<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4873" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4873?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T12:53:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14801">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/21f74b7ce134063f8c23a01c28c477f4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a00491da145f1a1e43d1796f18c45ae9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16722">
                  <text>r

iubap li.- -&amp;entintl

PageD6

DowN ON THE FARM

FFA

North Korea says it
conducted successful
underground nuclear
weapons test, A2

Sunday, October 8, 2006

TRAVE:IS
The River Va
-iigh
School FFA c •ter
had three mem bers
attend Greenhand
Camp in Carrollton, "
Ohio, Sept.·22-24.
Russe ll Mullins,
Clark Taylor, Nathan
Cox and advisor Bill
Holcomb participated in different activities, such as leadership, kayaking,
archery and hiking.

·-

·oisney ·
ftom Page01
in the round-the-world airfare, he said.
"Coordinating the airfare
was the trickiest part," he
said. "But once we decided
to go with a regular roundthe-world airfare, it all came
together really quickly."
Godfrey has ·a . word . ·Of
advice for anyone trying to
organize -a similar trip. "1
would book a round-theworld airfare. I would try to
stay at the moderate
(Disney) hotels. I'd also
make sure I go ·om of season,

llllod , . _

not 6n holidays when ·the
parks are crowded," he said.
Members all groaned
when asked how it would it
feel when the trip's all over.
"It'd be sad when you have
to go back to reality," said
Della
Whitton,
41,
Simpson's girlfriend and
fellow Disney addict.
She didn't have to despair
- Simpson said the couple
has -o pted out of the Tokyo
leg &lt;&gt;f this .trip so that they
could "save" it for later. A
Disney cruise a11d repeat
trips to the Florida park are
. also in their future.
.
"It feels like we'' re saving
up all our holidays for
Disney trips," he said.

0BITUARIFS

' 10\: ll.\' . I ll " I 0 HL 1{

BY BRwl J. R&amp;D
BREEDOMYD~ILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT -After
two years of fundraising
and new cons-~ction.
financed primarily through
. a federal grant, a commit'tee of Middleport residents ·
unvei!ed a newly-renov.ation Middleport freight
depot Saturday.
The old depot, w'hich will
now be available for use .as
. a &lt;Jommunity center, was
unveiled to the pu:b lic in an
afternoon cereqmny. The
depot now includes a meetil1g room, a ·k itchen and
£estroom facilit·i es and an
improved river view ·t hat
makes it a renterpiece, not
only of Dave Diles Pal'k,
where it is located, but for
the ·entire village.
The depot was · built ·
around the tum· of the 20th
century by the Hocking
I
J. -/]lillcltOO
Valley Railroad, and was The second phase of renovation of the Middleport Freight
Depot has been completed, and the finished product was
PI
•-Dqllt,AS
unveiled in a Saturday ceremony.

STAFF

• U.$. troQps, Shiite
militia battle in SOt:Jihem
Iraqi city, tolling 30
militiamen.
• Stewart speaks with
loccll students.
See hge A3
.
• 'Russia to hunt down
joumalist's i&lt;illers but
oolleagues skeptical of
official probe.
See hge A5

I imiled to th• fim 25 Ca ller;!

1 Hllh-6~4 - '2~;; r~·~a pointme n t.
~

PEOPLE" :..

"PEOPL:£·CARING
p

~

REPoRT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SeePageA2

,,

Betty Stiles of Stoutsville was the featured guest artist at
an Art in the Park exhibit sponsored by the Riverbend Arts
Council in conjunction with Saturday's depot dedication ceremony in Dave Diles Park.

MCHD to host.public forum
on pandemic preparedness

INsiDE

•

Tues, Ckt.· 10 &amp;
• Ckt. 11
Tues. Ckt. 17 " Wed. Ckt. 11

\\ \\ \\ .lll ll lai ' " ' ' " I in.-1 '"'"

1) , :!O n h

Page AS .
• Call.Boggs
~ Lori l. Hensley

FREE

""'

~~

Re..ovated depot unveiled :in Saturday ceremony

Dressed in • princess" dresses Japanese girls wave as they
parade with Disney characters at tf.le Tokyo Disneyland in
Urayasu, near Tokyo, March 3. Marking Japan's girls day
festival, the theme park invited 303 women guests to celebrate "Disney .Princess Days."

~Be/tone TMHearing Aid Center

...

ol. :;:; . '\ "

• Unbeaten Lady Eagles
eam No. 1 seed.
See.,.B1

•

9 a.m.· 4

rs • \

SPORTS

On Sept. 22-24, some of the
Ga'llipolis FFA Greenhand members traveled to Camp
Muskingum near Carrollton, Ohio.
Members attending were •Kody
Roberts, Jason McNicket, Jered
Shaffer. Adrian Miller, Dillon
Queen, Zac Cox. Trevor Bryan
and Wes Montgomery. While at
camp, these members attended
leadership workshops provided
by the State FFA officers. The
State FFA officers challenged first
year members to set personal
goals and to take advantage of
the wide range of opportunities
provided by the FFA. Greenhand
members .also received training
at the shotgun, rifle and archery
ranges. ThroughOut all of the
activities, the members interacted with over 200 other greenhands from all over Ohio.

·an

I '

,)0 (

Attend Greenhand_Camp

t

.Inmates raise
pumpkins for
schoolchildren, A6
~

Middleport • PomeNy, Ohio

SJI llttJ , . _

5 I

.

WEA1HER

a.-.. Ho.lllch/phcltoo

After 15 years of waiting. Virgil Teaford finally has a bumper crop of kiwifruit. The sweet,
juicy fruit .grows In clusters on a vine.

BY CHAIIllNE HoEFUCII

POMEROY -Planning
for an influenza pandemic is
similar to preparing for any
emergency but will present
its own unique challenges
and in an effort to clarify
confusion and to prepare the
county, the . Meigs County
Health
Department
(MCHD) is encouraging
residents to take action to
help lessen the impact of an
influenza: pandemic on
themselves and their families
by ·hosting
Bee
R.E.A.D.I.
(Responsible
Emergency and Disaster
Information).
This public forum will
take place at 6 p.m. this

BS~RGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Listen to today's most advanced hearing aids
in a real-world sound environment.

Tlris is a better Wl{l' to experience better lte4ring.

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Listening to "beeps" is no way to find 'out how your hearing instrument will sound. Yet
that's all you can expect from most in-office hearing tests and fittings . Bel tone has a better
.way. We've replaced the beeps with birds. An~ crowd noi_se. S?unds like real. l!fe. ·This i!
not a hearing test. It 's more hke a test dnve. It s new! .\ :\D 0~1 :\ 1\EI.TO\f. H .~S.
One of the most advanced patient-focused fitting systems available today. Before you leave
our office, you'll know what your hearing aid will sound like in the real world.

m.

12 pAGES

Bs

Dear Abby ·

'A3

Editorials

A4 '
As

Obituaries
Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© 11006 Olllo Volley l'uiJiiobin&amp; Co.

SYRACUSE - So you
think kiwi~ are a tropical
SYRACUSE - When it
fruit. Not necessarily so. Just
floods and Ohio 124
visit ·Virgil Teaford at his
becomes impassable the only
farm along Route 124 and
escape route for some
you will find dozens of vines
Syracuse
residents
is
hanging heavy with clu~ters
Bridgeman Street which will
of kiwi.
now be repaired an&lt;;! repaved
He 'II share a few with you
as will Roy Jones Road.
and if you like the sweet, disThe decision to repair and
tinctive taste of the high vitarepave the roads was made at
min C fruit, he ' II sell you a
the . recent meeting of
quart. or two. His kiwis are
Syracuse Village Council.
not of the grocery store vari- .
Council received a bid from
ety grown in warm temjleraMyers Paving of Henderson.
tures, but rather the smaller
W.Va. for $19,500 for both
ones which · grow on vines When kiwis are ripe, they are soft and wrinkled , like these streets. After consulting with
hardy enough to stand. the which Teaford just picked from the vines.
its village attorney council
cold weather of Ohio.
determined it can use high After retiring from the real Those stopping by.could usu- .awaited until the time he way fund money to pay for
estate business some years ally also find some recipes could add quarts of kiwi to the bulk of the paving.
ago, Teaford developed his for unique ways of preparing his offerings at the stand or
Councilman ' Mike Jacks
hobby of growing small . whatever was for sale at the open his patch to anyone . thanked Clerk Treasurer
crops offruits and vegetables time.
wanting to come in pick their Sharon Cottrill for contactand selling them on the honor
Since the early nineties, own. This is the first year the ing the attorney and looking
system from a rustic roadside Teaford has struggled with
into using lhe hi ghway fund
Mrtse see Kiwi. AS
stand along the highway. his kiwi crop and anxiously
for the project. Ulere is no

-------

UJIWHROYIUI R
UAW rKOVIDU
. . ·1

•'•

"

.

Hearing Aid Cellter
1312 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1744

TANDEM

-·----.............
........... _
··......·--·
! "''' H. ·//"111·

'

'"'/II

Bealth Care•

}'t!/'11

'

'
'

\

'

.

..
I

.

J

'

.

.
'

'

.

.
'

.

.

'•

,,'"

Pleaie see MCHD, AS

Bridgeman Street and Roy
Jones road to be pavt;d
BY 8rnt SERGENT

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Thursday at .the Meigs
County · Senior Citizens
Center. It is a follow-up to
the Pandemic · Flu Summit
the MCHD hosted in May
2006that involved local first
responders and communit;y/social service representatives.
The MCHD is responding
to news repons and health
concerns that another pandemic influenza outbreak or
l)ird flu may occur. In 1918
an influezna epidemic killed
30-50 million people worldwide and 01hers occurred io
1957-1958 and 1968-1969.
No one knows if the next
pandemic will result from
bird flu but it cenainly will ·

•

word yej on when the projeoi
will stan .
It was reported council .
approved the hiring of Randy
Smilh of Middleport for the
part-time police officer's job
effec1ive Sept. 25: Smith
works 16 hours a week at $7
per hour. Cunningham
reponed the village had,just
enough money to pay for
both its officers· through the
rest of the year. The village
appropriated $6.500 for
'at aries in the police departmen! for.2006.
.
Syracuse Pol ice Chief
Ryan Hill was granted permission to pursue a JAG LE
grant · for additional law
enforcement officers and il ·
lap top computer for the
,
cruiser.
Council set Trick-or-Treat
for 6-7 p.m .. Thursday, OcL
26 with all village streets to
be blocked off. The counc~

Pluse see hvecl, AS

,....

�'

•

:The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

Page.A2
Monday, October 9, 2006

'NORTH KOREA SAYS IT CONDUCTED SUCCESSFUL
UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR WEAPONS TEST
SEOUL, South Korea North Korea said Monday it
has performed its first-ever
.nuclear weapons test.
U.S. and South Korean
~fficials could not immediately confirm the report.
The North's official
Korean · Central
News
Agency said the underground test was petformed
.successfully and there was
rio radioactive leakage from
the site.
· South Korean intelligence
officials said a seismic
wave of magnitude-3.58
had been detected in North
:Hamkyung
province,
:according to Yonhap. It said
the test was conducted at
l0:36 a.m. (9:36 p.m. EDT
Sunday) in Hwaderi near
.Kilju city on the northeast
soast, citing defense officials. .
: North Korean scientists
''successfully conducted an
underground nuclear test
.under secure conditions,"
.the KCNA report said,
;Idding this, was "a stirring
-time when all the people of
i:he country are making a
great leap forward in the
burt ding of a great prosper·
ous r,owerful socialist
llation. '
: The director of South
Korea's monitoring center
that is watching for a test
·with sound and seismic
detectors declined to immediately comment on the
reported test.
· . "We don't know whether
it is a nuclear test or not,"
an official at the earthquake
renter at the Korea Institute
of Geoscience and Mineral
Resources said on condition
·of anonymity, citing the
sensitive nature of the issue.
The U.S. Geological
Survey said it had detected
no seismic activity in North
:Korea, although 11 was not
clear whether a blast would
be strong enough for its
:sensors.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·-

The North said last week
it would conduct a test,
sparking regional concern
and frantic diplomatic
efforts aimed at dissuading
Pyongyang .from such ·a
move. North Korea has
long claimed to . have
nuclear weapol}s. but had
never before petformed a
known test to prove its arsenal.
"The nuclear test is a historic event that brought
happiness to. our military

and people," KCNA said.
'·'The nuclear test will contribute to maintaining peace
· and stability in the Korean
peninsula and . surrounding
region."
On Sunday night, U.S.
government officials said a
wide range of agencies
were looking into the report
of the nuclear test, which
officials were taking seriously.
South Korean · President
Roh Moo-hyun has con-

vened a meeting of security pulled out of the Nuclear
advisers over the issue, Nonproliferation Treaty ·in
Yonhap reported, and intel- 2003 after U.S. officials
ligence over the test has accused it of a secret
been exchanged between nuclear program, allegedly
concerned countries.
. violating an earlier nuclear
Kyodo News agency pact betweeri Washington
~eported that the Japanese
and Pyongyang.
government has set up a
Speculation over a possitaskforce in response to ble North Korean test arose
reJThrts of the test.
earlier this year after U.S.
e North has refused for and Japanese reports 'cited
a year to attend internation- suspicious activity at a sus- ·
al talks aimed at persuading pected underground test
it to disarm. The country .site.

Colleague confronted Foley U.S. troops, Shiite militia
•
·battle in southern Iraqi
m 2000, newspaper says
city, killing 30 militiamen
'·

Bv HOPE YEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

WASHINGTON - Rep.
Jim Kolbe, R-Ariz., confronted then-Rep. Mark
Foley about his Internet
communications
with
. teenagers as early as 2000,
according to a newspaper
'teport.
'
: The Washington Post
reponed Sunday night that a
former page showed Kolbe
· some Internet messages
from Foley that had made
the page uncomfortable.
.Kolbe's press secretary,
Korenna Cline, told the Post
that a Kolbe staff member
advised the page last week
to discuss the matter with
the clerk of the House.
Cline denied the messages
:were· sexually explicit,
telling the Post only that
they had made the former
page uncomfortable. She
said "corrective action" was
taken, although she did not
:jcnow whether that went
beyond Kolbe's confrontation with Foley.
Rank-and-file
Republicans, meanwhile,
sought to mount a public
defense of Speaker Dennis
tlasten over the scandal,
which is threatening their
congressional control one
month before the elections.
But a House GOP leader
under fire for his handling
~f the scandal involving former Rep. Mark Foley can·
celed a national broadcast
appearance
and . one
Republican lawmaker said
those who participated ·in a
cover-up would have to
res·ign.
"Anybody that hindered
:this in any kind of way, tried
lo step in the way of hiding
thjs, covering it up, is going
to have to step down.
Whoever that is," said Rep.
Tom Davis, R-Va.
The House ethics committee is investigating the matter. If it finds evidence of a
cover-up. the puni;,hment
could Jange from a mild
rebuke in a committee
report to a House \)ote of

•

censure or expulsion.
Rep. Thomas Reynolds,
who heads the House
Republicans' re-election
effort, would have been the
chamber's top GOP official
on the Sunday talk shows.
Booked weeks ago. for
ABC's "This Week," he
confirmed his appearance
on Wednesday. By Saturpay,
his office canceled without
explanation and arranged
for a substitute guest, Rep.
Adam Putnam, R-Fla., a
network spokeswoman said. ·
A Reynolds spokesman
said the New York congressman had flu-like symptoms. Reynolds, whose district covers a· stretch of New
•York between the suburbs
of Buffalo and Rochester, is
now trailing his Democratic
opponent, Jack Davis, by a
48-33 percent ·margin ,
· according to a poll conducted by Zogby Interhational
for The Buffalo News.
Reynolds has been criticized by Democrats who
say he did too little to protect a page from Foley, the
Florida Republican who
resigned Sept. 29 after the
disclosure of his sexually
explicit electronic messages
to teenage · former male
pages. Foley is now under
investigation by federal and
Florida authorities. ·
The scandal has ignited
what has become a political
firestorm before the Nov. 7
elections,
with
the
Republican majority in the
House and Senate in jeopardy.
Putnam. who heads the
Pol icy
Republican .
Committee, sought to make
the case that Hastert's office
"acted proactively, they
acted aggressively, and
within hours of the explicit
e-mails coming to light.
· they demanded Foley's resignation ."
.
''The dirty laundry in our
conference is gone." he
said.
· Rep. Patrick McHenry, RN.C., said . Democrats
·,hould be investigated to
see whether they leaked the

explicit e-mails to gain a
political advantage before
the elections, although the .
lawmaker acknowledged he
had no evidence indicating
that was the case.
Responded Rep. Charles
Rangel, D-N.Y.: "I think it's
ridiculous. But if I was in a
bind, as the Republicans are
now, I guess l would be
reaching for straws. But it's
sad."
Hasten, R-111., last week
accepted responsibility but
resisted pressure to resign
over his handling of the
scandal.
"There 's been a lot of
ducking and dodging and
diving and weaving," said
Rep. Ray LaHood. R-Ill.
"There is a lot of fingerpointing that had gone on
earlier in the week, but I do
think people are behind the
speaker now."
Putnam insisted that
Dem.ocrats will not be able
to pick up the I 5 seat~ on
Election Day they need to
take control of the 435member House. LaHood
was Jess certain .
"This is going to be the
most difficult 30 days in the
last 12 years that we ' ve
been .the majority party,"
LaHood said. The GOP took
power after the I994 election.
Putnam said voters are
more focused on an improving economy as well as Iraq
and the fight against terrorism. although the page scandal will have an effect.
"It certainly has P!'t members all across the country
in the position of having to
answer uncomfortable questions about tawdry deeds by
a former colleague," he
said.
Because of the scandal,
Davis said "there's no oxygen.. for issues that are
important to people and
that's hurting Republicans.
He called 30 days an eternity in politic' but tluit "it's a
tough lift right now. ...
There are ~o many race; in
the margin,."
(

BY DAVID RISING

parts of Baghdad during a
24-hour period ending
Sunday morning, police I st
BA.GHDAD, Iraq - · The Lt. Mohammed Khayoun
U.S.-led coalition said it said. They were all apparent ·
killed 30 fighters in a battle victims of the sectarian
Sunday with the country's death squads that roam the
most powerful Shiite militia capital, with many of the
amid growing American bodies showing signs of torimpatience with the Iraqi ture.
government's inability to
The U.S. has shown
stop militias responsible for increa~ing impatience with
escalating sectarian vio- the failure of Shiite Prime
lence.
Minister Noun al-Maliki to
The clash was the second rein in mi Iiiias fueling the
with the Mahdi Army in the Shiite-Sunni killings that
predominantly Shiite south- many believe now pose a
em city of Diwaniyah in as
ter threat to Iraq's stabilmany months. Officials from . ity t
al-Qaida or the antithe party of· radioal Shiite U.S . ins ency.
cleric Muqtada al~Sadr, . Sunni 1 ders accuse aiwhich heads the militia, Maliki of h · ting to take
denied any of their fighters action against Shiite militias
were killed.
because many of · them A U.S. Abrams tank was like the Mahdi Army seriously damaged when it belong to political parties
was hit by rocket-propelled that his government relies on
grenades, but no casualties for support. Al·Sadr's party
were reported among the holds 30 of the 275 seats in
U.S. or Iraqi forces .'
parliament and five Cabinet
However, the military posts, and the cleric's backannounced the deaths of five ing helped ai-Mahki win the
U.S. troops elsewhere in the top job earlier this year. .
country. Two soldiers were
U.S. Secretary of State
killed Saturday - one in the Cond0leezza Rice gave alcapital and the other north- Maliki and other Iraqi leadwest of Baghdad - while ers a blunt assessment durthree Marines were killed ing a visit to Iraq this past
Friday in we,tern Anbar week, telling them the viopro vi nee, the military said lence cannot be tolerated and
without elaborating.
they have to act.
The deaths brought to 29
Sen. John Warner, R-Va.,
the number of Americans chairman of the Armed
killed in Iraq this month Services Committee, gave a
many of them in Baghdad as starker warning following
pan of a district-by-district his own visit to lraq, saying
crackdown aimed at reduc- if violence does not abate in
ing mounting violence by the next two or three months,
clearing the city of weapons Washington should ,make
and tighters.
"bold decisions" on ' what to
At least I4 Iraqis also died do next.
in other violence around the
U.S. troops have been quicountry Sunday, including a etly launching raids on key
Shiite woman and her young !11-Sadr loyalists and Mahdi
daughter who were killed Army members in the past
when gu nmen opened fire on week, members of al-Sadr 's
their minivan in Baqouba. party have said. The U.S. has
northeast of Baghdad. The announced numerous arrests
driver also was killed, and during the Baghdad sweep,
'
the woman
s husband and but has not specified what
her brother were wounded. ·group they belong to so
Pol ice a! so found 5 I bul- exact numbers could not be
let-riddled bodies in various determined .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

.

•

-

Wood
reunion held
· POMEROY - The Wood
-reunion was held Oct. 1 at the
home of Deloris, David and
Cyndi King of Pomeroy with
·a potluck lunch atl2:30.
Coming the farthest was
Joe and Gail Milligan cif
Indianapolis,
Ind.
Th~
·youngest attending ~as Philip
King and the oldest attending
was Norman Wood. Door
prizes were won by RaJph
Coleman, Stephen King,
Bobby Arnold, Steve Briekles
and Edith Harman. Gail
Milligan won a ·guessing
game.
Officers elected for next
year were David King, president; and Jean Wood, secretary/treasurer. It was decided
that the reunion next year
would be held Oct. 7 at the
home of the Kings. A new
llf3Jl(lson of Dale Hoffman,
Brandon Lee Hoffman was
reported.
Those attending were Jean
and Norman Wood, . Ronnie
Wood, Steve and Sue
Briekles, Deloris King,
David, Cyndi, Elizabeth,
.Philip and Stephen King,
Alan Haliday, Bobby Arnold,
Jimmie
Cummins
of
Pomeroy, Edith Hannan,
Rutland, Ralph and Marlene
Coleman, Columbus, and Joe
and
Gail
Milligan,
Indianapolis, Indiana.

Sarah Jenkins

SSUawards
scholarship

No drinking problem?
Think again .
Bv KAlliY MtTCttELL
ANO ·MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: I am an
alcoholic. For the past I 5
years, I have been .. able to
fool everyone. My older
brothers and sisters were all
.unaware of my situation.
When I get home, the
ftrst thing I do is have a
drink. By bedtime, I am
completely drunk , yet I
have no problem getting up
the next day and going to
work. This bas caused
numerous problems with
my husband. My house is a
disaster; and when I am
having company, I just
throw everything in closets
or·out in the shed.
I have two teenage kids .
Yesterday, I got a call from
the school that my daughter.
has not attended class since
school began. When I con.fronted her, she told me she
is embarrassed to bring anyone to our house and that
she is ashamed of me and
my drinking.
But the worst thing is,
my sister and her .husband
showed up while my daughter and I were screaming at
each other. When my sister
questioned me about the
fight, I told her my daughter
was a vicious liar. They
looked at my husband for
verification, and instead of
sticking up for me, he
walked out of the room.
Now my husband has told
my other siblings about it,
and they all want me to get
counseling and go to AA .
I will die before making
my · personal life a public
joke. I refuse to let my siblings run my life. If I can do
a good job at work, I
believe there is no problem,
and having a few drinks
before going to sleep is just
a stress reliever. I am angry
with my husband, who now
says he will leave me and
take the kids with him. My
daughter is to blame, and I
think she needs to understand the harm she has
caused our family. How can
I get this across? - New
Vork
·
Dear New York: Your
husband wants to take the
kids and leave, your .daughter is ashamed of you, your
house is a mess, and your
siblings want you in AA.
You don't think you have a
drinking problem? Think
again. It's called denial
when you blame everyone
else for the mess you're in.
You're not fooling anyone.
Get some help before 'your
life falls apart completely.
AA is in the phone book.
Please go to the next avail-

,S erpnl/phato

Meigs Homecoming Court

..

c - -hfphoto

Amber Haning, center, was crowned the 2006 Meigs High School homecoming queen in
ceremonies preceding the Meigs-Nelsonville football game on Boo Roberts Field Friday
night. She was escorted by Charlie Meister. Members of her court from the left and their
escorts were Cayla Lee escorted by Martin McAngus, Cassi Whan by Clayton Blackston,
Amber Burton by Dustin Vanlnwagen, and Michelle Weaver b&gt; Daylon Jenkins. The flower
girl was Khloe Smith and the crown bearer was Tyler Collins.
·

Club members hear review of 'Teacher Man'
POMEROY --" Gay Perrin · dealing with 170 difficult stu- sharing stories from his own
presented a review of Frank dents at McKee who weren't life with them. One amusing
McCourt's
latest
book, very interested in creative incident is when a student
''Teacher Man" for members writing unless it comes to their said, "Mr. McCourt, you're
of the Middleport Literary excuse notes. She involved lucky. You had that miserable
Club at a recent meeting lield the club members in her childhood so you have someat the Pomeroy library.
review by giving them humor- thing to write about."
Perrin described the book ous comments made by some
When McCourt retired from
as a "gem of a book", witty, of. McCourt's students to read teaching, a stUdent said, "Mr.
filled with Irish humor, but aloud.
McCourt, you should wTite a
brutally frank as were Mr.
McCourt's other teaching book, and he answered, 'Til
McCourt's two pt;evious jobs were with the first try!" The rest is literary histobooks, "Angela's Ashes," Fashion Industries High ry with Angela's Ashes, the
which brought him the School, . again with hard-to- book about his "miserable
Pulitzer prize and '"Tis," an motivate vocation'lll students, childhood", being published
account of his life after com- and at the second Seward Park ih I996 when he was 66 years
ing to the United Stares from High School, a·"melting pot" old. Perrin said in closing
Ireland. ~'Teacher Man," the school where he taught classes that, having been an English
third in the series of memoirs, of English as a second Jan- teacher of thirty years herself,
coni::entrates on his thirty year guage, even though he had no she could certainly identify
teaching career.
training . for this. Finally. he with ''Teacher Man" a heart- .
McCourt's first teaching job gained a teaching position at warming and informative
after graduating from New Stuyvesant High School, the book. As anyone who has ever
Yori&lt; University on the Gl bill, "Harvard of New York high served in the classroom
was .at McKee Vocational and schools," in.which he was for- knows, including McCourt,
Technioal High School, where tunate enough ro teach ere- teaching is not as easy as it ·
he taught the "future alive writing.
looks.
plumbers, electricians, beauti- . The discipline problems , After the review, 14 memcians, and auto mechanics of were different. with the stu- bers answered roll call by
New York". The title of the dents bright enough to chal- . naming a notable male teacher
book is from this period in his lenge him to make his lessons from their past. The next
teaching, as several of his stu- imaginative. In encouraging meeting. will be held at the
dents habitually greeted him, the student~ to write about Pomeroy Library on Oct. 18.
"Yo. Teacher Man".
their own families and their · Leah Ord will review ''The
Perrin said McCoun writes own experiences, he found his March" liy E. L. Doctorow.
humorously and sympatheti- own style and his own voice Phyllis Hackett will serve as
. cally about the eight years in writing. He found himself hostess for the meeting.

RUTLAND
Sarah
Jenkins of Rutland, has been
awarded the 2006-2007 Nellie
Niswonger scholari;hip b~ The
Shawnee State University
(SSU) Scholarship Commiuee.
The Nellie Niswongerscholarship was established in 1987
thrOugh a bequest by Mrs.
Nellie Niswonger and remains
as a permanent memorial to
Niswonger and her 31 years as
an aJgebra teacher.
The scholarship is awarded
to a high school or college student with a minimum 3.5 GPA.
RUTLAND
State
Jimmy
Jenkins, daughter of Steve Representative
and ·Donna Jenkins, is a 2006 Stewart (R-Albany) recently
graduate of Ohio Valley visited Meigs Intermediate
Christian School in Gallipolis. School where ]Je took time to
'She was a member of the speak with several fourth
National Honor Society and grade classes.
SpecificaHy, Rep. Stewart·
was included in Who's Who of
had
the opportunity to meet
American
High School
with
seven fourth grade
Students. She participated in 4H, yearlJook staff, volleyball, classes. Rep. Stewart spent
time discussing Ohio history
basketball, and track. At and
government with the stuchurch, she took Jl&lt;'irt in the dents, as well as the types of
Proteens youth group. She vol- issues legislators work on
unteered at vacation Bible and what their responsib,ili. sehool and children's church, ties are. While visiting, Rep.
and also worlced pan-time at Stewart presented all seven
Bob Evans Restaumnt.
classrooms with ay Ohio
These scholarship funds are flag:
.
administered through the SSU
"Working with and speakDevelopment
Foundation. ing to our children is such a
Individuals or organi7..ations privilege and honor:· Rep.
interested in establishin&amp; a Stewart ~aid. "I was pleased
scholarship can contaCt the to see how interested the stuSSU Development Foundation dents were in Ohio govern' ment, history and our legis Iaat (740)351-3284.

Ste~art

'

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

The Southern
Homecoming Court
was named at recent
homecoming festivities
with the following
senior escorts, attendants and queen
Amber Hill: (from left)
Adam Phillips, Emily
Babbitt, oarrin
Teaford, Mallory Hill,
Weston Counts, Amber
Hill, Cameron Brinager,
Stephanie Hoskins;
Wyatt Musser, Morgan
McMeeken. The flower
girl was Rhiannan
Morris. daughter of
Ben and Jamie Morris
of Racine. The crown
bearer was Colton
Hamm, son of Chris ·
and Anita Hamm of
Racine.

BY SALAH NASRAWI

So.uth Korean protesters burn a picture of North Korean leader Kim Jong II during an anti-North Korea rally in front of
Government House in Seoul, Sunday. North Korea's threatened nuclear test moved to the top of the diplomatic agenda Sunday
as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe flew to China to try to coo'rdinate international pressure on Pyongyang to desist.

Monday, October 9, 2006

Southern Homecoming Court

Arab diplott~~W
say Sudan ·
rejects offer for
peacekupers
CAIRO, Egypt - AralJ
countries have launched a
new effort to push Sud&lt;ffi
toward a compromise over
U.N. peacekeepers .for
Darfur, offering to dispatch a .
force of Arab and Muslim
troops to the troubled regiori,
diplomats said Sunday.
The Arab League diplomats said Sudan's president
j'ejected the initial proposal
- as he has all suggestions
of a U.N.-affiliated contingent, regardless of the makeup - but promised to suggest an alternative soon, in a
sisn that the Arab effort
mtght show more promise
than Western attempts to
stop the humanila!ian crisis.
"The situation is deteriorating and needs intervention," said Hesham Youssef,
a top aide to the league's
Amr
secretary-general,
Moussa.
But Youssef said the Arab
negotiators believed the
world community and the
United States should also be
flexible.
"The Americans should
realize that there should be a
compromise,"·he said.
The new push cQuld be a
significant step in the stalled
effort to reach a compromise
over Sudan's rejection of an
August Security Council
resolution that would let the
United Nations to take control of and significantly
expand a peacekeeping force
in the western Darfur region,
run so far by the African
Union.
·
The two sides are still far
apart, however. And it was
unclear how much leverage
the Arab countries - close
neighbors and supporters of
Sudan's Arab-dominated
regime - have or how .
strongly· they intended to
press.
.
At least 200,000 people
have died and some 2 million have been displaced
since the stan of a 2003
revolt by rebels from
Darfur's ethnic. African population. The Sudanese government is alleged to have
responded by unleashing
militias known as the janjaweed against villagers.
Fears the tensions could '
spread were highlighted this
weekend when Sudanese
soldiers crossed the border
into eastern Chad to fight a
group .of Darfur rebels, leav:
ing more than 300 people
injured, an aid worker said
Sunday, speakin~ on condition of anonymtty because
he was not allowed to
divulge information to the
media.
Chadian
government
spokesman
Hourmadji
Moussa Doumgor said he
had no information about the
battle.
Moussa carried the proposal for Arab peacekeepers
to Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir in Khartoum in
recent days, said diplomats
who accompanied the Arab
League chief.
The United States has
asked its moderate Arab
allies like Egypt to take a
greater role on Darfur, with
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice making it
a key mission of her Mideast
trip last week.
Moussa proposed .that
Sudan accept thousands of
troops . from Arab and
Muslim copntries, at first to
join the current African
Union peacekeepe.rs. With
the possibility that they
could later shift under a
U.N. mandate, the diplomats
said.
'
·
Samir Hosny, who heads
the African section of the
Cairo-based Arab League,
said al-Bashir was . still
opposed to U.N. peacekeepers -even Arab ones -but
J)romised to come back with
a counterproposal.
"He (al-Bashir) said he
will make an initiative
soon," Hosny said.
Youssef
told
The
Associated Press. he expected the counterproposal
''within days."
•
"We expect that the ideas
will be closer to what is
being circulated," Youssef
said .

PageA:J .

-B YTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

speaks with local students

able meetinjl.
Dear Annie: My partner.
"Otis," arid I are 20-year-old
college students. The first
tinie I met his family was
when they invited me to
dinner at a fancy restaurant.
His father picked up the tab.
Recently, Otis and' I spent
the weekend with his parents. They took us out to a
pricey place, and again, his
father paid for everyone. ·
Neither time did 1 offer to
pay for inyself, and I'm
worried that they think I
have no manners. My mom
said I should at least have
offered to pay for the price
of my meal. Generally I
would, but I thought since
they invited me. I didn't
have to.
We rarely see Otis' parents. They are quite wen
off. and we ate at places 1
can't afford. Both times, it
seemed clear that they
expected to pay. How do I
offer to cover my own costs
without feelinl1, awkward? .
- Not Quite Emily Post :
Dear Not Quite: Otis'
parents do not expect you to
pay for meals at fancy
restaurants of their choosing. Your obligation is to
thank them verbally and
with a short note after. You
.also can reciprocate by
inviting them to a home·
cooked meal at your place.
So stop feeling guilty
already.
Dear Annie: I am writing in response to "Don't ·
Wanl to Argue Anymore,:·
who fights with her twill
sister. Verbal fights can
cause the same amount of
conflict as physical fights .. I
am 16, and my mother and I
fight all the time over the
smallest things. A trick I
like to use is to pause the
argument and ask, "Will this
matter in one week?"
Usually the answer is no.
and we can agree to disagree. - R.S.
Dear R.S.: You have a
smart head on your shoulders, and we predict good
things for you. Thanks for
writing.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-nw:il your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O:
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and reod features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
qnd cartoonists, visit thi!
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 9
CHESTER -Chester
Township Trustees monthly
meeting, 7 p.m. , Chester
Town Hall.

Pomeroy Library," Larry
Marshall, health commissioner. speaker, lunch
catered by Wendy's, RSVP
992-5005.

wednesday, Oct. u . ·
POMEROY
- Meigs .
County
Board
of
Health,
Thesday, Oct. 10
POMEROY - Bedford regular meeting, 5 p.m ..
Township Trustees, 7 p.m., Meigs County Health
Department.
town hall ..

Thursday, Oct. 12
Wednesday, Oct. 1I
CHESTER
Shade
POMEROY
- Meigs.
County Commissioners, 12 River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
noon Wednesday.
at the hall.. Refreshments.
POMEROY Alpha
Iota Masters. I I:30 p.m. at
St. Paul Lutheran Church.
Program by lenni Dunham .
Hostesses Julia Proctor and
Thesday, Oct. 10
Velma Rue. '
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Chamber
·of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon.
noon.

Clubs and
organizations

A!!t=!·

•

Sullmlttod photo

Rep . Jimmy Stewart at Meigs Intermediate School.
ture. While the "tudents were
well behaved and very
polite, they asked many well
thought out, . challenging
questions
demonstrating
their intere't and competence

in many different areas.''
Rep. Stewart's district
includes Athens, Meig!. and
Morgan Countie' in additi'on
to pottions of Washington
County.

Keeping
Meigs ,
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe tocll.tv
992-2155

JOn

Ohio Valley Symphony
1018
Vanessa Wilson
' .
Vocal Recital "
10/9
Ariel Jr. Idol Finals
10/14
Magic of the'Caplingers ·
Famity E1•ent
www.arieltheatre.org
8o• Ollk:e: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllcotls. OH (7 l 446- ARTS

�,.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Yalley Publis~ing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News .Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Oct. 9. the 282nd day of 2006. There are
83 days left in the year. This is Columbus Day, as well as
Thaf1l\sgiving Day in Canada.
Tod.ay's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 9, 1888, the public was first admitted to the
Washington Monument.
On this date:
In 1635. religious dissident Roger Williams was ordered
banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
In 1701 , the Collegiate School ofConnecticut ·- IattrYale
University - was chartered.
In 1776, a group of Spanish missil, .. .tries settled in present. day San Francisco.
In 1930, Laura Ingalls became the first woman to fly
across the United States as she completed a nine-stop journey from Roosevelt Field. N.Y., to Glendale, Calif.
In 1936, the first generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam
began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles.
In 1946. the Eugene O'Neill drama "The Iceman Cometh." ·
opened at the Martin Beck Theater in New York.
In 1958, Pope Pius XII died. (He was succeeded by Pope
John XXII1.)
)n 1967, Latin American guerrilla leader Che Guevara was
executed while attempting to incite revolution in Bolivia.
· In 1975, Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the
· Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1985, the hijackers of the Achille Lauro cruise liner surrendered after the ship arrived in Port Said, Egypt.
Ten years ago: Vice President AI Gore and Jack Kemp
debated in St. Petersburg, Fla. Two Americans, Robert F.
Curl Jr. and Richard E. Smalley, and a Briton, Harold W.
Kroto, shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry while three
Americans, David M. Lee, Robert C. Richardson and
Douglas C. Osheroff. won the physics prize. ln·the opening
game of the American League Championship series, 12c
year-old Jeffrey Maier turned a probable fly out into a gametying home run by reaching over the right-field wall at
Yankee Stadium and sweeping the ball into the stands with
his baseball glove (the Yankees defeated the Baltimore
Orioles 5-4, in I I imtings).
One year ago: Dozens of foreign tourists fled devastated
lakeside Mayan towns as Guatemalan officials said they
would abandon communities buried by landslides and
declare them mass waveyard,. A driverless Volkswagen won
a $2 million race across the rugged Nevada desert, beating
· four other robot-guided vehicles that completed a Pentagonsponsored contest aimed at making warfare safer for
humans. Comedian Louis Nyc died in Los Angeles at age 92.
Thought for Today: "If we would only give, just once, the
same amount of reflection to what we want to get out of life
that we give to the question of what to do with a two weeks'
vacation, we would be litartled at our false standards and the
·aimless procession of our busy days." - Dorothy Canfield
Fisher, American author and essayist ( 1879-1958).
·

OPINION
The real taboo

explain why his fall , why
What may be most revoltthe Republicans' possible
ing about ex-Rep. Mark
fall, won't usher in an era of
Foley is what shows
cultural restoration.
through his debasing IM sex
Meanwhile,
cultural
talk with teenage boys: the
restoration isn't what this
conwessman 's
absolute
Diana
election is abou·t. It can't be.
lack of what was once
Culrure wars, such as they
West
known as restniint, inhibiare, necessarily become section, a sense of social taboo.
ondary · -political issues in
In this same absence of
times of war. And these are
restraint is the absence of a
certainly times of war, even
moral compass guided by
tracting Ye Olde Populi if leaders on both sides pre.maturity.
·
On a 'different level (one from events of national fer to mask them in less
impon, sex-scandal"fQCused momentous terms, as when
removed
from
sexual
malfeasance), there 's some- GOP voters are expected to they exhort us not to tristay home because of Mark umph
over
Islamic
thing somewhat unseemly
Foley's"
appalling
lack
of
jihadism,
but
rather
to fight
about the media's unblushtraditional values, helping against "terror," or, lately,
ing- dare I say shameless?
to elect Democrats who are hextremism.,
reportage . They may
more likely to eschew such . Come to think of it,
claim a fig leaf by acting in
values
in the first place. And maybe such rigid adherence
the "public interest," but
the
war
goes on - or not, to euphemism is a bona fide
that doesn "t completely
show of restraint . But in this
cover up a practically carnal with Democrats in charge.
All of which is to say. that Ca$e, " restraint" is not
zeal for smutty details. And
Foley's transgressions (first, mature. ' Restraining the
let's not even think about
overlooked by the House · libido (which Foley did not
the IM-leaker"s as-yet
secret · ecstasy. Restraint, GOP leadership, and later, amid a culture that ddes not)
set to explode ·at electioninhibition and social taboo
comes down to a matter of
time
by
persons
unknown)
have become dirty words in
mind (or morality) over
the decades since the 1960s, are unlikely to resonate cul- matter - a display of forturally even as they have beamnce which is by definbut the culture that lets it all
become political dynamite.
ition mature. Intellectual
hang out, it seems, doesn't
That's partly because the
have much inside.
restraint - . self-censorship
I say this as the rapid- GOP in smithereens is never - in matters of war and
·a victory for "values." It's
peace belies a lack of will or
response conventional wisalso because Foley is less a confidence that defines the
dom insists the Foley fiasco
creation of his, ''traditional unformed uncertainty of
will discourage GOP voter
values" GOP than he is a
immature man.
turnout :i n November, parcreature (cretin) of his time
ticularly among all-imporThen again, maybe wartant, so-called "values vot- · - our sex-drenched time. ialk ... inhibitions" simply
It"s also because sotiery's show . how "repressed'' we
ers,"
thereby
vaulting
ire is directed not at his
are as when we observe the
Democratic majorities into
(homo)sexuality, but at his
Congress. If so, this is a
"social taboo" of denying
exploitation of youth and
on
Bread
21st-century twist
the Islamic nature of our
power. Such context doesn't
foe. I'm playing around
and Circuses any Roman
excuse Foley's monstrous
with these 1960s clich,s to
emperor would applaud. ln
behavior, but it lielps
the ancient tradition of distry to illustrate a key aspect

Com!Ction Policy

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
·

Our main concern in all stones is to PubliShed every afternoon. Moncsay

be accurate. If you know of an error

tnrough Fnday, 111 Court Street,
~omeroy,

Ohio

Second-class

in a story, call rhe newsroom at (7 40)

pos1age paid at Pomeroy.

992-2156.

Member: The Assoc1ated Press and
tile Ohio Newspaper AssociatiOn.

Our main nu'mber is

(740) 992-2156.

Postm*ster: Send address corrections to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Court
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

Department errtenslons are:

News
EdHor: Chanene Hoeflich. Ext. 12 .
Reporter: Bnan Reed , Ext 14

Reporter: Be1h Sergent Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside Sates:· Dave Hams , Ext. 15
Outllde Sales: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16

Class/Circ. : Judy Clarl&lt;. Ext. 10

General Manager
Charlene Hoef11ch. EJtt . 12

E·mall:
r,ews@ myda1lysent1nel.com
•

Web:

·www myda11ysent1nel .c9m

Subileription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month
·'1 0.27
One year
'123.24
Daily
50'
Senior Cijlzen rates
One mo.n th
'9.24
One year
' 103.90
St.bsc~rs stnJid

remit in advanoe
direct 10 the Oa1fy Sentnel. No subscription by mail permitted in areas
where home carrier sen.~ice is available .

Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107 10
52 Weeks
' 2 14 21

'

'

Russia to hunt down journalist's ~-killers
·but colleagues skeptical of official probe

•
of our social condition:
Sexually untrammeled we
have become intellectually
moribund. We continue.
tiresomely. to highlight sexuality in the cu·lture, even a~
we continue. perilously, io
stifle debate that touches on
non-Western topics such l\S
Islam . Are the two related?
You bet, because they both
carry the stamp of approvid
from the school of political
correctness that was estab~
li shed amid the sexual revoc
lution and the rise of multiculturalism. What we might
regard as sexual Iiberationism and multiculturallyrigged reason are on track to
roll back the Enlightenment
that produced Western civilization as we know it today.
This symbiosis may in the
end help explain why, in the
midst of a global ,war to
determine the fate of
Western civilization (as in
whether Western civilization will continue to have a
fate}, American voters and
politicians alike appear
poised to turn all-important
midterm elections into a
meaningless referendum on
a sexual predator already
ostracized, while still failing
to qebate, examine, or even
recognize urgent
facts
before u~ .
For a culture with few
taboos, we sure have a lot of
hang-ups.

(Diana West is a columnist
for· The Washington Times.
She cim be collfacted via
dianawest@verizon.net.)

. GALLIPOLIS -

BY AJOITH INGRAM

Carl leland Boggs, 80, of Gallipolis,

Politkovskaya's editors
said she had been due to pubOenter, after a brief illness.
,
lish an investigative article
MOSCOW - Russia has on Monday about torture and
. He was born Dec. 12, 1925, at Frost, Ohio, son of the late
Carson ~d Florence (Tilton I Boggs of Guysville. He was become a deadly place for kidnappings in Chechnya
preceded m death by brothct . Ellis Leroy, Carson Jr., and journalists who run afoul of based on witness accounts
Glenn!s Manon and a sister, Laura Marilynn Gordon Myers. g9vernment officials or their and photos of tortured bod. ·He IS survived by his wife of 58 years, Wanda (Knapp) business and political part- ies.
~ggs; two daughters, Carolyn (Leslie) Hechler of ners.
She was at least the 4 3rd
Those behind the killings, journalist killed for her work
Richmond, Va. and Carla (Bill) Beal of Gallipolis; three
gr.mddaughters, Elizabeth (Nile) Waller.of Langley AFB Va though. are rarely brought to in Russia since 1993, accordKa~ (Greg) Crawfor? of Chesterfield, Va. and Amanda (Joe) justice, reinforcing a sense of ing to CPJ, which has ranked
Wnght of Glouster; s1x great-grandchildren, Marie), Cydney impunity that may have Russia the third most deadly
~ Stella ~aller, Holden and K;u:ma Crawford and Riley encouraged the . killers of country for journalists, after
Wnght; a stster, Beulah (Rev. Wallace) Smith of Princeton, Anna Politkovskaya, a fierce Iraq and Algeria. Many were
W.Va., and brothers, Basil (Clarice) Boggs of Stockport, 'and . critic of the war inChechnya. killed while reporting on the
Lowell (Ca~nne) Boggs of Belpre. Also surviving is a sisAs the European Union ·two wars in Chechnya, and
ter-m-law, E1leen Boggs of The Plains, and several nieces and the U.S : demanded a six were caught up in fightand.nephews.
thorough
probe
irito ing between government and
He was a 1944 gTaduate of Troy High SchooL Carl was a Saturday's · contract-style Opposition forces in Moscow
charter member of Faith Baptist Church in Rodney. He was a killing, there was skeptiCism · in 1993.
veteran of World War II, serving as a Sergeant in the United that the authorities would
Many more appear to have
States Army Air Force.
ever uncover the culprits of · been targeted because of
He worked as a route salesman for the lmperiallce .Cream the latest in a series of their aLteJ:Ilpts to dig into aiJec
Co._. at Parkersburg, m the late 1940's. Graduating from the killings of journalists in gations of corruption. The
Ohio State H1ghway Patrol Academy in 1948, he became a Russia under . President killers have rarely been
~rgeant and se~ed for. 30 years. After the collapse of the Vladimir Putin, who . has found.
Stiver Bndge m 1967, he was honored with "The ~n increasingly accused of
Dmitry
Kholodov,
a
Superintendents Citation of Merit", with one oak leaf &lt;:Juster, rolling back post-Soviet free- reporter who investigated
by the Ohto Htghway Patrol, for his investigation and life doms since coming to power military corruption, was
·
saving efforts.
in 2000.
killed in October 1994 when
·Services will be held at 2 p.m .. , Wednesday, Oct. II, 2006
The skepticism was under- a briefcase he had picked up
at Wh1te-Schwarzel Funeral Hoi)Je, Coolville, with Rev. Jim lined by the $929,700 reward at a Moscow train station folLusher officiating. Burial will follow in Coolville Cemetery. for information that Novaya lowing an anonymous call
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. at the ft~neral home. · Gazeta has offered, signaling · blew up in his office.
Nephews wi II serve as pallbearers.
stronger faith in their own Colleagues said he had been
investigative efforts than told it contained evidence.
·those promised by the govSix men charged in the
ernment, which has produced killing, including four former
LONG BOTIOM - Lori L Hensley, ·40, Long Bottom, so few prosecutions before. . members of an .elite para'"Russia is a uniquely hos- troops unit, were acquitted in
passed away on Oct. 7, 2006 at Camden Clark Hospital in
tile place for the execution of two separate trials, in 2002
Parkersburg, W.Va. after a brief illness. ·
independent
journalism. It is and 2004; the Russian
She was born on October I , 1966 to Larry and Linda
both
violent
and repressive," Supreme Court upheld those
(Grueser) Hudson in Gallipolis. She was a homemaker and a
said Joel Simon, executive rulings in June 2005.
proud supporter of Eastern High School Athletics.
Natalya Skryl, a business
She is preceded in death by her paternal grandparents, director of the New Yorkbased
Committee
to
Protect
reporter
for Nashe Vremya in
Walter and Irene Hudson, maternal wandparents, David and
Journalists.
Rostov-on-Don,
was beaten
Thelma Grueser; and special friends, Penny, Bobbie ;tnd
Chuck Hensley.
·
·
" For many, many years,
She is survived by her husband of 21 years, Ronald Eugene
activities went on here
Hensley, Long Bottom; daughters, Tiffany Irene Hensley and
even though the building
Justin Michael Gilmore, Long Bottom and Brittni Rose
from
PageA1
was just a shell ," Wise said.
Hensley and Joel Andrew Lynch, Long Bottom; gTandson,
"It's
.an im~ortant part of
Rohwan Michael Gilmore (Nana's Boy); parents, Larry and
used
daily
until
it
was
Middleport
s
hi story,
Linda. Hudson, Pomeroy; mother and fatlier-in-law, Henry
so
many
and \Beverly Hensley, Long Bottom; sister-in-law. Melissa closed in· 1953 . One man because
attending
the
event,
Jim
Middlepori
families
have
(froy) Scyoc, Long Bottom; nephews, Craig Hensley and
Hall,
a
·Middleport
native,
lleen
involved
in
railroadMichael Scyoc, Long Botto, and several gTeat friends.
Funeral services are scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. I 0, 2006, recalled working for the ing through the years."
Wise said a third phase of
at 2 p.m. at the Fisher Funeral Homes in Pomeroy. Burial will railroad in the depot's final
days.
renovation
work, .i ncluding
follow at Meigs Memorial Gardens with the Rev. Linda
Committee
·
member
landscaping
enhanceDamewood Officiating. Visitation will be held from 2-4 and
Mary
Wise
told
those
ments,
are
now
planned.
from 6-9: p.m. on Monday, Oct. 9, at the funeral home.
Feeney-Bennett
Post
Online condolences may be sent to: www.fisherfimeral- . attending the weekend ceremony
of
the
depot's
dilap128,
American
Legion
homes.com.
idated condition prior to opened the ceremony by
the beginning of the reno- raising the flag, and Wise,
Duffield
and
Teaford said that he would vation work. The roof Myron
estimate there are ·about 25 leaked, the floor was dirt, Frances Strickland, wife of
pounds on each vine. He and some in the communi• U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
went on to explain that you ty suggested the historic D-Lisbon, spoke of the
from PageA1
know when they're ripe freight facility be bull- project and its importance
to the community. Jim
vines, grown from seed, because they get all wrinkled dozed into the Ohio River.
Instead, the committee Tevis of AirClaws of
have ~eally produced. Today and pull off easily.
"It took me 15 years to get replaced the roof, repaired Athens, the general contwo rows arranged on trellis
stretch about 250 feet down a a crop like this," he com- the exterior, and secured tractor on the project and
mented, and believe me tak- funding , first through a Architect Penny Mullen
garden path.
Appalachian also spoke, with Tevis
"This is the first time I've ing care of them is no easy sma.ll
Regiona
l
Commission
recounting how at least an
job.
"They
require
lots
of
had a crop like this," cominch
and a half of old river
gFant
and
later
an
$83,500
mented the man whose face work with regular trimming
appropriation
th.rough
the
si lt was discovered in the
is half-hidden by his straw of the vines which somehat. ''There are thousands of · i'imes grow five . inches a Community Development depot ceiling during the
Block Grant 's Community · renovation work.
them here, five different day."
Distress
Program, for inteIn conjunction with the
He admits that for now his
kinds and some taste sweeter
event,
the Riverbend Arts·
than others, but they all look biggest consumers are deer rior repairs and upgrades.
Wise, · her husband, Council hosted an Art in
which · frequent the kiwi
alike inside."
Roscoe
, Myron and ll,me , the Park show, featuring
patch
to
enjoy
both
the
vines
Some of the kiwi are
Duffield,
and George and Betty Stiles, a guest artist
green, others are red, and all and the fruit they produce .
Cinda
Harris
formed the from Betty Stiles of
come in large clusters, each But he 's hoping to change all
Stoutsville.
renovation committee.
one about the size of a grape. that this year.

passed away Saturday, Oct. 7, 2006 at Holzer Senior Care

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Lori L Hensley

Depot

THINK W£11 TIMNG
TO C0V£R llUS
? .
THINGUP ....

Kiwi

HASTERT

after a bear market take four 30 stocks that make up the
years and four months, Dow, only 10 including
according to Merrill Lynch. Altria Group Inc . and.
The Dow tumbled 37 per- Caterpillar Inc. are trading
cent in a nasty two-year abpve their January. 2000
wasn't much euphoria on decline after the air came le veL That means twoWall Street this week as the out of the Internet ba-lloon, a . thirds of the Dow's stocks,
Dow Jones industrial aver- recession began and corpo- including General Motors
age hit all-time high. With rate scandals mounted. Corp., Intel Corp. and
most investors· ponfol ios Even after hitting a bottom Microsoft Corp., are trading
trailing the Dow's perfor- in October 2002. the climb well below what they were
mance, the crowds weren't higher has been slow.
srx years ago.
.
cheering too loudly for its
Things started ,looking up · The Dow ·, new closing
record run. ·
this summer, fueled by a high is also 15 percent
Gone were the chamdecline in energy prices and · below its 2000 record in
pagne toasts that ushered ,in
by mounting signs· that the real-terms when adjusted
the Dow· s last record run in
Federal Rese~ve will not for intlation. The bench 2000. This time, the party
was limited to the lucky few raise interest rates again this mark index is al~o trading
who own a handful of blue- year. Sparking thi s week's well below its previous
chip stocks. What · the record was a tumble in oil highs when adjusted for the
world 's best-known stock prices to seven-month lows. decline in the dollar. which
Not only did that help has fallen more than 25 perindex has been up to lately
push
the DOw to a new hi gh. · cent since 7002 against
doesn't reflect the beat of
but it also added to it s other major currencies.
today 's market much at alL
All that might explain
2006 run. The Dow
strong
The Dow - a weighted
is
up
about
I
0
percent
for
why
investors haven't been
average of 30 large-cap
so g iddy over 'he Dow' s
stocks ~ in recent weeks the year.
But
the
celebration
isn't
re(;ent gains. The y are more
had been closing in on its
being
felt
all
around.
Some
pessimistic about the marlast record of I I, 722.98,
of
that
is
beca1,1
se
other
ket's current prospects. A
which was reached on Jan.
poll by
Birinyi
14, 2000 at the height of the broad-market indictors are new
far
from
their
record
highs.
Associale'
Inc
.
of
50
Web
stock market boom . It finalThe
Standard
&amp;
Poor's
500
investment blogs found that
ly topped that on Tuesday
and then extended 'that gain · index is still about 12 per- 45 percent are bearish . 40
cent away from its record pe~cent are bulli;,h· and 15
on Wednesday.
Its comeback has been a high in, March 2000, while percent are market neutral.
Hi ghl ightin g that 'enti long , bumpy and often gru- the Nasdaq compo;ite index
eling ride. It took ~ix year' is s{ill down about 55 per- ment. many mutual fund
and eight months to work cent from ih peak that invbtor' have been rede ·
off an ugly hangover frorn month .
ploying
money - from
Skeptic&gt; a l,o say the dome;,tic stock funds to
the dot-com bu't and postfund,.
Sept. II blue' and re&lt;rch a·. Dow ·, record gJo"e' over international
new hi gh. Typical rebound~ reality. For inslancc. of the Acwrding to Citigroup. a

staggering 86.8 percent of
the $118.56 billion in total
U.S. equity flows has head ed oversea~ so far in 2006.
And those who are investing in L'.S. issues for the
most part aren't seeing
·much of a spillover from the
Dow··s record run. There
were 147 issues on the New
York Stock Exchange mak -.
ing 52-week highs out of
3.448 traded on Tuesday, ·
indicating a very narrow
participation in the blue-'
chip rally, according to
Merrill Lynch.
Even hedge funds, which
for years have outperformed ··
· the broader market, are seeing a weakening of returns.
Diversified hedge funds. as
tracked by ~errill Lynch,
. are up 4 .39 percent year-todate - les' th an half the
Dow·s gains ;,o far this year.
Now that the Dow has set
a record, will. the broader
market follow? Wachovia
Securities chief investment
· strategist Rod Smyth deems
that can only happen if
i.nvestors . believe in a new
era 9f ·faster earnings
growl h or are willing to pay
a higher price for the same
earnings stream.
They did both during the
late 1990, stock · market
boom . But they also still
have the scar&gt; to show for
that b'out of irrational exuberance .

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

WAAT toW&lt;ES YOU ·

Letters to the editor are welcome. Ther should be less
than 300 wrmis. All leuers are su~iect to·editing. must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
BY RACHEL BECK
unsigned leuers will be pul&gt;/ished Leiters should be in
AP BUSINESS WRITER'
good taste. ·addressing issue.&lt; not pasonalities. Leiters of
thanks to organiwtions mul indi1•iduals will not be acceptNEW YORK - Except
ed for publication.
· for the media noise, there

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 9, 20o6

Nlonday,~ober9,2006

ALL.BUSINESS: Dow's rnn to all-time highs
.doesn't spur record-breaking in broad market

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
.,

Reader Services

PageA4

MCHD
.from Page A1
change our everyday ·Iives
drastically. For example, it
m!ly possibly close schools
tempomri ly, cancel events,
disrupt services such as
electricity and water and
result in shortages including
food.
Bee R.E.A.D.I. will
include a panel disc;:ussion
between local and state
experts including Dr. Leah
Dorman, Assi stant .State
Veterinarian with the Ohio
Department. of Agriculture ;
Douglas Hunter, MD, local
MCHD
physician · and
Medical Director; Bob
Byer,
Meigs
County
Emergency Management
Agency Director; Doug
Fisher, Southeast Ohio SubRegion One Public Health
Frank
Coordinator;
Gorscak ,
MCHD
. Marshall (pictured)
Emergency
Response Tht;l Meigs County Health Department along with Health Commissioner Larry
Coordinator; Keith ·woods, will host a public forum Bee R.EAD.I. on how to prepare for an influenza pandemic at 6 p.m.
Ohio Department of Natural this Thursday at the Meigs County Senior Center. Door prizes and refreshments provided.
Resources Meigs County
Representative.
H.ealth
. .
Commissioner
Larry and when these lllness the Retired and Senior paredness kits as door
Re sident s
are
Volunteer ·
Program\ prizes.
Marshall will moderate !he · arrive in Mei gs County
panel discussion . Topics to
• Determine the impact of Homeland Security will encouraged to come with
be discussed include but are these disea'iC' on our com- erect di,play&gt; and di"emi- question' for the panelists
nate information to educate to be eligible for door prize
not limited to:
munities
• . Di sti ngui sh between
• Learn how to protect attendee' about per;;onal drawings.
For more in,formation,
and community preparedpandemic influenza and your self and your family
bird flu
Free refreshmenb will be ne" eiTnrh . The MCHD contacl Courtney Sim at
• Determine what to do if provided. The MCHD and wi II award emergency pre- 7 40-992-6626.

-··-...-

I

•

over the bead in March 2002
and died the next day.
Colleagues said she had been
investigating a dispute over
control of a metals plant, and
that was the most probable
reason for her murder.
Investigators
initially
excluded robbery as a motive
in the killing - because she
had jewelry and a latge sum
of cash on her when she was
found -. but later ruled the
opposite, according to CPJ.
'"It is extremely important
to break the circle of inconclusive investigations . in
regard of the recent murders
of jpt~rnalists in Russia," said
Miklos Haraszti, the media
freedom adv.o cate of the
Organization for Security
!IJld Cooperation in Europe.
"The violent death of any
member of the media stifles
the free spirit of journalism.
But in this case, the expediency of action is extrel)lely
1mportant also because Anna
Politkovskaya was an outspoken critic of government
policies."
Suspicion in the killing of
Politkovskaya, whose body
was found in the elevator in
her apartment building on
Saturday, has fallen on the
Moscow-backed Chechen
strongman Ramzan Kadyrov.
Politkovskaya, one of the
few Russian journalists writing about widespread human
rights abuses in Chechnya,
had been a persistent critic of
Kadyrov, whose security
forces are alleged to be
_involved in widespread
abductions and torture.
Novaya Gazeta said on its
Web site it believed her murder was either revenge by

Kadyrov or an attempt to discredit him.
In a recent radio interview,
Politkovskaya said she was a
witness in a criminal case
against Kadyrov concerning
his alleged involvement in
. the kidnapping of two civilians- an ethnic Russian and
a Chechen- who were tortured and killed.
Politkovskaya
also
angered other powerful people - · including the Russian
military - with her investigative reporting and human
·
rights advocacy.
Novaya
Gazeta
said
Sunday its reporters woul\1
conduct. their own investigait
called
tion ,
and
Politkov,kaya's
slaying.
revenge for her coverage of
Chechnya, whic h included
the story planned for
Monday.
"We never got the article, '
but she had evidence about ·
these (abducted) people and
there were photographs,"
Deputy
Editor
Vitaly
Yerushensky, told Ekho
Moskvy radio.
Politkovskaya's death was
the most high-profile slaying
of a journalist in Russia since. ·
the 1uly 2004 assassination
of Paul Klebnikov, the U.S.born editor of the Russian
edition of Forbes magazine.
That crime was believed ·.
linked to Klebnikov's investigation of the murky business world in Russia but
remains unresolved; two eth. nic Chechens accused of carrying it out were acquitted
earlier this year.

Paved

the.fire department to be paid
out of the levy money for the
fire department.
Council donated $ 100 to
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol memorial fund set up
for Troopers Dale Holcomb
and Joshua Risner who were
killed in an accident last
month.
Council accepted the resignation of village engineer
Linn
of
Linn .
Tim
Engineering effective Dec.
30. Council is to ask if Linn
can help with designs to
widen and repave Carleton
Street before his resignation
is effective.
Those wishing· to help
Sy~acuse win money for
improvements at the park
can log onto www.hometownhelper.com, look under
Ohio, then Syracuse and add ·
comments on the project.
The more. comments the
more likely Syracuse will
win some money for the
park.
Council granted pennission to Debbie and Kcvi n
Galla~her to build a barn to
house their horse on two
acres of land at 2894 Third
Street.
Cunningham announced
Kaitlyn Hood was named ·
Clerk of Courts.
Absent from the meeting
was Councilwoman Donna
Peterson a nd Counc.ilman
Mike VanMeter.

from PageA1
members, police department
and fire department will all
be giving out candy.
Mayor Eric Cunningham
brought up the issue of a
raise
for
Street
Superintendent
Mike
Ralston.
"There's no money 'for it
in my opinion," Jacks said.
"Maybe we can look into it
next year. The general fund's
just starting tO bounce back."
"It's not that we don't
want him to have a raise, we
just don't have the money,"
Councilwoman
Jenny
Hatfield said.
Council went into executive session once to discuss
personnel matters, more
specifically new applicants
for the Syracuse Volunteer
Fire Department.
Once
the
meeting
adjourned back into regular
session Cunningham recommended
and
counci l
approved -Robert and Pete
l:iendricks forthe fire depart.
ment.
Cunningham
announced Brent Schuler .
was the new assistant fire
·chief. Syracuse Fire Chief
Bill Roush reponed Trucks
34 and 37 wen~ back from
repairs. Council agreed to
purchase 10 new pagers for

~
~

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ;
~-"
.· In The Sentinel

l PUMPKIN PATCH~
~

~
~~

~

~
·~

Pictures will run:

~
~

Monday,
October23

Monday,
October30

~ Deadline for Entry:

'~

Qn\y

$8.00

Kylie Billings
·•J...ovc Ya!"
Mommy &amp;

Mail or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, Pom(lrOy, Ohio 45769

Child's Name:. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From :. _ _ _ _ _ _.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Your Name :. _ _ _~-~----------Address:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _________

.•'

Ads must be pre-paid

•

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Monday, October 9, 2006

. Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel .

Sroreboard, Page B2

Mazes, hay rides help,Ohio
farms stay in business
CLEVELAND (AP) Visitors to John Boyer 's
farm can walk through
seven acres of pumpkins
they· re .allowed !9 pick. Or
they can watch )them shoot
out of a giant slmgshot that
sends . the go11rds flying
toward wagons and other
targets.
Those are just two of the
attractions
at
Boyer's
Honey Haven Farms in
Ashland. which also boasts
· wagon rides, a petting zOQ,
a com .maze and a "haunted" cornfield complete with
tombstones.
Three years ago, · Boyer
had to give up the dairy
· business - which his family had been in for a century - because of falling
milk prices. So he decided
to turn his farm into a destination.
Farm tourism is cropping
up all over northeast Ohio
as small farms try to survive in the face of rising
costs and heavy competition from larger operations.
Providing tours and letting visitors pick vegetables
also educates the public
abopt a way of life that's

not as common as it used to
be, Boyer said. Farms are
often visited by school chi!- .
dfen who learn for the first
time how food gets to their
plates.
. Nickajack Farms in North.
Lawrence is home · to a
horse fairn and education
center where children· learn
about different types of
seeds and can touch old
bird and wasp nests.
. Owner Debbie Sebolt
said many of her young visitors have never been to a
·
farm before.
"It opens their minds to a
whole different kind of
. career," she said.
No matter the age of the
visitor, farmers know connecting with the consumer
is good business.
"Once they meet , you,
they feel like they know
you," said Amalie Lipstreu,
program coordinator for the ·
Farmland
Center
in
Peninsula. "If they know
you, they care about what
happens to you."
The 2002 Census of
Agriculture shows Ohio
'farmers reported more than
$37 million in direct farrn

-

sales, which is up 19 percent from 1997 and puts
Ohio in the top .five nationwide for direct sales.
Insurance rates for farmsturned-tourist sites are high,
so the Ohio Farm Bureau
and Nationwide Insurance
have worked together to
create liability policies for
farms that mcorporate
tourism,
said
bureau ·
spokesman Joe Comely.
Wineries were at the start
of the farm tounsm trend in
northeast Ohio, said· David
Marrison, ·assistant professor at Ashtabula County's
Ohio Stat~ University
Extension office.
David and Lisa Jilbert's
Medina County. winery is
run out of a renovated dairy
barn . In recent years
Photo
they' ve added a restaurant, Hunter Greene, 9. a student at Tallmadge Elementry School in Lancaster, helps APunload
which draws more than 40
pumpkins at his school Wedne~ay. .·The pumpkins were raised by prisoners at
customers a night in sum- SoutheastE!rn
Correctional Institution in Lancaster.
mer months, and a farmers
market.
David Jilbert expects to
sell up to I 0,000 bottles of
wine this year after selling
about 5,000 last year.
"It's a very simple philosophy," he said, "Get people
BY KEu.v HASSm.
ees, including Warden Mark
"I really like farm .work,
here, they'll buy wine."
· . THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Saunders, drove them tO the to do something with the
school.
land other than look at it,"
LANCASTER - Ten- · This is the first year that he said, heading out into)he
year-old Taylor O'Dell inmates at the nearby prison muddy fields.
grabbed a pumpkin from the have grown and donated
Frazier was sent to prison
Nagy has gone through back of a truck, hoisted it pumpkins, although ' they in the fall of 2004 on a burphysical and emotional tur- under her chin and scram- regularly grow tomatoes, glary conviction and is
moil that sometimes threat- bled inside Tallmadge cucumbers and other veg- scheduled to be released in
School.
etables to donate to local May.
ened a full recovery and his Elementary
Gently resting it next to food banks.
He admitted he knew
marriage, he and his wife the fa~t-gro":ing sea of • The pumpkin harvest was
nothing
about farming
Barb said.
orange JUSt mside the doors, started as a community ser- before and was surpriSed tci
"All those stories about she hurried back outside for vice · project that didn't learn he enjoyed it and
amputees make it seem like more.
require inmates to leave the would consider pursuing it
it's so ~asy to recover,"
"This is like pumpkin prison grounds, Saunders when he's released.
Nagy said. "If you read boot camp," she joked.
said. Only the lowest securiFrazier said he was glad
something about my acct. The pumpkins were a gift ty level prisoners are eligi- to hear the pumpkins were
dent' and then saw me back . from the Southeastern ble for farm detail.
going to ·kids who would
The 800-acre farm and appreciate them. "It feels.
to work, it would seem like, Correctional Institution,
where prison inmates har- buildings are behind the good to give something
'Hey, no big deal."'
vested
about 400 pumpkins prison and, other than · the back to the community."
Barb Nagy said her husthis
year
to ·give to area nearby fencing. look like
Just before II a.m., teachband was in a constant bad
of
any
other
working
farm
.
schools
and
the
city
ers
lined up a dozen or so
mood while stuck at home
Lancaster.
The
prison
has
about
270
students, who started hopwith nowhere to go but th.er- · Last week, a small group cattle.
ping
in excitement" when the
apy. Things got so bad at of inmates assigned to the
Inmate Shane Frazier, 27, trucks pulled up. When they
ope point she told him she prison's farm picked the last is assigned to farm duty and saw how many pumpkins
was leaving.
of the pumpkins from their helps with herding the cat- were there, a couple of
field and piled them into the' tie, driving tractors and teachers recruited more stuirnck. Other prison employ- . planting crops.
dents to help.

INMAtES RAISE PUMPKINS

.

Monday, {)ctober 9, 2006
LocAL ScHEDULE

Displaced
Hannan
gets a w~

Ill &amp; ICBOOL IOLLIYBALL

POMEROY-A_ol _ _

"""
h;g.
....., """" irWoMng
teams
from Gan~. Meigs and Mason ooootias .

maps

Mondlv'• ,.,.,
Volleyball
South Gama at South Point, 5:30p.m.
Portsmouth at Gallia·Academy, 5: 15 p.m.

Soccer
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.

'

Tyttdty'a QI!Ttll
Voiioyblotl
.
River Valley at Jackson, s p.m.
Gallia Academy at Falrta~. 5:30p.m.
Grace Cht1stlan at Sootll Gallla, 5:30p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Vlnton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at eves, 5:30 p.m.

BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -· A lot of numbers
are considered lucky.
·
For Hannan, that number i~

Soccer

eves at Cross Lanes Christian. 5 p.m.
Wlnlield at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Gt~oSocc«

a

Lincoln County a.t'Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.

Crou Country

.
SEOAL Meet ot Logan, 4 p.m. .
College Soccor
Ced8Ni11e at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.

Collogo VolloyboH
Cedarville at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.

WtdneDy'a QIIDM
Voltoyb811
South Gallia at Coat Grove, 5:30 p.m.
Southern at Malgs, 6 p.m.
Crou COUnlry
TVC Meet at lake Snowden

FOR SCHOOLCHilDREN

INSIDE

Police ojficer returns to work with prosthetic leg
MI D D L E B U R G
HEIGHTS (AP) - Eighteen
months after losing his right
leg to amputation, a police
officer has achieved his goal
of returning to the beat.
Patrolman Ryan Nagy didn't want a desk job despite
the obvious difficulties a
man with one leg would face
as a street officer. He spent a
year and a half in therapy
and struggled to learn how
to use his new prosthetic leg
made specially for work.
Nagy, 32, was crushed
between two vehicles during
a traffic stop on Interstate 71
in April 2005. He spent
seven weeks in the hospital
being treated. for multiple
fractures· and severe head

injuries.
Nagy, who returned to
work last week amid recognition from the mayor and
the police chief, will spend
his first four weeks as the
passenger to another patrolman to evaluate whether
he's prepared for · a full
comeback. His doctor said
he can go back to work
· without restrictions. and
he's learned to drive using
his left foot.
Still, he's anticipating the
challenges of being oil
patrol.
"Every so often, I think
about that call that will
come up and I'll be like, 'Oh
crap, how am I going to do
this with this leg?" he said.

Riverview Garden Club meets
REEDSVILLE - · Ruth
Anne Balderson And Mary
Alice Bise recently hosted
the Septem her meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club
at the Balderson home.
Margaret Cauthorn read
three poems pertaining to
the
season
Including
Lorgfellow's "Autumn" for
devotions preceding the
business meeting conducted by the outgoing presi dent. Maxine Whitehead.
Each member answered
roll ca II by reporting on
the success or failure of a
new plant grown in her
flower garden this past
·
summer.
Secretary
Delores
Spencer, gave her repon of
the last meeting and also
an account of the club's
enjoyable tour of . The
Castle in Marietta In June.
Club members ate lunch at
the Levee House following

the tour and visited Green
Leaf Nursery. Spencer also
told of the club's family
picnic at the Forked Run
State Park in July, which
was well attended.
· Vice president Kyla
Frank reviewed planned
programs for .the year . prepared by her and the program committee Mary
Marlene
Alice
Bise,
Putman, Marilvr Hannum,
and Margaret Cauthorn.
Hannum will print the program books and have them
ready to distribute at the
Oct. 26 dinner meeting at
the ·~iver City Grill In
Parkersburg. Members are
to meet at the Whitehead
home at 5:15 p.m. for car
pooling.
The nominating committee, Delores Frank, Janet
Connolly, and Mary Ann
Harris presel)ted the slate
of officers for 2006-2007.

Elected president was Kyla
Frank,
vice
president
Janice Young, secretary
Francis Reed, and treasurer
Margaret Grossnickle. Bise
will continue to be In
charge of the flower fund,
Putman scrapbook and
Balderson, news.
Due to the absence of
two elected officers, installation will be held In
October. A sympathy card
was signed for Janice
Young and a get well card
for Margaret Grossnickle.
In the program, members
enjoyed related their activities during the summer
months.
Refreshments
were
served by the hostesses to
Nola
Spears,
Nancy
Wachter,
Cauthorn,
Connolly, Harris, Putman,
and
Reed,
Spencer,
Whitehead. Spencer won
the door prize.

Soldier with Meigs ties serving in Iraq
PORTLAND Chief
Warrant Officer Robert
Deeter,
formerly
of
Portland, is now serving m
Iraq with the 36th Combat
Aviation Brigade.
The 36th CAB will provide attack capability air
assault operations and a
myriad of other operations.
Deeter joined the ARMY
in 1979 and has been a helicopter pilot all his adult life.
He will serve as a Black
Hawk pilot with the 1/131 st
Air Assault Battalion which
is part of the 36th CAB.
\Vhen not deployed
Deeter is a pilot in the
Missouri National Guard . In
civilian life he is a pilot in
the emergency medical services industry. He makes his
home in Springfield, Mo.
with wife Connie. He is the
father of five and has two
granc,lchildren. He anended
both Southern and Eastern
High Schools and ii a 1979
Eastern graduate . He is the
son of Florence [)eeter of
Portland and the late Argyle
"Tom" Deeter.

17th Annual Hysell Reunion Held
RACINE - The descendants of Denver and
Frances Hysell held their
Family
17th · Annual
Reunion on Sept. 24 at Star
Mill Park, Racme.
The day was -spent visiting,• reminiscing,. sharing all
the family activities, looking at photo albums and
taking pictures. ·
A new addition to the
family this year is Holly
Michelle Painter. born
March 18. She is the
daughter of Victor and Lisa
Painter and the sister of
Sandy and Travis Painter of
Middleport.
A potluck dinner was
enjoyed by the 29 family
members present. Thirtyeight family members were
unable to attend. ;
Plans were made for the
Christmas party to be held
Dec. I 0 at the Bradford
Church Activity Building at
12:30 p.m. Letters will be
sent out later to let everyone know of the plans.
Candy treat bags were
made for all the young people there and a white elephant exchange was held.
Door prizes were given
to Tammy Ruof, Lindsey
Wolfe and Gary Hysell .
Drawing for ·an afghan was
held with Josh Clegg winmng.

Submntedphoto

Children of Denver and Frances Hysell attending the reunion
were' from the left, Guy Hysell, Madeline Painter, Evelyn
Wood, and Gary Hysell. .
Loss of our family member Roger William Hysell
age 60 who passed away
March 26 was noted.
. Officers for the next year
will be Jane Hysell , president; Madeline Painter, vice
president; Dian:J Maxwell,'
secretary-treasurer.
Reunion date for 2007
will remain the same. the
last Sunday of SeptembeP.
Present for the Reunion
were Guy and Ruby Hysell
of Pomeroy; Donald and
Stephanie
Hysell · of
Pomeroy; Debbie Miller,
Jane, Janelle, Cody and Bill

Hysell · of
Pomeroy;
Madeline and Ralph Painter
of
Middleport;
Diana
Maxwell of Long Bottom;
Becky, Bill and Ryan
Amberger
of
Racine;'
Evelyn and Ivan Wood of
Long Bottom; Bonnie and
Gary
Warner,
Andrea
Warner and Jason Warner
.of Long Bottom; Lora and
Jim Bing, Lindsey and
Jonathan Wolfe of Long
B.ottom; Rodney Wood of
Long Bottom; Gary Hysell
of . Pomeroy;
Tammy,
Stephanie and Sa vanah
Ruof of Columbus.

LOcal weather
Monday ... Patchy dense
fog in the morning. Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
70s. Light and ·. variable
winds ... Becoming nonhwest around 5 mph in the
"
afternoon.
Monday night ...Mostly
clear in the evening ...Then
becoming panly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Light and variable winds.·
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy
wi'th a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the inid
70s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.
•

Tuesday
nlght ... Partly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance ·of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. East winds
.
around 5 mph.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with showers " and
thunderstonits likely. Highs
in the lower 70s . Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Wednesday
night...Shower; and thunderstornJs likely. Low; in
the lower 50s. Chance of
rain 70 percent.
Thursday ... Cloudy with
showers likely. Much cooler

with highs in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
T~ursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the upper 30s.
Friday ... Mostly cloudy.
Highs around 50.
Friday
night ... Partly
clo11dy. Lows in the mid
30s.
Saturday and Saturday
nighL.M pstly clear. Highs
in the mid 50s. Lows in the
mid 30s.
Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs around 60.

'.

'

'

Larry Crum/pho'o

The Eastern Lady Eagles huddle up during· Thursday's match against Federal Hocking. Eastern was awarded the top seed
at Sunday's sectional draw.

Unbeaten Lady.Eagles earn No.1 seed
• VICkers spins leadels to
steal win. See Page B6

ColLEGE FoomAIL

Ohio State
bowls over
Falcons
COLUMBUS (AP) Troy Smith threw three
touchdown ·passes, Antonio
Pittman ran for two scores
and Ohio State started its
second month as the No. I
team in the nation with an
easy 35-7 victory over
Bowling Green on Saturday.
The Buckeyes (6-0)toyed
with the Falcons (3-3), tacking on two touGhdowns in
the fin316Juarter to tum a surprisingly close 21-7 game
mto a rout. Ohio State
stretched the nation's longest
. winning streak to 13 in a
row. ..
Smith didn't do anythirig
to hurt his Heisman Trophy
candidacy, completing 17of-20 passes for 191 yards
with no interceptions. His
touchdowns covered 3 yards
to Rory Nichol, II yards to
Ray Small and a hghtning
strike 57 -yarder to Ted Ginn
Jr.
. The 85-percent completion rate was the third best
ever for an Ohio State quarterback.
Pittman carried lJ times
for 61 yards, scoring on two
·
8-yard runs.
· Early in·the fourth quarter,
Ginn got a rare chance.: to

BY BRAD SHERMAN
SSHERIIAA~IIAVOAILYfRIBUNE.COM

JACKSON Last Thursday's
match against Federal Hocking won't
be the final home match for the
Reedsville Eastern Lady Eagles, after
all - thanks to . a new rule for Ohio
High School Athletic Association.
volleyball tournaments.
· .
In what was merely a formality, the
undefeated seventh-ranked Division
IV team in the state was awarded the
top seed when the·sectional draw was
conducted Sunday at Jackson High
School.
Instead of traveling ro a neutral site
to play sectional tQurnament games,
as had been the case in the past, now
the higher-seeded teams will play on
their home courts. Neutral site matches will resume in the district round.
Eastern (20-0) received a first
round bye and won't play until Oct.
19 in a Division IV sectional championship. The Lady Eagles will face

,Local 'sectional games
;I
1 ,. ODt. 18
ro Gollilo '~ 01'(2) Wover1y, 6 p.m.
(5I A - II (4) MoQi, 8 p.m.

'

.

..,

•

... 0111.11

GANVawr1y 01 (6) Oh-""(S) w.ron, 6 p.m.
A1hono/Molgo 01 (8) Ylnlon County/(1) Joc!cson, 6 p.m.

gw' b'W
:ro-diiJ. oct. t r

(11) Cloak- at (6)
~...,

p.m.

s•

- ·vattoy, 6 p.m.
d$Oct.~1

Vllloy .. (14) Oak Hil/(3) Huntington, 6

,.

QM

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
men's soccer team, which
moved back to the top spot
in the NAJA Top 25 rating
earlier in the week, started
slow, but poured it on late to
roll past visiting Urbana 8-2
on Saturday evening at Evan
Davis Field.
For the second time this
week, Rio Grande junior
forward Guy Heywood netted a hat trick. For the week,
the Preston,. England native
scored six goals in a pair of
Pluie see 8Gwls, B1
victories. Sophomore forward Frank Brown added
two goals and freshman
mid-fielder Jason Massie
CoNTAcrUs
collected four assists.
Jieywood started the scorOVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-t o.m.) ·ing in the 6th minute after a
1-74&lt;&gt;-446-2342 ext. 33
shot from Conar Dawson
caromed
off Urbana goa!Fox - t-740-446·3008
keeper
Ryan
Michaels,
E-m~~ll - sportsOmydallysentlnel.com
Heywood was there to
Sport&amp; Slllff
knock the ball home.
Brad Shenmm, Sports Editor Dawson was credited with
(7«1) 446-2342, ext. 33
an assist on the play, one of
bshennanOmydaitytribune.co!""
two he tallied in the game.
Urbana (9-4, 1-3 AMCS)
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
tied the game in the '17th
6crum0myd.JIIyregister.com
minute after a breakdown by
the Rio defense. Jon Snyder
Aahley Shut, Sports Writer
scored the goal with both
(7«1) 446-2342, oxt. 23
sports' mydailytrbune .oom
Eric Miller and Josh Baskin

.

I

IN.

.llo:ellol, Oct. te
(11) Mitior II (8) Soulhem, 6 p.m.

(11) St. Joooleh 01 (B) Soutle Gilltia, 6 p.m.

ltMtdliJ,Oct.11

Mihr/SoUinem 01 (1) - · 6 p.m.

St. -..e Gallilb ot (3) SootllWel&gt;stsr, 6 p.m.

either county rival Southern or
Miller.
Southern got the No. 8 seed and
will play host to ninth-seeded Miller
on Oct. 16.
'
All games, both first and second

No. 1 Redmen start
slow, roll oyer Urbana
BY MARK ,WIWAMS

I

.,...

earning an
assist.
R i o
Grande ( Il l,
4-0
AM C S)
regained the
lead
on
Brown 's
first goal in
the
26th
Heywood
minute .
Ma ssie
gained his first assist of the
game. "
The Blue Knights battled
back to tie the game one
more time on.a header from
Matt Spirk in the 35th
Tom Woodruff
minute.
picked up the assist for the
Blue Knights.
The score remained at 2-2
heading to halftime.
·
The lfcond half was all
Rio GrTde as the Redrnen
tallied six unanswered
go,als. Brown gave the
Redrnen the lead for good
with his second goal of the
game in the 48ih minute.
He was assisted by Dawson
on what turned out to be the
deciding marker.
,
Heywood notched his second goal in the 54th minute
giving Rio a 4-2 lead after
Massie gave. him a beautiful

Please see Redmen. B1

rounds, begin at 6 p.m.
Also in Division IV, South Gallia
was awarded a sixth-seed and a home
game. The Lady Rebels will play host
tq No. II Ironton St. Joseph. The
winner of that game w,ill travel to
face the third seed, South Webster on
Oct. 19.
Meigs got a fourth seed in Division
II and Will face Athens on Oct. 18.
The winner of that contest gets the
winner of the Jackson- Vinton County
match on Oct . 21.
Gallia Academy is the lone team in
the Gallia-Meigs area with a first round road match. The Blue Angels
go to Waverly on Oct. 18. GAHS or
Waverly will face the ChillicotheWarren winner on Oct. 21.
In Division Ill, Ohio Valley
Conference champion River Valley
received a sixth seed and will play
hostto No. II Crooksville on Oct. 17.
Whoever survives ihat match will
play. in the sectional final Oct. 21 at
either Huntington or Oak Hill.

It was
week seven
game last
year when
t
h
e
W i I d cats
broke
a
nearly three
year losing
streak and
that
luck
continued
this weeke n. d .
Hannan (15) produced
its ·
best
defensive
outing of
the
year
and, along
with a couple big runs
from Weio
Gue, ende(!
Gue
another los-ing streak as the Wildca~
came up with their biggest
win since 2002 in a dominating 26-14 Week 7 victory
over Gilmer County (0-6~
Saturday evening at Poim
Pleasant High School.
With Hannan's field in
Ashton unplayable, the
Wildcats moved their game
to Point Pleasant and never
missed a step as Gue rushed
for two touchdowns of 55
yards on his way to amassing
143 yards on the night to
push previously winless
Hannan into the win column.
"It is all about these kids
and what they have overcome," .said Hannan coach
Wayne Richardson. "We
practice on an area where we
can't use the field and we
can't even simulate a line of
scrimmalle. We are down off
the practice field in a hole, it
is just what. these kids have
done, moving around, losing
players, playinjl through
mjuries. It is big step for
them and a character check
that will help them in life."
The Wildcats defense also
came up big, putting pressure
on Gilbert County all night
long and forcing six
iurnovers while not giving up
a single turnover themselws
Led by Jared Cobb and

Please see Displked. B1

11 kfoiK(JJ( ~ Tou.e~

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

Hedy M. ·Windsor, MD.
I

Now acceptiag appoiatmeats &amp; liew patients!
Dr. Windsor will begin her practice on November 8, 2006

· "Poibt Pleasant-Office:

• -Ripley Office:
304-372-5156 .

304~75-4839
~

(Jynecplogical examinations

• ll()bsteb ical

Care

• .Pelvic inflammatory disea~s &amp; peh;c pain

'

.

• &gt;Cysts and tumors of ovaries. uterus and female organs
..

• fl~y, Laparoscop) &amp; other female surgeries
• -Pap sme-ar &amp; breast' exams

• &lt;;omplete blood analysis. infections, evaluations &amp; therapy •

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
~ f'~ lj p,.,fortlo~alt

�Monday, October 9, 2006
'

~ The Daily Sentinel "

·PageB2

SCOREBOARD
.

Monday, October 9,

I

I !WO .

~ I

.

·

l

Gallia
County

OH

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER . 285,~00 PROSPECTS
PLUS -YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

.

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

• All ads muat be prepaid'

AD.. • -.rt Your Ads Wfth A Keyword •

Include Complete

'D

olptlcM • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include PhoM Numbet' And Adarees When NeiMied
• AdiShoukl _llUA 7 O.ys

~wmr - ~~
r
I

I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

1"0

Roward lor miaeng tamil)'
dog, Lola, 4 mo old female
I will not be responsfble for Australian Shepherd. " you
debts, past or present, other have seen her or she was
than my own, Douglas C. sold to you, please call
Grover, Q..29-06
(740)446-9385 or (740)4460720. Missing sii"lce Thurs.
GivEAWAY
eve. Sapt. 28.

r

8 - old -kitten, 2 _male, 2

female. Part Siamese.
spayedlneuter. . Voucher
Included. (740)441·1269.

PRO SocCER

A.fler 5:00PM cart 74D-9493408. Three male kittens.

r

YARD Sill:

0

1,~:::::::;::~

C;
0

i4 n...~yS,.~.:... -I

11

2006. 740-992-5232.

Kittens
to
(304)675-3m.

giveaway

•

L,...,iruMiiiiiliiil"""iiiiiii"'iiiiiUUULI'.iiiiiPI·

.,I

iijr;;.;.;;-:L~.osr...,_AND
__

r

W.m~
IHJ_T_

~,_ _ _ _

Our guest service oriented
dining room is looking to hire
friendly, energetic $&amp;Mrs.
Put on your best smile and
apply in person at the
·Holiday Inn of Gallipolis. No
phone cals please.

_.I

Absolute Top Dollar: u.s.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre, 935
U.S.
Currency.
FOUND- St. Bernard, male, Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
dark brown wfwhtte 11\81'1(- Coin Shop, 151 Second
ings. On Fairfield Church Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-44&amp;
Rd. on 10/3. (740)3~·2330 2842.

,
. . .
Heiners, a Division of Sara
Lee Food &amp; Beverage,

FOl.IND
t..--tiiiiiiiioo-_.1

w

COLLEGE. FOOTBA,LL

PRo BASEBALL

wWw.comica.com

'

~

·

!

Redmen

'

fromPageBl
feed for his second assist.
- Heywood completed his second straight
hat trick with a goal in the 59th minute as
he teamed up with Brown to make the score
5-2.
Rio continued the second half onslaught
on a penalty kick from Dawson in the
75th minute. Sophomore forward Euan
Purcell was taken down in the box and
Dawson nailed the kick past Michaels.
Purcell was credited with an assist.
'Freshman Stuart Croft was the next to
find the back of the net when he scored
on a shot from 30 yards out in the 82nd
minute. Massie collected the third of his
four assists.
.
Purcell closed out the scoring in the
84th minute on Massie's fourth assist to
give, the Redmen the final margin of vic'
tory . .
Rio out-shot Urbana 22-4 with a 17- 3
advantage in-shots on goal.
.
Rio senior goalkeeper Derek Talcott

posted one save while Michaels · tallied
nine for the Blue Knights.
Rio Grande head coach Scott Morrissey
was not pleased with the first half, but
thought his club executed extremely well .
in the second half. "l think the execution
on their first goal, defensively on our part
we had four or five guys at different times
in the course of the sequence in the build
up to that goal that just broke down,"
Morrissey said_
"We didn ' t have cover on the back post,
i.t was good goal and a good effort on
Urbana's part, the second goal, we're try- '
ing to clear and it goes off someone ' s
head, but overall for the first 45 minutes
we were rriore concerned with the quality
of the officiating then we were about
competing and playing.
"The second half, I thought the guys
played really well ," Morrissey added.
'There was a lot of sharing of the ball and
the second half was fantastic, I mean
that's how we s)lould be playing and the
· execution was good. the build up and the.
delivery. it was a real.ly good second half
performance for the guys."
Rio Grande wi II host Cedarville on
Tuesday night. Kick-off is set for 7, p.m.

which put the game away as
both teams struggled to
"
move the ball.
Gilmer
County
began
the
from PageBl
game with the first big play
- a 35-yard scamper by
_Patrick Flora, the young sec- Kinder on the first play of the
ondary, which had struggle,d game - but that would be
during the early portion of. the last big play the Titans
the schedule, came together would see for a while' as the
and limited Gilbert to one turnover problems stated
.(;ompletion _while forcing early.
two mtercepuons.
· . Following the big run,
"If I could give a game ball Gilmer County hit a wall and
I would give it to Jared was unable to move the ball
_C 0 bb," Richardson said. during its next four posses-"What he has been through. sions while giving up its first
my defensive backs are of many turnovers on the
young and he got burnt bad night.
at W111 CounfY. and we were
Hannan caught its first
tryil!&amp; to build him some
break
after being forced to
confidenCe. Well, he grew up
punt
on
its second possession
.tonight. He was ma!Qng the
of
the
game.
The booming
plays IIJ!d was the aggress&lt;?r."
Despite
outgammg punt from Joe Kinnard was
Hannan in total yards, poorly fielded by the Gilmer
Gilmer County, who was led defender and Hannan manby halfback Logan Kinder aged to recover at its own II
·
with 202 yards on 30 carries, · yard line.
They
then
used
just
a few
could not sustain a drive as
plays
.to
punch
in
the
first
· nearly every possession of
importance ended in a score - a five yard run by
twllover. The Titans ended Zach Sturgeon - to put
the night with seven total Hannan on top 8-0 followmg
fumbles, losing four of them the Gue conversion run.
while giving up two picks on · The two teams traded the
ball over the next ' few posdesperation throws.
It was simply th e bi g play &gt;essions. with Gi lmer next to

Displaced

I

grab the advantage. The
Titans, who were struggling
just to get first downs, finally
found a crease in the Wildcat
defensive front as Kinder
broke free for a 49-yard
touchdown run, but the failed
conversion left Hannan on
top 8-6.
.
But from then on. it was all
Hannan.
· Gue broke free for his ftrst
touchdown on a fourth and
three conversion attempt
when they caught Gilmer
unprepared. With the Titans
expecting a punt, Gue took
the hand-off and tore down
the center of the field for a
55-yard scorelo lengthen the
Hannan lead with 2:15 left in
the second quarter.
He then repeated the feat
on the first Hannan possession of the second half when
he broke free on a third' and
five situation for yet another
55-yard touchdown score to
put him over I 00 yards on
the night while giving hi s
tean1 a 20-6 ~ u shi o n.
Lengthy dri ve; saw the
third quarter go by quickly
wuh the two Gtlmer p•w .e;sions ending in a fumble and
a sack ,on fo urth down o n a
botc hed play. Hann an. on, the

Bowls
from Page 81 ·
)"CtUm a punt - the Falcons
punted out of bounds rather
than give up a big return and brought it back 21 yards
to the Ohio State 43. On the
next play; Smith dropped
back in the pocket and ftred
to Ginn, who had streaked
past defender Antonio Smith
to catch the ball at the 7, racing in the rest of the. way
untouched.
Ginn caught a career-high
I 0 passes for 122 yards. The
57 -yard score was the
junior's 18th career . play
covering at least' 50 yards.
He has caught eight passes
of at least that distance, all
from Smith.
It didn 't take long for Ohio
StaJe to show its ~uperiority
over their in-state rivals,
scoring on three of their first

Bowling Green turned it
four possessions for a quick
over
again on its next pos~
21-0 lead.
linemail
Smith's 3-yard touchdown session, . with
pass to Nichol, a tight end Vernon Gholston grabbing a
used mostly for blocking, tifped pass at the Falcons
got the sconng staned.
2'
.
Three plays later, Pittman
The Falcons took over and
drove to a first down at the sidestepped a tackler at the
Ohio State 34. But the . goal line to make it 21-0.
Falcons 50-yard field-goal
The crowd booed loudl&gt;::
attempt by Sean Ellis' was each time Bowling Green s
Alonso Rojas - a rugbyblocked by Kurt Coleman.
The Buckeyes made . the style kicker - punted out of
most of that turnover by bounds to avoid putting the
methodically slicing thiough · hall in Ginn's hands.
The Falcons put together
the Falcons. On third-and-26
at the Bowling Green 42, an impressive drive to start
Smith dropped the snap out the second half, moving 85
of the shot~n fonna~ion, yards in 15 pla~s on a mix
then picked II up and had to Anthony Turner s passes and .
avoid a diving tackler at left Chris Bullock's runs. On
-end. Smith cut across the first down from the Ohio
grain, racing to the right cor- State 12, Turner, who comner where he was caught · pleted I IH&gt;f-24 passes for
from behind by cornematk 179 yards with one intercepAntonio Smith after a 34- tion, play faked and sprinted
left, then threw a pass over
yard gain.
On the next play, Pittman the middle that Corey
skirted left end for the first Partridge snagged with one
hand for the touchdown.
o( his two 8-yard scores.

I

lfaJ&gt;WANmJ

;
I
~~~~~~~~~17=40~1!~~~:2:·~----~

CLASSIAED INDEX

4r4'a For Site .............................................. ns

- Announcement............................................ 030
.

~ ..................:.................................... 530
~forRont ................................... 440

Auction lttld FIN Ulrtcel-...........................080
Auto P8rtl &amp; AcCIIIIDrles
"
........... ,.;, ........... . 760
Aula R...lr..................................................770
Autos for S.1e ..............,............................... 710
Bola • Motors tor Site ............................. 750
. Building SUpp1~ ........................................ 550
Buslitea tmd Buildings ............................. 340
Bum- OpportunHy.................................210
, au.1nen Tl'8lning ....................................... 1_4 0
Cltntpers • lltotor ........................... 790
· c.tnplng Equipment ........................:.......... 760

Carda of Thanb .......................................... 01 0
. Child/Elderly Cite ....................................... 1911 .
. E~ ............................... 840

Equipment tor Rent .................................. .. 480
e.c.v.tlng ................................................... 830
FMn Equipment .........................- ............... 61 0
. F - for Ront............................................. 430
F - for Site ............................................. 330
Far l..eae .................................. _, __ ...:......... 490
: Far Salle ...................:.................................... 585
For Salle or Trade .........................................590
Fruits • v.g.tabln ..................................... 580

Fumlahed Rooma ........................................450

Oenerll Hltullng ...........................................ISO

Hllppy Ada.....................................- ............050
.., • Gnln.................................................640
Help W.nlld ................................................. 110

ttorne 11Utpf0\11n.nts••• _,,,,,, •••••••••••••••••:..•••••l10
ttan. far ............................. _._, ......•.;.•• 310
t aid ~ ..................... - ................ 510
Hot~.- for AMI! .......................................... 410

1to1

In lllfnOI'I~ ....... -....................................... 020
~ ••~.................................................. 130
Lawil•
Equ1ptllonl ........................ 810

o.n..n

UM!tOCk.-....................................................130
. Lolllnd Found ........................................... o&amp;O
Lobt.~ ............................................ 350

. II**IMIOU8 .........,.................................... 170
. tlleclill~ MerclllncD........................540
lloblte Horne Rlplir ....................................810

lllabiii·Homle lor Rent ...... - ....................... 420
lllablll HomeS lor 5818................................ 320
· 1111oney to l.oltn.............................................220

lltltorcyctes •

4

Wheelerl.:........................740

IIU8Icltilnltruinenll .. - .............. - ............... 570

......n~~~ ........IJ ........................................... oos

Pwts for 'Site ................................................ 560

Plurnblntl' Hutlng .................................... 820

Poul 11kmlli ServlcN.................................230
llldlo, lV • CB Replllr ............................:.. 160
· ANI Eltlle Wlnflld .......;............................. 360
Scfto01tlnltructlon .....................................150.
Seocl , Pllnt • FertiliZer .............................. 850
Slttmlono Wonflld ..., ................................... t20

Splice for Rent ....................... " .................... 460

SpoltlniJ Qoodo, ............................. r ........... S20
SUV'1 for Sotte.............................................. 720
Trucka tor S.te ............................................ 115
Up1101111r)' .................................................. 870
YltM Far S.te............................................... 730

w.nted lo Buy .............................................D90
W.tt.d 1o Buy· Form SuppHes .. .-.............. 820
W.med To Do ...........::................................. 160
w.nted to Rent ............................................ 470
v.rd S.le- Goi11poll1 ....................................072
Vlt'd Sale Pomeroy/llldd1e ......................... 074
Ylt'd Sate-Pt. Pleaunf ............................... 076

11:10
• w

Hw&gt;WANmJ

•

lbu&gt;WANmJ

•

llllllllllllllllllllllll. .
NEED A PAV

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FULl-TIUE CLASSES
' COl TflAINING

'
hl·r
$, 5 .67-S26 .t 9/ltr.. now
ing. For apptication and free
governement joti info, call
American ASsoc. oilabol" t·
91 3-S99-B04 2, ·24/hrs. emp.
serv.

RAISE?
wo ..
,_._._.
,_,.,.

M-5CiftMNr fult.4IIM!
Our full-time Pw,' rate
has Increased from

-~oIIIII

• FINANCI"'G AVAILA9l.E
• JOil rucEMENT
' ENAOU.J+G NOW

ibuWANml I.

School Bus Drtver Training,
October 23-24-25-26-27.
2006. tO:OOam • 1:00pm.
All sessions to be held at :
Meigs local Bus Garage,
38895 SR 124, Middlaport.
OhiO 45760 (Bohind the
new Elementary School) .
For more intormatk&gt;n con·
tact:
Paul McElroy,
(740)742·2990 by October
t 1. 2006.
-The--E-ast_e_m-Loca_I_Sch_oo_

r

:0~

l

=======~
••NOTICE••
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or
cbtall a loan. BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments of
1ees or insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
AffairS; toll free al t-86&amp;278..0003 to leam i1 the
mortgBge broll:er
or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the· Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

Oistrid Currently has avail·
able the following supplemental position: ASSISTANT BOY'S BASKET·
BALL COACH. The duties
will include assisting with the
varsity and JV basketball
programs· and any extra
responsibilities 1hat may be
assignad by the Head
Coach . Please send letter
of interest and resume to:
.Scott Gheen, Principal,
East m High Schoo 38900
TURNED DOWN ON
AOU1e 7, R~ille,
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
OH ~ 5 n 2 • Phone: 74oNo Fee Unless We Winl
9B5-S329. .
Equal
Opportunity EJnl)iorer.

r~1

Stat:

engt~rs to work 1n ~e
~unhngl:on bake~. Duties
mdude preventat1Ve ma1ntenonce. maohlne tabricatK&gt;I'1 , ,;;;;,;;,;;....;.;...;.o.;._""1
electrical work, basic plumb- 11il0
SaJnoL&lt;;
;;;;::;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;

~

ling. relrigeration repair,
•
welding , machine shop ~

POSTAL JOBS

1110

tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts.
wood Items.
To $480/lri
MaterielS provldad.
Free infprmation pkg. 24Hr
80 1-428-4649

L.------·

11'·10

Salvage
1304)773-5343 · - - - - - - · " - - - - - - - '
(3().()674-1374
FEDERAL
• \ 11 t • • • \ ' I t '\ I

Missing- · Friendly, Pretty
'I I ~ I I' t '
gray.tJiack/oranQO striped 3 ir.ijr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
month ~d.kitten. If found call

~.. .,.................................................,....040

other hand, used its fmal pos- on the second interception of said.
session of the third quarter to the game by Flora to seal the
Gue ended the night with
pul the game away.
win despite Gilmer punching 143 yards and two scores,
F:ollowing the botched in a late score on a 20-yard while Sturgeon added 31
fourth down converston touchdown run from Ethin yards and a score, Kinnard
attempt by Gilbert €ounty, Wolfe with just 17 seconds had 21 yards on eight carries
and Andy Sowards posted 12
the Wildcats ended up with remaining.
the ball deep in Titan tenitoHannan' s win was its yards on four carries.
ry. They then stringed togeth- biggest since defeating Ericsson ended the night
er a drive which carried over . Bishop Donahue 38-22 in with negative rushing yards
into the fourth quarter and 2002. It was also the first despite scoring a touchdown
ended in a two-yard tQuch- tiiJie the Wildcats have faced while completmg one pass to
down score by quartemack a team of similar ~iz;e this Christian Estep for two
Victory Ericsson. which put season, with lioth teams ros- yards.
Hann,an on top 26-6 follow- ters under 20 players, as a
Only two players rushed
ing the blocked extra point
brutal beginmng of the the ball for Gilmer County as
Gilmer's best opporturrity schedule left them playing Kinder posted 202 yards and
to close that gap came on the teams nearly double their a score and quarterback
very next possession.
stze.
Wolfe had 48 yards on 10
Starting at their own 3 7
But even though they carries while ·completing one
yard line, the Titans used two grabbed the win, sloppy play pass to Daniel Delude for 16
personal foul penalties by · late allowed Gilmer to move yards.
..
Hannan and ·a big ruri by the ball and threaten to score,
· Hannan will now try to
Kinder to put the team inside but not because of mistakes.
build off of its win as they
the five yard line with first
No, Hannan's ~loppy play travel to always 'tough
and goal and plenty of time came because of another rea- -Bishop Donahue m another
to ancmpt to rally from the son.
Saturday contest.
three score deficit.
"We were so awkward at
"Our players are getting
But like a broken reCord, the end because, believe it or bencr. We have four more
Gilmer punished themselves , not, we were trying to substi- games, our next two games
once again with a fumble a tute and get some other guys we have Tug Valley who
few plays later to keep them out. So we were getting knocked off Matewan and
out of the endzone with time · wrong personnel on and off we have to go to Bishop
running out. Hannan then the field which made it look Donahue that is ranked. It
used it s ground attack to ugly which I hated. but we will be tough, but they will
drai n the clock and another have not been in that kind of get better as the season goes
turnover late in the quarter situation before.'' Richardson along," Richardson said.

Buying Junk Cars,Trucks &amp; 1110
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D •

~ qualitied.maint~nance

c 2001 br NEA, Inc.

1

Lost: Male Pomeranian,
orange whh blond lall.
VIcinity of 554, Wheaton ah.d
Ward Rd. Please call
(740)367·7609.

11"

0

HDPWANmJ

Ohio Valley Home· Heatth,
lne. hiring lor Full Time RN,
PT, PTA, FuHTime and Part
Timo CNA, STNA. CHHA,
PCA and Per Diem PT, PTA
OT, ST. Accepling appi~tiOOS tor LPN'S. Gompe1i1ive
· Wages and Benefits including heatttl insurance and
mileage. Apply at 1480
Jad&lt;son Pike, Gallipolis or
2415 Jad&lt;son Avenue , Point
Pleasant, wv..or phone toll
free· 1-~ 1-1~93.

'!tlrd Sale! -Tealor&lt;ls. 305
Fern. Sheltleit41n. Collie Ml•. Tyree
Blvd.,
Racine.
Parents on premises. GNe Monday, Monday Oct . .9,
to good hOme. Born Apr. 9:00AM--?

I

·

Now you can ~Jove borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourctosslfledods
· s.
_ ~
m
Borden $3.00/per ad ·
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for lo1'9e

•

PRo HOCKEY

I

'

PREP FOOTBALL

I

1

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysenlinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

{304) 675-1333

TRANSACTIONS

I

l\-~

l\egtster

I

Tho--

Sentinel- l\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED

•

.

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~rtbune-

2006

Chicago
1 1 0 2 . 12 11
ranking:
.
ThuJ'Iday, OCt. 5
[)etrolt
t 1 0
2
3 3
Record Pis
Pvs
Detroit 4. New York 3
0 1 t
1 •5 9
1. Ohio St. (63) 6.0
1,623 1
St. Louis
Friday, OCt. 6
National Footblll L"gue
NashviUe .
o 2 0 0
11 14
2. FloridP
6-0
1,516 5
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
· Detroit 6, New 'York 0
AMER1Ct.N CONFERENCE
North Division
Northwest Division .
3. Southern Cal S.O
1,451 3
I
S.turdly, Oct. 7
Ealt
SEOAL
ALL
W L OT Pis GF GA
4. M~hlgan
6.()
t ,429 6
Detroit 8. New Yo!1( 3, Detroit wins
W l T Pet PF PA
W·L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA
Minnesota
2 0 0
4 9 7
5. W. Virginia (2) ·s-o
1,416 4
series 3· 1
New England 4 1 0 .BOO 108 74
togan . . .
.. .... .4.() ... 160 .. 33 .. ·L·5-2 .. .212 .. 109
Vancouver
2 1 0 4 8 6
6. Telt8S
5-1
1,29&lt;4 7
Zanesville ,
.............3-1 ... 130 .. 58 ... .4-3 ... 190 '. 155
N.V. Jets
2 3 0 400 96 t32
lftnnnotl ys. Otkt•nd
Cotorado
i 0 2 4 7 8
7. Louisville
s-o
t ,247 8
Marietta . . . . . . . . . . • . . . .
. .2 -2 ... 76 ... 77
.2-5 ... 111 ... 148
BuffalO
2 3 0 .400 n 105
TUIIdlly, DeL 3
Calgary
1 t 0
2
3 4
9_Tennessee
5-1
t, t 59 13
Warren
........
. ... 1-3 ... 57 ... 156 .
3-4 ... t04 .224
t 4 0
200 61 91
Oakland 3, Minnesota 2
Edmonton
1 1 0
2
4 3 ~ 9. Notre Dame
.s.-1
1,068 12
Athens
.......0-4 ... 59 ... 165 .
.t -6 ... 136 .281
South
WednMdly, Oct. 4
Pacific DivisiOn
·
! 10. California
5-1
1,017 16
1
South Division
W l T Pet PF PA
Oakland 5, Miilnesote 2
W l OT Pl:s GF GA 11 . Aubum
5-l
943
2
SEOAL
-ALL
Indianapolis
5 0 0 1.000 t35 tOO
Friday, OCt. 6
.
Anaheim
2 0 0
4
6 4
I
12. Clemson .
5·1
876
15 ·
W·L
P.F PA
. W·L
PF
PA
Jacksonville
3 2 0 .600 118 74
Oakland 8, Minnesota 3, Oaklan&lt;l wins Danas
2 0 o 4
6 3
13. Georgia Tech 5- t
739
18
Chilicothe .............. ....... 3-1
.129 .. 117 ....5·2 .. : 181 .. '171
, 3 0 .250 66 t13
Houston
series 3..0
san Jose
2 0 0 4
7 4
14. lSU
· 4-2
693
9
Gallia Academy ................2-2
.100 .. 96 . . . . 5-2 ... 204 .134
Tennessee
0 5 0 000 60 135
· los~geles
1 t 0 2
7 5 . : tS. Iowa
5-1
661
19 ·
~onton ......•...
. .2-2
. .97 .... 101 .... .4-3 . . 162 ' .149 .
North
7 5
NaUoNIIIAague
Phoen1•
1 1 0 2
1 16. Gaorgia
5-1
615
10
~ackion .. .. .. ..
..2-2
.129 .. 99 ..... 4-3 ... 209 .140
W l T Pet PF PA
New Vork yw. Lot Ans.ln
.· ...... .. .. t -3
.. 75 ... 11 o .
.2-5 ... 180 ' .194
l&gt;onsmouth .. .. ..
lo
17.
Arkansas
4-1
482
Benimore
4 .0 0 1.00086
Wodn1odoy, Del. 4
.
po1nts for a wm, one point · rover· tS. Oregon
4·1
474
11
3 , 0 .750 98
Cincinnati
Fridly'o muHa
Friday, Dcto~&gt;er 13
New York 6, Los Angeles 5
time Joss or shootout loss.
6-0
. 469
19 . Missouri
23
Pittsburgh
1
3
0
.250
61
77
'
Thu..doy. Oct. 5
~anesville33, Athens 19
Athens at Chillicothe
20
1 '4 0 .200 81 to9 1 New York 4, Los Angeles 1
Cleveland
s.turdoy'o Gomn
20. Boise St.
s-o
449
Chillicothe 29, Portsmouth 28
Jackson at Gama Academy
22
West
Buffalo
4,
onawa
3
21
.
Nebraska
5·1
431
saturday, Oct. 7 ·
Gallia Academy 14, Ironton 7
Ironton at Portsmouth
21
WLTPctPFPA
Atlanta 6, Florida o
22. Virginia Tach 4·1
360
.
New
York
9
,
Los
Angeles
5,
New
Yor1c.
Jackson 48, Vincent warren 15
Logan at Warren
t4
San Diego
3 1 0 750 t 03 36
1 23. Oklahoma
washington s, Carolina 2
3·2
27~
wins
series
3--0
)-ogan 41 , Marietta 0
Marietta at Zanesville
24
Denver
2 1 a .667 36 31
Montneal 3, Toronto 2, SO
I 24. Rutgers
5.()
194
Kansas City
2 2 0 .500 80 52 i
San Diego YL St loula
N.Y. Rangers 5, Philadelphia 4, SO
I 25. Wisoonsin
5-1
. 86
OaKland
0.
4 0 .000 47 113
TUeadly, Oqt. 3
Detro~ 2, Pittsburgh 0
Ohio Valley Conference
NATIDNt.l CONFERENCE
BOston 3, Tampa Bay 2
Others receiving votes: Boston College
St. LouiS 5, San Oiego ,
OVC
t.Ll
Eaat
Dallas 3, New Jersey 1
79, FlOrida St. 25. Miami 13, UCLA 13,
ThuJ'Iday, DeL 5
W-1.
PF
PA
W·L
PF
Pt.
WLT Pet PF PA
Minnesota 6, Nashville 5
Penn St. 10, Washington 9, Pittsburgh 6,
St. Louis 2, San Diego 0
¢hesapeake ...................2.0 ... 50 ... 2t .... .S:. ... t90 .. 2t7
Philadelphia 410 .800 155 97
Rock Hill .......... ... .. . ......2-0 ... 86 .. .42 .....5·2 ... 250 .. 159
N .C. State3, TexasTecll2; BYU 1, Wake
Columbus 5, Chicago 4
Saturdly, OCt. 7
N.Y. Giants
220 .500 tOO 95
Coal Grove .................... t -1 .. . 41 .. .48 ..... 4-3 .. 182 .. .115
San Diego 3, St. Louis 1
Anaheim 2, PhQenix 1
I Forest 1.
DallaS
220.500 113 86
South Point .. . ......... .. ..... 1-1 ... 35 ... 35 .....2-5 ... 110 .. 175
Suncloy, Oct. 8
Calga,Y 2, 'Edmonton 1
Washington
2 3 0 .400 96 110
Fairiand . .
·
.. . .. 0-2 .. . 40 .. .60 .....o-7 ..88
.202
St. Louis 6, San Diego 2, St Louis wins Los Angeles 4. St. Louis t
South
!liver Valley
........ , .......0-2 ... 35 ... 81
... t-6 .. 93 .. 216
series 3· t
San Jose 2, N.Y. Islanders 0
WLT Pet PF PA
•
Fridlly'o multo
Friday, October 13
New Orleans 410 .800 118 86
Coloracto 3,S..ncloy'lvancouver 2
Ohio High School FoolbOI Scon11
LEAGUE CHA~P SERIES ·
Chesapeake at Rock H~l
Ghesapeijke 22, Coal Grove 14
Atlanta
3 1 0 .750 69 42
1
M.-y•1 Gamto
Saturdly'o Rooulto
AmtriM" "QUI
Carolina
320 .600 88 90
f1ock Hill33, Fairland 14
South Point lit Coal Grcive
Phoenix at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Akr_Rrestone 37, Akr. Garfield 21
Tuoodoy, DeL 10
Tampa Bay
040 .000 48 91
Florida a,t Toronto, 7:30p.m.
South Point 28, River Valley 7
Fairland at River Valley
Detroit at Oekland. 8:19p.m.
1 Bascom Hopewell-loudon 57, Tiffin
North
Wodneodoy, Oct. 11
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
1 Calvert 7
W L T Pet PF ' PA · Detroit st Oek1arid, 8:19p.m
San Jose at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Bediord 29, lorain Southview 14
Tri-Valley Conference
Chicago ·
5 0 0 1.000 156 36
Friday, Oct. 13
St. Louis at Anaheim, 10 p.m.
' Can. McKinley 38, Massillon Perry 20
OhiO Divlolon
Minnesota
3 2 0 .600 89 82
Oakland at Detroit, T8A
1\teaday'a Glmll
1 Hamilton Badin 27, Day. Chamlnade·
lVC
ALL
1 4 · 0 .200 87 t 38
Green Bay
Soturdly, Oct. 14
Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
1 Julienne 24
W-1.
PF
PA
W-1.
PF
Pt.
Detroit
0 5 0 .000 88 t41 1. Oakland a.t Detroit, TBA
Vancower at Minnesota, 9 p.m.
Lakewood St Edward 44, Cle. E. Tech 0
NeiSQnviMe-York ' .... .. ...........2.() ...88 ... 32 .....6-1 .. .250 .. 89
W.ot
SUnday, Oct. 15
N.Y. Islanders .tt Los Angetes. t0:30 I Lancaster Fisher Cath . 28, Sugar Grove
Wellston .......... .. ... .......2.0 ...50 ... 25 .....5-2 ... 172 .. 166
WLT Pet PF PA
Oeklarid at Detroit, TBA, II necessary
p.m.
. Beme Union 0
Alexander . .... ... ... , .. .. .... 1·1 ... 54 ... 46 .....3-3 .. .157 .. 148
St. Louis
4 1 0 .800 111 98
lltndoy,Oct.17
•
I Newark Cath. 21, Heath 14
VInton County ........ .. ......... t-1 ...40 .. .53 .....3-4 .. ~07 ..137
Seattle
3 1 0 .750 78 83 ! Detroit at Oakland, TBA, if necessary
Parma Hts. Holy Name 38, Hunting
Belpre . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . ... . .0-2 . . .32 ... 67 .. ...2-5 .. .93 ...148
Sen Francisco 2 3 0 .400 105 148 I
. Wed~, Oct. 18
!-'algs .
.. .... 0-2 " .31 ... 52 " ...5-2 " .212 .• 123
Valley University 21
·
1
Arizona
1 4 0 .200 88 119 I Detroit at Oakland, T8A, if necessary
Hocking Division
w.•nd
Sportl
Tl'lnuctlonl
1 Saltsburg
(Pa.)
Kiski
45,
Cols.
I
lV.C
t.LL
Sunday••
Gamu
ay
Crusaders
28
I
NJtiQOII I '"'UI
W-1.
PF
PA
W-L
PF
Pt.
BASKE19ALL
1 Shadyside 52, Zanesville Rosecrans 0
Chicago 40, Buffalo 7
I'
Wodneodoy, DeL 11
.2.0 ...72 ...0 .......6-1 " . 167 .. 34
Federal Hocking
N8tloniiiiiiMibltl Auocl8don
1 Sugarcreek
Garaway
63, New
Minnesota
26,
Detroit
17
St.louis
at
New
Vori&lt;,
8:19p.m
.
..
2·0
..
.
67
..
.
25
..
..
..
5-2
...
181
..
134
Trimble .. . . . . .. . . ..... .
•
DENVER
NUGGET5-Signed
G
Philadelphia
Tuscarawas
Cont.
Cath. 14
St.
louis
23,
Green
Ba)f
20
'.1· 1 " .51 .. .41 .. ....5·2 ... 166 .. 86
ThUI'Idoy, DeL 12
Soulhem . .. .. . .. . ..... .
Courtney Atexandltr.
Thompson Ledgemont 14, Ashtabula
lndi&amp;napolls 14, Tenn~jtssee 13
' .1-1 ., . .38 .. .39 . . ....4·3 . .. 120 ' .107
Sl . Louis at New YorK, 8:19p.m.
, Walertord •· . . .. ........ .
.
FOOTBALL
,
New England 20, MiaMI t 0
1 Sts. John and Paul 7 ·
' .0·2 . ' .0 ... ,85 ·......0-7 . .. 62 : . .282
Eastem . .. . : . . ....... . .
Saturdoy, DeL 14
~
Fol&gt;1b111
Luguo
1
Tol.
Rogers
34,
Tot.
Woodward
13
New Orleans 24, Tampa Bay 2,
Miller .. . .. . ........... .
' .0-2 . ' .26 .. ,64 .. .. '.0-7 . . .54 . . .174
New York at St. LOUIS, TBA
N.Y. Giants 19, Washington 3
MIAMI OOLPHIN5-Aetlvated RB I Tol. St. Johns 41, Tol. Start 21
'
SUnday, Oct. 15
Friday, OCtober 13
Sammy Morris rrom the suspended list.
Toronto 13, Beverly Ft. Frye 9
Carolina 20, Cleveland 12
•
Frklly'o ""'"""
I
Now York at St. Louis, TBA
1
Meigs at Alexander
)linton County 27, Alexa~der 21
San Francisco 34, Oakland 20
waived OL Will Whltticker.
Warren Harding 17, Cle. St. lliJn&amp;tlus 7.
~.Oct. I&amp;
1 WatTOn JFK 34, llnsly (WVa.) 0
Belpre at Vinton County
Wellston 34, Belpre t 3
Jacksonville 4t, N.Y. Jets o
r New York at St. Louis, TBA, If necessary OAKLAND RAIDER5-Activated · LB
Wellston at Nelsonville·Vorl&lt;
lilelsonville-York 36, Meigs t 9
Kansas City 23, Arizona 20
Ricky Brown from the practice squad.
· w~,Oct.11
Philadelphia 38, Dallas 24
Miller at Easlem
Federal Hocking 45, Eastern 0
W.Va. High ~ -1Sccno.
St. Louis at New Vol'k, TSA, if necessary Waived FB John Paul Fooct11.
San Diego 23, Pittsburgh 13
Federal Hocking at Trimble
Southern 51, Miller 14
PITTSBURGH STEELERs--Ptaced CB
Soturdly'o Thutwdoy, Oct. II
Open:· Cincinnati, Seanle, Atlanta,
Bishop Donahue 26, Bellaire St. Joho,
· Southam at Watertord
Yrimble 27, Waterford 25
St . Louis at New Yorl&lt;. TBA, "necessary Ricardo Colclough or\ Injured __.e.
Houston
Signed CB Anthony Modisorl from the 1 OhiO 7 ·
Mondly'o&lt;l.practice squad.
Hannan 26, Gilmer County 1.\
Independents
Bal11fnore at Denver, 8:30p.m.
·
ttOCKEY
Meadow BridQO 45, Monlcalm 15
ALL
Sundoy, Oct. 15
t--, ~
St. Albans 14. Greenbrier Eost 8
W-1.
PF
PA
Buffalo at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Notionot Hockoy Looguo
ANt.HEIM OUCKS Signed C Samuor I
South Gallia ..
.6-1 .. .. 1e1 .. 90
Houston at Dallas, 1 p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Pohlooon to a two-year oontract exten- :
.4-2
.. 140 .. 65
Wahama . . . . . .
N.Y. Giants at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Afton~ r'~Pis GF GA ~n, through 2008'09. J;le-slgned C
Hannan ... . .
.. . .1-5
.47 .. .178
Sean)e at St. Louis. 1 p.m.
Zenon KcHiopklto a two-yeor oontract
Fridly'l ntiUII
Friday, October 13
Tennessee at Washington, 1 p.m.
N .Y. Rangers
2 0 0 4 10 6
andassi~KonopkatoPortlandofthe !
Major~Soccer
South GaMia 16. Scioloville Eastl2
South Gallia at Symmes Valley
New Jersey
t t 0 2 5 3
AHL.
•
,
e.m.m Corilotoo.,.
Carolina at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama
:
Saturdly'l result
Philadelphia at New Orleans, 1 p.m. ,
Pittsburgh ,
t 1 0 2
4 2 . t.Tt.ANTA THRASHERs-Assigned G ·1
W L T Pis GF GA
Hannan 2~. Gilmer County 14
. Saturdly, October 14
Cincinnati at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
J Philadelphia
0 1 1 1 4 9
FredBrathwaitetoChicagoof1heAHL.
y-D.C. un·ited
15 6 10 55. 50 35 ·
Miami at N.Y. Jet$. 4:,5 p.m.
Hannan at Bishop Donahue
N.Y. Islanders
0 2 0
0 3 8
COLUMBUS
BLUE . JACKETs- •·New England 11 8 12 45 38 35 ·
Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 4:15p.m
Nortt\eatt Dlvlllon
ACtivated C AleiC,8nder Svltov from x-Chicago
12 11 8 44 40 39 .
San Diego at San Francisco, 4 : ~5 p.m.
W l OT Pis GF GA injured resenie. Assigned C Geoff Plan · Kansas City
10 13·8 38 41 42
Buffalo
12 9
Cardinal Conference
Oakland al Denver. 8 ;15 p.m.
3 0 0
6
1o Syracuese of the AHL.
j New Vorl&lt;
8 11 12 36 . 38 39 ,
' CARD
t.LL
Open: Indianapolis, New England , Montreat
1 0 1 3 7 7
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Recalled COlumbus
8 14 9 33 30 41
W-1.
PF
Pt.
W-l
PF
PA
Green Bay. Minnesota , Jacksonville, Toronto
1 1 ~ ~ ~ ;a
LW Tomas Fleischmann trom Hershey of
w..-n
Coi.W.a
Boston
Cleveland
Poco.. ... .... .. .. .. ..
..3.0 ... lt7 .. 4t ..... 5-t .. .201 .. 95
~
~
the At:tL. Assigned Fleichman bacK to
L T P1s GF GA
0
2 7 11
Ottawa
Monday, OCt. 16
Sissonville .. .... .. ,....
..3.0 ... 48 . .. 31
.5-t .. .123 .. 82
Southollot Dfvllion
Hershey.
y-FC [)elias
t 6 11 " 52 46 39
101 .. 35
.5-t ... 156 . .62
crica.go at Arizona, 8:30p.m.
Wayne . . . . . . . . .
.3-t
w
L OT Pis GF GA I
•-Houston
11 8 12 45 41 37
Logan ........ ... . . .... . ......1·2 ... 81 .. .78 .....2-5 ... 128 .. 195
Allan"1 o 1 3 8 3
CO Chlvas USA 10 9 12 42 44 41
Point Pleasant .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .1-2 ... 43 ... 100 ..... 1-5 ...96 ...205
FtorJdli'
ColoradO
11 131 40 33 46
1 1 .o . , , a 9
Herbert Hoover ... .. .. ..
.. .. t-3 .. 66 ... 126 . . . .4-3 .. 167 .. t70
, Tan'lpa Bey
t t 0
2 5 5
I
Tho AP Top 25
Real San Lake 10 13 8 88 44 48
Winfield ... ..• . . . : .. ... .
. . .0-4 .. . 53 ... 85
.. .. t-5 . .. 72 .. 106
Washington
t 1 0
2 7 7
I The Top 25 teams in The Associated Los Angetes
10 15 6 a6 32 35
Postseason B111ebaH
Friday, OCtober 13
Frldly's niiUHI
, Carolina
0 2 1 1 4 12
Press college football poll, with first·
DIVISION SERIES
Sissonville at logan
~t-clinched playoff spot
Sissonville f9, Herbert Hoover 12
WESTERN CONFERENCE
place votes in parentheses. records
American League
Logan 23, Winfield 13
Winfield at Poca
y-clinched conference
Centrell&gt;'vfalon
1 through Oct. 7, total points based on 25
New York ys Detroit
NOTE :· Three points for victory, one
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood
Poca 41, Point Pleasan17
, W L OT Pts GF GA points for a first-place vote through one
Tuesday, OCt. 3
l Columbus
1 0 1 3 7 7 I point tor a 25th-place vote, and previous point for tie.
Wayne at Tolsia
New York 8, Detroit 4

PRo BASEBALL

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

www.mydallysentlnel.com

HoMEs

~

work, bakery produC1ion Golllpotil eo,..:
equipment repair and trou- (Careers Cl~ To Home)
bloshooting.
Candidates cau Today! 740446-4367,
must have a high school
t-&amp;OQ-214-0452
degree or GEO, technical
_ ,,.,.............. ----•~...a...........
~·-~~--training or ~rtification in 8 Acc1edited Member Accredilin~:~
maintenance held of study Council br lrdapeMI!nl Colleg!ts
and previous maintenance :::•"".::.::":::moo~~
:.:.:.'::.":::••::.·_ __:__
experience. Apply in person
Kara1e self-defense. professional Blac:k Belt instructor.
Men, women. childr.en .
Avenue,
in
Gallipolis,
between 9:00a.m. and Spacious tully equipped
gym. Bitanga's Martial Arts
2:00p.m., Monday-Saturday.
Center. Middleport. 740No phone calls please. EOE.
~2·57t5 . Open tlai~,

~uti:~ ~~~:r·s eS::.::~

have the opportunity to
u11 11rne emporary umal
take advantage of our
Flerk: Position involve&amp;
other grost benefits like
rocessing program appli
ptions. greeting the public
paid training, paid
ALUANCE
vacations, weekly pay
~ing, tiling, Knowledge "
TRACTOR-TRAILER
and medical benefits.
~icrosoft Word, ability 1&lt;
BOhrs, Underground, 40hrs,
TRAINING CENiERS
And you still have the
Roodrfaf
1170
eem
IBM System 36 Men•
Cho11019ng c - ?
.
.
WYTHEVILLE , IIA
Surface Classes to be held
opportunl1y to make
Programs &amp; other genera
Apply
fo(
a
CHHA
classes
at Point Pleasant Moose
calls to protect our 2nd
s14111s. Apj)IWOOI
'beginning
Oct
9th. Amos and Son's Trash
1·800-334-1203 ~oe
October 9th thru October
Amendment rights on
re available at Masor
AppliCations must be sub- Service, Firewood &amp; EJCtra
24th, 9am day, 4pm evening
beha" of the NRA. But
t;ounty FSA Office, 22....
mined by Oct. 61h. We help Hauling, Reasonable Rates.
classes, Sign up Monday·
now you wll Nm
Certtfted Bus Drtvw
lrst Street. Point Pleasant
w/job placement and are Heap Accepted. (740)388Friday 6pm Bt Moose any
montmonoylt
Applications are being
25550. No ca!ls. Las
also
hiring PCA, CHHA &amp; u0~37p1-~~----,
questions · call/(304 )524lnloCiolonl
acCepted fol Substitute Bus o file is COB October 20th
STNA!! (7401441-13n
r.l1i)
WANJID
7203
Driver position with the ti'..::iS::;:A,::is~a:::n.:;E;;;:DE::::·-.--.....J
-PAYING
An Eaccellen1 way to earn Gallia County Soard ol
AN
•
ToDo
Furniture warehouse/delhi·
$8.501hour
money. The New Avon.
· MR/DD.
Oualificalions:
ery person needed. Apply in
FULL-TIME!
Call Mar1lyn 304·882·2645 Current bus driver phySical
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, ~II Types Masonry, Brick.
person
10.5. Lifestyle
a Tandem Health Care facili- Bloc:k, Stone, Free Estimate,
-"'~· CDL with Class B Furniture,
3rd
A.ve,
Clll
Tocs.yl
' Appl icatiOns are bemg endorSement, background
ty, is seeking a select few to (304)882·3688 - 30l1-5931-877-.463-6247 ext.
accepted lor experienced chectt and school bus certifi· Gallipolis. No pl10no cal~.
;otn our outstanding team 6421 .
Elec1ridans. Apply Bt ·Ae cation. Applications are
2311
as:
Hltr Styllolw: Do you want
George's .Portable Sawmill .
Elec1rical ContraC1or, Inc., available at the Guiding
to work at an innovative
www.lntocllton.com
don't haul your Logs to the
33 14 Mossman Avenue Hand SchOol, 8323 N. SA 7,
RN SUPERVISOAS ' RN
Mill just call 304-675·1957,
• Point
Pleasant.
WV Cheshire, Oh10 45620. The salon that offers the bes1
UIIT
MANAGER
compe nsetiorl/be.nef its
{304 ~75· ~ 537
Galli a County Board ·ol
Full • Portnmo
pad&lt;age In the area? Anti
ito
AR Shlllo Avollablo
•
...,....._
•
AulomoC1ve
\lpenence MR/00
iS an
Equal Slllona is looking for highly
l
required., Job location Opponunity Employer
creative. licensed Hair
Proper !icen!le reQuired. We
Middleport area. Please call Certified
Nur.lng StyllltS tor our Malon, WV
Care .
offer an excellent wonc envi- Etderly
(740)645-t896. Full t1me Au.latant for full time and salonl Benefits ihcluded:
ronment. shltt differential, Expenenced/Relerences .
position.
temporary (90-day) work in guaranteed hourly wages,
competitive wa~s. great Sunday ltlru Thrus. 9:00PM .
up to 52% services commis·
benefits, pertact anendanoe 7:00AM. Coli Mary 74oAVONI All Areas! To Buy or a 114 bed long term care
sian, relailftanning commisSail. Shirley Spears, 304- State lacllity.
Full-time
incentiw&amp; and much morel _965_-42_82_._ _ _ __
sions, 401 lk). paid vacation.
675·1429,
empklyment offers an exten·
For
quk:lkest consideration. Will take care ot loved onemedical vision, dental and
si\18 benefit package, includptaue apply online:
cook,' clean . (740)245-5601
Bartender/Waitress, Jericho Ing State civil service r.tire- life Ins., advanced ~­
lv. meg.
Inn,
8CM
22nd · St . ment, eam up t'o 15 dly5 tion, Immediate clientele and
Appllcattons now being ~~&amp;cation per year, 18 days rru.lc:h more! Call , ·877·3277001 lor more lnltl or apply
accepted
sk:k leave and 12 plus paid
Soentc Hills Nursing Center ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...._ __,
o
n
I
n· e
CARPET
tNS.TALLERS holidays: haa~Mife inout311 Bucl&lt; Ridge Road
BusiNJiliS
1ifte!"ftLODfj com
NEEDED to bid on lnstalla· anoe is available. Salary is
Bldweti ,' OH456t4
Ol'l'olmMIY
Ph. 7401446-7150
tion.of COmmercial carpet in commensurate with experi· Hallmark Shop (Ohio River
a church and a hospital . ence. Mull: hiVI I WV Plaza-. Gallipolis} will Inter- ·
oNOTICE•
References required . Ph. CNA otr1fflcdon to work ~o~iew tor sal•s associates .
TANDEM
~.,.
OHIO Vt.LLEY PUBLISH·
. (740)446-0332 _
In WOOl Vlrglnll, end lftllt Tu....:lay, Oct. 10th lrom 12
lNG CO. recommends
~::.:.:.::...:==----- poon 1 GED or noon till 2pm
Canle Manage1/herdsman high school dlplom•. - - - - - , - - - : : - that you do buSiness w~h
SFIDRIEOE
for 300 cow commercial contact Kimberly Billups or Help want9CI al Darst Group
people you know, and
HROtandemhealthcare.com
cowJcalf
operatiOn
In Vicky" Berkley at Lakin Home, WOFklng with elderly,
NOT to send money
Southeastern Ohio. Must be Hosprtal. LAkin , WV at 304· heavy lifting invotved . 740'
through the mail until you
experi enced In cow/~att 675·0860,
extension 992-5023.
Rotbprings Rehab1lital10n have investigated the
operation, hay production, 1241125. Monday through - - - : : - : - : - - - - - center
and fence mainlenanoe. ate. Friday. 8:00a.m. - 4:00 p.m. t1VAC INSTALLER
pmvtdes residents
with outstanding
nurs1ng .
Competltwe salary, housing, Lakm Hospital is an EEO/AA Must be prot1ciem with
care and rehabilitation servheatth 1nsuranci! and other employer Lakin HoSf:Jilal installation of heating and air
Ices helping them retum to a
benefits offered Rspty with co nducts pre-employment conditioning
eqwpment.
lite of independence at
resume . references and drug/alc;ohol
testing.· Competitive saiarylbenefits.
home. We currently ha\18
salary requirements to Em~oyee s may be exposed Drug-tree workplace Send
opponunttles tor RN's wolt·
Benedict , Inc.,, PO Box 3-15. to streamhne or secondhand resume to Dan Inman
ing 12 hour shifts at our facil·
Me Arthu r, Ohio 4565-t or smoke
Electric, Inc., 6246 Radford
11y located in Pomeroy, Ohio.
fa~t to (740)596-3811.
- - - - - - -Rd., Athens. OH 45701. No
We offer a compet lti~o~e
Chaplain Part Trme:
phone calls please.
salary scale, ,an excellent
Persons needec:l to work Corporate Chaplains of - -- - - -- beneitt package and a supwith developmentally disable Ameri ca rs ·seeking candi- Make 50% sellinliJ Avon. Call
portrve wofk emnronment
ind1vrduals in the Pomt dale
tor position
in (740)446-3358.
Interested
candidates
Pleasant area. Autism ParKersburg. Please reYiew - - - - - - - shou
ld
apply
to
rs
Overbrook
Ceme•
tS
currerr1
·
O
ffe
t
C
s erv1ces
en e1
web-site www.lamchap.org
Telephone
1nterv1 ewer,
e~~;cellent benefits compel!· · for 1ntormatlon &amp; applicatiOn ly accepting apptiCati:Jns for e~~;cellent computer &amp; com - Rookspnngs Aehabl!itat!On
tiVe wages, and 11exible hnk.
Contact (919)570- Dretary lechniCran or equlv· municaHon skiMs, tuiHime, Center. 36759 Rocl&lt;spnngs
Pomeroy. Oh1o
hours For more information 07oorex 204
alent for 20 hours per week. no benefits, $10 per hour Aoed ,
45769.
EKtend1
care health
please call (304J525 ·801 4
Pleasestop by andtillout an after 4 weekS tl alnlng. $B
or vish www au1 jsmsery 1ces· Forming ·Rock/metal band appi!C&amp;tlon. today. tf you per hour dunng trammg. in Serv~ ces , Inc. 1s an equal
centttr prg
tor
aeta11s Lookiflg for singer. Call: haw quest1ons !)4ease con- Pomeroy. start' mvnedtet 81y, opportunlty employer tha t
encourages
workplace
Application deadline is 74Q-992-9904 or 740-41 &amp;- tac1 M1ch9ile G1tmore at 992· ,0811 Marl&lt; 800 _556 _3583
d1versi1y. WF ON
October t t , 2006.
t 090
64 72 EOE

I-·-.

~

I

fNV .

11.·ilniiwiillotiiiiilllliiitll•liit•li..

R1R SAt£
1996 Redman 28x60 in
Apple Clrove 304-593-67 t 9
view
on\.ine
at

www/orvb.com. code 8246
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 306 2nd
Ave., Middleport, Ohio.
Basement, double garage.
and large deck.
Firm.
$63.000. 74Q-992-2571 .

3 bedroom·, 2 bath. with fireplace. 40~t60 barn. Rio
Grande area. On eflat aces.
$120,000. (740)709-1166.
_4_oa_d-ro_o_m__ _
2 -bsth
_ __do_u_bl_e

garage, pool, 2 acres;
Eastern School District
740..992·3:465 after 5:00PM
4 rental houses ~For Sale"
Good income producing
propenies. Great · location!
Price(s) are Negotiable.
Motivated
Seller!
In
Gallipolis. · Call Wayne
(404)456-3802 .
-------About $3000 down 812 S
3rd. Ave .. Middlepon. Totally
remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath. Perfect credit not
required Payment $525 .

~~ ~-A-pp-ra_
, ._ed_$_7o_.o_o_o_7_4_o367-7129.

riO

www

Attantionl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN . PAYMENr programs tor you t() boy your
home Instead of rentinliJ .
• 1ooomfinancing
• Less 111an perfect cred~
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Locs1ors.
Mortgage
(740)367·0000

,A ,_,..

~~offe~ring~.~~~~l
on
SAVINGS

Shop

Clossifleds!

Central air, full buemant,
hardwood floors, ~taehed
garage. covt~red patio
fenced back yard, newly
remocte lea. 3 or 4 bed·
rooms. close to schools.
Point Pleasan1 $69,500
(740)709-1382.
Charoisis Hills 2 77 Country

Lane (2 miles frt&gt;m - r)
5/bedrooms, 3/full ~ths
Large Rec Aoom Formal
Living Dining Room TV
Aoom lnground pool 2 car
ga1age, 360 sq feet.
Appr()l( . 4facres $220.000
(740)441 -1145
Comfortable house. hvtng
room. d1n1ng room, 2 bed·
room, bath, \POd basement
could have adelitlonal room .
heat pump, dec6t, Mlrge front
pO&lt;ch, good N&lt;!ighbo&lt;hood
(30l1)675-t 536

'

�MOnday, October 9, 2006

Monday, October 9, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

~LLEYOOP
Need to sefl your home?
Late on payments, diwrce,
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
and qt.Hc* dosing. 740... 16--

11111118 ..

_

•MUJJBedloom~Beth ·

APARnAENTS
NC:1W
AVAilABLE
Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, stove/refrigerator
indWod, 1 loca1ed In ol1y, 1
appmx. 1 mile OUI8ide ol1y

AI I'MI ..-.. ..tw.rtl.lng
kt tf1h

...... -..

iiOA

f

pJ

Is

Flllr .......... Act of, ...
wt.k:h ...-.. tt Ht.pl to
-.tYertiM "W'Iy
Nmitlltion or

pt...,.,...,

'diKrtmiNtion baed on
f'IICII, eokM', Nllgion. ...
femlHel a.tua or n~~tionlll
origin, or . , Intention to
IMkllftY auch

PI Mila, limitation or
dl.c:rimii'Mtion ...
This new p r r wll not
kno..tngty

..,.,.,t

MlwrttHtMnts tor real
ettMewttlch I~ in
violation of the law, Our
l'eiCiets
Informed that 1111
d ~~. . adW!Iti-.d tn

•re '*'"'

. . ,.. r ruiN
8'llillbM on an equal
opponunlty - -

Handyman special, comes
~
-~-·w••• 2 1o1s, close to~~.

Point Pleasant. $24.900.
(
709-_1_:
362
:..7_40
_;)_
.:._·____
House and 10.n acres at
Mt. Alto._ Private with greet
view, $155,000 (304)695·
3722

mynddwwttNHne.com

(740)8211--2750

Also-.:...-J

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

John Deere Mini Excavator/
Traotor loader ·Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Cermlchael
Equipment (740)446-24t 2

---------= r

upS1a1rs, furnished 1BR apt.

5000 Sort.. lJ1III1y trac-

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELMRY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS·

1·2Be&lt;toomhouse.Aa00e. 11M
Equipment (740)446-2412
downstairs. Furniture store One car garage, all utilities ---:c
·
wlda on wheels. (740~
in roer Car lot on side. All on paid $625.00 plus St5o.oo CONVEIIENTI.Y LOCAT- i6786;,r~be~fol;;;e,.apm;!OO;,
· - - - , Qual~y John Doore Hoy
1/2 ac. lot at 130 Bulaville deposit .. 740-949-1020.
ED&amp;AFFORDABLEI
~
Equipment for less-round
Pike .
Gallipolis,
OH
Townhouse
apartments,
MDt&lt;'HANDisE
balers, square balers '&amp; ''Take the pain out nf I
$135.000 . (740)446-4762.
2 bedroom house lor rem and/or small hOuses FOR ~
• mower conditionBfS 04.7%
painting-let us do It
$350
monthly~
$250.
No
RENT.
CaH
(740)441-1
111
Fill&amp;d
for
48
month$
1h11JUgh
tor you',
Verv nice part brid(, 3·bedDeere
Credit.
for application &amp; information. Cemetery lots 1or sale in John
room on .52 acre. finished pets. Caii -(740}.U6-0924.
Interior
Only
Ohio
Valley
Memorial Carmichael
EQuipment
basement with day tight 2bdr. House freshly painted,
Garden. Discounted price. (
740 ~. 2412 _
entrance, hardwood floors, new carpet, full basement
Call
(868) 686-446~ or
740-'!85--41110
heat P.ump, near Point garage. Ref., Dep.. No. Pets
Leave
message
::-'7_40_1446-_39_26_._--::-_
~
Pleasant (304)675-1536
(304)675-5162
Firewood far sale, ~ a __
2BR home- Vinton Ave.
load until t0/31, $35 11/t,
$375. mo. + sec. dep. Y9lJ pay
740-992·3276,
delivery 'KIEFER BULT "V"U.EY
1
utilities. Gas heat. (740)4&lt;'6"vailat;e.
"1IISON 'ltORSE &amp; UVE- ,...~~~~~~.1.:.4
- - - - - - - STOCK TRAILERS "Lo.\D1997 14x72, cleM wtth fire- 3644.
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
place, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 1 2bf. Hoose for rent in downJET
IIAI
'GOOSENECK,
AERATION MOTORS
DUMPS
&amp;
unul'Y
S1ar1ing at S365 arid up
1997 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 town Pl. Pleasant $350 a
'ALUMINUM
Centra! heat &amp; air, WID Repaired, New &amp; Robulti In 'ALUIIA
bath, vin)1 siding. shingled month (3041593-1994
ool
~--I
S1ocl&lt;. Call Ron Evens, 1· TRAILERS 'BIW GOOSE· 97 Beech Street
hookup. Coin opera1ed
r · 4 more to ..,......,'""" rom.
laundry, owner pays
NECK
HITCHES.
.t
600·537-9528.
(740)366·0000
dll)1ime: 3 Bedroom House in Town,
Com1lehll01
Equlprnont
S
water, sewer &amp; trash
(740)386·8017
evening: Excellent l~lon. No Pets.
(740)446-1162
(740)645-6150 cell
NEW AND USED STEEL 17&lt;101446-2m
steel e,ams, Pipe Rebar
3BA home· SA 554, Bidwel"
2003 16.:80 mobiie home for
For
Concrete.
Angle. 8yrs old Reel&lt; Pony/Morgan
$575/mosec.
dep.
refersale. (740)446:0527.
Channel,
Flat
Bar,
Steel mix, 550-lbs, black wlwhite
ences. all etec. (740)446blaze face for salel1:rade "lor
Gratihg
For
Drains,
3 bd.. 2 bath, 1990 M.H., 3644.
call (304)t937-2705
~Middleport's only
2acres. 10 X 12 building,
Attention!
Furnished 'apt, 3 rooms &amp; OriYUWays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap
Metals
Open
Monday,
pool.
OH New Lima in
Self.Storap" '
bath, upstairs, • clean, no
Local company offering "NO
Au11and. $63,500 . 740-742· DOWN PAYMENl"' pro- pa1S . .R.Vdeposh required. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Sears 42" cut riding lawn
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed mower. Runs good, $150.
1080.
(740)446-1519 . .
!J1lms tor you to buy- your ' - - ' - - - - - - - Thursday,
Saturday &amp; John Deere 30" cut riding
Great used 3BR home only home Instead of renting.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Sunday. (740)446-7300
lawn moo.ver, like new, $900. Klrnmy's Furniture
$9,995. Will help with deli'ol- • 100% financing
room apartmems at Village
ery. Call (740)385-7671.
• less than perfect credit· Manor
and
Riverside ~ Marble Garden Tub. (740)441-1127 or (740)446·
accepted
Apartments in Middleport. Exercise HealTh Rider, Si/¥er 6731.
?.97 Uuroln Street Middlt!J!M, OH
New 2006 Clayton sinll.:\\ .... l'~ll~l\11•1\
• Pa~_ment coul~ be tne From $29 5·$44-4. Caii..7.40- FC~C. fur Jac:Ut, Kohler tub
741.~751
gtewioes starting at $199.84
same as rent.
9 92.sos4. Equal Housing enclOSure (304)675-796 1
l'li;ll"'"--:o....--...,

r

I

Free Rent
Special

(304)882-3017

•

two-bedroom

with

i

bath, per mo'nth. Trade·ini wei·

menl 'An estate sale.
~~ oooPhone (7401992--

0

Ranch Style Home, Yost
Road with 2 Acres. 3 bed·
rooms. 2 baths. garage,
enclosed breezeway. Pool
and Spa included.
$83,500 .
Call 740-9924001 .
Ranch Style Home. Yost
Road with 2 Acres . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage.
enclosed breezeway. Pool
and "Spa induded. ·
$63,500.
Call 740-9924001 .

IFlO

Locators. Opportunities.
llunJJsNGSI.m.mi
...:..:_______
Now taking apptlcatlons for
f15D
I.A::mi &amp;
House for rent on Hidden one bed apa rtments a1
l
A&lt;.liEAGE
Valley Drive, 3 ·bedroom Spring Valley, Green and Pole
Barns
30x50x10
wlfree water. $500/mo. Call Brookside apartments. Call $6,995. Painted metal, slid·
·ua acres... Sandhill Rd0 (740)285-7571.
17• 01446 _1599 10r in1onna- er, 1ree da/Ivery. 1937)716•
SunSet Lane Priced to sell
*·-ed
tfon
www.nationwideNew 3BR , 1 bath . •·~•"
__· - - - - - - - 147t,
(304)675-6039
garage, $500 per mo. , One bedroom apartment. !Jams.com.
3.2 Acres in Morning Star ~epOSit &amp; ref. (740)446· Location: 403 1/2 Third Ave.
PEfs
Area w/rignt~A-Way. 740- 2601 .
One block from GAHS. ~
· FOR SALE
949-2544
Taking applications tor home Washer &amp; dryer hookup. For

I

r

9 Acres for sale at
Kingsbury. $35,000. OBO.
Can 740-843·1047.
- H 1 &amp;F
A"uen110n
un ~rs
armers
160 acres. Barton Chapel
Rd. 20 minutes from 1-64,
Milton exit City water. For

in nice family oriented nel~borhood. Located on Anh Or.
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, 2 car
narage. 0111 bulidi~. tar~
~
·.,
..,..
deck &amp; large 1enoed yard:
Available Dec. 1, 750 With
same deposit. You utilities.
{740 }44 1_112? or (l40)446·

s

Two ~ story house/1 acre.
4Bd. 1 1/2 Ba .. D.A ..
kitchen, utility room, fire
plilce/gas logs, /Mng room
plus family room , 2 car

information (304)937-4127. 8731 .
MobtlettOmeLottorrent' .:;..:;..:__ _ _~-Taking applications for home
near Vinton . Call (740)441- on Vinton Ave. 3-4 bedrOom.

garage, front porch, basement, storage buildings,
TPC water, heat pump,
paved dn-ay. Letart Falls.
740·2•7-2532

Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile Home Park in
Gallipolis,
OH.
Phone
(740)446-2003 or (740)'46l409.

1111.

1 bath, family room,

an appliCation call (740)446- 2 male CKC registered
-4639.
Miniature Dachshunds 10
weekS old asking $300
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
(304)593-3620
in" applications tor waiting
w
1tst for Hud·subsized, l·llbr, AKC GOlden Ret. puppies.
apartment, call 675-6679 shots &amp; wormed. $200 each.
Equal Housing Opportunity (740)643-0013.

j

SPACE

tUtltENr

I
,

1.~------·
-.,t.
·

gas fire-

Commercial building MFor
place, 2 car garage, large RentM1600 square leet. off
deck &amp;. hot tub. Avalable street parking. Great loca· lion! 749 Tnird Avenue in
Dec. , • $750 wi1h same
depos~. you pay util~les Galipolis. Rent "Negotiable'
(740)441-1127 or (740)446- Cell Wayne (404)456·3602

I

r

_873'1r'1." :"::--"!':'---., Downtown
Commercial
ti
~~
Re1allspacetorAent $400/
rua. ftU'fl
month.
Upstairs Office
Su/1es tor Rent $1251 momh
tha U1il~es. Call
2 Bedroom Trailer, · Lar.,ge you pay
3 528 17
Garage. Partially FurniShed. (70 )
-o6
Close toWai-Mart in Mason.
(740)256-6415 or (740)256-

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

~•\O••IIoulmow'""iiiiiO.•rl

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I

(?4QtA..Il~2479_

Auction
AMVETS POST #23
Truck Load Sale
Something for everyone
6 pm Thursday Oct 12th

r

•5'001
~,.~RINr~
· ~
tu"t•uu lnl'..ol-.......

in Henderson, WV. Pre·
own_
ed Appliances S1aning
a!
&amp; up all under

srs

1 and 2 bedroom apan- warranty. also have recon~

Help Wanted

iiC: I I~f(&gt;Cision

Now paying

$8·!~our

It's better a,,.,__
here.
~,.,IUD

EJ;callllnlllelllls:
• Pt-Gt.•a1811, _.. wurll: .....-ifoom.,t
• MediCal. dlnlaland VIIIOII

• .f01(kl with

compt~ny

• P8111h-

m•lc:h

i

apt

on

c:-----'---

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale.
re -conditto ned au1omat'•c
wosherti &amp; d~rs r~·ge
• , . . . tnll
rators
n• s and e1 ct 1
' e rc
:::S::::OO:::Pc:m:...- - - - - - ranges, air ~ttloners, and
Centenary Road , water
paid, appliances furnished,
WID ho·•up
'""" · close to
Holzer, no pets. Call
after
1740)446-9442

·Garages .

Lorr.//ru
.T

Mal·a·
.......

lQ-•-1m

~

Stop &amp; Oompare

Service
·

we~days, {740 )742-3020
evenings/weekends

1941

. Farmall H wide

~om

11

.

.~,_~
1,.-tu 1 UM I'I\11\'lM

·.Fost-·S·AJ.E--· r·~.

I We Deliver To You!
'

• Rome Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

r]amihJ- ...."".)~'~:"tt~'~'t~a·a~:•..
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HoME

••iiiiiiiiitiliiiiioil-.,t

Caravan,

miles,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditiooal lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
81

~w__e_rp_roo_
· _fin_g_._ _-::-_
Decks, siding, roofirg, floo~ing, and all remodeling

PEANUTS
IF 'I'OV DON'T WRITE

NEED 'I'OV TO WRITE
LHt~~t:

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446..0007

IT 'I'OURSELFJlOW WILL
'I'OU EVER LEARN ?.

FOR ME ..

r---~1

~

Cornerstone
l!i:Pti Construction

Residential • ComiM'rcia:l • Gt!Mnll Cont.-.cting

Painting • Door~ • Windows • Decks
• Siding • ROofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
'IN O!IH2 · • Plumbin~ • Elcctnclll 7..0-387-GSiol
OH 31.2.U
• Accoustic Ceiling · 7-40-331-3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

needs. No tob too big or
smalL
10+ years eKperience. Pomeroy and surrounding areas. Free esti·
1969 Airstream (TaQalonQ)
mates. 1 ~740-4~&amp;-1471 .
32 ., good condition, 4/new

~254=2_______

ALLY,

IIPIITS

Grand

I

JilES'

Tree Service

'1'---=:o:-:-:::---,

SHOP
CLASSIREDS

Top • Aelnovcl • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

•

.•
I

rof,

GARFIELD

ONlliiSPAGE·fOR
,,
'
ASLOWAS
.$21.09 PERMONTH!

--·-------

.... en..... _....

11-TII'IWCII,..

•
1

••

•

YOUNG'S
J

bedrooms,l.S bath.

'

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room l.ddltlona &amp;
Remoc;.llni
New Gllraljlfta .
Electric.! &amp; Plumbing
Roofing I Guttera
Vinyl Sid1n~ &amp; Painti ng
Pat1o •nd Porch Oeektl

wv 036725

V C YOUNG Ill
qg2~:o·~

Pom{'IP\
.'

- •

-

- -"'

-

G

Vf'iH'

( 11

Advertisein this
space
for
ss4 per

+

GRIZZWELLS
1~11iMU.

~Et&gt;~"'ib
~~\-16E

1\IE LNIW&gt;t
liiXlM

~

All pass
•

K

"- Tiki"
Honlhu
volclno
St1rta 111t

=~llton

46

anlmala

Zan (abbr.)

1

dellcac;les

' 38 Me, In

U-bolt

movie "-

MarseiHH

Boot"
40 Whale'•
Pig movie . diet
Correspond 41 Energy
Old ••1st
aource
Sorts
42 Sky be.No, to
43 Tearful
Fraulein
rvquell
Beavere'
44 Vlvacloueyoung.
ness
Twlsl
45 Truck atop
Bagelcerw
sight .
Slangy
46 Greenopen
ladles
· stat
Ball out
·47 ~·s
South Saas
CIIUiinl
locale
49 Mldt raat hrL
Hamlet's

realm
37 Fine-tune

11 Fem. saint

r

CELEBRITY CIPHER
~y Luis Campos
Celel1tt Cipher CJYl11091ems n created from QIIOUibons CV IIVI'WS people
Eldl!Or il h! CVEf stlrG Ia ~ .
Toda1'saue: leqi!BO R
"GNS

DOCL

AMHEDZSIL
HSSJMOU
NWZMOU

ISWC

ZDLWUS

EDOHMHGH

DSF
OSF

~ arid f)fesenl.

DT

ODG

MO

CWOAHEWXSH
SLSH."

-

PRG

XIDRHG
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Lite is enthusiasm, zest ." - Laurence Olivier
"You will do foolish lhings, but do them with enthusiasm." - Colette

· '=!:'i' S~\t(llA -ltttrs·

&lt;tbur'llrlhllor:

ltlten of the
lour o&lt;romblod word• be·
low 10 form lour tlmPio

By Bemlce Bodo 0.01
Lli&lt;E A
It's t,mlikely the year ahead will be anoth·
PL ...CE
er run-of~the-mlll cycle for you. Some
To FEEL
eMciting tu rns of events are apt to be
walting, which will offer fortune and ben·
etits never afforded you previously.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Much 1o
· . your surprise. your ideas for ways and
. means to further your financial position
~.....J
wH! be tar more \-ewarding than you can
imagine. You'll be quite happy with the
resuhs.
' SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Get ou1
and mingle socially with friends with
whom you nave a good rapport; one may
offer you a business ·opportun!ry that's
right up your alley.
,
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Something important to you of a personal nature can be advanced without you
having to reveal the maner to others. A
word here and there will provide tne
impetus.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - This
is a better-than-average day to initiate or
advance a project or endeavor on whicn
you're working, especially If it is of a
unique nature. Progress belongs to tt}e
bol9 pioneer.
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) - A hapPI'
surprise may be in store where your
finances or resources are concerned . A
job on whicn you're working may make
the rum that will put you on the track to
riches.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcn 2Q) - Get the
word out on that special endeavor you 've
wanted others to near about. The timing
is exceptionally good for gett'ing hard-to·
reach people to listen to What you haYe
to say.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)- The wei- .
fare of others will be foremost on your
mind, vet it'll be more than a noble inclination. To your surprise. the less you do
'for yourself, the more you are apt to
receive.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20} - Much to
tl1e unexpected cooperation of others,
your probabilities for success will be substantially enhanced. It might seem to you
like all your friends want to do something
for you.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Don't rest
on your laurels because, even though
tr1tngs might start off slowly, opportuni·
. ties 'pertaining to your work or career
could grow and blossom in ways you
'never thougnt possible.
CANCER (Jwla21-July 22)- Pa1 your·
self on th8 bacfl: tor you'r good attl1ucSe.
Because of 11, everything you touch will
go very smootnly.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) - Even lt1ougn
othen; might see your method&amp; or tactics
as being unorthOdox or S1range, they will
make great sense to you and be respon·
sib~ for producing the wonderfu l results
you 'll ge1.
VIRGO (A&amp;Jg ,•23-Sep1. 221 - Allt1ough
you might not bltne one 'fitlo originate&amp;
new Ideas or concepti, you'll be the per·
son who wllllnatlncttvely Know what to dO
with them . Trade on your n~tural t1'-nta.

MO

YWIESC

AstroGraph

n.octoy, Oct. to, 2006

PE~SO~­

)MJIIIO\IE!IdD,"fS

around porch, 3
Bonus room over garllltBlacktop driveway._ .
Hilltop views. Owner
has current appraisal of
$185,000 (ATOl. Seller
offering to pay all closing costs. Immediate Occupancy.
41530 Fo• Hill Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2478

Tht. MO~I»-'(~!

:;:""""'~~'~:":1:":'-~=~

r

I

==

n

,..AeADC~oF

Frw EttllllltN

•

Brand new 2 story
colonial with "Tap--

I'M 'SPECTIN' A
SMIF CLAN VISIT!!

I'M CRANI&lt;'r',
·NERVOUS AN'
WEEPISH !!

Meigs County Fai;:ncts
ArrMII: Oct. 21,
t:ro.m-1t:OOpm
R -: April 21, 200'1 ·
A tee of $20.00 will be
charged for aariy arrival,
late arrival, earty removal ...
late removal, or anytime_
acceiS is wanted to
fairgrounds other than
stated dates, Building
spaCe Is first come
first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lt
Open Span: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence : $1.00111
can 985-4372
for more information

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PA1CES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $349 to $448.
Walk to shOp &amp; 'movies. Call
740-446~2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Real Estate

BARNEY

WELL,

••
......
1998
Dodge

end runs great
$2500, tires, ~C. new hoi water
international square baler,
tank ,
new
plumbi ng,
good shape $500. 740.992·
$10,500 (304)675-4475

IN61lfi&gt;I~NTS!

. BIG NATE

Rlclc20~..!;;..,0Wnor

I

i

sursr1run

A•ailable

Top~frini;C...AIIm!Mt
Crlnt•Hiullng•~Orllldlng
171RindSti'MI•CWiipoiM,Ott

Pass

+

CD pleyere1

18 Wa1811ogged 52 NFL team
20 Early VCR 5:!. - du jour 19
form&amp;\
54 Mineo of old
· 21 Flemin!S
fllma
or,::c!Om 55 Do aockl
20
22 B
22
mouthed
DOWN
23
container
24
23 Dinner bev- 1 Gullible one · 25
eragas
~ Henri's ans
26 Put ll1t 3 Pl9ffx for
26
on
second
29 Stain flllenl 4 Barney lana 27
30 San:aotlc
5 Refuge
28
temark
6 Type of mltt 30
31 Hawaiian
7 Fair grade
ICICII
8 -uno
32
33 Vall runner 9 No future
34
34 Klomet
35 Lox locale tO Blggetlhan 35
36 Gourmet
elhe

Comedian Emo Philips, whose real
name is Ph ilip Soltanec, said, "At my
11j.monada sland 1 usad to giva the 1/rst
gTass away free and charge five dollars
for the second glass. The refill contained
the antidote."
Whal is_the antidote to lh~ four-spada
contract after West leads the diamond
king?
North might respond two no-trump ff that
would show a balanCed hand with 13-15
(or 16-p/us) high-card points and lew8f
lhan four spadas. (II ha did make this
response and South, .wltn 5·3-3·2 distribution, raised to three no-trump, North
would hava an awkward guass. Probably
lle shoukl retreat 10 four spades, showIng his threa-card support, bul mighl
be a deal with only nine tricks.available
in sp.des or no-trump.}
1 'know some Wests who would make a
three-heart weak jump overcall, but I will
allow them to rema in anonymous.
Luckily most ol us stll have some sunquality standards.
OtX:Iarer seems to have only three losers: one heart and two diamonds. Easl,
though, should see a chance for a fourth
defensive tFick - a hean ruff. At trick
ona. East could drop a discouraging diamond two, strongly suggesting that West
switch to a different suit. But.would WeSt
lind lhe haart shift?. Maybe, but ~ is no
certainty. Instead, Eest should overtake
the diamond king wHh his ace, cash the
hean ace, and return a dle~mond to
West's queen. Now; if West does not
laad a haan for East to ruff, Eas1 will be
safe .i£1 throttling his partner. He woUld be
lound not guilty olall charges by a jury ol
bridge players.

_IEAW

Co-Tree Cote

I
~·
X
rys er ....irrus L 1·
miles, clean,
loaded,
low (7401992-3394
great MPG.·

C~O,OLATE

Monthly Plans

...

(7&lt;10)446-2•12

CA~ol

YOIJ~

Fully Insured
&amp; Bonded

1999 Ch

95,000

·

ALt.

Affordable

1991
Cadillac
DeViJia,
leather int . Excellent condi·
lion. (740)339-2039.

r~.

~

OVE~

Dependable

'

y Furgersen Truck Camper. w!bath, A.C,
2br. Apt. tor Rent downtown wringer washers. Will do 255 Masse_
'Pt. Pleasant, $350 a month repairs on major brandi in Dediel, excellent condition . TV Antenna on top $4.800.
ShOp or 11 your home.
$6500. 740-992-2622.
(304)675:3353
call Don (304)5 9 3- 1 ~

Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br.. No
Pets 740·992-5656 .

--

• Complete
Remodeling

2000 Neon 4 door, air. automalic,
$2,900
.OBO. 1999 Jayco Eagle 5th wheel
(7•0)256-1652
' - - ' - - - - - - - 24' with 9ide . Mint condition,
included. extras.
2002 Chevy Cevallar. looks hitch
$7,999
Locally located
street parklnn.
Great loca- and runs great, 117,000
"V
tionl 749 Third Avenue in IT)iles, automatic, $4,500 (304)965·, 513.
080
GaMlpolis. Price MNegotlabe"
. Call {740)256·1253.
. . 1 I-'• I, I ...
New roof! Mctivated Seller!
Call
VANi
.

:..

bedroom

• New Homes

':;1~·;7~40--~99~2--6~~196~;::
r
ACE TRff SfRV/Cf

lBR apUcabin. All utllnias Berber carpel 6.95yd, vlny1
F~l
$3,000 OBO. 40 256·1233
5.95yd. New rocker recliners
••~, rvot
740
pd. 1
~ 1 - 0117 ·
$199.95: new couch &amp;
""''""'-'......,_,
1BA furnished apt., lBR fur· loveseat $450. Mollohan •KIEFER BUILT -v.a.uiv
4 WI*H.FJ!S
76
Vine
St., •atSON •HORS-=: 6 UVEntshed mobile home. No Carpet
pe1s. Ae)ldep. required. Gallipolis, OH (740)4.6· STOCK TR~ILERS "LOAD- 2000 Harley Davidson 120°
Custom Sportster. Loaded,
(740)446-4762. Gallipolis, _7444
__
. - - -- - - MAX
'GOOSENECK,
extra
cnrome,' $6,900.
_O_H_
. - - - - - - - Naw recliner $200: sola &amp; 1. OUMPS . I
UTILITY
(304)593·1987 or (740)441·
2 be~room apt for ren11ocat· seat $400. Mollohan Fum. "ALUMA
•ALUMINUM
0355.
ed on Rt. 588. No pets. Call 202 Clerk Chapel Ad . Porter TRAILERS •B&amp;W GOOSE~
.~':.._
14_19.;.:1.:_35'-'9~·1_766:..::...
. - - - Phone
(740)368-0173. NECK
HITCHES.
J¥JVJUK ~
Open 9-3 sat. only.
Carmichael
EquiPment
2

7:00AM·

1961 Csdillac convertible .
Kiwi Frurt! Cnerry and Ver~ good condttion~ leather
Hickory nut size, smooth interior. classic. (740)245·
·

tMNl&gt;

WINTER STORAGE .

Hours

2

Etst
Pass

Taking charge
can save money

45771

740-849-2217

Daily. Weekly, or

9142 ·

i

s:r •.
PI~ATES.
~·Of THE)

Racine, Ohio

00 Neon $2.888
00• F350 quad cab, diesel
4x4 $22,888
01 Grand Prix GT $8,499
00 Alero $3,695
95 Eclipse $2,288
96 M da 626 $1395
az
96 ~1aurus $2300
97Taurus $1850
97 Wrangler $4,495
89MustangGT$1895

FAJt;!PMDrr

lnfoCisiiJn haS '
ra.ised its rates.

29670 Bashan Road

00 F-250 quad cab diesel,
4x4 $12,488
,

r

ments, furnished aOd unfur· ditioned Big Screen TV's
n1sheH. security deposit
required, no pets, 740.992- by Ron's TV (30ot)6~
7118
2218.

Help Wanted

"""".cia.,_koaloln~.oom

Sheltie pups, 9 wks, firs! 96 Mustang $2,999
shots &amp; wormed. no papers. 92 Dodge Cargo van, low
$150each. (740)698-0475
miles $2,500.
FSiurrs &amp;
Rome Aulo Seioo
VffiETABUS
(7&lt;10)44 1. -

'-------.....1

(740)446·1409

OS Ram 2500, 4 dr, diesel,
4x4 $29,999

weal Nonb
Pass 2+
Opening lead:

Hardltod MiiiWJ And Flnian

H111·s Sell
Sto1 age

,
06 Eclipse $6,500
Neon
,
03
54 395

.

or s1ereo. storage &amp; display
area. Excellent condition. (740}446-2692
ArTll'sh bUI.1t storage building.
f"""~''"
For rent: Nice 2 bedroom
L
1h 1
old Do ble
ass an year
·
u
mObile home in Country
doors. 2 windows, shelves
Homes. $325 + deposit.
built inside. Excellent condi·
(740)385-4019.
Appl-.c. , tion,
10x16.
$1,350.
Mobile HOme sites for ~to
(740)245-0344.
,6 60 · Country H
1n
omes.
W•rehouM Commercial building ~For
x
(740)365-4019.
Sate" 1600 square feet, oft
2003.

Kim Bia~~wner

1+

Soulll

74t-Jf7-744l

A~
••lllliiiiitiiiiii-_.1
FOR SAlE

AKC Siberian Husky pup- 94 Corsica $895
pies, Fefnales, Black &amp; 94CutlassCierra$1495
92 Olds Eighty Eight $1,495
Wh~e With Blue Eyes. $300 96 Wl'ndstar $ 1695
F 11 R · 1 r
$250
u
eg•s ra •on ,
95 Dakota 4x4, V6 $1895
740 446 8627
Umlted. (
}
'
92 F-2;5.0 VB 4)(4 $3,295.
Cnlhuahua puppies,
9. 97 K~2500 V8, auto, 4x4
·
weeks old &amp; one 7 months $4395
old, call (740)992-7335
97 Cavalier $3095
96 CS&gt;alier Z24 $2688

_7_
. ______
skin, 740-992·7449. Virgil 's
694
Goons
Berry Pafcn, St.Rt. 124, East ·
2 bedroom, A!C, porch &amp;
.
otSyracuse,Ohio.
awning. Very, very nloe, no
po1s. In Gall~is. (740)446- 3pC. oak ent. dr. Holds TV.
FOR SALE

+AK

Colleae Rd. • Syncuse, OH 740-Hl-tlll

10% OFFW/AD

9 7 2

• J 5

Mastl!r. t.rtllied Mechanics

------------.. ~-------... ---

• A 9 7 2·

+86532

+

ATil Parts&amp;.. Service Available 8 M'!1LEY
13~

762

Soulb
K Q 10 8 5 I

Outlet

attached, garage and base- comes. Call {740)385·2434 . Mortgage
(740)967.()()()()

K Q 10 I

•

OPE Certlfl&lt;d

992-3194
or 992-663·5

•

+74

lyraca• SmaU
Eagla•
Duelers ·
'
Since 1978

10xl0x10x20

Ellm View
Apartments

.A

'

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877·669·0007

OH

epo."

3

milk, maybe

39

guide
CNIIM
47 Valle
15 Awan action 48 Knighted
16 Notch
Gulnnen
shape
50 Capone foe
17 Long-tailed 51 Shinto or 81::*.'

Eosl

Wesl
•

.'1086 .5 13

Authorlud Servloe For:
Quality Wcrtr. at a fair Prla!l
All Work Guaranteedl
All Makes &amp;.. Models
Pk:Jwp &amp;.. DeiiiOI}' Aval~

13 ~::...
14 Colt.ge

tii-OH6

• ass

MONTY

38 AaQd lor

Ad40
commlttM 41
I Playful bllu
12 Tlln Shan 43

.. Q J 10 9

70 Pine Street • GalliPQiis

ffOW OPEN

House for sale in Syracuse.

5

+A J 9
• K QJ

rtamihJ
•·tfl3M•
&amp; ·MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

lllllEn
SELF STIIIIE
M' ddl

No

'

rnr'-------.,

I

Moo~~IE§

1 Go under

New John Deere Compacts
and

units oo S1a1e
tors Dft. • - lor sa
Roul!t 160· Cell for details Antique oale made bv month8 through John
1 7 40~t-(llS4 "'(740~ 1 - Meilink Mig. t6" tigh, , •• Deere Credit. Carmichael

~-•llliiiiii

-Ve-ry.:.__n_:ic_e_3_B-:A-._ba_th_

for
rent.
Carmlchael
Equipment (740)446-2412.

r

1imi1B;

-

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

John Deefe 10ft. No Til Dr~

Used furniture store, 130
BuiBVifle Pitse. Gas ranges,
bunk beds, ctlests, dinettes,
couches, mattresses, new
washer/dryer $400 set.
'(740)446·•762 Gallipolis,
OH. Hrs t1·5 (M-S)

f:=~~;~=; 2Awnue.
Bedloom ApartrMnt, 2nd
Glllpol3:

- -

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Ui114

~r

WOlD
liM I

ClAY I. rOUAN

0 IIQffO"Ot

l

-d•

FLARO(

I~ trtI· I
- ~•s,....-H
1,EI',L.,.O_WT--i!.,_~
11 ~
·

I

·Granny always told me
that I should make sure I was

NNE
~~ ~i~m-g:~~nd betore I put my
0 0
1-~,,.:..._:;.,1,r-,;li;..;_;..l.:....l.--1 c:J Co!T'Iplele Jh~ chuckle quoted

I

T

1._-l..-1.--1..-L.-;-L-- '
-

f}

J-

PRINT NUMSERED

b" filling in rhe ~ ~$MQ .....ard1
you dcwc-lop I! om ~~~P No. 3 below

1

LEITtRS IN SQUAUS

8 ~~~~~R..BLE fOP.I I I

I

I 'I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

I I I

101~

Thirty- Oasis - Rayon - Jounce - CRAYON
Overheard while leaving lhe sports arena. •Athlelic
champs are getting so young. they give &lt;.~utographs in
CRAYON.'
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Wt. £Atlf.IU.-Y JOIIJW UP
Ill HoRD!&gt; .

SOUPTONUTZ
JoW GfO!IIIlftl \olltlT Back
To CoLLeGe To GeT HIS

DEGRee .

~llU~

f•cel1t"

~

/..i'lwn

month

lil£l,lf"IF'l.l

"'

w&gt;~en

He

~Mes

flbM I&lt;&gt;!G i1'\lme s
aND fll.s~ O&lt;.IT ON 11-le

I

�•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.inydailysentinel.com

to

spins
tie more patient than they
were back there.
•
"I know he was trying to
TALLADEGA, Ala.
get his first win, but he was
Brian Vickers isn't allowed in a position to finish secto
attend
Hendrick ond or third the way that
Motorsports team meetings. was , and he gave me one
Now he might not even be hell of a push from behind
allowed in the building.
and pushed me into
Vickers stole his first (Earnhardt) and off we
Nextel Cup victory Sunday went."
by nudging . teammate
The dramatic ending
Jimmie Johnson into race capped what had been a
leader Dale Earnhardt Jr., curiously calm event on
then skirting by the . two Talladega's sleek new
spinning cars on the last lap asphalt. The UAW-Ford 500
at
Talladega was incident free until 50
Superspeedway.
laps to go, when an 11 -car
It robbed what looked to melee
crippled
Jeff
be a victory for Earnhardt Gordon's
championship
·and a solid chance for hopes.
Johnson to resurrect his fadA second accident set up a
ing Nextel Cup title hopes. final restart with 10 )aps to
And it certainly spoiled go and Earnhardt out front.
what should have been a Then points leader Jeff
crowning
moment for Burton got a flat tire and
·
Vickers, who has just six
races left in his Heild. rick had to make a desperate ptt
stop while the champiride before his impending
defection to a Toyota team. onship board tightened up·
"I got into Jimmie and .I cons.tderably.
)
.
hate it," Vickers said. "The . Wnh Earnhardt chugg_mg
last thing 1 wanted 10 do . along - and only 20 pom_ts
was wreck either one of out of the ch~mptonshtp
those guys, but what hap- lead - the fimsh seemed
d h
d 11
•1 secure.
pene
•
appene
·
wasn
But the two Hendrick drimtentional.
"It's definitely mixed vers apparently had a gameemotions for me, being my plan of hooking up to run
first win, but also what hap- down Earnhardt. They
pened with Jimmie because moved low together, and
he is rny friend and also a Earnhardt threw a huge
teammate, as well."
block to prevent the pass.
But rift has apparently Vickers pushed, Johnson
been brewing since Vickers bobbled and as he was
asked out of his Hendrick drilled in the back bumper,
contract in June, and was he slid into Earnhardt for
locked out of team meetings . the two-car crash.
shortly after.
Vickers . defended th,e
Johnson, who wasn't · move, saymg tf he hadn t
going to finish lower than have given Johnson a push
second, wound up 24th arid they would have had zero
of
running
struggled to understand chance ·
why the accident happened. Earnhardt down.
"I just can't believe it.
"If I would have not
Here we go all day long, I touched him and laid off of
had a great chance to make him, we would have finup some points, and I end ished 1-2-3, Junior, Jimmie
up getting wrecked by a and me," Vickers said. "I"
teammate,"
he · said. apologize, that is the last
"Knowing the situation thing I want to do is to get
we're all in, I would hope into Jimmie. But when the 8
that someone would be a lit- chopped him, and Jimmie
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRES~

a

..

Monday, October g, z006.

swerved, I just got him."
It started a debate through
the . garage, with everyone
choosing sides, including a
crowd
that
showered
Vickers with boos.
Earnhardt seemed to side
with Vickers.
"Brian was just excited
there," he sai4. "I'm not
really tl)at upset, I . mean,
that's just the way racing
goes here and sometimes
you come out on the good
end of those deals and
sometimes you don't."
Kasey Kahne and Kun
Busch, who fiq;ished second
and third because of the
wild ending, both seemed to
sympathize with Vickers.
"Vickers was in a Catch22, whether to go for the
win for himself or to help
his teammate," Busch said.
"He had every intention of
· h.
1·
helpmg ts teammate. t JUSt
didn't turn out that way." ·
But not everyone was so
forgiving, particularly within Johnson's team.
"I honestly don't think
Brian was trying to wreck
us; I think he was trying to
help us," crew chief Chad
Knaus said. "I J·ust don' t
think he has the talent to
understand what he has
underneath him."
The
wreck . dropped
Earnhardt to a 23rd-place
finish, Johnson to 24th and
prevented either from making any gains in the .Chase
for the championship.
Although Burton's lead was
cut to six points over Matt
Kenseth, Earnhardt is 106
back in sixth. place and
Johnson is 156 out in eighth
place.
Even more disconcerting
for Hendrick is that Gordon
also took a huge hit in the
standings.
After leading seven times
for 27 laps, he was denied a
chance to run for the· win
when he received the worst
of the first accident in the
race. It came with 50 laps to
go when contact between

Carl
Edwards,
Joe
Nemechek and . Johnson set
off an 11-car melee.
Gordon spun toward the
outside, seemed to keep his
car off of it, then skidded
back down the track with
minimal damage. But Casey
Mears tagged him from
behind, sending a disheart~ned Gordon putteri ng into
the garage amid a flood of
cheers from the crowd.
As he watched his crew
furiously try . to make
enough repairs to get him
back on the track, he
declared his championship
hunt pretty much over. Six
)JOints out of the lead two
races ago·, a 39th-place finish last week' and a 36th
here has him seventh in the
· standings, 147 points out.
"I've said all along that if
it's meant to be, it's meant
be" h
·d "A d · ·
to , e sat .
n tl JUSt
doesn't seem meant to be.
R" h
1
tg t now
am not even
thinking about it because I
am just so bummed out
because I know that our
chances are pretty slim of
winning this championship,
if not completely done."
NASCAR slapped smaller restrictor plates on the
cars Saturday because
speeds on the repaved track
were nearing 200 mph during two early practice sessions. The new plates were
designed to slow the cars,
and they did in qualifying.
But many of the average
speeds throughout the race
were still over 200 mph.
"I think we'll visit the
speeds after we've had a
chance to look at everything
and go through all the lap
sheets from every lap,"
NASCAR spokesman Jim
Hunter said. "The one thing
you have to watch . for
speeds over 200 is if a car is
in the back and gets a good
push, especially with new
pavement, the closing rates
are really good.
"We'll definitely take a
look at that."

Ohio seeks to preserve
old fire towers, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. :;6, .Nn. -1:1

SPORTS .
• ALCS preview.
SeePage81

.

.,

man

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

the Middleport committee
took place until the results of
that discussion, not agreement, was released in The
Daily Sentinel .
·
Musser said he and
Proffitt met with the committee, which did not consist
of Middleport Council members, one time and up front
told them this had not been
discussed with Pomeroy
Council and any type of
agreement would have to be
approved by
Pomeroy
CounciL
" That was the first thing I

fielder/defender Sarah· Brame as she notched
the first goal of her collegiate career.
Freshman mid-fielder/defender Leslie
McGee also scored a goal and assisted on two
others.
·
Sop)lomore Sarah Sandlin and freshman
Randilyn ·Blankenship _both spent in the net
for Rio Grande. Sandhn allowed both goals
and recorded nine stops in 82 minutes while
Blankenship added. two saves in eight minutes.
·
Rio steps back into conference play on
October 13 wtth a road game at Cedarville.

merchants Jane Harris of
Dan's Clothing Store and
Chip Werry of Unique
Antiques in support of the
village's festivals.
Karr said business at her
store always increases during festival weekends and
many of those customer~
return at other times to shop.
"It's a shame to put a
damper on the festivals ,"
Karr said. "We're vying for
dollars in an economy where
you don't know what is

Please see Pollee. AS

Page AS
• Martha M. Wittig
· ·ReedWHI
APphoto

..

INSIDE

Brian Vickers poses for photographers in victory lane after
winning the NASCAR UAW·Ford 500 auto race Sunday at
Talladega Superspeedway'in Talladega, Ala.

• Meigs County Girl

• Lower standards help
Anny meet recruiting goal.
See Page AS
• Early results show
residents have high levels
of Teflon chemical.
SeePage AS
• Lawmakers contacting
~x-pages as ethics panel
ramps up Foley probe.
SeePage AS
• Local graduates from
Shawnee. See Page M
• Ohio University Career
Services holds Fall .
Career Fair. See Page A6
• Air Force researching
planes that change
shape. See Page M
• 3 corrections officers
charged with assault,
burglary. See Page A6

'.

THING HAPPENS
WHEN -YOU DON'T
ADVERTISE

:MHS alumnus sponsors.
· Washington D.C. trip .
BY Ctwlt.ENE HOEFUCif
HOEFLICH@MYDAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - A recent
trip to Washington , D. C. for
four Meigs Hi_gh sophomores was made possible
because Gary Nokomoto, an
MHS alumnus remembered
his years there and wanted
to give back.
Traveling to the nation's
capitol for a week-long leadership conference were
Talisha Beha, Rebecca
Hanstine, Steven, Stewart,
and Richard Well with
Michael Wilfong as the
supervising teacher.
The conference was being
held by the Close Up organization whose role is to teach
youth about how government works. Nokomoto .
paid for the students' tcavel
and living expenses while in
Washington, D. C. for the
con Ference .

Residents of Overbrook
Center in Middleport
and their families
enjoyed a perfect sundappled fall day and
the facility's lOth
annual Oktoberfest on
Saturday. Big Bend
Ctoggers performed a
show - in costume and other musical
entertainers per·
formed, while residents
took part in a hayride
and a hog roast.
Donna Wilson, a story
teller, also made an
appearance, along with
Sparkles the Clown.
Health screenings were
provided by Holzer
Medical Center.
11MnJ,R-/~

WEAmER

ANYMORE

~P
,,

'

sees rate increase for equipment upgrades.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'·

POMEROY - American
· Electric Power Ohio filed a
DeUHsonPIICIIA2
plan with the Public Utilities
Commission
of
Ohio
Monday to enhance distribution system reliability and
improve customer service.
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES
The plan proposes an
additional annual average
Calendars
A3 . investment of approximate•
ly $130 million over the
Classifieds
B3-4 next five years on vegeta'
tion management, equipComics
Bs ment . replacement, infrastructure improvements and
Dear Abby
"A3 improved use of technology.
improvements are
Editorials
·A4 The
designed to help reduce outages and improve service
Obituaries
As
lJ
reliabiliry. AEP said .
If the PUCO approves' the
Sports
B Section
plan, Columbus Southern
A6 Power customers will see a
Weather
monthly rate increase of
©,,_Ohio Volley PublishiJJ&amp; Co. approximately $1.60 ~er

INDEX

a

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

•

I

While there, the students
were able to meet other students from all over the
United States including
Missouri, New Jersey, and
California.
·
During the week the stu ~
dents went on "walking
explorations" that consisted
of
touring
all
of
Washington 's
memorials
such as the Jefferson
Memorial, the Lincoln
Memorial,
and ·
the
Roosevelt Memorial. They
also participated in many
group discussions about a
variety of political issues
ranging from the immigration issue, to abortion. to
drug testing in schools.
They also attended several
seminars about a variety of
subjects such as the media:,
m,ihtary, and political views
of different issues.
·

Pluse see MHS. AS .

County flu shot clinics .
scheduled, bring photo ID

NO ONE·
NOTICES
YOU

SUbmitted piiOIOS

Gary Nokomodo a Meigs High School graduate, sponsored a
trip to Washington, D. C. for four Meigs sophomores. From.
the left are Nokomoto, a representative of the Close-up organization which hosts the program , the students, Rebecca
Hanstine, Talisha Beha, Richard Well, Steven Stewart. and a
teacner. MIGhaei-.Wlth:Nt~o•wOO-a~.. ..._,,- ,

• HoSchar harv~ts first
deer. See. Page A3

,.

told them ," Musser said
about the meeting. "We were
not trying to hide anything.
We were asked to attend, we
attended, pulled some figures out of the air and that's
all it was. No offer was
made."
.
Musser said there are "a
lot of problems" with the
idea and he didn't know if
Pomeroy was in any position
to discuss it further.
Also discussed were the
festivals on the parking lot.
Bobbie Karr of Hartwell
House spoke for herself and

OBITUARIES

~~A3

Rio·competes -at AUOhio Championships

Redwomen end skid
at West Virginia Tech

·'

vices when discussed with
the Middleport committee
investigating the possibility
was "not a definitive discussion."
"I don't think Middleport
is interested and I'm not real
sure we' re interested,"
Musser said at last night's
meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council.
The issue was brought up
by Councilwoman Mary
McAngus who wasn't aware
the
meeting
between
Musser, Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark E. Proffitt and

Scout Diary.

CANlDN - It was a fiustratin~ weekend
for a bang~~ University of Rio Grande
volleyball sq
as they dropped both matches at Saturday's American Mideast
Conference tri-match at Malone. Rio lost to
Malone in five games, 29-31, 30-20, 29-31,
30-22 and I 0-15 and in three games to Tiffin.
It was the second time this season that Rio
(14-14, 2-6 AMCS) lost to the Pioneers in
five games. Rio had also defeated Malone
(16-12, 4-6 AMCS) in a non-conference
match and felt like this was one it could win.
The Redwomen had three players deliver
double figures in kills, led by sophomore
middle/outside hitter Jessica Rodgers with 19
kills. Freshman outside hitter Megan Wills
added I~ kills and senior hitter Lindsay Urton
DELAWARE-. Every sq~ competing at
chtpped m 16 kills.
the Uruversity of Rio Grande this fall has been
Jessica also led the Rio defense with 28 · beset with their own set of injuries. Add the
~gs . Fre_shman libero Summer Rinehart tal- men's cross country team to that list. The
lied 25 digs and was a _perfect 14-for-14 serv- Redmen had only four runners compete at the
ing with one ace. Semor hitter Jessica Veach All-Ohio Championships on Friday at ,Ohio
posted 19 digs while Urton added II with Wesleyan University.
three solo. blocks and four block assists.
As a result Rio Grande did not a have a team
Sophomore setter Randi Rodgers handed score for the first time this season.
out 51 assists and tallied 20 digs on 27-for-27.· Sophomore Corey Culbertson finished
serving with three aces. Sophomore middle I 21st with a time of 28:19.5. ·fellow sophohitter Stephanie Lapp had a nice game up more Paul Webb was the next Rio runner to
front with five solo blocks and five block cross the finish line. He was·J64th with a time
assists.
of 28:54.9. Freshman Kyle Hively was 235th
Rio would later fall in three games to Tiffin, overall with a time of 31 :27 and sophomore
19-30, 25•30 and 14-30. Rio is 0-2 versus Troy Howdyshell finished 247th with a time
Tiffin (21-6, 6-1 AMCS) this season.
of 32:14.8.
Urton was the only player to tand in double
Ohio State won the men's event with 42
fi_gures in kills with II . Jessica Rodgers added . points. NAJA No. 3 Malone was the top
rune, but tt· was not enBugh. Rodgers paced NAJA team to fimsh, as' they were 5th ( 179).
the defense with 20 digs while Rinehart NAJA No. 10 Cedarville was 6th (252).
added 19.
Eddie Kipchoge of Bowling Green was the
Randi Rodgers dished out 30 assists.
men's indtvidual winner with a tim~ of
Rio Grande will return to the friendly con- 25:30.2.
fines of the Newt Oliver Arena on Tuesday
There were 286 total runners in .the men's
evenin&amp; when they tangle with N AlA No. 12 race.
Rio also did not post a team score in the ·
Cedarvtlle.
The match is set to begin at 7 p.m.
. women's race. Freshman Kayla Fulkerson
Rib is 0-1 versus the Lady Jackets this sea- was the top runner to finish for the
son.
Redwomen. She was "I 87th overall with a
time of 22:15.7.
Fellow freshm311 Stacey Arnett finished
20 I st with time of 22:31.7 and sophomore
Brittany Dixon was 258th with a time of
.
26.37.4.
Ohio won the women's meet with 63 points.
MONTGOMERY,
W.Va.
The NAJA No. 6 Cedarville. was the top NAJA
University of Rio Grande women's soccer team finishing 6th with 177 points.
team snapped a nine-game losing skid with a
Katie Wieferich of Wooster was · the
4-2 victory on Saturday afternoon on the road women's individual winner. She posted a time
at West Vrrginia Tech.
.
of 18:11.5.
Rio Grande (2-1 0) was happy to have freshThere were 264 runners in ihe women 's
forward Tiffany Reese back in the line- race.
up as she nailed two goals in leading the
Rio will get the week off to try to get healthy
Redwomen to victory.
.
·
and run again, October 21 at the Circleville
It was a big day for senior mid- Pumpkin Show.
. '

1

Pomeroy poUdng Middleport: 'Not a definitive discussion;

0KTOBERFEST

A fi11Strating weekend for
Rio Grande volleyball team·
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

-

'""'·rn}dail)·sentinel.&lt;~&gt;m

'll TSD.\Y, OCTOBER to. :.wo6

POMEROY - ·Politics,
religion and money are common hot topics but for
Pomeroy Village Council
those hot topics as of late are
alleged open container violations and the possibility of
Pomeroy entering into a
contract with Middleport for
police services.
According to Mayor John
Musser the prospect of
entering into a contract with
Middleport for police ser-

Redmen Roundup

BY MARK WtWAMS

Southetn's Harris
headed to State, Bt

...

month, and Ohio Power cus- lines over a four-year peritomers an increase of od, while gathering data for
approximately $2.30 per use in more customized
month.
future plans. · AEP said in a new~ · AEP will also begin a
comprehensive
release it has spent an aver- · more .
age of $101 million annual- inspection of the hardware
ly over three years on relia- and equipment on overhead
bility programs designed to structures to determine what
maintain distribution infra- repair and replacement work
structure and reduce out- should be performed to
ages. The spending level has reduce outages.
Increased steadily but distriAEP will proactively
bution rates have not address emergeing equipchanged in 10 years.
ment and hardware issues,
. "Without the additional including cutouts and lightinvestments, it will be diffi- ning arresters, and will
cult for AEP Ohio to main- expand use. of AMI. ~uto­
tain service reliability at lev- mated metering technology,
els expected by today's cus- that provides outage and
tomers," the news release restoration reporting, energy
said·.
. usage and remqte · meter
Vegetation management reading. That work will prowould reduce the number of vide more accurate meter
tree-related outages, will reads, quicker identification
increase the number of tree of problem meters and will
crews and perform end-to- resolve "high'' bill comend circuit clearing on all plaints.

8Y BETH SERGENT
BS~RGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY,- The Meigs
County Health Department
will once again be offering
flu shots this fall with the
pneumonia vaccine during
separate flu shot clinics, the
first being for both residents
over 65 years of age and
older. along with those .with
high risk conditions. fn llowed by a clinic for the general public. .
Both clinics are contingent ,upon flu vaccine availability.
The first clinic is for those
residents over 65 years of age
and older, along with those
with high risk conditions
from9-ll a.m. and l-3p.m.,
Friday, Oct. 27 at the Meig'
County Senior Center. There
is no charge to Meigs County
residents who have Medicare
or Medicaid cards which
clients must bring 10 the nu
shot
clinic .
Railroad.

Medicare is also accepted.
The health department
will administer to the general
public from 9-11 a.m. an'd 1~
·3 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 30
and Tuesday, Oct. 3 I at the
health department. Charges
are $ 15 for the flu vaccine
and $27 for pneumonia vac:
cine for those withouJ
Medicaid, Medicare.
This year all atlendees to
the clinics are asked to bring
photo identification that
show' Ohio re,idency. These
photo m·, can also be u~ed.
if desired . fo,r "swipers."
Swipers are an electronic
. product that can quickly doc:
ument and track the dispensing of vaccines and other
medications given to individual&gt;. All inforrnat.ion is
kept confidential and secure.
Swipcr' wi ll first he used
during thi' year"s Ou vaccine
clinic;. and if succe,sful
information will be electron-

Please see Flu, AS

,,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="522">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9973">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16724">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16723">
              <text>October 9, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="266">
      <name>boggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1752">
      <name>hensley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="735">
      <name>hudson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
