IDi
FOR SALE

38R. 1 bath . 2-story older
farm house on SA 554 Bidweii/RV
schools
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pels
under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
deposit. Available 10·13·07.
Call 446·3644 for applica·
tlon.

r--,-·,'!""-,-""1

=

t..------· ,. ,

...,
Professionally
Clean,
Ottice! Housecleaning .
Reasonable
Rates,
References
-446·22&amp;2
740

3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy. large &amp; very clean,
1 112 bath. ale, hardwood
flo ors, lull basement w/2 car
garage, small back yard.
$635, (741' 19 -~·2 303
---3 Be droom House in
Syracuse . SSOOfmonth · +
deposit No Pets. (304)675·
5332 weekends 7~0-591·
0265

3BA, 1.5 bath, 2·storv on
Cedar St · $575/r~nl. $575 ·
sec. dep. Pets less than 20
lbs w/$575 per deposit. Call
accepted
New 3 Bedroom homes from 446·3644 for application.
• Payment co uld be the $214 .36 per month. Includes
69 Garfield · 28R, 1BA
same as rent.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
$460/month + sec . dep.
Mortgage
l ocators. set-up. (740)385·2434
You pay all utilities. Call 446(740)367·0000
Nice used 3 bedroom home 3644
vinyVshing\e. Will help with - - -A
: -tte
:-nt.,-lo-n"t - delivery. 740 ' 385'4367
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
OWNER FINANCING
grams lor yoo to buy your
Nk:e 312 singlewides
home instead ol renting.
From $1,800 down
' 100% financing
All realntllle advertlelng
In thle newepeper I•
payment
' Less than per1ect credit
•ub}ect to the Federtl
Gary (740) 828·2750 '
accepted
Fair Hou1lng Act of 1988
• Payment co uld be the ,
1
which m.k•• 1t 1191
to
same as rent.
tdvertiH "any
Locators.
Mortgage
-~
flmltotl on or
Lots&amp;
tn .........nce,
(740)367·0000
dl~ertmln•tlon b..td on
ACRFAGE
r.ce, color, religion, HX
For sale or rent, 3 bedroom ,
fomH'-1 •tatus or n~ttonal
1 b th ne I remodeled
~
7+ acres on le" FaA Ad
a '
wy
orJuln,oreny.lnUntionto
"
'"
house In ROdney Village 11.
any auch
near Jackson Pike, priced to &amp;y lor $64,000 with possi·
~ee, llmltiiUon or
sell. Call 740·446·7525
ble owner assist or rent tor
dlserlmlnttlon."
MOBilE HOME lOT FOR $500 per month wtlh securi·
1y de-" N · 'de t
Thll ntwiPIIIMI' will not
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
.,.._.. o ms• pes.
knowingly accept
Ad, 44 1-11 11
call (740)645·1383
advertiHmentt for real
...;.;._______ HUD HOMES! 3bd onl'
Mobile Home lot tor rent. SA
,
ealltewhlch lain .
141 &amp; 775 area. Some $13,2501
More
1~4bd
violation or the law. Our
homeo available! From
relderaare hertby
restrictions apply. $ 12 5. per
9/mol
S%dn ,
519
lnrormect -•••rt
month. 740·446·4053
u•
----~--- 20yraGI%. For listings
ctweiUnus adventaed In
Sites avaUabfe up to 16X80 •nn55" •tot xF144
thllnewspaperare
mobile homes $ 130.00 per --~
-----available on an equal
month. Call 740·992-5639
Nice 2br Home on Redmond
opportunity blltl.
Ridge Ad 304-675-6406
~::::::::::::~ Trailer lot lor ren t in after 5pm
For sale by owner. 38A Harrisonville, $125/month. ::N:. -':3:::B::R:--t--:B:::A--:C::IA
::
Call (740)742·1504 at1er 6 •ce
.
.
·
Ranch. 1 bath. Fa mil~
IF
'd
5love · nS 9e, MurnD
1 . 1 ~1
Room, Stove/Fridge. WID p.m.
60o. O+ eposll ,
A kl
$
lease.
included. s ng 70,000.
k.
CaU 740·709-6339
references, no sma tng. no
-------pets. 105 Bastiani. 7'40-446·
For salefland contract. 3 BA Cr10
H&lt;llSFS
1 _
36_6_7 _ _ _ _ __
house in Gallipolis, W/0
Inn n.........
Off SA 141 , 3BA, 2BA .
vn. ntJ'i 1
connection $1500 down
appltances, basement , 1 ca r
$400/mo or rent $475/mo.
garage, $500/mo plus
Al so 1 BR in Gallipolis $750 $191/mot Buy 3bd HUO deposit. f614 )226·0859
down $200fmo or rant home! 5%dn, 20yra@8%.
$275/mo.Call Wayne 404· For Listing&amp; 80().559-4109 Pomer9Y, 2-3 br. apL 0 1
1
xt709
house, partially furnished.
456·380 21o r 1no.
- - c - - - - - - - HUD aPproved.. near patio; .
House for sale in Raci ne 2 BR Duplex · 644 2nd Ave no pets. (740)992·6B86
area. Ap pr())C . 4 acres. aII $425/mo plus deposit &amp; utili· Preuy. 3BR.
Batt1
·
11y 1andscaped ties. Stove &amp; fridge, WfD Downtown Gallipolis. Very
profess1ona
Ranch style house with 4 hookup, No pets. Lease.
446-()332 eam to 5pm Man· close to WaShington Etem.
bedrooms, llving room , din·
and GAHS. 695
81
· - - - - - - No smok,ng Utilities 001
ing room. knchen. large lam· :5::::...
ily room, central air, gas heat 2 story Farm House. located included.
and 1 fireplace . Addition of a 3 miles from Rio Grande 645 _6378 ask tor Kelly
large Florida room co m- Univ.. No Pels, References
pletely cedar opens onto requ1red 304·675·7624
Moou .E Hmtl:'i
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
lliR lbl\T
ground pool enclosed by pri· 2BA. WfD. Slove. refridg. 88
vacy lenc1·ng and 1and· Gartie ld. $ 400/month $ Trailer tor ren t, 38A. 2 BA.
scaped. Finished 2 ca r 400/dep+ulililies. 6 month Cal/ 367 _7762 or 446 -4 060
garage attached to house lease. Call 740·446·2515
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
Ellcellent condition ready to
move in . $255,000.00, Call·
(740)949·2217

I :::;::::::::::~
S.111V1Cfli~.-~-.. I

Ja~n

...

Ml'lcruANEous

00 Clayton 14X60. 28A. 2
Covered Porches, Very Nice.
Must be Moved. $13,000.
Call after 5pm, 740·339·
4570 or 441 ·5294
- - - - - - -1975, 14 X 70 Governor, 3
Bd., 1 1/2 bath. 740-247_04_0_2._ _ _ _ _ _
2000 14x70, 3BA. 2BA. l ols
of ,.... grades . on rented lot
~
34
Kraus·Beck
Ad .
Gallipolis. 3 miles from
Gallipolis qtf SA 588. 446·
8435
-20-00-CI-ayt_on
_24X-5-6.-3-B-A-.
2BA, 3/4 acre in Green
Township. 579,900 _ Call
740•645•7113
__:c..:c.;~------Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16.:80 with vinyl/shing le.
Must sell, Only $25,995 whh
delivery. Call (740)385-4367

t

·;=:::;;;::==:,

s

Lw------

COUPONS

HUD HOMES! lbd only
$13,2501 More 1-4bd
homes available I From
$199/mo t
5%dn,
20yrs08%. For listings
BD0-559-4109 II:Fl44
Oak Hiii-Anractive 1-story.
2BA. 1.25ba . NEW updates·
energy efficien t windows
doors &amp; kitchen appliances
Hardwood &amp; ceramic floors,
full basement (partially 'fin ·
ished) . central air, forced
gas t1eal, city water &amp;
sewage, off street parking.
large level backyard . A
MUST
SEE!
A~king
sao.ooo. 740-645·1863 or
740-352·2645

REDUCE D! Brand new
House for Sale 1905 N. Main home in Gallipolis. 2BR ,
Street, 4 bedroom 304-675· 2BA wf3 acres rntl. SB2500.
1545
Caii74Q.446·7029

_________

CURRENT EVENTS

·TECHNOLOGY

COMICS SPORTS

ENTERTAINMENT
and more ...

To Subscribe Call
The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

�~­

Page 86 • The D;.ily Sentinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007
ALLEY OOP

\.

1~x70 3BR, 2BA

(740)446-3481.
740-258o3168
- - - - -- _....;.;_;_.;,:--_ __
~·" A'
•
I
Cocker Sparilel pups, blk, &amp; ~!"'!'--'!"""=-•won rwrs '"""' 'accept- white
w/b/k.$300-$350,
lng appllcatlono for wahlng
list for Hud-subelzed, 1- br, ' brindle and fewn $350-$400.
2BA on private lot, Addison eportmont,for
the Atl'pupeAKC. 740-767-4875.
Twp, $400 flent &amp; $400

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

Deposit; 28R on priVate )Ot, elde~ldlsabled call 875·
very nice, quiet, scenic area, 667
E~al
Housing
Addison Twp, $550/rent, Opportunity
$550 Deposit {740)645· Very nice apartment for rent
3413 or (740)645-3592
in Pomeroy, ~eat neighbor·
hood, quiet. Newly remod·

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

Kfttens - 6Wks oiCI. Siamese·Himalayan. $50 each. Cell
740·441.0727

-Ae;,:g_Bo;_r;_d.:;er;_,-Co_l_lie-pu-p-s,
Imported BlOodlines, 1st
shots, wormed, working par·

Mobile Home for Rent, 2 BA, eled. New appliances, 2 ents, Call740-379-9110

AJC, HUO Appi'oved, Total Bedrooms, 1 bath. Central
ElectriC, Rent inctudes trash, Air &amp; Heat. Calf 992•9784 or
water &amp; sewer, 532 5/mo, 992·5094 for more details.

$325 deposit, CaH {740)992-

,

•=:,-=-

1.....;1:.:-..;;;;;;;;.;;,._;;;.;"'._~

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

•\ I I\ I " I I H 1,

Lr__FORIISI'Aiiii~illl-.,.11 r10

56391or appt.
Nice 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath ,

Here's all you
need t-o do ...
Fill out• the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I \l i\ I ..,I 1' 1'1 II -.,

FARM

Phillip
Alder

MONTY

I

'
MASON

1-

Mowm, llll~1'5,,'-l
MumJy,
CI"I!{ISIMll,
MTD,Brigp
&amp; Stralton

2 br., country setting, w/rJ
hookup, utilities included. no
pets, available 10/01/07,
$550 per month pius
de~,

Phone,__________________________

(740)992-4119

1
I

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

.I •

•

•

• • •

•

• •

•

•

•

• • •

•

• • •

• •

•

• •

•

•

• •

•

• •'

l~ty
5tOYears

92 CASE 580 Super!(

Bacil.hoe, very gOOd condi·
2br. Apt. on 5th Street Pt. lion, low hours. $18,000.
Pleasant $375 ask for Don Call 740·709-9420

II ~\

\ '- 1'1 I I ~ I\

l it I \

Alllll'i
FOR SALE

H d i
yun a

Accent

GE Heavy Duty XLIL capac- Hatchback. 5 speed trans,

-----~------- ity Washer &amp; Dryer $150, 65,310 miles, good condi·
Bruno Wood Burning Stove tion. needs catalytic convert·
dual door w/electric· Blower er. Asking $3200. Cali 740-

$180 call304-675·6880

_709-·6_3_39_.- - - - - -

Hot tub, wiring in~luded, 02 Camry Le. 58,000k, 4cyl,
Seats 7, Great Condition, AT, AC, 4DR, 1 owner;
Reasonably priced, Call garage kept, like new cond.

POOik Nod"" it ::~:~::1

Your Rigllt to Know, Ddinml Rl!hll

Beautiful Apto, at Jackson (740)441-0366 or {740)339· $10700. Call245-1513
Eafatea. 52 Westwood 2813
. 03 Mustang, Convertible,
Drive, from $365 · to $560. ------J-i,;,.-:------ .hood scoop, rear spoiler,
740·446-2568.
Equal
•'
eke
1
Housing Opportunity. This
AERATION MOTORS
pony pa I, 27000 ml es.
institution is an Equal Repaired Ne~ &amp; Rebuilt In Excellent cond. Asktng
Opportunity Provider and StocK.

Public Notice
County: Meigs
The following appllca·
·lions and/or verified
complaints
were
received, and the fol·

lowing draft, proposed,
or final actlona were
Issued, by The Ohio
En v I ron mental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) last week,
"Actlona" Include tho
adoption, modification,
or repeal ol orders
(other than emergency
orders); 'the Issuance,
denial, modification or
revocation of licenses,
permits, Ieases, varl·
ances, or certificates;
and the approval or
dlsapproval of plans
a~d
apeclflcatlona.
"Draft Actions" are
written statements of
the
director
of
E nv I r o nma n t a I
Pr o I e ct I o n ' s
(Director's) Intent with
respect . to
lhe
tsiUance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,
order, etc, lnterestacl
peraona may submit
written perntlt, license,
order, etc. lnterestacl
persons may submit
written comments or
request a public meetlng regarding draft
actlono, Comments or
public
meeting
requesta must be sui&gt;mltted wHhln 30 days
ol notice of the draft
acttori.
"Propcisact
Actions" ore written
ototemento of the
director's Intent with
respect
to
the
laauance, denial, modi·

may be appealacl to the P.M., Sept 27,2007 and
EnvlrORmental Review then at 1:15 P.M. at
Appeals Commission saldolllceopenedand
(ERAC)
(Formerly read aloud lor the lol·
know
as
the lowing:
Environmental Soard Specification, and bid
of Review) by a person forma may be secured
who was a party to a at the office of Meigs
proceeding before the C o u n I y
director by filing an Com m Is al on a r a,
appeal wHhln 30 daya Courthouse, Pomeroy,
of notice of the final Ohio 45769- Phone
action. Pursuant to t740·992·2B95.
A
Ohio Revised Code deposit of 0 dollars will
Section 3745.07, A be requlracl for each
Final Action Issuing, sat of plans and apecldenying, modifying, llcallons, checks mede
revoking, or renewing payable
to
a permit, license, or
• The 1u11
var Ianca w hi ch Ia not amount
w Ill
be
preceded by a pro- returned within thirty
posed action, may be (30) days after receipt
appealacl to the ERAC of bids.
by filing an eppeat Each bid must be
within 30 days of accompanlacl by eHher
Issuance of the final · a bid bond In the
action. ERAC appeals, amount of 100% of the
accompanied by a $70 bid amount with a
llllng fee which th surety aatlolactory to
ecommlsolon In It dis· the aforesaid Meigs
cretlon may reduce 11 C 0 u n . 1 y
by affidavit the appel· Commissioners or by
!ant demonstrates that certified
check,
payment of the full cashiers check, or let·
amount of the lee tar of c,redlt upon asol·
would cause extreme vent bank In the
hardship,
must be amount of not less
flied
with: than 10% of the bid
Environmental Review amount In favor of the
Appeals Commission, aforesaid
Meigs
309 South Fourth C o u n t y
Street, Room 222, Commissioners. Bid
Columbus, Ohio 43215. Bonds shell be accomA copy of the appeal panled by Proof of
must be served on the Authority of the oftlclal
director within 3 days or agent signing the
after filing the appeal bond.
with the ERAC.
Bids shall be sealacl
Final approval of Plans and markacl aa Bid for
and Specifications
Pomeroy
Volunteer
Tupper Plains/Chester Fire
Department
Water District
Protective
Clothing

Employor.
---'-'-------CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED&amp;AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse apartments,
andlor small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441'1111

C~li

17500 2
Pion Evans, 1· $
6006 · 56-8882 or 256-

800-537-9528.

·

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
tor application &amp; infofmation. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Ellm View
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Apartments Thursday, saturday &amp;
, 2&amp;3 bedroom apart!flents Sunday. {740)44fl-7300
•Central heat &amp; fVC
0 Frldc sawmill with blower,
•Wasller/dryer hookup
belts and pipes. Sawdust
•Tenant pays electric
Bucltet. No Sunday Calls.
(304)882-3017
3149 Nebo Ad. Pa1rlo1, Oh

~~

1il
•

Save 10% off regular price
On all Vent Free Gas Heaters
(Propane
or Natural)
Aluminum Fiberated Paint
{Great for Mobile Homes) 5gel. Bucket $36.95, StaKool While Elastomeric Real
Coating 5-gal. Bucket
$78·59· BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Oil Bese Paint I Barn Red)
5-gaI• Buckat $89·95• We
carry Pitlsburgh Pa1nts &amp;
Slkkens Finish for all your
ctia~~~e~:. Hordware

------Graofouo Uv"'g 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
ManorandAiversideApts.in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
- - - - -- - - - - Middleport, Baech St, 2 br.
lurnished apt., uliitles pd.,
dep. &amp; rei., no pets,
99_2_-0_165
304-li75-4084
:.
17_40_1_
______
Middleport, No,lh 4th Ave., 2 flrii"--P~t·I•S--.,~
br. 1urnt'shed apt ., dep. &amp;
Jo'OH SA.U:
ref., no pats, (740)992-0 165 ~------,..1

~=-------

03 Taurus, auto s3900 , 04
Suntire aulo$5200 91 Olds
$1450.'98Tiburon.' $2200.
and more, 446-7278
.:::.::-'-':..:..-'-'..:.::_:____
2000 Black Grand IW. GT,

vs, Ram Air, SUnroot, CD.
91 ,000 miles. $5,800.00.
740·949-9006.

26 Years Experience

95 Ford Contour. 4cyl, auto,

• Garages

air. $1000 080. 740-2561233

• Complete
Remodeling

97 Camara AS. wht wlblk
racing stripes/racing sPoiler.
Looks/runs good. Priced to

sell $28001 304·634-8523

Going Out Of Buslneaa
Inventory must Go, Vehicles,
Tools, Office Equipment Eel.
Kenny's Auto' Center 740-

,;.446;;.;·9.;.97;,;1 ~----,

Fi5

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

~------·
02 Dodge Ram 42k miles,
auto, 4K4, $8500. 2000
Ranger EXP, std, 4' 4•
$4500, and more. 446-7278
1978 Chevy, 1 Ton, Dually
2WD Flatbed, $600. Call
{740)742-2457.

r ;: ; ;,:

""' • S
g
FOR ALE

J&amp;L
Construction

740·182-lm

Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios,
Concrete Footers
Also

{

Hil l's Se lf

•

I

Storage

-t

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
746-949·2217

...I
,·

THE BORN LOSER
~""rtAtit.e. I!:I ~WTI\1~ wrow. "'q
'NI'It\ :)E(.\(JW.,~'( f\~1&lt;-E:

'i BE.LIE.VE. W..T ~1-liU.TI~
I~ TI-\E. 1'£'&lt; '\"0 ~&gt;.· fJ.E.r..L"ffi'(

ll£L,"'-TIO~IP!

~f\~1~(£

t~US!

C.OUI'o\SELOR ...

WM"( JO WE GET

SOCCE!t.!!

ProtectloBnox Age
10n4c9y,,
P.O.
Columbus,
Ohio
4 3 2 1 6 - 1 0 4 9
(Telephone: 614-644·
2129j. \ "Final Actions:
Are actions of the
director which are
upon issuance or a
stated effective date.
Pursuant to
Ohio
Revised Code Section
3745.04, A final action

tFhle
Volunteer1
rePomaroDyepartmen
Protective
Clothing
and
gear,
Meigs
County Ohio As per
specification in bid
packet.
Will
be
recelvacl by the Meigs
C o u n t y
Commissioners
at
lhelr office at the
Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 until 1:00

dyra(w301)s dbld
1
ayswlaftthln
er thhlr·
t e
actual date of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs
County
0 m m Is s 10 n e r s
reserve the right to
reject any and all bids.
Mick
Davenport,
President
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(9) 1o, 20, 27

Must have high school diploma or
GED, valid driver's license, three
years good driving experience and
adequate automobile insurance.
$7.50/hr. Send resume to P.O . Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for
applicants: 9/21/07. Pre-employment
drug testing.
E
10
· E 1
qua pportuntly mp oyer. :

r:C~~~~~i~~i~i~~J

1111ybo

:12 Camel,
lo Ill II1Ciant

Eul
Pass
ADpaos

34Typeol

lOCka
36 Map abbr.
37 Foremll't

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
NewGaragn
Roofing &amp; Gutter1

*Insured
*Experienced

VInyl Siding 6 Painting
Patio and Porch O.Ck1

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293

V.C . YOUNG

PEANUTS
M'&lt; DAD 60U6HT

WV036725
Ill

MEA NEW 6ALL

992 62 15
l i S L (J L

What Is the most common mistake thet
declarers maks?
n is not failure to count lrumpa. lt Is playIng lar.too qulcl&lt;~ at trlcl&lt; number ons.
When the dummy appears, His vital to
count winners and losers, and to plan a
campaign. Lazy declarers will plow
lhoughllosely into the play.
Take your time whh this deal. You are
South, in tl.-es no-trump. West leads the
hoan jack. Whet wcukl you rlo7
Nola thet although South wcukl like to
show his club suit, he Is too weak 1o
respond two clubs. Ho can only reapond
one no-trump. Than, when North jumps
to lhree no-trump, South must hOpe that
his club suh will generate some triCkS.
(Yes, some pairs could show the club
suit immediately. They would respond
· three clubs, a weak jump shill, But I think
that is akin to tl)'ng on the high trepezs
whh no saloty net,)
When in no-trump, always start by
counting your lop tricks. Hers, you have
six: lwo spades, lhree hearts and one
diamond. Cleatiy, you will need to get
your club sun established and run. But
you are short al hend entries, The.cor·
rsct Play Is to win the first trick on the
board, saving your h&amp;an king tor later,
and lo lead the club kilg. Lei's SUPJ)Ose
East duclcs this trick, takes tho second
club, and returns a hean. You win w~
your ~ng and (tlve out Eeet's secOnd
club honor. You can Q&lt;!l back to your
hand with the spade king and run the
clubs, onttng ~h 10 liicks: two spade$,
tRr8e hearts, one diamond and lour
clubs.

~

22 Ul\ftl..

.•.

"*'

23 Get noay
46 d'"""'~ ..
25 "N~Ftn-"

-

27 Sharif and

BIWdley
28 Brawl
3f NASA

49 Pille

51 Dwirl
53 Colorful

•
•

"*P

55 Oullnt
counterpart
lodglni
33 Slangy
5&amp; Uat

9 Cruel tyrant '

11 ilouncllng
main
12 Cheryl or
Alan
loa
36 Kind
13 Morning
of tradition
dampnaaa

manipula'ttve, alr!Ye to be forthright and
slnoere wtth cohorts;
.

I

SORR'f, SIR ..
1 TI40U6MT
'(OU MAD
QUICK J.lAND5 ..

WELL, LETS 60
TR'f IT OUT..

Pu ll&lt;' I O'f tJ III O

"' y,

sigh
8 Foreign
vlaltore?

reluul
35 Muna of
hearing
39 Pepe up
41 Sechat

iiiat""IOr""'•onwor

57 Rlllben
bread

COII!plll•a

44 King or

CELEBRITY CIPHER

k

by Lull campos

••

Ce&lt;e&lt;llyC,.«-toto'
""'thehrlm"""""'"' '"""-·""' ...Ea:h
IBI.terln

••
•

dpher itands fiJI' lfC(her

TOII8y's flue: c eQ&lt;JBJs v

"SCSTZ MTWEKW

UEXK

REK

i•

GTBKR

EP REK YIP KYBD, MPU XMEPWK REK &lt;
'.
Y I P P M W B T S E P W Y R E K X E J W B T S K , " ,, ,
• RSPTZ

IMTU

GSSJRST

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"I wills scripls to serve as skelelons aw&amp;iling 1he
flesh and sinew of images.· · II'!Jmar 8ergman

ll Yfll' l 'l'lll (

SCORPIO

(Oct

24-Nov, 221 - AH tho

wishful thinking In the work! won't help
you achieve your objectives. There are
only two things that can procluce what
vou want: 1) applied realism and 2)
strong effort.

SAGITIAAIUS (Nov, 23·Dec, 21) Powertul Information you possess can be
used e6ther constructively or destructively. li's your choice, but lt'A be unwise 10
use what.you know as a weapon to belli~
tie another. ••

CAPA&lt;COAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Feeling sorry for yourself or believing the
world owes you a free ride won't get you
where you would llk.e to go. Only knowl·
edge, desire and hard worK can get you
to high places.

COW and BOY

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Feb. 191 - If you ,
side with the position of an ou1elder over
that of a loved one, the disappointment
of . your devotee will be substantial.
Additionally, the Interloper might only be
trying 10 use you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) • Usually,
you put yourself out for oth.ers and are
willing to do au that you ,can to help
everyone, But you might palm off even
the smallest ot jobS lo someone who'll do
it lor you.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) -Forgo the
temptation to pass on julcy gosatp aboui
a friend to others. Unless you make an
effort to understand and accept the real·
ity about your pal, you'll turn thla person
Into an enemy.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) - Adopting

GARFIELD
HOW WAS ITO KNOW THE
ML-I.ET WAS SO STUFFY?!

ANI' WHAT'S

ume

WITH A

STOPIP
OSHER!

suspicious inclinations about a situation
In which you're Involved could cloud your
judgment If you read something nonex·
istent into the intentions of others, you'll
suffer.
GEM INI (May 21.June 20)- H you get
down on yourself. you'll end up being a
hasher critic ol your ways than anybody
else would be. Don't punish yourself or
push a negative attitude arou-nd ..
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- tt's impor·
tant that you don't treat a negative finan ·

cial matter indifferently. eBP,ecially II

it

affects others. II you don't acknowlldge
.what is wrong, you can never correct the
problem .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)- There is a good
chance you cou ld lack lha necessary
aesertlveneaa required to advance an
interest. You'll only have yourself to
blame, so don't lay your disappointment
at the feat of another.

SOUPTONUTZ

,..,...,"'rlt

LY K E N E

ltl11111'on it; it's too--."

I7 II I' I I e
8 rm:RrUM8mD I' I' I

Complete

tho chuclrlo quotod

-d•

_ •
•
,
_
by filling in IN miutnv
L-..1..--L-'-.._-', --' yov dMiop from ""P No. 3 below.

r I' I' I' I• I' I

111111111
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS . 9~u-o1
Jostle -Unfit - Gbost- ZiDnia- OUT of GAS
Our sonlikn to teU his tilbcr how to drive. Sigbing my husbaild
replied, wrhe bacbCat driver is lhe only lhiog lhat never runts
OUT of GAS."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

'

.. I

AJ !bey llltmfl I depllbnelll
store, I ovet1lelnl the modtllr tell
bet
1tu enybody's

LIBRA (Sept, 23.(lct. 23) - Ploylng pol·
iticS. either SOCially or at 'wcirk, ueually
producea l..fldeslrable results and will be
no different today. Instead of trying to be

Room Addldons &amp;
Remodeling

Electrical &amp; Plumbing

7 Pleased

provided you don't gat yourself InvolVed
In ljlhuationS that are way beyond your
level of exper1/se. Be realistic abOut your
abilities and talents at ail Umes.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) - It you
agree to do aomethlng for another, do so
wlttlout anaching strings to it. Othei"Mse,
tHe response you gGt for your dead ml~t
be more hostile than grateful.

Pomeroy, OH ·

r

FIND
I BARGAINS
EVERY
DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

30 Embroider,

uu.

By Bomlco 0.01
Conditions In general look rather stable,

Block &amp;
Brickwork
Dennis Bryant
740-742-2377 .

3 NT

out

3

•
•

Fttdi~Sttn-21,2007

STRoMG? Tb PtAY

740-985-3831 '

• Prompt and Quality
Work

Z9 Bummed

"The

A-.gere"

19

•"

.Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St Rt 7 North

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

freme

ona ·

,-KOT TI&gt;.L.VJI'\6 TO E.i&gt;-.U\
~TO WORK "Til.E. &amp;:!&gt;T

WHAT A DEAL!!

Stop &amp; Compare
~~~~=~~~ *Reasonable Rates

WID II
C•l'llll Will

-I

New 2BR apartments. 13 wk. old Shih Tsu puppy, 2001 Expedll~n. red &amp; tan,
Washerldryer
hookup, female, black &amp; white, $150, loaded, moon roof, leather
stove/refrigerator included. (740)985-3431
Int., excellent condition,

r

c

~=~

• New Homes

---------Public Notice
--------NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for

Facility Description:
Community
Water
Syatem
Identification
No.
4690n
This llnal action not
precedacl by proposed
action and Is appeal·
able to ERAC. Detail
plans lor PWS ID:
5300612
Plan No:
4690n REgarding well
field Improvements
(9) 20

I

Sportsmix Dog Food 21-8....,...... $9.99150
S-UREA """"""'"""'"""$199/ton Bulk Only
Priefert Powder Coated Gates
10ft. $53.00
14ft. $75.00
12ft. $$65.00
16ft $83.00
Why drive anywhere else

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISDICTIIN

LI'L TATER~S PURT't' EXCITED
'BOUT TH' BIRFDAY CAKE
I MADE HIM,
PAW !!
YEP !! BUT IS
IT 'CUZ HE WANTS
TO EAT IT •. ,?

'

. ·740-992-6971

~=::;;;~~
Free

BARNEY

I

Triumph 12% Horse Feed .......$5.99/SO lb.

renewal of a permit,
license, or variance.
Written comments and
requeata lor a public
meeting regarding a
proposed acHon may
be oubmlttacl within 30
days of notice of the
proposed action. An
adjudication hearing
may be held on a proposed action If a hoarlng request or objec·
tlon Is recalvacl by the
OEPA within 30 days of
Issuance of the proposed action. Written
comments, requests
for public meetings,
and adjudication hearIng requests mull be
sent to: Heerlng Clerk,
Ohio Environmental

or 39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, OH Action
Date: 09/1312007

www.~keablftetey.coJD

David Lewis

Also, units on SA 160. Pals
84,475 miles. 441-1417
AKC German Shepherd
Welcome! (740)441-0194.
Puppies, Blaei&lt; &amp; Tan, $350VAAS
males, $300-lemales 304FOR SALE
n3-6062, cell 304-5934267
2002 Mercury V!lager Sport
.., I I{ \ I( I ..,
Nice 1 br. appliances lurn, AKC Golden Retriever pups Mini van, Very Nice, 51,000
s3so.oo • dep.near PPHS lst shots, wormed, 9wks, miles
asking
$9,400, I'll!'""_":'!'__,,_-~
94;::9;.:·1 .::;
94;::9_ _ __,
304-675-3100 or 304-675- Parent 011 srte. $300/meles, !;7;;40~
s509.
$350/lemate, 304-273-2066 40 MoroRcvcus'
-------------4 WIIEELERS
and Gear and mailed Nice Clean furnished 1 AKC Reg. BoKer pups, .......iiriiiiiiiiiii--r
or delivered to:
bedroom Apartment. $350 Photos seen at www.patter· 05 Honda 450 R. Low Hours.
Meigs
County month Deposit required sonboxers.bravehost.com or $4500. Cali
_ 6.
740 41 7055
Commissioners
1304)675-2970
caii 74D-S32·4328
Leave Massage.
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
H 1 W
d
H
W ted
2006 Honda Gold Wing
1
Attention of bidders Is -:::::::e:p::::::•n:t:e::=..:==e=p=a=n=:::::; $4,000 in accessories. Paid
called to all of the 1
$24,000 new--$19,600. Call
requirements
con- WANTED: Buckeye Community
740-367-7129.
tained in this bid packet, particularly to the Services is opening a new home and
2001 Honda Rancher, 420
Federal
Labor has the following positions available to ES/4•4 paid $5,300 asking
Standards Provisions
$4,300 304·675-3711
assist two individuals with mental
and
Davis-Bacon
CAAolPERS &amp;
Wages, various . lnsur- retardation in Middleport:
MOTOR H~
ance
requirements, 1) 40 hrs: 2:30p-12:30a S/S;
~
•
various equal opportu- 3p· 1 :30a M/Tu
Palomino
Fil~
pop-up
1999
nity provisions, end
the· requirement for a 2) 35 hrs : 3p·12:30a W/Th/F;
camper. PC, lridga, stove.
payment bond and per- 9a· 2 :,30p Su;
Call 256·6102 aflerBpm
lormance bond ·tor 3 ) 35 hrs: 12 :30- 9a S/S/M/Tu;
camper lor sale 2002 Kl100% of the contract
Frontier, 24ft, sleeps 6, fully
price.
40 32 hrs: 12:30·9a WITh;
loaded, like new, usee very
No bidder may with· 12:30a-2: 30p F ;
tittle se.5oo 304-576·2321

flcatlon, revocation,

·•I
Harfwod Cabinetry And Film• . .
''

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner: .
James Keesee II
742-2332

1,,--oiiliilliiliiiO.._.I

5 Rm Apt. all uld1ties pd but coal or wood, and all pipes,
gBs, $550/mo .plus dePosit, call (740)992-3242
01
No pets, upetatrs, Kanauga,

OH. {740)388-0173

"'l

H-Honest

1304)812-4350
.
r1o
- - - - - - . - .----- Buck stove lor sell ~urns
1

I

I• i

MOWER

City/State/Zip ~
. -----,---,----

1

(j/;s
t ' /\'
'

l..ilwll Traeton,

1.

\

~~

384-882-134

45 Slights
Deft
6 Dlnouur
bone

=...
..
;o..;,.•

f1111111
Sink
46 ~
urdoaalr
!ICI,...,.!"
20 Pl.vlnliiluck A7 S..l-

17 P.yll*d

26

Count your way
to your contract

Tlll.IST ME, l
GAN 6~T OPfN!

DOWN

• 85

Opening lead; • J

FRAt,IK &amp; EARNEST

384-773-~1

oiLucy

21 Fill

• K5

Pass

~

.:

23~~~,.,
24

1•
1 NT

o1

1 .,_kin
2 Emmlln

Weal North

South

740-992-5921)
740-416-161)8

Smicilfg

--------------------------------------

981
• Q 10 i 7
• AQ6

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Bolh

4Jalltpoli• JBailp ttrtbunt
,tlotnt ,tlleasant 1\.egister
.·The Daily Sentinel

II

9J!O t871

.J1095 12

Rick Wise

r.:r

=ftlrlv
~ ::-~~ l!jj~~

42

18 Plant crope 61 Aaof
t9 Hub!IY

s

• K 76

'

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

• J 85

South

'\

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ __

Eul

• Q 10 9
• 81

~

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1
.
I

Wea&amp;

+Kl

:.~

40 Knock

bNch
58 Hlrd
16 MlkH
60 OlhU
f8ldy to ull
welcomes

• K 7

a'

Owner-

...

tAJ 61S

OXYGEN I RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT S\JPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

~

•
•
•

• bill
52 Neigh
t2 Old nothing 54 lobe frilly
t4 AduR
58 A1111retto
t 5 On the
111¥0!'

• AQa

&amp;MEDICAL
,..,,.,,.,. In:

All types of con;cret&lt;'

Renr 1800 square feet. off Paetura, Plaaaer no till
street partdng. Great foca· drill $8,000 AIC 4 row No
Small 2BR Mobile Home in tionl 7~9 Third Avenue in Till corn planter $1,500
Johnsons Mobile Home Gallli~olllio.. Rent $3001mo. Andy Sigler 304-f37-2018
Park. 140.446-2003 or 4461409

6

,IHI'I

Norih
• A 42

Wise Concrete

pots. 367-0266

1 1111or oil

tO

!!!!==7=4D-~ 446..0007

L,,--Esu:rMwiiiililiili;:-_.1

16k80 ir~ Addison. Deposit
and References. No indoor Commercfilf building •For 8F1 dloc $400, 1 112 Tye

6uttb4!' Ctmel -6enttnel

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

'

2 e. ' M;, Very nice with
_...., In Gallipolis. No pets,
""'~'
741l-446-2003 or 446-1409

~

"

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
BRIDGE

for rant. Tara
Townhouse CKC Cocker Spaolel pup$450/dep. $4351 a month. Apartments, Very Spoclou~ pies, CKC Rat Terrier P'Jl)Call304-675-7911
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112 plee for S8le 3().475-4243
Bath, Adu" Pq&lt;&gt; &amp; Baby
2 Bedroom, Reference• &amp; Pool, Patio, .Start $425/Mo. CKC Toy· Poodle puppies, ·
Deposit,
$350/mo, No Pets, Lease Plus females. Shots and wormed.
(740)387-oe32
Sewrity Depoott Aequlrod, Males $250 Femalee $300,
00

www.mydallysentlnel.com

�~­

Page 86 • The D;.ily Sentinel

Thursday, September 20, 2007
ALLEY OOP

\.

1~x70 3BR, 2BA

(740)446-3481.
740-258o3168
- - - - -- _....;.;_;_.;,:--_ __
~·" A'
•
I
Cocker Sparilel pups, blk, &amp; ~!"'!'--'!"""=-•won rwrs '"""' 'accept- white
w/b/k.$300-$350,
lng appllcatlono for wahlng
list for Hud-subelzed, 1- br, ' brindle and fewn $350-$400.
2BA on private lot, Addison eportmont,for
the Atl'pupeAKC. 740-767-4875.
Twp, $400 flent &amp; $400

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

Deposit; 28R on priVate )Ot, elde~ldlsabled call 875·
very nice, quiet, scenic area, 667
E~al
Housing
Addison Twp, $550/rent, Opportunity
$550 Deposit {740)645· Very nice apartment for rent
3413 or (740)645-3592
in Pomeroy, ~eat neighbor·
hood, quiet. Newly remod·

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

Kfttens - 6Wks oiCI. Siamese·Himalayan. $50 each. Cell
740·441.0727

-Ae;,:g_Bo;_r;_d.:;er;_,-Co_l_lie-pu-p-s,
Imported BlOodlines, 1st
shots, wormed, working par·

Mobile Home for Rent, 2 BA, eled. New appliances, 2 ents, Call740-379-9110

AJC, HUO Appi'oved, Total Bedrooms, 1 bath. Central
ElectriC, Rent inctudes trash, Air &amp; Heat. Calf 992•9784 or
water &amp; sewer, 532 5/mo, 992·5094 for more details.

$325 deposit, CaH {740)992-

,

•=:,-=-

1.....;1:.:-..;;;;;;;;.;;,._;;;.;"'._~

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

•\ I I\ I " I I H 1,

Lr__FORIISI'Aiiii~illl-.,.11 r10

56391or appt.
Nice 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath ,

Here's all you
need t-o do ...
Fill out• the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I \l i\ I ..,I 1' 1'1 II -.,

FARM

Phillip
Alder

MONTY

I

'
MASON

1-

Mowm, llll~1'5,,'-l
MumJy,
CI"I!{ISIMll,
MTD,Brigp
&amp; Stralton

2 br., country setting, w/rJ
hookup, utilities included. no
pets, available 10/01/07,
$550 per month pius
de~,

Phone,__________________________

(740)992-4119

1
I

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

.I •

•

•

• • •

•

• •

•

•

•

• • •

•

• • •

• •

•

• •

•

•

• •

•

• •'

l~ty
5tOYears

92 CASE 580 Super!(

Bacil.hoe, very gOOd condi·
2br. Apt. on 5th Street Pt. lion, low hours. $18,000.
Pleasant $375 ask for Don Call 740·709-9420

II ~\

\ '- 1'1 I I ~ I\

l it I \

Alllll'i
FOR SALE

H d i
yun a

Accent

GE Heavy Duty XLIL capac- Hatchback. 5 speed trans,

-----~------- ity Washer &amp; Dryer $150, 65,310 miles, good condi·
Bruno Wood Burning Stove tion. needs catalytic convert·
dual door w/electric· Blower er. Asking $3200. Cali 740-

$180 call304-675·6880

_709-·6_3_39_.- - - - - -

Hot tub, wiring in~luded, 02 Camry Le. 58,000k, 4cyl,
Seats 7, Great Condition, AT, AC, 4DR, 1 owner;
Reasonably priced, Call garage kept, like new cond.

POOik Nod"" it ::~:~::1

Your Rigllt to Know, Ddinml Rl!hll

Beautiful Apto, at Jackson (740)441-0366 or {740)339· $10700. Call245-1513
Eafatea. 52 Westwood 2813
. 03 Mustang, Convertible,
Drive, from $365 · to $560. ------J-i,;,.-:------ .hood scoop, rear spoiler,
740·446-2568.
Equal
•'
eke
1
Housing Opportunity. This
AERATION MOTORS
pony pa I, 27000 ml es.
institution is an Equal Repaired Ne~ &amp; Rebuilt In Excellent cond. Asktng
Opportunity Provider and StocK.

Public Notice
County: Meigs
The following appllca·
·lions and/or verified
complaints
were
received, and the fol·

lowing draft, proposed,
or final actlona were
Issued, by The Ohio
En v I ron mental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) last week,
"Actlona" Include tho
adoption, modification,
or repeal ol orders
(other than emergency
orders); 'the Issuance,
denial, modification or
revocation of licenses,
permits, Ieases, varl·
ances, or certificates;
and the approval or
dlsapproval of plans
a~d
apeclflcatlona.
"Draft Actions" are
written statements of
the
director
of
E nv I r o nma n t a I
Pr o I e ct I o n ' s
(Director's) Intent with
respect . to
lhe
tsiUance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,
order, etc, lnterestacl
peraona may submit
written perntlt, license,
order, etc. lnterestacl
persons may submit
written comments or
request a public meetlng regarding draft
actlono, Comments or
public
meeting
requesta must be sui&gt;mltted wHhln 30 days
ol notice of the draft
acttori.
"Propcisact
Actions" ore written
ototemento of the
director's Intent with
respect
to
the
laauance, denial, modi·

may be appealacl to the P.M., Sept 27,2007 and
EnvlrORmental Review then at 1:15 P.M. at
Appeals Commission saldolllceopenedand
(ERAC)
(Formerly read aloud lor the lol·
know
as
the lowing:
Environmental Soard Specification, and bid
of Review) by a person forma may be secured
who was a party to a at the office of Meigs
proceeding before the C o u n I y
director by filing an Com m Is al on a r a,
appeal wHhln 30 daya Courthouse, Pomeroy,
of notice of the final Ohio 45769- Phone
action. Pursuant to t740·992·2B95.
A
Ohio Revised Code deposit of 0 dollars will
Section 3745.07, A be requlracl for each
Final Action Issuing, sat of plans and apecldenying, modifying, llcallons, checks mede
revoking, or renewing payable
to
a permit, license, or
• The 1u11
var Ianca w hi ch Ia not amount
w Ill
be
preceded by a pro- returned within thirty
posed action, may be (30) days after receipt
appealacl to the ERAC of bids.
by filing an eppeat Each bid must be
within 30 days of accompanlacl by eHher
Issuance of the final · a bid bond In the
action. ERAC appeals, amount of 100% of the
accompanied by a $70 bid amount with a
llllng fee which th surety aatlolactory to
ecommlsolon In It dis· the aforesaid Meigs
cretlon may reduce 11 C 0 u n . 1 y
by affidavit the appel· Commissioners or by
!ant demonstrates that certified
check,
payment of the full cashiers check, or let·
amount of the lee tar of c,redlt upon asol·
would cause extreme vent bank In the
hardship,
must be amount of not less
flied
with: than 10% of the bid
Environmental Review amount In favor of the
Appeals Commission, aforesaid
Meigs
309 South Fourth C o u n t y
Street, Room 222, Commissioners. Bid
Columbus, Ohio 43215. Bonds shell be accomA copy of the appeal panled by Proof of
must be served on the Authority of the oftlclal
director within 3 days or agent signing the
after filing the appeal bond.
with the ERAC.
Bids shall be sealacl
Final approval of Plans and markacl aa Bid for
and Specifications
Pomeroy
Volunteer
Tupper Plains/Chester Fire
Department
Water District
Protective
Clothing

Employor.
---'-'-------CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED&amp;AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse apartments,
andlor small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441'1111

C~li

17500 2
Pion Evans, 1· $
6006 · 56-8882 or 256-

800-537-9528.

·

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
tor application &amp; infofmation. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Ellm View
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Apartments Thursday, saturday &amp;
, 2&amp;3 bedroom apart!flents Sunday. {740)44fl-7300
•Central heat &amp; fVC
0 Frldc sawmill with blower,
•Wasller/dryer hookup
belts and pipes. Sawdust
•Tenant pays electric
Bucltet. No Sunday Calls.
(304)882-3017
3149 Nebo Ad. Pa1rlo1, Oh

~~

1il
•

Save 10% off regular price
On all Vent Free Gas Heaters
(Propane
or Natural)
Aluminum Fiberated Paint
{Great for Mobile Homes) 5gel. Bucket $36.95, StaKool While Elastomeric Real
Coating 5-gal. Bucket
$78·59· BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Oil Bese Paint I Barn Red)
5-gaI• Buckat $89·95• We
carry Pitlsburgh Pa1nts &amp;
Slkkens Finish for all your
ctia~~~e~:. Hordware

------Graofouo Uv"'g 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
ManorandAiversideApts.in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
- - - - -- - - - - Middleport, Baech St, 2 br.
lurnished apt., uliitles pd.,
dep. &amp; rei., no pets,
99_2_-0_165
304-li75-4084
:.
17_40_1_
______
Middleport, No,lh 4th Ave., 2 flrii"--P~t·I•S--.,~
br. 1urnt'shed apt ., dep. &amp;
Jo'OH SA.U:
ref., no pats, (740)992-0 165 ~------,..1

~=-------

03 Taurus, auto s3900 , 04
Suntire aulo$5200 91 Olds
$1450.'98Tiburon.' $2200.
and more, 446-7278
.:::.::-'-':..:..-'-'..:.::_:____
2000 Black Grand IW. GT,

vs, Ram Air, SUnroot, CD.
91 ,000 miles. $5,800.00.
740·949-9006.

26 Years Experience

95 Ford Contour. 4cyl, auto,

• Garages

air. $1000 080. 740-2561233

• Complete
Remodeling

97 Camara AS. wht wlblk
racing stripes/racing sPoiler.
Looks/runs good. Priced to

sell $28001 304·634-8523

Going Out Of Buslneaa
Inventory must Go, Vehicles,
Tools, Office Equipment Eel.
Kenny's Auto' Center 740-

,;.446;;.;·9.;.97;,;1 ~----,

Fi5

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

~------·
02 Dodge Ram 42k miles,
auto, 4K4, $8500. 2000
Ranger EXP, std, 4' 4•
$4500, and more. 446-7278
1978 Chevy, 1 Ton, Dually
2WD Flatbed, $600. Call
{740)742-2457.

r ;: ; ;,:

""' • S
g
FOR ALE

J&amp;L
Construction

740·182-lm

Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios,
Concrete Footers
Also

{

Hil l's Se lf

•

I

Storage

-t

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
746-949·2217

...I
,·

THE BORN LOSER
~""rtAtit.e. I!:I ~WTI\1~ wrow. "'q
'NI'It\ :)E(.\(JW.,~'( f\~1&lt;-E:

'i BE.LIE.VE. W..T ~1-liU.TI~
I~ TI-\E. 1'£'&lt; '\"0 ~&gt;.· fJ.E.r..L"ffi'(

ll£L,"'-TIO~IP!

~f\~1~(£

t~US!

C.OUI'o\SELOR ...

WM"( JO WE GET

SOCCE!t.!!

ProtectloBnox Age
10n4c9y,,
P.O.
Columbus,
Ohio
4 3 2 1 6 - 1 0 4 9
(Telephone: 614-644·
2129j. \ "Final Actions:
Are actions of the
director which are
upon issuance or a
stated effective date.
Pursuant to
Ohio
Revised Code Section
3745.04, A final action

tFhle
Volunteer1
rePomaroDyepartmen
Protective
Clothing
and
gear,
Meigs
County Ohio As per
specification in bid
packet.
Will
be
recelvacl by the Meigs
C o u n t y
Commissioners
at
lhelr office at the
Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 until 1:00

dyra(w301)s dbld
1
ayswlaftthln
er thhlr·
t e
actual date of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs
County
0 m m Is s 10 n e r s
reserve the right to
reject any and all bids.
Mick
Davenport,
President
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(9) 1o, 20, 27

Must have high school diploma or
GED, valid driver's license, three
years good driving experience and
adequate automobile insurance.
$7.50/hr. Send resume to P.O . Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for
applicants: 9/21/07. Pre-employment
drug testing.
E
10
· E 1
qua pportuntly mp oyer. :

r:C~~~~~i~~i~i~~J

1111ybo

:12 Camel,
lo Ill II1Ciant

Eul
Pass
ADpaos

34Typeol

lOCka
36 Map abbr.
37 Foremll't

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
NewGaragn
Roofing &amp; Gutter1

*Insured
*Experienced

VInyl Siding 6 Painting
Patio and Porch O.Ck1

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293

V.C . YOUNG

PEANUTS
M'&lt; DAD 60U6HT

WV036725
Ill

MEA NEW 6ALL

992 62 15
l i S L (J L

What Is the most common mistake thet
declarers maks?
n is not failure to count lrumpa. lt Is playIng lar.too qulcl&lt;~ at trlcl&lt; number ons.
When the dummy appears, His vital to
count winners and losers, and to plan a
campaign. Lazy declarers will plow
lhoughllosely into the play.
Take your time whh this deal. You are
South, in tl.-es no-trump. West leads the
hoan jack. Whet wcukl you rlo7
Nola thet although South wcukl like to
show his club suit, he Is too weak 1o
respond two clubs. Ho can only reapond
one no-trump. Than, when North jumps
to lhree no-trump, South must hOpe that
his club suh will generate some triCkS.
(Yes, some pairs could show the club
suit immediately. They would respond
· three clubs, a weak jump shill, But I think
that is akin to tl)'ng on the high trepezs
whh no saloty net,)
When in no-trump, always start by
counting your lop tricks. Hers, you have
six: lwo spades, lhree hearts and one
diamond. Cleatiy, you will need to get
your club sun established and run. But
you are short al hend entries, The.cor·
rsct Play Is to win the first trick on the
board, saving your h&amp;an king tor later,
and lo lead the club kilg. Lei's SUPJ)Ose
East duclcs this trick, takes tho second
club, and returns a hean. You win w~
your ~ng and (tlve out Eeet's secOnd
club honor. You can Q&lt;!l back to your
hand with the spade king and run the
clubs, onttng ~h 10 liicks: two spade$,
tRr8e hearts, one diamond and lour
clubs.

~

22 Ul\ftl..

.•.

"*'

23 Get noay
46 d'"""'~ ..
25 "N~Ftn-"

-

27 Sharif and

BIWdley
28 Brawl
3f NASA

49 Pille

51 Dwirl
53 Colorful

•
•

"*P

55 Oullnt
counterpart
lodglni
33 Slangy
5&amp; Uat

9 Cruel tyrant '

11 ilouncllng
main
12 Cheryl or
Alan
loa
36 Kind
13 Morning
of tradition
dampnaaa

manipula'ttve, alr!Ye to be forthright and
slnoere wtth cohorts;
.

I

SORR'f, SIR ..
1 TI40U6MT
'(OU MAD
QUICK J.lAND5 ..

WELL, LETS 60
TR'f IT OUT..

Pu ll&lt;' I O'f tJ III O

"' y,

sigh
8 Foreign
vlaltore?

reluul
35 Muna of
hearing
39 Pepe up
41 Sechat

iiiat""IOr""'•onwor

57 Rlllben
bread

COII!plll•a

44 King or

CELEBRITY CIPHER

k

by Lull campos

••

Ce&lt;e&lt;llyC,.«-toto'
""'thehrlm"""""'"' '"""-·""' ...Ea:h
IBI.terln

••
•

dpher itands fiJI' lfC(her

TOII8y's flue: c eQ&lt;JBJs v

"SCSTZ MTWEKW

UEXK

REK

i•

GTBKR

EP REK YIP KYBD, MPU XMEPWK REK &lt;
'.
Y I P P M W B T S E P W Y R E K X E J W B T S K , " ,, ,
• RSPTZ

IMTU

GSSJRST

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"I wills scripls to serve as skelelons aw&amp;iling 1he
flesh and sinew of images.· · II'!Jmar 8ergman

ll Yfll' l 'l'lll (

SCORPIO

(Oct

24-Nov, 221 - AH tho

wishful thinking In the work! won't help
you achieve your objectives. There are
only two things that can procluce what
vou want: 1) applied realism and 2)
strong effort.

SAGITIAAIUS (Nov, 23·Dec, 21) Powertul Information you possess can be
used e6ther constructively or destructively. li's your choice, but lt'A be unwise 10
use what.you know as a weapon to belli~
tie another. ••

CAPA&lt;COAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Feeling sorry for yourself or believing the
world owes you a free ride won't get you
where you would llk.e to go. Only knowl·
edge, desire and hard worK can get you
to high places.

COW and BOY

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Feb. 191 - If you ,
side with the position of an ou1elder over
that of a loved one, the disappointment
of . your devotee will be substantial.
Additionally, the Interloper might only be
trying 10 use you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) • Usually,
you put yourself out for oth.ers and are
willing to do au that you ,can to help
everyone, But you might palm off even
the smallest ot jobS lo someone who'll do
it lor you.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) -Forgo the
temptation to pass on julcy gosatp aboui
a friend to others. Unless you make an
effort to understand and accept the real·
ity about your pal, you'll turn thla person
Into an enemy.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) - Adopting

GARFIELD
HOW WAS ITO KNOW THE
ML-I.ET WAS SO STUFFY?!

ANI' WHAT'S

ume

WITH A

STOPIP
OSHER!

suspicious inclinations about a situation
In which you're Involved could cloud your
judgment If you read something nonex·
istent into the intentions of others, you'll
suffer.
GEM INI (May 21.June 20)- H you get
down on yourself. you'll end up being a
hasher critic ol your ways than anybody
else would be. Don't punish yourself or
push a negative attitude arou-nd ..
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- tt's impor·
tant that you don't treat a negative finan ·

cial matter indifferently. eBP,ecially II

it

affects others. II you don't acknowlldge
.what is wrong, you can never correct the
problem .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)- There is a good
chance you cou ld lack lha necessary
aesertlveneaa required to advance an
interest. You'll only have yourself to
blame, so don't lay your disappointment
at the feat of another.

SOUPTONUTZ

,..,...,"'rlt

LY K E N E

ltl11111'on it; it's too--."

I7 II I' I I e
8 rm:RrUM8mD I' I' I

Complete

tho chuclrlo quotod

-d•

_ •
•
,
_
by filling in IN miutnv
L-..1..--L-'-.._-', --' yov dMiop from ""P No. 3 below.

r I' I' I' I• I' I

111111111
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS . 9~u-o1
Jostle -Unfit - Gbost- ZiDnia- OUT of GAS
Our sonlikn to teU his tilbcr how to drive. Sigbing my husbaild
replied, wrhe bacbCat driver is lhe only lhiog lhat never runts
OUT of GAS."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

'

.. I

AJ !bey llltmfl I depllbnelll
store, I ovet1lelnl the modtllr tell
bet
1tu enybody's

LIBRA (Sept, 23.(lct. 23) - Ploylng pol·
iticS. either SOCially or at 'wcirk, ueually
producea l..fldeslrable results and will be
no different today. Instead of trying to be

Room Addldons &amp;
Remodeling

Electrical &amp; Plumbing

7 Pleased

provided you don't gat yourself InvolVed
In ljlhuationS that are way beyond your
level of exper1/se. Be realistic abOut your
abilities and talents at ail Umes.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) - It you
agree to do aomethlng for another, do so
wlttlout anaching strings to it. Othei"Mse,
tHe response you gGt for your dead ml~t
be more hostile than grateful.

Pomeroy, OH ·

r

FIND
I BARGAINS
EVERY
DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

30 Embroider,

uu.

By Bomlco 0.01
Conditions In general look rather stable,

Block &amp;
Brickwork
Dennis Bryant
740-742-2377 .

3 NT

out

3

•
•

Fttdi~Sttn-21,2007

STRoMG? Tb PtAY

740-985-3831 '

• Prompt and Quality
Work

Z9 Bummed

"The

A-.gere"

19

•"

.Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St Rt 7 North

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

freme

ona ·

,-KOT TI&gt;.L.VJI'\6 TO E.i&gt;-.U\
~TO WORK "Til.E. &amp;:!&gt;T

WHAT A DEAL!!

Stop &amp; Compare
~~~~=~~~ *Reasonable Rates

WID II
C•l'llll Will

-I

New 2BR apartments. 13 wk. old Shih Tsu puppy, 2001 Expedll~n. red &amp; tan,
Washerldryer
hookup, female, black &amp; white, $150, loaded, moon roof, leather
stove/refrigerator included. (740)985-3431
Int., excellent condition,

r

c

~=~

• New Homes

---------Public Notice
--------NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for

Facility Description:
Community
Water
Syatem
Identification
No.
4690n
This llnal action not
precedacl by proposed
action and Is appeal·
able to ERAC. Detail
plans lor PWS ID:
5300612
Plan No:
4690n REgarding well
field Improvements
(9) 20

I

Sportsmix Dog Food 21-8....,...... $9.99150
S-UREA """"""'"""'"""$199/ton Bulk Only
Priefert Powder Coated Gates
10ft. $53.00
14ft. $75.00
12ft. $$65.00
16ft $83.00
Why drive anywhere else

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISDICTIIN

LI'L TATER~S PURT't' EXCITED
'BOUT TH' BIRFDAY CAKE
I MADE HIM,
PAW !!
YEP !! BUT IS
IT 'CUZ HE WANTS
TO EAT IT •. ,?

'

. ·740-992-6971

~=::;;;~~
Free

BARNEY

I

Triumph 12% Horse Feed .......$5.99/SO lb.

renewal of a permit,
license, or variance.
Written comments and
requeata lor a public
meeting regarding a
proposed acHon may
be oubmlttacl within 30
days of notice of the
proposed action. An
adjudication hearing
may be held on a proposed action If a hoarlng request or objec·
tlon Is recalvacl by the
OEPA within 30 days of
Issuance of the proposed action. Written
comments, requests
for public meetings,
and adjudication hearIng requests mull be
sent to: Heerlng Clerk,
Ohio Environmental

or 39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, OH Action
Date: 09/1312007

www.~keablftetey.coJD

David Lewis

Also, units on SA 160. Pals
84,475 miles. 441-1417
AKC German Shepherd
Welcome! (740)441-0194.
Puppies, Blaei&lt; &amp; Tan, $350VAAS
males, $300-lemales 304FOR SALE
n3-6062, cell 304-5934267
2002 Mercury V!lager Sport
.., I I{ \ I( I ..,
Nice 1 br. appliances lurn, AKC Golden Retriever pups Mini van, Very Nice, 51,000
s3so.oo • dep.near PPHS lst shots, wormed, 9wks, miles
asking
$9,400, I'll!'""_":'!'__,,_-~
94;::9;.:·1 .::;
94;::9_ _ __,
304-675-3100 or 304-675- Parent 011 srte. $300/meles, !;7;;40~
s509.
$350/lemate, 304-273-2066 40 MoroRcvcus'
-------------4 WIIEELERS
and Gear and mailed Nice Clean furnished 1 AKC Reg. BoKer pups, .......iiriiiiiiiiiii--r
or delivered to:
bedroom Apartment. $350 Photos seen at www.patter· 05 Honda 450 R. Low Hours.
Meigs
County month Deposit required sonboxers.bravehost.com or $4500. Cali
_ 6.
740 41 7055
Commissioners
1304)675-2970
caii 74D-S32·4328
Leave Massage.
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
H 1 W
d
H
W ted
2006 Honda Gold Wing
1
Attention of bidders Is -:::::::e:p::::::•n:t:e::=..:==e=p=a=n=:::::; $4,000 in accessories. Paid
called to all of the 1
$24,000 new--$19,600. Call
requirements
con- WANTED: Buckeye Community
740-367-7129.
tained in this bid packet, particularly to the Services is opening a new home and
2001 Honda Rancher, 420
Federal
Labor has the following positions available to ES/4•4 paid $5,300 asking
Standards Provisions
$4,300 304·675-3711
assist two individuals with mental
and
Davis-Bacon
CAAolPERS &amp;
Wages, various . lnsur- retardation in Middleport:
MOTOR H~
ance
requirements, 1) 40 hrs: 2:30p-12:30a S/S;
~
•
various equal opportu- 3p· 1 :30a M/Tu
Palomino
Fil~
pop-up
1999
nity provisions, end
the· requirement for a 2) 35 hrs : 3p·12:30a W/Th/F;
camper. PC, lridga, stove.
payment bond and per- 9a· 2 :,30p Su;
Call 256·6102 aflerBpm
lormance bond ·tor 3 ) 35 hrs: 12 :30- 9a S/S/M/Tu;
camper lor sale 2002 Kl100% of the contract
Frontier, 24ft, sleeps 6, fully
price.
40 32 hrs: 12:30·9a WITh;
loaded, like new, usee very
No bidder may with· 12:30a-2: 30p F ;
tittle se.5oo 304-576·2321

flcatlon, revocation,

·•I
Harfwod Cabinetry And Film• . .
''

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner: .
James Keesee II
742-2332

1,,--oiiliilliiliiiO.._.I

5 Rm Apt. all uld1ties pd but coal or wood, and all pipes,
gBs, $550/mo .plus dePosit, call (740)992-3242
01
No pets, upetatrs, Kanauga,

OH. {740)388-0173

"'l

H-Honest

1304)812-4350
.
r1o
- - - - - - . - .----- Buck stove lor sell ~urns
1

I

I• i

MOWER

City/State/Zip ~
. -----,---,----

1

(j/;s
t ' /\'
'

l..ilwll Traeton,

1.

\

~~

384-882-134

45 Slights
Deft
6 Dlnouur
bone

=...
..
;o..;,.•

f1111111
Sink
46 ~
urdoaalr
!ICI,...,.!"
20 Pl.vlnliiluck A7 S..l-

17 P.yll*d

26

Count your way
to your contract

Tlll.IST ME, l
GAN 6~T OPfN!

DOWN

• 85

Opening lead; • J

FRAt,IK &amp; EARNEST

384-773-~1

oiLucy

21 Fill

• K5

Pass

~

.:

23~~~,.,
24

1•
1 NT

o1

1 .,_kin
2 Emmlln

Weal North

South

740-992-5921)
740-416-161)8

Smicilfg

--------------------------------------

981
• Q 10 i 7
• AQ6

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Bolh

4Jalltpoli• JBailp ttrtbunt
,tlotnt ,tlleasant 1\.egister
.·The Daily Sentinel

II

9J!O t871

.J1095 12

Rick Wise

r.:r

=ftlrlv
~ ::-~~ l!jj~~

42

18 Plant crope 61 Aaof
t9 Hub!IY

s

• K 76

'

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

• J 85

South

'\

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ __

Eul

• Q 10 9
• 81

~

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1
.
I

Wea&amp;

+Kl

:.~

40 Knock

bNch
58 Hlrd
16 MlkH
60 OlhU
f8ldy to ull
welcomes

• K 7

a'

Owner-

...

tAJ 61S

OXYGEN I RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT S\JPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

~

•
•
•

• bill
52 Neigh
t2 Old nothing 54 lobe frilly
t4 AduR
58 A1111retto
t 5 On the
111¥0!'

• AQa

&amp;MEDICAL
,..,,.,,.,. In:

All types of con;cret&lt;'

Renr 1800 square feet. off Paetura, Plaaaer no till
street partdng. Great foca· drill $8,000 AIC 4 row No
Small 2BR Mobile Home in tionl 7~9 Third Avenue in Till corn planter $1,500
Johnsons Mobile Home Gallli~olllio.. Rent $3001mo. Andy Sigler 304-f37-2018
Park. 140.446-2003 or 4461409

6

,IHI'I

Norih
• A 42

Wise Concrete

pots. 367-0266

1 1111or oil

tO

!!!!==7=4D-~ 446..0007

L,,--Esu:rMwiiiililiili;:-_.1

16k80 ir~ Addison. Deposit
and References. No indoor Commercfilf building •For 8F1 dloc $400, 1 112 Tye

6uttb4!' Ctmel -6enttnel

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

'

2 e. ' M;, Very nice with
_...., In Gallipolis. No pets,
""'~'
741l-446-2003 or 446-1409

~

"

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
BRIDGE

for rant. Tara
Townhouse CKC Cocker Spaolel pup$450/dep. $4351 a month. Apartments, Very Spoclou~ pies, CKC Rat Terrier P'Jl)Call304-675-7911
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112 plee for S8le 3().475-4243
Bath, Adu" Pq&lt;&gt; &amp; Baby
2 Bedroom, Reference• &amp; Pool, Patio, .Start $425/Mo. CKC Toy· Poodle puppies, ·
Deposit,
$350/mo, No Pets, Lease Plus females. Shots and wormed.
(740)387-oe32
Sewrity Depoott Aequlrod, Males $250 Femalee $300,
00

www.mydallysentlnel.com

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel .com

Thursday, September 20 , 2007

Nixed visit highlights
. tricky decisions .
.about who goes to
ground zero, A6

2007 FaD Home

Improvement edition
inside today's Sentinel

••
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o(J'\I"""L'\cd)

'\c.

ll\111 \\

l

• Local runners compete
at Jackson Invitational.
See Page81

BY

BRIAN

J. REED

panies included different
specifications and pricing
structures in their bids. The
POMEROY
-Four bids were referred to Grants
firms have submitted bids Adminstrator Jean Trussell
for repair and· replacement for review and action at the
of sidewalks in Pomeroy commissioners' next meetas part of a half million- ing on Wednesday.
dollar ~rant project.
This is the third attempt to
Meellng
Wednesday, get bids for the sidewalk
County project, which is part of a
Meigs
Commissioners opened bids bigger . , . Community
from four firms for the side- Development Block Grant
walk project: Tom Mayle and Community Distress proSons Construction, Inc., gram awarded to the Village
$171,616, Bartlett, DGM, of Pomeroy.
Inc., Beaver, $79,000, Parker
The village has until
Corp. , Tuppers
Plains, July, 2008 to spend the
· $193,281.25, and Bruce grant. . $73,100 has been
Bumgardner and The Pool allocated for sidewalk
People, Pomeroy, $119,734. · repairs, a project chosen by
The four contr11cting com- residents via surveys.
BREEO@MVDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

Eastern
board
approves
personnel
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBI'llJARIES
. Page AS .

.·

.,r, '

lfaxter, -89

• Mary Alice Bise, 83
• Undsey L. lyons Ill, 64

07 Malibu LTZ

05 GMC Envoy 4i4

V6 E1pe, Power Saaroof, Heated Seats,
Low Miles
BallilctqfJJ!O,~'J .W1rranty

Power Saaroof,

INSIDE
: • AHunger For More.
See Page A2
· • Hocking College hires
law firm amid state
probe. See Page A5
• $5 bill getting a

04 Trailblazer EXT
7Passeacer Sealiac! Extra Cleu, Su1roof,
Clolb lalerior, 4W~eel Drive
1
ir~~~·'ce
·
h ,,.
•.. ftiiS~'sog
. ' . , . ,.,

OS Cbevy Impala

06 Chevy Silverado Ext. Cab 4x4

W~le with ,ay clotb backet seals
AluminUI Wbtels, On~ 23,7110 Low Milts

Blue Granite In Color, 41-2&amp;.40 Sealiag,
Z-71 Mode~

.

I : SUI'IIfCIEAIY:W~

·w;s,lll,tiU•:.IIf,·-80.;

.·.r:N .. , .• .:

'1 ,.,

•. ,

~-~._.1(;·&gt;~~-.'1:

.._.

colorful makeover.
Page A6
• Grange enjoys hayride.
·See Page A7 ·
·:• Weber presents UMW
program. See Page A7

see

WEATHER
06 Cbevy Silverado Ext.

03TahoeLT

Mid Size Valoe, SPassenger,
Well Eq1ipped

Graystoae Ellerior, Z-71 Model, 414,
Rw Tuaaeau Cover, P. Sea~ 5.3 V8
Towing Package, Only 32,0110 Miles

Black, Sunroof,
Leather; 48,801 Miles

,; .SI4,BID:

.. '. (,'llllfl.D ·

',·_

-

\ ·. ' .

:~j{"';,. ·t~~-

~- -~

'

·-l

.,

,'~'&lt;-.-'

•

;;/j

~

'

·-~ ~ ~- -i'"
""

{,

Details on Page A7

04 Chevy Silverado Ext. Cab
wit Model, ZWbetl Drine, U VI, Air,
New Premi1m Tires

Local Owner!

ll41mpala LS
Only 18,000 Miles, Sunroof,
Leather, XM Radio

$11,.,0·

06 Toyota Camry LE
Only 13,711 Miles, New Impala Trade,
P. Sea~ P. Willdo111, P. Locks,

Custom·BIDlb·1111er111r

..,.
...

As Law

04 Rendezvous CX AWD
48,000 Miles, Local Car, Power Windows &amp; Locks

.

CD Player

Only$11,900

filii Is

D• Ds. . Cal's

...

FDI'

It

*AU rebates to dealer!
•Jail Prices good thru Sept. 24th

1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

'ftJII Free

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

t6 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A7

Buckeye page

AB

Calendars

A7

Classifieds

ss-6

Comics

87

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values

A2-3

Movies

As

NASCAR

B8

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

''""·IH\d:llh •.c·n t tlw i'Ht•

Commissioners open bids for Pomeroy sidewalk project

SPORTS

~ Gilaa•.

I...,IPI I\IBI-.I{:!.J .:.!OO_,

B Section
A7

© 2007 Ohio Vulle)' Publishing Co.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eastern Local Board
of Education approved
substitute teachers and
substitute
classified
employees at We4,lncsday'·s
regular meeting. ~ ·· , . ·
The
following
were
approved as substitute teach:
ers: Natalie J. Faulk, Tiffany .
Kehl, Jennifer A. Baldwin,
Leland Carver, Kristine S.
Colburn,
Sharon
Cunningham,
Trevor
Hanhilammi, Chad Huston,
Mackenzie Lackey, Sarah
Russell, Cory Streets, Jason
Williams and Wendy Beegle.
Approved as substitute
teacher
aides
were:
Kimberly Carl, Carolyn
Searls, Michele Vanaman,
Hollie M. Ferrell, and
Connie Soulsby.
.The board approved the
resignation of bus driver,
Keith Downs.
Approved as classified
substitutes were: Jeanie
Ridenour,
secretary;
Deanna Shepard, cook; Kim
Carl,
secretary;
Mary
Pellegrino, cook; Keith
Downs, bus driver.
The board approved
Sarah Lee and Nicole
Honaker as student teachers
in the elementary school,
and Nancy Circle as entry
year teacher mentor for the
2007-08 school year.
The following supplemental
positions were
approved: Brad Brannon,
fall weight room coordinator, and Martie Baum,
Freshman class advisor.
Brent
Bissell
was
approved as a casual labor
employee at $7.50 per hour
for a maximum of 20 hours,
retroactive to Sept. 4, 2007.
Extended service was
approved for Sheryl Roush
and Chad Griffith.
The following
were
approved, as volunteers in
the elementary school:
Norma
Arbaugh,
Lisa
Averion, Laurie Boyles ,
Paula Buckley, Tammi
Causey,
Jenni
Dailey,
Angela Damewood, Brenda
Day, Linda Dunlap, Mindy
Durst, Linda Hensley,
Tabitha Horner, Rae Lynn
Kimes, Sarah Kuhn, Tanya
Lambert, Serena Lemley;
Carri
Long,
J.e nnifer
McBride , Richard Nease,
Jenny Ridenour, Bobbi
Salyer, Melissa Scyoc ,
Teresa Shamp, Alice Sharp,
Dawn Weddle, Shelley
Welch and Paula Wood .
McKenzie Roush, Aaron
Roush, Jacob Haught and
Please see Eastem, 11.5

A listing of sidewalks. to Commissioners received
be repaired is as follows: only the Lane's bid for the
Spring Avenue and Main heating system replacement
Street to the corner of project. It will be paid for
Condor Street, Spring through a capital improveAvenue from the corner of ment loan through Farmers
Condor Street to Wolfe Bank and Savings Co.,
Drive, Main Street at the which will also pay for
Dollar
General
store, repairs to the sandstone
Sycamore Street, Lincoln along the street level of the
Hill, Second Street and courthouse.
Mulberry Avenue, and the
At the request of Engineer
Meigs County Courthouse Eugene Tnplett, commisrear parking lot entrance.
sioners approved a resolu, Commissioners awarded tion allocating $500 annuala bid of $36,700 to Lane's . ly from the county's oneBoiler Repair of Marietta percent sales tax revenue
for the removal and replace- for roads and bridges,
ment of two gas boilers, allowing additional points
new gas lines· and a new for the county in State
pump to serve' the Meigs Capital Improvement (Issue
County
Courthouse. 2) project scoring.

Commissioners also:
• Approved appropriations
adjustments for the economic development office, auditor, and treasurer.
• Approved payment of
bill s in the amount of
$276,937.40.
• Approved a $20,800
appropnations request for
the · Litter Control and
Prevention office, for equipment.
• Approved an additional
appropration for the coroner, and tabled a request'for
additional appropriation for
postage .
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport · and Jim Sheets,
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

God's NET
to benefit
from bike run

nigbt

'

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY God's
NET will benefit from this
Saturday's Inaugural All
Ohio Valley Bikers Benefit
Run which begins at the
same time in both Pomeroy
and Marietta.
The first bike is out at II
a.m. on Saturday at both the
Pomeroy parking lot and
S&amp;P Harley D ~vidson in
Marietta with th~ .l~st bike
out by I p.m. The cost to
ride in the benefit is $10 per
rider. Bikers leaving from
each destination will follow
two separate paths with
each leg of the ride approximately 75 miles each. The
Meigs County leg will stop
at the roadside rest on US
33, Dow Lake on Ohio 50
and the Barlow ParMar
Station before meeting up
with the Marietta group at
the National Guard Armory
on Front Street in Marietta.
The last bike is due in at
the armory by 5 p .m. where
there will be live music,
' auctions, cash prizes and
drawings as well as food.
Commemorative T- ~h irt s
will also be for sale. All pro·
ceeds will be split evenly
between God's NET and
Wood County's Old Man
Rivers which both help less
fortunate children and families by providing food.
clothing and the necessities
for life and both are 50 I (3) c
exempt and tax deductible .
Both organization s provide free, hot meals and
Beth seraent/plloto pass out ~chou! supplies
Tt;mlght many people across the area are tailgating before cheering on their .favorite high among other services.
Jenni Dunham, a coordi school football team. Here , Noah Gross (left) and Zach Bartrum take a bite out of what the
Meigs Local Alumni Association taitgaters had to offer at a recent Marauder home game. nator at God's NET said
Tfte Marauders are on the road tonight at Fairland, Southern travels to Wirt County, W.Va. there are many uses for
money received to the orgaqf,lll Eastern hosts Belpre at home.
nization and include money
for food, staffing and programs for youth.
On a weekend night the
God's NET staff may see
60-80 kids, all of whom can
~ Bv BETH SERGENT
favorites (or not so Saturday's show is a rein · have a free dinner, play
~ERGENT&lt;iiMYDAI LYSENTINEL.coM
favorites) from ringside.
ing exhibition during inter- games like pool or video
,,
Many PIW wrestlers will mission which is free for games. School buses acrual,PORTLAND The participate
in
several participants. There is a $3 ly ·stop at God's NET in the
Pi!~land
Community matches ,
including · a per horse grounds fee and afternoons as a sort of home
Center will be one busy "hardcore match" where the majority of entry fees away from home for some
place this weekend when it fans are encouraged to for each event are $2 with kids who enjoy having a
welcomes the return of pro- bring the weapons for the open poles and open barrels social place to go in the
fessional wrestling tonight wrestlers to use. Mr. Sex costing $5 each though evenings to hang out with
and
the Ohio River ~ppeal Eric Steel with these events have an 80 their friend s.
Producer's Horse Show $teff Leppard ~ill defend percent payback for the
Dunham said God 's NET
Series tomorrow.
the PIW litle With appear- first three places. Entry serves free meals to kid s
Wrestlers from Pure ances by the Sons of Rock fee s help take CjU'e .of the everyday of the week
Impact Wrestling return 'n Roll vs. The Next cost o( ribbons and awards. except Thursday s and
Other events include hal - Sundays. This Sunday is the
for a third engagement Generation, Chris Kahil vs.
tonight at the c"enter. Doors Gorgeous JC, The Lynch ter, showmanship, lead-in beginning of a new worship
vs. . Th~
Day (under 10), walk trot youth service called "Sunday
open at 6 p.m., the., show Boys
begins at 7 p.m. and tickets Brothers , VIpcr vs. Death (18 and under), walk trot Evenin g Bless ings" which
are $10 for adults and $5 · ,Falcon Zen~ vs. Dammn.
(open), we stern pleasure is open to everyone of all
for kids. The show is said , 1'he ORPs Horse. Show {youth t8 and under). west- ages and begins at 7 p.m. at
to feature professional Senes continues . with the ern pleasure (open), fo'ur the Mulberry Community
.wrestlers with all the chair arena openmg for warm comers, trail class, catalog Center.
throwing and stage diving ups at 10 a.m . tom~rrow race, fl ag race , down and
Dunham said money
the crowd can handle. The and the show beg mmng at back ( 12 and under), down could al so be used for procrowd is also encouraged II a .m. at the Portland and back (over 12), speed g rams for youth which
to participate by making Show Arena beh1nd the
signs and cheering their center.
New
to
this
Please see Portland, AS
Please see Bike run, AS

Horse show, wrestling return to Portland

~

"

I

I

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