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                  <text>AP Impact: Sputnik at
so·: first space race won
with scrounged rocket,
improvised satellite, A2 .

Televangelist
Htimbard
remembered for focus
on saving sopls, A6 ··

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;n CENTS • \ 'ol. ;;-,No. 4H

SPORTS
• Rio Grande CC
Invitational. See Pa9' 81

INSIDE
• Announce birth.
See Page A3
• Cleveland school
building plan.overhauled,
millions more needed.
See Page A3
• Local resident receive$
cloctorate.from OU.
See Page A3
• Energy efficient
strucfurefour set for
'
~tu~. See Page A3
• Low-income
smokers would pay
disproportionate share of
children's health plan.
See Page AS
• Boy blamed for
fatal fire described
as shy, easygoing.
See Page AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Many
seniors are choosing an
active lifestyle and the
proof came last week when
Active Aging Week was
observed at the Wellness
Center at · the Senior
Citizens Center.
Bryan Hoffman, an exercise physiologist and direc·
tor of the Wellness Center,
· reported good participation
in the regular and special
programs offered during the
week-long observance. All
fees were waived giving
seniors a chance to try out
the e~uipment and participate tn the special programs. Many of the "regu"
Iars" took part but there
were also a number of new
people coming in, according
to Hoffman.
The programs were varied
and several new ones introduced during the week. 1\vo
of the new programs have
now been included into
what is offered at the
·Wellness Center. The interest generated during Active
Aging Week resulted in

PI•••• ... Asln1r A5

2 SI!CfiONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's ,Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section
A6

© ~ ()hlo Valley Publishing Co.

Pilates is a new program being offered at the Wellness
Center. of the Senior Citizens Center to be taught by Brian
Hoffman, director. Active Aging Week included a demonstration class.

" il

f

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A bright, sunny di!Y
brought hundreds to
the annual Tuppers
"'
Plains Harvest
Festival on Saturday.
A parade, featuring
the Eastern High
School Marching
Band, under direction of Cris Kuhn,
also included floats
from organizations,
decorated golf carts,
like this one, and~
as always, firetrucks
aplenty. The field
around the Tuppers .
Plains firehouse was
. filled with vendors;
and the department
sold barbecue chicken. The festival also
included live music
throughout the day.
Brian J. RHd/photOI

Weather

Charlene Hoelllch/photoa

The activities of Active Aging Week includeq an hour's walk
on three· mornings on Pomeroy's riverside track. Wednesday
morning It rained but a small group turned out anyway
shown here led by Barbara Aelds, left, and Donna Jones.

-Meeting set for possible
Tackervil.le sewer extension

'WEA1HER

INDEX

www.mydailp.cntind .t·um

Active Aging Week observed at Wellness C'enter

.

Detllll1 on Pqe AS

:\ JON DAY, O(TOBLR t , :!007

RACINE - The Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer
District has scheduled the second public meeting to discuss
possibly extending sanitary sewer services into the
· Tackerville are. "
·
The meeting is set foe 7 p.m., Oct. 9 at the Racine
.Americah Legion Hall.
.
Gary Freeman, operator of the SRRSD, said the purpose
of the meeting i~ to share information with residents of the
Tackerville area .concerning the development of sanitary
sewer collection lines.
The SRRSD is in the preliminary stages of a rehabilitation project to the wastewater treatment plant and lift stations, making it an "opportune" time to consider the sewer
extension, according to the SRRSD. If the sewer extension
mo.ves forward the time line for project completion is two
to three years.
· .
·
The Ohio Revised Code requires any household located
within 200 feet of a central sewage system to connect to the
system. In, additioh, if the existing on-Jot wastewater treatment system is failing and there are no acceptable means of
treating wastewater from households beyond that 200-feet
limit, these households may be required to connect to the
sewer system ...
The SRRSD sees the advantages of a centralized sewage
treatment system to include increased safety and health for
the residents, elimination of odors from failing individual
systems, protection of community streams, rivers and
wildlife, and increased development.
,
. In order to start the project the SRRSD's boundaries
would have to be expanded to provide sewer service to
Tackerville. First, the SRRSD must file a petition with
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to expand those
boundaries. A public notice is then placed in The Daily
Sentinel to permit residents a comment period. If the petition is conducive to improving public health and does not
jeopardize current SRRSD operations the petition will be
granted.
· If the projec! move forward the SRRSD's consulting
engineer will locate sewer lines in existing public right-ofways. However, input from residents may assist the engineer in determining if it is more cost effective to locate the
line on a particular side of homes to coincide with the location of wastewater discharge lines from homes.
Bob Allen from Ohio Rural Community Assistance said
possible grant and loan funding sources may be available
for the project. Allen added though no funds have been
secured as of yet, if income levels of residents in the
Tackerville area ·are similar to existing customers of. the
Pluse see Sewer, AS

. ..

.,

Marty O'Bryant,.()wner

........

�,,
•,

PageA2

NATION• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel ,

Monday, October t,

2007

.

'

launch a new satellite, this Nobel committee's · offer to
time, to · rpark the Nov. 7 nominate Korolyov for a
anniversary of the 1917 prize, insisting that it was the
Bolshevik Revolution .
achievement of "the entire
·:we didn' t believe that you Soviet people."
.
would outpace llJe Americans
Sergei Khrushchev said his ·
with your satellite, but you father thought singling out
did it. Now you should Korolyov wquld anger other
launch something new by rocket designers and hamper
Nov. 7," Korolyov quoted the missile and space pro.
Khrushchev telling him, grams.
accordi,ng to Grechko.
"These people were like
Working round-the-clock, actors; they would all have
Korolyov and his team built been madly jealous at
another spacecraft in less than Korolyov," he said. "I think
a month. On Nov. 3, they my father's decision was psylaunched Sputnik 2, which chologically correct. But, of
weighed I, 118 pounds. It car- course, Sergei Korolyov felt
ried the world's first living deeply hurt."
paylead, a t;nongrel dog
Korolyov's · . daughter,
named Laika, in its tiny pres- Natalta, r~called m a book
. that the vet! of secrecy vexed
surized cabin. . '
The dog died of the heat her father. "We are like minafter a week, drawing protests · ers - , we work underfrom animal-lovers, But the ground, she recalls htm saytii~ht proved that a living ing. "No one sees or hears
.
.
bemg could survive in space, us."
paving the way for human
The Sovtet Umon and the
flight.
·
rest of the world learned
The ftrst Sputnik beeped Korolyov's name only after
for three weeks and spent his death in 1966. Today his
home,
where
about three months in orbit Moscow
before burning up in the Chertok '!let repo~ers, is a
atmosphere. It circled Earth museum m the chte! sctenmore than 1,400 times, at just tist's honor.
.
under I00 minutes an orbit.
Chertok was perm tiled to
For Korolyov there was bit- . travel abroad only in the late
temess as well as triumph. He 1980s, after Soviet .leader
was never mentioned in any Mikhail Gorbachev liberalcontemporary accounts of the ized the Soviet Union.
The survtvmg leaders of
launch, and his key role was
. ·known to only a few officials ,the space program are no
and space,designers.
longer anonymous or stlent,
Leonid Sedov, a member of and revel in the accolades so
the Soviet Academy of long denied them.
'
Sciences with no connection
"The rivalry in space, even
tQ space program, was erro- though it had military reaneously touted in the West as sons, has pushed the
the Father of Sputnik. mankind forward," said
Korolyov, meanwhile, w~s Valery Korzun, a cosmonaut
only allowed to publish hts who serves as a deputy chief
non-sensitive research under of the Star City cosmonaut
the pseudonym "Professor K. training
center.
"Our
Sergeyev."
.
achievements today are rootKhrushchev rejected the ed in that competition,"

BY ·VLADIMIR
ISACHENKOV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW
When
· Sputnik took off 50 years ago,
the world gazed at the hea,vens in awe and apprehension,
watching what seemed like
the unveiling of a sustained
Soviet eH'ort to conquer space
and score a stunning Cold
War triumph.
But 50 years later, it
emerges that the momentous
launch was far from being
part of a well-planned strategy to 'demonstrate communist
superiority over the· West.
Instead, the first artificial
satellite in space was a spurof-the-moment gamble driven by the dream of one scientist, whose team scrounged
a rocket, slapped together a
satellite and persuaded a
dubious .Kremlin to open the
space age.
And that winking light that
AP photo
crowds around · the globe Cosmonaut Georgy .Grechko stands in front of a painting showing Yuri Gagarin, the first
gathered to watch in the night human in space, at the Russian cosmonauts living quarters in northern Moscow, Tuesday.
sky? Not Sputnik at all, as it Grechko, a space engineer who later became a highly-decorated cosmonaut, calculated the
turns out, but just the second trajectory for the Sputnik's, launch on Oct. 4, 1957 ..
stage of its booster rocket,
accor~ling to Boris Chertok, "The Americans proudly
Sergei Khrushchev said report of Sputnik's launch
one of the founders of the called
their
project that at first they saw the was brief. and buried deep in
Soviet space progl'am.
'Vanguard," but found them- Sputnik's launch as simply Pravda, the Conimunist Party
In a series of interviews in se 1ves beh'tnd us. "
one in a series of Soviet tech- daily..Only two days later did
recent days with The
The Soviet Union already nological achievements, like it offer a banner' headline,
Associated Press, Chertok had a full-fledged scientific a ·new passenger jet or the quoting the avalanche of forand other vetera11s told the lit- satellite in developmeill, but ftrst atonlic power plant.
eign praise.
tie-known story of how it would take too long to comPravda also published a
"All of us - Korolyov's
Sputnik was launched, and p'lete, Korolyov knew. So he men, people in the · govem- description of Sputnik's orbit
what an unlikely achievement ordered his team to quickly ment,'Khrushchev and myself to help people watch it pass.
it turned out to be.
sketch a primitive orbiter, It - saw that as just yet anoth- The article failed to mention
Chertok couldn't whisper. a was called PS-I, for er accomplishment showing tl)at the light seen moving
word about the project "Prosteishiy Sputnik" - the tliat the Soviet economy and across the sky was the spent
through much of his lifetime. Simplest Satellite.
science were on the right booster rocket's second stage,
His name, and that of Sergei
Grechko, who calculated track,"
the
younger . which was in roughly same
Korolyov, the chief scientist, the trajectory for the first Khrushchev, now a senior fel- orbit, Chertok said.
were a state s.ecret Today, at satellite 's launch, said he and low at Brown University's
The tiny orbiter was invisiage 95 and talking to a small other young engineers tried to Watson
Institute
for ble to the naked eye.
group of ,reporters in persuade Korolyov to · pack International Studies, said in
Excited by the global furor,
telephon~ interview,
. Khrushchev
Moscow, Chertok can finally Sputnik with some scientific
·
ordered
Korolyov
give full voice to his pride at instruments, .
The first official Soviet Korolyov immediately to
the pivotal role he played in refused, saying there was no
the history of space explo- time.
ration.
''If Korolyov had listened
"Each of these first rockets to us and started putting more
was like a beloved woman for equipment on board, the
· us," he said, "We were in love Americans
could · have
with every rocket, we desper- opened · the space era,"
ately wanted it to blast off Grechko said.
successfully. We would give
The satellite, weighing just
our hearts and souls to see it 184 pounds, was built in less
flyin~. "
.
than three months. Soviet
Thts very ratiOnal exuber- designers built a pressurized
ance, and Korolyov's deter- sphere of polished aluminum
mination. were .the key to alloy with two radio transmitSputnik's success.
ters and four antennas. An
So was happenstance.
earlier satellite project envisAs described by the fonner aged a cone sha~e, but
scientists, the world's first Korolyov preferred the
orbiter was born out of a very sphere.
·
different Soviet program: the
"The Earth is a sphere, and
frantic development of a its first satellite also must
rocket capable of striking the have a spherical shape,"
United States with a hydro- Chertok, a longtime deputy of
gen bomb.
Korolyov, recalled him say,
Because there was no ing,
telling how heavy the, warSputmk's surface was polhead would be, its R-7 ballis- ished to perfection to better
tic missile was built with deflect the sun's rays and
thrust to spare "much · avoid ·overheating . .
more powerful than anything
The launch was first sehedthe Americans had," Georgy uled for Oct. 6, But Korolyov
Grechko, a rocket engineer suspected that the U.S , nught
lie planning a laul)ch a day
and cosmonaut, told AP.
The towering R-7's high earher. The KGB was asked
thrust and payload capacity, to ~heck , and reported turning
unmatched' at the time, just up nothing.
happened to make it _the perKorolyov was taking no
feet vehicle to launch an chances. He immediately
object into orbit· someth(ng canceled some last-minute·
never done before.
tests and moved up the launch
Without
the
looming by two days, to Oct. 4, 1957.
"Better than anyone else
nuclear threat, Russian scientists say, Sputnik would prob- Korolyov understood how
ably have gotten .off the important it was to open the
space era," Grechko said,
ground much later.
''The key .reason behind the ''The Earth had just one moon
emergence of Sputnik was the (or a billion years and sudCold War atmosphere and our denly it would have another,
race against the Americans," artificial moon 1"
Chertok said. "The military
Soon after bla~toff from the
'
missile was the main thing we arid steppes of the Soviet
were thinking of at the Republic . of Kazakhstan, the
moment"
satellite sent out what would
When the warhead project be the world's most famous
hit a snag, Korolyov, the beep. But the engineers on the
..
father of the Soviet space pro- ground didn't immediately
&amp;. IMII.Coti'I/I'Ul»ti. tijn
.
gram, seized the opportunity. grasp its importance.
1. ~- tMft/ttHI/aN\.MHI
Korolyov. both visionary
"At that moment we couldDIRECTLY~
scientist and iron-willed man- n 't fully understand what we
ager, pressed the Kremlin to had Ijone," Chertok recalled.
let him launch a satellite. The "We felt ecstatic about it only
u.s. was already planning later, when the entire world
such a mo ve in 1958, he ran amok. Only four or five
pointed out, as part of the days later did we realize that
International Geophysical it was a turning point in the
Year.
history of civilization."
Immediately after the
• But while the govemml;!nt
gave approval in January launch, Koroly&lt;JV- ' called
1956, the military brass want- Soviet
leader
Nikita
ed to keep the missile for the Khrushchev to report the suc·
bomb program, Grechko, 76, cess. Khrushchev's son,
said in an interview. "They Sergei , who was alongside his
treated the satellite as a toy, a father at the moment, recalled
silly fantasy of Korolyov."
that they listened to the satelThe U.S. had it; own sate!- lite's beep-beep and went to
lite program , Grechko said. bed.

a

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'-"'

Daily Number
. of Visitors .

Over 1,000 VIsitors
A Dayl Take a break
to check out
the newsl

.Public meetings

•

•

Monday, October t,

2007

Monday, Oct. 1
REEDSVLLLE - Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., township garage.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village HaiL
ALFRED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30p.m., at home
of Fiscal Officer Osie
Follrod.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., office
building.
TUesday, Oct. 2
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Tru stees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town HaiL
Wednesday, Oct. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Healt h, 5
p.m. , Meigs County . Health
Department, second public
hearing Meigs County
General Health District
Sewage Treatment System
rules.
Thursday, Oct. 4
SYRACUSE - ·Syracuse
Villa~e Cou ncil. regular
meettng , 7 p.m., village
haiL
Tuesday, Oct. 9
POME!WY - Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, at town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 1
POMEROY
._ Me igs
County Cancer Initi ative .
noon, conference room · of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. New members welcome.
Bring ·
lunch.
Courtney Sim, 992-6626 for
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Band Boosters, 6
p.m., high school band

Chatty niece is her dads problem

I

room.
_ RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30
p.m . with initiation of new
member. Wear chapter
attire. Refreshments.
POMEROY
The
Meigs High School bapd
Boosters w iII meet at 6
p.m.. in the bandroom. All
band parents are encouraged to get involved as the
Boosters plan events and
fundraisers to support and
enhance the band experience f9r students.

Jon Brockert, pastor of First
Baptist, to speak.
POMEROY
Community observance of
World Communion Sunday,
9:30 a.m.
at Trinity
Cpngregational church with
Pastor Jon Brockert of
Pomeroy . ·First Baptist
Church as speaker. ·· ·
RACINE - Racine First
Baptist Church fall revival,
7 p.m., beginning today,
ending Thursday; Pastor
Sammy Frye.
POMEROY - Hemlock
Gtove Christian Church
Thesday, O~t. 2 ·
wi II observe homecoming at
MIDDLEPORT
the morning service with
Regular monthly meeting of . Bob . Werry
speaking.
Middleport Masonic Lodge Dinner wiJI be served at
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. All 12 :30 p.m. and an afternoon
Master Masons invited. program will be presented
Refreshments.
at 2 p.m. by Freed by Christ
CHESTER Chester smgmg.
Council 323, D of A, will
meet 6 p.m. for a potluck
supper. Friendship meeting
of District 13 to be
observed. Members to w'ear
white and· take a covered
Saturday, Oct. 6
dish. Lodge meeting starts
RACINE
"Teen
at 7 p.m.
Night," 6 p.m., Christian
Outreach Center of Racine
Thursday, Oct. 4
First Baptist Cliur~h with
HARRISONVILLE
Pastor Sammy Frye ,
Harrisonville Eastern .Star
Past Matrons, I p.m. luncheon at the Wild Horse in
Pomeroy.
Saturday, Oct. 6
CHESTER - Genealogy
Friday, Oct. 5
. POMEROY PERl Fair, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Chester
Chapter 74 of Meig s Courthouse; for beginning
e1eperienced
County will meet at I p.m. and
at the Meigs Multipurpose researchers.
Center (God 's N.E.T)
Mulberry
Avenue.
Representatives from insurance companies will be
Wednesday, Oct.lO
guest speakers. Available to
CHESTER ~ Eleanor
answer questions concern- Knight of Chester will
, ing insurance plan.
oberve .her birthday on Oct
I 0. The celebration will
take place on Sunday, Oct. 7
at the restored Chester
Sunday, Oct. 7
Courtho1,1se wi'th an open
POMEROY
reception from 2 to 4 p.m.
Community
World Those unable to attend can
Communion Sunday !will send cards to her at 36741
be obsrved at Trinity State Route 7. Pomeroy,
church, 9:30 a.m. with Rev. Ohiop-45769

School and
Youth

Other events

Birthdays

Church events

ATHENS Renewable
energy-powered and energy
efficient homes and buildings in Southeast Ohio will
be shown on free public
guided tours on Sat.urday,.
Oct. 6, during the annual
Ohio Solar Tour,
Organized by the clean
energy' advocate Green
Energy Ohio (GEO), the
Ohio solar tour encompasses
sustainable features beyond
solar energy, highlighting
hundreds of solar, wind, biomass, green design and energy-saving technolo gies in
every comers of the state ,
The tours are free and open
to the public,
GEO Executive Director,
Bill Spratley, said most peo, pie don't know that many
clean energy installations
exist all over Ohio.
"Many will be surprised to
learn that Ohio already has
commercial solar electricity,
a utility grade wind farm, a
manufacturer of solar roofing and a utility-scale wjnd
turbine
in
downtown
Cleveland at the Great
Lakes Science Center," said
Spratley. "Elsewhere, we

have solar homes, businesses, schools, bus stops,
libraries and even traffic
lights. This is a great opportunity for everyone to see
how and where 'clean' electricity is being generated,"
he said.
Sites on the Southeast
Ohio Solar Tour include
solar photovoltaic systems
and fuel cell technology at
Hocking
College
in
Nelsonville, a wind/solar
electric hybrid system in
Logan. solar thermal technology at Ohio University in
Athens, and an off-grid solar
electric system providing
I 00 percent of the electrical
needs of a home in Stewart
Site owners and GEO
members will host ' tWo
simultaneou s,
day -long
tours ·in Southeast Ohio on
Saturday from I0 a.m. to 4
p.m. The tours originate
from the Great Outdoor
Adventure
Festival
at
Hocking
College
'in
Nelsonville. Tours attendees
wi II meet at the Welcome
Center in main parking lot,
located at 330 I Hocking
Parkway. The Southeast
Ohio Solar Tour Guidebook

contains information on how
to take the tours, including
de· ·iptions, photos and
dir .• tions to sites, The
guidebook is available fqr
free download on the GEO
website
at
www.GreenEnergyOhio.org'
. Tour attendees will receive
free copies of the guidebook
2007
Ohio
and
the
Energy
Renewable
Resource
Guide, both published by
Green Energy Ohio; the
National Solar Tour issue .of
Solar Today Magazine published by the American
Solar Energy .Society; and
other resource materials.
The Southeast Ohio Solar
Tour is sponsored by Third
Sun Solar &amp; Wind Power,
the Ohio Department of
Development's Office of
Energy Efficiency, and the
American Solar· Energy
Society. The Ohio Solar
Tour is part of the National
Solar Tour sponsored by the
American Solar Energy
Society. For more information, tontact Dovetail Solar
&amp; Wind at (740) 592-1800
or info@dovetailsolar.com.

BY KATHY MITCHEll
AND MARCY 51!DAR

Dear Annie: How do you
tell your brother that his
daughter is turning into a
nightmare? "Cindy" is an
adorable 9-year-old and runs
the house, I don't see my
brother as much as I'd like
because"' they live three
hours away, but when I do,
it's becoming harder and
harder to bite my tpngue .
Cindy constantly interrupts the adult conversations, asking all kinds of
questions about what she
overhears. Much to everyone's horror, each time it
happens, the conversation
ends until she has extracted
all the information she
wants and added her two
cents, Then we are allowed
to continue talking. She is
never told not to interrupt
(There is very little discipline of any kind.)
As for her table manners,
there is a lot of lip smacking
and loud nasal snorting. I
have never witnessed this
child using a tissue or being
told to get one. This is particularly embarrassing at a
restaurant. Cindy orders the
waitress around and i.s never
corrected. And l've yet to
hear "please" or "thank you"
from her l'ips ..
My
sister-in-law
is
extremely well put together,
attractive and has excellent ·
manners. How she ignores
this behavior is beyond me.
My brother is very sensitive,
so I always stay silent What
can I say that will be helpful
and not sound judgmental?
- Frustrated in North
Carolina
Dear Frustrated: Are you
friendly enough with Cindy
to address her directly ?

MIDDLEPORT -Amy
Michelle Blake recently graduated from Ohio University
with a doctorate in physical
therapy.
She was president of her
class and honored with. the
College of Health and
Human Services Outstanding
Service Award and the Dean
of Students' Citation. She was
also the recipient of .the
Cynthia
J.
Norkin
Scholarship, Area Six Health
Services Scholarship, Athens
County Education Award and
a two-time Pleasant Valley
Hospital' Health Foundation
Scholar. She also had the
honor of representing the
School of Physical Therapy
as a speaker at the Ohio
University Willed Body
Donor Program Memorial

EAST LETART - Adam
and Co urtney (Rous h)
Leachman of East Letart
announce the birth of their
son,
Noah ·
Russell
Leachman.
The infant was born on
July 28, 2007 at Hol zer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
He weighed 8 pounds 9
ounces. Noah's maternal
grandparents are Marshall
and Debbie Roush. His
paternal grandparents an!
Dale and Marl)" Ann
Leachman . Maternal greatgrandparents are Donna
and the late Dallas Hill and
the late Virgil and Mary
Roush, Paternal greatgrandparents are Ronald ·
and Kathleen Leachman
and Irene and the late
Wilbur Russell Morrison:,
Leachman is a ci'vil engi-

("Cindy, honey, please get a wilL "
tissue,") Could you pull it · My husband is 80 pounds
off with humor? ("I'll bet overweight. While, I can't
Cindy runs the show at force him to eat right, I still
school :") If not, your brother prepare healthful meals. But
is likely to interpret every- I have no control over the
thing you say as criticism. junk be puts into his stomSince you see him rarely, ach during his workday. Ask
tolerate what you can, make him to walk with me'1 You
your interactions with Cindy bet But l}e'd rather sit and
short, and let her be his finish off a bag of peanut
headache.
'
M&amp;Ms. I've been married
Dear Annie: I have just for a long time, but I think
become engaged to a won- partners who want an active
derful man. While I am sex life have an inherent
looking forward to the wed- responsibility to .maintain a
ding, we have come across a degree of physical attracsnag in our planning. ,
tiveness.
"Jake's" extended family,
I g uarantee xou if I
though wonderful , isn't very weighed 80 pounds more
accepting of homosexuals. !han I do, my husband
The problem is, two of my would not "love me regarduncles (including the man less." He' d be looking elsewho is de&gt;igning my dress) where. - " Live There,
and one aunt are gay, I Know That
refuse to not invite them.
Dear Live There: We are
Financially, we could not miracle workers. If
throw two separate recep- Hubby doesn't want to lose
lions, but h&lt;Jw would we weight, he won't. Is this a
even address that? I'm good reason to divorce after
almost to the point Of elop- many years of manriage to
ing, but I want this day to be an otherwise wonderful
about our families joining: man? We don't believe so. If
you love your husband, the
What should I do? Desperate in Southern best advice we can give is to
California
find a way to accept what
Dear Desperate: Are you cannot be changed. It will
making an announcement )ower your blood pressure
that these relatives are gay.? considerably
If not, there's no reason to
Annie's Mailbox is writbelieve Jake's family will ten by Kathy Mitchell and
notice, let alone comment Marcy Sugar, longtime ediInvite whomever you wish, tors ofthe Ann Landers colsay nothing about your umn. ·Please e-mail your
guests' sexual orientation questions to anniesmailand remember to have a box@cmitcast.net, or write
wonderful day.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I was di sap- Box 118190, Chicago, 1L
pointed in your response to 606ll. To find out more
"Helpless Wife," whose hus- about Annie's Mailbox, and
band has let himself go. You read features by other
suggested healthy meals and Creators Syndicate writers ·
exercise and then told her, and cartoonists, visit the
"He expects you to love him Creators Syndicate Web
regardless and we hope you pagll at www.creators.com.

.

Amy Blake
Service.
Blake also earned bachelor's and master's degrees in
athletic training from Ohio
University. Prior to attending
physical therapy school, she
served as an Athletic Trainer
for seven years at Holzer

Clin(c Meigs. She is a boardcertified athletic trainer and
physical thempist licensed in
Ohio and West Virginia.
In addition, she is a member of the American Physical
Therapy Association, Ohio
Physical
Therapy
and
Ohio
Association,
Athletic
Trainers'
Association.
Blake · has
accepted a position with
Pleasant Valley · Hospital in
outpatient orthopedics.
She is the wife of Frank
Blake, son of John and
Margie Blake and grandson
of Janet Harris, and daughter
of Mike and Jane Fry and
Huck and Sherry Wagner.,
and the granddaughter of
Jackie and the late Edward
Wagner, Helen Pickens, and
Carroll Johnson.

Cleveland school building plan
overhauled, millions more needed
.

Sanders' new proposal, ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - A ments caused by competition
construction plan approved by from voucher and charter which must be approved by
the Cleveland School District schools and a declining city the school board and the state,
will need another $217 million population. In 2002, the dis· is expected to draw opposition
to complete building and reno· trict had 73,000 students; this from city council members
vations on the final 26 schools year, it has 50,000, with the whose constituents were
of the project, school officials state prediciing the loss of promised new or renovated
said,
·
schools in the original plan.
10,000 more by 2015'
According to a report by The
(Cleveland) Plain ·Dealer,
ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY? .
school officials want voters to
In order to vote in the November 6, 2007 General
approve the money in a bond
issue, to help cover some segElection you must be registered by October 9,2007.
ments of the plan - the sec·
ond voter-approved loan for
Vote at your new precinct :md avoid long lines at the
the project
The construction plan is on
board on Election Day by changing your address (if
track to exhaust its $1 billion
you have moved within the county) or if you
budget in 2012, Officials said.
c hanged your name, by updating your registration
If a~proved, the bond would
add rune years of debt to the
by Ot tober 9, 2007 .
current 28-year bond, and cost
the owner of a $ 100,000 home
just over $1,000 for the exira
The Board of Elections will be open from 9:00a.m.
period.
until 9:00p.m. on October 9th , 2007.
Mayor Frank Jackson called
the plan "thorough and practical" but expressed some hesiYou may also register at the following locations:
tancy about the bond issue.
Meigs County Department of Human Services,
The original 12-year plan,
devised under former schools
Meigs County WIC Office, License Bureau, Board
CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett, ,
of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport
called for projects in Ill buildPublic Library, Eastern Library, Meigs County
ings . New superintendent
Eugene Sanders is overhauling
Treasurer's Office, and all area high schools.
the plan, shifting more focus to
elementary schools and space
for pre-kindergarten,
For any additional information. call 992-2697. or
"
Sanders said the project is
Noah Russell Leachman
part of the district's anempt to stop by our office located at 117 E . Memorial Drive,
Koko sing .' al therapist with Genesi s keep neighborhood schools
Ste. I, Pomeroy. Ohio.
neer
with
open despite slumping enrollCourtney is an occupation- Rehab Services.
~~-

•

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Anno}lnce birth

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Community Calendar

Energy efficient structure
tour set for Saturday

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Of
Are Growing.
More Individuals Are
Checking The
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8,000 visitors request
mydailysentinel.com
.,

BY THE BEND

..,;:..

.....

AP IMPAcr: Sputnil&lt;-.at 50: first space race .won
with scrounged·rOCI&lt;et, improvised satellite
'

The Daily Sentinel·

------------·-·--

�,,
•,

PageA2

NATION• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel ,

Monday, October t,

2007

.

'

launch a new satellite, this Nobel committee's · offer to
time, to · rpark the Nov. 7 nominate Korolyov for a
anniversary of the 1917 prize, insisting that it was the
Bolshevik Revolution .
achievement of "the entire
·:we didn' t believe that you Soviet people."
.
would outpace llJe Americans
Sergei Khrushchev said his ·
with your satellite, but you father thought singling out
did it. Now you should Korolyov wquld anger other
launch something new by rocket designers and hamper
Nov. 7," Korolyov quoted the missile and space pro.
Khrushchev telling him, grams.
accordi,ng to Grechko.
"These people were like
Working round-the-clock, actors; they would all have
Korolyov and his team built been madly jealous at
another spacecraft in less than Korolyov," he said. "I think
a month. On Nov. 3, they my father's decision was psylaunched Sputnik 2, which chologically correct. But, of
weighed I, 118 pounds. It car- course, Sergei Korolyov felt
ried the world's first living deeply hurt."
paylead, a t;nongrel dog
Korolyov's · . daughter,
named Laika, in its tiny pres- Natalta, r~called m a book
. that the vet! of secrecy vexed
surized cabin. . '
The dog died of the heat her father. "We are like minafter a week, drawing protests · ers - , we work underfrom animal-lovers, But the ground, she recalls htm saytii~ht proved that a living ing. "No one sees or hears
.
.
bemg could survive in space, us."
paving the way for human
The Sovtet Umon and the
flight.
·
rest of the world learned
The ftrst Sputnik beeped Korolyov's name only after
for three weeks and spent his death in 1966. Today his
home,
where
about three months in orbit Moscow
before burning up in the Chertok '!let repo~ers, is a
atmosphere. It circled Earth museum m the chte! sctenmore than 1,400 times, at just tist's honor.
.
under I00 minutes an orbit.
Chertok was perm tiled to
For Korolyov there was bit- . travel abroad only in the late
temess as well as triumph. He 1980s, after Soviet .leader
was never mentioned in any Mikhail Gorbachev liberalcontemporary accounts of the ized the Soviet Union.
The survtvmg leaders of
launch, and his key role was
. ·known to only a few officials ,the space program are no
and space,designers.
longer anonymous or stlent,
Leonid Sedov, a member of and revel in the accolades so
the Soviet Academy of long denied them.
'
Sciences with no connection
"The rivalry in space, even
tQ space program, was erro- though it had military reaneously touted in the West as sons, has pushed the
the Father of Sputnik. mankind forward," said
Korolyov, meanwhile, w~s Valery Korzun, a cosmonaut
only allowed to publish hts who serves as a deputy chief
non-sensitive research under of the Star City cosmonaut
the pseudonym "Professor K. training
center.
"Our
Sergeyev."
.
achievements today are rootKhrushchev rejected the ed in that competition,"

BY ·VLADIMIR
ISACHENKOV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW
When
· Sputnik took off 50 years ago,
the world gazed at the hea,vens in awe and apprehension,
watching what seemed like
the unveiling of a sustained
Soviet eH'ort to conquer space
and score a stunning Cold
War triumph.
But 50 years later, it
emerges that the momentous
launch was far from being
part of a well-planned strategy to 'demonstrate communist
superiority over the· West.
Instead, the first artificial
satellite in space was a spurof-the-moment gamble driven by the dream of one scientist, whose team scrounged
a rocket, slapped together a
satellite and persuaded a
dubious .Kremlin to open the
space age.
And that winking light that
AP photo
crowds around · the globe Cosmonaut Georgy .Grechko stands in front of a painting showing Yuri Gagarin, the first
gathered to watch in the night human in space, at the Russian cosmonauts living quarters in northern Moscow, Tuesday.
sky? Not Sputnik at all, as it Grechko, a space engineer who later became a highly-decorated cosmonaut, calculated the
turns out, but just the second trajectory for the Sputnik's, launch on Oct. 4, 1957 ..
stage of its booster rocket,
accor~ling to Boris Chertok, "The Americans proudly
Sergei Khrushchev said report of Sputnik's launch
one of the founders of the called
their
project that at first they saw the was brief. and buried deep in
Soviet space progl'am.
'Vanguard," but found them- Sputnik's launch as simply Pravda, the Conimunist Party
In a series of interviews in se 1ves beh'tnd us. "
one in a series of Soviet tech- daily..Only two days later did
recent days with The
The Soviet Union already nological achievements, like it offer a banner' headline,
Associated Press, Chertok had a full-fledged scientific a ·new passenger jet or the quoting the avalanche of forand other vetera11s told the lit- satellite in developmeill, but ftrst atonlic power plant.
eign praise.
tie-known story of how it would take too long to comPravda also published a
"All of us - Korolyov's
Sputnik was launched, and p'lete, Korolyov knew. So he men, people in the · govem- description of Sputnik's orbit
what an unlikely achievement ordered his team to quickly ment,'Khrushchev and myself to help people watch it pass.
it turned out to be.
sketch a primitive orbiter, It - saw that as just yet anoth- The article failed to mention
Chertok couldn't whisper. a was called PS-I, for er accomplishment showing tl)at the light seen moving
word about the project "Prosteishiy Sputnik" - the tliat the Soviet economy and across the sky was the spent
through much of his lifetime. Simplest Satellite.
science were on the right booster rocket's second stage,
His name, and that of Sergei
Grechko, who calculated track,"
the
younger . which was in roughly same
Korolyov, the chief scientist, the trajectory for the first Khrushchev, now a senior fel- orbit, Chertok said.
were a state s.ecret Today, at satellite 's launch, said he and low at Brown University's
The tiny orbiter was invisiage 95 and talking to a small other young engineers tried to Watson
Institute
for ble to the naked eye.
group of ,reporters in persuade Korolyov to · pack International Studies, said in
Excited by the global furor,
telephon~ interview,
. Khrushchev
Moscow, Chertok can finally Sputnik with some scientific
·
ordered
Korolyov
give full voice to his pride at instruments, .
The first official Soviet Korolyov immediately to
the pivotal role he played in refused, saying there was no
the history of space explo- time.
ration.
''If Korolyov had listened
"Each of these first rockets to us and started putting more
was like a beloved woman for equipment on board, the
· us," he said, "We were in love Americans
could · have
with every rocket, we desper- opened · the space era,"
ately wanted it to blast off Grechko said.
successfully. We would give
The satellite, weighing just
our hearts and souls to see it 184 pounds, was built in less
flyin~. "
.
than three months. Soviet
Thts very ratiOnal exuber- designers built a pressurized
ance, and Korolyov's deter- sphere of polished aluminum
mination. were .the key to alloy with two radio transmitSputnik's success.
ters and four antennas. An
So was happenstance.
earlier satellite project envisAs described by the fonner aged a cone sha~e, but
scientists, the world's first Korolyov preferred the
orbiter was born out of a very sphere.
·
different Soviet program: the
"The Earth is a sphere, and
frantic development of a its first satellite also must
rocket capable of striking the have a spherical shape,"
United States with a hydro- Chertok, a longtime deputy of
gen bomb.
Korolyov, recalled him say,
Because there was no ing,
telling how heavy the, warSputmk's surface was polhead would be, its R-7 ballis- ished to perfection to better
tic missile was built with deflect the sun's rays and
thrust to spare "much · avoid ·overheating . .
more powerful than anything
The launch was first sehedthe Americans had," Georgy uled for Oct. 6, But Korolyov
Grechko, a rocket engineer suspected that the U.S , nught
lie planning a laul)ch a day
and cosmonaut, told AP.
The towering R-7's high earher. The KGB was asked
thrust and payload capacity, to ~heck , and reported turning
unmatched' at the time, just up nothing.
happened to make it _the perKorolyov was taking no
feet vehicle to launch an chances. He immediately
object into orbit· someth(ng canceled some last-minute·
never done before.
tests and moved up the launch
Without
the
looming by two days, to Oct. 4, 1957.
"Better than anyone else
nuclear threat, Russian scientists say, Sputnik would prob- Korolyov understood how
ably have gotten .off the important it was to open the
space era," Grechko said,
ground much later.
''The key .reason behind the ''The Earth had just one moon
emergence of Sputnik was the (or a billion years and sudCold War atmosphere and our denly it would have another,
race against the Americans," artificial moon 1"
Chertok said. "The military
Soon after bla~toff from the
'
missile was the main thing we arid steppes of the Soviet
were thinking of at the Republic . of Kazakhstan, the
moment"
satellite sent out what would
When the warhead project be the world's most famous
hit a snag, Korolyov, the beep. But the engineers on the
..
father of the Soviet space pro- ground didn't immediately
&amp;. IMII.Coti'I/I'Ul»ti. tijn
.
gram, seized the opportunity. grasp its importance.
1. ~- tMft/ttHI/aN\.MHI
Korolyov. both visionary
"At that moment we couldDIRECTLY~
scientist and iron-willed man- n 't fully understand what we
ager, pressed the Kremlin to had Ijone," Chertok recalled.
let him launch a satellite. The "We felt ecstatic about it only
u.s. was already planning later, when the entire world
such a mo ve in 1958, he ran amok. Only four or five
pointed out, as part of the days later did we realize that
International Geophysical it was a turning point in the
Year.
history of civilization."
Immediately after the
• But while the govemml;!nt
gave approval in January launch, Koroly&lt;JV- ' called
1956, the military brass want- Soviet
leader
Nikita
ed to keep the missile for the Khrushchev to report the suc·
bomb program, Grechko, 76, cess. Khrushchev's son,
said in an interview. "They Sergei , who was alongside his
treated the satellite as a toy, a father at the moment, recalled
silly fantasy of Korolyov."
that they listened to the satelThe U.S. had it; own sate!- lite's beep-beep and went to
lite program , Grechko said. bed.

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Daily Number
. of Visitors .

Over 1,000 VIsitors
A Dayl Take a break
to check out
the newsl

.Public meetings

•

•

Monday, October t,

2007

Monday, Oct. 1
REEDSVLLLE - Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., township garage.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village HaiL
ALFRED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30p.m., at home
of Fiscal Officer Osie
Follrod.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., office
building.
TUesday, Oct. 2
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Tru stees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town HaiL
Wednesday, Oct. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Healt h, 5
p.m. , Meigs County . Health
Department, second public
hearing Meigs County
General Health District
Sewage Treatment System
rules.
Thursday, Oct. 4
SYRACUSE - ·Syracuse
Villa~e Cou ncil. regular
meettng , 7 p.m., village
haiL
Tuesday, Oct. 9
POME!WY - Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, at town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 1
POMEROY
._ Me igs
County Cancer Initi ative .
noon, conference room · of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. New members welcome.
Bring ·
lunch.
Courtney Sim, 992-6626 for
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Band Boosters, 6
p.m., high school band

Chatty niece is her dads problem

I

room.
_ RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30
p.m . with initiation of new
member. Wear chapter
attire. Refreshments.
POMEROY
The
Meigs High School bapd
Boosters w iII meet at 6
p.m.. in the bandroom. All
band parents are encouraged to get involved as the
Boosters plan events and
fundraisers to support and
enhance the band experience f9r students.

Jon Brockert, pastor of First
Baptist, to speak.
POMEROY
Community observance of
World Communion Sunday,
9:30 a.m.
at Trinity
Cpngregational church with
Pastor Jon Brockert of
Pomeroy . ·First Baptist
Church as speaker. ·· ·
RACINE - Racine First
Baptist Church fall revival,
7 p.m., beginning today,
ending Thursday; Pastor
Sammy Frye.
POMEROY - Hemlock
Gtove Christian Church
Thesday, O~t. 2 ·
wi II observe homecoming at
MIDDLEPORT
the morning service with
Regular monthly meeting of . Bob . Werry
speaking.
Middleport Masonic Lodge Dinner wiJI be served at
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. All 12 :30 p.m. and an afternoon
Master Masons invited. program will be presented
Refreshments.
at 2 p.m. by Freed by Christ
CHESTER Chester smgmg.
Council 323, D of A, will
meet 6 p.m. for a potluck
supper. Friendship meeting
of District 13 to be
observed. Members to w'ear
white and· take a covered
Saturday, Oct. 6
dish. Lodge meeting starts
RACINE
"Teen
at 7 p.m.
Night," 6 p.m., Christian
Outreach Center of Racine
Thursday, Oct. 4
First Baptist Cliur~h with
HARRISONVILLE
Pastor Sammy Frye ,
Harrisonville Eastern .Star
Past Matrons, I p.m. luncheon at the Wild Horse in
Pomeroy.
Saturday, Oct. 6
CHESTER - Genealogy
Friday, Oct. 5
. POMEROY PERl Fair, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Chester
Chapter 74 of Meig s Courthouse; for beginning
e1eperienced
County will meet at I p.m. and
at the Meigs Multipurpose researchers.
Center (God 's N.E.T)
Mulberry
Avenue.
Representatives from insurance companies will be
Wednesday, Oct.lO
guest speakers. Available to
CHESTER ~ Eleanor
answer questions concern- Knight of Chester will
, ing insurance plan.
oberve .her birthday on Oct
I 0. The celebration will
take place on Sunday, Oct. 7
at the restored Chester
Sunday, Oct. 7
Courtho1,1se wi'th an open
POMEROY
reception from 2 to 4 p.m.
Community
World Those unable to attend can
Communion Sunday !will send cards to her at 36741
be obsrved at Trinity State Route 7. Pomeroy,
church, 9:30 a.m. with Rev. Ohiop-45769

School and
Youth

Other events

Birthdays

Church events

ATHENS Renewable
energy-powered and energy
efficient homes and buildings in Southeast Ohio will
be shown on free public
guided tours on Sat.urday,.
Oct. 6, during the annual
Ohio Solar Tour,
Organized by the clean
energy' advocate Green
Energy Ohio (GEO), the
Ohio solar tour encompasses
sustainable features beyond
solar energy, highlighting
hundreds of solar, wind, biomass, green design and energy-saving technolo gies in
every comers of the state ,
The tours are free and open
to the public,
GEO Executive Director,
Bill Spratley, said most peo, pie don't know that many
clean energy installations
exist all over Ohio.
"Many will be surprised to
learn that Ohio already has
commercial solar electricity,
a utility grade wind farm, a
manufacturer of solar roofing and a utility-scale wjnd
turbine
in
downtown
Cleveland at the Great
Lakes Science Center," said
Spratley. "Elsewhere, we

have solar homes, businesses, schools, bus stops,
libraries and even traffic
lights. This is a great opportunity for everyone to see
how and where 'clean' electricity is being generated,"
he said.
Sites on the Southeast
Ohio Solar Tour include
solar photovoltaic systems
and fuel cell technology at
Hocking
College
in
Nelsonville, a wind/solar
electric hybrid system in
Logan. solar thermal technology at Ohio University in
Athens, and an off-grid solar
electric system providing
I 00 percent of the electrical
needs of a home in Stewart
Site owners and GEO
members will host ' tWo
simultaneou s,
day -long
tours ·in Southeast Ohio on
Saturday from I0 a.m. to 4
p.m. The tours originate
from the Great Outdoor
Adventure
Festival
at
Hocking
College
'in
Nelsonville. Tours attendees
wi II meet at the Welcome
Center in main parking lot,
located at 330 I Hocking
Parkway. The Southeast
Ohio Solar Tour Guidebook

contains information on how
to take the tours, including
de· ·iptions, photos and
dir .• tions to sites, The
guidebook is available fqr
free download on the GEO
website
at
www.GreenEnergyOhio.org'
. Tour attendees will receive
free copies of the guidebook
2007
Ohio
and
the
Energy
Renewable
Resource
Guide, both published by
Green Energy Ohio; the
National Solar Tour issue .of
Solar Today Magazine published by the American
Solar Energy .Society; and
other resource materials.
The Southeast Ohio Solar
Tour is sponsored by Third
Sun Solar &amp; Wind Power,
the Ohio Department of
Development's Office of
Energy Efficiency, and the
American Solar· Energy
Society. The Ohio Solar
Tour is part of the National
Solar Tour sponsored by the
American Solar Energy
Society. For more information, tontact Dovetail Solar
&amp; Wind at (740) 592-1800
or info@dovetailsolar.com.

BY KATHY MITCHEll
AND MARCY 51!DAR

Dear Annie: How do you
tell your brother that his
daughter is turning into a
nightmare? "Cindy" is an
adorable 9-year-old and runs
the house, I don't see my
brother as much as I'd like
because"' they live three
hours away, but when I do,
it's becoming harder and
harder to bite my tpngue .
Cindy constantly interrupts the adult conversations, asking all kinds of
questions about what she
overhears. Much to everyone's horror, each time it
happens, the conversation
ends until she has extracted
all the information she
wants and added her two
cents, Then we are allowed
to continue talking. She is
never told not to interrupt
(There is very little discipline of any kind.)
As for her table manners,
there is a lot of lip smacking
and loud nasal snorting. I
have never witnessed this
child using a tissue or being
told to get one. This is particularly embarrassing at a
restaurant. Cindy orders the
waitress around and i.s never
corrected. And l've yet to
hear "please" or "thank you"
from her l'ips ..
My
sister-in-law
is
extremely well put together,
attractive and has excellent ·
manners. How she ignores
this behavior is beyond me.
My brother is very sensitive,
so I always stay silent What
can I say that will be helpful
and not sound judgmental?
- Frustrated in North
Carolina
Dear Frustrated: Are you
friendly enough with Cindy
to address her directly ?

MIDDLEPORT -Amy
Michelle Blake recently graduated from Ohio University
with a doctorate in physical
therapy.
She was president of her
class and honored with. the
College of Health and
Human Services Outstanding
Service Award and the Dean
of Students' Citation. She was
also the recipient of .the
Cynthia
J.
Norkin
Scholarship, Area Six Health
Services Scholarship, Athens
County Education Award and
a two-time Pleasant Valley
Hospital' Health Foundation
Scholar. She also had the
honor of representing the
School of Physical Therapy
as a speaker at the Ohio
University Willed Body
Donor Program Memorial

EAST LETART - Adam
and Co urtney (Rous h)
Leachman of East Letart
announce the birth of their
son,
Noah ·
Russell
Leachman.
The infant was born on
July 28, 2007 at Hol zer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
He weighed 8 pounds 9
ounces. Noah's maternal
grandparents are Marshall
and Debbie Roush. His
paternal grandparents an!
Dale and Marl)" Ann
Leachman . Maternal greatgrandparents are Donna
and the late Dallas Hill and
the late Virgil and Mary
Roush, Paternal greatgrandparents are Ronald ·
and Kathleen Leachman
and Irene and the late
Wilbur Russell Morrison:,
Leachman is a ci'vil engi-

("Cindy, honey, please get a wilL "
tissue,") Could you pull it · My husband is 80 pounds
off with humor? ("I'll bet overweight. While, I can't
Cindy runs the show at force him to eat right, I still
school :") If not, your brother prepare healthful meals. But
is likely to interpret every- I have no control over the
thing you say as criticism. junk be puts into his stomSince you see him rarely, ach during his workday. Ask
tolerate what you can, make him to walk with me'1 You
your interactions with Cindy bet But l}e'd rather sit and
short, and let her be his finish off a bag of peanut
headache.
'
M&amp;Ms. I've been married
Dear Annie: I have just for a long time, but I think
become engaged to a won- partners who want an active
derful man. While I am sex life have an inherent
looking forward to the wed- responsibility to .maintain a
ding, we have come across a degree of physical attracsnag in our planning. ,
tiveness.
"Jake's" extended family,
I g uarantee xou if I
though wonderful , isn't very weighed 80 pounds more
accepting of homosexuals. !han I do, my husband
The problem is, two of my would not "love me regarduncles (including the man less." He' d be looking elsewho is de&gt;igning my dress) where. - " Live There,
and one aunt are gay, I Know That
refuse to not invite them.
Dear Live There: We are
Financially, we could not miracle workers. If
throw two separate recep- Hubby doesn't want to lose
lions, but h&lt;Jw would we weight, he won't. Is this a
even address that? I'm good reason to divorce after
almost to the point Of elop- many years of manriage to
ing, but I want this day to be an otherwise wonderful
about our families joining: man? We don't believe so. If
you love your husband, the
What should I do? Desperate in Southern best advice we can give is to
California
find a way to accept what
Dear Desperate: Are you cannot be changed. It will
making an announcement )ower your blood pressure
that these relatives are gay.? considerably
If not, there's no reason to
Annie's Mailbox is writbelieve Jake's family will ten by Kathy Mitchell and
notice, let alone comment Marcy Sugar, longtime ediInvite whomever you wish, tors ofthe Ann Landers colsay nothing about your umn. ·Please e-mail your
guests' sexual orientation questions to anniesmailand remember to have a box@cmitcast.net, or write
wonderful day.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I was di sap- Box 118190, Chicago, 1L
pointed in your response to 606ll. To find out more
"Helpless Wife," whose hus- about Annie's Mailbox, and
band has let himself go. You read features by other
suggested healthy meals and Creators Syndicate writers ·
exercise and then told her, and cartoonists, visit the
"He expects you to love him Creators Syndicate Web
regardless and we hope you pagll at www.creators.com.

.

Amy Blake
Service.
Blake also earned bachelor's and master's degrees in
athletic training from Ohio
University. Prior to attending
physical therapy school, she
served as an Athletic Trainer
for seven years at Holzer

Clin(c Meigs. She is a boardcertified athletic trainer and
physical thempist licensed in
Ohio and West Virginia.
In addition, she is a member of the American Physical
Therapy Association, Ohio
Physical
Therapy
and
Ohio
Association,
Athletic
Trainers'
Association.
Blake · has
accepted a position with
Pleasant Valley · Hospital in
outpatient orthopedics.
She is the wife of Frank
Blake, son of John and
Margie Blake and grandson
of Janet Harris, and daughter
of Mike and Jane Fry and
Huck and Sherry Wagner.,
and the granddaughter of
Jackie and the late Edward
Wagner, Helen Pickens, and
Carroll Johnson.

Cleveland school building plan
overhauled, millions more needed
.

Sanders' new proposal, ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - A ments caused by competition
construction plan approved by from voucher and charter which must be approved by
the Cleveland School District schools and a declining city the school board and the state,
will need another $217 million population. In 2002, the dis· is expected to draw opposition
to complete building and reno· trict had 73,000 students; this from city council members
vations on the final 26 schools year, it has 50,000, with the whose constituents were
of the project, school officials state prediciing the loss of promised new or renovated
said,
·
schools in the original plan.
10,000 more by 2015'
According to a report by The
(Cleveland) Plain ·Dealer,
ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY? .
school officials want voters to
In order to vote in the November 6, 2007 General
approve the money in a bond
issue, to help cover some segElection you must be registered by October 9,2007.
ments of the plan - the sec·
ond voter-approved loan for
Vote at your new precinct :md avoid long lines at the
the project
The construction plan is on
board on Election Day by changing your address (if
track to exhaust its $1 billion
you have moved within the county) or if you
budget in 2012, Officials said.
c hanged your name, by updating your registration
If a~proved, the bond would
add rune years of debt to the
by Ot tober 9, 2007 .
current 28-year bond, and cost
the owner of a $ 100,000 home
just over $1,000 for the exira
The Board of Elections will be open from 9:00a.m.
period.
until 9:00p.m. on October 9th , 2007.
Mayor Frank Jackson called
the plan "thorough and practical" but expressed some hesiYou may also register at the following locations:
tancy about the bond issue.
Meigs County Department of Human Services,
The original 12-year plan,
devised under former schools
Meigs County WIC Office, License Bureau, Board
CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett, ,
of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport
called for projects in Ill buildPublic Library, Eastern Library, Meigs County
ings . New superintendent
Eugene Sanders is overhauling
Treasurer's Office, and all area high schools.
the plan, shifting more focus to
elementary schools and space
for pre-kindergarten,
For any additional information. call 992-2697. or
"
Sanders said the project is
Noah Russell Leachman
part of the district's anempt to stop by our office located at 117 E . Memorial Drive,
Koko sing .' al therapist with Genesi s keep neighborhood schools
Ste. I, Pomeroy. Ohio.
neer
with
open despite slumping enrollCourtney is an occupation- Rehab Services.
~~-

•

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily· Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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www.mydallyaentlnel.com,

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
esjablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free ..exercise the;eof; or abridging thefreedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct. I, the 274th day of 2007. There
are 91 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. I, 1908, Henry Ford introduced the Model T
automobile to the market.
On this date:
In 1507, Italian architect Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola
was born.
In 1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France in a secret .
treaty.
In 1907, New York's Plaza Hotel opened to the public.
In 1936, Gen. Francisco Franco was proclaimed the head
of an insurgent Spanish state.
In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees· hit his
6Ist home run to set a new record for homers in a season.
In 1964, the Free Speech Movement was launched at the
University of California at Berkeley.
In 1971, Walt Disney World opened in Orlando, Fla.
In 1987, eight people were killed when an earthquake
measuring magnitude 5.9 struck the Los Angeles area.
Five years ago: Iraq agreed to a plan for the return of
U.N. weapons inspectors for the first time in nearly four
years, but ignored U.S. demands for access to Saddarn
Hussein's palaces and other contested sites. New 'ersey
Democrats chose former Sen. Frank Lautenberg to be on
the November ballot in place of scandal-tainted Sen.
Robert Torricelli. Publisher, philanthropist and · diplomat
Walter H. Annenberg died in Wynnewood, Pa., at age 94.
One year ago: The Israeli army completed its withl)rawai
from Lebanon, clearing the way for a U.N. peacekeeping
force. Brazil's leftist President Luiz lnacio Lula da Silva
fell short of the votes·he needed to win a second term outright and was forced into a runoff, which he won by a landslide. Tiger Woods won the American Express
Championship in Chandler's Cross, England. (It was his
eighth victory of the year, making him the first player in ·
PGA Tour history to win at least eight times in three seasons.)
·
Today's Birthdays: Actor James Whitmore is 86. Former
President Jimmy Carter is 83. Pianist Roger Williams is 83.
Actor Tom Bosley is 80. Actress-singer Julie Andrews is
72. Actress Stella Stevens is 71. Rock musician Jerry
Martini (Sly and the Family Stone) is 64. Baseball Hall of
Farner Rod Carew is 62. Jazz musician Dave Holland is 61.
Actor Stephen Collins is 60. Actor Randy Quaid is 57.
Actress Yvette Freeman is 50. Singer Howard Hewett is 50.
Singer Youssou N'Dour is 48. Actor Esai Morales is 45.
Actor Christopher Titus is 43 . Actress-model Cindy
Margolis is 42. Rock singer-musician Kevin Griffin (Better
Than Ezra) is 39. Singer Keith Duffy is 33. Actress Jurnee
Srnollett is 21. Actress Brie Larson is 18. ·
Thought for Today: "Everybody favors free speech in the
slack moments when no axes are being ground." Heywood C. Broun, American journalist ( 1888-1939).

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PageA4

•

Christiane Amanpour and
Time magazine 's Richard
Stengel and whomever
else supped with Iran 's
jihadist-in-chief have told
him, if not where to go,
Diana
that they had to wash their
West
hair? Alas , no . Not the
president, not the State
Department;
not
Columbia, not the media,
there's a disconnect here. could think of a single reaFor kids still grappling son to say no to thi s thug
with moral absolutes - this sworn enemy of our
kno\Yn as right and wrong, country fighting . a covert
it's very confusing to .con- war against U.S . troops in
tend with the "alternate" Iraq , this largest sponsor
message: essentially, that of terrorism in the world;
Holocaust-denier
there is right and right this
again. For the preschoolers seeking the nuclear· tools
in the audience, this was for another Holocaust just the beginning of their and deny him an Ameriqn
· showcase on the · world
postmodern education.
It's no coincidence that stage. That's because they
this anecdote comes up in
don't
know a single reathe aftermath of Iranian
Mahmoud son. Decades of multiculPresident ·
Ahmadinejad 's obscene turalism, positing that all
caper ·across New York cultures are equally valuCity - from Columbia able, except. of cour.se, for
University (with a threat- Western culture (whi ch is
ened detour to Ground the pits) have undermined
Zero), to the United our ability to make di stincNations, _and to the. tions, to understand that
Intercontinental
Hotel being open to. everything
including
where he hosted a dinner
for 50 American guests Ahmadinejad 's presence
from academia and' the - is not the same as premedia. The same childlike serving a tolerant society.
ethos of right and right- "If we are not prepared
again - moral relativism to defend a tolerant society
- of the PC puppet show against the qnslaught of
was the institutional ratio- · the
intolerant ,"
Karl
nate
that
permitted · Popper wrote, "then the
Ahmadinejad's
terrible tolerant wi II be destroyed
puJ?lic relations triumph and tolerance with them ."
over America. I fear it has
From the puppet theatre
only convinced him that he to the· Ivy League, we are
can win more.
not prepared. Instead; we
• He came, he raved , h~ act as though Ahmadinejad
hosted . the
media. has his point of view, and
Question: Couldn't news we, or, rather, the U.S.
stars Brian Williams and government as, for

.· U.S. Embassy criticizes Senate resolution .

example, Scott Pelley of
"60 Minutes" carefully
pointed out in . his A-jad
interview ( J'v~ never
heard a reporter ·say ."sir"
more times) - has its
point of view. "This is
America at its best,"
according to Columbia ·
president Lee Bollinger.
No, it's America at its
morally paralyzed.
Tra n ·sform i ng '
Ahmadinejad into a grand
old statesman, ·some have "
noted , has parallels to the •-·
notorious 1933 Oxford "
Union resolution declaring· ·
"That this Hou se refuses to
fight for King and coun- •·
try." Among Britain's en e. '
mies, Churchill later ·
noted, "the idea of a dec a- .
· dent , degenerate Britain
took deep root and swayed
many calculations."
·
This is the recurring ·
danger. But this time the ' ·
decadence is more wide- .
spread· and the· degeneracy ,
more. entrenchtd. Why? .
The Oxford resolution was ..
passed by college sllldents .1
very yo ung peo ple.
Ahmadinejad was admit- ,_.
ted into the country. hosted .
by Co lumbia , and respect- ··
fully re ce ivec,l by the
media on the say, so of '·
supposedly
seasoned ~
adults. Which should make ·
us all cry out: Where have
all the grown-ups gone? .1

Bv STEVEN R. HURST

Boylan-told Tile Associated
Press.
Iraq's Defense Ministry
BAGHDAD - U.S. and said m an e-mail Sunday
lraqi forces killed more than afternoon that Iraqi soldiers
60 insurgent and militia had killed 44 "terrorists"
fighters in intense battles over the past 24 hours. The
over the weekend, with operations were centered in
most of the casualties Salahuddin and Diyala
believed to have been a!- provinces and around the
Qaida fighters, officials said city of Kirkuk, where the
Sunday.
ministry said· its soldiers
The U.S, Embassy, mean- had killed 40 and arrested
while, joined a broad swath eight. It said 521 fighters
of Iraqi politicians - , both were arrested altogether.
Shiite and Sunni - in critiThe ministry did not furcizing a nonbinding U.S. ther identify those killed,
Senate resolution seen here ·. but use of the word "terrora~ a recipe for splitting the ists'~ normally indicates aicountry along sectarian and Qaida.
ethnic lines.
In a separate operation,
U.S. aircraft killed more U.S. forces killed two insurthan 20 al-Qaida in Iraq gents and detained 21 others
fighters who opened fire on during weekend operations
an American air patrol "to disrupt al-Qaida in Iraq
northwest of Baghdad, the networks in the Tigris River
U.S. command said.
Valley."
'
The firefight between
Intelligence led to a raid
U.S. aircraft and the insur- early Sunday that netted
gent fighters occurred what the U.S. military
Saturday about 17 miles called 15 rogue members of
northwest of the capital, the the Mahdi Army militia at
an undisclosed Baghdad
military said.
The aircraft observed location.
The mainstream of· the
about 25 al-Qaida insurgents carrying AK-47 militia, the armed wing of
assault rifles - one bran- anti-American
cleric
dishing a rocket-propelled . Muqtada al-Sadr's organigrenade - walking mto a zation, has been ordered by
palm grove, the military the religious leader to stpp
said. ·
attacks on U.S. and Iraqi
"Shortly after spotting the forces. ·
.
men, the aircraft were fired
But many one-time memupon by the insurgent fight- bers of the group have split
ers," it said.
off and are acting indepenThe military did not say dently of ai-Sadr's controL
what kind of aircraft were Some have gone to Iran for
involved but the fact that training and are receiving
the fighters opened fire sug- weapons and financing
gests they were low-flying from the Islamic regime in
Apache helicopters. The Tehran.
command said more than 20
The Senate resolution,
of the group were killed and adopted last week, proposed
four
vehicles
were reshaping Iraq accordmg to
destroyed. No Iraqi civilians three sectarian or ethnic teror U.S. soldiers were hurt.
ritories. It calls for a limited
"Coalition forces have central government with the
dealt significant blows to bulk of power goin~ to the
Al-Qaida Iraq in recent country's Shiit~. Sunlii or
months, including the Kurdish regions, envisionrecent killing of the ing a J?Ower-sharing agreeTunisian head of the foreign rnent smular to the one that
fighter network in Iraq and · ended the 1990s war in
the blows struck in the past Bosnia. Delaware Sen.
24
hours,"
military Joseph Biden, a Democrat
spokesman Col. Steven · prestdentiai, candidate, was
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

1
•

(Diana West is a colu11inist ·
for Tire . WashingTOn 'flmes. ·
· She is the author of "The
Death of the Grown-up: How ·
America's
Arrested ..
Developmem Is Bringing
Down Westem Civilization." :.
She can be comacted via'
diana west@ verizon. net.)

.

a prime sponsor.
allowing Shiites in "the
In a highly unusual state- south, Kurds in the north
ment, the U.S. Embassy and Sunnis in the center and
said resolution would seri- west of the country io set up
ousiY. hamper Iraq 's future . regions with considerable
stability.
.
autonomous powers.
"Our goal in Iraq remains
Nevertheless, ethnic and
the same: a united, democ- sectarian turmoil have
ratic, federal Iraq that can snarled hopes of negotiating
govern, defend, and sustain such measures, especially
itself," the unsigned state- given deep divisions on
ment said.
sharing the country's vast
"Iraq's leaders must and oil resources. Oil reserves
will take the lead in deter- and existing fields would
· mining how to achieve fall mainly into the hands of
these national aspirations .... Kurds and Shiites if such a
attemp!s to t;&gt;artition .or division were to occur.
divide Iraq by mtimidation,
Also Sunday, a judge
force or other means into delayed court proceedings
three separate· states would for a second U.S. Army
produce extraordinaJ,'y suf- sniper accused. in the deaths
fering and . bloodshed," it of two unarmed Iraqi iivil...
said.
·
ians a day after a mifitary
The statement came just panel sentenced a 22-yearhours after representatives old specialist to five months
of Iraq's major political par- in· pnson for his role in the
ties denounced the Senate killings. ·
proposaL
.
Jorge G. Sandoval was
The Kurds in three north: convicted Thursday of
ern Iraqi provinces ar\! run- planting evidence on one of
ning a virtually independent the unidentified Iraqis killed
country within Iraq while last spring. He was acquitnominally maintaining rela- ted of two murder charges.
tions with Baghdad. They
Sandoval had faced five
support a formal division, charges in the deaths of the
but both Sunni and Shiite two unidentified Iraqi men.
Muslims have denounced In dramatic testimony durthe proposal.
ing the four-day court-marAt a news conference ear- tial, his colleague, Sgt. Evan
lier in the day, at least nine Vela, testified he had pulled
Iraqi political parties and the trigger and killed one of
party blocs - both Shiite the men . Sandoval was
and Sunni - said the accused of murdering.
Senate resolution would
Vela, 23, said the sniper
' diminish Iraq's sovereignty team was following orders
and said they would try to when it shot the men during
pass a law to ban any divi- two sepamte incidents near
sion of the country.
Iskandariyah, a Sunni-dom"This propos.al was based inated area south of
· on the incorrect reading and Baghda_d, on April 27 and
unrealistic estimations of May II.
Iraq's past, present and
On Sunday, a military
future," accordmg to a state- judge postponed a pretrial
ment read at a news confer- hearing for Vela for at least
ence
by
lzzat
al- a month. Vela's civilian
Shahbandar, a representa- defense lawyer had asked
tive of the secular Iraqi that the hearing be closed to
the media because of classiNational List.
On Friday, Prime Minister fied information expected to
•
Nouri al-Maliki told The be ·discussed.
The U.S. military also
Associated Press that
"dividing Iraq is a l?.roblem, announced the death of an
• and a decis1on hke that American soldier killed
Saturday in a roadside
would be a catastrophe."
. Iraq's constitution lays bombing and gunfire attack
down a federal system, in eastern Baghdad.

ALL BUSINESS: Troubled housing market
-reflected by home b11ilder's curious bond ~ring ·:
as existing homeowners .
Most buyers are saving their
cash,.anticipating better deals
NEW YORK -· Never bet to collie.
.
against the house, unless it
Then there is the mortgage
ask~ you to.
issue. A ye-ar ago, lenders
The housing rnark~t is in were handing home loans to
such bad shape that one · almost anyone who walked
homebuilder is ·even helping into their offices. Surging
investors bet its stock will defaults in loans to risky bordrop. ·
rowers ended that; lenders
That's not a misprint - it's have tightene(l standards,
exactly what Standard Pacific making it more difficult and
Corp. added as a sweetener to expensive to get a mortgage.
attract buyers for a $100 milThe Federal Reserve's larg-.
lion convertible bond offer- er-than-expected interest rate
ing. Like most in the industry, · cut on Sept. 18 - which took
the California-based builder its benchmark federal funds
has been hit hard by the real- rate down a half-point to 4.75
estate prices collapse; percent - is still too new to
eriohling bond b11yers to short really make any difference in
i,, stock was the trick it need- housing. Economists say it
ed to raise cash.
' could minimally take eight or
"With market conditions nine months for any effect to
like they are right now, they appear.
must think this is their best
Homebuilders
Lennar
approach," said Matthew Corp. and KB Home reported
Wilcox, a credit analyst at big quarterly losses this
KDP Investment Advisors · week, and their CEOs
Inc. in Montpelier, \'t. "That wamed of more tough times
will give them li~ur(lity if ahead. "We expect housing
they need it."
industry conditions to continThe unfolding reality is ue to worsen through .the end
that things are far worse than of the year and into 2008."
even the most bearish hous- KB Home CEO Jeffrey
ing industry watchers had Mezger said on Thursday.
anticipated. It's like peeling
Some companies like
an onion that's rotten to the Standard Pacific - which
core.
lost $166 million in the quarHome inventories are pil- ter ended June 30 and does
ing up, forcing big price cuts business in some of the
by new home builders as well nation 's most troubled real-

-----·---- . ·- -.--- ---·- - .--. --- -

estate markets including Suisse.. Those who buy the '
California, Florida and convertible bonds through
Arizona - apparently can't that investment firm will also ·
afford to wait until things be allowed to enter a short ·
start looking up.
position with the stock. .
.
The Irvine, Calif-based · When in.vestors short a ;
company has commitments stock, they typically borrow ·
connn~ due in the next year, shares from a brokerage
includmg a $150 million house.and sell them. They are •
unsecured bond issue that betting the price falls so they ·
must be ~paid. But raising can profitably buy the shares ·
cash is not easy for home- back for less to return lhem to ·.
builders now, said Dennis the investme111 tinn.
McGettigan, a partner at the
Buy6t:.~
of convertible :
in vestment · bank Gordian bonds often short a compaGroup LLC, which co-pro- ny 's stock to hedge their risk,
-duces the biweekly research since if the stock price doespublication, Distressed Debt n't rise the option to convert
Investor. .
the bond to stock becomes
That helps explain the worthless. What's unusual
homebuilder's announce- here is that Standard Pacific
ment Monday that it would is encouraging the short '
end its dividend program, transaction .
,
whtch wtll conserve $10 milStandard Pacitic officials '
lion a year in cash. It also dis- did not return requests for
closed the unusual nature of comment.
the terms attached to its $100
Given thai the ·offering
million convertible bond · "can be interpreted as an ·1
offering.
attempt to manage liquidity .
Those notes pay an interest at the expense of shareholder .
. rate of 6 percent and will . value,"
according
to .
mature of Oct I, 2012. The McGettigan, stock investors
notes can be converted to have pushed the company's ,
common stock at a rate of shares down more than 25
$8.75 per share, which was percent to around $5.75 each ·
more than 24 percent above since Monday's news was ·'
the company's closing stock announced. So far thi year. ·
price on Monday.
its shares have lost more than
. As . part of that offering. 75 percent of their value.
Standard Pacific agreed to
It's easy to see why sharelend 7.83 million of its shares holders don't like what they
to an affi liate of Credit see.

...

..

Spooks needed
PORTLAND -· Volunteers are need to work !he Portland
Community Center's upcoming haunted house. Volunteers
can dress up as whatever Halloween-themed character they
wantto be forthe haunted hou se open from 7-10 p.m., Oct.
19-20, and Oct. 26-27. Call Lynn Melton for more information at 985.-3524.
~
·

Evening clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health De'partment is
offe)ing evening clinic hours until 6 p.m. tomorrow. The
following services will be offe(ed: Childhood and adult
immunizations, blood pressure checks, WJC, prenatal services/pregnancy testing, head lice screenings and eradication, environmental health, vital statistics, receipt of general heal$-related questions.

Low-income smokers would
pay disproportionate share ·
of children's health plan
Bv CHARLES
BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The American Heart Association reports that 35
percent of people with no
more t11an II years of schooling are smokers. Those with
16 or more years of fonnal .:
education smoke at a 12 percent rate.
Non-Hispanic black men ~
smoke at slightly higher rates
than do non-Hispanic white
men. But the reverse is true '
among women.
The demographics of.i
smoking
and
taxation
received scant attention during last week's House and ,
Senate debates, perhap~
because many Democrats and J
Republicans agree that cigarettes are the best target for J
tax· increase if the insurance
program were to grow. A few
lawmakers, however, took a .1
swing.
"I know there is very little ·
sympathy for smokers these •
days," Rep. Jack Kingston, R- •
Ga., said during the House i
debate. "But it is still a tax ~
increase on the backs of the l
smokers. And in order to get '
enough money to pay for this,
it would require 22 million :
new smokers."
Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J.,·'·
defended putting the burden •
of expanded medical care on "
smokers.
;
"The tobacco tax is a great .,
way to pay for it," he said, '
• be
·f
1
' cause 1 you taf peop e '
who are smoking 3Qd they
smoke less, then we have less ;
.health problems."
· Rep. Jim McCrery, R-La., .
did not buy that logic. "To~
,
propose funding a growing:
program with a declining rev- ·.
enue source is, I would sub- ·.
mit, irresponsible fiscal poli- -~
cy," he said.
·
.
If the federal cigarette tax ~:
nears $1 per pack, smokers in·,
many states will · pay hefty·
sums into govemmen~ coffe~ .
unless they kick _thetr habit. ·,
On top of the federal tax, New 1
. Jersey l~v1es a $2.57 per pack ·
· tax on cigarette~, followed by
Rhode Island at $2.46.
California is qear the mid·
die, at 87 cents a pack. Three
states tax ctgarettes at less
than ~0 cents per pack. South ·
Carolina ts the lowest at 7 -"
cents.
'
t-.1-IN c~R
v'
·l'o

WASHINGTON
Congressional Democrats
have chosen an unlikely
source to pay for the bulk.of
their proposed $35 billion
increase in children's health
covera~e: people with relalively little money and educalion.
The program expansion
passed by the House and
Senate last week would be
financed with a 156 percent
increase in the ·federal cigarette tax, taking it to $1 per
pack from the current 39
cents. Low-income people
smoke mpre heavily than do
wealthier people in the United
States, making cigarette taxes
a regressive fonm of revenue.
Democrats, who wrote the
legislation and provided most
of its votes, generally portray
themselves a~ champions of
the poor. They do not dispute
tha_t the tax plan would hit
poor communities disproportionately, but they say tt is
worth it to provide health
insurance to millions of modest-income children.
All the better, they say, ·if
higher cigarette taxes discourage smoking.
"I'm very happy that we're
payin~ for this," Senate
Majonty Leader Hairy Reid,
D-Nev., said in an interview
.Friday, noting that the plan
father said.
and in the early morning. His getting this confession," would not add to the deficit.
Bv DAN SEWELL
"The health of .the children is
The Rev. William Zink, mother worked as a waitress, Rohrer said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
important," he
· pastor
of New Life and his family struggled
Byers' step-grandfather extremely
said. "In the long run, maybe
s.aid police wouldn't allow . it'll stop people from smokCINCINNATI- A west- Pentecostals. of Greenville, finallcially.
the
church
Byers
has
attendAfter
his
stepfather
died
in
him
to accompany the boy ing."
ern Ohio community still
ed
since
he
was
4,
said
it's
July,
Winans
and
her
three
during
three rounds of quesreeling· from an apartment
Congress probably will
blaze that killed five people also hard for him to think . young children moved out of tioning and that the boy was revisit the cigarette tax issue
faces a stunning develop- that the boy was responsible · a hmpeless' shelter and in not told of his right to an soon because President Bush
attorney.
ment - a I 0-year-old boy for the devastating fire in the . with Byers and his family.
has pledged to veto the proOn the night before the
"They just kept pressuring posed $35 billion expansion
stands accused of deliberate- community of 13,000 people
fire, the boy was sleeping on him," Rocky Reed said. of the State Children's Health
ly settin~ the fire that neat Indiana.
"I
felt
like
somebod~
the couch because his bed- Reed's wife is the boy's Insurance Program. The
claimed hts mother and siskicked me in the stomach, ' room was -taken, prosecutor maternal grandmother.
ter.
decade-old program helps
Zink
said
of
learning
Byers
Richard
Howell
has
said.
Reed
said
the
family
doesfamilies
buy medical coverPeople describe Timothy.
had
been
charged.
While
police
say
the
boy
n't
believe
the
allegations
Douglas Byers as shy and
age if their income is too high
KilledintheblazeSept.J6 confessed to settin~ · the frre, against Byers. Messages for to qualify for Medicaid.
easygoing, recalling seeing
him riding bikes and tossing were Byers' mother, Chanan Howell said there 1s no evi- comment were left Sunday
Bush has proposed. a more
Palmer,
30,
and
sister
dence
he
intended
to
kill
with
Greenville
police
and
a football around on a grassy
modest growth for the proHowell. ·
·
patch near his duplex home Kaysha Minnich, 8. The anyone.
gram, and both politiCal parHe was charged with five · John Graham who runs' a ties seem·inclined to pay for it
m Greenville. At church other victims were Kayla
events, he would pray for his Winans, 6, Je'Shawn Davis, delinquency counts of mur- homeless -sheiter where through a tax on an unpopular
mother, play jokes in the 5, and Jasmine Davis, 3. der and one delinquency Winans aod her children had group, cigarette smokers.
mother, Christy c·ol!nt of aggravated arson. If stayed before .· moving in
church van, and eat pizza Their
By most measures. the
Winans, 31, escaped.
he 1s fo~;~nd by the court to be with Byers' family, .said the aver:age smoker is less pri virolls and orange drink.
Susan Rie¥le, the city - responsible. for the deaths, tragedy has rocked the com- leged than the average nonNow he is held on charges
schools
supenntendenl who Howell smd; he could_ be munity "to the core:"
that could result in 'his
smoker. Nearly one-third of
Q::
' I
'
"But I think very quickly . all U.S. adults living in pover·t0&gt;
spending the rest of: his was principal of the elemen- transferred to an adult pnson
"'('
I / ',
youth in detention and possi- tary school Byers attended, after he turns 21.
. we're going· to forget ty are smokers, compared
,...
···"' }{}
...,
~ ,_/!&gt; --···
bly years beyond that behind . called the boy a well- . Defens~ attorney Dav1d because we want to forget," with 23.5 percent of those
------·-···· ·--····--··behaved student who got Rohrer s~d Thursday that he Graham said. "We want to above the poverty level,
bars.
PF.RFORMT~G AJIT5 C£~Tll£
along
well
with
JUs
peers
and
plans
to
tssue
a
derual
of_
all
move
on.
We
want
to
be
noraccording
to
government
staHis attorney has said
'Haunted House
. the charges ~t a heanng mal again."
tistics.
Byers was pressured into never caused problems.
'Byers
lived
in
a
low•
Monday
and
Will
ask
that
an
_
____;:_
_
_
_
_
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
__
_
_
making a confession he will
Casting
seek to have thrown out as . income, rough-and-tumble alleged confession not be
If the project receives
Monday, Oct. 1· • .6-8 pm
·
evidence. Family members neighborhood where sltout- used as evidence.
.Community Development
Tuesday, Oct. 2 • 6-8 pm
"l believe there was coerdon't believe the accusations ing and fistfights sometimes
Block Grant funds, that
against him, his step-grand- erupt on the street at night cion used by the officers in
money may be available for
from PageA1
The Ohio Valley
tap fees, lateral sewer line
Symphony
extensions from the house
Week is called 20120120. A will be Lindsay Matson, SRRSD, the project should to the collection line and for
Sat., Oct: 6th 8:00pm
demonstration was held last assistant Wellness Fitness receive "significant" grant the abandonment of current
22 Seats Left
funds.
week and classes are cur- diiector.
on-site systems of low ·to
Customer costs will not moderate income houseBox Office: 428 2nd Ave.
rently being held. Hoffman
In addition to the new
frorri Page A1
Galllpolla, OH (740) 446-AIITS
explained that the program demonstration ·P.rograms, be determined until the holds.
that, said Hoffman. They includes stretching and the 20/20/20 , P1lates, and completion of final engiare Pilates and Tai Chi, "not &amp;trength training along with Tai Clii, other activities car- neenng and at the time all
to be a self-defense class, cardiovascular endurance, ried out during Active . proj~ct financing is in place.
···~· but one emphasizing range providing an ail around fit- Aginj! Week included group Samtary sewer customers
Your Invited To
ness program in an hour.
walkmg on the Pomeroy would pay a monthly $ewer
of motion and endurance.
He encouraged participa- riverside track. balance bill and other costs includThe Pilates classes will
begin on Qct. 18 and will be tion in the program which training for fall prevention, ing a tap fee for service and
conducted at 6 p.m. every will be held at 5:30p.m. on and the P.A.C.E. program lateral extensiol) costs ·for
Thursday for 10 weeks. Wednesday evenings and 9 for those whose activities individual property owners.
The SRRSD will own,
There will be a .charge of a.m. on Saturday mornin~s · are limitep by arthritis.
To emphasize the impor- operate and maintain the
$35 for the full session beginning.on Oct. 17. ~'This
whicli will be taught by forces semors to enter mto a tance of fitness, Hoffnian . sewer system with individcomprehensive said his message to aging ual property owners owning
Hoffman . .Those interested regular
can either signup in advance exercise program which is adults is "by staying active and maintaining the lateral
or at the first session. Plans very beneficial," said and involved in life con- extension that connects
are also being made to offer Hoffman adding that ~'it tributes- to being happy aod their residence to the central
·99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH
Tai Chi with the time to be starts at a beginner level and . able to contribute to the collection system. The
(740) 992-1030- (740) 992-6068
· announced.
Currently is a great place to start coinmuriity." He welcomes owner of the municipal
(Tum al Speedway &amp; Follow Beech St. toward the Ohio River)
weekly classes in yoga are because it mcludes those questions for additional sewer system does. have the
Roger Manley· Owner James Moore - Certified Mechanic
being taught by Joy Bentley. components for an ' all- information and can be con- right to monitor all connections
and
sewage
entering
.
around
fitness
regime."
tacted
at
992-2161,.
extenAnother program intr&lt;fthe system.
duced during Active Aging Instructor for the program sion 233.

Boy blamed for fatal fire described as shy, easygoing

/If' BUSINESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

u~s., Iraqi forces kill more than 60 insurgents; Local Briefs ··

.'

Bv RACHEL BECK

.

Monday, October 1, 2ooi'

Going gaga over Ahmadinejad
Some ' years ago, when
our teenagers were tots,
my husband and I took
them to a puppet version
of "Goldilocks. and the
Three Bears." Or was that
"The Three Bears and
Goldilocks"? Turns out,
we were seeing "the other
side" of the old story.
Here, Goldilocks was no
wandering lass improbably
meeting tip with an even
more improbable household of bears, but a human
interloper vandalizing the
home of her fellow mammals.
When the bears came
home from their walk,
happened
upon
Goldilocks ' mischief and
chased her out of the
house, they were acting in
fright, not anger, and had
no thought of, say, devouring the heroine - which is
often . the conventionally
climactic possibility in this
and other such fairy tales.
The puppets made it clear
that the whole incident
resulted · from a lack of
communication. Everyone
- · bears, children should listen to one another because, as the puppets
sang in conclusion, "there
are two sides to every ·
story."
This really burned me
up. First, the kids in the
theatre were too young to
have their Goldilocks narrative down pat, . and,
therefore, too young to
have it messed with. And
who did these puppeteers
think they were injecting a
dose of moral relativism
into age-old tales? It's not
that Goldilocks is a rallying figure · exactly, but

~

Monday, October 1, 2007

~A
.~

~

Sewer.

Aging

AUTO. REPAIR

Grand Opening
Tuesday, October 2nd
•
at3p.m •

I

•

•

,.
•

.,..

�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily· Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992·2157

.

www.mydallyaentlnel.com,

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
esjablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free ..exercise the;eof; or abridging thefreedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct. I, the 274th day of 2007. There
are 91 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. I, 1908, Henry Ford introduced the Model T
automobile to the market.
On this date:
In 1507, Italian architect Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola
was born.
In 1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France in a secret .
treaty.
In 1907, New York's Plaza Hotel opened to the public.
In 1936, Gen. Francisco Franco was proclaimed the head
of an insurgent Spanish state.
In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees· hit his
6Ist home run to set a new record for homers in a season.
In 1964, the Free Speech Movement was launched at the
University of California at Berkeley.
In 1971, Walt Disney World opened in Orlando, Fla.
In 1987, eight people were killed when an earthquake
measuring magnitude 5.9 struck the Los Angeles area.
Five years ago: Iraq agreed to a plan for the return of
U.N. weapons inspectors for the first time in nearly four
years, but ignored U.S. demands for access to Saddarn
Hussein's palaces and other contested sites. New 'ersey
Democrats chose former Sen. Frank Lautenberg to be on
the November ballot in place of scandal-tainted Sen.
Robert Torricelli. Publisher, philanthropist and · diplomat
Walter H. Annenberg died in Wynnewood, Pa., at age 94.
One year ago: The Israeli army completed its withl)rawai
from Lebanon, clearing the way for a U.N. peacekeeping
force. Brazil's leftist President Luiz lnacio Lula da Silva
fell short of the votes·he needed to win a second term outright and was forced into a runoff, which he won by a landslide. Tiger Woods won the American Express
Championship in Chandler's Cross, England. (It was his
eighth victory of the year, making him the first player in ·
PGA Tour history to win at least eight times in three seasons.)
·
Today's Birthdays: Actor James Whitmore is 86. Former
President Jimmy Carter is 83. Pianist Roger Williams is 83.
Actor Tom Bosley is 80. Actress-singer Julie Andrews is
72. Actress Stella Stevens is 71. Rock musician Jerry
Martini (Sly and the Family Stone) is 64. Baseball Hall of
Farner Rod Carew is 62. Jazz musician Dave Holland is 61.
Actor Stephen Collins is 60. Actor Randy Quaid is 57.
Actress Yvette Freeman is 50. Singer Howard Hewett is 50.
Singer Youssou N'Dour is 48. Actor Esai Morales is 45.
Actor Christopher Titus is 43 . Actress-model Cindy
Margolis is 42. Rock singer-musician Kevin Griffin (Better
Than Ezra) is 39. Singer Keith Duffy is 33. Actress Jurnee
Srnollett is 21. Actress Brie Larson is 18. ·
Thought for Today: "Everybody favors free speech in the
slack moments when no axes are being ground." Heywood C. Broun, American journalist ( 1888-1939).

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PageA4

•

Christiane Amanpour and
Time magazine 's Richard
Stengel and whomever
else supped with Iran 's
jihadist-in-chief have told
him, if not where to go,
Diana
that they had to wash their
West
hair? Alas , no . Not the
president, not the State
Department;
not
Columbia, not the media,
there's a disconnect here. could think of a single reaFor kids still grappling son to say no to thi s thug
with moral absolutes - this sworn enemy of our
kno\Yn as right and wrong, country fighting . a covert
it's very confusing to .con- war against U.S . troops in
tend with the "alternate" Iraq , this largest sponsor
message: essentially, that of terrorism in the world;
Holocaust-denier
there is right and right this
again. For the preschoolers seeking the nuclear· tools
in the audience, this was for another Holocaust just the beginning of their and deny him an Ameriqn
· showcase on the · world
postmodern education.
It's no coincidence that stage. That's because they
this anecdote comes up in
don't
know a single reathe aftermath of Iranian
Mahmoud son. Decades of multiculPresident ·
Ahmadinejad 's obscene turalism, positing that all
caper ·across New York cultures are equally valuCity - from Columbia able, except. of cour.se, for
University (with a threat- Western culture (whi ch is
ened detour to Ground the pits) have undermined
Zero), to the United our ability to make di stincNations, _and to the. tions, to understand that
Intercontinental
Hotel being open to. everything
including
where he hosted a dinner
for 50 American guests Ahmadinejad 's presence
from academia and' the - is not the same as premedia. The same childlike serving a tolerant society.
ethos of right and right- "If we are not prepared
again - moral relativism to defend a tolerant society
- of the PC puppet show against the qnslaught of
was the institutional ratio- · the
intolerant ,"
Karl
nate
that
permitted · Popper wrote, "then the
Ahmadinejad's
terrible tolerant wi II be destroyed
puJ?lic relations triumph and tolerance with them ."
over America. I fear it has
From the puppet theatre
only convinced him that he to the· Ivy League, we are
can win more.
not prepared. Instead; we
• He came, he raved , h~ act as though Ahmadinejad
hosted . the
media. has his point of view, and
Question: Couldn't news we, or, rather, the U.S.
stars Brian Williams and government as, for

.· U.S. Embassy criticizes Senate resolution .

example, Scott Pelley of
"60 Minutes" carefully
pointed out in . his A-jad
interview ( J'v~ never
heard a reporter ·say ."sir"
more times) - has its
point of view. "This is
America at its best,"
according to Columbia ·
president Lee Bollinger.
No, it's America at its
morally paralyzed.
Tra n ·sform i ng '
Ahmadinejad into a grand
old statesman, ·some have "
noted , has parallels to the •-·
notorious 1933 Oxford "
Union resolution declaring· ·
"That this Hou se refuses to
fight for King and coun- •·
try." Among Britain's en e. '
mies, Churchill later ·
noted, "the idea of a dec a- .
· dent , degenerate Britain
took deep root and swayed
many calculations."
·
This is the recurring ·
danger. But this time the ' ·
decadence is more wide- .
spread· and the· degeneracy ,
more. entrenchtd. Why? .
The Oxford resolution was ..
passed by college sllldents .1
very yo ung peo ple.
Ahmadinejad was admit- ,_.
ted into the country. hosted .
by Co lumbia , and respect- ··
fully re ce ivec,l by the
media on the say, so of '·
supposedly
seasoned ~
adults. Which should make ·
us all cry out: Where have
all the grown-ups gone? .1

Bv STEVEN R. HURST

Boylan-told Tile Associated
Press.
Iraq's Defense Ministry
BAGHDAD - U.S. and said m an e-mail Sunday
lraqi forces killed more than afternoon that Iraqi soldiers
60 insurgent and militia had killed 44 "terrorists"
fighters in intense battles over the past 24 hours. The
over the weekend, with operations were centered in
most of the casualties Salahuddin and Diyala
believed to have been a!- provinces and around the
Qaida fighters, officials said city of Kirkuk, where the
Sunday.
ministry said· its soldiers
The U.S, Embassy, mean- had killed 40 and arrested
while, joined a broad swath eight. It said 521 fighters
of Iraqi politicians - , both were arrested altogether.
Shiite and Sunni - in critiThe ministry did not furcizing a nonbinding U.S. ther identify those killed,
Senate resolution seen here ·. but use of the word "terrora~ a recipe for splitting the ists'~ normally indicates aicountry along sectarian and Qaida.
ethnic lines.
In a separate operation,
U.S. aircraft killed more U.S. forces killed two insurthan 20 al-Qaida in Iraq gents and detained 21 others
fighters who opened fire on during weekend operations
an American air patrol "to disrupt al-Qaida in Iraq
northwest of Baghdad, the networks in the Tigris River
U.S. command said.
Valley."
'
The firefight between
Intelligence led to a raid
U.S. aircraft and the insur- early Sunday that netted
gent fighters occurred what the U.S. military
Saturday about 17 miles called 15 rogue members of
northwest of the capital, the the Mahdi Army militia at
an undisclosed Baghdad
military said.
The aircraft observed location.
The mainstream of· the
about 25 al-Qaida insurgents carrying AK-47 militia, the armed wing of
assault rifles - one bran- anti-American
cleric
dishing a rocket-propelled . Muqtada al-Sadr's organigrenade - walking mto a zation, has been ordered by
palm grove, the military the religious leader to stpp
said. ·
attacks on U.S. and Iraqi
"Shortly after spotting the forces. ·
.
men, the aircraft were fired
But many one-time memupon by the insurgent fight- bers of the group have split
ers," it said.
off and are acting indepenThe military did not say dently of ai-Sadr's controL
what kind of aircraft were Some have gone to Iran for
involved but the fact that training and are receiving
the fighters opened fire sug- weapons and financing
gests they were low-flying from the Islamic regime in
Apache helicopters. The Tehran.
command said more than 20
The Senate resolution,
of the group were killed and adopted last week, proposed
four
vehicles
were reshaping Iraq accordmg to
destroyed. No Iraqi civilians three sectarian or ethnic teror U.S. soldiers were hurt.
ritories. It calls for a limited
"Coalition forces have central government with the
dealt significant blows to bulk of power goin~ to the
Al-Qaida Iraq in recent country's Shiit~. Sunlii or
months, including the Kurdish regions, envisionrecent killing of the ing a J?Ower-sharing agreeTunisian head of the foreign rnent smular to the one that
fighter network in Iraq and · ended the 1990s war in
the blows struck in the past Bosnia. Delaware Sen.
24
hours,"
military Joseph Biden, a Democrat
spokesman Col. Steven · prestdentiai, candidate, was
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

1
•

(Diana West is a colu11inist ·
for Tire . WashingTOn 'flmes. ·
· She is the author of "The
Death of the Grown-up: How ·
America's
Arrested ..
Developmem Is Bringing
Down Westem Civilization." :.
She can be comacted via'
diana west@ verizon. net.)

.

a prime sponsor.
allowing Shiites in "the
In a highly unusual state- south, Kurds in the north
ment, the U.S. Embassy and Sunnis in the center and
said resolution would seri- west of the country io set up
ousiY. hamper Iraq 's future . regions with considerable
stability.
.
autonomous powers.
"Our goal in Iraq remains
Nevertheless, ethnic and
the same: a united, democ- sectarian turmoil have
ratic, federal Iraq that can snarled hopes of negotiating
govern, defend, and sustain such measures, especially
itself," the unsigned state- given deep divisions on
ment said.
sharing the country's vast
"Iraq's leaders must and oil resources. Oil reserves
will take the lead in deter- and existing fields would
· mining how to achieve fall mainly into the hands of
these national aspirations .... Kurds and Shiites if such a
attemp!s to t;&gt;artition .or division were to occur.
divide Iraq by mtimidation,
Also Sunday, a judge
force or other means into delayed court proceedings
three separate· states would for a second U.S. Army
produce extraordinaJ,'y suf- sniper accused. in the deaths
fering and . bloodshed," it of two unarmed Iraqi iivil...
said.
·
ians a day after a mifitary
The statement came just panel sentenced a 22-yearhours after representatives old specialist to five months
of Iraq's major political par- in· pnson for his role in the
ties denounced the Senate killings. ·
proposaL
.
Jorge G. Sandoval was
The Kurds in three north: convicted Thursday of
ern Iraqi provinces ar\! run- planting evidence on one of
ning a virtually independent the unidentified Iraqis killed
country within Iraq while last spring. He was acquitnominally maintaining rela- ted of two murder charges.
tions with Baghdad. They
Sandoval had faced five
support a formal division, charges in the deaths of the
but both Sunni and Shiite two unidentified Iraqi men.
Muslims have denounced In dramatic testimony durthe proposal.
ing the four-day court-marAt a news conference ear- tial, his colleague, Sgt. Evan
lier in the day, at least nine Vela, testified he had pulled
Iraqi political parties and the trigger and killed one of
party blocs - both Shiite the men . Sandoval was
and Sunni - said the accused of murdering.
Senate resolution would
Vela, 23, said the sniper
' diminish Iraq's sovereignty team was following orders
and said they would try to when it shot the men during
pass a law to ban any divi- two sepamte incidents near
sion of the country.
Iskandariyah, a Sunni-dom"This propos.al was based inated area south of
· on the incorrect reading and Baghda_d, on April 27 and
unrealistic estimations of May II.
Iraq's past, present and
On Sunday, a military
future," accordmg to a state- judge postponed a pretrial
ment read at a news confer- hearing for Vela for at least
ence
by
lzzat
al- a month. Vela's civilian
Shahbandar, a representa- defense lawyer had asked
tive of the secular Iraqi that the hearing be closed to
the media because of classiNational List.
On Friday, Prime Minister fied information expected to
•
Nouri al-Maliki told The be ·discussed.
The U.S. military also
Associated Press that
"dividing Iraq is a l?.roblem, announced the death of an
• and a decis1on hke that American soldier killed
Saturday in a roadside
would be a catastrophe."
. Iraq's constitution lays bombing and gunfire attack
down a federal system, in eastern Baghdad.

ALL BUSINESS: Troubled housing market
-reflected by home b11ilder's curious bond ~ring ·:
as existing homeowners .
Most buyers are saving their
cash,.anticipating better deals
NEW YORK -· Never bet to collie.
.
against the house, unless it
Then there is the mortgage
ask~ you to.
issue. A ye-ar ago, lenders
The housing rnark~t is in were handing home loans to
such bad shape that one · almost anyone who walked
homebuilder is ·even helping into their offices. Surging
investors bet its stock will defaults in loans to risky bordrop. ·
rowers ended that; lenders
That's not a misprint - it's have tightene(l standards,
exactly what Standard Pacific making it more difficult and
Corp. added as a sweetener to expensive to get a mortgage.
attract buyers for a $100 milThe Federal Reserve's larg-.
lion convertible bond offer- er-than-expected interest rate
ing. Like most in the industry, · cut on Sept. 18 - which took
the California-based builder its benchmark federal funds
has been hit hard by the real- rate down a half-point to 4.75
estate prices collapse; percent - is still too new to
eriohling bond b11yers to short really make any difference in
i,, stock was the trick it need- housing. Economists say it
ed to raise cash.
' could minimally take eight or
"With market conditions nine months for any effect to
like they are right now, they appear.
must think this is their best
Homebuilders
Lennar
approach," said Matthew Corp. and KB Home reported
Wilcox, a credit analyst at big quarterly losses this
KDP Investment Advisors · week, and their CEOs
Inc. in Montpelier, \'t. "That wamed of more tough times
will give them li~ur(lity if ahead. "We expect housing
they need it."
industry conditions to continThe unfolding reality is ue to worsen through .the end
that things are far worse than of the year and into 2008."
even the most bearish hous- KB Home CEO Jeffrey
ing industry watchers had Mezger said on Thursday.
anticipated. It's like peeling
Some companies like
an onion that's rotten to the Standard Pacific - which
core.
lost $166 million in the quarHome inventories are pil- ter ended June 30 and does
ing up, forcing big price cuts business in some of the
by new home builders as well nation 's most troubled real-

-----·---- . ·- -.--- ---·- - .--. --- -

estate markets including Suisse.. Those who buy the '
California, Florida and convertible bonds through
Arizona - apparently can't that investment firm will also ·
afford to wait until things be allowed to enter a short ·
start looking up.
position with the stock. .
.
The Irvine, Calif-based · When in.vestors short a ;
company has commitments stock, they typically borrow ·
connn~ due in the next year, shares from a brokerage
includmg a $150 million house.and sell them. They are •
unsecured bond issue that betting the price falls so they ·
must be ~paid. But raising can profitably buy the shares ·
cash is not easy for home- back for less to return lhem to ·.
builders now, said Dennis the investme111 tinn.
McGettigan, a partner at the
Buy6t:.~
of convertible :
in vestment · bank Gordian bonds often short a compaGroup LLC, which co-pro- ny 's stock to hedge their risk,
-duces the biweekly research since if the stock price doespublication, Distressed Debt n't rise the option to convert
Investor. .
the bond to stock becomes
That helps explain the worthless. What's unusual
homebuilder's announce- here is that Standard Pacific
ment Monday that it would is encouraging the short '
end its dividend program, transaction .
,
whtch wtll conserve $10 milStandard Pacitic officials '
lion a year in cash. It also dis- did not return requests for
closed the unusual nature of comment.
the terms attached to its $100
Given thai the ·offering
million convertible bond · "can be interpreted as an ·1
offering.
attempt to manage liquidity .
Those notes pay an interest at the expense of shareholder .
. rate of 6 percent and will . value,"
according
to .
mature of Oct I, 2012. The McGettigan, stock investors
notes can be converted to have pushed the company's ,
common stock at a rate of shares down more than 25
$8.75 per share, which was percent to around $5.75 each ·
more than 24 percent above since Monday's news was ·'
the company's closing stock announced. So far thi year. ·
price on Monday.
its shares have lost more than
. As . part of that offering. 75 percent of their value.
Standard Pacific agreed to
It's easy to see why sharelend 7.83 million of its shares holders don't like what they
to an affi liate of Credit see.

...

..

Spooks needed
PORTLAND -· Volunteers are need to work !he Portland
Community Center's upcoming haunted house. Volunteers
can dress up as whatever Halloween-themed character they
wantto be forthe haunted hou se open from 7-10 p.m., Oct.
19-20, and Oct. 26-27. Call Lynn Melton for more information at 985.-3524.
~
·

Evening clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health De'partment is
offe)ing evening clinic hours until 6 p.m. tomorrow. The
following services will be offe(ed: Childhood and adult
immunizations, blood pressure checks, WJC, prenatal services/pregnancy testing, head lice screenings and eradication, environmental health, vital statistics, receipt of general heal$-related questions.

Low-income smokers would
pay disproportionate share ·
of children's health plan
Bv CHARLES
BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The American Heart Association reports that 35
percent of people with no
more t11an II years of schooling are smokers. Those with
16 or more years of fonnal .:
education smoke at a 12 percent rate.
Non-Hispanic black men ~
smoke at slightly higher rates
than do non-Hispanic white
men. But the reverse is true '
among women.
The demographics of.i
smoking
and
taxation
received scant attention during last week's House and ,
Senate debates, perhap~
because many Democrats and J
Republicans agree that cigarettes are the best target for J
tax· increase if the insurance
program were to grow. A few
lawmakers, however, took a .1
swing.
"I know there is very little ·
sympathy for smokers these •
days," Rep. Jack Kingston, R- •
Ga., said during the House i
debate. "But it is still a tax ~
increase on the backs of the l
smokers. And in order to get '
enough money to pay for this,
it would require 22 million :
new smokers."
Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J.,·'·
defended putting the burden •
of expanded medical care on "
smokers.
;
"The tobacco tax is a great .,
way to pay for it," he said, '
• be
·f
1
' cause 1 you taf peop e '
who are smoking 3Qd they
smoke less, then we have less ;
.health problems."
· Rep. Jim McCrery, R-La., .
did not buy that logic. "To~
,
propose funding a growing:
program with a declining rev- ·.
enue source is, I would sub- ·.
mit, irresponsible fiscal poli- -~
cy," he said.
·
.
If the federal cigarette tax ~:
nears $1 per pack, smokers in·,
many states will · pay hefty·
sums into govemmen~ coffe~ .
unless they kick _thetr habit. ·,
On top of the federal tax, New 1
. Jersey l~v1es a $2.57 per pack ·
· tax on cigarette~, followed by
Rhode Island at $2.46.
California is qear the mid·
die, at 87 cents a pack. Three
states tax ctgarettes at less
than ~0 cents per pack. South ·
Carolina ts the lowest at 7 -"
cents.
'
t-.1-IN c~R
v'
·l'o

WASHINGTON
Congressional Democrats
have chosen an unlikely
source to pay for the bulk.of
their proposed $35 billion
increase in children's health
covera~e: people with relalively little money and educalion.
The program expansion
passed by the House and
Senate last week would be
financed with a 156 percent
increase in the ·federal cigarette tax, taking it to $1 per
pack from the current 39
cents. Low-income people
smoke mpre heavily than do
wealthier people in the United
States, making cigarette taxes
a regressive fonm of revenue.
Democrats, who wrote the
legislation and provided most
of its votes, generally portray
themselves a~ champions of
the poor. They do not dispute
tha_t the tax plan would hit
poor communities disproportionately, but they say tt is
worth it to provide health
insurance to millions of modest-income children.
All the better, they say, ·if
higher cigarette taxes discourage smoking.
"I'm very happy that we're
payin~ for this," Senate
Majonty Leader Hairy Reid,
D-Nev., said in an interview
.Friday, noting that the plan
father said.
and in the early morning. His getting this confession," would not add to the deficit.
Bv DAN SEWELL
"The health of .the children is
The Rev. William Zink, mother worked as a waitress, Rohrer said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
important," he
· pastor
of New Life and his family struggled
Byers' step-grandfather extremely
said. "In the long run, maybe
s.aid police wouldn't allow . it'll stop people from smokCINCINNATI- A west- Pentecostals. of Greenville, finallcially.
the
church
Byers
has
attendAfter
his
stepfather
died
in
him
to accompany the boy ing."
ern Ohio community still
ed
since
he
was
4,
said
it's
July,
Winans
and
her
three
during
three rounds of quesreeling· from an apartment
Congress probably will
blaze that killed five people also hard for him to think . young children moved out of tioning and that the boy was revisit the cigarette tax issue
faces a stunning develop- that the boy was responsible · a hmpeless' shelter and in not told of his right to an soon because President Bush
attorney.
ment - a I 0-year-old boy for the devastating fire in the . with Byers and his family.
has pledged to veto the proOn the night before the
"They just kept pressuring posed $35 billion expansion
stands accused of deliberate- community of 13,000 people
fire, the boy was sleeping on him," Rocky Reed said. of the State Children's Health
ly settin~ the fire that neat Indiana.
"I
felt
like
somebod~
the couch because his bed- Reed's wife is the boy's Insurance Program. The
claimed hts mother and siskicked me in the stomach, ' room was -taken, prosecutor maternal grandmother.
ter.
decade-old program helps
Zink
said
of
learning
Byers
Richard
Howell
has
said.
Reed
said
the
family
doesfamilies
buy medical coverPeople describe Timothy.
had
been
charged.
While
police
say
the
boy
n't
believe
the
allegations
Douglas Byers as shy and
age if their income is too high
KilledintheblazeSept.J6 confessed to settin~ · the frre, against Byers. Messages for to qualify for Medicaid.
easygoing, recalling seeing
him riding bikes and tossing were Byers' mother, Chanan Howell said there 1s no evi- comment were left Sunday
Bush has proposed. a more
Palmer,
30,
and
sister
dence
he
intended
to
kill
with
Greenville
police
and
a football around on a grassy
modest growth for the proHowell. ·
·
patch near his duplex home Kaysha Minnich, 8. The anyone.
gram, and both politiCal parHe was charged with five · John Graham who runs' a ties seem·inclined to pay for it
m Greenville. At church other victims were Kayla
events, he would pray for his Winans, 6, Je'Shawn Davis, delinquency counts of mur- homeless -sheiter where through a tax on an unpopular
mother, play jokes in the 5, and Jasmine Davis, 3. der and one delinquency Winans aod her children had group, cigarette smokers.
mother, Christy c·ol!nt of aggravated arson. If stayed before .· moving in
church van, and eat pizza Their
By most measures. the
Winans, 31, escaped.
he 1s fo~;~nd by the court to be with Byers' family, .said the aver:age smoker is less pri virolls and orange drink.
Susan Rie¥le, the city - responsible. for the deaths, tragedy has rocked the com- leged than the average nonNow he is held on charges
schools
supenntendenl who Howell smd; he could_ be munity "to the core:"
that could result in 'his
smoker. Nearly one-third of
Q::
' I
'
"But I think very quickly . all U.S. adults living in pover·t0&gt;
spending the rest of: his was principal of the elemen- transferred to an adult pnson
"'('
I / ',
youth in detention and possi- tary school Byers attended, after he turns 21.
. we're going· to forget ty are smokers, compared
,...
···"' }{}
...,
~ ,_/!&gt; --···
bly years beyond that behind . called the boy a well- . Defens~ attorney Dav1d because we want to forget," with 23.5 percent of those
------·-···· ·--····--··behaved student who got Rohrer s~d Thursday that he Graham said. "We want to above the poverty level,
bars.
PF.RFORMT~G AJIT5 C£~Tll£
along
well
with
JUs
peers
and
plans
to
tssue
a
derual
of_
all
move
on.
We
want
to
be
noraccording
to
government
staHis attorney has said
'Haunted House
. the charges ~t a heanng mal again."
tistics.
Byers was pressured into never caused problems.
'Byers
lived
in
a
low•
Monday
and
Will
ask
that
an
_
____;:_
_
_
_
_
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
__
_
_
making a confession he will
Casting
seek to have thrown out as . income, rough-and-tumble alleged confession not be
If the project receives
Monday, Oct. 1· • .6-8 pm
·
evidence. Family members neighborhood where sltout- used as evidence.
.Community Development
Tuesday, Oct. 2 • 6-8 pm
"l believe there was coerdon't believe the accusations ing and fistfights sometimes
Block Grant funds, that
against him, his step-grand- erupt on the street at night cion used by the officers in
money may be available for
from PageA1
The Ohio Valley
tap fees, lateral sewer line
Symphony
extensions from the house
Week is called 20120120. A will be Lindsay Matson, SRRSD, the project should to the collection line and for
Sat., Oct: 6th 8:00pm
demonstration was held last assistant Wellness Fitness receive "significant" grant the abandonment of current
22 Seats Left
funds.
week and classes are cur- diiector.
on-site systems of low ·to
Customer costs will not moderate income houseBox Office: 428 2nd Ave.
rently being held. Hoffman
In addition to the new
frorri Page A1
Galllpolla, OH (740) 446-AIITS
explained that the program demonstration ·P.rograms, be determined until the holds.
that, said Hoffman. They includes stretching and the 20/20/20 , P1lates, and completion of final engiare Pilates and Tai Chi, "not &amp;trength training along with Tai Clii, other activities car- neenng and at the time all
to be a self-defense class, cardiovascular endurance, ried out during Active . proj~ct financing is in place.
···~· but one emphasizing range providing an ail around fit- Aginj! Week included group Samtary sewer customers
Your Invited To
ness program in an hour.
walkmg on the Pomeroy would pay a monthly $ewer
of motion and endurance.
He encouraged participa- riverside track. balance bill and other costs includThe Pilates classes will
begin on Qct. 18 and will be tion in the program which training for fall prevention, ing a tap fee for service and
conducted at 6 p.m. every will be held at 5:30p.m. on and the P.A.C.E. program lateral extensiol) costs ·for
Thursday for 10 weeks. Wednesday evenings and 9 for those whose activities individual property owners.
The SRRSD will own,
There will be a .charge of a.m. on Saturday mornin~s · are limitep by arthritis.
To emphasize the impor- operate and maintain the
$35 for the full session beginning.on Oct. 17. ~'This
whicli will be taught by forces semors to enter mto a tance of fitness, Hoffnian . sewer system with individcomprehensive said his message to aging ual property owners owning
Hoffman . .Those interested regular
can either signup in advance exercise program which is adults is "by staying active and maintaining the lateral
or at the first session. Plans very beneficial," said and involved in life con- extension that connects
are also being made to offer Hoffman adding that ~'it tributes- to being happy aod their residence to the central
·99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH
Tai Chi with the time to be starts at a beginner level and . able to contribute to the collection system. The
(740) 992-1030- (740) 992-6068
· announced.
Currently is a great place to start coinmuriity." He welcomes owner of the municipal
(Tum al Speedway &amp; Follow Beech St. toward the Ohio River)
weekly classes in yoga are because it mcludes those questions for additional sewer system does. have the
Roger Manley· Owner James Moore - Certified Mechanic
being taught by Joy Bentley. components for an ' all- information and can be con- right to monitor all connections
and
sewage
entering
.
around
fitness
regime."
tacted
at
992-2161,.
extenAnother program intr&lt;fthe system.
duced during Active Aging Instructor for the program sion 233.

Boy blamed for fatal fire described as shy, easygoing

/If' BUSINESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

u~s., Iraqi forces kill more than 60 insurgents; Local Briefs ··

.'

Bv RACHEL BECK

.

Monday, October 1, 2ooi'

Going gaga over Ahmadinejad
Some ' years ago, when
our teenagers were tots,
my husband and I took
them to a puppet version
of "Goldilocks. and the
Three Bears." Or was that
"The Three Bears and
Goldilocks"? Turns out,
we were seeing "the other
side" of the old story.
Here, Goldilocks was no
wandering lass improbably
meeting tip with an even
more improbable household of bears, but a human
interloper vandalizing the
home of her fellow mammals.
When the bears came
home from their walk,
happened
upon
Goldilocks ' mischief and
chased her out of the
house, they were acting in
fright, not anger, and had
no thought of, say, devouring the heroine - which is
often . the conventionally
climactic possibility in this
and other such fairy tales.
The puppets made it clear
that the whole incident
resulted · from a lack of
communication. Everyone
- · bears, children should listen to one another because, as the puppets
sang in conclusion, "there
are two sides to every ·
story."
This really burned me
up. First, the kids in the
theatre were too young to
have their Goldilocks narrative down pat, . and,
therefore, too young to
have it messed with. And
who did these puppeteers
think they were injecting a
dose of moral relativism
into age-old tales? It's not
that Goldilocks is a rallying figure · exactly, but

~

Monday, October 1, 2007

~A
.~

~

Sewer.

Aging

AUTO. REPAIR

Grand Opening
Tuesday, October 2nd
•
at3p.m •

I

•

•

,.
•

.,..

�-·

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October t,

TELEVANGELIST HUMBARD
.ERED FOR FOCUS ON SAVING SOULS
.

BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

•

. A KR ON - T he Rev.
Rex Htl mbard was remembered Sun day at a me morial service for a min istry
th at grew from revival tents
to the new mediiun of te levision. a pionee r who
reached a wo rldwide audi -·
ence large r than an eva ngelist in the 1970s.
About 550 people gat h·
ered for Humbard 's "H(1me
Going Celebration" at Stan
Hywe t Hall and . Gardens,
ju st a few miles from the
Cathedral of Tomorrow. a
5,000- seat nonden omiqational where he broadcast
Sunday se rvi ces.
" Re x was fo cused on
one thin g: to tell peopl e
th ey need to be saved ,"
said Humbard' s broth e rin-law Way ne Jon es. who
worked in the te leva ngelist 's mini stry.
Humbard , 88, di ed of
natural causes Se1)t. "2 1 at
a South Florida hosp ital
near his Lantana home.
The last time Jones saw
Hum bard, · he was in _.a
weakened state and said :
."I told the Lord whe n I
can' t win any souls it ' s
time to go home."
The memorial ser vice
was outdoors held unde r a
large white tent. ·a fitting
setting for the former itin erant preacher.
"Man , I'm glad I didn ' t
have to put this thing up . I
put up tents for years. "
said Jones. drawing laughter.
After a decade preaching on the road, Humbard
settled in Akron in 195 2,
the same year he saw one
of the first television pro·
grams broadcast li ve in
northeast
Ohio .
He
watched a Cleveland
Indians-New
York

- . AP pllolo

Reverend Clement Humbard leads the procession of his brother Rex Humbards'casket Into
t he "h9 me going Celebration" at Stan Hywet Hall in Akron.

sands of red, white and
blue li ght bulbs.
The broadcast, al so
called
"Cathedral
of
Tomorrow ,"
developed
into a mixture of preaching and musi c, with
Humbard 's wife , Maude
Aimee, an · accomplished
gospel · s inger, and the
Cathedral Quartet as regular
performers.
The
Humbard s' children - also
performed.
By 1979, the show was
broadcast in the United
States, Canada , Europe,
the Middle East, Fa~ East,
Latin
Australia . and
America. His syndicated
program appeared on more
· TV st11tions in America
than any other program by ·
1970.
.
Humbard's
memorial
service was filled with a
.......
·· ..~.. mixture ·Qf tears, .. JaughteF-•
and son~ with Lflfry Gat! in
performnlg "Great is Thy
.
Faithfuli1ess" and ''I'll Fl,Y
Monday .. .Sunny. Highs in the upper 70s .. SG.uth wilrds..S:&lt;' ;-:Away," which haclthe audt~ •
to I 0 mph.
ence clapping and singing
Monday nigllt...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s. along.
The preacher's rose-covSouthwest winds around 5 mph in the evening ... Becoming
. light and variable.
·
·
erect casket was carried in
Tuesday, .. Sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. Southwest to a bagpiper playing
winds around 5 mph .
"Amazing Grace," and teleThesday night...Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 50s. vangelist Benny Hinn led
South winds around 5 mph.
·
.
the funeral service, calling
Wednesday and Wednesday night...Partly cloudy. Humbard's family onto the
stage to sing "Alleluia." ·
Highs in the lower 80s. Lows in th«,: upper 50s.
Thursday and Thursday night .. .Mostly clear. Highs in
"What a saint of God,"
the mid 80s. Lows in the upper 50s.
Hinn 'said. "He lived his life
Friday through Sunday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the with such purity."
mtd 80s. Lpws around 60.
·
Hinn recalled once asking
Ya nkee s baseball game
through th e window. of a
downtown
depar!ment
store and was inspired.
The son nf Pentecostal
evangeli sts, Humbard saw
the power .of television,
Jone s said, recalling how
Humbard visited a TV station manager a dozen
time-s - refusin g to give
up on hi s vision - before
he agreed to put him on
the air.
"Rex had a faith like I'd
never seen," Jones said.
" It was a gift. "
Humbard began with q
renovated theater in 1953
arid later the $4 million
domed
Cathedral , of
Tomorrow, which included vel vet drapes,
a
hydraulic stage and a
cross covered with thou-

Local weatlier

~·

Humbard how much of his
day he spends in prayer.
Humbard told him: "Benny,
my life is a prayer."
Richard Roberts, son of
preacher Oral Rolierts,
spoke and thanked the
Humbard family for what
they've meant to his family.
A letter from Christian
Coalition founder Pat
Robertson was read in
which he noted that
Humbard, at the height of
his
popularity,
was
"America's preacher."
Elizabeth Humbard spoke
of her father's love for his
family and recalled as a
child sitting in his office in
her pajamas on Saturday
evenmgs as he prepared his
sermon for the next day.
"His heart always thought
about the people that were
waking up Sunday morning
in a situation, they needed
to know God loved them,"
she said.
She spoke of the love her
father and mother shared all
the way through their 65th
anniversary in August ,
which they celebrated holding hands in the hospital.
Humbard is survived by
his wife, who was not well
enough to attend the funeral, and their four children
Rex Jr., Do'n, Charles, and
Elizabeth.
Priyate
burial
was
planned for Monday' at
Rose Hill Burial' Park in
Akron.

2007

s

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
law limiting shipments from
large out-of-state wineries
directly to Ohioans likely
means consumers will have
to pay higher prices and go
back to buying from local
·stores.
The law, added as an
amendment to the state budget in June and backed by a
lobbying effort from Ohio
winerie s and the state' s
powerful 'Wholesale Beer
and Wine Association, is
drawing the ire of a watchdog group that says the
measure was passed with
little or no public debate.
The ban, set to go into
effect Monday, stops wineries that make more than
150,000 gallons of wine a
year, or about 63,000 cases.
from directly shippin g to
Ohio consumers - a practice that began after a 2005
U.S. Supreme Court ruling
said in-state and out -of, state
wine producers must · be
. trealtl,d equal! y.
More than I 00 Ohio
wineries fall underthat limit
and are unaffected. according- to the Ohio Wine
Producers Association.
But the ban will affect
thousands of Ohioans who
liave _wine shipped from
California and other places.
It also means that Ohio
wine drinkers will likely
have to pay higher prices in
stores, as well as' miss out
on limited-edition wines
available only from out-ofstate wineries.
State senators· have said
ihey were trying to protect
Ohio's wirie - industry by
including the ban in the
budget.
"For me it was an economic-development Issue
dealing with the overall
interest of promoting Ohio
wineries," said state Sen.
Tim Grendell, a Republican
whose
district
covers
Geauga County and is home
to several wineries.
Grendell and state Sen:
Jeff Jacobson, a Daytonarea Republican, teamed up
to get the ban added in a
June 12 amendment in the
Senate Finance Committee.
It was one of. dozens of
minor changes to the budget

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

URG Invitational results, Page B2

Ohio restrictions on out~ofstate
wine shipments set to begin

'

JOE MILICIA

lnside
Rebels fall to Notre Dl\me, Page B2
Browns rough up Ravens, Page B6

bill befo re it left the committee.
Grend el! ac knowledged
that the Wholesale Beer and
Wine Association , whose
po litical action committee
has give n him $8,000 since
2004. pushed for L1e language.
"But it was the legislature
and th e legislators that
decided the right' way to
go," he said.
.
Watchdog group Ohio
Citizen Action said the bari
should have been publicly
debated before lawmaker~
voted.
.
"What we're talking
about is not just access, it's
cutting a deal that no one
actually knows about until
it's over," said Catherine
Turcer, the group's legisJa:
tive dire ctor.
But Jacobson said the
matter was thoroughly dis:
cussed among lawmakers in
June. He said he even spoke
with a lobbyist for the large
out-of-state wineries .
"This had plenty of dis•
. cussion within the Senate,"
Jacobson said. "It would be
impossible for every iss ue
in every budget bill to be
one that people spend hours
and hours talking in a public
meeting about."
One of the main architects
of the state budget Republican state Rep.
Matthew Dolan of suburban
Cleveland ~ said last week
that he thou~ht the ban
would affect JUSt retailers,
not consumers. Dolan,. the
chairman of the House
Finance Committee, sai&lt;l
he'll seek to overturn the:
ban.
,
State. Rep. Bill Seitz, a
Cincinnati Republican, said
he tried to ratse the gallon
cap from 150,000 to
250,000 before the budget
reached a joint HouseSenate conference committee, but Dolan turned him
down.
Seitz said he thought
Dolan didn't fully understand the meaning of the
measure.
"It's
understandable
because he was chairman of
finance and had a .million
things on his plate," . Seitz
said.

"
Monday,
Odober 1, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A acheWie of upcorrmg t11!t1
9Chool varsity sporting evem invOimg teams
from Meigs Coon~.
Tuudav. Oct 2
Volleyball

Meigs at A1e.cander, 6 p.m
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m.
Gon
Division Ill district meet at Marietta
Country Club, 9 a.m

Wadnesdly. Oct. 3

Cross Country- 37th annual Rio Grande Invitational
•

Runners flock to Rio
Gnlnde Invitational
BY BRVAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Yolloyball
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p,n .
Eastern at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Southam at SOuth Gall Ia, 6 p.m.

Crun Country
Southam, Meigs, Eastern at Alexander

Invite, TBA
Gon
DMston II district meet at Cook's Creek,

9a.m.
Tbul'ldiV Oct 4

.
Yolloytioll
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m. ·
Miller at Eaatern, 6 p.m.
Water1brd at Southern, 6 p.m.

Raiders come
up short against
Rock Hill, 20-6
Bv BRYAN WALT£Rs
BWALTERSii&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - A total
of 114teamsand 1,107individual competitors took part
in the 37th annual Rio
Grande Cross Country
Invitational
this
past
Saturday on the campus of
the University of Rio
Grande.
.
Swisher
O'Bryant
A dozen programs and .
120 participants showed up fi
.for the men's and women's ~~ril.i;lr Kimi Swisher
college races, while · 43 (21:52.9~) placed 12th oversquads and 402 runners
•
competed in the junior high a 11· tn-that race, the top fin- ·
contests.
isher
for
the
Lady
But the main events of the Marauders. Classmate and
. h h
teammate Devan Soulsby
d ay were on th e htg
sc ool ~laced 20th with a time of
level, where a whopping 59 2 20 79
h'l
t
d 585 thl te
k
: · • w t e - River
. a e s too Valley's · top finisher was
earns an
part ·~ four sep~~te races Ashley Fitch (22 ·29 06) .
· ·
m
two m e_ach diVIsiOn (Red 26 th.
a~d Wh1te) of boys and
Other Gallia A ad
fi _
c emy m
girls
·
h
·
·
f
·
ishers
were
Genna
Baker
. 0 ~ t e grrls stde o thmgs, . (22:58.74)· in 33rd; Aarika
Manetta and Teays Valley Stanley (23: 10.92) in 38th;
(OH) came away_as res~c- Lauren Godwin (24:35.62)
live team ':hampiOns of 'the in 56th; Sara Ebersfeld
( 26 :02 _60) in 82 nd; and
red and white d1vrswns.
Em1ly E1ckholt (Logan Jessica Willett (3 2.52 SS) 111
.
Eh~) .won the st,ronger. Re~ 99 th.
· ·
DIVISIOn race With an mdtL
dk
. ·
vidual time of 19 . 28 13
aurenA ms led the first
Logan's Tisha Gro~e :.Va~ half of the race, but dropJ?Cd
,
.
out of the competition
1he ~op •e.mal_e runner ~n the before it ended. It is the secWhit~ D~VISIOn, postmg a ond time this season Adkins
wmm.ng Ume of 20:47 ;6~- has failed to finish a race at
the nm\h f~stest g1rls lime Rio Grande.
overal! m h1g~ school.
Other Meigs . finishers
Morgan
Lentes
. Manetta, With a l~rut;J tally were
of 51_, won the gtrls Red (23:59.84) in 50th; Jessica
Dr vision byl..£8 pomts over Holliday (26:01.1 1) in 81 st;
runner-up Humcane (79) . and Olivia Bevan (29:26.20)
Athens ( l 23) was thrrd, fol- in 93rd. Kelsey Sands
lowed by Loga~ Elm (143) (27:50.88) also placed 87th
and ?th-place R1pley (148). overall for the Lady Raiders.
Galha . Academy (171) was
In the White Division,
moth m the 10-team field, Teays Valley posted a winfimshing 19 r.omts ahead of ning team score of 85,
last-place Me1g,s \19!J).
beating out Logan (I 00) by
Blue Angels JUmor Lee 15 places . Wheelersburg
Ann T?w~s~nd · placed (102) was third by tief~urth mdiVIdually, the breaker, with Beloit West
h1ghest of any area runner at Branch
( 102)
and
the event. Townsend's time Southeastern (135) round-of 20:21)9 was the fourth ing out the top-fiv.e .
f~stest h1gh school female
Only three local athletes
ume at the eve~t, as ~ell as competed in this race, with
6th overall - mcludmg the Eastern
sophomore
Audrianna
Pullins
college event
_ Townsend was preceeded (24:27.82) doing the best
by . Erckholt, runner-up - with a 33rd-place effort.
Em1ly Skidmore (19:57.71) Senior
Jule
Draehn
of . Al~x~nder
and (2~: 17 .12) was next for the
Hurncane s ~lex, D~nt Lady Eagles with a 69th(20: ~8.94). Manetta s Em1ly place finish, while Southern
Gamson (20:23.63) rounded
Please 'see Invite, B:Z
out the Red Division top-

PEDRO - Close, ·but no
proverbial cigar: .
· River Valley battled
tooth-and-nail for 45-plus
minutes Friday night with
host Rock Hill during the
start of Ohio Valley
Conference football play.
Unfortunately
for
the
Raiders (1 5,
0-1
OVC), you
play
48
minutes of
regulation.
T h e
R:edmen (51,
14)),
behind
some late
Curnutte
heroics '
from Wes
Pierson, scored a pair of
touchdowns with under
three minutes remaining as
the Red and White dodged a
major upset bid during a 20- ·
6 Week 6 victory at RHHS.
Tied six-all witli 2:41 left
in the fourth quarter, things
looked great for the Silver
and Black after a punt
pinned Rock Hill back to its
own five-yard line.
Pierson took the opening
·play of that drive and scampered 95 yards to paydirt,
gil(ing the Redmen a 13-6
advantage
with
2:27
remaining in the game.
River Valley, on the ensuing drive, marched down to
· its own 31 with 54 seconds
left, but Pierson picked off a
pass and returned it 69
yards for another score with
JUSt 41 ticks left on the
clock.
The Raiders churned out
269 yards of total offense,
including 157 rushing yards
in the setback. The guests
were plus.one in turnovers
and also had 15 first downs .
in the setback.
Bv MARK WtWAMS
Tyler Canaday led .t hat
. SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl
ground assault witl! -72
yards on 15 carries, folRIO .GRANDE - The
lowed by Clayton Curnutte
' University of Rio Grande
with I 0 carries for 30 yards.
men's and women's cross
Curnutte, who threw for I00
copntry
teams ran extremely
yards on 7-of-16 passing,
well
on
the home course in
also had the Raiders only
the 37th Annual Rio Grande
score on a 4-yard fourth
Invitational at the Stanley
quarter TD run that tied the
Evans Field Complex on
game at six. The game was
Saturday · morning. The
scoreless at halftime.
Redmen finished fourth out
Jordan Dee! and Cody
of seven teams while the
McAvena each ran the ball
women had only four
six.times. Deel produced 26
healthy runners, but all of
yards on the evening while
them captured top 20 finishMcAvena finished with 27 .
es .
Ryan Henry also had two
Three of the Redwomen
~otes for as many yards.
claimed top-10 positions
Eric Caldwell, one of six
and two were in the top.fi ve
wideouts to catch a pass, led
overall.
Sophomore Stacey Arnett
·
·
AP photo
RVHS with one grab for 24
yards. Henry had two catch- NASCAR drlvt::r Greg Biffle celebrates winning the Li.felock 400 In Victory Lane at Kansas contrnued her outstanding
season by finishin g . third
es'for 21 yanls, followed by Speedway on Sunday in Kansas City, Kan.
with a time of 20:59.93.
Zak Deel with
two recep,
Freshman Beth Hysell was
Pieese
Ralden, B6
ri ght behind Arnett in fourth
place ,with a time · of
KANSAS CJT.Y, Kan. Cup champion Jimmie have set up an ovenime fin - 2 1:04.43. It was th e best
(AP) - Greg Biffle scored Johnson reclaimed- the ish, but NASCAR declined outing of Hysell 's career to
CoNTACT
to restart the race because of date .
his first victory oftlie season points Iqd.
Sunday ,_ even though his
· Freshman
Jordan
He was one of the few· impending darkness.
OVP Scorellne (5 p. m.~1 a.m.l
The evenl was finished Kennedy finished in seventh
car ran short on fuel before Chase drivers to make · it
crossing the finish line - in unscathed to the finish line, under caution , and Biffle's position and covered the
. 1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
a wild race that jumbled the and when he got there, he car began to spuuer on the :u :mile course in 2 1:17.79.
Filii'_,. f·74Q-446-3008
Chase for the championship questioned the fini shing last lap. As his car coasted Freshman Hillery Haines
E·mltl :- sportsOmydallysenllnel.com
standings.
toward the line, local star ran 18th overall with a time
order: - .
Spo!ll Sial!
The Chase field imploded
The race ended under cau- Clint Bowyer and Johnson of 23: 18.24.
There were 46 runners in
Bryan WaJt.ere, Sports Writer at Kansas Speedway, where tion becau se Juan Pablo both passed him before he
rain and impending darkness Montoya blew a tire with reached the checkered fl ag. th e women's race. Kati e
(740) ~~2. 0&gt;&lt;1. 33
bwjlltero.m)'dalty1rlbune.com
Alderson
cut _the race short by 85 four laps to go in an event Johnson immedi ate ly said Antonik · of
.
miles. Seven of the 12 Chase that NASCAR had already Kansas native Bowyer Broaddus was the overall
Lany Crum, Sports WrHer
winner with a time of
drivers
finished 30th or shortened by 57 laps.
(740) «6·2342, o&gt;&lt;1. 33
Please
see
BIHie,
86
lcrumOmydallyregister.com
20:03.42.·Montoya's
cauti
on
should
worse, and defending Nextel

ABOVE -The
start of the boys'
White Division race
saw 152 runners
head up the first
hill Saturday during
the 2007 Rio
Grande Cross
Country Invitational
at Rio Grande.
_There were 1,107
total competitors
at the, 37th annual
event.

LEFT- Meigs
teammates
Morgan Kennedy,
left, and Jacob
Riffle lead a pack
• of runners down a
hill during
'Saturday's 37th
annual Rio Grande
Cross Country
Invitational -at Rio
Grande.
Bryan Watterslpholos

Rio Grande fares well
at 2007 Rio Invitational

•

Biftle wins at Kansas Speedway

,..e

US

•

'

-,.-·-- -·-- -··

.--·

~-·

.'.

Arnett

Spencer

Alderson Broddus won ,
the wom.en' s event with 25';
points, followed by Bethany ·
College with 50 points. The
U ni'versity of Charl.eston
was third with 79 points
while West Virginia Tech
and Kentucky Christian
each scored I 0 I points.
On the men 's side, the
Redmen fini shed fourth as a
team with 120 points and
produced their best effort
thi s season . Fre shman
Matthew Spencer continued
his impressive start to his
college career as he fini shed
12th overall, with a time of
28:26 .62. .
Sophomore Kyle Hively
recorded a 26th, place fmi sh
and his time fot the S-mile
course was 29:24.52. Senior
Philip Webb garnered a 31 st
place fini sh with ,a time of
29:44.45.
Othe r Redmen . results:
Jordan Cunningham, 42nd,
with a personal best
3 1:24.54; Zach Nelson, 45th

Ple1se see Rio, B:Z

•

�-·

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October t,

TELEVANGELIST HUMBARD
.ERED FOR FOCUS ON SAVING SOULS
.

BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

•

. A KR ON - T he Rev.
Rex Htl mbard was remembered Sun day at a me morial service for a min istry
th at grew from revival tents
to the new mediiun of te levision. a pionee r who
reached a wo rldwide audi -·
ence large r than an eva ngelist in the 1970s.
About 550 people gat h·
ered for Humbard 's "H(1me
Going Celebration" at Stan
Hywe t Hall and . Gardens,
ju st a few miles from the
Cathedral of Tomorrow. a
5,000- seat nonden omiqational where he broadcast
Sunday se rvi ces.
" Re x was fo cused on
one thin g: to tell peopl e
th ey need to be saved ,"
said Humbard' s broth e rin-law Way ne Jon es. who
worked in the te leva ngelist 's mini stry.
Humbard , 88, di ed of
natural causes Se1)t. "2 1 at
a South Florida hosp ital
near his Lantana home.
The last time Jones saw
Hum bard, · he was in _.a
weakened state and said :
."I told the Lord whe n I
can' t win any souls it ' s
time to go home."
The memorial ser vice
was outdoors held unde r a
large white tent. ·a fitting
setting for the former itin erant preacher.
"Man , I'm glad I didn ' t
have to put this thing up . I
put up tents for years. "
said Jones. drawing laughter.
After a decade preaching on the road, Humbard
settled in Akron in 195 2,
the same year he saw one
of the first television pro·
grams broadcast li ve in
northeast
Ohio .
He
watched a Cleveland
Indians-New
York

- . AP pllolo

Reverend Clement Humbard leads the procession of his brother Rex Humbards'casket Into
t he "h9 me going Celebration" at Stan Hywet Hall in Akron.

sands of red, white and
blue li ght bulbs.
The broadcast, al so
called
"Cathedral
of
Tomorrow ,"
developed
into a mixture of preaching and musi c, with
Humbard 's wife , Maude
Aimee, an · accomplished
gospel · s inger, and the
Cathedral Quartet as regular
performers.
The
Humbard s' children - also
performed.
By 1979, the show was
broadcast in the United
States, Canada , Europe,
the Middle East, Fa~ East,
Latin
Australia . and
America. His syndicated
program appeared on more
· TV st11tions in America
than any other program by ·
1970.
.
Humbard's
memorial
service was filled with a
.......
·· ..~.. mixture ·Qf tears, .. JaughteF-•
and son~ with Lflfry Gat! in
performnlg "Great is Thy
.
Faithfuli1ess" and ''I'll Fl,Y
Monday .. .Sunny. Highs in the upper 70s .. SG.uth wilrds..S:&lt;' ;-:Away," which haclthe audt~ •
to I 0 mph.
ence clapping and singing
Monday nigllt...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s. along.
The preacher's rose-covSouthwest winds around 5 mph in the evening ... Becoming
. light and variable.
·
·
erect casket was carried in
Tuesday, .. Sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. Southwest to a bagpiper playing
winds around 5 mph .
"Amazing Grace," and teleThesday night...Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 50s. vangelist Benny Hinn led
South winds around 5 mph.
·
.
the funeral service, calling
Wednesday and Wednesday night...Partly cloudy. Humbard's family onto the
stage to sing "Alleluia." ·
Highs in the lower 80s. Lows in th«,: upper 50s.
Thursday and Thursday night .. .Mostly clear. Highs in
"What a saint of God,"
the mid 80s. Lows in the upper 50s.
Hinn 'said. "He lived his life
Friday through Sunday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the with such purity."
mtd 80s. Lpws around 60.
·
Hinn recalled once asking
Ya nkee s baseball game
through th e window. of a
downtown
depar!ment
store and was inspired.
The son nf Pentecostal
evangeli sts, Humbard saw
the power .of television,
Jone s said, recalling how
Humbard visited a TV station manager a dozen
time-s - refusin g to give
up on hi s vision - before
he agreed to put him on
the air.
"Rex had a faith like I'd
never seen," Jones said.
" It was a gift. "
Humbard began with q
renovated theater in 1953
arid later the $4 million
domed
Cathedral , of
Tomorrow, which included vel vet drapes,
a
hydraulic stage and a
cross covered with thou-

Local weatlier

~·

Humbard how much of his
day he spends in prayer.
Humbard told him: "Benny,
my life is a prayer."
Richard Roberts, son of
preacher Oral Rolierts,
spoke and thanked the
Humbard family for what
they've meant to his family.
A letter from Christian
Coalition founder Pat
Robertson was read in
which he noted that
Humbard, at the height of
his
popularity,
was
"America's preacher."
Elizabeth Humbard spoke
of her father's love for his
family and recalled as a
child sitting in his office in
her pajamas on Saturday
evenmgs as he prepared his
sermon for the next day.
"His heart always thought
about the people that were
waking up Sunday morning
in a situation, they needed
to know God loved them,"
she said.
She spoke of the love her
father and mother shared all
the way through their 65th
anniversary in August ,
which they celebrated holding hands in the hospital.
Humbard is survived by
his wife, who was not well
enough to attend the funeral, and their four children
Rex Jr., Do'n, Charles, and
Elizabeth.
Priyate
burial
was
planned for Monday' at
Rose Hill Burial' Park in
Akron.

2007

s

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
law limiting shipments from
large out-of-state wineries
directly to Ohioans likely
means consumers will have
to pay higher prices and go
back to buying from local
·stores.
The law, added as an
amendment to the state budget in June and backed by a
lobbying effort from Ohio
winerie s and the state' s
powerful 'Wholesale Beer
and Wine Association, is
drawing the ire of a watchdog group that says the
measure was passed with
little or no public debate.
The ban, set to go into
effect Monday, stops wineries that make more than
150,000 gallons of wine a
year, or about 63,000 cases.
from directly shippin g to
Ohio consumers - a practice that began after a 2005
U.S. Supreme Court ruling
said in-state and out -of, state
wine producers must · be
. trealtl,d equal! y.
More than I 00 Ohio
wineries fall underthat limit
and are unaffected. according- to the Ohio Wine
Producers Association.
But the ban will affect
thousands of Ohioans who
liave _wine shipped from
California and other places.
It also means that Ohio
wine drinkers will likely
have to pay higher prices in
stores, as well as' miss out
on limited-edition wines
available only from out-ofstate wineries.
State senators· have said
ihey were trying to protect
Ohio's wirie - industry by
including the ban in the
budget.
"For me it was an economic-development Issue
dealing with the overall
interest of promoting Ohio
wineries," said state Sen.
Tim Grendell, a Republican
whose
district
covers
Geauga County and is home
to several wineries.
Grendell and state Sen:
Jeff Jacobson, a Daytonarea Republican, teamed up
to get the ban added in a
June 12 amendment in the
Senate Finance Committee.
It was one of. dozens of
minor changes to the budget

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

URG Invitational results, Page B2

Ohio restrictions on out~ofstate
wine shipments set to begin

'

JOE MILICIA

lnside
Rebels fall to Notre Dl\me, Page B2
Browns rough up Ravens, Page B6

bill befo re it left the committee.
Grend el! ac knowledged
that the Wholesale Beer and
Wine Association , whose
po litical action committee
has give n him $8,000 since
2004. pushed for L1e language.
"But it was the legislature
and th e legislators that
decided the right' way to
go," he said.
.
Watchdog group Ohio
Citizen Action said the bari
should have been publicly
debated before lawmaker~
voted.
.
"What we're talking
about is not just access, it's
cutting a deal that no one
actually knows about until
it's over," said Catherine
Turcer, the group's legisJa:
tive dire ctor.
But Jacobson said the
matter was thoroughly dis:
cussed among lawmakers in
June. He said he even spoke
with a lobbyist for the large
out-of-state wineries .
"This had plenty of dis•
. cussion within the Senate,"
Jacobson said. "It would be
impossible for every iss ue
in every budget bill to be
one that people spend hours
and hours talking in a public
meeting about."
One of the main architects
of the state budget Republican state Rep.
Matthew Dolan of suburban
Cleveland ~ said last week
that he thou~ht the ban
would affect JUSt retailers,
not consumers. Dolan,. the
chairman of the House
Finance Committee, sai&lt;l
he'll seek to overturn the:
ban.
,
State. Rep. Bill Seitz, a
Cincinnati Republican, said
he tried to ratse the gallon
cap from 150,000 to
250,000 before the budget
reached a joint HouseSenate conference committee, but Dolan turned him
down.
Seitz said he thought
Dolan didn't fully understand the meaning of the
measure.
"It's
understandable
because he was chairman of
finance and had a .million
things on his plate," . Seitz
said.

"
Monday,
Odober 1, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A acheWie of upcorrmg t11!t1
9Chool varsity sporting evem invOimg teams
from Meigs Coon~.
Tuudav. Oct 2
Volleyball

Meigs at A1e.cander, 6 p.m
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m.
Gon
Division Ill district meet at Marietta
Country Club, 9 a.m

Wadnesdly. Oct. 3

Cross Country- 37th annual Rio Grande Invitational
•

Runners flock to Rio
Gnlnde Invitational
BY BRVAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Yolloyball
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p,n .
Eastern at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Southam at SOuth Gall Ia, 6 p.m.

Crun Country
Southam, Meigs, Eastern at Alexander

Invite, TBA
Gon
DMston II district meet at Cook's Creek,

9a.m.
Tbul'ldiV Oct 4

.
Yolloytioll
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m. ·
Miller at Eaatern, 6 p.m.
Water1brd at Southern, 6 p.m.

Raiders come
up short against
Rock Hill, 20-6
Bv BRYAN WALT£Rs
BWALTERSii&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - A total
of 114teamsand 1,107individual competitors took part
in the 37th annual Rio
Grande Cross Country
Invitational
this
past
Saturday on the campus of
the University of Rio
Grande.
.
Swisher
O'Bryant
A dozen programs and .
120 participants showed up fi
.for the men's and women's ~~ril.i;lr Kimi Swisher
college races, while · 43 (21:52.9~) placed 12th oversquads and 402 runners
•
competed in the junior high a 11· tn-that race, the top fin- ·
contests.
isher
for
the
Lady
But the main events of the Marauders. Classmate and
. h h
teammate Devan Soulsby
d ay were on th e htg
sc ool ~laced 20th with a time of
level, where a whopping 59 2 20 79
h'l
t
d 585 thl te
k
: · • w t e - River
. a e s too Valley's · top finisher was
earns an
part ·~ four sep~~te races Ashley Fitch (22 ·29 06) .
· ·
m
two m e_ach diVIsiOn (Red 26 th.
a~d Wh1te) of boys and
Other Gallia A ad
fi _
c emy m
girls
·
h
·
·
f
·
ishers
were
Genna
Baker
. 0 ~ t e grrls stde o thmgs, . (22:58.74)· in 33rd; Aarika
Manetta and Teays Valley Stanley (23: 10.92) in 38th;
(OH) came away_as res~c- Lauren Godwin (24:35.62)
live team ':hampiOns of 'the in 56th; Sara Ebersfeld
( 26 :02 _60) in 82 nd; and
red and white d1vrswns.
Em1ly E1ckholt (Logan Jessica Willett (3 2.52 SS) 111
.
Eh~) .won the st,ronger. Re~ 99 th.
· ·
DIVISIOn race With an mdtL
dk
. ·
vidual time of 19 . 28 13
aurenA ms led the first
Logan's Tisha Gro~e :.Va~ half of the race, but dropJ?Cd
,
.
out of the competition
1he ~op •e.mal_e runner ~n the before it ended. It is the secWhit~ D~VISIOn, postmg a ond time this season Adkins
wmm.ng Ume of 20:47 ;6~- has failed to finish a race at
the nm\h f~stest g1rls lime Rio Grande.
overal! m h1g~ school.
Other Meigs . finishers
Morgan
Lentes
. Manetta, With a l~rut;J tally were
of 51_, won the gtrls Red (23:59.84) in 50th; Jessica
Dr vision byl..£8 pomts over Holliday (26:01.1 1) in 81 st;
runner-up Humcane (79) . and Olivia Bevan (29:26.20)
Athens ( l 23) was thrrd, fol- in 93rd. Kelsey Sands
lowed by Loga~ Elm (143) (27:50.88) also placed 87th
and ?th-place R1pley (148). overall for the Lady Raiders.
Galha . Academy (171) was
In the White Division,
moth m the 10-team field, Teays Valley posted a winfimshing 19 r.omts ahead of ning team score of 85,
last-place Me1g,s \19!J).
beating out Logan (I 00) by
Blue Angels JUmor Lee 15 places . Wheelersburg
Ann T?w~s~nd · placed (102) was third by tief~urth mdiVIdually, the breaker, with Beloit West
h1ghest of any area runner at Branch
( 102)
and
the event. Townsend's time Southeastern (135) round-of 20:21)9 was the fourth ing out the top-fiv.e .
f~stest h1gh school female
Only three local athletes
ume at the eve~t, as ~ell as competed in this race, with
6th overall - mcludmg the Eastern
sophomore
Audrianna
Pullins
college event
_ Townsend was preceeded (24:27.82) doing the best
by . Erckholt, runner-up - with a 33rd-place effort.
Em1ly Skidmore (19:57.71) Senior
Jule
Draehn
of . Al~x~nder
and (2~: 17 .12) was next for the
Hurncane s ~lex, D~nt Lady Eagles with a 69th(20: ~8.94). Manetta s Em1ly place finish, while Southern
Gamson (20:23.63) rounded
Please 'see Invite, B:Z
out the Red Division top-

PEDRO - Close, ·but no
proverbial cigar: .
· River Valley battled
tooth-and-nail for 45-plus
minutes Friday night with
host Rock Hill during the
start of Ohio Valley
Conference football play.
Unfortunately
for
the
Raiders (1 5,
0-1
OVC), you
play
48
minutes of
regulation.
T h e
R:edmen (51,
14)),
behind
some late
Curnutte
heroics '
from Wes
Pierson, scored a pair of
touchdowns with under
three minutes remaining as
the Red and White dodged a
major upset bid during a 20- ·
6 Week 6 victory at RHHS.
Tied six-all witli 2:41 left
in the fourth quarter, things
looked great for the Silver
and Black after a punt
pinned Rock Hill back to its
own five-yard line.
Pierson took the opening
·play of that drive and scampered 95 yards to paydirt,
gil(ing the Redmen a 13-6
advantage
with
2:27
remaining in the game.
River Valley, on the ensuing drive, marched down to
· its own 31 with 54 seconds
left, but Pierson picked off a
pass and returned it 69
yards for another score with
JUSt 41 ticks left on the
clock.
The Raiders churned out
269 yards of total offense,
including 157 rushing yards
in the setback. The guests
were plus.one in turnovers
and also had 15 first downs .
in the setback.
Bv MARK WtWAMS
Tyler Canaday led .t hat
. SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl
ground assault witl! -72
yards on 15 carries, folRIO .GRANDE - The
lowed by Clayton Curnutte
' University of Rio Grande
with I 0 carries for 30 yards.
men's and women's cross
Curnutte, who threw for I00
copntry
teams ran extremely
yards on 7-of-16 passing,
well
on
the home course in
also had the Raiders only
the 37th Annual Rio Grande
score on a 4-yard fourth
Invitational at the Stanley
quarter TD run that tied the
Evans Field Complex on
game at six. The game was
Saturday · morning. The
scoreless at halftime.
Redmen finished fourth out
Jordan Dee! and Cody
of seven teams while the
McAvena each ran the ball
women had only four
six.times. Deel produced 26
healthy runners, but all of
yards on the evening while
them captured top 20 finishMcAvena finished with 27 .
es .
Ryan Henry also had two
Three of the Redwomen
~otes for as many yards.
claimed top-10 positions
Eric Caldwell, one of six
and two were in the top.fi ve
wideouts to catch a pass, led
overall.
Sophomore Stacey Arnett
·
·
AP photo
RVHS with one grab for 24
yards. Henry had two catch- NASCAR drlvt::r Greg Biffle celebrates winning the Li.felock 400 In Victory Lane at Kansas contrnued her outstanding
season by finishin g . third
es'for 21 yanls, followed by Speedway on Sunday in Kansas City, Kan.
with a time of 20:59.93.
Zak Deel with
two recep,
Freshman Beth Hysell was
Pieese
Ralden, B6
ri ght behind Arnett in fourth
place ,with a time · of
KANSAS CJT.Y, Kan. Cup champion Jimmie have set up an ovenime fin - 2 1:04.43. It was th e best
(AP) - Greg Biffle scored Johnson reclaimed- the ish, but NASCAR declined outing of Hysell 's career to
CoNTACT
to restart the race because of date .
his first victory oftlie season points Iqd.
Sunday ,_ even though his
· Freshman
Jordan
He was one of the few· impending darkness.
OVP Scorellne (5 p. m.~1 a.m.l
The evenl was finished Kennedy finished in seventh
car ran short on fuel before Chase drivers to make · it
crossing the finish line - in unscathed to the finish line, under caution , and Biffle's position and covered the
. 1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
a wild race that jumbled the and when he got there, he car began to spuuer on the :u :mile course in 2 1:17.79.
Filii'_,. f·74Q-446-3008
Chase for the championship questioned the fini shing last lap. As his car coasted Freshman Hillery Haines
E·mltl :- sportsOmydallysenllnel.com
standings.
toward the line, local star ran 18th overall with a time
order: - .
Spo!ll Sial!
The Chase field imploded
The race ended under cau- Clint Bowyer and Johnson of 23: 18.24.
There were 46 runners in
Bryan WaJt.ere, Sports Writer at Kansas Speedway, where tion becau se Juan Pablo both passed him before he
rain and impending darkness Montoya blew a tire with reached the checkered fl ag. th e women's race. Kati e
(740) ~~2. 0&gt;&lt;1. 33
bwjlltero.m)'dalty1rlbune.com
Alderson
cut _the race short by 85 four laps to go in an event Johnson immedi ate ly said Antonik · of
.
miles. Seven of the 12 Chase that NASCAR had already Kansas native Bowyer Broaddus was the overall
Lany Crum, Sports WrHer
winner with a time of
drivers
finished 30th or shortened by 57 laps.
(740) «6·2342, o&gt;&lt;1. 33
Please
see
BIHie,
86
lcrumOmydallyregister.com
20:03.42.·Montoya's
cauti
on
should
worse, and defending Nextel

ABOVE -The
start of the boys'
White Division race
saw 152 runners
head up the first
hill Saturday during
the 2007 Rio
Grande Cross
Country Invitational
at Rio Grande.
_There were 1,107
total competitors
at the, 37th annual
event.

LEFT- Meigs
teammates
Morgan Kennedy,
left, and Jacob
Riffle lead a pack
• of runners down a
hill during
'Saturday's 37th
annual Rio Grande
Cross Country
Invitational -at Rio
Grande.
Bryan Watterslpholos

Rio Grande fares well
at 2007 Rio Invitational

•

Biftle wins at Kansas Speedway

,..e

US

•

'

-,.-·-- -·-- -··

.--·

~-·

.'.

Arnett

Spencer

Alderson Broddus won ,
the wom.en' s event with 25';
points, followed by Bethany ·
College with 50 points. The
U ni'versity of Charl.eston
was third with 79 points
while West Virginia Tech
and Kentucky Christian
each scored I 0 I points.
On the men 's side, the
Redmen fini shed fourth as a
team with 120 points and
produced their best effort
thi s season . Fre shman
Matthew Spencer continued
his impressive start to his
college career as he fini shed
12th overall, with a time of
28:26 .62. .
Sophomore Kyle Hively
recorded a 26th, place fmi sh
and his time fot the S-mile
course was 29:24.52. Senior
Philip Webb garnered a 31 st
place fini sh with ,a time of
29:44.45.
Othe r Redmen . results:
Jordan Cunningham, 42nd,
with a personal best
3 1:24.54; Zach Nelson, 45th

Ple1se see Rio, B:Z

•

�.,. ,
Page 82 • The.Daily Sentinel

~ebels
BY lARRY

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October t,

2007

Monday, October 1, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com
·~

·.'

drop third-straigbt, fall to Portsmouth Notre Dame, 50-18

CRUM

LCRU M@MYDAILY REGISTER .COM

PORTSMOUTH - The
Notre Dame in South Bend
may be struggling to score;
but the Notre Dame in
.Portsmouth is having littl e
trouble putting points on th ~
board.
·
Portsmouth Not re Dame
(3-3) had 436 yards on the
ground wi~h two backs
goinj; over 100 yards in a
dommating 50- 18 v ictory
over visiting South Gallia
(3-3) Saturday ni ght at
Sparl.an Field.
While the Titans finally
get to .500 on the season,
South Gallia has now lost
three straight while giving
up the most points smce a
51-20 loss against Danville
in the Divi sion IV playoffs

last season. It was also the
larges t margin of victory
against the Rebels since a
playoff g ame against River
Ill 2005.
Despite the tou~h loss.
Saturday was the fmt time
the Rebels have lost to a
team from Ohio during the
regular season sinee week
four of the 200,:; sea son
Symmes
against rival
Valley.
Other than that, the Rebels
found lillie to be liappy
about.
Notre Dame 's Craig
William s had · 214 yards
rushing and two touchdowns, . teammate · Jo.
Emnetl had 115 yards on the
ground and a score and Joel
Willi ams had two touchdowns and 67 yards rushing
to lead the potent Titan

attack that averaged nearl y Gallia threw at the Titans, it
'nine yards per carry on the was a pair of Williams' that
night.
·
stole the show. The two
Titan quarterback Trey players had half of the Notre
L a Vall~y added 34 yard s Dame
touchdown s and
thro•Jgh the air on 3-of- 7 accounted for a majority of
passing.
the yards for the home
So uth Gallia, who did squad.
most of its scoring in the
And they wasted little
fourth quarier,. was led by time getting their show on
Vance fe llure wi th 92 yards the road.
on 14 · carries. Nathan
Joel Williams scored the
Bainter added 56 yards on first touchdown of the game
seven carries and John Wells after a drive that put the
ran for 58 yards. Wells also Titan s up 7-0 at the 7:32
threw for 91 yards on 5-for-. mark of the first quarter, but
II passing woth two picks. had to wait two more. quarTyler Dunc an led the ters for his encore.
With just the single touch~
receiving corp for SGHS
with one catch for 34 yards. down highlighting the first
Bainter
and .
Caleb quarter. South Galli a opened
McLanahan also hauled in a the second canto with a
pass apiece for 29 yarcts and ·score of its own when
15 yards respectively.
Bainter received a Wells
But despite all South pass .. nd ran it 29 yards for

' paydirt but, after a failed
kick , the Rebel s still found
themselves down by a point.
But that point would hardly matter as the Titans ·then
fired off 37 con secutive
points over the second and
third quarters while shutting
out the Rebel offense.
Craig Williams added two
touchdowns on run s of 62
yards and 50 yards, · Joel
,Williams rumbled rive yards
for a score, Em nett rushed
for a seven yard score and
Slack hauled in a five yard
touchdown · score . from
LaValley.
Wells finally put the
Rebels back on the board
two minutes into the fourth
quarter with a one yard
touchdown run, but it hardly
mattered as the Titans found
themse_lves up 44-12 at that

point.
Notre
Dame 's
Hadj iyan ni s added the
teams final points of the
game at the 8:05 mark on a
four-yard scoring run and
Fellu re added the Rebels
final touchdown of the n'ight
four minut~ s later on a one
yard run t0 end the scoring
50-18 in favor of the Titans.
It has been a rough trio of
game s for the Rebels who
opened the year again st
teams a combined record of
1- 16 while facing teams a
combined I0-8 over the past
three weeks. South
Gallia
'
will try to correct Its recent
skid when it heads on the
road for the third straight
week, thi s time traveling to
Franklin Furnace for a contest again st Green (1-5)
Friday night.

\!tribune - Sentinel ·- l\e ister
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County

OH
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classified@ mydailytribune .com

/)

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Your Ad, · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call ,T oday... . or Fax To (740) 446-3008
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euslneaa Day• Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper
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Sundays Paper

r

GtVfAWAY

I

r=.

YAJU&gt; SALE-

~

GALUPOl.l'&gt;

Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

1 Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Desc;riptlon • lnc;ludc A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed • Adt Should Run 7 Days

•\\\ill \C I \11 \,Jo..;

Publication

1:00 p .m .

of""

••1*1•

MONEY

.

Do

Yov

1"o

Mlll'l~'

K!&gt;ICII/
1\ ~l?f'fe&gt;~ WAy

Oct. 1·4. 1 m1le below ·dam.
Home interior. fur niture.
Female, 4 month old puppy. adult &amp; children winter
Call 740 -446 -1689
clothes, mise:.

0 0

1\

~er?-y J..i51' ~

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Oh10 Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
AffairS BEFORE you refi nance your hom9 or

Ho~tES

HOUS£S

FUR SALE

IURRENr

For sa le by owner. 3BR
Ranch, 1 bath, · Family
Room . Stove/Frid ge, W/D
included Askmg $7 0,000.
Call 740·709-6;339

obtain a. loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance. Ca ll the
Office of Consumer
Affa1rs toll free at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
prope rly
li censed. (This IS a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

Kitten. ma le, approK. 3 Items, Halloween Costumes
mon th s old , yellowJ.J.,hile knick-knacks, bake sale
tabby, very playrul, litter 074
YARD SALE·
trained. 593 -1fi54 daytime
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
or 675- 686 7 evenings
!weekends.
33218 Bailey Aun Road .
Lo!rr AND
Pomeroy,Ohlo. Oct.1,2,3
F1rst house below the

South~rn·s Kyle Good.e leads a pack of runners down 'Big Ea!&gt;teo·n senior exchange student Jule · Draehri ·crosses a
Moose' .during Saturday's 37th annual Rio Grande Cross bridge during Saturday's 37th annual Rio Grande Cross
Country Invitational.
Country Invitational.

10

TO WAN

~-------"

t

•

POLICIES : Ohio V.tley P.ublllhlniJ .....,.,., tht l-Ight to tdlt, ~. or cant1l1ny ld 11 en., time . Errort must be reported on the llrsl de';' ol
I
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Reglet• will be rnponiMble for 'no moreth .... tM cOli
IPICI occupied by the error end only the flr1t lntertlon . We shall not
thlt retutl:l from tM publk:lll:lon or oml8tlon of 1n tdvertlnrMn, Correction will be made In the flrlt 1vaHable edition. •• ~:,'~:.~;.::1
eny lo .. or
ara aiWIIYI contlda~~l. • Cu~ rite Clfd appllea. • All r•l lillie advfrliNmenll are subject to the Fedtt;al Fair Housing Act of 1988. • ·
acc:eptt only htlp w'lnttd tela
EOE •ndllrdl. We will not knowingly IICCept any advertlalng In 11lolatlon of the law.

I KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Free Kittens Call 740-446· OCI.1 ·2. 4110 of a mile off
9632
218 on Kriner. Large and
Free to good hol)"e, 14 wk small tools, WintEir clothes.
old F English Pointer pup. _m_o_
~_
.';_'o
_oo_s_m_o_re_.-~­
Full blooded lemon &amp; Oct.2-3. 138 Buhl Morton
White. Call 740-441 ·0405
Rd. Clothing, Pamper Che f

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classified ads .
(.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
l!i4
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Four.u

Church.

Attention!
Local company offering ~NO ·
DOWN PAYMENT~ programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• less than perlect credit

Eastern senior Aaron Martindale runs down a hill during
Saturday's Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational.

accepted .

• Payment could be th e
sam&amp; as rent .
·
Mortgage

locators.

(740)367-0000
Fullv furnished .2 bedroom

house, in e~tcellen t condition
at 24 11
Lincoln,
Pt.
Pleasant. $400 per month,
w/$400 deposit.
Taking ·
applications at 1403 Eastern ·
A'JOnue, Gallipolis, 740-446-:
4514. References Required .

.~ ;,
.

I . &lt;;!~' Cillo .
2"#,411\&lt; Wiefrich .

3.Bet)Wise ·
4. Brad Lloton

5. 8randonCrisllp
8. Brad Olinger
, 7, Sleven R1tUf!
. ll. Moreuo Edwltrdo
9: Natl,l)n R"" · .
. IO.. tlen Ankrom

s.~c=lo=lh~e=s.~ot=h•:•_m~·:·sc
~~~~~~~~~~~oo:l~
CLASSIFIED INDEX
~, ~~~"ow the
items

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 726
Announcement.. .......................................... 030
Anllquea ............:.......................................... 530
Aportments for Rent ................................ ... 440
Auction and Flea Matket ............................. OBO
Auto Partf!l &amp; Accessories ...... .......... .. ........ 760

Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos for Sale................................ .............. 71 o
Boata &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

r

I.

.

Building Supplies ........................................ 550
8UIIIIIIS and BuUdlnga ............................. 340
Bullnass Opportunlly ................................. 210
Bullnatt Training ....................................... \40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda ol Tllanka .......................................... 010
Chl1d1Eldarly Care ....................................... 1BO
ElectrlcaURefrlger•tlon...............................840
Equipment for Rent .................................... .4BO
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment..........................................610
Farmalor Rent .....................................,.......430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
ForLello ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ........:...............:................SBO
Fruits &amp; Vegetabloa .....................................sao

Tclp-10 .
1. Emily Eickholl . '
2. Emily ·skidmore

,.,

': .

a.AoexDefto

I

~

4. L.ee Ann Townsend
6. EITllly~n

Fum..hed .Roorne ............... ,,,.,, ................... 450

6. KaY10:9oo'&lt; ,. .
7. Kyii.JilliolctO

Hurricane

I

I

I
,,
I

I

Invite
- from Page B1
junior Chelsea- Freeman
(26: 17.12) was 84th overalL
On the boys' side of
things, Mariel!a and Teays
Valley (OH) came away as
respective team champions
of the red and white divisions.
Galen Dills (Unioto) won
the stronger Red Division
race with an individual time
of 16:05 .91. Charleston
Capital's Jordan Burgess
was the top male runner in
the White Division. posting
a winning time of 17:47 .27
- the 17th fastest boys'
time overall in high school.
· The Tigers, with a team ·
score of 86, squeaked out a
4-point victory over Unioto
(90) in the Red Division.
Circleville ( I0 I) was third.
foll owed by Ravenswood
( 106) and Whee lers burg

18:20.00

8. OIMa Vtuiooter
9.
10.
Grtigory

with 133 - rounding out
the top-five. Meigs was
17th in the 18-team field
with 517.
Eastern 's
Aaron
Martindale was the top local
finisher, placing 52nd with
a time of 18:33.09.
Teammate Keith Aeiker
(19:32.29) was next in 80th,
while the Marauders' top
placer
was
Andrew
O' llryant (19:55.37) in
96th.
.
Other Meigs finsihers
were
Nathan
Cook
(20:19.43) in l!Oth; Jacob
Riffle (22: 59.35) in !57th;
Morgan
Kennedy
(23:53. 12) in !74th; Keith
W,illiam s (26:26.41 ) in
I87th; a nd Noah Hajivandi
(31 :09.18)·in 19l st.
Gallia Academy had two
competitors as well . Dallas
Craft (20:49.30) was the top
Blue Devil in 127th. followed by teammate Jacob
Wheel er (23:29. 61 ) in
I68th . There .were 18 teams
and 193 c9mpeti tors in the

Bryan Walters/photos

Red Division.
TVHS, with a team tally
of Ill, edged out runner-up
Logan (115) by four points
in the White Divi sion.
Mor&amp;an (116) was a slim
third, with West Branch
(129) and Capital (135 )
rounding out the top-five.
River Valley (245) placed
IOth .in the 18-team event,
while Southern (308) finished 14th overall. There
were also 152 competitors
in the individual race.
The top finisher from the
area was the Tornadoes'
Kyle Goode, who placed
20th overall with a tome of
18:46.53.
Vince
Weatherstei n (1 9:01.82)
was the top Raider in 21st
position, · while South
Galli a's Jacob Watson was
56th with a time of 20:25.4 1
Other RVHS fi ni shers
were Dav id House holder
( 19: 03.70) in 26th : Tyler
Noble (20:36.63) in 63 rd;
Kody Johnson (2 1: 14.22) in
75th ; Sean Sands (2 1: 14.73)
I

Meigs jUnior Devan Soulsby passes a Ripley runner during
in 76th; and Jon Porter Saturday's Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational.
(24: 11.85) in 125th.
Other SHS participants
were
Dyllan
Roush
Bob Willey was very
(19:39.69) in 36th; Colby
pleased with the war both
Roseberry (20:26.19) in
of his team's ran. "It s very .
'57th;
Drew
Hoover
fromPageBl
exciting. Being involved in
(22:20.46) in lOlst; John
this (meet) you don't get to
Holsinger (25:03 .88) in
. see much, but I was able to
Kris
Kleski (31 :46.75); Steven Davis, see both races and our
!34th;
(27:39.59) in !44th; and 56th (34:02. II ) and Cody young people ran very well
Tyler Goble (30:04.66) in Grooms, 60th (34:44.49).
today," Willey said. "I was
There were 74 runners in very happy, very excited,
!47th. .
Gallia Academy's Peyton the men's race.
they were too. I got several
Brenden McKee of Walsh hugs; that 's always a posiAdkins won the JUnior high
girls race, posting a wfnning was the men's individual tive thing."
time of 12:16.11. Adkins champion with a time of
"Great weather, a lot of
was the top runner out of 26:25.25.
things have gone wrong
Walsh won the men 's early, but we've got good
176
competitors.
event
with 21 points, Davis help and we've been able to
Ravenswood wori the junior
&amp;
Elkins
was 2nd with 72 dodge the bullet," Willey
high ~iri s team event.
and
Alderson added. "If we can keep
Umoto's Adrian Ro ~s points
won the junior high boys Broaddus finished 3rd with doing that and keep people
race with a winning time of 79 points.
happy. I' II be a happy man."
Bethany was 5th (134),
II :04.35, beating out 226
Roo Grande will next run
participants. Fairland won just behind Rio Gorande in
the .
All -Ohio
. the junior hi gh boys learn whil e
Ohio
Vall ey Championships·, October 5
title.
Uni versity ( 138) and West at Oh io Wesleyan. The
Complete results arc post- Virginia Tech ( 163) rounded women will begm at 2 p.m.
ed on the Web at out the field.of teams.
and the· men's race will
www. baumspage.com
Rio Grande head coach begin 2:45 p.m.

Rio

GeiWal Haul1ng...........................................850
GIVOIWay...................................................... 040
Happy Ads ..................................: .................oso
Hay &amp; Qraln .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ..................... ........................... :110
Home lmprovementa ........... ,,,,,,.... .............. 810

HomHfor Sale ............................................ 310
HoUHhold Goods ....................................... 510

.Yard Sale. Oct. 2 &amp; 3. Blue
house on Pullins Excavati ng

r
~

signs. 9:oo wo

~~-c::r!.~!!':!!..

rLrA ••""""''

I
.

RIVERSIDE Auction Barn
5 Miles Below the Dam
Tools. Furn1\ure. Household
Items. Something for
Everyone. EVERY Sat. •
Night @ 6pm. 740 -2 566989

r

Pomeroy, 2·3 br. ap t. or
house, partially furnished,
HUD approved., near park,
no p6ts. (740)99.2-6886

WANI'ED
TOBIN

Local Home Health Agency
now hiring PCA's, HHA's,
CNA's and STNA's. FleKible
scheduling. Apptv in person
or call 740·44t·t377. 2
Commerce Dr.
1989 2 Bedroom tn Rio

included.

Grande Must be moved. 645-6378 ~sk for Kelly
R1ver Cottage 2. bd 1bt. '
DOWN PAYMENT" prowasherfdryer.Beauhfut inte·
2000 14x70, 3BR. 2BA. lots rior located in Long
grams for you to buy your 1
d
1
o
up gra es , on rented Ol Bottom(MeigsC.)Dep.&amp;Ret.7
home instead of renting.
d
34
Kraus-Beck
A 40-416-4248.
• 100% financing
GallipoliS. 3 miles from ~~~:..;;;;_~---.

Medical assistant needed for
busy physician's ofti((B In the
Gallipolis area. Prefer pleasant, self motivated, hard
working person. Send

Anentlon!
Local company offering "NO $6500. Call 740 -2 45-5671

resumes CLA BoK 101 , P.O.

BoK 469, Gallipolis, Ohio
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. AVONI All Areas! To Buy or 45631 .
Silv6r and Gold Coins, Sell. Shirley Spears, 304 · ~------675-1429.
~roofsets, Gold Rings, Pre· - - - -- -- 1935
U.S.
Currency,
Bob Evans, Gallipolis IS hir·
Solitaire Diamonds- ~U. S.
ing one fu ll time kitchen prep
Coi n Shop, i51 Second
pe rson for day shift. Please
Avenue, Gallipolis, 74G-446apply in person.
2842
Carpenter to put floor in ~ v­
Loo ~ing for land. priced rea·
ing ro0111 of mobile tiome.
sonabie. Call 740 -64£·6299. Only eKperienced need to
Leave a message. 740-645· app~. (740)446· 7039
6299
Immediate full time opening
Paw Paws, black walnuts, fo r receptionist In a busy
INTERVIEWS
hickories, please call first, me dical practice, appiiCa·
(740)698-6060
t1ons maybe picf( up at Suite
THURSDAY
Proper ty to build home in 11 2 Pleasant Valley Hospital
OCTOBER 4th .
Galfia County. Prefer 5_1o must be able to type &amp; mq:le10:00om ·3:00pm
acres, high and dry. Call _"e
_n_ce_
he_IP_fu_Lc.'_ __

Housea for Rant ...............~ ....... ........... ....... 410

Pretty, 3BA.
Bath. ·
Downtown Gallipolis. Very:
close to Washington Elem. ·
and GAHS. $695
No smoking. Utilities not

~~;ec:han

perfect credit

• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators .
(740)367-0000

~:~l:ofis

off SA 588. 446·

George's Portable 5awmilt.
don't haul your 'Logs to the
Mill just ca ll304-675-1957.

lntoCialon
Marty collect @ 321-453- La kin Hospital currently has
tn Msmorlam ................................................ 020
" 242 3rd Ave
1351 evenin gs.
positiOns available
for
Insurance ................................ ........... .......... 130
Gallipolis, OH
Certlfie·d Nursing Assistant
HOuse &amp; Office Cleaning!
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment.. ...................... 660
WE BUY USED
(CNA'S) to r fu!l 11me and
Gall Larrl 1-479-970·6328 .
Uveatock ...................................................... 630
Up to $8.50/hour
MOBILE HOMES temporary (90 day) work in a
Lost and Found ....... ,,,,, ............................... 060
ll\\\1 1\1
Gary (7 40)828·2750
1J4 bed Long Tern Care
Lola &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
$300
Hiring
Bonus
Facility. Fun-ttme employ·
Milclllaneoua.............................................. 170
men!
offers an eKtensive
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.,,, .... ...............540
I \1 1'11)\\11 \I
If u{lable to anend,
bene fit package ,, Including
Mobl1e Home Repalr .................................... 860
" I IH I( I ""
please call
State
c1
v1
1
service
retir
eMobile HomeoiOr Rent .....,......................... 420
1-877463-6247
ment . earn up to 15 days
Mobile Homes for Sale ........ ........ .. ,,, ...........320
110
'
"'·
4256
HELPWAI''U .ll
vacatiO n per year. 18 days
Money to Lpan ............................................. 220
_
_
_
_
_
_
_.
sick leave. and 1~ plus pa1d
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
!.,
holidays; health/li te insur- ._,::www;:;;:·;;:'"::;IOC:o;;I•;;IO::;n;;
.C;oom-..~
Musical Instruments ............... ....... ... .......... 570
An E~tceHen t way to earn ance IS a\lailaDie
Lakm
Pereonals ..................................... .. .............. oos
money. The New Avon .
Hospilal IS ' an EEOfAA
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
Employer Please contact
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................... 820
K1m Billups, AN DON , al
Proteaslonal Servlcea................................. 230
Lak1n Hosp1 tal, Lakin, WV at
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ................·............... 160
304-675-0860. eKt 126
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Do you want to be a part
Schoolo lnlltllctlon .....................................150
Monday thru Fnday from
of a team tha t helps raise 8.00 AM - 4:00 PM regardSeed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ................. .. ........... 650
fundS lor a JeadillQ , Ing the poSttions
S~uotlona Wanted ......................... .............. 120
Republican Presidential
Space lor Rent .............c......... ...................... 460
Needed· Dedica ted eKperiCandidate?
Sporting Goods .................... ,...................... 520
enced HHA's, PCA's, CNA's
SUV's for Sale........................:.....................720
&amp; STNA's. Establishe d and
Then we are looking for
Trucko lor Sate ............................................ 715
you to )oin out teaml
we ll respected local hOme
Upholotery ................................................... 870
health agency l ocated in
Van a For Sale..................... .......................... 730
No EKperience Necessary GallipoliS, Ohio has av8ilWlntoclto lilly ............................................. 090
Wantocllo Buy· Farm Stlppllea .................. 620
. Full Benefits
able full -time and par t-time
Wontocl To 00 .............................................. 180 ·
Up To $8.50 per hour
cases. If you have a desire
Wontoclto Ront ........ ,................................... 470
S300 Hiring Bonus
to work as a respected
Vord Sole- Gslilpolla.................................... 072
Day and Evening Shifts
TEAM
member
call
. Vord Sole-Pomeroy/Mtcklle ......................... 074
(740)446-380a for immediYord Sole-Pt. Pleaaani.. ..........................:... 078
1·Bn-4113-6247 Ext 2301 ate interwew.

All real estate advertising
In this newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Hou~lng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to

advertise " any
preference, tlmltatton or
discrimination baaed on
rae., color, religion, OIIII
famlllilltatua or national
origin, or any lnfentlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.''

1

2 Bedroom , .Addaville
School Distnct. References
&amp;
Deposit ,
$J 50/mo.
(740)367-0632
_ .:__ _ _ _ __

2 bedrooms, no pets. Call
446·7275

2 Br . AJC. Very nice with ·
porCh in Gallipolis. No pets.
740.446·2003 or 446· 1409

r

call 304-675·34~~'

lms &amp;
ACREAG E

1,-------~

Small 2 bedroom mobile
home tn Racine. $225 a ·
month, $225 deposit, yea rs
lease, no pels, no calls after
9pm, (740)992-5039

2.12 acres Wa l r~ut Creek
Sandt1 111 Rd. Utillt1es ready, Tra iler for rent. 3BA. 2 BA:
Flat lot, $25.000IOBO 304· Call 367-7762 or 446-4060
675· 441 1 Leave Message

r

•
•

•

$21 4.36 per mon th. Includes $300 depostt. No pels. 740many upgrades, delivery &amp; _74
_2_-2_0_
14_. - - - - set-up. (740)385-2434
2BA. heatpum p. covered
Nice used 3 bedroom home patio. fe nced backyard wl
v1 nyl/s~ ingl e. Will help with bulld1ng . W/D, lridgp and
stove. No pets. No Smo~ing.
delivery. 740-385·4367
Gallipolis Ferry $300 deposit
and $350 a month FIRM.
OWNER FINANCING Utilit1es not Included. 304Nice 312 singlewides
675-7149
f rom $1 .800 down
Mobil e HomE!s for Rent
p.1.;rrrent
located off Sandhill Road
Gary (74v d:!lJ·2750

.

ii

I.

2 br. all electric. mobile homtl
New J Bedroom homes from 1n country. $350 per month.

. WANI'Eil

To Do

~~

~------- ~

2004 16K80 Clayton 3Bed
.2Bath .
2002
16x80
Oakwood JBed 2Balh , 3
More 16KB0 and 2 More
BriCk Home Approx. 2000
14x70 to choose from. Days
Gallipolis Caretr College sq.fl. CIA. 2 1/2 acres. 2 br. 740 -388-0000 Eves 7402ba, 2 car gerag&amp;, Go to
{Careers Close .To Home)
388-801 7 or 740 -245-9213
orvbcom code 7137 price
cau Today! 74tl-446-4367,
neg. 304-675-4235
Great used 20 05 3 bedroom
1·800-214-0452
16x80 w1th vinyl /shingle .
.__.galli~iscareerooHege. oom
Must sell , Only $25,995 with
Accredited Member .A ccrediting
Cooocll lor lndepundent Colleges
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
&lt;lfld Schoollll 12748

r

AllooMF.NTs
IURRE!Ifr

�.,. ,
Page 82 • The.Daily Sentinel

~ebels
BY lARRY

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October t,

2007

Monday, October 1, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com
·~

·.'

drop third-straigbt, fall to Portsmouth Notre Dame, 50-18

CRUM

LCRU M@MYDAILY REGISTER .COM

PORTSMOUTH - The
Notre Dame in South Bend
may be struggling to score;
but the Notre Dame in
.Portsmouth is having littl e
trouble putting points on th ~
board.
·
Portsmouth Not re Dame
(3-3) had 436 yards on the
ground wi~h two backs
goinj; over 100 yards in a
dommating 50- 18 v ictory
over visiting South Gallia
(3-3) Saturday ni ght at
Sparl.an Field.
While the Titans finally
get to .500 on the season,
South Gallia has now lost
three straight while giving
up the most points smce a
51-20 loss against Danville
in the Divi sion IV playoffs

last season. It was also the
larges t margin of victory
against the Rebels since a
playoff g ame against River
Ill 2005.
Despite the tou~h loss.
Saturday was the fmt time
the Rebels have lost to a
team from Ohio during the
regular season sinee week
four of the 200,:; sea son
Symmes
against rival
Valley.
Other than that, the Rebels
found lillie to be liappy
about.
Notre Dame 's Craig
William s had · 214 yards
rushing and two touchdowns, . teammate · Jo.
Emnetl had 115 yards on the
ground and a score and Joel
Willi ams had two touchdowns and 67 yards rushing
to lead the potent Titan

attack that averaged nearl y Gallia threw at the Titans, it
'nine yards per carry on the was a pair of Williams' that
night.
·
stole the show. The two
Titan quarterback Trey players had half of the Notre
L a Vall~y added 34 yard s Dame
touchdown s and
thro•Jgh the air on 3-of- 7 accounted for a majority of
passing.
the yards for the home
So uth Gallia, who did squad.
most of its scoring in the
And they wasted little
fourth quarier,. was led by time getting their show on
Vance fe llure wi th 92 yards the road.
on 14 · carries. Nathan
Joel Williams scored the
Bainter added 56 yards on first touchdown of the game
seven carries and John Wells after a drive that put the
ran for 58 yards. Wells also Titan s up 7-0 at the 7:32
threw for 91 yards on 5-for-. mark of the first quarter, but
II passing woth two picks. had to wait two more. quarTyler Dunc an led the ters for his encore.
With just the single touch~
receiving corp for SGHS
with one catch for 34 yards. down highlighting the first
Bainter
and .
Caleb quarter. South Galli a opened
McLanahan also hauled in a the second canto with a
pass apiece for 29 yarcts and ·score of its own when
15 yards respectively.
Bainter received a Wells
But despite all South pass .. nd ran it 29 yards for

' paydirt but, after a failed
kick , the Rebel s still found
themselves down by a point.
But that point would hardly matter as the Titans ·then
fired off 37 con secutive
points over the second and
third quarters while shutting
out the Rebel offense.
Craig Williams added two
touchdowns on run s of 62
yards and 50 yards, · Joel
,Williams rumbled rive yards
for a score, Em nett rushed
for a seven yard score and
Slack hauled in a five yard
touchdown · score . from
LaValley.
Wells finally put the
Rebels back on the board
two minutes into the fourth
quarter with a one yard
touchdown run, but it hardly
mattered as the Titans found
themse_lves up 44-12 at that

point.
Notre
Dame 's
Hadj iyan ni s added the
teams final points of the
game at the 8:05 mark on a
four-yard scoring run and
Fellu re added the Rebels
final touchdown of the n'ight
four minut~ s later on a one
yard run t0 end the scoring
50-18 in favor of the Titans.
It has been a rough trio of
game s for the Rebels who
opened the year again st
teams a combined record of
1- 16 while facing teams a
combined I0-8 over the past
three weeks. South
Gallia
'
will try to correct Its recent
skid when it heads on the
road for the third straight
week, thi s time traveling to
Franklin Furnace for a contest again st Green (1-5)
Friday night.

\!tribune - Sentinel ·- l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
'

Galli a
County

OH
E-mall
classified@ mydailytribune .com

/)

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Websites:
. www.mydailytribune .com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

Tq Place
\!tribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
Your Ad, · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call ,T oday... . or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992-2157

1

.
I

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
.8 :00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Oeacll1irM

[)!splay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion

euslneaa Day• Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper
!:~:~~~~&gt;:.~In-Column:

Sundays Paper

r

GtVfAWAY

I

r=.

YAJU&gt; SALE-

~

GALUPOl.l'&gt;

Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

1 Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Desc;riptlon • lnc;ludc A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed • Adt Should Run 7 Days

•\\\ill \C I \11 \,Jo..;

Publication

1:00 p .m .

of""

••1*1•

MONEY

.

Do

Yov

1"o

Mlll'l~'

K!&gt;ICII/
1\ ~l?f'fe&gt;~ WAy

Oct. 1·4. 1 m1le below ·dam.
Home interior. fur niture.
Female, 4 month old puppy. adult &amp; children winter
Call 740 -446 -1689
clothes, mise:.

0 0

1\

~er?-y J..i51' ~

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Oh10 Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
AffairS BEFORE you refi nance your hom9 or

Ho~tES

HOUS£S

FUR SALE

IURRENr

For sa le by owner. 3BR
Ranch, 1 bath, · Family
Room . Stove/Frid ge, W/D
included Askmg $7 0,000.
Call 740·709-6;339

obtain a. loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance. Ca ll the
Office of Consumer
Affa1rs toll free at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
prope rly
li censed. (This IS a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

Kitten. ma le, approK. 3 Items, Halloween Costumes
mon th s old , yellowJ.J.,hile knick-knacks, bake sale
tabby, very playrul, litter 074
YARD SALE·
trained. 593 -1fi54 daytime
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
or 675- 686 7 evenings
!weekends.
33218 Bailey Aun Road .
Lo!rr AND
Pomeroy,Ohlo. Oct.1,2,3
F1rst house below the

South~rn·s Kyle Good.e leads a pack of runners down 'Big Ea!&gt;teo·n senior exchange student Jule · Draehri ·crosses a
Moose' .during Saturday's 37th annual Rio Grande Cross bridge during Saturday's 37th annual Rio Grande Cross
Country Invitational.
Country Invitational.

10

TO WAN

~-------"

t

•

POLICIES : Ohio V.tley P.ublllhlniJ .....,.,., tht l-Ight to tdlt, ~. or cant1l1ny ld 11 en., time . Errort must be reported on the llrsl de';' ol
I
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Reglet• will be rnponiMble for 'no moreth .... tM cOli
IPICI occupied by the error end only the flr1t lntertlon . We shall not
thlt retutl:l from tM publk:lll:lon or oml8tlon of 1n tdvertlnrMn, Correction will be made In the flrlt 1vaHable edition. •• ~:,'~:.~;.::1
eny lo .. or
ara aiWIIYI contlda~~l. • Cu~ rite Clfd appllea. • All r•l lillie advfrliNmenll are subject to the Fedtt;al Fair Housing Act of 1988. • ·
acc:eptt only htlp w'lnttd tela
EOE •ndllrdl. We will not knowingly IICCept any advertlalng In 11lolatlon of the law.

I KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Free Kittens Call 740-446· OCI.1 ·2. 4110 of a mile off
9632
218 on Kriner. Large and
Free to good hol)"e, 14 wk small tools, WintEir clothes.
old F English Pointer pup. _m_o_
~_
.';_'o
_oo_s_m_o_re_.-~­
Full blooded lemon &amp; Oct.2-3. 138 Buhl Morton
White. Call 740-441 ·0405
Rd. Clothing, Pamper Che f

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classified ads .
(.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
l!i4
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Four.u

Church.

Attention!
Local company offering ~NO ·
DOWN PAYMENT~ programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• less than perlect credit

Eastern senior Aaron Martindale runs down a hill during
Saturday's Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational.

accepted .

• Payment could be th e
sam&amp; as rent .
·
Mortgage

locators.

(740)367-0000
Fullv furnished .2 bedroom

house, in e~tcellen t condition
at 24 11
Lincoln,
Pt.
Pleasant. $400 per month,
w/$400 deposit.
Taking ·
applications at 1403 Eastern ·
A'JOnue, Gallipolis, 740-446-:
4514. References Required .

.~ ;,
.

I . &lt;;!~' Cillo .
2"#,411\&lt; Wiefrich .

3.Bet)Wise ·
4. Brad Lloton

5. 8randonCrisllp
8. Brad Olinger
, 7, Sleven R1tUf!
. ll. Moreuo Edwltrdo
9: Natl,l)n R"" · .
. IO.. tlen Ankrom

s.~c=lo=lh~e=s.~ot=h•:•_m~·:·sc
~~~~~~~~~~~oo:l~
CLASSIFIED INDEX
~, ~~~"ow the
items

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 726
Announcement.. .......................................... 030
Anllquea ............:.......................................... 530
Aportments for Rent ................................ ... 440
Auction and Flea Matket ............................. OBO
Auto Partf!l &amp; Accessories ...... .......... .. ........ 760

Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos for Sale................................ .............. 71 o
Boata &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

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Building Supplies ........................................ 550
8UIIIIIIS and BuUdlnga ............................. 340
Bullnass Opportunlly ................................. 210
Bullnatt Training ....................................... \40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda ol Tllanka .......................................... 010
Chl1d1Eldarly Care ....................................... 1BO
ElectrlcaURefrlger•tlon...............................840
Equipment for Rent .................................... .4BO
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment..........................................610
Farmalor Rent .....................................,.......430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
ForLello ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ........:...............:................SBO
Fruits &amp; Vegetabloa .....................................sao

Tclp-10 .
1. Emily Eickholl . '
2. Emily ·skidmore

,.,

': .

a.AoexDefto

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~

4. L.ee Ann Townsend
6. EITllly~n

Fum..hed .Roorne ............... ,,,.,, ................... 450

6. KaY10:9oo'&lt; ,. .
7. Kyii.JilliolctO

Hurricane

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Invite
- from Page B1
junior Chelsea- Freeman
(26: 17.12) was 84th overalL
On the boys' side of
things, Mariel!a and Teays
Valley (OH) came away as
respective team champions
of the red and white divisions.
Galen Dills (Unioto) won
the stronger Red Division
race with an individual time
of 16:05 .91. Charleston
Capital's Jordan Burgess
was the top male runner in
the White Division. posting
a winning time of 17:47 .27
- the 17th fastest boys'
time overall in high school.
· The Tigers, with a team ·
score of 86, squeaked out a
4-point victory over Unioto
(90) in the Red Division.
Circleville ( I0 I) was third.
foll owed by Ravenswood
( 106) and Whee lers burg

18:20.00

8. OIMa Vtuiooter
9.
10.
Grtigory

with 133 - rounding out
the top-five. Meigs was
17th in the 18-team field
with 517.
Eastern 's
Aaron
Martindale was the top local
finisher, placing 52nd with
a time of 18:33.09.
Teammate Keith Aeiker
(19:32.29) was next in 80th,
while the Marauders' top
placer
was
Andrew
O' llryant (19:55.37) in
96th.
.
Other Meigs finsihers
were
Nathan
Cook
(20:19.43) in l!Oth; Jacob
Riffle (22: 59.35) in !57th;
Morgan
Kennedy
(23:53. 12) in !74th; Keith
W,illiam s (26:26.41 ) in
I87th; a nd Noah Hajivandi
(31 :09.18)·in 19l st.
Gallia Academy had two
competitors as well . Dallas
Craft (20:49.30) was the top
Blue Devil in 127th. followed by teammate Jacob
Wheel er (23:29. 61 ) in
I68th . There .were 18 teams
and 193 c9mpeti tors in the

Bryan Walters/photos

Red Division.
TVHS, with a team tally
of Ill, edged out runner-up
Logan (115) by four points
in the White Divi sion.
Mor&amp;an (116) was a slim
third, with West Branch
(129) and Capital (135 )
rounding out the top-five.
River Valley (245) placed
IOth .in the 18-team event,
while Southern (308) finished 14th overall. There
were also 152 competitors
in the individual race.
The top finisher from the
area was the Tornadoes'
Kyle Goode, who placed
20th overall with a tome of
18:46.53.
Vince
Weatherstei n (1 9:01.82)
was the top Raider in 21st
position, · while South
Galli a's Jacob Watson was
56th with a time of 20:25.4 1
Other RVHS fi ni shers
were Dav id House holder
( 19: 03.70) in 26th : Tyler
Noble (20:36.63) in 63 rd;
Kody Johnson (2 1: 14.22) in
75th ; Sean Sands (2 1: 14.73)
I

Meigs jUnior Devan Soulsby passes a Ripley runner during
in 76th; and Jon Porter Saturday's Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational.
(24: 11.85) in 125th.
Other SHS participants
were
Dyllan
Roush
Bob Willey was very
(19:39.69) in 36th; Colby
pleased with the war both
Roseberry (20:26.19) in
of his team's ran. "It s very .
'57th;
Drew
Hoover
fromPageBl
exciting. Being involved in
(22:20.46) in lOlst; John
this (meet) you don't get to
Holsinger (25:03 .88) in
. see much, but I was able to
Kris
Kleski (31 :46.75); Steven Davis, see both races and our
!34th;
(27:39.59) in !44th; and 56th (34:02. II ) and Cody young people ran very well
Tyler Goble (30:04.66) in Grooms, 60th (34:44.49).
today," Willey said. "I was
There were 74 runners in very happy, very excited,
!47th. .
Gallia Academy's Peyton the men's race.
they were too. I got several
Brenden McKee of Walsh hugs; that 's always a posiAdkins won the JUnior high
girls race, posting a wfnning was the men's individual tive thing."
time of 12:16.11. Adkins champion with a time of
"Great weather, a lot of
was the top runner out of 26:25.25.
things have gone wrong
Walsh won the men 's early, but we've got good
176
competitors.
event
with 21 points, Davis help and we've been able to
Ravenswood wori the junior
&amp;
Elkins
was 2nd with 72 dodge the bullet," Willey
high ~iri s team event.
and
Alderson added. "If we can keep
Umoto's Adrian Ro ~s points
won the junior high boys Broaddus finished 3rd with doing that and keep people
race with a winning time of 79 points.
happy. I' II be a happy man."
Bethany was 5th (134),
II :04.35, beating out 226
Roo Grande will next run
participants. Fairland won just behind Rio Gorande in
the .
All -Ohio
. the junior hi gh boys learn whil e
Ohio
Vall ey Championships·, October 5
title.
Uni versity ( 138) and West at Oh io Wesleyan. The
Complete results arc post- Virginia Tech ( 163) rounded women will begm at 2 p.m.
ed on the Web at out the field.of teams.
and the· men's race will
www. baumspage.com
Rio Grande head coach begin 2:45 p.m.

Rio

GeiWal Haul1ng...........................................850
GIVOIWay...................................................... 040
Happy Ads ..................................: .................oso
Hay &amp; Qraln .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ..................... ........................... :110
Home lmprovementa ........... ,,,,,,.... .............. 810

HomHfor Sale ............................................ 310
HoUHhold Goods ....................................... 510

.Yard Sale. Oct. 2 &amp; 3. Blue
house on Pullins Excavati ng

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signs. 9:oo wo

~~-c::r!.~!!':!!..

rLrA ••""""''

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RIVERSIDE Auction Barn
5 Miles Below the Dam
Tools. Furn1\ure. Household
Items. Something for
Everyone. EVERY Sat. •
Night @ 6pm. 740 -2 566989

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Pomeroy, 2·3 br. ap t. or
house, partially furnished,
HUD approved., near park,
no p6ts. (740)99.2-6886

WANI'ED
TOBIN

Local Home Health Agency
now hiring PCA's, HHA's,
CNA's and STNA's. FleKible
scheduling. Apptv in person
or call 740·44t·t377. 2
Commerce Dr.
1989 2 Bedroom tn Rio

included.

Grande Must be moved. 645-6378 ~sk for Kelly
R1ver Cottage 2. bd 1bt. '
DOWN PAYMENT" prowasherfdryer.Beauhfut inte·
2000 14x70, 3BR. 2BA. lots rior located in Long
grams for you to buy your 1
d
1
o
up gra es , on rented Ol Bottom(MeigsC.)Dep.&amp;Ret.7
home instead of renting.
d
34
Kraus-Beck
A 40-416-4248.
• 100% financing
GallipoliS. 3 miles from ~~~:..;;;;_~---.

Medical assistant needed for
busy physician's ofti((B In the
Gallipolis area. Prefer pleasant, self motivated, hard
working person. Send

Anentlon!
Local company offering "NO $6500. Call 740 -2 45-5671

resumes CLA BoK 101 , P.O.

BoK 469, Gallipolis, Ohio
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. AVONI All Areas! To Buy or 45631 .
Silv6r and Gold Coins, Sell. Shirley Spears, 304 · ~------675-1429.
~roofsets, Gold Rings, Pre· - - - -- -- 1935
U.S.
Currency,
Bob Evans, Gallipolis IS hir·
Solitaire Diamonds- ~U. S.
ing one fu ll time kitchen prep
Coi n Shop, i51 Second
pe rson for day shift. Please
Avenue, Gallipolis, 74G-446apply in person.
2842
Carpenter to put floor in ~ v­
Loo ~ing for land. priced rea·
ing ro0111 of mobile tiome.
sonabie. Call 740 -64£·6299. Only eKperienced need to
Leave a message. 740-645· app~. (740)446· 7039
6299
Immediate full time opening
Paw Paws, black walnuts, fo r receptionist In a busy
INTERVIEWS
hickories, please call first, me dical practice, appiiCa·
(740)698-6060
t1ons maybe picf( up at Suite
THURSDAY
Proper ty to build home in 11 2 Pleasant Valley Hospital
OCTOBER 4th .
Galfia County. Prefer 5_1o must be able to type &amp; mq:le10:00om ·3:00pm
acres, high and dry. Call _"e
_n_ce_
he_IP_fu_Lc.'_ __

Housea for Rant ...............~ ....... ........... ....... 410

Pretty, 3BA.
Bath. ·
Downtown Gallipolis. Very:
close to Washington Elem. ·
and GAHS. $695
No smoking. Utilities not

~~;ec:han

perfect credit

• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators .
(740)367-0000

~:~l:ofis

off SA 588. 446·

George's Portable 5awmilt.
don't haul your 'Logs to the
Mill just ca ll304-675-1957.

lntoCialon
Marty collect @ 321-453- La kin Hospital currently has
tn Msmorlam ................................................ 020
" 242 3rd Ave
1351 evenin gs.
positiOns available
for
Insurance ................................ ........... .......... 130
Gallipolis, OH
Certlfie·d Nursing Assistant
HOuse &amp; Office Cleaning!
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment.. ...................... 660
WE BUY USED
(CNA'S) to r fu!l 11me and
Gall Larrl 1-479-970·6328 .
Uveatock ...................................................... 630
Up to $8.50/hour
MOBILE HOMES temporary (90 day) work in a
Lost and Found ....... ,,,,, ............................... 060
ll\\\1 1\1
Gary (7 40)828·2750
1J4 bed Long Tern Care
Lola &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
$300
Hiring
Bonus
Facility. Fun-ttme employ·
Milclllaneoua.............................................. 170
men!
offers an eKtensive
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.,,, .... ...............540
I \1 1'11)\\11 \I
If u{lable to anend,
bene fit package ,, Including
Mobl1e Home Repalr .................................... 860
" I IH I( I ""
please call
State
c1
v1
1
service
retir
eMobile HomeoiOr Rent .....,......................... 420
1-877463-6247
ment . earn up to 15 days
Mobile Homes for Sale ........ ........ .. ,,, ...........320
110
'
"'·
4256
HELPWAI''U .ll
vacatiO n per year. 18 days
Money to Lpan ............................................. 220
_
_
_
_
_
_
_.
sick leave. and 1~ plus pa1d
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
!.,
holidays; health/li te insur- ._,::www;:;;:·;;:'"::;IOC:o;;I•;;IO::;n;;
.C;oom-..~
Musical Instruments ............... ....... ... .......... 570
An E~tceHen t way to earn ance IS a\lailaDie
Lakm
Pereonals ..................................... .. .............. oos
money. The New Avon .
Hospilal IS ' an EEOfAA
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
Employer Please contact
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................... 820
K1m Billups, AN DON , al
Proteaslonal Servlcea................................. 230
Lak1n Hosp1 tal, Lakin, WV at
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ................·............... 160
304-675-0860. eKt 126
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Do you want to be a part
Schoolo lnlltllctlon .....................................150
Monday thru Fnday from
of a team tha t helps raise 8.00 AM - 4:00 PM regardSeed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ................. .. ........... 650
fundS lor a JeadillQ , Ing the poSttions
S~uotlona Wanted ......................... .............. 120
Republican Presidential
Space lor Rent .............c......... ...................... 460
Needed· Dedica ted eKperiCandidate?
Sporting Goods .................... ,...................... 520
enced HHA's, PCA's, CNA's
SUV's for Sale........................:.....................720
&amp; STNA's. Establishe d and
Then we are looking for
Trucko lor Sate ............................................ 715
you to )oin out teaml
we ll respected local hOme
Upholotery ................................................... 870
health agency l ocated in
Van a For Sale..................... .......................... 730
No EKperience Necessary GallipoliS, Ohio has av8ilWlntoclto lilly ............................................. 090
Wantocllo Buy· Farm Stlppllea .................. 620
. Full Benefits
able full -time and par t-time
Wontocl To 00 .............................................. 180 ·
Up To $8.50 per hour
cases. If you have a desire
Wontoclto Ront ........ ,................................... 470
S300 Hiring Bonus
to work as a respected
Vord Sole- Gslilpolla.................................... 072
Day and Evening Shifts
TEAM
member
call
. Vord Sole-Pomeroy/Mtcklle ......................... 074
(740)446-380a for immediYord Sole-Pt. Pleaaani.. ..........................:... 078
1·Bn-4113-6247 Ext 2301 ate interwew.

All real estate advertising
In this newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Hou~lng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to

advertise " any
preference, tlmltatton or
discrimination baaed on
rae., color, religion, OIIII
famlllilltatua or national
origin, or any lnfentlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.''

1

2 Bedroom , .Addaville
School Distnct. References
&amp;
Deposit ,
$J 50/mo.
(740)367-0632
_ .:__ _ _ _ __

2 bedrooms, no pets. Call
446·7275

2 Br . AJC. Very nice with ·
porCh in Gallipolis. No pets.
740.446·2003 or 446· 1409

r

call 304-675·34~~'

lms &amp;
ACREAG E

1,-------~

Small 2 bedroom mobile
home tn Racine. $225 a ·
month, $225 deposit, yea rs
lease, no pels, no calls after
9pm, (740)992-5039

2.12 acres Wa l r~ut Creek
Sandt1 111 Rd. Utillt1es ready, Tra iler for rent. 3BA. 2 BA:
Flat lot, $25.000IOBO 304· Call 367-7762 or 446-4060
675· 441 1 Leave Message

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•

$21 4.36 per mon th. Includes $300 depostt. No pels. 740many upgrades, delivery &amp; _74
_2_-2_0_
14_. - - - - set-up. (740)385-2434
2BA. heatpum p. covered
Nice used 3 bedroom home patio. fe nced backyard wl
v1 nyl/s~ ingl e. Will help with bulld1ng . W/D, lridgp and
stove. No pets. No Smo~ing.
delivery. 740-385·4367
Gallipolis Ferry $300 deposit
and $350 a month FIRM.
OWNER FINANCING Utilit1es not Included. 304Nice 312 singlewides
675-7149
f rom $1 .800 down
Mobil e HomE!s for Rent
p.1.;rrrent
located off Sandhill Road
Gary (74v d:!lJ·2750

.

ii

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2 br. all electric. mobile homtl
New J Bedroom homes from 1n country. $350 per month.

. WANI'Eil

To Do

~~

~------- ~

2004 16K80 Clayton 3Bed
.2Bath .
2002
16x80
Oakwood JBed 2Balh , 3
More 16KB0 and 2 More
BriCk Home Approx. 2000
14x70 to choose from. Days
Gallipolis Caretr College sq.fl. CIA. 2 1/2 acres. 2 br. 740 -388-0000 Eves 7402ba, 2 car gerag&amp;, Go to
{Careers Close .To Home)
388-801 7 or 740 -245-9213
orvbcom code 7137 price
cau Today! 74tl-446-4367,
neg. 304-675-4235
Great used 20 05 3 bedroom
1·800-214-0452
16x80 w1th vinyl /shingle .
.__.galli~iscareerooHege. oom
Must sell , Only $25,995 with
Accredited Member .A ccrediting
Cooocll lor lndepundent Colleges
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
&lt;lfld Schoollll 12748

r

AllooMF.NTs
IURRE!Ifr

�.,
, Monday, October 1, 2007

Monday, October 1, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

--------..------ "
NEA Crossword ' Puzzle

BRIDGE ·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
Johnson~s

.

Tree

'

Service

• 3
• 10 7 5 3 2
4 A Q J tO 9 6
West
East
K 9 7 -1
• Q 10 6 5 2
Q 5 4- '
• J t 0872
• Q9
• J.
853 2
4 K 4

Complete Tree Care
· fn•d • ,_IEIIImMII

-Specllllstlln:

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

so, you q

a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
I

!.:.
1996 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4.
72,876 miles, AC, alec
brakes and windows, cloth
interior, Re!,..,-hlldlr,-1!om&lt;L)J
rust . $5000.00, Riverview
Productions (740) 441-1150
7:ooam · 3:30pm, ask tor
Rodney Flankin.

Townhouse ~ apartments,
and/or small houSes FOR

RENT. Catl (740)441-1 111
for 8J!PIIeation &amp; information.

EllmVIew
' 'Apartll)ents
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

•Central heat &amp; AIC
•Washer/dryer hookup
• Tenant pays electric

(304)882-3_017

n

Jeep CJ5, 4JC4, VB. Call
740·388·0862 or 740-645·
6996, leave a message.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aep_aired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
8()()-537·9528.

r·4tJ=&lt;lS

1

NEW AND ·USED STEEL 2000 Kawasaki Prairie, runs
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar good, 2 wheel ctrive, $1500,
For
Concrete, Angle, (740)590-7666

Subscriber's Name - - - - - - - -

Dli_.

Equal Sunday. (740)446-7300

Honeymoon conage, 2 br.,
country aanlng, wid hookup.

r

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ian;

,.FOR_SAu:i i j-·_.1

2008 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 In accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-$19,600. COli

Phone_________________________

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apptlcallons
1a' 1
2 BR Parents
1st shots
&amp; wormed,
Apta. Located
onand
Colonial
on Premises.
$250. 304-593-3933 $5,800 ceo

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

Pu"e,'

~lng Applications

1·2 Bedroom Apanments

~llo11r

304-881-32'14
Servicing

'

D'YA HAVE A
RECIPE FER TH'
COOKBOOK,
LUREEN?

l

&amp; Strallan

THf

oTHfl

...tlf'"

H-Honest

MAN TO
COOK 'EM FER !!

SIGH~!. . A

NAW, ALL MY
DISHES LACK

ONE

Wll Dl

ClllcrtiiWIIl

....
;

THE BORN LOSER

"'t CM.LE.I&gt; I)IJ(K '\'1\e:. ·..
WEC.II.Wt&gt;-WU£ YOU

'1-fl.ommLE:, t MY
1\"f '\'I ME,';) ...

~~~.~·~Y

Hours

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

,.-e.\Jj' l M.WI&gt;.Y!) fi.I&gt;.\/E:
IC.~RE. ~ O.LL ~.-ce"JI--1
fro~ YOU!

i

SOON THE IIIEIGHeoRHOOt&gt;
WILL S.E FILL.EP WITH
THE SOUMPS Of 'ENSL.'VE
THE MOLL~K' PLA"fllf6
HEI\1&gt;-IWIGING EAI!TH·

ft:OCK !

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition~ I

'Prompt and Quality
Work

R•modtllng

*Reasonable Rates
"' lnsured ~
•Experienced
References Availa""ll"!

Pello and Porch Deck&amp;

New Glf'8011
Electrical I Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Outtera
VInyl Siding&amp; Painting

.,

wv 0311725

YOUNG

PEANUTS

'

Ill

THEN A VOICE COMES TO ME FROM
OUT OF TilE DARK, 11 WE APPRECIATE
'I'OOR ATTITUDE!''

•

r)

P'HlH'rt , (111,
1

",, •

,.

·'
·•
"•

$7.50/hr. Send resume to : P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants:
10/5107. Pre-employment
drug testing.
.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

.

MJNIMUMBID$8,470.00
Purchuer · of both
trecta sublect to~ .
fHI, · 111111men11,
linea and penaltlee.
10% qown, belence on
delivery of cloed
Property doneted to

R e q u e a t e d
F. Total Distribution:
Circulation:
3,229.
1. Paid/Requested
G.
Copies
Not
Public Notice
Outslde·County Mall Distributed.: 193.
Subscriptions Stated
H. Total: 3,697.
STATEMENT OF OWN· on Form 3541 . (Include
Dan Goodrich,
ERSHIP
MANAGE· advertlaer's proot and
Publisher
MENT AND CJFICULA· oxcl1ange copies.) 78
October t , 2007

monds, where maHers rested.

a game-invitational raise in diamonds'.
After that, South would make a slam-try,
which North would embrace enthusiastically. It is hard to reach seven diamonds,
but six ought to be act1ievable.
Suppose West guesses to lead a heart
· against sevein diamonds. Declarer wins

with his ace, draws trumps, plays a club

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.;

by Luis campos
~ebrity Cipher

Cryptogram! M! etealed from qoo!alials by lamO\JS peope, past and present
Each letter 1n!he c1phef stands fo. anothef.
,

Today'sdue: Tequilts K

"P

YOZWW

MZZKZK

SZHUZM

H WSVERWAVL ."

WAZPMAEZMMZE,
MZJ

GOWR

FVET

VM

FHMTZZ

RSZ

YEZHR

SHUZ
•

YZVEYZ

KZHAS

VC

LSPX

EPBBOAV
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "There is no way to be truly great '" this world. We
ara all impaled on lhe crook or conditioning.' · James Dean

AstroGraph
'lbur'lllrtlldl;y:

'~~::~' S©\\~~-~t!fs·
::::
.. .UUo4
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Ofour
words bt·
~~ClAY

Rearrange letters of the
scromb~d

law ro form four olmple words.

By Bernice' Bede Oeol
Your profit motive could be ·mu ch
str~mger than usual, which will serve as a
powertul motivating Ioree urging You to
blaze new trails for gain. When you seek,
·you will find something that could be a
gold mine.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You have
that somethi ng extra going for you that
separates you from the atso-ntns~ If you
aren't atrald to use your talents construe·
tl...ety, you will end up In the winner's clr·
cle.r
SCORPIO .t.kt. 24-Nov. 22) - Make an
effort to seefo: out knowledge or inl6rma·
lion that could help you achieve a better
"Mistakes," gramps told the
life. What you learn can have a strohg
Impact on your futurO plans.
boy, "are part of the dues
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec .• 21) onepaysfora --·---."
Ahhough you realize there could be an
element of risk by changing the way You
Complere 1he chu&lt;:kle q110ted
have always done something, It's worth ·a
-L.
.
....1.-J..-J...
----'
.
L.....J
by. fijfing in the miuing words
try. Advancement comes tt:trough grow·
L.
you deYelop lroin step No . .') below.
ing with the limes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) 1
PRINT NUMBERED
Conditions are conducive tor forming an
l'fTTERS IN SQUARES
allianCe fof' a mutually benefidal purpose. Howo11er, successcwlll be In pro·
portion to the eJCperience and abilities ol
{)
· the person you select
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Even
though you mtghl have to work a trifle
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 9·18 -o 1 ·
harder lhan usual, your rewards will be
Climax- Poise- Blend - Wedded- BE PLEASED
commensurate with the effort you
expend. Don't hesitate to' take on a tough
"I bcliev.e if you do wbal intemt yoo,·the l'ellow told hisf!l. "at
assignment. •
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20~ - A new
least one penon will BE PLEASED.'
enterprise you are considering could
haYG the large possibilities for growth
that you envision. Be sure to do the
spadework necessal)' tor success
·

I

MI R LAp
1---.-,--i,-.1--.,;:.._,.,...:..,,.,8:-! 0

@

~~~~~MSLE FORI I

COWandBOY
AS SooN AS HE'S FAT
ENO!JGtl HE'LL ENTER
THEN HE'LL BECOME

J

508.1Sl•IIIIMIIIIIUU5J88 .
7....2-:IIU

!

-lllllllltfr1111VI:IIIIit HI••

I

~

f

IIIUdiVI:DI-12:•••

I

By th ink·
ing things througtl before you start any·
thing, you're not Nkely to take on more
than you can comfortably hancle and
you'll be able to successfully finish to ·
your satisfaction.
TAURUS (Apr1120-Uay 20) - Something
about whiCh you feel strongly and ha...e
taken a vigorous interest in can Ignite the
care of olt'lers. Take your message
directly to those who can help you
advance your plans.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Your lmbl·
tlon and Ingenuity can be joined together
to produce a combination for lasting per·
sonal gains more powerful than you
could imagine. Concentrate your efforts
In this area.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) -When It
comes to satisfying your aelt-lnteri)Sta,
try to be a bit more assertive than usual
without being arrogant or brash. Strongly
apply your etfG:rta toward producing
clealrablt rtlultt.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 - Co lhlng1 the
Wl'f you th ink they thould be done, with·
out ttepplng on the toea of othert. You'll
find your m.thodt will be very lfftc11vt

GARFIELD

Manlay•llli
Racycl•na

I

. ARIES (March 21·~1 19) -

AIIJITBIFLY)

~~,~~-·

I .I I I

ARLO &amp;JANIS

THE Pli'A STAGE, AND

Lori Hensley ,

driver's license, three years good dri vi~g
experience and adequate automobile insurance.

was a transfer

TUe~.~-2,2007

WHO 81t0Ll6HT
SOME MUSIC.'

FOR SAu:

Lo••

thinking~

trump, South continued with four dla·
monds, and North raised to five dla·

,•

SHo\lTER.II&gt;IC,

I

to •· .

and had wondered how her opponents
could have reached a slam In diarTl(lncts.
The original auction was a comedy of
errors. After East passed, South opened
two no-trump desp~e a singleton and
· only 19 points. (Apparently, neither
North nor SOUth questioned this choice

to dummy's ace, and calts 1or the club
queen. He is tempting East.to cover, but
is ln1encting to rufl if East plays low.

-BIG NATE

740-985-3831

&lt; • 1'

.

Chicago, she had held the West cards

South humps and claims.

• Pomeroy, OH

I

loop .

45 Dlamol c;y
47 Earthen pol
48 LMrent
51 Final Jettor
53 Dawn
dusk

Here, though, the king appears, so

Shade River Ag. Service

,., (I', • '

44 Knock--

Th is deal was sent to me by one of my
stude(lts. During a social game of

enthusiastic. Also, because both oppo·
nents passed despite North's having two
major-suit singletons, South is m_
arked
with a strOng hand. I think I would make

45771
740-949-2217

r1~2-1.21

43 Suppo111

mends, but wnh only seven high-card
points. one does not wish to sound too

Why drive anywhere else

Call Gary Stanley "
740-742-2293

horne?"
''
(hyph.l
39 taklthe I~
tie
40Walfled
41 Thunctorhaod
42 Slohed wltl1
delight

gBme-going values in support of dia·

Hill's Se lf '
"
Sto rage
29670 Bashan Road .,
•
Racine. Ohio

V.C.

36 "Anyone

what does North respond? That is not an
easy questiOn to answer. The hand has

Triumph 12% Horse Feed ....... $5.99/50 lb.
Sportsrnlx Dog Food 21-11........... $9.99/50
S·UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk Only
Prlerert Powder Coated Gates
tort. $53.00
14 rt. $75.00
12 rt. $$65.00
16 rt $83.00

Stanley Tree_Trimming
&amp; Remova.l

maybe
Well·known
Pharaoh
Nobleman
London lav
German
article ·
Mall
beverage
Possesses
Compete
for
Freight
weight
High
dudgeon
No, to a
laird
Salon
supply
Bridle parts

Obviously, South should open one dia·
mond, preparing to rebid strongly. But

INGREDIENT !!

WHAT A DEAL!!

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

•,

to diamondS! South, who rightly
assumed it was Stayman, rebid three

I

Owner:

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISlRUeTIIN

??

A problem caused
by an earlie.r error

ed three clubs,

I

James Kee- II
742·2332

Pass

•

PIYINGni'PIICES FD1
IIIMIRmC.S•III. .IIIWIIIIIII
CIIIIIJIIC Dlilvlrln •C.IIIF

when IVIryone It lrtt to operate lndt·
pendantly.
VIAQO (Aug, 23-Sept.-22) - If you &amp;111 a
pragmatic 11111onary and not juat a wilh·
fulthlnker, the reaMzatlon of accompliSh·
lng your tlCpectatlona will 'vaatly Improve
The former· succeeds, the laner tails.

llllltlnll•lnt
ICIII ftr Clnlll'riCell

GRI~ELLS

SOUP TO NUTZ ·
Ca.&lt; Gille

Me

t:rnNmon fOR

• LoGOIIRHea " ?

(10) 1,7.

Shop
Classifieds!

•
'\

•

I'

•

•

•.

.

"

during the post-mortam.) North reSpond·

l

Siding
Replacement
Wlndtiwa .
Roofing
Decka
Garages
Pole Buildings
Room AddRions

East

.'

hearts. North converted to three no-

•

!'
,'

141-992-1611

l

S~ALYOU~

tNVeLoPe.

Mu"ay,
Craftsman,
MTD, Briggs

:;,,~::~~~

l!'r;p.-....U-.v-&amp;--

YOU F0~60T TO

\

~.tlml&gt;erc:reelala1!iftetry.oom

- ~-=ty

North

Opening lead: • 4

Mowm_,TiUen,

·-----_.1

'·
'

1•

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J&amp;L
Construction

West

Pass

Hll'dwood Cablae1ry And Furnl.ure

Free Eo.•

a.

South

Lawn. Trocton,

I

rr
·

Wi!ie Concrete
Alli ypes of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise .

J04.773-5416t

Mllgl County by Mary TION
2. Paid Jn-Couniy
I. Title of publica- Subscriptions stated
no 1111 The Board of County Murrey for benefit fof
tlon: The
on Form 3541. (Include
1or de,eils or pick up drill $6,000 NC 4 row No Commlulonet'l II lite lite County Jtll.
advarlloar's proof .,d
Appl~allim at the rental Till corn plonlor $1,500 front otapo of the MEIGS COUNTY COM- Dally Sentinel.
• New Homes
. 2. Publlcailon No. exch.,ge capias): 20.
office. Poosl&gt;lilly ol rental
Sip!=' 30W3HG11 l..lge County Court MISSIONERS
•
Ga1ages
Houoa on
Friday, Mlck
Devenport, 145-960.
3. Sales through
assistance. Equal Housing
• Complete
October 12, 2007, at . President
3. Date of filing: Dealere and Cerrltll'll,
Opportunity. TOOt 419·526~
10:00 o'clocll AM will (1!17, 24, (10)1
October 1, 2007.
Street Vendora and
Remodeling
0466. -This institution Is an
oall-at public auction to
4. I'Niquancy of Coumar Sales: 3,243.
equal Opportunity provider,
·
and Emptoyef
16 Black Angus cow and calf the hlgheat and beat
Josue: Dally Monday
C.
Total
Paid
pairs. 7 bJed cows, 1 bllll. bidder the following
Public Notice
through Friday.
Clrcullllon: 3,341. '
.
call 7&gt;40-146-9:!83
Stop &amp; Compare
real eetate found In vol.
5. No. Of Jssuea pubD. Free Dlatrlbutlon
Legat Notice
Ill bed Annually: 259
by Mall. ·
~~~=~~~
Boar rtog .· 2yr old Hemp- 221 Pg. 399, to wit:
TRACT 1:Situalld In Sealed Blda are being
6.
Annual
1. Outelda-County
Duroc, lbp Genetics. 740·
the County of Meigs, accepted lor a 1977 Subscription
Price. as alated on. ,form
------------~ =33~~==7________ State of Ohio, VIllage of lntornallonal
dump $123.24
Home 3541:2.
One bedroom Garage apart· .Pure briKI BlaCk Angus Bull. Poemroy, In Sacllon
truck,
Bedford Delivered.
2. In countY aa alit·
ment with WOOd deck. iur· 2 112 ·years old. 740-446- Town2,andRange13, Township
.Trusteea
7.
Location
of edonlorm3541:0.
nlshed w/carpel, couch, 4410
beginning II a alike reoarve tho right to Known
Office
of
3. Other claeeea
Driveways,
chairs, _bod, microwave,
lOuth 81112 c1eg eaat1 accapt or reject any or Publication: 111 Court mailed through · the
Sidewalks, Pr"os, .
electric range, refrigerator,
DA•
cl1aln 69 llnka; thence all bldo. To view or St, Pomeroy, 9hlo, USPS: 0. '
'"'
4. Filii Dlatrlbutlon
Concre~ Footers
. dlehes &amp; ~lverware. No ~w--oiGiiiRAJNiiiilio.-,.1 north 11 112 tteg will Jnqulrlee call 740-992· Melga County, 45761.
Pets, S.C:urlty deposit ..,
Ill llnkl; lhance north 7015. Mall bids to
8. Locallon of the Outelde · tha
Mall ,
Also
required, Rent $250 plus 1000 tb round Balas ol HaY 55 deg 3 chaine Bedlord
Townehlp, Headquarters
or (Carrier
or
Othar
ullllllea 304-675-1625
call ·304-76HI030
and 81 llnkl; thence 42774 Helwig Ridge, General
Buolne11 Meane): o
Block &amp;
11{\'\."l'(\1( 1\ll!J\
lOuth 24112 deg ent3 Shlde, OH 4577&amp;. Bids Dlflcea
of
the
E.
Total
Free
Brickwork
Tara
Townhouse
chains and 47 Jlnklto accepted until October Publlihera: 111 Court Dlotrlbutl.on: 2.
the place of beginning, 9111.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio,
F. Total Distribution:
Attanmems. very Spacious. ~10
Atmli.
containing 40/1 ODihl Barbera J. GRI8oar
45769.
3,343.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, I 112
Dennis Bryant
Beth, Aduh Pool &amp; Baby 1.,,-.,.;liiiliiii._.l scree, excepting the Flecal Officer
8. Publlehar: Dan . G.
Copies
Not
740-742-2377
Poot, Patio, Start $42~o. 1991' Neon, auto, 4dr, coal therein and the 7-96-1244
Goodrich, 111 Court Distributed: 212.
No Pete, .,.. Lease Plus
right to mine the same (8) 25, 26, 27, 28 (10) 1, St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
H. Total: 3,559
Security Deposit Required, $1700. ceo. cou 740·256- Without lncumbancato 2, 3, 4, 5
45769.
Managing
Average
No. Copies
1652 or 256-1233
(7.40)446-3481 .
the eurfaca, axcaptlng
EdRor, Kevin Kelly, 111 of
Single
Josue
the right of. way
Courf St., Pomeroy, Published Nearest to
through oald lot along
Public Notice
Ohio 45768.
Filing Date:
In Memory
Devld·Richerd's l[nato
. 10. '
Owner:
15.
Extant
and
Walehtown
Road. The Syrocuoa R.eclne H e a r t 1 a n d nature of Circulation. ..
Parcel
No. ·
16· Regional
Sewer PubUcatlono, 1 West
A. Total No. Copies
·
00400.000
32023
Dlotrlct
will
hold
1
pubMain
Stllllt,
Clinton,
Printed:
3,422.
· ·
1966-2006
WelahiOY(n
Rood, lie meeting on the pro- CT 08413, Michael
B.
Paid
and/or
In loving memory
Pomery, OH
pooed
Tacklnrllla Bush; 183 Orcutt Drive, requested Circulation:
of our tkar daugltttr
Prior Jnetrument reflr- Expanelon on October COullford, CT, 06437,
1. Paid/Requested A-One Auto Repair
enca: Vol 200 Page 358 I, 2007 II 7:00 pm II Wachovle
Capltel Oulllda·County Mall
99 Beech Street
MINIMUM
BID the American Legion. Partnars 2004, LLC, Sublcrlptlono Stated
Middleport. OH
oN October I st
$5,800.00
(1)26, 26,27,28.30(10) 301 South Collage on Form 3541 . (Include
740,992·1 030
TRACT 2: Situated In I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 8
Street, 12 th Floor, edvertlsar's proof and
h•r 41st birllulay
Mon-Fri 9·5
the Vllllgl Of Pomeroy,
Charlotte, NC 28288, exchange copies.) : 71.
Oil Changes,
Melge' County, Ohio:
W
I
c
k
·s
2. Paid ln·County
Brake Svc. Tune
We love yO.. and miss you
Loti 83 and 64 on the . Public Notice
Communications • &amp; Subecrlptlono ~tated
Up, AIC Svc,
You'llalways be In our thooghts 111d our
Eaat Slclo ot Naylor's
Media Partners , L.P. on lorm 3541. (Include
Engine Work,
Run and on the EHI Notice of Lien Sale
405 Pork Avenue, Suite edvertloar's proof and
hoarts
Shocks Struts
Side Of Spring Avenue, Tho personal property 702,
Now
York, exchange copleo): 16.
Mom 111d Dad
All work
end baing the nme andcontanlloflhefol· NYID022,
Wlcka
3. Saleo through
guaranteed
property occupied -by lowing atorage unite Parallel
(Limited) Deelara and Carriers,
George BIIUII', Sr., II I will be auctioned for Plrtnerehlp L.L.P. 405 Street. Vendors and Certified Mechanic
Bumper To
ruldance II the Ume sale te oatllfy the lien Parte Avenue, Suite 702 Counter Salea: 3,140
Help Wanted •
Help Wanted
Bumper Service.
of his decease; and of Harwell Storage.
Now YOrk, NY 10022.
C. Total Paid end/or
given by him, the oakl The Ilia will be held at
11 .
Known Requested Clrcula1lon:
WANTED: Buckeye Community Servic~s is George Bluer, Sr., by the tJartwell Storage B o n d h o I d. e r s , 3,227.
will to three of his cl111· facility, 34055 Laurel Mortgagees · Holding
D. Frea Distribution
opening a new home and has the following dren
George Bauer, Cliff Rd., Pomeroy, 1% or more: General by Mall.
posiiions available to assist two individual s Velentlno Bauer, and Ohio at 5:00 p.m. on Elactrlc
Capital
1. Outslde,County
· Corporation,
2325 as stated on form
with mental retardation in Chester (MeiBS Kathryn Bauer, and October 17, 2007.
being more particular· UnR I 52
Lakeview
Parkway, 3541 : 2.
County):
ly deecrlbed In the Becky Klein
Suit~ 700, Alpharetta,
2. In county as sta1·
1)40 hrs · 2:30pm , I 2:30am SIS: 3 pm ·
Record Of Deeda And 160 Mulberry · Ave . GA 30004.
ed on form 3541 : 0.
12:30 am M!fu
.
Wille PI Melgl County. Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
AV11rage No. Copies
3. Other ·classes
Deed reference Vol 311 UnR t88
·
Each lsaue · During mailed through the
2)35 hrs -3 pm · I 2:30am WfThiF: 9am ,
PG 7V5
Todd Hertford 48720 Preceding 12 Montha: USPS: 0.
·
2:30pm Su
·
Parcel
-No.
16· Tornado Ad.
IS.
Extent
and
4, Free Dletrlbutlon
3) 35 hrs: 12:30.9 am S/S/Mffu
00521.000
16· Racine, Ohio 45771
nature 01
Outside
the
Mall ·
4) 32 hrs 12:30 . 9a.m. Wffh: 12:30 am · 2:30
00528.000
UnR t45
Clrc~JIIIon.
(Carrier
or
Other
Prior Jnllrutnent Vol Vickie Lambert '
A. Total No. Copies Means): 0
pmF
215 PG 459 Vol 215 PG Box 26t Middleport, Printed: 3,559.
E.
To1al
Free
Must have high school diplorpa or OED, valid 461
Ohio 45760
B.
Paid · and/or Dlotrlbutlon: 2.

1400.

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neither ·

-

740-992-6971

7 112 Tye PUBLIC AUCTION .

with appliances furnished. 8Ft dlec

On aile Laundry lacllly. Cal Pooture,

•

MOWER

DaVid Lewis

Ohio 45685. (740)245·9170. ..,_...
F'.ounMm
_ _ ___

===7=40:;..- 446-0007'

MASON

26 Years E•perience·

~n

:

GOPf

;;;-;,;E,.··;;~--.-;;;;

at: Valley View Apartmanta,r
ii0i10

BOO Sl Ate 325, Th\o'man,

9AK9 6
+AK8 64
.. 7

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

•---~------------------.1

I \In I '&gt;.I 1'1'1 I I ...,
,1, I I \ I .... I ( ~( h

••

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

••••••••••••••••••••• - ••• - • - - - •

......
Black/Tan femalee, $300
each. 8 woeke old.
(7&gt;401388-8 124

South
4 AJ 8

F~AN~.

Mall or .drop ott thte coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publlehlng 'P.O. Box 469, Gelllpalla, OH 46631

2

••

H&amp;H
Guttering

:..:740-643-00::.:::..:;::.::'3:.__ _,_
Miniature . Pincher

•

740-367-0536

tO Years
City/State/Zip---- - - - - - - - - -

Honeysuckle
Hills :___::.:..:._____ 78 Air Stream, 31FT, great
Apartments now acoepting AKC Golden Fletrlever pups. conditkln 304-674-oooEI or

-

Address __________________________

:._17_&gt;40_:_)2_4_5·_50_2_7- - - -

utHIIIea Included, no peta, ..,_ _
740-367"7129.
available 10/01107. $550 per
moolh
plus
deposit, I yr. old Yorl&lt;ie, CKC regis·
M~~
(74(})992-4119
IOJed , appx. Sf, $150, ~
v•~nvmr.&gt; ,
(740)59o-7666 .

Drive, across from Gallle
County Health Dept. No
rental aulstBnce avallable
at this time. Aents stan at
$310 and $340. Equal
Housing
·apportunlty.
(7&gt;40)44e-3344

4JalUpoli• JBail!' ottibune
.t)otnt •b!a•ant Jl.eut•ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba~ ott me• -6enthtd

·----------~-------~----------- --

Channel, Flat Bar, Steel - - - - - - - Grating
For
Drains, 2004 Sporlster 883 XL
Qroclouo Living 1 8nd 2
&amp; W&amp;lkviays. L&amp;L w/8hl81d, Engine Guard,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Forward fool conlro~. pull
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; ~ H Bar, Two Seater,
Manor and RIYOrsldo Apls.ln Friday &amp;am-1·30p Closed
Middleport, from $327 to ThJJrsday, Satu~day &amp; Foot pegs. sissy bar, SSOOO.

=~~~.'

Here's all you ..
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit,' Decks,
Doors, Windows.
·Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • ~alllpolls, OH

44 Goudy
46 Set up a
1 Atlantic
lund
swimmers 49 Circus
5 200 lins
crowd noise
8 Library
50 Move like
caution
lava ·
11 Ogden stale 52 Zlploc
·12 Raiae
compe11tor
14 Mlao
54 Feel sorry
Piggy's
about
word
55 Got In debt
15 Citrus tree 56 He directed
16 Famed
Marlon
lionen
57 Augment
17 Jr. naval
58 French
oHicer
article
18 Downpour 59 Actress
20 Investment
Tyne 19
. f'etums
22 Opera1e
DOWN
21
23 PC fodder
24
24 Smallest
1 --de-eac 25
amount
2 Elevator
27 In charge of
man
26
29 Lubricant .
3 Foggy
30 MajoreHe's 4 Cuts off
27
art
5 Traffic
28
34 Singly
signal
(hyph.)
6 Sushi
30
37 -Dawn
morsel
Chong
7 Cuohy
31
38 Atom
8 Process ore
9 Accord
fragments
32
39 Pivot
maker
41 Roman
10 Teakenlo
33
historian
sound
43 Bahl
13 VIking,
35

..·

\

·-

-- ·~

- ,___ --'----------

.

I

·,

�.,
, Monday, October 1, 2007

Monday, October 1, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

--------..------ "
NEA Crossword ' Puzzle

BRIDGE ·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
Johnson~s

.

Tree

'

Service

• 3
• 10 7 5 3 2
4 A Q J tO 9 6
West
East
K 9 7 -1
• Q 10 6 5 2
Q 5 4- '
• J t 0872
• Q9
• J.
853 2
4 K 4

Complete Tree Care
· fn•d • ,_IEIIImMII

-Specllllstlln:

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

so, you q

a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
I

!.:.
1996 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4.
72,876 miles, AC, alec
brakes and windows, cloth
interior, Re!,..,-hlldlr,-1!om&lt;L)J
rust . $5000.00, Riverview
Productions (740) 441-1150
7:ooam · 3:30pm, ask tor
Rodney Flankin.

Townhouse ~ apartments,
and/or small houSes FOR

RENT. Catl (740)441-1 111
for 8J!PIIeation &amp; information.

EllmVIew
' 'Apartll)ents
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

•Central heat &amp; AIC
•Washer/dryer hookup
• Tenant pays electric

(304)882-3_017

n

Jeep CJ5, 4JC4, VB. Call
740·388·0862 or 740-645·
6996, leave a message.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aep_aired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
8()()-537·9528.

r·4tJ=&lt;lS

1

NEW AND ·USED STEEL 2000 Kawasaki Prairie, runs
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar good, 2 wheel ctrive, $1500,
For
Concrete, Angle, (740)590-7666

Subscriber's Name - - - - - - - -

Dli_.

Equal Sunday. (740)446-7300

Honeymoon conage, 2 br.,
country aanlng, wid hookup.

r

'I

ian;

,.FOR_SAu:i i j-·_.1

2008 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 In accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-$19,600. COli

Phone_________________________

r

I

apptlcallons
1a' 1
2 BR Parents
1st shots
&amp; wormed,
Apta. Located
onand
Colonial
on Premises.
$250. 304-593-3933 $5,800 ceo

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

Pu"e,'

~lng Applications

1·2 Bedroom Apanments

~llo11r

304-881-32'14
Servicing

'

D'YA HAVE A
RECIPE FER TH'
COOKBOOK,
LUREEN?

l

&amp; Strallan

THf

oTHfl

...tlf'"

H-Honest

MAN TO
COOK 'EM FER !!

SIGH~!. . A

NAW, ALL MY
DISHES LACK

ONE

Wll Dl

ClllcrtiiWIIl

....
;

THE BORN LOSER

"'t CM.LE.I&gt; I)IJ(K '\'1\e:. ·..
WEC.II.Wt&gt;-WU£ YOU

'1-fl.ommLE:, t MY
1\"f '\'I ME,';) ...

~~~.~·~Y

Hours

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

,.-e.\Jj' l M.WI&gt;.Y!) fi.I&gt;.\/E:
IC.~RE. ~ O.LL ~.-ce"JI--1
fro~ YOU!

i

SOON THE IIIEIGHeoRHOOt&gt;
WILL S.E FILL.EP WITH
THE SOUMPS Of 'ENSL.'VE
THE MOLL~K' PLA"fllf6
HEI\1&gt;-IWIGING EAI!TH·

ft:OCK !

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition~ I

'Prompt and Quality
Work

R•modtllng

*Reasonable Rates
"' lnsured ~
•Experienced
References Availa""ll"!

Pello and Porch Deck&amp;

New Glf'8011
Electrical I Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Outtera
VInyl Siding&amp; Painting

.,

wv 0311725

YOUNG

PEANUTS

'

Ill

THEN A VOICE COMES TO ME FROM
OUT OF TilE DARK, 11 WE APPRECIATE
'I'OOR ATTITUDE!''

•

r)

P'HlH'rt , (111,
1

",, •

,.

·'
·•
"•

$7.50/hr. Send resume to : P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants:
10/5107. Pre-employment
drug testing.
.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

.

MJNIMUMBID$8,470.00
Purchuer · of both
trecta sublect to~ .
fHI, · 111111men11,
linea and penaltlee.
10% qown, belence on
delivery of cloed
Property doneted to

R e q u e a t e d
F. Total Distribution:
Circulation:
3,229.
1. Paid/Requested
G.
Copies
Not
Public Notice
Outslde·County Mall Distributed.: 193.
Subscriptions Stated
H. Total: 3,697.
STATEMENT OF OWN· on Form 3541 . (Include
Dan Goodrich,
ERSHIP
MANAGE· advertlaer's proot and
Publisher
MENT AND CJFICULA· oxcl1ange copies.) 78
October t , 2007

monds, where maHers rested.

a game-invitational raise in diamonds'.
After that, South would make a slam-try,
which North would embrace enthusiastically. It is hard to reach seven diamonds,
but six ought to be act1ievable.
Suppose West guesses to lead a heart
· against sevein diamonds. Declarer wins

with his ace, draws trumps, plays a club

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.;

by Luis campos
~ebrity Cipher

Cryptogram! M! etealed from qoo!alials by lamO\JS peope, past and present
Each letter 1n!he c1phef stands fo. anothef.
,

Today'sdue: Tequilts K

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SZHUZM

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WAZPMAEZMMZE,
MZJ

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EPBBOAV
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "There is no way to be truly great '" this world. We
ara all impaled on lhe crook or conditioning.' · James Dean

AstroGraph
'lbur'lllrtlldl;y:

'~~::~' S©\\~~-~t!fs·
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words bt·
~~ClAY

Rearrange letters of the
scromb~d

law ro form four olmple words.

By Bernice' Bede Oeol
Your profit motive could be ·mu ch
str~mger than usual, which will serve as a
powertul motivating Ioree urging You to
blaze new trails for gain. When you seek,
·you will find something that could be a
gold mine.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You have
that somethi ng extra going for you that
separates you from the atso-ntns~ If you
aren't atrald to use your talents construe·
tl...ety, you will end up In the winner's clr·
cle.r
SCORPIO .t.kt. 24-Nov. 22) - Make an
effort to seefo: out knowledge or inl6rma·
lion that could help you achieve a better
"Mistakes," gramps told the
life. What you learn can have a strohg
Impact on your futurO plans.
boy, "are part of the dues
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec .• 21) onepaysfora --·---."
Ahhough you realize there could be an
element of risk by changing the way You
Complere 1he chu&lt;:kle q110ted
have always done something, It's worth ·a
-L.
.
....1.-J..-J...
----'
.
L.....J
by. fijfing in the miuing words
try. Advancement comes tt:trough grow·
L.
you deYelop lroin step No . .') below.
ing with the limes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) 1
PRINT NUMBERED
Conditions are conducive tor forming an
l'fTTERS IN SQUARES
allianCe fof' a mutually benefidal purpose. Howo11er, successcwlll be In pro·
portion to the eJCperience and abilities ol
{)
· the person you select
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Even
though you mtghl have to work a trifle
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 9·18 -o 1 ·
harder lhan usual, your rewards will be
Climax- Poise- Blend - Wedded- BE PLEASED
commensurate with the effort you
expend. Don't hesitate to' take on a tough
"I bcliev.e if you do wbal intemt yoo,·the l'ellow told hisf!l. "at
assignment. •
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20~ - A new
least one penon will BE PLEASED.'
enterprise you are considering could
haYG the large possibilities for growth
that you envision. Be sure to do the
spadework necessal)' tor success
·

I

MI R LAp
1---.-,--i,-.1--.,;:.._,.,...:..,,.,8:-! 0

@

~~~~~MSLE FORI I

COWandBOY
AS SooN AS HE'S FAT
ENO!JGtl HE'LL ENTER
THEN HE'LL BECOME

J

508.1Sl•IIIIMIIIIIUU5J88 .
7....2-:IIU

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-lllllllltfr1111VI:IIIIit HI••

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IIIUdiVI:DI-12:•••

I

By th ink·
ing things througtl before you start any·
thing, you're not Nkely to take on more
than you can comfortably hancle and
you'll be able to successfully finish to ·
your satisfaction.
TAURUS (Apr1120-Uay 20) - Something
about whiCh you feel strongly and ha...e
taken a vigorous interest in can Ignite the
care of olt'lers. Take your message
directly to those who can help you
advance your plans.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Your lmbl·
tlon and Ingenuity can be joined together
to produce a combination for lasting per·
sonal gains more powerful than you
could imagine. Concentrate your efforts
In this area.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) -When It
comes to satisfying your aelt-lnteri)Sta,
try to be a bit more assertive than usual
without being arrogant or brash. Strongly
apply your etfG:rta toward producing
clealrablt rtlultt.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 - Co lhlng1 the
Wl'f you th ink they thould be done, with·
out ttepplng on the toea of othert. You'll
find your m.thodt will be very lfftc11vt

GARFIELD

Manlay•llli
Racycl•na

I

. ARIES (March 21·~1 19) -

AIIJITBIFLY)

~~,~~-·

I .I I I

ARLO &amp;JANIS

THE Pli'A STAGE, AND

Lori Hensley ,

driver's license, three years good dri vi~g
experience and adequate automobile insurance.

was a transfer

TUe~.~-2,2007

WHO 81t0Ll6HT
SOME MUSIC.'

FOR SAu:

Lo••

thinking~

trump, South continued with four dla·
monds, and North raised to five dla·

,•

SHo\lTER.II&gt;IC,

I

to •· .

and had wondered how her opponents
could have reached a slam In diarTl(lncts.
The original auction was a comedy of
errors. After East passed, South opened
two no-trump desp~e a singleton and
· only 19 points. (Apparently, neither
North nor SOUth questioned this choice

to dummy's ace, and calts 1or the club
queen. He is tempting East.to cover, but
is ln1encting to rufl if East plays low.

-BIG NATE

740-985-3831

&lt; • 1'

.

Chicago, she had held the West cards

South humps and claims.

• Pomeroy, OH

I

loop .

45 Dlamol c;y
47 Earthen pol
48 LMrent
51 Final Jettor
53 Dawn
dusk

Here, though, the king appears, so

Shade River Ag. Service

,., (I', • '

44 Knock--

Th is deal was sent to me by one of my
stude(lts. During a social game of

enthusiastic. Also, because both oppo·
nents passed despite North's having two
major-suit singletons, South is m_
arked
with a strOng hand. I think I would make

45771
740-949-2217

r1~2-1.21

43 Suppo111

mends, but wnh only seven high-card
points. one does not wish to sound too

Why drive anywhere else

Call Gary Stanley "
740-742-2293

horne?"
''
(hyph.l
39 taklthe I~
tie
40Walfled
41 Thunctorhaod
42 Slohed wltl1
delight

gBme-going values in support of dia·

Hill's Se lf '
"
Sto rage
29670 Bashan Road .,
•
Racine. Ohio

V.C.

36 "Anyone

what does North respond? That is not an
easy questiOn to answer. The hand has

Triumph 12% Horse Feed ....... $5.99/50 lb.
Sportsrnlx Dog Food 21-11........... $9.99/50
S·UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk Only
Prlerert Powder Coated Gates
tort. $53.00
14 rt. $75.00
12 rt. $$65.00
16 rt $83.00

Stanley Tree_Trimming
&amp; Remova.l

maybe
Well·known
Pharaoh
Nobleman
London lav
German
article ·
Mall
beverage
Possesses
Compete
for
Freight
weight
High
dudgeon
No, to a
laird
Salon
supply
Bridle parts

Obviously, South should open one dia·
mond, preparing to rebid strongly. But

INGREDIENT !!

WHAT A DEAL!!

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

•,

to diamondS! South, who rightly
assumed it was Stayman, rebid three

I

Owner:

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISlRUeTIIN

??

A problem caused
by an earlie.r error

ed three clubs,

I

James Kee- II
742·2332

Pass

•

PIYINGni'PIICES FD1
IIIMIRmC.S•III. .IIIWIIIIIII
CIIIIIJIIC Dlilvlrln •C.IIIF

when IVIryone It lrtt to operate lndt·
pendantly.
VIAQO (Aug, 23-Sept.-22) - If you &amp;111 a
pragmatic 11111onary and not juat a wilh·
fulthlnker, the reaMzatlon of accompliSh·
lng your tlCpectatlona will 'vaatly Improve
The former· succeeds, the laner tails.

llllltlnll•lnt
ICIII ftr Clnlll'riCell

GRI~ELLS

SOUP TO NUTZ ·
Ca.&lt; Gille

Me

t:rnNmon fOR

• LoGOIIRHea " ?

(10) 1,7.

Shop
Classifieds!

•
'\

•

I'

•

•

•.

.

"

during the post-mortam.) North reSpond·

l

Siding
Replacement
Wlndtiwa .
Roofing
Decka
Garages
Pole Buildings
Room AddRions

East

.'

hearts. North converted to three no-

•

!'
,'

141-992-1611

l

S~ALYOU~

tNVeLoPe.

Mu"ay,
Craftsman,
MTD, Briggs

:;,,~::~~~

l!'r;p.-....U-.v-&amp;--

YOU F0~60T TO

\

~.tlml&gt;erc:reelala1!iftetry.oom

- ~-=ty

North

Opening lead: • 4

Mowm_,TiUen,

·-----_.1

'·
'

1•

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J&amp;L
Construction

West

Pass

Hll'dwood Cablae1ry And Furnl.ure

Free Eo.•

a.

South

Lawn. Trocton,

I

rr
·

Wi!ie Concrete
Alli ypes of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise .

J04.773-5416t

Mllgl County by Mary TION
2. Paid Jn-Couniy
I. Title of publica- Subscriptions stated
no 1111 The Board of County Murrey for benefit fof
tlon: The
on Form 3541. (Include
1or de,eils or pick up drill $6,000 NC 4 row No Commlulonet'l II lite lite County Jtll.
advarlloar's proof .,d
Appl~allim at the rental Till corn plonlor $1,500 front otapo of the MEIGS COUNTY COM- Dally Sentinel.
• New Homes
. 2. Publlcailon No. exch.,ge capias): 20.
office. Poosl&gt;lilly ol rental
Sip!=' 30W3HG11 l..lge County Court MISSIONERS
•
Ga1ages
Houoa on
Friday, Mlck
Devenport, 145-960.
3. Sales through
assistance. Equal Housing
• Complete
October 12, 2007, at . President
3. Date of filing: Dealere and Cerrltll'll,
Opportunity. TOOt 419·526~
10:00 o'clocll AM will (1!17, 24, (10)1
October 1, 2007.
Street Vendora and
Remodeling
0466. -This institution Is an
oall-at public auction to
4. I'Niquancy of Coumar Sales: 3,243.
equal Opportunity provider,
·
and Emptoyef
16 Black Angus cow and calf the hlgheat and beat
Josue: Dally Monday
C.
Total
Paid
pairs. 7 bJed cows, 1 bllll. bidder the following
Public Notice
through Friday.
Clrcullllon: 3,341. '
.
call 7&gt;40-146-9:!83
Stop &amp; Compare
real eetate found In vol.
5. No. Of Jssuea pubD. Free Dlatrlbutlon
Legat Notice
Ill bed Annually: 259
by Mall. ·
~~~=~~~
Boar rtog .· 2yr old Hemp- 221 Pg. 399, to wit:
TRACT 1:Situalld In Sealed Blda are being
6.
Annual
1. Outelda-County
Duroc, lbp Genetics. 740·
the County of Meigs, accepted lor a 1977 Subscription
Price. as alated on. ,form
------------~ =33~~==7________ State of Ohio, VIllage of lntornallonal
dump $123.24
Home 3541:2.
One bedroom Garage apart· .Pure briKI BlaCk Angus Bull. Poemroy, In Sacllon
truck,
Bedford Delivered.
2. In countY aa alit·
ment with WOOd deck. iur· 2 112 ·years old. 740-446- Town2,andRange13, Township
.Trusteea
7.
Location
of edonlorm3541:0.
nlshed w/carpel, couch, 4410
beginning II a alike reoarve tho right to Known
Office
of
3. Other claeeea
Driveways,
chairs, _bod, microwave,
lOuth 81112 c1eg eaat1 accapt or reject any or Publication: 111 Court mailed through · the
Sidewalks, Pr"os, .
electric range, refrigerator,
DA•
cl1aln 69 llnka; thence all bldo. To view or St, Pomeroy, 9hlo, USPS: 0. '
'"'
4. Filii Dlatrlbutlon
Concre~ Footers
. dlehes &amp; ~lverware. No ~w--oiGiiiRAJNiiiilio.-,.1 north 11 112 tteg will Jnqulrlee call 740-992· Melga County, 45761.
Pets, S.C:urlty deposit ..,
Ill llnkl; lhance north 7015. Mall bids to
8. Locallon of the Outelde · tha
Mall ,
Also
required, Rent $250 plus 1000 tb round Balas ol HaY 55 deg 3 chaine Bedlord
Townehlp, Headquarters
or (Carrier
or
Othar
ullllllea 304-675-1625
call ·304-76HI030
and 81 llnkl; thence 42774 Helwig Ridge, General
Buolne11 Meane): o
Block &amp;
11{\'\."l'(\1( 1\ll!J\
lOuth 24112 deg ent3 Shlde, OH 4577&amp;. Bids Dlflcea
of
the
E.
Total
Free
Brickwork
Tara
Townhouse
chains and 47 Jlnklto accepted until October Publlihera: 111 Court Dlotrlbutl.on: 2.
the place of beginning, 9111.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio,
F. Total Distribution:
Attanmems. very Spacious. ~10
Atmli.
containing 40/1 ODihl Barbera J. GRI8oar
45769.
3,343.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, I 112
Dennis Bryant
Beth, Aduh Pool &amp; Baby 1.,,-.,.;liiiliiii._.l scree, excepting the Flecal Officer
8. Publlehar: Dan . G.
Copies
Not
740-742-2377
Poot, Patio, Start $42~o. 1991' Neon, auto, 4dr, coal therein and the 7-96-1244
Goodrich, 111 Court Distributed: 212.
No Pete, .,.. Lease Plus
right to mine the same (8) 25, 26, 27, 28 (10) 1, St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
H. Total: 3,559
Security Deposit Required, $1700. ceo. cou 740·256- Without lncumbancato 2, 3, 4, 5
45769.
Managing
Average
No. Copies
1652 or 256-1233
(7.40)446-3481 .
the eurfaca, axcaptlng
EdRor, Kevin Kelly, 111 of
Single
Josue
the right of. way
Courf St., Pomeroy, Published Nearest to
through oald lot along
Public Notice
Ohio 45768.
Filing Date:
In Memory
Devld·Richerd's l[nato
. 10. '
Owner:
15.
Extant
and
Walehtown
Road. The Syrocuoa R.eclne H e a r t 1 a n d nature of Circulation. ..
Parcel
No. ·
16· Regional
Sewer PubUcatlono, 1 West
A. Total No. Copies
·
00400.000
32023
Dlotrlct
will
hold
1
pubMain
Stllllt,
Clinton,
Printed:
3,422.
· ·
1966-2006
WelahiOY(n
Rood, lie meeting on the pro- CT 08413, Michael
B.
Paid
and/or
In loving memory
Pomery, OH
pooed
Tacklnrllla Bush; 183 Orcutt Drive, requested Circulation:
of our tkar daugltttr
Prior Jnetrument reflr- Expanelon on October COullford, CT, 06437,
1. Paid/Requested A-One Auto Repair
enca: Vol 200 Page 358 I, 2007 II 7:00 pm II Wachovle
Capltel Oulllda·County Mall
99 Beech Street
MINIMUM
BID the American Legion. Partnars 2004, LLC, Sublcrlptlono Stated
Middleport. OH
oN October I st
$5,800.00
(1)26, 26,27,28.30(10) 301 South Collage on Form 3541 . (Include
740,992·1 030
TRACT 2: Situated In I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 8
Street, 12 th Floor, edvertlsar's proof and
h•r 41st birllulay
Mon-Fri 9·5
the Vllllgl Of Pomeroy,
Charlotte, NC 28288, exchange copies.) : 71.
Oil Changes,
Melge' County, Ohio:
W
I
c
k
·s
2. Paid ln·County
Brake Svc. Tune
We love yO.. and miss you
Loti 83 and 64 on the . Public Notice
Communications • &amp; Subecrlptlono ~tated
Up, AIC Svc,
You'llalways be In our thooghts 111d our
Eaat Slclo ot Naylor's
Media Partners , L.P. on lorm 3541. (Include
Engine Work,
Run and on the EHI Notice of Lien Sale
405 Pork Avenue, Suite edvertloar's proof and
hoarts
Shocks Struts
Side Of Spring Avenue, Tho personal property 702,
Now
York, exchange copleo): 16.
Mom 111d Dad
All work
end baing the nme andcontanlloflhefol· NYID022,
Wlcka
3. Saleo through
guaranteed
property occupied -by lowing atorage unite Parallel
(Limited) Deelara and Carriers,
George BIIUII', Sr., II I will be auctioned for Plrtnerehlp L.L.P. 405 Street. Vendors and Certified Mechanic
Bumper To
ruldance II the Ume sale te oatllfy the lien Parte Avenue, Suite 702 Counter Salea: 3,140
Help Wanted •
Help Wanted
Bumper Service.
of his decease; and of Harwell Storage.
Now YOrk, NY 10022.
C. Total Paid end/or
given by him, the oakl The Ilia will be held at
11 .
Known Requested Clrcula1lon:
WANTED: Buckeye Community Servic~s is George Bluer, Sr., by the tJartwell Storage B o n d h o I d. e r s , 3,227.
will to three of his cl111· facility, 34055 Laurel Mortgagees · Holding
D. Frea Distribution
opening a new home and has the following dren
George Bauer, Cliff Rd., Pomeroy, 1% or more: General by Mall.
posiiions available to assist two individual s Velentlno Bauer, and Ohio at 5:00 p.m. on Elactrlc
Capital
1. Outslde,County
· Corporation,
2325 as stated on form
with mental retardation in Chester (MeiBS Kathryn Bauer, and October 17, 2007.
being more particular· UnR I 52
Lakeview
Parkway, 3541 : 2.
County):
ly deecrlbed In the Becky Klein
Suit~ 700, Alpharetta,
2. In county as sta1·
1)40 hrs · 2:30pm , I 2:30am SIS: 3 pm ·
Record Of Deeda And 160 Mulberry · Ave . GA 30004.
ed on form 3541 : 0.
12:30 am M!fu
.
Wille PI Melgl County. Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
AV11rage No. Copies
3. Other ·classes
Deed reference Vol 311 UnR t88
·
Each lsaue · During mailed through the
2)35 hrs -3 pm · I 2:30am WfThiF: 9am ,
PG 7V5
Todd Hertford 48720 Preceding 12 Montha: USPS: 0.
·
2:30pm Su
·
Parcel
-No.
16· Tornado Ad.
IS.
Extent
and
4, Free Dletrlbutlon
3) 35 hrs: 12:30.9 am S/S/Mffu
00521.000
16· Racine, Ohio 45771
nature 01
Outside
the
Mall ·
4) 32 hrs 12:30 . 9a.m. Wffh: 12:30 am · 2:30
00528.000
UnR t45
Clrc~JIIIon.
(Carrier
or
Other
Prior Jnllrutnent Vol Vickie Lambert '
A. Total No. Copies Means): 0
pmF
215 PG 459 Vol 215 PG Box 26t Middleport, Printed: 3,559.
E.
To1al
Free
Must have high school diplorpa or OED, valid 461
Ohio 45760
B.
Paid · and/or Dlotrlbutlon: 2.

1400.

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neither ·

-

740-992-6971

7 112 Tye PUBLIC AUCTION .

with appliances furnished. 8Ft dlec

On aile Laundry lacllly. Cal Pooture,

•

MOWER

DaVid Lewis

Ohio 45685. (740)245·9170. ..,_...
F'.ounMm
_ _ ___

===7=40:;..- 446-0007'

MASON

26 Years E•perience·

~n

:

GOPf

;;;-;,;E,.··;;~--.-;;;;

at: Valley View Apartmanta,r
ii0i10

BOO Sl Ate 325, Th\o'man,

9AK9 6
+AK8 64
.. 7

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

•---~------------------.1

I \In I '&gt;.I 1'1'1 I I ...,
,1, I I \ I .... I ( ~( h

••

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

••••••••••••••••••••• - ••• - • - - - •

......
Black/Tan femalee, $300
each. 8 woeke old.
(7&gt;401388-8 124

South
4 AJ 8

F~AN~.

Mall or .drop ott thte coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publlehlng 'P.O. Box 469, Gelllpalla, OH 46631

2

••

H&amp;H
Guttering

:..:740-643-00::.:::..:;::.::'3:.__ _,_
Miniature . Pincher

•

740-367-0536

tO Years
City/State/Zip---- - - - - - - - - -

Honeysuckle
Hills :___::.:..:._____ 78 Air Stream, 31FT, great
Apartments now acoepting AKC Golden Fletrlever pups. conditkln 304-674-oooEI or

-

Address __________________________

:._17_&gt;40_:_)2_4_5·_50_2_7- - - -

utHIIIea Included, no peta, ..,_ _
740-367"7129.
available 10/01107. $550 per
moolh
plus
deposit, I yr. old Yorl&lt;ie, CKC regis·
M~~
(74(})992-4119
IOJed , appx. Sf, $150, ~
v•~nvmr.&gt; ,
(740)59o-7666 .

Drive, across from Gallle
County Health Dept. No
rental aulstBnce avallable
at this time. Aents stan at
$310 and $340. Equal
Housing
·apportunlty.
(7&gt;40)44e-3344

4JalUpoli• JBail!' ottibune
.t)otnt •b!a•ant Jl.eut•ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba~ ott me• -6enthtd

·----------~-------~----------- --

Channel, Flat Bar, Steel - - - - - - - Grating
For
Drains, 2004 Sporlster 883 XL
Qroclouo Living 1 8nd 2
&amp; W&amp;lkviays. L&amp;L w/8hl81d, Engine Guard,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Forward fool conlro~. pull
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; ~ H Bar, Two Seater,
Manor and RIYOrsldo Apls.ln Friday &amp;am-1·30p Closed
Middleport, from $327 to ThJJrsday, Satu~day &amp; Foot pegs. sissy bar, SSOOO.

=~~~.'

Here's all you ..
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit,' Decks,
Doors, Windows.
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Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • ~alllpolls, OH

44 Goudy
46 Set up a
1 Atlantic
lund
swimmers 49 Circus
5 200 lins
crowd noise
8 Library
50 Move like
caution
lava ·
11 Ogden stale 52 Zlploc
·12 Raiae
compe11tor
14 Mlao
54 Feel sorry
Piggy's
about
word
55 Got In debt
15 Citrus tree 56 He directed
16 Famed
Marlon
lionen
57 Augment
17 Jr. naval
58 French
oHicer
article
18 Downpour 59 Actress
20 Investment
Tyne 19
. f'etums
22 Opera1e
DOWN
21
23 PC fodder
24
24 Smallest
1 --de-eac 25
amount
2 Elevator
27 In charge of
man
26
29 Lubricant .
3 Foggy
30 MajoreHe's 4 Cuts off
27
art
5 Traffic
28
34 Singly
signal
(hyph.)
6 Sushi
30
37 -Dawn
morsel
Chong
7 Cuohy
31
38 Atom
8 Process ore
9 Accord
fragments
32
39 Pivot
maker
41 Roman
10 Teakenlo
33
historian
sound
43 Bahl
13 VIking,
35

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�~age B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Football Box Scores
'

CLEVELAN D (AP) - · ' Lewis,
released . by
Picked on for years, the Baltimore coach Brian Billick
Cleveland Browns fi nally in March, got some satisfacgave a black eye to orie of the tion against his former coach
NFL's biggest bullies.
and the team he played with
Derek Anderson threw two for seven seasons. He finished
touchdown passes, Jamal with 64 yards and scored on a
Rock Hill 20, River Valley_6
Lewis ran for one ·a!)!l! nst his disputed !-yard dive in the
River Valley 0 0 0 6 - 6
former teaijl and the Browns, . second quarter, the first TD
Rock Hill
0 0 6 14 - 20
considered the 98-pound roshing gtven up by the NFI,.'s
weaklings of the rugged AFC top run defense this season.
Scoring summary
North, surprised the Baltimore
And Cleveland's defen se
Third Quarter
Ravens 27-1 3 Sunday.
kept Ravens quarterback
RH-Was Pierson (run failed)
Fourth Quarter
'
With their second win over Steve McNair on hts heels and
RV-Cumutte 4 run Ikick faUed)
· a division opponent this didn't give up a touchdown
RH-i&gt;i~rsort 95 run (Michael
month, the · Browns (2-2) until the fourth quarter.
Davenport kick)
looked nothing like the inept
September was. viewed as
RH-Pierson 69 interception
team
that
was
embarrassed
34cructal
· for Browns coach
( Davenpo~ kick) '
7 in their home opener three Romeo Crennel's job secuFity,
weeks ago by Pmsbilrgh.
and a .500 overall record and a
RV
RH
Instead,
Anderson,
who
has
2-1 mark within the division
First downs
15
18
had a tendency to make poor should end .anY. talk of a
Rushing yards
157
304
Passing yards
112
47·
decisions, made mostly smart coaching change m Cleveland.
Total yards
269
351
ones while throwing two TD
And as for changing quarComp-att·int
8·24-1
passes ·- one a 78-yarder to terbacks,Andersoncouldkeep
Fumbles-lost
1-Q
o-o
Bmylon Edwards - in the rookie Brady Quirm on the
Penaltles-yds
3·15
6-40
tina quarter as the Browns bench longer than anyone
built a 24-6 lead over the thought possible.
lndlvldual Statlallcl
stunned Ravens (2·2).
The Ravens, who _didn't
Rushing' RV- Tyler Ca•naday

Notre Da~ SO,
South Gallla t8
GaJiia 0 · 6 o 12 Dame 7 18 19 8 -

Receiving: SG-Nathan Bainter
29, cateb McClanahan 1-15,
Duncan 1·34, Caleb luCIWig
Vance Failure 1·2.
NO- Slack 1·5. Bowman
Noel t -11 .

18

so

..

Scoring summary
Ft!JI I:IU.rter
tlD--.Icoel Willlal'l')i! 1 run (SiaciC ·
7:32
Second~er

lso~tathan Bainter 29 pass from
Wells (kick failed) 10:22
t.ID-Cralo Williams 62 run (kick
NO-Slack 5 pass Trey LaValley
failed) 2:12
· 7 run (run tailed) :34
Third Quarter
-.o-eraia Williams so run (Slack

ND-.koel Williams 5 run (kick
3:46
.
lilc...:.:.~loel 11 ilass from LaValley
failed) 1:49

FQurth Ciuarter
IBG,.._VIIalls 1 run (pass failed)
~D~Iadjiyan1nlo 4 run (lack failed)

l$!ii....F'ell~ire 1 run (pass failed)

'34·222
' 91
' -313
5;11·2

ND
49-436
34
470
3·7.0

lnelllvfclual StaH1t1ce
$G-Vance Fellure. 14·
Bainter 7·56, John
~iil~f&lt;l!•5~.. _
Logan Wamsley 5·16.
J'!~t;;:•:~ Williams 16-214, Jc .
IE
·
Joel Williams 5-67 ,
Davis 3-12, Je. Emnen 3-10,
· Williams ~·8, Hadjiyannis·5·10.
$G-John Wells 5· t 1-2

'72; Clayton Cumut1e 10·30,
McAveha 6-27, -~ordan ~I
Ryan H•nry 2-2.
AH-wes Pierson 17·201,
Bostic 11·55. Drew Kuehne
Andy Smith 3-12. C.J. Justice
Seth Kuehne 1-1 .
.. c&gt;·
Passing: RV...clayt~ri Cumut1e
16-Q 100, Jordan Dee.l '1-8·112.
Rft-Qrew Kuahna·4·11-2 47.
R-Iving: RV-Eric CaldWell 1
, 24, Rya~ HenlY 2·21 , Zak Deel1
18, Jordan Deel 1-11;
Canaday 1·17. ean Sands 1
RH- Sath Kuehn~' ~·26,
Pierson 1·15, Mitoh'Bii 'QaY.,nport
s_

6.

Raiders
fromPageBl
tions for 18 yards. '0rdan
Dee! and Canaday each
hauled in one pass for J 7
yards, while Sean Sands
added one grab for 15 yards.·
Jordan Dee! was also 1for-8 passing with a dozen
yards, throwing an interception - the only RVHS
turnover of the contest.
Pierson, who also added
the first score of the game
on a 6-yard run in the third
period for a 6-0 RHHS

Oc;tober 1,

2007 ·

North, South Korean
·leaders to hold
second-ever summit on
divided peninsula, A2

Anderson,.Browns rough up ragged Ravens, 27-13 ·;

•

. $0'

Mond~y,

www. mydailysentinel.com

advantage, fini shed the
ni ght with 201 rushing
yards on 17 carries. Rock
Hill accumulated 304 rushing yards as a team, as well
as 351 total yards offensively.
Drew . Kuehne was 4-of11 passing for 47 yards in
the triumph, throwing two
interceptions and zero
touchdowns. The hosts also
had 18 first downs.
Seth Kuehne led the
Redmen receivers with two
catches for 26 yards.
River Vallev returns to
OVC action ·this Friday
·when it travels to South
Point for a 7:30 kick-off.

Biftle ·

from Hendrick Motorsports,
and two-time series champion Tony SteWart gambled
twice - the first one put
fromPageBl
him in position to win, and
the
second one took him out
should be celebrating in of contention.
Victory Lane, not Biffle,
When the dust finally setand Bowyer agreed.
tled, the points standings
" It was definitely dark , had been blown open for a
and it was starting to be a Chase field that entered the
concern , but it wasn't dark event with the top six drienough that I couldn't see vers separated by just 28
(Biffle) having trouble," points.
.
.
Bowyer said. "I just didn 't
Now Johnson has a. sixknow what to do . I knew it point lead over teammate
wasn't right, but I didn't Jeff Gordon, and Bowyer is .
think they expected us to in third, 14 points out.
pull down in the grass and · Stewart, who. started the
follow him .
day just two points out of
"I don't know what hap- the lead, finished 39th and
pened, (Biftle) didn't cross dropped to fourth - 117
it lhe way I thought you points out.
were supposed to, but I
Kevin Harv'ick finished
know they're not going to sixth to jump four spots in
pull him out of Victory the standings to fifth, · 126
Lane."
points out.
Busch, who came into the
The ending was par for
the course on this wild race I 0 points out of the .
lead, finished 41st. He's
Sunday.
Rain caused two delays sixth in the standings, 136
totaling almost three hours, points out, and .blamed his
Kyle Busch was wrecked poor day squarely on Dale
minutes after the race by the Earnhardt Jr.
Earnhardt ran into the
driver who got him fired

have Pro Bowl tackle Browns a 24-3 lead.
Jonathan Ogden for the third
The Browns, who didn't
straight week, were reeling wake up until it was too late
from the start: ·
last week in a loss at Oakland,
Steve McNair, nursing an carne out firing.
injured groin, attempted a · Kellen Winslow's first
career-higl) 53 passes. McNair catch, a 25-yarder on third
threw an interception in the down, helped set up a 2-yard
first quarter, and the Browns TD pass from Anderson to Joe
capttalt:red on the .next P,lay, Jure vicius. Winslow played
when Anderson htt a. wtde· , with a partially dislocated left
open Edwards to make It 14-0. shoulder.
Phil Dawson ktcked two
The Ravens. drove . to.
field goals for the Browns, and Cleveland's 27 on ·their ftrSt
everyone was m such a good
· b MN · •
mood late in the fourth quarter possesston, ut c rur s pasS'
even Browns wide receiver mto double coverage was;
Bmylcin Edwards, a Michijlan mtercepted by Letgh Bodden..
gmduate, took part in nval
Nme seconds later, the .
Ohio State's signature "0-H-1- Browns were up 14-0 when
0 " sing-a-long.
Anderson found Edwards
Willis · McGahee had · 1Oil alone down the' left sideline
yards on 14 carries against a for a 78-yard TD. Pro B_owl'
Cleveland defense allowing cornerback Chris McAlhster
176 yards per game.
inexplicably cut inside as
The Ravens had not given Edwards broke out before
up a TD rushing in 2007 hauling in Anderson's toss and
before Lewis leaped over t11c sprinting to the end zone
pile from the _I to give the untouched.
back of Busch very early in
the race when he closed in
on his rear bumper in an .
attempt to pass. The contact
sent Busch sliding down the
track, and his earthen rocketed back across and into
the wall.
-Busch was furious at
Earnhardt, who was hired in
June to drive for Hendrick
next season . -The move cost
Busch his spot with the .elite
four-car team.
"I left a lane for him on
the outside because l knew
he was going to have a good
run coming off the corner.
He ran me over for· no reason whatsoever," Busch
said: "Just an unfortunate
circumstance and l am sure
these , guys. aren't very
appreciative of the guy who
is going to be racing for
them next year just dumped
their car that has a great
shot for the championship."
Earnhardt was apologetic,
but the damage was done.
Fortunately for Busch, most
of the Chase fii.~ld struggled,
as well.
Matt Kenseth (35th) and
Martin Truex Jr. (38th)

wrecked on' the first lap
after the race resumed following the second rain
delay. Stewart was involved
in that accident, causing
fender damage ihat his crew
chief decided not to attempt
to fix.
The damage caused a rub
that led to his tire to
explode. Kurt Busch (lith)
ran into the back of him,
sending him spinning into
the path of Carl Edwards.
Stewart was fuming after
the wreck, angrily removing
his steering wheel and
throwing his gloves, helmet
and safety gear as he exited
his car.
Stewart, who put himself ·
in position to win the race
by not pittiqg for gas right
before the I second rain
delay, declined comment as
he left the race track.
Edwards, last week's race
winner, finished 37th and .
lamented the sequence of
events.. He said his spotter .
thought Stewart should
have pulled off the track for
repairs when the tire rub
sent billowing white smoke
from his car:

•
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;u (' I•.N'I S

• Patriots stay unbeaten
with win. See Page B1

OBITUARIES

WEATIIER
:0

BR 380.0 8actpa~k Blower

I
~

~
~
~

Pllwl~prot.··krttl~.ctrw. .

fot &gt;11cwmlng Ifill
thrlddintl'ltlf~ - ·
..-tllthGme

Euityc,_1U
••• t 'I blow

GEARED UP •.• wldt llor4e.. eSTIHL

..ii

Baum lumber hie.

Twin Rivers Marrna
412 State At 1 North
740·446-6700
Next to River Front Honda

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

3,000 gallons for residential
customers, and to increase the
overage rate for gallons over
the 3,000 gallon · minimum
from 35 cents per I 00 gallons
to 45 center per I00 gallons.
Racine . currently charges
$19.50 for the first 3,000 gale
Ions.
·
'
The ordinance also recommends non-residential customers pay $26.90 per month

· Dettwiller Lumber

634 East Main Street
740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a week

for the first 3,000 gallons, and
45 cents per every I 00 gallons
over the 3,000 gallon minimum. Residential and non-residential consume&amp; vacation
mtes wiU be half of' the customer's normal rate, unless the
water is shut off at the meter by
water superintendent .
Light commercial users
within the village will be
charged $14.50 per month for

the ftrSt 3,000 gallons and 30
cents for ever I00 gallons over.
Light commercial users average in a 12-month period
I0,000 gallons a month. Light
commercial users outside the ·
village will be charged $26.50
per month for the first 3,000
gallons and 30 cents per ever
100 gallon over that 3,000.
.

Please see Racine, AS

RACINE -With a yearly premium at nearly $1
million for its 93 employees, the Southern Local
School District is attem,Pting to deal with its rismg
health insurance rates by
switching providers, partie!·
paling in a health insurance
committee and asking
teachers to contribute a total
of two percent towards their
total medical insurance benefits.
Southern SUperintendent
Tony Deem said in one year
his district . saw between a
12 to 14 percent increase
from its previous health
care
provider
which
prompted the change to
Blue Cross/Blue Shield.
Last
year
Southern
belonged to a health care
consortium with other districts -to get a lower premium cost. Although Deem
said Southern only used 60
Cha~one Hoeftlch/photoa
percent of its premium last
Marianne McDonald, guest artist and judge at the Riverbend Arts Council art show, demonstrates working in p~stels for year, another district had
Steve Harrison, center, and Todd Tyler.
·
used much more which
caused this year's proposed
rate to go up and Southern
to switch providers.
Despite the switch in
providers, Deem fears the
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COI\4
expensive trend in health
care may contin9e to worsMIDDLEPORT- Beautiful weathen as it is for many employer and an abundance of entries coners who offer health insurtributed to the Ri verbend Arts
ance benefits.
Council's .successful art in the park
"We want to provide cov- I
erag~ for our emplo:yees but
prognim Saturday at Dave Diles Park.
at this rate in five years we
Chairman Sharon Dean reported
could be. looking at a $2
over 70 paintings and photographs
million annual premium as
were entered in the show which was
opposed to a $1 million prejudged by guest artist, Marianna
mium," Deem said.
McDonald · of · Lexington, Ky. who
Deem said the school
during the day demonstrated her talboard's
recent agree·ment
ent.
with employees from the
Winners of the top awards of $25 in
Southern Local Education
the painting category were Joni
Association
(SLEA) averCarrington of Albany with an oil of
·ages
around
-$10 per
"Elvis" and Shirley Hamm of Racine
employee
per
month.
Until
with her acrylic painting, "Amarrllis."
the agreement is approved
Receiving honorable mentions m the
by the state's financial overshow ere Karen Harrington of Athens
stght
commission, SLEA
with a still life, Venessa Folmer of
and
Ohio
Association of
Middlepof\ with her acrylics in two
Public School Employees
categones, "Poppy Cat" and "Emma"
(OAPSE)
are paying one
and Rhojean McClure of Pomeroy
Roger Williams looks over an art show winning entry in painting by Shirley Hanim
Please see Rates, AS
Please SH ArtS, AS
of Raclne titled "Amaryllis."

ARrs (OUNCR'S ART IN 1HE PARK A SUCCESS

bond was set at $~5.000 and he was
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
ordered to surrender his passport and
1
~y documents relatin~ to his immigra·
LONG BOTTOM -. A Long Bottom uon.
.
resident was arrested early Monday and
·
d
p·
hd
"
charged with two felonies after sheriff's
Beeg1e sru
terez a no green
deputies discovered cocaine in his home. card," proving he was working in lhe
· Alex Pierez, 27, was ordered to sur- county legally. As of Monday afternoon
render his ·passport or visa to the Meigs Pierez was in the Meigs County Jail.
County Court. Pierez was arrested at his · According to Beegle, the arrest was
home on Bashan Road- in Chester the result of a month·l~ng investigation,
Township after deputies executed a which included assistance from the
seatch warrant and discovered cocaine Middleport Police Department.
there. Pierez was charged with traffickDepuy Adam Smith said Pierez's
ing in cocaine and possession of cocaine. arrest was significant because of the
Officers discovered approximately 13 quanti~y of cocaine confiscated. He said
grams of cocaine, packaged in small the powdered cocaine confiscated during
plastic
bags,
as an r·ounce of.· mar·
..
d as well be
the search cou ld prod uce three tunes
as
11
tJUana an a num r o l'rescnp on
h ·k
·
medications. Deputy Adam Smith, ,who muc cmc ~rune. ,
along with Deputy Rick Smith executed
Beegle ~rud Pierez s arre~t was the
the warrant, said the street value of . result of mfonnauon provtded by a
.
cocaine is approximately $1 00 per gram. m~mber of the public, .
Pierez appeared ycsteTday before
When we get good rehable mforma·
Count)- Court Judge Steven· Story. His lion, we act on it," ~eegle said.

Bv BRtAN J. REED

Dotalo on Pace Ax

i

•

INDEX
Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

.Comics
Annie's Mailbox
Editorials

I

Obituaries

Bs
A3
A4
As

BSection

Sports

stihlusa.com

relation to the village's ~n­
struction of the riew water
~t plant, water wells,
RACINE- Racine Council lines and water tanks.
has approved lhe second readThe ordinance requires
ing of a water rate increase ·three readings and a tina! vote
which
was
previously before going into effect on the
approved by the Racine Water November billing cycle which
Board to insure· moQey will be · is payable in December.
available for payments for
The proposed rate increase
loans from the Ohio Water is for $5 for .a total minimum
Development Authority · in charge of $24.50 for lhe first

J

"j

.

\

tljriiMol ~-Mit ........

wear!

'

.

Cocaine, other drug~ siezed in Monday search

Pomeroy

'

.

i

i

Gallipois

'

Comfn~lblcr 1e •• tllfay big

2 SECriONS- 12 PAGFS

Chester

.

Ractne water rate Increase
~

I

Ca1BII1k: -rw llf rt-.. Ml•kint

'""' ·"'·' ciai 1, " ' "' "" 1 , "'"

....
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ..

• AP lntetView:
Chertoff says southwest
border fence good,
for environment.
See Page A2
• ·What empty spot
is he trying to fill?
See Page A3
• Transfers posted.
See page A3
. • Sonshine Circ~o .
contribute., to new youth
group. See Page AS
• Trial begins for two
accused of hiding
nuclear plant damage.
See Page AS
• Boy accused of
fatal fire released to
grandmother's house:
See Page AS

AedliG• yard -It!

.

l'l I I ·: S IIA Y , 0( TO B F I{ :! , :!11117

Southern deals
with rising
insurance rates

INSIDE

r1•·1raM ro.-dl)' !ll~$ )

-

• \' ol. :; ~, No. 4CJ

·~

•••• =·

Hysell reunion
held,A:J

•

Page AS
• Harl~y Hoschar

•••••
•••••

.

Weather

.A6

© ao07 Ohio van., Publlshlng''Co, ',
'\

"

•

Sheriff Robert
Beegle looks
over evidence
seized in a
Monday morn·
ing arrest by
Deputies
Adam and
Rick Smith
which included
approximately
13 ounces of
alleged
cocaine. The
s,nall bag on
the scale has
a street value
of around
$500.
Beth

Sorllont/ pho1o

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