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                  <text>Rice says .w orld united
against North Korea's nuclear
efforts; U.S. intelligence
confirms atomic blast, A2

FWITnt,8•etLmp._~....__.AtgzucatsfwaSt

tatePa pmlt.y
lzitiatlve Pedti&amp;a te be S.IMnltted at tile Gew• II Eld-. ~-ber 7, 2tk

Prosecutor: coin
dealer
stole Ohio's
•
mvesbnent money
right away, A6
•

.Proposed Law
be of sufficient size to be
clearly legible to a pcroon
of nOrmal vi•ion tbroQgbout
the areas they are intended to
mark. All signs shall contain
a telephone number fOr reponing violatioM.
(B) Alluhttays and other receplaeles used for disposing

of smoking materials shall
be removed from any area
where smoking ;, prohibited
by this chapter:

37M;t7 Dlltles .r tile DeperhiN!III of Heolt!o.
This chapter shall be enforced by the department of
health and its designees. The
di=tor of health shall within six months of the effective
dote of this section:
(A) Promulgate rules in accordonce with Chapter 119
of the Revised COO. to implement and enforce all provisions of this chapter;
(B) Promulgate rules in ac-

cordance with Chapter 119
of the Revised Code to prescribe a schedule offines for
violations of this chapter designed to foster compliance

prescribe a procedure for
providing a proprietor or
individual wrinen nOtice of
a report of a violation and
the opportunity wpment in
writing any 518tement or evi-.
dence to contest the report,
and pr~bing procedures
for making findings whether
a proprietor or individual
violated a provision of this
chapter and for imposing
fines for violations;

with the provisions of this

.chapter. Tht unountofafine
fOr a violation of 3794.02
(A) and (B) shall not be less
than one hundred dollars and
the maximum for a violation
shall be twenty five hundred
dollars. The unount of a fine
for a violation of 3794.02
(D) shall be up to a maximum of one hundred dollars
per violation. Each day of
a violation shall constitute
a sepcr111e violation. The
schedule of fines .that apply
to a proprietor shall be progressive based on the number of prior violations by the
proprietor. Violations which
occurred more than two
years prior to a subseq~t
violation shall not be considered if there hu been no
finding of a violation in the
intervening rime period. The
fine schedule shall set forth
specific factors that may be
considered to decrea.'IC or
•- .waive the amount of a fine
that otherwise would apply.
Fines shall be doubled for
intentional violations;

(D) Establioh a System for

receiving reports of viola, lions of the provisions o(this
chapter from any member of
the public, incloding, but not
limited to, by mail and one
or' more e-mail addresses
and toll free telephone numbers exclusively for such
purpose. A person shall not
be required to disclose his or
.her identity in order-to report
a violation;
(E) Inform proprietors of
public places and places of
employment of the requirements of this chapter and
how to comply with its provisions, including, but notli"litod to,· by providing printed
and other materials and a toll

(C) Promulgate rules in accordance with Chapter 119
of the Revised Code to

free telephone nmnber and
e-mail address exclusively
for such purposes; and
' (F) Design and implement •
program to educate lhe public regarding the provisions
of this chapter, incloding, but
not limited to, throQgh lhe
establishment of an internet
websi~ and hOw a violation
may be reported.

3.,...,.. s.-. Fr.

la-

"-AtrF1111d.
There is hereby created in
the stale llasury the mnolce
free indoor air fund. All fines
colleCted pursuant to this
chapter and any .grant, contribution, or other moneys
rooeived by the depanment
of bealth for the pwposes of
this chapter shall be credited
ro the smoke free indoor air
fund and used solely for the
purposes of this chapter.

3794;09 bflirc!e..e.t:; · alties.
(A) Upon -the receipt of a
first report that a proprietor ·
of a public place or place of
employment or an individual
has violated any provision of

this chapter, lhe dopanment
ofheahh·or its designee shall
investiBW ibe 1eport ond, if
it concludes that there wu
· a violation, i.- a warnitlg
~ to 'lhe proprietor or individual.
(B) Upon a noport of a oecood or subsequent violation of any provision &lt;&gt;f this
c1u1p1er by a proprietor of a
public place or ·Place of employment or an individual,
lhe depanment or h&lt;ialth or
its designee shall investigate
the noport. If lhe diRIC!Dr of
health or ditector's designee
concludes, based on all of
the infortnation befOre him
or her, that there wu a violalion, be or sbe 11hall impose a
civil fine upon the proprietor
or individual in accordance
with lhe schedule of fines
""!Uirod to be promulpted
under section 3794.07 of this
chapter.

sovemed by the ]II'Ovisnw
ofaeelion 119.12 of theRevioed&lt;:ode.
(D) The -dlrector of heal1h
moy institute an action in lhe

·court ofllOIIUIIOil pleas 'leeking an&lt;&gt;rder in equily against
a pmprielor or individual
that hu repeatedly violated
the provisions of this chap""or fails to comply with its
provianw.

Middleport • Pomeroy;·Ohio

Contractor requests extension on water plant constructiorj:

SPORTS

'Sie.,.8, .

• Soulhem m&lt;Mng on.

RACINE Downing
Construotion, the primaiy
oontmctor on the .new Racine
water treannellt plant, has
requested .a !time extension of
221 days on 'the plant's oonstruction which had been due
to be ootnpleted in late

If any provision of this chapter or the llf!Plication ~f
to any person or circumstances •hall be held invalid
by a court, that invalidity
shall not affect the other provis'- of this chapter that
can be given effect without
the invalid provision 0.. application, and to this end the
provisions ofthis chapter are
declared to be severable.

Derember.
Downing
Construction
requested the extension due to
changes tp the design, material and equipment delays and
other assorted problems.
Racine Village Council
recently.received a letter oonceming this issue from the village's engiJ:I!lCrin$ finn.Strand
Assol' 1ates whtch aJZreed
Dow. ~ttg would be entitled to
an approximate 42 day extension.
After discussing the matter

(C) Any proprietor or indi-

vidual against whom a finding of a violation is made wider this chapter may appeal
the finding to the Franlclin
. County Couit of Common
Pleas'. Such appeal shall be

"

BY BEnt Ss 1en

BSERGENT~NELCOM

OBITUARIES

with 'the oontractor, representatives from Strand and
Associates and its sOlicitor,
council .approved the draft of a
letter to Downing outlining
the foDowilig offers:
\{'• A revised substantial
oompletion date of Jan. 31,
2007, will be established for
the project. As of this date, the
waler treatment plant shall be
capable of producing filtered,
unsoftencd. potable water to
the distribution system.
• By Feb. 28; 2007, the
water lreatment plant shall be
capable of producing filtered,
softened, potable waler to the
distribution system,
• Idelitified punch list items
shall be compkited by March

existing water treabnent plant
following the current completion date of Dec. 28, 2006, any
additional costs to the village
for removal of unsuitable soil
that has already J:ieen removed
and the additional co5t! for
increasing the road radius
frOm 20 feet to 50 feet will the
be responsibility of Downing
Construction Company.
• Costs inour=l by the vii!age for grant administration,
engineering, 3nd resident project services following the
current completion date of
Dec. 28, 2006, will be the
responsibility of Downing
Construction Company.
Before press time, no woro
was heard whether the offer
3l,W07.
was accepted.
• Costs incwred by the vilIn other recent Racine
lage associated with erner- Village Council business:
gency maintenance Qf the
Mayor ). Scott Hill

TRADmONS OLD ·AND NEW

Page AS

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE OF OffiO

" Ronald StoUt
• Alby BJeWer 'Donnan
• Jordan Isaiah Runyon

I, Monty Lobb, Assistant Secretary of State, do htrreby certifY the foregoing constitutes the full text of
the following:

•

Su~ of sectarian

violence leaves nearly
1OQ &lt;teact in Iraqi town
n6rth ·Of the capital.

SeePtgeA2

• Shawnee State
UniveJSity trustees

endorse 'Ohio.Core'
proposal. See Page A3
• Refereeing lessons
ease stress for Ohio

In testimony thereof, I have hemmto subscribed my name at Columbus, OH this 2nd day of October,
2006.
.

soldieJS in Iraq.
See Page A6
MontyLobb (
Assistant Secretary of State

WEAmER

'

...,..on ....

A6

INDEX ·
a Si!cnoNS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classitieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby .

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
•

Weather

..B Section ·
A6

t?J aoo6 Ohio van.,. Publlshlns Co.

High schoOl homecomings are
all about tradition - and
memories. Some
Homecoming traditions halle
been around fOr years, like
crowning a queen and holding ·
a "spirit week" at scl'lool.
Others are newer. Current
Eastern High Scliool students
and alumni er1oyed a numoor
of traditions at·Friday night's
homecomill! game against
Miller. Each class built a float
for the half-time homeconiill!
parade. This float, built by the
juniOr Class, used the theme,
·Roast the Falcons, • and
included a roaring campfire. A
newer tradltioO, the Eastern
Classic Band, draws more
attention - 'and niore alumni
members - each year. Music
DireCtor Cns Kuhn ('76) said
25 band members returned to
the field for this growing annual tradition, including Tara
Woods Gates ('87) of Logan,
pictured here, and Heath
Proffitt ('98) of CIEM!Iand,
who made their first appear·
ances with the alumni band
on Friday evening. Eastern will
celebrate Its 50th annual
homecoming in 2007, and
alumni who participated In the
first Eastem homecoming are
asked to contact the high
school to share infOrmation.
-

J. -

-·

BaUot Issues 4 and ~- .
create ·smokescreen?

Students spruk out as _
Rio revises programs :
BY Jov KOCMOUD
president of the university,
JKOCMOUOOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM said the programs were cut
because each of them had.
RIO .GRANDE The seen fewer than five grad,!!-:
University
of
Rio ates per year over the I~
Grande/Rio
· Grande five years.
·
He assured students that_
Community College .will no
longer accept new majors in there will be no cuts to the
English, Fine Ans, Theatre, staff. and their degrees ~f
or History programs.
not lose any value.
: :
"We have an outstandillg
Although' students currently enrolled in the pro- English faculty, and want 10
grams will be able to finish see more students expose!!
their degrees without inter- to them," said Sojka "I''m
ruption and win remain confident that the faculty
accredtted, they wtll be the will be able to revise tf!e
la~t of their kind. ·
, current program to be m~
"Some of us are not into attractive to students. in tim
science or math, this is a future."
·· passionate major," said
He explained that proKayla Whitman, an English grams must constantly be
major. "It's what we care· revised in order to keep
about. Writing is Ihe only Rio 's students competiti¥e
thing I could ever Ihink of in the global economy. He
doing, whether I'm success- said that if the institution
ful or not. Now we're taking still used the same courseS
that opponunity away from as ii did centuries ago whefl
someone else.,

Dr. Greg Sojka, interim

('85)/.,._

,.
(

•

Officer Steve , Williams
resigned his part time positiOO
due · to personal reasoi$
beyond his control.
'.
Allen Thcker, president l&gt;f
the Racine Baseball Youth .
League recently reported ~
money is in place to comp~
the baseball/softball dugout
project. He i"formed the Hifl
if the village would want the
blocks to match the bl&lt;ds
·being used on the ~
project that the cost for tljal
block would be about a $1.10
more per block. The total
would be around $700 to $7SO
to purchase the split f~
blocks. Council voted to pur~
chase the matching split face
block by paying the 'diffe&amp;;ence.
~ .. .
Council set trick-or-IJ$t
for 6-7 p.m. on Thursday,~
29.·

BY BE111 SERGENT
clean indoor atr ordiBSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM nances.
However, Issue 4 sup-POMEROY
On porters C&lt;J.ll it a smoking
Election Day, Ohio voters ban that looks to ban
will be faced with tw&lt;i sep- smoking in what they call,
arate issues that deal with "90 percent of the busismoking bans in public nesses in Ohio, includin:g
places and though on the everywhere children aild
surface they may seem families are likely to be."
similar, their critics are Issue 4 provides what supquick to point out .the difporters call "exceptions ·
ferenoes.
Differences aside, even for places where there are
if both issues pass, Issue 4, no · minor children . or
also known as Smoke Less where a total ban would
Ohio, would override Issue threaten the health of the
5,
also
known
as busin·ess ." Issue 4 claims
SmokeFree Ohio, because bars a[e the main excepIssue 4 amends the state tion as are "bowling
Constitution. According to alleys, bingo locations and
separate,
Issue 4 critics amendment completely
would include ove1turning enclosed areas in restau-.
smoke-free laws in 21 rants."
cities across Ohio includIn addition to overturning Columbus and making ing smoke-free laws in 21
it unconstitutional for lawPINse see ....... AS
makers to enact future

INsiDE

I. The sections oflaw subject to the referendum on Amended Substitute Senate Bill 7 of the 126th
General Assembly proposed by petition and filed with the secretaty of state;
.
2. The full text of three oonstit.1tional amendments proposed by petition for the November, 2006
General Election and filed with the secretaiy of state;
3. The full text of the initiated statute proposed by Petition for the November, 2006 General Election
and filed with the secretary of state;
.
.
4. The ballot language certified by the Ohio Ballot Board for the five preocding proposals;
5. The official explanations and arguments submitted to the secretary of state by proponents ·and opponents of the five preoeding proposals.

received the state stamped
drawings for the Star Mill
Parle. restrooms projeCts from
Breach Engineering. The permit fees and drawings cost
around $3,!XXl.
Plrler Construction from
Tuppers Plains has been
awarded the contract for the
Elm Street Sidewalk Project
in the amount of $55,000. The
village paid $22,500 for the
village match which was a
requirement of the grant. The
match was based upon the
state estimate of$ I 20,000 for
·this work ... The village should
receive a refund · from the
State for the match overpayment 111ade.
Hill appointed Racine
Auxiliary Police Officer
Kevin Dugan to work 30
hours per pay period with a 90
day probationary · period.

'

.. ..

PINse seello. AS ;

,•

�'

.The Daily Sentinel
.,

NATION
•
..

Surge of sectarian violen«
.leaves nearly 100 dead in lNq_i
town north of the capital

PageA2

WoRLD
.
I

•

I

.
~

Tuesday, October 17, aoo6

Community.Calendar.

...',
'

BYMnJERtlE

insurgents. The base is also
SHRADER
the supply hub for all U.S.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
military operations in Iraq.
~ BAGHDAD, Iraq- Four
President Bush, meanWASH1NGTON - U.S.
days of sectarian slaughter while, telephoned Prime spy . agencies confirmed
killed at least 91 people by Minister Nouri ai-Malik:i on North Korea's nuclear test
-Monday in Salad, a town Monday to reassure him of on · Monday, even as .
'near a major U.S. air base American support as rumors Secretary
of
State
·an hour's drive north of the · swirled ihrough Baghdad Condoleeu..a Rice declared
&lt;lapital. Elsewhere, 60 Iraqis that Washington had lost that U.N. sanctions prove the ·
" died in attacks and 16 tor- patience with the Shiite world is united in opposing
tured bodies were found.
.leader during his little more Pyongyang's nuclear ambi~ The U.S. command said than four months in office. · tions.
·
-seven American troops died
Bush spokesman Tony · Such strong opposition
in fighting a ,day earlier. Snow said the president should be a warning to Iran,
That raised the U.S toll to used the 15-minute conver- too, said Rice, who is leav58 killed in the first two sation to tell al-Maliki there ing TUesday morning for an
weeks of October, a pace was no American deadline Asian trip ihat is expected to
-that if continued would for the Iraqi government to be dominated by the nuclear
make the month the worst be able to stand on its own. issue. She will visit Japan,
fot coalition forces since
Al-Maliki "said . that South Korea, China and
· L07 U.S. and 10 British sol- rumors sometimes can Russia.
diers died in January 2005. undercut confidence in the
Providing the govern_ Iraqi deaths also are run- government and · also its · ment's first definitive confir.njng at a high rate. abiliry to work effectively mation that North Korea det.According to an Associated in fighting terror," Snow onated a nuclear device one
l'ress count, 708 Iraqis have reported. "And the presi- week
ago,
National
been reported killed in war- dent said, 'Don't worry, you Intelligence Director John
related violence this month, still have our full support."' Negroponte's office said in a
.
.
i\P ........
or just over 44 a day, comAl-Maliki canceled a statement that air samples Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice talks to reporters about her upcoming trip to Asia this
•pared to a daily average of planned visit to TUrkey on collected on Wednesday
'rriore than 27 since the AP Monday. His office cited showed evidence of radioac- week as she hopes to bolster support for the United Nation's sanctions against North
began tracking deaths in inclement weather for fly- tiviry. That verified North Korea over its announced test of a nuclear bomb, at the State Department in Washington,
Monday. Rice will visit Japan. South Korea, and China. North Korea's closest ally.
April 2005.
ing.
Korea's claims.
.. A surge in sectarian
Later Monday, Ali ai"The explosion yield was
l?loodshed and jump in U.S. Dabagh,
al-Maliki's · less than a kiloton," the adopted on Saturday, aimed of mass destruction and South Korea will enforce the
C\lsualties coincide with the spokesman, told the AP that statement said, smaller than · at making life difficult for other advanced weaponry. lt U.N. resolution. Both counrun-up to the American the prime minister had many experts had expected. the North Korean govern- also would clamp down on tries have significant trade
ment and its weapons prolif- travel for North Koreans relations wlth North Korea,
·midterm elections in which asked parliamentary politiEach kiloton is equal to eration business.
involved in the weapons pro- whose economy is perpetu·the Bush administration's cal blocs to nominate repre- the force produced by 1,000
"The
Iranian
government
gram and freeze many of the ally on the verge of collapse.
handling of the Iraq war has sentatives to sit on a new tons of TNT. An intelligence
"Actions are more poweris
watching,
and
it
can
now
international assets of people
l'lecome a key issue.
committee with a mandate official said the North
·· The U.S. military has kept to disband the militias Korean device was believed see that the international or businesses connected to ful than words, and we
expect the actions will be
·a low profile in Salad, behind
the
sectarian to be roughly the equivalent community will respond to that program.
powerful," .White House
threats
from
nuclear
pro
liferAfter
the
resolution
was
·
'Where violence began killings.
of 200 tons of TNT, suggestPolitical figures close to ing 'lo analysts that it was arion," said Rice, who added unanimously passed, North spokesman Tony Snow said.
Friday with the slaying of
Many in the U.S. govern.)7 Shiite Muslim workers. al-Maliki's coalition ,gov- probably a partial failure. that She believes the Security Korea's U.N. ambassador
ment
would not be surprised
Revenge-seeking
Shiite ernment said the prime min- Experts in and out of gov- Council will begin working accused council members of
death squads then killed 74 ister was under mounting ernment had anticipated a on a sanctions resolution a "gangster-like" action that if North Korea were to
Sunnis, causing people to pressure from the United detona~on of at least several against Iran this week. "The neglects the· nuclear threat attempt a second nuclear test
sometime soon. The deciIranian government should po~ by the Uni\00 States.
flee across the Tigris River States to shut down the thousand tons. .
Rice ackltOwledged inter- sion to test is considered a '
to the nearby Sunni-domi- armed groups.
The official spoke on eon· consider ·the course thjlt it is
on."
.
·
national
concerns of •escalat- political one, and officials
oated city of Duluiyah.
Al-Dabagh was sketchy dition of anonymiry because
The
United
States,
.
North
ing
the
crisis and said she say North Korea will be
. An American spokesman on details about the com- of the sensitive situation
Korea and seven other · would address that on her monitoring action at the
did not directly respond mittee, but said it would be with Pyongyang .
are now believed to trip. Countries in the region United Nations and elsenations
.when asked if the Iraqi gov- asked to find a method for
At the State Department,
nuclear
arms. Yet North worry that the collapse of where.
have
,ernment had sought U.S. disbanding the militias, Rice said the world "has
Rice said a new test
unpredictable North Korea's ~vernrnent
-military assistance in including their absorption responded calmly and firm. Korea's
"would
further deepen the
behaviot
and
its
history
of
could
·
send
·
mlllions
of
quelling the violence.
.
into the army. .
ly" to the teSt.
isolation
of North Korea."
trading
weapons
and
comporefugees
streaming
toward
· "Coalition force units are · When pressed on how
"North . Korea cannot
A
key
clue
on the nature of
' Partnering with Iraqi police well that would work when endanger the world and then nents makes its nuclear their borders. South Koreans
and Iraqi ·army units previous attempts failed, ai- expect other nations to con- .advencements particularly .also wori'y about a conven· North Korea's nuclear deto\nvolved in operations Dabagh said "appropriate duct business as usual in worrisome to its neighbors tiona! attack by their neigh· nation - its first - came
from air samples collected
around Salad. We are also measures" would be taken arms or missile parts," Rice and the international com· bor.
"We have no desire to by the Air Force's WC-135
providing quick reaction against any political bloc said, previewing her mes· · munity.
U.S.·sponsored ratchet up conflict," Rice Constant Phoenix, a jet
The
assets to the Iraqi police and that failed to disband its sage for the Asia trip. "It
wmY· The lA and IP are in militia.
cannot destabilize the inter· United Nations resolution on · said. ''But we 'II have some designed to collect particles
Among 'the 60 Iraqis national system and then Nol'th Korea demands that discussions on precisely how and gases after a nuclear test.
the lead w1th the operations
Samples· are rushed back to
around Balad," · Lt. Col. killed outside Salad on expect to exploit elaborate Pyongyang
eliminate this will be canied out."
·christopher Garver said.
While .China has been labs in the United'States for ·
Monday was lmad al- financial networks built for nuclear weapons. But it also·
: .The two runways at the Faroon, the brother of the ·peaceful commerce."
rules out military action inspecting cargo trucks study before they lose their
air base· on the outskirts of chief prosecutor in the secShe said Iran - another against the country, as the headed for its communist radioactive properties.
Salad are among the ond trial of Saddam . government accused of run- Russians and · Chinese ally, its U.N. ambassador
The first reading last
world's busiest, launching Hussein. Gunmen burst into ning an illicit nuclear pro· demanded.
indicated its inspectors will TUesday was negative, but a
~7,500 aircraft a month, his home and shot him to gram - should pay attenIt calls on countries to not board ships to search for test on a second sample colhundreds of them bomb- death in front of his wife, tion to the .global reaction. block North Korea from suspicious equipment or lected Wednesday was posiJaden jets that support U.S. government official Ali al- Tha.t would include the U.N. .receiving equipment or material, raising questions tive, according to the intellitroops moving against Lami told the AP.
·
Security Council's sanctions materials to build weapons . about how strictly it and gence official.

BY STEVEN R. HURST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Expectant mom should heed warnings

In Celebration of Women in Business
October 16th · 20th

OMEN'S
WEEK

POMEROY Meigs
County Retired Teachers
will meet for noon luncheon
Tuesday, Oct. 17
at
Triniry Church, Second
RUTLAND -Rutland
Village Council, re-sched- and Lynn in Pomeroy. Ray
uled regular ~ession . 7 p.m., Hoellar of the Ohio
Consumer Council will
Rutland Civic Center.
speak on "Saving on our
Utility Dollars." A men's
quarter will entertain.
Reservations to 992-3214.
Guests are welcome.
RACINE - . PomeroyTuesday, Oct. 17
Racine Masonic Lodge 164,
CHESTER
- Past 7:30 p.m. at the hall .
Councilors Cluh , Chester Refreshments.
Council 323, Daughters .of
America, 7 p.m. at the
Saturday, Oct. 21
home of Ruth Smith. Opal
POMEROY - AA Bi-g
Hollon, co-hostess.
Book Study, 8 p.m. , Sacred
POMEROY - Regular Heart Church.
meeting Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting to
follow. Renewal member·
1\Jesday, Oct. 17
ship dues payable.
REEDSVILLE
Revival at the Fellowship
Wednesday, Oct. 18
Church of Nazarene in
MIDDLEPORT
Reedsville, Oct. 17-22. Rev.
Special '
meeting. Ron Roth preaching, speMiddleport Lodge, F&amp;AM, cial singing nightly. nursery
7:30 p.m. for work in provided.
entered apprentice degree.
Refreshments.
Wednesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY
PIOMEROY - Services
Middleport Literary Club, 2 7 p.m. through Oct. 22 at
p .m. at the . lPomeory the
Pinegrove
Bible
L1brary. Le$ Ord to -review Holiness
Church
"The March" by E. L. Rowlesville Road .off Route'
Doctorow. Phyllis Hackett, 325 . Rev. Victor · Nelson ,
hostess.
Chauncey, speaker, Sonny
and
Connie
Hudson,
Thursday, Oct. 19
singers. Sunday service, 6
POMEROY
The p.m. Pastor Odell Manley,
American Cancer Society 992-7276.
Meigs County Advisory
Board, annual meeting,
Thursday, Oct. 19
noon, Wild Horse Cafe,
MIDDLEPORT -Nonlunch provided, RSVP at denominational community
99Z-6626, ext. 24.
women's Bible study will
POMEROY -. AA open be held from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
discussion, 7 p.m., Sacred on Thursdays at Rejoicing
Heart Church.
Life Church. ·

Sunday, Oct. 22
ALBANY Revival
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene. S.R. 689, Albany,
Sunday, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.,
Dear Annie: My fiiend,
and Oct. 23, 24 and 25, 7
"Lois,"
is pregnant .and due in
p.m. nightly. Oct. 22-25, 7
three months. On several
p.m. Dave Canfield of occasions, I have observed her
Rush, Ky., evangelist. Rev. drinking and smoking heavily.
Lloyd Grimm, pastor.
several of her friends have
spoken to her about this, as
Wednesday, Oct. 2S
has her doctor, to no avail. We
' LANGSVILLE
have dropped the subject
Evangelist Gary Polard, because we love Lois and
Mullins, W.Va., speaking 7 can't change her behavior.
p.m. Oct. 25-27 at the
Lois told us that her husHouse
of
Healing band is fine With her drinking.
Ministries, S.R.
124, However, he recently told me
Langsville. Special singing it was OK if sbe had a beer
once in a while. This makes
nightly.
me believe he doesn't know
how much she drinks.
· I feel) have a moral obligation to speak up, but 1 don't
Wednesday, Oct. 18
want to lose the fiiendship.
MIDDLEPORT - Free Should I tell him? Should I
community dinner, chili, send an anonymouS letter? I
sandwich, dessert, begins 5 also ask myself if it will
p.m., old American Legion change the outcome and if her
Hall oti North Fourth, spon- husband would believe me.
I know Lois has yet to feel
sored by Oasis Christian
the
baby move, so it may
Fellowship.
already be too late. And if her
husband finds out, he might
Saturday, Oct. 21
leave
her, especially if the
POMEROY Hysell
baby
is
born wi"th fetal alcohol
Run Community Church, 6
syndrome or worse, and I
p.m. cookout and games for don't
want to be the cause of
the kids. Call 992-5275 or her marriage ending. Plea.~
992-7442 for more informa· help me decide what to do. lion.
'
Speak Up or Shut Up
Dear Speak Up: Lois
should have been able 'to feel
the baby move at about 20
weeks, but we assume she is
Saturday, Oct. 21
getting regular checkups and
LONG BOTTOM
Eileen Bahr will observe her doctor would have noticed
something amiss. Even if
her 81 sr birthday on Hubby knows the extent of
Saturday, Oct. 21. Cards her drinkil)g, it won't protect
may be sent to her at 37837 the baby if Lois refuses to
Green Up Lane, Long give up her destructive habits.
Bottom: Ohio 45743.
Is it possible she doeSn't rt:ally

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Other events

Birthdays

Local businesses donate
The Earl Neff Ped Iatrlc
Fund at Holzer Medical
Center continues to be
supported enthusiastically by area businesses and organizations..
The Pediatric Fund, in
existence for nearly
30 years, has sup.
plied needed toys,
equipment and enter·
tainment to the thou·
sands of pediatric
patients Who have
received care on
Holzer Medical
Center's Pediatric
Unit. October spon·
sors included Irvin's
Glass, represented in
the picture by Mike
Brumfield, and Elks
Lodge #107, repre·
sented in the photo by
Bill McCulty, The
entire staff of Holzer
Medical Center joins
in expressing their
gratitude, along with
the.young children and
their families, tor
these generous contributions to the Earl
Neff Fund. Anyone who
would like more infor·
mation or is interested
in making a donation
may contact the Holzer ·
Foundation at (7 40)
446·5217.

To nave l'our

. THE WOMEN
OF
.
MEIGS COUNTY
.

Business Included ...

~

This special section, publishing October 20th, is an excellent opportunity
for local busine-sswomen ·to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women who own their own business, but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.

~oint ~leiuiant l\.egi~ter

(304) &amp;75-1333

(Each ad will have rhe same /a)&gt;oU/10 give everyone equal opponunily /lJ rei/ rheir srorv.)

~allipoh~

Jlatlp Qrribune

\

Contact your Daily Sentinel .
Representative Today!

(740) 446-2342
The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

Dave Harris ·
.740-992-2155 Ext. 15

..

Brenda Davis
740-992-2155 Ext 16

.

.

.

Local resident wins championship
Silversmiths buckle is
awarded for first; a
WeatherBeeta "Rug Sac"
containing three unique
blankets for second; thirdplace finishers receive . ·a
pair of Justin Boots; and
Professional's
Choice
Accessories for fourth. The
American Quarter Horse
Journal award a grooming
bag to fifth-place. Tex Tan
saddles, sponsored liy
Markel
Insurance, a~
awarded to novice · youth,
youth, novice amateur and
amateur all-around high
point winners at each
Experience.
For more information cin
AQHA
Regional
Experiences,
visit
www.aqha.com.

Shawnee State University trustees
endorse 'Ohio Core' proposal
I!WIN ;, (d i\', ' , ~. ~ ! lV I(!
!

/'

'

•·

·•

'

•

1

:r:

Birthday celebration

presents.

want to be a mother? Mention up. Give your stepchildren the
that her behavior indicates she opportunity to become closer,
is ambivalent at best, and see and at the very least, you will
if that turns on any lights. for have made your husband
her.
happy and established a relaDear Annie: I'm tired .of tionship with. those grandchilfeeling guilty because I don't dre
·
lik
n.
. e my stepchildren or step.Dear Annie: You printed a
grandchildren.
letter from a woman whose
When J remarrifid, my 80-year-old husband made .a
daughter and I were ecstatic pass at a fiiend. Another readabout becoming a blended
family, but it soon became er said it was an early sign Qf
apparent l was just Dad's wife dementia.
and they wanted nothing to do
My father's 86-year-old
w1th me or their stepsister. best fiiend propositioned me
After continually being for- when his wife was out . of
gotten at Christmas, birthdays town. I !et him know he was
and. other special occasions J out of line, and I can assure
gave up.
' you the "disease" went away.
Until recently, the only ·He wasn't senile. He was a
time my stepchildren · would horny old coot. Any behavior
call · or visit wa~ when they that can be conttolled in front
needed money. Now, after all · of the wife is not a disease. ...:..
these years, they· suddenly Virginia
.
. ·
want a relationship. They
Dear Virginia: This is less
want me to be "Grandma" to · about control than about
the~ children. They still have impaired judgment and the
no mterest m thelf steps1ster, loosening of inhibitions,
however.
. .
Some people with dementia
My husband 1s d1sabled, don't realize how inappropl'iand I work long hours. I come ate their behavior is unless
home after work exhausted you point it out (and even
and don t have the energy to then) Of course your "horny
be "Grandma" and take care
· ..
· '
·
of ftandch'ldre
H
old
coot
may
have
a
different
1 n. owever, problem.
my usband wants the fanu ly
A · • u..:•~- · .:-.
to be closer. I'm standing firm
nnre s '~'U&lt;M~~Jx IS w. ,...,,.
and it's causing a strain on our by Ktlthy M11fheU ~Morey
marriage. What should I do? Sugar, longtime editors of the
- Stressed Out in Oregon Ann J_mukrs _ col~m~~~; ~ ·
Dear Stressed Out: You e·~il Y?"' questions t.o
don't have to be a haby sitter, .anme~mailbox@.c?mctiS.t.trel,
but this is yeur husband's fam- or wrrte t.o: Amue s M~
ily, and even if you dislike P.O. Box 118190, Chicago,
them, try to be flexible. lL 60611. '!~find .out mo..e
Perhaps the grandchildren about Anme s Mailbox, and
could visit on the weekends. read features by other
Some kids have a han! time Creat(Jrs Syndicate writers
accepting the new wife and and cartoonists, visit the
sibliligs, but when grnndchil· Crea/Drs Syndicate Web page
dren come along, they soften at www.CMJt.ors.com.

AMARILLO, Texas - more people to AQHA and
Thomas W. · Karr of invite previous exhibitors
Pomeroy
claimed
a back to the Association.
Reserve American Quarter
Each of the I 0 North
Horse Association Regional American regions hosts a
Experience Championship Regional
Experiel)ce.
title in the amateur select AQHA Corporate Partners
·western pleasure class with Farnam, Ford, Fort Dodge
"Valentine Version." an Animal Health, John Deere
American Quarter Horse, and The American Qua1ter
during the ·Region Four ~orse Journal are presentExperience, held recently • mg . sponsors of the
in Columbus.
Regional Experiences. Joint
Created to encourage sponsors are Nulrena, Exiss
participation
from Trailers,
WeatherBeeta,
exhibitors at all levels of Montana Silversmiths, Tex
abiliry in an event branded Tan and Markel Insurance.
Exhibitors competing in
to the , American Quarter
Horse lifestyle, Regional . the show portion of the
Experiences blend competi- Experience receive awards
tion, education and trade based on their placing. In
show commerce, as well as each region, a customfree test rides, .to introduce designed
Montana

POMEROY Walker
Mayer, son of Mike and Julie
Mayer, observed his second
birthday at a shared celebration with his great-grandfather, Roscoe Fife.
· The occasion was celebrated with a party carrying
out an Elmo theme at Lake
Snowden. Preparing the
cakes was Walker's paternal
grea.t-grandmother Pauline
Mayer. Attendin g besides
Walker's parents were Man
Wandling, Terri ,Fife, Steve
Fife, Roscoe and Betty Fife.
Don and Cheryl Roush, Don
and Linda Mayer. Tim, Beth.
Raymond and Melinda
Lawson , Pauline Mayer,
Walker Mayer
Donna Carr, Marie Hauck,
Sending gifts were Mike,
Bill Matlack, Lesley and Amv, Shaina. Jaron, Amanda
Mason Michigan, Wendy, and- Danielle Danielson.
Sieanna and McKenzie Nikki , Travis Butcher and
Ohlinger, Joy Clark. Mony. Jon , II~ Darnell , Conn ie
Shannon, Clayton , Nikita Chapm an, Linda Holley and
and Ashley Wood. Brian and Susan McCombs, George
Paula Harri&gt;, Carolyn,· and Cind a Harri s. Dave.
and
Michael . Weston and Kel sey Fife, and
Rac hel
Kesterson .
'
Rose Fife..

PORTSMOUTH - The , the ninth grade in the number of math, sc1ence
Shawnee State University 2007·2008 school year in and technology
unit.s
Board of Trustees has rec- any public or private required for graduation.
ommended
the
Ohio school will be subject to The legi slation wo1.1ld al&amp;t&gt;
Leg•sl;~ture approve the · the new minimum curricu- require study of a foreign
"Ohio Core" proposal lum, "which increases the language.
which would require high
school students tb complete a more rigorous curriculum, with special
emphasis on science, math,
and technology in order to
graduate from high school.
Noting that "Ohio ... is
facing a critical talent gap
in science, technology,
engineering and mathemat- ~ Pictures will run:
ics," the Trustees , during f~
Monday,
·
their October meeting held
October30
in the Selby Board Room ~
of the Clark Memorial
Library, approved a resolu- ~ Deadline,for Entry:
Monday,
tion urging passage of leg- ~
islation (SB 31l/HB 565) ~
October23
contail)ing" the Ohio Core
proposal.
"I commend the Tru s tee ~
for taking a stand on
behalf of high school students in Ohio," said
Shawnee State University ~
Kylic Billings
President
Rita
Rice .~1
Morris. "By achieving a
&amp;
higher level of competen- ~ ~
cy, high school graduates ~
·Mail or Drof:) off at The Daily Sentinel
will be better equipped for
P.O. Box 729 , Pom eroy, Ohio 45769
the challenges of tile workplace and better prepared
Child's Name: _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _---"=.\...
to make the most of a uni From:_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __
versity education like that
Your Name:_ _ _ _....:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
offered at Shawnee State."
The legi slation pre scribes a new minimum
Address: . . . : . . . · · - - - - - - - - - - - - high school curri culum,
called the "Ohio Core,"
Phone: -- - - - - - - - - - - - first appl yin g to the Cla., s
Ads must be pre-paid
of 20 II . Students entering

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ·
In The Sentinel
·

Submitted photo

·The .Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 17,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBox ·

Public meetings

I

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Governor asks
Ohio Tumpike to
hold line on tolls
BEREA. (AP) - Lower
truck tolls on the Ohio
Turnpike ha:ve sharply
teduced truck traffic and
improved safety on parailel
highways, Gov. Bob Taft's
top budget official said
Monday in appealing to the ·
turnpike commission to avoid
a toll hike.
Proposed toll increases.
could undem1ine improved
safety on highways near the
turnpike corridor · across
northern Ohio, said Tim
Keen. director of the Ohio
Office , of Budget and
Management.
.. Based on the results that
we have seen over the last 21
months, Governor Taft
believes that the turnpike
commission should not take
any action that would jeopardi ze continued improvements
in safety along . northern
Ohio's roadways."' Keen said.

~PuMPKIN PATCH
•

~

•

Qn\y

;i $s·.oo

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Democrats should build on Bush's drng plan, not wreck it

Despite abundant evidence
of its success,
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Democrats are still on the
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
warpath against President
www.mydailysentinel.com
Bush's 2004 Medicare prescription-drug plan - and
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
they threaten to undermine
future success if ·they take
Jim Freeland
control of Congress.
Publisher
At an Oct. 4 campaign
event in Sunrise, Fla.,
House Minority Leader
Charlene Hoeflich
·
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
General Manager-News Editor
declared, "This ·is a bill
borne of corruption at the
expense
of America's
seniors, and we can do
Congress shall make no law respecting an
something about it."
establishrn_ent of religion, or prohibiting the
She promised that one of
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of the top priorities of a
Congress
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- Democratic
would be to authorize the
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the federal
government to
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
directly negotiate with drug
companies to lower their
-The. First Amendme'lt to thil U.S. Constitution prices instead of relying on
private insurance companies.
The savings, she said,
..
would be used to close the
"doughnut hole," the gap
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 17, the 290th day of 2006. There
between the first $2,250 in
are 75 days left in the year.
a
beneficiary's annual drug
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 17, 1777, British forces under Gen. John expenditures, of which the
Burgoyne surrendered to American troops in Saratoga, government pays 75 percent
of the cost, and $5,100,
N.Y., in a turning. point of the Revolutionary War.
above which it pays I 00
·On this date: .
In 1919, the Radio Corporation of America was char- percent.
To save money, Congress
tered.
.
.·
required
seniors to cover
In 1931, mobster AI Capone w'as convicted of income tax
evasion (sentenced to II years in prison, Capone was the $2,850 hole themselves,
either by buying insurance
released in 1939.)
In 1933, Albert Einstein arrived in the United States as a or paying out of their own
pockets
which
refugee from Nazi Germany.
.
In 1941, the U.S. destroyer Kearny was torpedoed by a Democrats denounced at the
German submarine off the coast of Iceland; II people died. time even as they assailed
In 1945, Col. . Juan Peron, the future president of the
administration • for
Argentina, was released from prison after protests by trade underestimating the total
unionists, ending a c1isis that began with his forced resig- cost of program.
nation from his government posts and his arrest.
According
to
Mark
In 1956, the all-star movie "Around the World in 80 McClellan, who is leaving
Days," produced by Michael Todd, had its world premiere this week . as head of the
in New York.
Centers for Medicare and
In· 1973, Arab oil-producing nations announced they Medicaid Services, compewould begin cutting back oil exports 'to Western nations tition among private insurand Japan; the result. was a total embargo that lasted until ance companies and their
March 1974.
negotiations with drug comIn 1979, Mother Teresa of India was awarded the Nobel
panies have lowered the
Peace Prize.
estimated 10-year cost of
In 1989, an earthquake measuring 7 .I on the Richter
scale struck northern California, killing 67 people and the program by near! y 20
percent, to $516 billion, and
causing $7 billion in damage.
·
One year ago: A·two-man Chinese space crew landed in may reduce it by another I 0
China's northern grasslands after five days in orbit. percept next year.
That was just one of the
Japanese' Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi enraged China
successes
he cited at a
and South Korea by visiting Tokyo's Yasukuni war shrine.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Marsha Hunt is 89. Actor reporters' breakfast sponTom Poston is 85. Actress Beverly Garland is 80. Actress · sored by the Christian
Julie Adams is 80. Daredevil Eve) Knievel is 68. Country.
singer Earl Thomas Conley is 65. Singer Jim Seals (Seals
&amp; Crofts) is 64. Singer Gary Puckett is 64. Actor Michael
McKean is 59. Actress Margot Kidder is 58. Actor George
Wendt is 58. Actor Sam Bottoms is 51. Astronaut Mae
Jemison is 50. Country singer Alan Jackson is 48. Mo'l(ie
director Rob Marshall is 46. Animator Mike Judge is 44.
Actor-comedian Norm Macdonald is 43. Singer Rene' Dif ·
is 39. Reggae singer Ziggy Marley is 38. Singer Chris
Since December, I've
Kirkpatrick ('N Sync) is 35. Rapper Eminem is 34. Singer been impressed with the
Wyclef Jean is 34. Actress S_haron Leal is 34. Rock musipassion and eloquence by
cian Sergio Andmde is 29.
.
which the Republican chairThought for Today: ''The philosophies of one age have
man of the Senate Judiciary
become the absurdities of the next, and the foolishness of
Committee,
Arlen Specter,
yesterday has become the wisdom of. tomorrow." - Sir
William Osler, Canadian physician and educator (1849. has so outspokenly opposed
the revoking of the basic
1919).
haqeas-corpus rights _of
detainees to petition our
courts on their status and
conditions of confinement.
But then, last month, he
voted
for the Military
Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less
Jhan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be Commissions Act of 2006,
·signed, and include address and telephone number. No which
removes
those
unsigned letter.! will be published. Letters should be in habeas petition rights,
good taste, addres.1ing·issues, not personalities. Letters of despite whatever abuses _are
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept-. committed . against these
e~ for publication.
prisoners.
The first Specter said
indignantly, while this bill
was being supported by the
administration, "It would
(USPS 213-960)
allow legal counsel and a
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
day in court to only those
Co.
detainees selected by the
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
Pentagon for prosecution.
Our main concem in all stories 1s to
through Friday, ~ 11 Court Street,
Other
suspects could be
be accurate. If you know of an error PomerOy, Ohio.
Second-class
held indefinitely without a
, in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
hearing (possibly for the
992·2156.
.Member: The Associated Press and
rest
of their lives)." ·
t11e Ohio Newspaper Associatio,n.
Postmaster: Send address correc- ·
We hold at least 14,000 of
Our main number Ia
tions to The Dafly Sentinel, 111 Court
these
other suspects around
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy; Ohio 45769. ·
the world, many of whom
Department extanaicins are:
will never be charged or
Subscrip!ion Rates
tried
- not counting . an
By carrier or motor·route
untold number of other prisNews
On a month
•t 0.27
oners deprived of habeas
EdHor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, EKI. 12
'123.24
One year
Dally
50'
who will be held under
Reporter: Brian Reed , EJCt. 14
Senior
Chlzen
rates
other provisions of this new
Reporter: Beth Sergenl, Exl. 13
'9.24
Ona month
law. Therefore, a Sept. 24
One year
'1 03.90
affirmation of our rule of
Advertising
s.-.s shotJd remit " """""""
law by the first Specter was
direct to the Daly Sentinel. No sub:outside Sales: Dave Harris , Ext 15
all
the more .vital as we try
scription by mail permitted in areas
:outside Sales: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16 where home carrier service is availto convince the world of the
:ctassJCirc.: Judy Clark. E•t 1o
able .
values we fight for:
"If the courts are not open
Mall Subscription
to
decide constitutional
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
issues,"
he said, " how is
Charlene Hoelloch , EKI. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
constitutionality to be test26 Weeks
'64.20

TODAY IN HISTORY

LETT.E RS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

.

E-mail:
news@mydallysentinel.com

Web:

wWw mydailysent1nel .com
__

52 Weeks

Obituaries

Tuesday, October 17,2006

The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, October 17,2006

'127.11

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

_ _ _ _ _ __

__J

ed ?"
.

How indeed? The very
next day, at the National
Press Cluh ' in Washington,
the senator. speaking further of our rule of law. made

Molbi

KaiCIIa:le

· Science Monitor, as well as
in a subsequent interview.
Others include the fact that
the average prescription
drug-insurance premium
paid by seniors is $27 per
month, not $34, as originally estimated.
And polls show consistently that 75 percent to 85
percent of Participants in
. the program are happy with
it.
J.D.
Power
and
Associates recently gave the
program,
known
· as
· Medicare Part D, a 75 percent approval rating. A
forthcoming AARP study
shows that only II percent
of seniors disapprove.
Democrats predicted that
few private insurance plans
would participate in the
program.
Then,
when
dozens
.of
companies
offered competing plans,
they charged that the prograin was "chaotic" and
that seniors were so confused that few would sign
up.
In fact, 16 million seniors
who previously lacked drug
coverage did sign up.
According to the CMS, 90
percent of all the nation's
43 million Medicare beneficiaries now have coverage.
Their average savings for
drug purchases is , $1 ,200 a
year. About 9 million lowincome seniors pay nothing .
for their drugs.
McClellan pointed out
that the origimil Democratic
plan for eliminating the
doughnut hole would have
cost $1 trillion. As the program
has
developed,
according to America's
Health Insurance Plans, the
health insurance lobby, 15
percent to 25 percent of
seniors have been able to
find plans that cover .all
· their drug outlays, thus

closing the hole.
come, it also could build on
If Democrats do take over McClellan's record of tryeither the House or Senate, ing to move the nation
or both, they should strive toward a results-based payto improve on the Medicare ment system for health care,
reform record set by not the current serviceMcClellan and the Bush based system.
administration
not
The lame-duck session
undennine it with top-heavy will consider bills to pregovernment regulation.
vent cuts in reimbursements
Rep, Henry Waxman, D- .for physicians who treat
Calif., one of the leading Medicare beneficiaries. It
critics of Bush 's [JOiicy should tie pay increases to
who's slated to be chamnan requirements that doctors
of the Government Reform . keep . records on their
Committee If . Democrats patients' health progress.
take over, smd Ill a January · McClellan has· introduced
_radio address, ·:we need to a system whereby hospitals
go _back to bastes. Put pre- report on treatment outscnptiOn-~g covera~e m comes, with the result~
reg~lar ~edtcare. Make the posted online for patients to
chmce s1mple . Make the see. There's a pilot program
benefit und~rstandable. Use for physicians, but he said
the purc~as~ng power of all pay-for-results should be
of Am~nca s semors to get the rule across-the-board. '
low ,pnces and better coverHe. also has introduced an
age.
.
incomes-based
premium
. A . popu~ar De~ocrallc schedule for · part of the
1dea 1s to_ have Med1care set Medicare system to begin
pnces fm dru?s the way the coping with its "unsustainVeterans Affa1r~ does for 1ts able" long"term cost. It's an
partiCipants. Its true that alternative
to
straight
VA ~rugs cost about half the means-testin of Medicare
•
Medtcare average, but the
.
. g
VA
r
1 b 1 h If wh1ch 1s anathema to
· supp 1es on y a ou a
Democrats.
of the drugs m&lt;?st commonJohn ·Rother, national polly used by semors, accord- .
d' t
f th AARP
Icy uec or 0
e .
'
ing to McClellan.
About 35 percent of VA told m: that McClellan
patients also participate in rates _as ..o~e of the aU-t1me
Medicare plans to obtain best admm1strators the pr~­
wider choices, and the VA gram has ever had. He s
patients are required to see gmded It through . a very
only VA doctors and use VA am~111uus set of retorms ....
hospitals and VA pharma- He s a very creat1ve guy
cies.
and has maintained bipartiAccording to McClellan, san support for most of h1s
"our beneficiaries have agenda. He gets very htgh
actively told us by their marks."
.
choices that they ·do not
Congress should see to 11
want a restricted network that the' reform agenda
approach to delivery of advances and that doctors,
their health care. They want health plans, d~g compamuch more access to physi- n~es and . hospitals have
·cians, to neighborhood mcenll~es to compete on
pharmacies, · to
other the bas1s of the1r ab1hty to
providers-and drugs."
keep people healthy - not
Congress certainly could JUSt treat s1ck people at govimprove Medicare. It could ernment-set prices. If they
ensure that about 3 million do take control, Democrats
low:income senjors who . need to reform not only
currently lack drug cover- health care but their own
age get it and apply Part D thinking.
savings to close the dough(Morton Kondracke is
nut hole.
executive editor of Roll
In Congress' lame-duck Call, the "newspaper of
session, and. in years to Capitol Hill.)

The two Arlen Specters
Nat
Hentoff

a statement that should be
repeated in every American
classroom
on
civics.
Protesting the abandonment
of habeas corpus, he said:
"(Habeas corpus) has
beeri the way traditionally
of determining whether the
detention is lawful. It's been
around for a long time,
since the Great Writ (in the
Magna Carta in 1215). And
· it is emblazoned in the
Constitution specifically
that it can be suspended
only in case of (rebellion)
or invasion. I'm not going
to support a bill that's blatantly unconstitutional."
Seeing
and
hearing
Specter say that on television made me. feel like
cheering, and I did. Also
approving of Specter's
reminder of this centuriesold protection of the individual - any individual,
citizen or not, in our custody was columnist
David Sarasohn of the daily
Oregonian, who told his
readers: "There's a 1297
edition of the Magna Carta
in the National Archives.
There's even a replica,
printed in gold, right in the
middle of the Capitol ...
Since 65 senator~ including
the
second
Specter - voted for the
Military Commis&gt;io ns Act
of 2006, revoking habeas
rights for our detainees, I
suppose it Wouldn' t have
mattered if that Magna
Carta rep! ica had been

placed right smack in the was a Republican in that
. middle of the Senate cham- overwhelmingly
ber as they voted.
Democratic city - told me
But why did Specter about his previous days in
Hquse
of
after harking back to the · the
crucial reductions of .the Representatives.
arbitrary powers ot King
A tenacious civil libertariJohn at Runnymede in 1215 an who never abandoned
- actually vote for the bill his principles, Lindsay,
that· gives that British while a Congressman, was
monarch a posthumous vic- one of the very few memtory?
bers to oppose the abuses of
In an Oct. I Washington the Fourth Amendment by
Post editorial, "Profiles in the then-Attorney General
Cowardice," there is a Robert Kennedy, who had
report on why Specter - . signed .a number of wiretap
after his own amendment to orders - , some of them
preserve habeas failed on a pushed ' 'f or by J. Edgar
5 1-to-48 vote - then put . Hoover. including the one
his principles aside.
on Martin Luther King Jr.
"(First) when his amend- (See Taylor Branch's book
ment failed ... the senator "At Canaan's Edge,'' pubsaid he would vote against lished by Simon and
the bill, calling it (revoking Schuster, 2006.)
habeas) ·patently unconstiLindsay told me that
tutional on its face.' Then when he tried to get colhe voted FOR it. The bill, leagues to move on the
he then explained, had good .floor against unconstitupoints, and the court~ 'will tional abu ses (including
clean it up."'
Hoover's practices), he was
With the midterm elec- often brushed off by memtions looming. only one bers on both sides of the
Republican voted against aisle, saying, "Let the
the bill - the irrepressibly courts decide!"
independent
Lim:oln
I did not think that
Chafee of Rhode Island, Specter would be in th,at
recently saved from losing a company. I'll never know
primary contest by the · how niany other members
Republican
National of the House and Senate
Committee to try to keep voted for the upending of
control &lt;if the Senate . the rule of law in the
Republican Sen. Olympia Military Commissions Act
Snowe of Maine sat out the of 2006 by letting the
vote, maybe inMead visiting Supreme Court decide .
the 1297 edition of the ·After all, it's only the
Magna Carta at -the National Constitution they themArchives to try to make up selvesralso swore to protect.
her mind.
(Nar Hemoff is a lzationThis ·tran sce ndence of allr renow11ed owhorifl; on
party loyalty over the once the First Amendme111 ·and
· Great Writ, as its emblazon- the Bill '!!' Rights and
ment in the Co nslitution a11rhnr of many books.
fades, reminded me of including '"The War on the
'~hat, lbng ago. the t1Jen- Bill rd Rigllls and the
Mayor of New York, John Gatherif![i
Resista11ce "
Li'ndsay - who had gained I Set•en
Srories
Press.
that office •even though he 2003).)

•

Local Briefs

Ronald Stout

Women's Bible Study

POMEROY - Ronald Parker Stout, one,year old
son of Steven and Nanette Stout of Pomeroy, passed
away Saturday, Oct. 14, 2006, at Ruby Memorial
Hospital in Morgantown , W.Va.
Besides his parents, he i~ survived by his brother,
Samuel Stout of PomeroJ .Jnd hi s grandmother, Eva
Anderson of Ripley, W.Va.
Service will be at I J. a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2006, at
Vail Funeral Home in Ripley, ·W.Va., with Pastor Mike
~lder officiating . Burial "fill be in Anderson Cemetery
m Kenna , W.Va. Friends may call from · 6-8 p.m. on
Monday, Oct. 16, 2006, at the funeral home, and may
send condolences to www.vailfh.com.

MIDDLEPORT -A non-denominational community
women 's Bible study will be held from 6:30 to 8 p.m. on
Thursdays at Rejoicmg Life Church. All women are invited to participate.

Ruby Brewer Donnan
Ruby Brewer Donnan died Friday Oct. 13 at the
University of Tennessee Medical Centet.
She was preceded in death by her husband Arnold;
parents 'Allen and Audrey Brewer ; sister Louise
Brewer and brother David Brewer.
· She is survived by her son Eric (Kathy) Donnan of
Evansville Ind., daughter Erin Alonzo of Limestone,
Tenn.; grandchildren, Nicholas and Kaylan Donnan,
Megan and Shelby Coonz, Hannah and Caroline
Alonzo: Brothers , Harold Brewer pf Long Bottom and
Kenneth Brewer of Pomeroy; sisters , Myrna Close of
Waterford and Marilyn Beall of Westerville.
Memorial services will be Friday in Mars Hill, N.C.

Jordan Isaiah Runyon

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

For the Record
~reaking

and entering

MIDDLEPORT -Middleport Police Department is
investigating a breaking and entering at the Veterans
Memorial football stadium at the old Middleport High
School. According to Police Chief Bruce Swift, members
of the Big Bend Football League. reported that someone had
entered the stadium concession stand and stolen food and
drinks. Parts of the stadium were ransacked.
Swift said the incident took place Friday night or
POMEROY - Sacred Heart Church's annual fall bazaar · Saturday morning.
will be held Nov. 9, with dinner beginning at 4:30 p.m.

Church bazaar

Dissolutions

Council meets
MARIEITA -Natural Resources Assistance Council
will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Oct. 26 at Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District, to review
projects · submitted under Round 4 of the Clean Ohio
Conservation Fund for District 18.
Questions should be directed to Misty Casto, at 3749436.
.

POMEROY -Actions for dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by John
M. Haggy, Middleport, and He&lt;1ther D. Haggy, Middleport,
Cynthia G. Howard, Rutland, and Jerome K. Howard,
Pomeroy, and Carl Albert Tromm, Pomeroy, and ~Ia
Marie Tromm, Jackson.
Dissolutions were granted to David E. Ross and Mill)' Y.
Ross ;md Jarrod L. Folmer and Michelle D. Folmer.

Portland trick-or-treat

Civil suits ·

PORTLAND - Trick-or-treat in the Portland area will
be froni 7·8 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 26.

POMEROY -An action for foreclosure was ·filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by HSBC Bank USA,
Orlando, Fla., against Donald Randolph , Jr., Pomeroy,
alleging default in the amount of $49,846.38.
. .
·
A lawsuit alleging personal inj1,1ry was filed by Raymond
L. Rowe, Racine, and others, against Clarence L. Roy,
Racine, and others.

Law You Can Use: Regaining
Your Driving Privileges After
a Drunk Driving Charge

Divorce

POMEROY Jordan
Q.: I was arrested for drunk driving for the first
Isaiah Runyon, 7, of
POMEROY - A divorce was granted in Meigs County
time last night, and the officer took my license. _When Common Pleas Court to Dawn Clark from Timothy Clark.
Pomeroy was called home
can ·I get my license back?
·
to heaven on Oct. 13; 2006
A.:
·
It
depends.
If
you
submitted
to
a
test
to
deterafter a courageous battle •
mine your Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) and your
with ilhiess at Children's
BAC was under the legal limit, the officer should not
Hospital in Columbus.
have taken your license, and it should be retnrneq to
· He · was born Jan . 19,
you
immediately. If the officer did not ask you to take
1999' in Gallipolis, son of
a
BAC
test (if, for ·example, the test could not be
Jason and Penny Runyon
administered), the Jaw requires the officer to turn your
of Pomeroy who survive
. license over to the court for disposition at your initial
him. He was a member of
appearance. Your license may be returned to you at the
the Church of Christ in
initial appearance or, in some cases, the court may
' that the tide
Christian Union, Hartford,
seems to argde
BY QASSIM ABDULof
your
driving
privileges
under
a
impose
a
suspel)sion
W.Va.
.
J
I lhRu
may be turning against U.S.ZAHRA
He was preceded in death
ordan sa a
nyon
"public safety" suspension.
led foreign troops and the
AND
If your BAC was at or above the legal limit, you
by his great-grandfathers, James Greene Sr. and Frank
Shiite-dominated
governJAMAL HALABY
"Dean" Arnold; his grandfather, Kenneth Reitmire Sr.; have . been. ·placed under an Administrative License
ment
they
support.
Suspension (ALS) for 90 days. The duration of the sus- • • ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
great uncle, Roy Gene Greene; uncle, Ronnie Harris.
"The hour of liberation is
In addition to his parents he is survived by sisters, pension will be lengthened if you are convicted of OVI
at hand, God willing. But
BAGHDAD, Iraq
Shelby Runyon and Cassidy Runyon of Pomeroy; (drunk driving). If you refused to submit to a BAC
remember that your near- .
great-grandparents, Ruby Greene of Hartford,' W.Va., test, the ALS will be extended to one year, but if you Gunmen killed the brother of tern\ goal is confined to freeWilma Hill of Mason, W.Va., Leda Lee of Glouster, are convicted of OVI, the length of this "refusal" sus- the chief prosecutor in ing your country from the ·
and Gladys and Robert Chaney of Pomeroy; grandpar- pension may be · shortened. If you are convicted of Saddam Hussein's genocide forces of occupation and
e,nts, Jamie (Kathy) Greene of Pomeror, Janet Greene OVI, the court must suspend your license for a mini- trial Monday, as the ex-pres- their followers, and not to be
(David Jeffers) of Letart Falls , Jerry (Vtcki) Runyon of mum of six months and may suspend it for a maximum ident called in an open letter preoccupied . in settling
for Iraqis to forgive their scores," Saddam wr'&gt;te in the
Pomeroy, Evelyn Reitmire of Hartford, W.Va., Esther of t~ree years.
American enemies and storJ Arabic-language Jetter.
Goble of Hartford, W.Va.; father, Kenneth Reitmire,
sectarian killings because the
Q.: When can I drive again?
Jr., of Letart, W.Va.; friends, Peter Mustillo, MD,
He signed it as "President
A.: If you did not r.e fuse to submit to a BAC test, country's "liberation i!;. at and commander in chief of
Dennis Cunningham, MD , Katalin Koranyi, MD,
Crystal Felts, Julie Miller, Joyce Lee, Shirley Wilson and your BAC was not at or above the legal limit, you hand"
the holy warrior armed
The letter appeared to be forces."
and Sixth Floor Infection Disease nurses; several aunts inost likely were not placed under an ALS and you
should be able to drive immediately. If. however, you an effort by Saddarn to cast
and uncles.
The letter, ·a copy of which
Services will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 18 at submitted to a rest and your BAC was at or above the himself in the role of a states- was obtained in Jordan by
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va. with Je~al limit, you will not be eligible for even limited man who could reconcile and The . Associated Press, was
Pastor James Hughes officiating. Visitation is from 6- dnving privileges for 15 days from the date of arrest.
rebuild a nation now torn by dictated to his lawyers during
If you refused to submit to a BAC test, you are not intensifying sectarian blood- a meeting over the weekend.
9 P..m. o.n Tuesdljy, Oct. 17, at the funeral home. Burial
eligible for driving privileges for 30 days from the date shed . between Shiites and
w11l be m the Carleton Cemetery, Pomeroy.
.
Court
officials
said .
·pallbearers are Jerry Ray Runyon, Wayne Runyon, of arrest. The time during which the court cannot grant Sunnis, continuing attacks by Monday that a verdict 'and .
driving privileges is commonly referred to as a "hard" Sunni insurgents and wors- sentence would be handed
Jamie Greene, J.R. Greene.
.
E-mail condolences to foglesongtucket@myway.com. su~p_ension. In many courts, the judge will not grant ening economic problems.
down Nov. 5 in the ftrst trial
pnvtleges at any .ume · before the case ends 1f you
Many h:aqis have come to against Saddam, for the
refused to submit to a BAC ·test.
believe that the United States k1llings of 148 Shiite
If granted, the limited privileges are valid for the has decided to begin pulling Muslims from the town of
remainder of the suspension. .
out of Iraq despite President Dujail after an assassination
Bush's denials. And the letter attempt against him in 1982.
Q.: "What kind of privileges can I get after my
.
.
body or show that "hard" suspension is over?
Bv NICK WADHAMS
administration inquiring ·
A.: Under Ohio Jaw, the judge has broad discretion
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
members states are deadabout the relative value of
in determining whether or not to grant privileges, but
locked and clear the field the scope of the privileges is usually limited to occudegrees in programs that
UNITED NATIONS for a new candidate.
no longer exist and the
pational,
educational,
vocational
and
medical
purposes,
from PageA1
.Venezuela pulled even
inability to maintain standAfter trailing Guatemala or for taking a driver's license examination and attendwith Guatemala in the
in the first five rounds of ing court-ordered treatment.
it was founded, it would be ing as part of a national
sixth round of voting for a
organization
without .
out of business.
U.N. Security Council voting in the 192-nation
English
majors.
So· far,
Q.:
Can
I
get
privileges
that
go
beyond
work
and
"The, programs we have
Assembly,
seat Monday, a ·result that General
have
received
no
they
work-related trips? ' · .
. are the products we give to
could
either
boost Venezuela finally garresponse.
. A.: It is possible, depending upon the judge's inter- our students," said Sojka.
"I'm upset that they're
Venezuelan
President nered 93 votes, the same pretation of the law. A liberal reading of the law per- "We have to offer the proHugo Chavez's campaign as its rival. Mexico mits the court to grant limited privileges for a variety grams they are interested getting rid of these programs because the arts are ·.
for a spot on the powerful received one vote.
of reasons, while a strict. reading does not.
tn .'"
"I believe that ihere is a important," said English
major Sarah Triplett. "I
Q.: I need to drive to and during work tm;norrow.
if Issue 5 passes it would Can I get the court to take away the "hard" suspension? general bias in th'e system thought this was supposed
against majors like English
eliminate
secondhand
A.: A judge cannot grant privileges before the end · and fine arts beq~se they to be a liberal arts college~
.smoke in all public of the "hard" suspension, but an ALS can be"stayed"
are viewed as not being · and now they're getting rid
places
and
workplaces;
from PageA1
(put on hold) by the court until the final di~position of
said Satah of these programs. What's .
· offer equal protection the case. Th1s would allow you to dnvewh1le the sus- practical,"
up with that?"
secondhand pension is on hold. If you are subsequently convic!ed McCann, a member of the
.cities,
the
argument against
English
Honor
The
English Honor s ·o ciety.
against Issue 4 according smoke to all .workers and of OVI, the judge must impose the full suspens1on "I've even heard of people Society will be discussing
to Issue 5 supporters is customers; create one including the "hard suspension," and must gtve you being advised not to take the issue during their reguthat it denies a person the fair, level playing fie.ld credit for all of the days you have already spent under English as a major because lar meeting at 2:30 p.m.
right ' to breathe . smoke- for all businesses. Issue 5 suspension, including credit for the ".hard" suspension. there aren't any jobs,"
today at the top of the :
say
free area in public places; supporters
"It's not true," she con- stairs in Wood Hall. The •
'keeps smoke in restau- SmokeFree Ohio would
Q.: l refused to take the chemical test when I was tinued. "College is where public is invited toattend. :
amend
the
rants and bowling alleys, not
"We would like to see as
stopped, but I was obviously drunk. Now I wish I'd you follow your dreams
Constitution
and
would
exposing children, the
taken the test, since I know the penalty will be less mstead of conforming to mUch evidence from the
elderly and those with not prohibit smoking in severe. Can I somehow undo my refusal and the one- what everybody else wants community as possible,"
health problems to sec- private residences, vehi - . year suspension that goes with it?
you to do: It's not about said McCann . "We want to
ondhand
smoke. cles or outdoors.
A.: Possibly. If you plead "guilty" ·or "no contest" to doin? what's safe· or show the administration:
Issue
4
·.supporters
say
SmokeFree Ohio supthe OVI charge, then your refusal to submit to the what s easy or what's con- how important this is to us ;:
porters also claim lssue4 !&amp;sue .5 will not allow for chemical test is set aside ("vacated") . The judge. by venient, it's about getting how niuch it matters."
IS supported by b1g exceptions for adult-only
what you want out of life ."
.
tobacco companies like businesses and calls it a law, must impose a court suspension for a period
The English and History
beiween
six
months
and
three
years
on
a
first
OVI
con"near
total
ban
on
smok·
RJ Reynolds and say it
"alters the Constitution ing across the state." Issue viction. In most cases, the judge will impose the lesser programs are currently
'
-to protect the tobacco 4 supporters further call six-month suspension and will grant credit for any ume considered under revision
while
the
Fine
Arts
and
already
served
under
the
initial
ALS
suspension.
Thi
s
.
Issue 5 "an reasonable .
industry 's bottom line."
Theatre
programs
.
have
may
shorten
the
suspension,
but
you
will
have
an
OVI
At thi s month 's meet - i'ntrusi ve approac ~ that
ing of the Meigs County will create more problems . conviction on your record. The length of the suspen- been eliminated.
Emptions on both sides
sion· should not be the sole factor in deciding whether
·
American. Cancer Soc1ety than it solves."
HAUNTED
Issue 5 supporters are or not to plead guilty. In most cases, having an OVI of the debate are running
Taskforce, members were
encouraged to support quick to claim Issue 4 conviction on your record is much worse than having high after several flyer' ARIEL THEATRE
began appearing on camIssue 5 which is the last keeps smoke in restaurants your license 'suspended.
Oct. 20 &amp; 2I, 26 - 31
pus . The flyer from the
.issue on the ballot. Is sue and many public places
Open each night at 6 pm
Law You Can Use is a weekly cons'u mer legal infor- English Honor Society
5 is endorsed by the and leaves 500,00,0 hospiAll new, much scarrier
American
Cancer tality workers and their mation columr1 provided by the Ohio State Bar demands that students take
notice
of
these
changes
AssociaTion.
Tl1is
article
11·as
prepared
by
altorney
customers
exposed
to
the
Society. Ameri can Heart
3 floors of terror
Association . American dangers of seco ndhand Darrell M. Crosgrove of Crosgrove Law Offices in while a second bulletin .
$7 aduits/$5 students
Toledo, and attorney Jon J. Saia, a parmer in the posted · by administration,
Lung Association and smoke.
urges
staff
to
reassure
their
Columbus
la11jirm
,
Soia
·
&amp;
Piau,
PLL.
Articles
Point s, counterpoints,
what supporters claim are
IFYOUDARE!
st
udents
that
they
will
not
appearing
in
this
column
are
imended
to
provide
c
laim
s,
critic
s
.and
propa
more than 550 organizaThe Ariel-Dater Hall
tions and businesses in ganda aside , it's up to the hroad, ge ne ral information about 1he law. Before be affected by the change~ .
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
La't
week.
members
oT
applving
tl1is
injomratio11
to
a
specific
legal
problem.
voters
to
see
through
the
Ohio.
740-446-ARTS (2787)
the EHS drafted a letter to
readers are urged to seek adt·ice fro m an attornev.
Supporters abo claim smokescree n on Nov. 7.

.Saddam letter says Iraq's
'liberation' at hand, urges ·•
end to sectarian killings
0

.Guatemala, Venezuela pull even in
race to win seat on Security Council

Rio

.Ballot

h!!tr!·

.

.

..

�•
•

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 17,2006

Inside'

Bl.·

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, B2

Rifereeing lessons .ease stress
for Ohio sol4iers in Iraq
COLUMBUS (AP) - An idea over with his wife.
Maria·Moore realized that
Ohio National Guard officer
fed hi s passion fo( football her husband - regimented
while in Iraq by teaching and energetic- would need
a diversion after a day of
soldiers to be referees.
Maj. Fent&lt;ln Moore, 44, of duties as a supply and purColumbus, gathered off- chasing oftlcer.
duty soldiers on a ditt field
"I told him, 'You gotta dO
on the grounds of one of · something that you love ·to
Saddam Hussein's former do,"' she said. "If you want
palace hunting lodges to run to teach it to someone else,
drills, and they watched this is the time to do it."
ga mes in the mes~ hall. His
· So the major got rule
wife mailed them whistles. books , study · guides and
bean bags for markers, a other materials from the
striped shirt and score cards. Ohio High School Athletic
For some soldiers. it was a Association he needed to be
w6lcome diversion from the certified as an instructor.
stress of living in a combat
During classes, the students watched officiating
zone.
'The dass was a great videos and televised games,
change of pace and some- in~luding Ohio State's 24-:7
thin g io make the time go victory over Texas on Sept.
quicker,"
said
Joshua 9. The group dissecteq . :a
Slaughter, of Columbus, roughing -the-passer pHiy
AP Photo
who is admi ni strative assis- from all angles.
·:
· Tom Noe, left, ta lks with his lawyers, Bill Wilkinson, center, and John Mitchell, Monda, during court proceedings at the tam in the brigade. "I've
. To give his students some
Lucas County Courthouse in Toledo, Ohio. Noe, a politically connected coin dealer accused of stealing from a $50 million played college football , and game experience, Moore
state inv.estment. was deep in debt when he got the money, and he quickly used that money to pay oack creditors, a pros- the sport has a,lway s been in marked off a 60-yard footecutor told a jury Monday.
my life."
ball field on the nearby
'
' Moore has spent 20 years grounds of the hunting
·
officiating high school and lodge.
college football games.
Since he didn't have
"When we'd talk sports enough people for 22 playand they'd find out I was an ers, Moore used cardboard
official, there was always cutouis placed over orange
that, 'Gee-how-did-you-get- plastic cones to represent the
into-that?' respon se," he missing players. His stuBv JOHN SEEWER
coins because Of his politWilkinson
said the chased with the state said.
. dents kept the game clock ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
money.
ical ties.
bureau gave Noe wide
The guardsmen from the and threw penalty flags.
Noe, once a member of Columbus-based
Defense
attorney authority to manage the
16th
All of the students are now
TOLEDO- A political- William Wilkinson said investment and that he state boards that oversee Engineer Brigade met about certified to referee gan;t~s up
ly connected coin dealer Noe's. contract with the spent millions buying the Ohio Turnpike and twice a week .from July to the junior-varsity lever.
accused of stealing from a Ohio Bureau of Workers' other collectibles such as Ohio's public universities, through September at Camp
When Moore returns
$50 million state invest- Compensation
allowed historical documents and was a top GOP f undraiser Liberty, 15 minutes from home next month, he plans
ment was deep iri debt him to borrow money rare paintings.
who gave more than Baghdad, and got more than to return to his routine when he got the money, from the investment fund
The bureau knew in $105,000 to Republicans 35 hours of instruction in officiating Division Ill coland he quick Jy used that or loan it to others.
1999 that the contract with including President Bush high school football rules.
lege football and highmoney to pay back credi"You can;t steal some- Noe allowed him to use and Gov. Bob Taft during
Moore, whose deploy- school basketball and foottors, a prosecutor told a thing from the owner of the money as he saw fit, the 2004 campaign.
ment is his first in 21 years . ball, typically 20 to 28
jury Monday.
In a different case, Noe with the Guard, talked the games a year.
property if they give you and that no one from the
· Within a week Tom Noe permission to use it," bureau
objected, pleaded guilty earlier this
put $1.75 million into his Wilkinson said.
Wilkinson ·said. It was just . year to .funneling $45,00Q
own business and wrote
The state fund for two years later that the .to Bush's re-election camhimself a $135,000 check injured workers initially . 'bqreau gave .Noe another paign and was sentenced
to support "a lifestyle he invested $25 million with $25 million to invest, he last month to two years
felt he deserved," Lucas Noe in 1998, followed by said.
and three months in federal
prison. He won't begin
County
Assistant another $25 million in
The fund will end up
CLEVELAND (AP) - A because I didn't want to end
Prosecutor . John Weglian 2001.
showing a profit because that sentence until after man accused of sexually this as a crazy person who
said in his opening stateWeglian told jurors that of all the investments in the state charges are assaulting nine boys who didn't know ' what he was
ment at Noe's trial.
Wilkinson resolved.
Noe put $1.75 million into collectibles,
have physical or mental dis- -talkill8-II!MIIoll but. as a sane
"He needed money," his business after the, first said.
Investigations into the abilities was sentenced one who did,"1 Distasio said,
Weglian said, "He needed payment so that he could
Ohio Inspector General coin investments led to Mond.ay to life in prison.
while parents and relati:Ves of
it desperately."
Tom Charles testified that separate ethics charges
pay off bank debts.
Phillip Distasio, 34, of his victims listed and someNoe, once a go-to guy
He said Noe kept two his office began looking against Gov. Bob Taft,
Rocky
River. a Clevelaflii\- times,*'~ court~m.
for the Republican Party, sets of financial records into the fund after reading who pleaded no contest
Distasioon'Sept. 18 pleadhas pleaded not guilty to - one for the workers' a series of newspaper arti- last year to · failing to suburb, admitted he is a
he
ed
guilty to all 74 counts in
pedophile
but
believed
theft, money laundering, comp agency and one for cles in The Blade aod report golf outings and
was
practicing
a
sacred
ritual
an
indictment that accused
forgery and corrupt activi- his own business. When receiving letters from sev- other gifts.
ty charges. He is accused state officials wanted to eral state Democratic senNow Democrats are protected by civil rights . him of rape and ·several other
·
. charges, such as pandering
of stealing more than $2 check on the status of the . a tors· urging him to inves- poised to take back the laws.
"I
took
down
all
of
my
obscenity to minors and cormiJI.ion and spending it on coins Noe told them he tigate.
governor's office and are
his business and renovat- had bought, he created
Charles testified that his in position· to win a major- guards and went on a self- rupting another with drugs.
He was accused of molesting his home in the false documents and bor- investigators were initially ity of the five statewide destructive crusade of hona
handcuffed
Distasio
ing
two disabled boys he
esty,"
Florida Keys. He faces up ro~ed coins from other turned away in May 2005 races, according to recent ·
told Cuyahoga County tutored at his home and rapto I 0 years in prj son on dealers to trick investiga- when they first attempted polls.
Common
Pleas
Judge ing seven autistic boys at a
The trial is expected to
the
corrupt
activity tors, Wegl\an said.
to check·on the number of
Kathleen
Sutula.
Cleveland school for special"If Tom Noe wasn't a coins Noe had bought with last ·at least six . weeks,
charge .
" In the long· run I'm glad needs students where he was
through Election Day on
The scandal has become thief, he wouldn't have the state's money.
to
have been found sane, a teacher's aide.
Nov.
7.
a central political issue in had two sets of books.''
The bureau's director of
Ohio over the last I 8 Weglian said.
investigations,
Tom
,months and has conNoe spent only a frac- Wersell , said investigators
tributed to trouble for tion pf · the Bureau · of a month earlier gave Noe
Republicans who have Workers' Compensation four days advance notice
dn01inated the state since investment money on of a. spot check they percoins, and when state formed on coins at hi s
1990.
Democrats hoping to investigators began look- business.
capitalize on the invest- ing into the investment in
It was during that spot
ment scandal in the 2005, 96 percent of the check that, prosecutors
.
.
November election say coins Noe said he owned said, Noe produced fake
Noe was selected to over- actually were borrowed documents explaining the
see the state investm ent in from others, Weglian said. whereabouts of coins pur-

PROSECUTOR: COIN DEALER STOLE OHIO'S
INVESTMENT MONEY RIGHI' AWAY

'

Thesday, October 17,2006

locAL SCHEDULE

Friday, October 20 is
National Mammogram Day

·Local weather
1\Jesday ... Rain. Breezy
with highs in the mid 60s.
South winds I0 to 20 mph
with gusts up to 30 mph.
Chance of rain I 00 percent.
1\Jesday night...Mos tly
cloudy. A chance of showers in .the evening. Lows in
the mid 50s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the lower
70s. North winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday night...Parlly

cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. West winds around 5
mph.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Chance of rain 30 percent. ·
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows
in the mid 40s.
Friday ... Mostly cloudy.
Cooler with highs around
60.
Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper

Tournament Soccer
Gallla Acaclemy at Athens, 6 p.m.
Ripley at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m.
Volley boll
OVCS at Miracle City, 5:30p.m.
College Volleyball ·
YNU Tech at Ria Grande, 6 p.m.

Wtdrird•y'a a•ma•

Toum1ment Volleyball
Gallla Academy.at Waverly, 6 p.m.

BY BRAD SHERMAN

Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ThYI'I!diY'I Umt•
Tournament Volleyball

MERCERVll.LE -

Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.

Toumement Glrla Soccer

l'olrit Pleasant at Winfield, ~ p.m.
College Volloybotl .

MoUnt Vernon at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.

frldr(•amu
Football
GaNia Academy al Warren, 7:30 p.ni.

logan at Point Pleasant,'7:30 p.m.
South Gallla at Oak Hill, 7:30p.m.

Matewan at Wahama, 7:30p.m.

River Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at VInton County, 7:30 p.m.
. Trimble at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Hannan at Tug Valley, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 7:30p.m.

Soccer

aves at Teays Valley, 5 p.m.

·

INSIDE

Ace,

ace, ace, ace, ace, ace, ace.

South Gallla at South Webster, 6 p.m.

And that was just during
Glenna Wrillht's first turn at
the service line.
South Gallia certainly aced
its first test in the Diviston IV
volleyball
tournament,
amassing 15 service aces in
all, en route to a lopsided 3-0
victory over Ironton . St.
Joseph on Monday.
The Lady Rebels won by
scores of 25-11, 25-12 and
25-15 to advance to the sectional championship game.
. South Gallia goes to thirdseeded South Webster 6 p.m.
Thursday with a trip to the
Southeast District tournament on the line.
Monday's semifinal was
. played at South Gallia High
School, as this is the ftrst season that sectional round contests are held at the home site
of the higher-seeded team. In Southern coach Tonja Hunter, center, rallies her girls during a timeout after her team Jell
the past, all games were held
Division IV sectional semifinal in Racine.
,
at'neutrallocations.
. Wright led all Lady Rebels
. with 14 points followed by
Chelsea Canaday with 12.
Ashley Clary added nine and
Niki Fuks eight.
Ashley Gannon Jed St.
Joseph (1- I 5) with five Points
Bv Scon WOLFE
took on the same script, took a 23-20 advantage with
and
teammate
S'ophie
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
Starting With an exciting first an ace · serve from Jacy
Schwab added four.
game that saw nine ties and· Jackson.
Schwab had three straight
RACINEIn
the
rubber
multiple lead changes before
Going down the stretch
aces to start the match, giving
game
of
the
series,
the
extending
to
a
26-24
tally
in
both
teams had great gamethe Lady Flyers a 3:0 lead,
Southern
Lady
Tornadoes
Southern
's
favor.
saving digs. Turley, who
but it was a short-lived one.
on
top
of
the
To
a
17-17
deadlock
came
out
played much of the match as
After a side out, Wright
Miller
Lady
Falcons
in
four
·
Whitney
Riffle
and
Kasey
a freshman, quickly rid herserved nine straight points,
of the early game jitters
self
sets
(26-24,
I
1-23,
25-22,
Turley
each
had
two
hoomincluding seven aces, to give
to
advance
to
the
inll
kills
for
Southern
that
and
hammered a kill to
25-19)
the Lady Rebels a 10-3 lead
finals of the Southeast ,sec- shtfted a slight momentum regain the serve for the trailand they never looked back.
Canaday served South tiona! Thursday evening at change in Southern's favor. ing Southern team 22-24.
Riffle served an ace to give Stephanie Cundiff unveiled
Gallia to a quick 5-0 lead in Eastern.
Southern
an 18-17 lead and a quantum of tricky serves
Monday's
win
pushes
Game 2 en route to the 25-12
win, then the Lady Rebels Southern to 6-17 overall, Stephanie Cundiff made a that saw Southern win on a
jumped out to a 6-1 edge while Miller bows out of nice save preceding an game winning spike by
before cruising in the ftnal tournament play at 3-20 Emma Hunter kill, bul Sarah Eddy. With Cundiff's
Southern~s small run faded five points, Southern rode
overall.
game as well.
.
In the previous two meet- with a side out that followed home with the 26-24 win.
Fulks led South Gallia wilb
In the second game, Coach
ings
this season between the a lengthy volley. Miller's
eight kills followed by
Craig
Axline's pep talk lifted
Stormy
Humphrey
served
up
two
clubs,
both
matches
Megan Delaney with five,
Allie West four and Canaday went five games and bOth an ace to tie the game once the Lady Falcons · and
and Megan Sheets added were decided in the · final again at 20-20, then after a Southern missed the bus.
fifth game. Monday's action trade in side-outs, Miller Kandice Kaido gave Miller a
three and two.

• Bears sliM u~ten.
SeePageB2
SPORTS BRIEFS

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAilYSENTINEl.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Division IV volleyball
sec.tional finals between
Eastern and Southern will
be held at Eastern High
School . on
Thursday
October 19 at 6 p.m . .
Admission
will
be
charged·to all fans, meaning
no passes will be accepted.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. A Fall Coed
Softball Tournament will
begin at 10 a.m. Oct. 28 in
Harmon Park ballfield.
The tournament is sponsored by the PPHS Lady
Kni'ght Softball boosters.
Prizes will be awarded for
the top three teams. For
more information, including
cost, and packet, call 6752568.

COLUMBUS- Southern
High School sophomore
golfer Bryan Harris shot a
score of 156 to finish 17th
overall in the Division . IV
State Golf Tournament this ·
past weekend.
Harris had a opening
round of 80 and shot a 76 in
his second round. Harris,
who also made the state
tourney as a freshman,
improved his 2005 score by
20 stokes.
Harri s wa~ the lone
Tornado participating. The
entire Southern go! f team

CoNTACT
14.88
Rockwell - 62.26
Rocky Boots - 13.44
Sears - 168.72
WaJ.Mart - 48.32
Wendy's- 35.20
Worthington- 17.70

Premier -

Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes .
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

To schedule your FREE C!injca! Breast Exam
Call the Holzer Center for Cancer Care at
(740) 446-54 74 or toll-free at 1-800-821-3860

OVP

US

Sco,.une (5 p.m.·t Lm.)

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fll -1-740-«6-3008
E-moll- sporltiOmydailysentinel.c:om

!ill&lt;ll!LSII!f

'

"'

'

Bred Sherman, Sports EdHor

'

'i-..1

(740)&lt;4-46-2342. 9011. 3:J
bshlrmanOmvdailytribuno.oom

'

· All women are welcome to attend and learn more about ·
breast cancer and breast health.
For more information , call Bonnie McFarfand at (740) 446-5679

Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(740)&lt;4-46-2342, 81&lt;1 . 3:J
k:rum Omydaityregister.com

Alhley Shaw, Sparta Writer
(740) &lt;146-2342, 9011. 23
sportsOmydailytribune.c:om

Please see Moving. a1 ·

qualified last
year, but finished
four
shots out of
the final qualifying spot at
last week's
district tournament.
At
the
Harris ;
Southeast
District golf coaches meeting held Sunday, Harris was
named first team all-disttM:t
and also voted the district's
Player of the
Year.
Teammate Patrick Johnson
was also named to the first
team and Jacob Hunter bonorable mention.

Submitted phata
The 1986 Meigs Marauder football team was honored for its undefeated season before a
recent game ~ith Wellston . The team announced plans for the Charles Chancey
Scholarship Fund , in honor of the longtime Marauder coach.
'..

Meigs honors 1986 football team
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEl

Local stocks

10-3 lead with six pointS
including an ace, whi,fe
Stormy Humphrey hailed in
two ki lis for scores. Janel
Hanning nearly duplicated
the feat for the Lady Falcons
with six points and two aces.
Hilary Bray added a dink .
and Miller led 20-9 en route
to a 25-1 I win that appropriately enough ended on an ·
ace serve from Bray . .
Southern was the rejuvenator in the third game.
Apparently Coach Tonja
Hunter set the Lady ·~~
straight for their next
encounter as SHS show.ed an
escalating enthusiasm. Still,
the game was tough. Miller
dominated early 7-5, and
12-9, but a side out and three

Harris places 17th at State

Eastern to host
sectional finals

Softball tourney
wiD be fundraiser
for PPHS team

30s.
Saturday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Saturday night and
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the mid
40s. Highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday night...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows
in the lower 40s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Cooler with highs in the
mid 50s.

Aohlay Shawlphot:a

behincl early during Monday's

Lady 'Does moving on_

Bv DAVE HARRIS

ACI- 32:86
USB- 33.59
AEP- 39.90
Gannett - 56.99
Akzo - . 60.70
General Electric - 35.56
.Aiflland - 66.73
GKNLY- 5.35
BIG- 20.95
Harley Davidson - 66.65
. JPM- 47.73
Bob Evans - '33.23
BorgW,mer - 59.75
Kroger - 22.09
CENX- 36.89
Ltd.- 28.82
Champion - , 7.68
NSC- 47.97
Channing Shops - 14.91! Oak Hill Financial City Holding - 40.75
26.23
Col- 58.51
ova- 25.50
DG -1.3.68
BBT- 43.87
Peoples- · 31.00
DuPont - 45.36
Federal Mogul - .40
Pepsico - 62.68

'

South'
Gallia
aces test.

Tuttdly'a gam11
. Tournament Volleyball
Crooksville al River Valley, 6 p.m.

Man sentenced to life for sexually
assaulting handicapped boys

Attention All Women

Division IV Sectional Volleyball

POMEROV -A. sctledule of upooming college
ond h9o ac!lool vaniiy -OQ "'"""' im;oMng
teams fftlm Galla, Melga and Mason coontles.

POMEROY. The 1986
Meigs Marauder football
team was honored before a
recent game with Wellston.
The team is the only undefeated team in Meigs High
history, winning the TriValley
Conference
Championship.
The team gave up only 28
point on the season, 18 in their
first game at Point Pleasant and
I() against Vinton County.
Thirty-six players returned
and took their bow on the field
before the contest, the team
announced that they are form-

ing a Charles Chancey Huey Eason, Terry Fields. Bill
Scholarship fund. Details -of Haggy. Walter Haggy, David
that scholarship with be forth- Hess, Jay Humphreys, Jesse
coming.
Howard, Phil King. Eddie
To get the fund started', Mil&lt;e Kitchen, Mike Kloes, Sean
Bartrum of the Philadelphia Lambert, Jeff McElroy, Steve
Eagles, who quarterbacked the ' Musser, Scott Neigler, Kevin
1986 team was on hand and he Oiler. Joe Parker. Scott Powell,
gave away hts Eagles game Jer· Todd Powell. Raymond Rider,
sey for the prevtous. week.
· s mt·th ,
.th Jared Sh ee 1s, Ch ns
$
Almost
I,000
Steve Tracy, Denny we1sh. ·
.
. was rat sed Wt
th e Jersey g•ve away.
,
.
. trod uced'before the Paul V.olfe and Brent Ztrkle.
PI ayers ill
.
game included: E9die Baer.
The team also recogmzed
Mike Bartrum; Brent Bissell. coaches that were to allenBill Brothers, Don Bunce, dance with plaques, they
Randy Bunce, Jason Bush, included head coach Charlie
Decker
Cullums,
Todd Chancey and assistants Don
Cullums. Jim Durst. Tim Durst. Dixon and Fenton Taylor.

AP photo

Rain falls over Busch Stadium as Game 5 of the National
League Championship Series is postponed because of
inclement weather. Game 5 is rescheduled for today.

Game 5 of the NLCS postponed
ST. LOUIS (AP) Daylong rain caused Game
5 of the NL championship
series between the St. Louis
Cardinals and New, York
Mets to be postponed
Monday night.
The game was rescheduled for 8: I9 p.m. EDT
Tue&gt;day nig,ht at Busch

Stadium. The teams are tied
at two games each in the
best-of-seven series.
.
For the second time in the
NLCS, the teams will travel
without a day off. They'll
play Game 6 at Shea
Stadium in New York on
Wednesday night. as scheduled .

••

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

·•

W-L

PF

PA

W-L

A&lt;x:k Hill ........... .. .... . ....3-0 ... 107 ..50 .....6-2

E

sageake ...................2-1 . .. 56 .. .42 ..... 3-5
uth Point ................... .2-.1 ... 76 ...50 .....3-5

I Grova .... .. .............. 1-2
Fairtand ... , .... : ....... : ...... l-2
Ri\lerValley ....................0·3
•
Friday's raoults 11ock Hill 21, ChesapeOke 8
!outh Point 41, Coal Grove 15
~lrtand 39, River Valley 6

Ohio Dlvlolon

TVC

•.

. 1'-.
..109
.. 169
..183
.. 289
.. 329
PA
.. 171
.1 61
.191
.. 174
.. 243

WL
Toronto

3 0

1.000 -

New York

2

1.000 'h

Philadelphia

1 1

···

ALL

. .271
.. 147
... 186
.. 163

PA

.. 103
.. 143
.. 187
.. 174

... 238 .. 129
... 99 ... 188

ALL

Independents

ALL
W-L
PF
PA
.7·1 ... 181 . '.103

South Gallia ..
Wahama ..
' ..5·2
.180 .. 83
/"Iannan ..... . .. : ~
..... 1-6
.47 ... 222
•
Friday's results
Friday, Oct. 20
South Gallia 20. Symmes Valley 13 .
South GaUia at Oak Hill
Wahama 40, Buffalo 18
Matewan al Wahatna
Bishop Donahue 44, Hanhen 0
Hannan at Tug Valley

Cardinal' Conference
CARD
ALL
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
Poca . . . . . . . . . .... . . .• .. .. ~ .4-0 ... 144 .. 55 ..... 6·1 ...228 .. 109
Sissonville ....
. ... . . . .. : . :3-1 ... 46 ... 45 .... .5·2 .. ·. 123 ..96
Wayne ................. . ..... 3-1 ... 101 .. 35 ...... 5-2 ... 175 .. 92
Logan .................. . .....2·2 .- .. 95 ... 78
... 3-5 ... 142 .. 195
Point Pleasant.
. .. 1·2 ... 43 ... tOQ ....2·5 ... 133 .. 239
Herbert Hoover . .
. .. 1-3 ... 68 ... 126 .....4·3 ... 167 .. 170
Winfield..
.. .......0·5 ... 67 ... 112 ..... 1-6 ... 86 ... 133
•
Friday's rasu~a
Friday, Ocl20
Logan 14, Sissonville·O
Herbert Hoover al Bluel~ld
f'oca 27, Winfield 14
Logan at Point Pleasant
Point Pleasant 37, Ravenswood 34
Poca at Wayne
Tolsia 30. Wir&gt;Jne 19
Shady Spring at Sissonville
Lincoln County at Winfield

WLTPcl

Chicago

.500

Boston

1 2

.333

2

Detroit 5, oakland 1

0 3

.000

3

Wtdotlday. Oct 11
Detroit 8, Oakland 5

Southeaet Dlvl1lon
Orlando
Atlanta
Washington

Miami

WL
3 0
2 1
22

Pet
GB
1.000 .667 1
.500H

0 2

St.Louis

~

Chicago ·

3 0

Detroit
Milwaukee

3
2

.700
.687

WtdntadO Oct 11
St. louis at New 'ly\:)11&lt;;, ppd. , rain
Thu[wday. Oet. 12

1
1

!tt

New York 2. St. Louis 0
Fd..,,Oc!.13
St. Louis 9, ar Neyv Volt 6

1

Cleveland
1 2 .333 2
Indiana.
1 2 :333 · ~
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwttl Dlvlolon
WL Pet
GB
Memphis
2 2 .500
Houston
1 1 .500
New Orleans
1 1 .500
San Antonio
01.000 b
Dallas

0

3

-Sacramento
L.A. Lakers
Phoenix
LA. Clippers

•

Mood4v

Pet 18

(Weaver 5·4), 8:19p.m.
·
Wtdnat!M)', 0!;1. 18

·

St. Louis (Carpenter 15-B) at New York

(Maine 6·5), 8:19p.m.
· Thurad.,. Oct 1D
St. Louis at Ne"N York. 8:19 p.m., If nec&amp;SS&amp;F)'

Pet"

1
1
2
1
0

1.000 1.000 .667
.500 ·~
.000 'I,

Tulldoy, OCt. 2-0
Detroit at St. Louis or N.Y. Mets, (n)
Wtdno-v, Oct. 25

Phoenix 99, L.A. Lakers 91

Mondly't Games
Washington 100, Chartotte 91
Mlnnesota.103, Indiana 87
Detroit 90, Utah 85
Chtcego 87, Memphis 78

essary, (n)
Sundoy, Oct. 2&amp;
essary, (n)

Washington vs. Charlotte at Chapel Hill,
N.C., ·7 p.m.
Atlanta at Orlarido, 7 p.m.
p.m.

Sacramento vs. L.A. Lakers at Las
Vegas, 10 p.m.
Golden State at' Portland, 10 p.m.

Wednesday'• G•me•

NY.. 7:30 p.m.

Poataeaaon Baseball

Oak11nd 3. MIQnuota 0

Oakland 3, Minnesota 2
Oakland 5, Minnesota 2
Oakland 8, Minnesota 3

Nlllonot League

Nfw York 3 Lqa Angtftl D
New York 6, Los Angeles 5
New York 4, Los Angeles 1

-u

WLTPct
I

PF

PA

Houston

1 4 0 .200 72
1 5 0 .167 85

Pittsburgh
Cleveland

Denver
San Diego

PA
69
99
84

81

109

PF
62

PA
37

SOuth

WLTPct
New Orleans

Carolina

PF

97
126

W L OTPts
10
8
2 0 2 6

Buffalo
Toronto

5 0 0
3 1 2

Montreal
Ottawa

2 3 0

1

~

4'

1 3

PHILADELPHIA PHILL!Es-Namold Art
Howe third base coach arid infield
lristructor, Davey Lopes first base coach
and outfield·baserunnlng instructor, and
Jimy Williams bench coach.
.
•

FRANCISCO

GIANTS-

Announc~d the resignation of Stan

I

WASHINGTON

NATIONALS-

A,nnou~d Randy St. Claire, pitching
coach, WJII be reta1ned tor the 2007 sea·

son.

BASKETBALL

DENVER

14

· Or

19
11

Offtee lfo~~

10 21

3 2 1. 7

19 20

3 3 1

21

7

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a•R)· to 5:00 p.m.

23

I Minnesota

oo

5
3 2 1
3 2 o

vancouver

Edmonton
C lgary
a
COlorado

GF
17
23
12
12

GA
9
19
13
16

HOW IQ WRUE AM
SucceufuiAds

18

19

GF GA
10 19 10
7 15 15
6 15 12

2 2 1 5
1 2 2 4

13

9

13 . 17

DhloVattay
Pu~l•hlng

lite

~ghl

i

NUGGETS-Waived

,..nrv11

Mu•t
on IIMI

5 0 0 10 18' 8
4 1 0 8 21 15

San Jose

3 o 2 8
2 4 0 4
1 4 0 2

G

PA

1

Mondey'e Gamea

Stephanie
Cundiff
receives a
serve from
Miller en
route to a'
first round victory to
advance to a
sectional
against
Eastern on Thursday.

for the next three Miller
points were side-outs.
Southern began to take control.
from Page Bl ·
First
Emma
Hunter
regained the SHS serve and
Amber Hill scores that served up three J)oints, then
included a deceiving dink Riffle hammered a pile-drifrom Riffle gave SHS its ving kill for a Turley posfirst lead 13-12. The game session. Poised and confiwas tied three times before dent, Turley served . up
Mill6r edged back in front seven straight points with
22-18.
support from Eddy and
Miller's Christina Griffin Rashell Boso kills and two
had five kills in the game of Turley's own booming
and Jacksen and Hanning aces: Southern led 12-6 and
each had consecutive aces edged on to 16-10 and 18in the drive. A Whitney 11 tallies.
Riffle dink gave Southern
On the latter, possession,
the point and the posses- Turley gave Southern consion, thert Southern fought trol with perhaps the hardest
back to 21-22 on a Kasey kill of the night to the left
Turley ace. Miller called flank. She countered with
time out, but after the break another equally powered
Turley was just as devastat- kill to the center of the
ing.
Miller back row, then
Turley served the last six Hunter added an ac:e for a
points, including another 20-12 SHS lead. Miller ralace and a booming kill from lied slowly with Humphrey
Sarah Eddy. Southern won and Jackson kills (20-16) ,
25-22 to take a 2-1 lead in but moments later Riffle
the match.
rifled two blazing fast balls
Southern felt a lump-in- ' through the Miller defense
the-throat as Miller went up for a 24-19 SHS lead.
4-0, behind a quorum of
Stephanie Cundiff gave
~atie Searles points. The
Southern the final possesonly attributes accounting sion with a kilL and Kasey

Moving

Turley delivered a nonreturnable dink off an ·
Amber Hill serve for gamepoint and the sectional
-~
semi-final win.
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle I~
Southern with five kills in a
11-16 spiking night, 18:19
passes with five assists, and
three dinks; Turley was 2020 serving with six aces, 9. 10 spiking with seven kills
and three blocks, and was
7- 12 passing, and two
dinks; and Cundiff was 1625 passing, 15-18 serving
with two aces, 7-9 spiking
and two kills. Eddy was 67 serving 14-21 spiking
with three kills and a 9-16
passing night. Hunter was
13- 11 passing with six
assists, a kill, 15-18 serving
and 5-5 spiking; Amber
Hill was · 7-9 serving, 1-2
~piking, · and 2-3 passing;
Adelle Rice was 4-4 serving and 8-12 passing; Boso
was 7-9 spiking with two
blocks ;
while
other
Southern contributors were
Chelsea Pap'e, Kaylyn
Spradling, an d Samantha
Patterson.
Southern goes to Eastern
for the Sectional finals 6
p.m. Thursday.

5).

"I was ready lo hit it," he
said. "Unfortunately I hit the
ground first, then I felt
extremely sick to my stomach for my teammates and
coaches and everybo!ly else

'

1. SO

e Include A Price • AYOkl Abbftvllctlons
• Ads Shoukl Run 7 blip

·

r ~I ~.,r__G_IVE_~.w.~y-,.J

POLICIE8: Ohio v.lley Pub6l8hlng ,_....,.. rtlht to edit,,.._, or Clrtoeltny ad It eny ttrM. E.rrora nut be "'f*1tCI on tl'll
TtiJul• 8 clio I "1;1 1 will bt r.poM!bll for no rnoNt:Mn 1M COlt at thiiPICI oocupted by tiM enw 11\d only hftrlllnMrtlon.
WIJ' lou Of uplftW ttwt rwutte from 1M putMarton or omlulon a4 1n Hlili'tiMmlnt. eorr.ct1on will be !Mdrlln the tim .valt.IM ltdttlon. • Bo•
.. •'-fa COil01diiidliL •CurNnl .... o.d . . . . . •AI Nil MIMI lluOiliwl'*its are
to tl'll Federal F•lr Hauling Aet of 1MB. •Thla - - - ·
...-ldlmt~~tng 101...... , . , Wt will not tcno•lnttw ICOipl
In violation ol thllliw.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

:I

kltncartyleGcomcut.net

Reward for stolen ladder

stand between Route 7 and
Zuspon Hollow. 740-992·
2196.

I WAf• e.,~tl A

r.

?£.¥1f Oy

Calgary at Montreat, 7:30p.m.

Great Dane/Yellow Lab mhc
Housetrainad, great w/kids·

I Phoentx at St. Louts, 8 p.m.

pets. Rescued from hn &amp;
run .

In

great

health.

Borrow Smart. Contact
Ohio plvision of
Financial
Institution's
Office
of Consumer
Altair!; BEFORE you refi·
nance your · home or
the

~61?VIZG,

~o1

A ?;~~"(

. oF

e,~\2.~ N.

0

Offic,

0

,.

1mr AND
FOUND

1Ubioc1to1hoF I I r - , AOI ol 1111
which- ft ltlogolto

of

..nwtiM"'"Y
p:iCMIItoeoltmtllltlon or ·
diiCrimlnMion be..cl on ·
,..,., color, f'llglon, ...
flmlllll etltUI or netton11
·origin, 01 any inlllnHon to

Consumer

Affairs toll tree at 1-866·
278..0003 to learn if ttla
mortgage broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This Is a public
service announcement

0

0
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•

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dltcrimlndon."

Thla nenpapar wlll .not
lmowlngtw~

- ..-

ldnfti......U. for rwl
..-whk:hlain
- a l t h o low. 0...

~;::::;:::;::~
11

r~

...

I

~~v~..:. &lt;

. infonnld . . . .u

dwelllnga MvertiMd in

-nlty-.

1o~rrp

No Fee Unless Wa Winl

0 2008 by NEA, Inc.

www.comica.com

lhta MWI p1per are
availlbte on •n equal

TUANEO DOWN ON
SI)QAL SECURITY ISSI?

~

ruMr.KV•IJ.TIWIII...:..

Mother cat· brownlblaclc Moving Sale· across from
stripped with white flea 001· SOuthern High SChOOl, Oct.

.

puc,.enoe, llmiiMion or

from the Ohio Valley
Publishing COmpany)

1740)367-7574

Colorado at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Montreal at Chtcago, 8:30p.m.

All 1 0 0 1 - - . . . g
In lhls 1ww 1 I* Is .

ol!taln a loan. BEWARE
ot requests for arr,o large
advance paymenls of
fees or insurance. Call the

0

a home (740)645·

r

Vanco~ve.: 2, Edmonton 1
Oetroit 3, Los Angeles 1

1-888-582..:J345
I\ I \ I I ., I \ I I

~.:;_..:.;_..:.;_;.:.;,;.:.;,;;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:..::;::,~,;:.::.;:,.::.;:::.J

.9t

House and 10.77 acres

~~=~~~i:s· bl::. p~~~nd :~00 am-llll'"'tol"'"'lfru&gt;--W.-:\N1ID--.,,I"•'~~tol"""lfru&gt;--W.-:\N1ID--.,II'~...m....-lfru&gt;--W.-:\N1ID--...I I'" ~N I~rl l....
o -.FOR~Ho~~-AU-.-~ ~{n~1:s~:· :4)~:
Concealed
Class
Ohto,
wv. Pistol
NVFWov.
4; L--oiriiiiiiiiiiii;;.,-"
--..
. -:;;:;;:-;::---:--~;;;;;:::;;;;;;
.,.

·
ro BuY
Two Australian
Shepherd·. . .
pups 1 male 1 female 6
.
.
.
Ab I
T
Doll
US
months old. black &amp; wMe.
so ute ,op
ar: · .

~:~t~n~~o~~ngs~~~~

(740)388·8756.

Tan German Sheppard, 2 1935
U.S
Currency.
yrs okl ~304)675-1961 ·
Sot~aire tiiamonds- M.T.S.

.

who deserved to wm this ves.
game."
"First of all they weren't
Just last week, he missed a blocking me, so that was
51-yard attempt at the finish easy," Urlacher said.
that ·would have sent the
On their next possession,
j;ame ag~inst Kansas City the Cardinals were forced to
mto overttme.
punt. Hester caught the ball,
Arizona coach Dennis broke a few ann tackles and
Green was seething. Judging weaved around hapless
by his comments, he clearly defenders as he sprinted
didn't believe the Bears upfield, scoring his second
lived up to the hype - or . punt return for a touchdown
this season and giving
deserved to win.
"The Bears are who we Chicago the lead for the first
thought they were!" he ·said, time all night ,
yelling at the top of his lungs
In addition to his four
and pounding on the podium picks, Grossman fumbled
at · his postgame press con- the ball away twice and
ference. "Now, if you want struggled to hit receivers
to crown them, then crown when he did manage to get
(them)! But they are who the ball cleanly away, going
they thought they were! And 14-for-37 for 148 yards.
With their. offense suddenly
we let them off the hook!"
Green then stormed away. punchless,
the
Bears'
Anquan Boldin caughl 12 defense provided the points.
passes for 136 yards and a
The first came when
touchdown
for · the defensive
end
Mark
Cardinals, who blew a late Anderson broke through
Jead at home for the third untouched and blindsided
time this season. Similar Leinart, forcing a fumble ·
collapses occurred against that Mike Brown returned 3
St. Louis and Kansas City.
yards for a touchdown that
"The way things have cut the lead to 23-10 with
turned out is just unreal," two seconds left in the third
Edgerrin James said. "This quarter.
is some of the weirdest stuff . Chicago entered the game;
I have ever seen in these past. with five turnovers in five
six weeks."
games: 10 fewer than their
James carried 36 times for foes. I!ut it WIIS evident
only 55 yards, an average of early that this would be a
1.5 yards. It was the most frightful night with the roof
carries in an NFL game by a open for the first time in
player while averaging less Arizona's extravagant new
than 2 yards per attempt, stadium.
according to the Elias Spons
"In the NFL, when you
Bureau.
have six turnovers, you
James also had one very lose," Bears defensive end
costly fumble.
Alex Brown said. " If you're
After Grossman threw his fortunate enough to win,
fourth interc.eption, the somebody upstairs is 'lookCardinals were trying to use ing out for you."
up time. But Brian Urlacher
Four of the turnovers
stripped the ball from James helped the Cardinals to a 20~
and
Charle s
Tillman 0 halftime lead in Arizona's
scooped it up for a 40-yard first Monday night appearreturn to cut Arizona's lead ance since 1999.
to 23-17 with five minutes
"We have a lot of charac- ·
left.
ter in that locker room,"
Urlacher finished with II Smith said. "We just got
tackles, seeming to find his together at halftime and just ·
way .to th~ ball on nearly said 'We're n.ot going to go
every play as the ,Cardinals out like that. We 're a lot betwere making their final dri- ter football team."'

Publlc.tlon

Now you con hove borders and Qraphlcs
~
added to your dasslflecl ads
· _{. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~·
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for larqe

• All ada muat be preP.Id'

Chest freezer. old but works
good ' Giveawa~.
Call Missing Beagle! With chain.
HySell Run. Young roG'white
~740)388-11743.
copp(tr nose female beagle.
Free Pallets. ·Pick up a~ the Caii740·742·102B.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
ollica In the rear.
.
YARD SAU

Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·446·

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'a For Sele ............ ~ ................................. 725
Announcement ..: ....... .................................. 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Aportmsnts lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction ond .Floe kket............................. o80
Auto Pal'lll &amp; Acceuorles .......................... 760
Auto Repatr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sele ..............................................710
Boats I Motors for Sale ............................. 750 ·
Building Supplles ...,.,........: ......................... 550
Builtness Md Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ................................. 21 0
Business Troinlng ...................................,... 1411
Csmpera I Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cords of Thanka .......................................... 01 0
ChilciJEiderly Care ....................................... 190
Elecb:lca11Refrigeratlon...............................840
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
E,tavotlng ................................................... 830
Fonn Equlpment..........................................61 0
Fonns lor Rent............................................. 430
Fonns for Sete ............................................. 330
For LeaN ..................................................... 490

For Sale ...:::.................................................. 585
For Sale or Trlde .........................................590
Frutt. &amp; Vegelllbles .....................................580
Fumt.tled Rooms ........................................450

2842.
Buying Junk Cars, TrltQ(s &amp;
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D

Salvage
~304)773-5343
1304).674-1374
Wanted cars any oond~ion
or fixable. (740)388·8228.
l \1!'1111\ll\ 1

"I h' \ II I "

CDI. TRA!NINO'

' Ft""'NCING AVAILABLE'

JOB PlACEMENT','

Hay l Grain..................................................840
Hoip Waril8il ................................................. 110

TRAINING CENTERS

TRACTOR·TRAILER

llomli lmpro-ta...................................810

1-800-334-1203 '

In Mernor11m ................................................ 020

100 WORKEIIS NEEDED

lneu11111Ce ...................................:................. 130
lJtwn • Ganlen Equlpment ........................ 660

Assemble crafts,

-. &amp;lltfi~I.(O:TI

wood ttems.

Uveatock ......................................................830

To $480/w~

Lola. Ac:relge ............................................350
Mt1Cdo.-ua.................:............................

Materials provided ..
Free lntormation pkg. 24Hr.

Ml-'la.-ua Morchandl18.......................540
Mobile Homo Repoir ....................................860
Mobile Homsa for Rent .................... .-.......... 420
Mobile Homsa for Sele ................................320
Money to Loen .............................................. 220

Motorcycles 14 Wheelen ..........................740
Muolcat lnatrumsnta ................................... 570
· l'llaonolo ..................................................... 005
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 580

Plumbing I Hellllng .................................... 820
Pn&gt;leulonlll Servtcel .................................230

Radio, TV l C8 Repair............................... 160
Reo! E - Wonted .................................... 360
SchoOII tnotruc:tlon ..................................... 150
lllld , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer ............................. 650

SMuallonl W1nted ....................................... 120
~for Rent .............................................-460

Sporttng Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'a for Sale..............................................720

s

Truckl for Site ..................._
......................... 71
Upholstery ....................~ .............................. 870
Vena ~or Site ............................................... 730
Wom.d.to Buy ........................................... ,. 090
, Wom.d to Bur· Farm SUpplles .................. 620
Wlllled To 00 .............................................. 180
Wonted to Rent ............................................ 470

Yanl Sole- Galllpolls....................................072
Yanl Sale Pomeroy1Middte ......................... 074
Yord

Pteoaant ................................ 076

•

,,

• FVLL·TIME CUSSES

' fiNANCINGAVAIL.ABLE
JOe PL.ACEUENT

801-428·4649
N
- -I E-xcelle-nt- wa_ y_
to_e_a_rn
money. The New Avon.

Ce ll M II

ar yn

304 BB2 2645
•

•.

$8.00/hr. Please
resume to CL.A Box

' ENAOI..LING Nf:NI

469, GaHipolis, OH 45631.

UEDI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR·TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE, VA

HAS OPENINGS FOR

1-800-334-1203

$28 PER HOURI
$42 PER VISIT

•SI.so.'hour

•Pa•d Tra1ni~
•Vacations every 6

months
And Much Moral

CALL TODAY!
1-t77-463·S247
111.2321

ASSOCIATES
Join the winning teaml
ll1ilnlng- Two wee1&lt; initial &amp; orientation classes
with continued ongoing

CompenMtion-Bonuses,

rate.

Flat

health care, Dissbillty,
Call Vidd Reynolds RN

,

women ,

Associates.

-curr we•Y9

. established a 35 year

.,..... .. ,.t;,..... ~ ~,
rVIA'_.,..,..,. ..........

a.,,

1.nt....... and--~ng
cUstcmor servioe- bolo!&amp;
and afler 1he sale. With
1he hoftee1 products on
the market and as the

vv-··,

.................

fall:est growing dealer·

ahlp in90rroglon, wan.
adding SaJts Aasoc:lltes
10 better eervloe our
customers.

vending · If you arvloctt!ng 1o start

• ,_ ca-"' maybe
I'JU don1 1Hi youle pakl
or treated u well as you
llhoutd bt n " I'JU\'o
tired ofworl&lt;i1gtor
ton1
Working tor you, giYI
~ ~1 B-" Sa
!'WI " " Of
·~ ng
a~ 1ortay

""'*"'""""

(7-40)4*9800 or
1-800-272•5179 _

--.a •

'bu may alao apply In

imPiementaUon of grant
ChltiM'Iglng c - 1
projects. etc. A minimum Of Apply fcir a CHHA. ciUM
·
B n· t
De
bt
I
Oct
Q1h
a
ac e or&amp;
gree
ginn ng
.
.

, 95 Upper RNer Ad .,

=

'FACTS, 45 Oll.o S!rHt, w/)ob plooemont ond ora
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or alto hiring PCA, CHHA &amp;

mullotaak. E~lei'IOII pr~

ferred but hot necessary.
$tS.67-$26.19hor , now hlr·
Recinients should t'lllf'lllVWJ.
ing. For application and tree
~
~·-· governement tab into, cell ly deltver rasumas to BiU

1110

MlQCDJANEXJtli

I

per100 at

fiND AJOB

L,------·
George's

~rtable

House with large lot, 2 oar
garage. wood floors, maple
kitchen.
gas fireplaCe
$82,500 (304)675·2364 :

.

.

Maple appliances
uot:IUI
•
e~·
bum ln '"'
. patio
ana

building.S·25 152919
(304)6
7

Sawmill,
screened &amp; glassed .suf1l
don't haul your Logs to the ' 4 bedroom, 2 be:th, douHie porch , shade &amp; fruit treeS.
Mill)ust call304-675-1957. garage .. Pool , 2 acres. grapes &amp; be"tes. reasoi&gt;Eastern ' School District. ably priced, 80's. John
Painting
and
Drywall 740--992·3465 after 5:00PM vanMeter, (740)247·2229
Service, misc. labor. Call tor·
estimate after 6:00 pm or 4 bedfoom, 2 bath, ·double
garage. poor, 2 acreS,
740- 985• Eastern
leave message.
School Dis(riC1.

...,
-1111111 ...

3n 9. ·
740-992·3465 aher 5:00PM
Ray l Son's COmplete Cor

• Bedtooor- 2 8Ith

Cleaning 2615 112 Jackion 4 rerrtaJ hOuses "for Sale-

Ave. Pt. Pleasant wv 13041 Good income produdng
675·7375. We wash by properties. Greet tocallonl
Price(s) . are Negotiable.
hand special compteta was Motivated

lob $4.50 off. Elcterior'wesh

In

Sellerl

Way~~

mymktu uthome.com

(74Q)8 "_2 5Q

2v- 7
_ _;__.::.__ _ __,_

)cbs S2.50 elf

Gallipolis.

iiO

About $3000 down. 812 S. Bathroom. oversized two car
3rd. Ave .. Middleport. Totally
remodeled. s bedrooms. , garage. storage"bl.llldln~. 112 _

Call
(404,.56-3802.

Three

n.~~

:::

~~

OPPolrroNrrv

~====='

•NOTICE•
lNG

CO. recommem:la

I

.. ~h

IN THE

that you do bus ness "'"
people you know. and
NOT to send money

CLASSifiEDS

through the mall until you
ha'.le investigated the

offering

Two

acre level lot.

Well main·

Perfect credit not talned home.
required Paynlent '$525

Reduced

$89,900.

Appraised $70,000.

OHIO Vf\W_EY PUBLISH·

Bedroom.

bath .

740·9•9·80Hl

740· Vme S1reet. Racine.

-------~

367-7 129.

. Two Story housa/ 1 acre.

Au.ntlonl

Local companv ofler·ln' 'NO 4B
_d,
.,

1 1/2 Ba.,

D.R. .
.

pro· k,!tchen. utility r~m , lire
grams tor you to buy your placelgas _ lo~. hvmg room
DOWN

PAYMENr

home Instead of renting .
• 100% tlnanc1ng
• Less than pel1ect credit
· pted

plus tamtly room. 2 caJ
garage. front porcn•. ~ase·

men~,

stora~e

b~:~tldcngs.

TPC water, heat pump.
ment could ba the pa'Jed driveway. Letan Falls
ay
74Q-247-2532
same as rent.

~~

Mortga~a

10.5,
Ute style Register 200 Main ST. Pt.
3rd
Ave, Pleasant WV 25550.
Ambulance
drllt'Etrs. Galtipolis. No phone calls .
Competrtive wages. Apply at
Help wanted at Darst Group
Life
Ambulance .
1770
Home. working with elderlv.
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
heavy lifting involved. 740·
Ohio.

satq

and

(-740)367·0000

. Rock/ 181 •-oo Wanted- lull-time Ya1erlnary
Formrng
me
Ulll
.
. e p ·enc
Looking for singer. Call: ..{ecep 11 0 " 151• • en
e
740-992·9904 or 74Q-416- helpful but no&lt; essential lor
person willing to learn
1090
·
raspond w~h COtf~plete
Furniture warehouse/deliv· resume &amp; 3 reference to
ery person needed . Apply in Box·TSC10
Pt.Fteasant

estate

Son's Trash 4BR/2B: 4.533 ac: Shirlene , netghborhood well buiit
Goff, Agent Century Homes house w/5 ~ms &amp; bath
Service, Firewood &amp; &amp;tra Holley and Associates .
Hauting, Reasonable Rates.
upstairs and 1amily room
44_7_
· _ _ _ 1\'ith brick fireplace/ buck
u...n Acoepted . 1740 )388_(7
. _40_:1_286-_2_
•-...
·
0371
3br, 2·bath, · basement , stove insert and bedroom in
1 ·
h
,.,
attactled garage, '.linyl sid· in1shed basement, ous~
WANIID
h
h dw od 11
&amp;
. ing, fenced yard, storage · as
ar o
oars
1
'110 Do
•--· •ifut woodwo~ ki1ch •
1

Golllpol~. Ohio

J!==i"'=~=·fr=lrla:=!;=o!J

An

$70,000.Phone (740)99&lt;3690.

Pnme property on 4 cormw
3076 White Road, Gall•_
poiiS, lots in Syracuse, Oh, gre:ft

.

913·599-8042, 24Alrs. emp. Henderson, WV for info call
serv.
(304)675-1270

992-5023

men1.

(304)5253. or (304)693-5949

American Assoc. of Labor 1· Crank Veterinary Hospital,

andior Furniture.

-

House tat sale in Syracuse,
two-bedroom wfth batft
attached, garage and base.

children .

gym. Bttanga's Martial Arts Porch,
Heat
pump,
Center, Middleport. 740· Appliances. Meadowhill off
992·5715. Open daily.
Sandhill Rd . was $89,009
reduced
to
$79.900

Amos

N. John Sing Fontncocn

==------on-aHt

.,

and

~(7_4...:0)_286-_2_44_7_.- - -

3 bedroom. 2 bath, with tire·
place. 40x60 barn. Rio
Karate self-defense, profeS· Grande area. On a flat aces.
sionaJ Blad&lt; Bet! instructor. $120,000. (740)709-1166.

more.

u ...-~ ......

481-6334.

~~~= s;~ ~me ~~ =~~Octm: ~~

Holley

- . gaUipoh:;a!r8!tlrollege.com
Accreotted Member Accledtting
Council b 1~1 Col~
and Schoots 12748.

Long Term care and

(7~~~1~:.;~

Part time

~orvb.CO:.~~~ 8246at

GIIIHpolo c - Colltgo
(Careers Close To Home) 2924 Centerpoint Road ;
cau Todayi740-446-43B7, 38RI18; 1 ac: Shirlene Goff . .-.
HW~214 .()4 52
Agent, Century Homes

Men,

management 1eam i'llhe
country to assist you.

•

1740
5555 , 7...,_. 1&amp;.3329.

~· The best .Spacious fully equipped 3 yrs. old, 3 BR, 2BA. Lg.

classroo.m presentation&amp;, 782,.
·
trainings, fairs, community . ; . : . , - : - - - - - , . ·
·
evants. development
. snd n.-..L.
_ , . for o

person

Dispatchers

SALES

training.

anenaant ~Chelltlre ares)
Sam to tpm (M·F) No trav11o
ing. no dMIYiriM, viCitiona
and adults In Gallia anr1 clayo.
hollclayo.
Coli
JackSon
counllos. (740)1198:000S.
R
'bili11 1'nclude but
eaponst
es
P1umber· Experlet ad f'eli.
•
no!Hm~d to: alCOhol, table- l II""' OOIIHrilldal.
00 and ~ drug ediJca·
"""
.
Top . pay, inluranoo, ·flli,..
tlon, mentortng program, ment. Contact Tim (~}675-

POSTAL JOBS

•Full and Part Time
Schedule&amp;
•Medical Benefits

·

w....... ~ ..,...

~

send

AVON! All Areasl To Buv or ~~. J;:IH (740)«6·8014. STNAII (740)"1-13n
SOli. ' Shlney Spears. 304- =::;_:::;_:.:_____ Receptionist It a Vet o1fica,
675-1.29.
FEDERAL
part-time, must be able to
BEUEVEm

~·t~m ··~

.558 c/o
Gaii!&gt;&lt;&gt;IIS Tribune. PO Box

I

accepting resumes for the
· • following full time ~lfion :
Prwantfon
EducatorSeeking an energetic lndividual to work with youth

llomea for Sale............................................ 310
HoulehOid Gooda ....................................... 510
Hou-lor Rent ........ ,................................. 410

l70

·NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

&amp; Over the Road. Class A Please stop"" and fill out an
COl required. Gocxf driving applloation loday. II you
record. Exoellenf compen- have questions please oon·
sation. Call M·F 8:~:30 tact Michelle GNmore at 992·
::&lt;304.:....:17_22_·_2_184
_ _ _ _ 6472. EOE
·
-----:-:-'-~FACTS/New ·AI1ernBtives·
Part nme Maid needed
OUip
ho nd
atient Aloo I a
Lowe Hotel Apply wllhin no
M
other Drug agency is caHs. ,

' FULL·TIUE CLASSES'

I

stress. Computer knowledge

.,

LEARN
TO DRIVE

I

~~:to~=~~:%,:

Over!Jrook Center is CUITentDrivers, Hiring now, Masofi 1y .;......,,·ng appl'-~ tor
..........,.....
........,..,
&amp; Dixon Unes. Van, Flet N-taryli·-~,~----·""·
LIIC
-.o~•- 1 ""' ......-~
Bed, Hea"l' Haul, Ragional _
~-tor
20 •-·- per-,
·~•

$$

lifiiii!i!fl!!l

local EmpkTter looking to fr"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"11
$
1996 Redman 28x60 m
2006,. 75.00.
9:00am.
G
hire lull time Receptiomst
VFW Mason wv.
)843- Apple rove 304·593-6719

is a plus. Pay starts out a1

COL driver for garbage
route. Must have experience
&amp; .knowledge ot GaUia CO.
Full or part time. (7"0)388·
9688.

ALLIANCE

La.i •nd Found ............:........................:·..... 060

il'~£~iliJ~Il6@1

'ffWW.all18no.lractoltr1110r.OOII'I

Gononl Houtlng ...........................................850
111ppy Ads.................................................... oso

©lil)l!.

• COL,......,

Glv.wty ...................................................... 040

II

'

Sunday Dl•play: 1.:00
Thureday for Sund•y•

'---r:.::::~-.,1

N.Y. Rangers 4, New Jersey 2

Bears play badly, still win
.

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For ·sund•v• P•per

• lndude P'hone "'umber And Addrea When Needed

j

Dallas 4, Anaheim 3, SO

5 1 0 .833 145 110
PITTSBURGH STEELEAS- Releesed 1 _
Detroit at Anaheim, 10 p.m.
4 2 0 .667 109 1 t 1 1 DB Jovon Johnson. Re-signed QB Brian 1 Minnesota at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

' GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP)
-Six turnovers, 3 points on
offense, and somehow the
Chicago Bears are still
unbeaten.
Somehow, some way, the
Bears 'rallied from 20 points
down at halftime and
escaped with a 24-23 victory
in Arizona on Monday night,
leaving the shellshocked
Cardinals to ponder yet
another excruciating lategame collapse.
"Sometimes, when you're
a team of destiny, things like
that happen," Chicago coach
lovie Smith said.
.
The Bears are off to their
best start in 20 years at 6-0.
For that, they can thank their
defense, punt returner Devin
Hester and Arizona kicker
Neil Rackers.
Rex Grossman gets no
credit for this one. ,
"I'xe never played so bad
and won a game like that,"
said the Bears quarterback,
who threw four interceptions and lost two fumbles.
"It was unbelievable."
Down 20-0 at halftime,
Chicago returned ,two fumbles for touchdowns in the
second half. Then Hester
returned a punt 83 yards f9r
a score with 2:58 remaining
to take the lead.
' Matt Leinan, who threw
two first-quarter lol!khdowns and finished 24-for42 for 232 yards, coolly
directed Arizona downfield
at the finish for a chance to
claim ·a victory that
to
be
the
appeared
Cardinals' all night.
But Rackers, a Pro Bowl
kicker last season who connected from . 41 , 28 and 29
yards earlier in the evening,
missed a 41-yarder to the
left with 53 seconds left for
what would have been the
game winner for Arizona ( 1-

DescripHon

5 pups, born AUg. 1. Father· 7275.
Jack Russell, slick haired,
mother· small dog. Cail
(740)794·0697. ·
~

PHILADELPHIA 76ER5-Named Steve Vancouver at Edmonton. 9 p.m.
i Dallas at San Jose, 1?:30 p.m.
PA I Yaros vice president-of marketing.
FOOTBAU
Wtd.-day a Gomeo
124 1'
Nadonst Foo!ball Leoguo
Aorida at Washing10n, 7 p.m.
109
BUFFALO BILLS-Placed LB Josh I Nashville at N.Y._Rangers. 7 p.m.
92
·
135 I Stamer on Injured reserve.
1 New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
HOUSTON TEXANS-Released CB
PhiUip Buchanon .
•

All Dllpl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bullnen Deya Prior To

a Sbrt Your AcfJ With A Keyword • Include Complet.

Tabith~

Tuesday's Gomes

Courtney Alwcander.

Dally zn .. Column: 1:00.p.m.
Mondey-Prld•y for ln-rtlon
In Next D•v•• P•per ·

, Parennlal Gat SheHer
2 Schwlmm bicycles to give· "Tabitha" 1·2 year . old
spayed female. Please give
away (304)882·2715

Sund~'a Game•

Chicago 5 Colorado 3

Display Ads

GivFAWAY

15 13
14 18
11 23

I Two potnts lor a win, one point for over·
time loss or shootout loss.
I
·

Carolina 5, Taml?8 Bay 1
Nashville 2. N.Y. Islanders

Word Ads

to adtl,

or cancel 1ny
.ct M any time.

r1ject

W L OT Pts GF, GA
1 Dallas

~

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

j. Philadelphia at Buffalo, 7 p.m.

National Basketball Aasociatlon

I

10

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

15

Pacific D.l vlalon

manager and agreed to terms W!th h!m

I Conte. tramer.

GA

Cantral Dlvialon

I

SAN

Gf
22
22
12

SoutheaSt Ohilalon
W L OT Pis GF GA
41192011

1

on a three·year contract.

I,

To

25

2 3 1 5 15 19 ·
2 2 0 4 11 12
Philadelphia . 1 3 1 3
11 17
Northeast Divielon

' Anaheim
National LHguo
Los Angeles
CHICAGO CUBs-Named Lou Plnlella Phoenix

I

25

2 4 o 4 12 15
Washington
1 1 2 4 12 14
WESTERN CONFERENCE

Durham of the IL. Released 18 Kevm

4 1 o .800 151 55

Kansas City 2 3 0 .400 87
Oakland
0 5 0 .000 50
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Esat
WLTPct PF
Philadelphia 420 .667 179
N.Y. Giants
320.600 127
Dallas
320 .600 147
Washington 240 .333 118

6

Tan\paBay

Win

147
157

PF
1to
111
106

3 3 0

.

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

Place
tlrribune
·Sentinel
.l\egistet'
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 . {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
call Todav•••
Fax To (740) 992·2157·

W L OTP!s GF GA
3 2 0 6 f7 15

Pittsburgh

Boston

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Purchased
the contract of LHP Jeff Ridgway from

74
149
125
111

3 2 0 .600 118 74

Battimore
Cincinnati

NewJersey
N.Y. Rangers
N.Y. Islanders

Macha, man'ager.

Jacksonville

North
WtTPct
420 .667
• 320.600
230.400
140 .200
West
WLTPct
4 1 o .800

Atlantic Dlvlalon

OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Flied Ken

5 0 0 1.000135 100

Tennessee

National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE

elected to become a tree agent.
Announced C Sal Fasano elected to
become a free agent
I'll\

E·mal!
classified@ mydailytribune .COf11

PRo HocKEY

1

Announced INF NICk Green refused hts
outnght assignment to Scranton and

Indianapolis

DIVISION SERIES
American League
Ottrplt 3. Ntw York 1
New York 8, Detroit 4
Detroit 4. New York 3
IJetroit 6, New York 0
Detroit 8, New York 3

nee~

SOU!II

Milwaukee at Houston, 8:30p.m.

PRo Bi\sEBALL

,
If

Notional
Loogilo
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Esat
W L T Pet PF
New England 4 1 0 ,800 ' 108
N.Y. Jets
3 3 0 .500 116
Buffalo
2 4 0 .333 94
Miami
1 5 0 .167 78

Boston at New York, 7:30 p.ni.
New Orleans at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Houston at Dallas. 8:30p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Phoenix. 10 p.m.

Minnesota vs. Detroit at Grand Rapids,
Mich., 7 p.m.
Indiana vs. Denver at Cincir:mati. 7 p.m.
New Jersey at Boston, 7:30p.m.
Toronto vs . Cleveland at Rochester,

at Detroit,

PRo FOOTBALL

Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv at Cleveland, 7

season.

W L OTPts
Monday's Spona Trlnaactlona
Detroit
3 1 1 1
.'
BASEBALL
Chrcago
3 2 0 6
American League
' Columbus
2 1 1 5
BOSTON RED SOX-Named John I St LOUIS
2 2 t 5
FarreN pitching coach.
Nashville
2 3 0 4
NEW YORK YANKEES-sent INF Andy j
Northweat Division
Cannlzaro outnght to Scranton of the IL
w l OT Pta

St. Louis or N.Y. Mets at Detroit, if necSt. Louis or N.Y. Mats

1

1
•

Sunday, OCI. 22

TRANSACTIONS

esssry, (n) ·
Saturday, Oct. 28

Tuesday'• GamH

1

N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.

I

Thursday, Oct. 28

County
OH

ball coach.
STANFORD-Signed Tara VanDerveer,
women's basketball coach, to a shc·year
contract extension through the 2011·12

Monday, OCt. 23

Detroit at St. L9uis or N.Y. Mere.• if nec-

'

i

I

Detroit at St. Louis or N.Y. Mats, (n)

Gallia

Michelle

SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT- Named
Jerry DeGregorio men's Interim basket·

Atlanta
Open: Chicago. St. Louis. New Orleans. · Florida
San Francisco, Baltimore, Tennessee
Carolina

I
I
I
I

Sunday, Oct. 22
St. Louis or N.Y. Mats at Detroit, (n)

Chicago 110. Seattle 105. OT

.

Minnesota at Seattle; 4:15p.m.
Washington at Indianapolis, 4:15p.m.
Arizona at Oakland, 4:·15 p.m.

St.' Louis or N.Y. Mets at Detrol1, (n)

Toronto 119, New Jersey 110

CO~LEGE

GREENSBORe-:Nemed

Philadelphia a1 Tampa Bay. 1 p:m.
Denver at Cleveland, 4:05p.m.

WORLD SERIES
Saturday, Oct. 21

Sundly'o Gomeo

Ale• Brooks from Lowell of the AHL.

. Carolina at Cincinrleti, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Kansas City, 1 p.m.

.

GB

National Hockey L.ugue

NEW JERSEY DEVIL5-Rocalled D

I

Higdon women's swimming coach.

Detroit at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Miami, 1 p.m.
Plnsburgh at Atlanta, I p.m.
Jacksonville at Houston, 1 p.rn·.
New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m.

I

ij[;ribune·- Sentinel CLASSIFIED
'

WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Stgned
DB Troy Vincent.
HOCKEY

Chicago 24, Arizona 23
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

fifth-round draft choice.

Monday'&amp; Game

New York at St. Louis, ppd., rain
Juttdw Oct 17
New York (Giavine 15·7) at St. louis..

GB

W L

0
0
1
1
0

New York 12. St. Louis 5, ssries tied 2-2

1~

.000

Northweot Dlvlolon ·
WL Pet
Minnesota
2 1 .667
Seante
t 2 .333
t 2 .333
Utah
Denver
0 1 .000
Portland
0 1 .000
Poclnc Division

Seturdw Oct. i•

St. Louis 5, New 'fbrk 0
Sunday. Oct 15

2006

Hargrove to the Buffalo Bills for a 2007

PA

Dattas 34, Houston 6
N.Y. Giants 27, Atlanta 14
Seattle 30, St. Louis 28
T,nne·ssee 25, Washington 22
CBro4ina 23, Baltimore 21
· New Orleans 27, Philadelphia 24
Tampa Bay 14, Cincinnati 13
N.Y. Jets 20, Miami 17
Pittsburgh 45, Kansas City 7
San Diego 48, San Francisco 19
Denver 13. Oakland 3
Open: Indianapolis, New England,
Green Bay, Minnesota , Jacksonville,
Cteveland.

· 4-()

Natlonalt..Hgue

Gil
1.000 -

PF

Sunday'• Gam11
Detroit 20. Buffalo 17

$elyn:tey. Oct 14
Detroit 6, Dakland 3, Detroit wins series

03.0003

Charlotte

PA

59
82
•138
168

San Francisco 2 4 0 .333 124 194
Arizona
1 5 o .167 111 143

Frld'V. Oct. 13
Detroit 3, Oakland 0

2~

·000

W L T Pet

www.mydallysentlnel.com

from &gt;the practice squad. Signed DE
Shaun Nua to the practice sQuad.
ST. LOUIS RAMs-Traded DE Ant hony

4 1 0 .800 108' 111
4 ·2 0 .667 139 128

Seattle

New Jersey

PF

1.000 180
.60089
.200 87
.167 108

Tuesday, October 17,2006

St. Pierre. Released RB Cedric Humes

West

Tuudl¥ Oct. 10

1 'lr

6 0 0
320
1 4 0
. 1 50

Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
American LUgue

W L Pel

ALL
PF
PA
. , .271 .. 167
... 196 .. 238
... 151 .. 190
... 197 .. 156
... f27 .. 208
...99 ... 255

PF

0

69
104

Norttl

GB

Pet

Centl'lll Dlvlekm

W-L
PF
PA
W-L
PF . PA
~rat Hocking
. . .. 3-0 ... 86 ... 7 .......7·1 ... 181 .. 41
Ttlmble . .. . . ..
. .. 2-t ...74 . .. 39 ......5-3 ... 188 .. 146
Watertord . . . . . .
. .... . .. .2-t ...98 ... 39 .... .. 6-2 ... 180 .. 107
Mnter. : ..... ..... : .... . : ...... t-2 ... 45 ... 76 .... .. 1-7 .. .73 ... 186
Southern .. ..... ........ . ...... 1-2 ... 51 ... 101 . ....5-3 ... 166 .. 146
Eastern ..... : .... , .. ... . ..... .Q-3 ... 12 ... 104 . ....0·8 ...74 .. .301
Frlday'o raOUIII
.
Friday, Oct. 20
Meigs 26, Alexander 6
Alexander at Wellston
Virrton County 40, Belpre 6
Nelsonville-York at Belpre
iSielsonvllle-York 21, Wellston 14 OT
Meigs at Vinton County
Miller 19, Eastern 12
Eastern at Watertord
~ederal Hocking 14, Trimble 7
Federal Hocking al Miller
Waterford 60,.Southern 0
Trim~e at Southern

'.

St. Louis 6, San Diego 2

Gok:ten State

W-L
PF
M
w:t_
Nelsonville-York . . . . . . • • . . . . . .. 3-0 ...89 .. .46
.. .7-1
'tinton County . , .. .. . .. .. .. .. .2·1
.80 ... 59 .....4-4
'1\'ellston . . . . . .. . . . . .. . .. . . .. 2·1 .. 64 .... 46 .....5-3
Alexander : .. ................. 1·2 ... 60 ...72 .....3-4
Meigs .: ....................... 1·2 ...57 ...58 ..... 6-2
Belpre ..................... . .. 0·3 ...38 ... 107 ..... 2-6
•
Hocking Olvlolon

TVC

At11ntlc Dhtlalon

PreHuon Glance

... 56 ...89 .....4-4
... 79 ...66 ..... 1-7
... 41 ... 120 ..... 1-7
Friday, Ocl20
River Valley at' Cheeapeake
Rock Hill at Coal Grove
South Point at Falnand

Tri·Valley Conference

EASTERN CONFERENCE

St. louis s. San Diego 1
St. Louis 2, San Diego 0
San Diego 3, St. Lquls 1

Notlonel Bllktlball AIIOCIItlon

320.60083
1 4 0 .200 62

Atlanta
Tampa Bay

St. Laula 3. S1n Dteao 1

North Dlvlolon
SEOAL
ALL
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
Logan . .
. ..... 5-0 .. .225 .. 33
...6-2 ... 277
1/iarietta . .
. .. 3-2 ... 104 .. 98 .. . .. 3·5 ... 139
Zanesville . . . . . . . . .
. .. 3-2 ... 151 ..86 ..... 4·4 ...211
Warren . . . . .
. .1·4 ... 57 ...221. .... 3-5 ... 104
Athens ........................0·5 ... 59,. .213 ..... 1·7 . . .138
•
South Dlvlolon
..
SEOAL
. ALL
:
W-L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
Ghlllicothe .. . ............. . ... .4-1 ... 177 •. 117 .... .6-2 ... 229
6allia Academy ................. 3-2 ... 134 .. 123 .. . .. 6·2 ... 238
lfontor . ... .
. ..............3·2 ... 146 .. 143 .... .5-3 .. .211
Jackson . . . . . ...............2-3 , •. 156 .. 133 _.... 4-4 ...238
F)&gt;rtsmouth ·.................. . .1-4 : .. I 17 . .159 .. •. .2·6 ...222
Frldoy'o n~~ulta
Frkhty, Oct. 20
· Chillicoihe 46, Athens o
Jackson at Athens
Sallla Acaden\y 34, Jackson 27
Chillicothe at Mailetta ·
Gallla ,6,cademy at Warren
lfonton 49, Portsmouth 42
l.ogan 65, Warren ·o
Portsmouth at Logan
Marietta 28, Zanesville 21
Slturdly, Ocl21
Ironton at Zanesville (Sat)

Ohio Valley Conference

New York 9, Los Angeles 5

PRo BASKETBALL

·

ave

Tuesday, -october 17,

"

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

•

PageB2

Locators .

i

MoBnJ: fbmi
FOR SAo:_

1
~

Brick. house &amp; 7·acres land . ......
1501 sq.tt. living area.
2003 16x80 mobile home for
1203 sq.tt. unfinished base· sale. (740)446·0527
ment, 3·bedroom, 1·bath,
living rd, kftchen dtnging rm
combina1ion, TV room and
2·car detacned garage.
Located 3·miles soutn on
Rt..a2 at the V $125.000 for

--------'3 beL , 2 bath, 1990 M.H,,
2acres, 10 X 12 building,
poo l
Off New Lima 1n
Rutland ss:f.soo 740·742·
1080

App!. call (304)675·2845

-F-or_sa_t_e-_aH_e_te_ct_llc_2_bed--

ln Patriot, 3 bedroom, new room mobile home. Address
kitchen cebine1s, new fur· 1322 Jackson Pike. emas
nace. AC. new plumbing , lOt also. CaM (740~3478 .
large iot. Call/740}446-0761 Mobile home rented for
or (304~75·2329 .
$400 mo.
·

- - - · ·---"

~-----

�•

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

-tor

-oy.

OIIIIE ..,__.,
FOR REM

Almost 1 acre In Ga.ltipolis
Fanr; area 56.850 on land (2) t4x70 mobile homas tor
cont!act (304)576-2934
rent. \740)~46..000 or
(740)367-7762.
.
- l e Home Lot for"""
. near Vinton . Cal l (740)4~1- 2 badroom, 2 bath, private
, 1111.
seHing, no inside pets, close
MObileHomeLotnJohnSM
Home Park in
OH
Ph
G.llipol'
•s.
.
one
(740)-«6-2003 or (740)4461409.
.

Mobile

I

~r . RF..uw.·~lE
N ••

~

2 bedroom upstairs apt.
Water, !nosh, s1oYa refrigera· Doornlool!t'
Commo!dol
tor included. $325 rent. $325 Retail space tor Rant. $4001
deposit.
(740~·7620. month. Upstairs Office
(7~)441-9872.
Sulas tor Rent $125/'rnontll
you pay tha Utilities. Call
APARTMENTS
NOW. (700)528.00t7
,

to town . Depos~ requirad .
7
( 40)44S·6B90.
2 bedroom A1C porch &amp;
.
•
a¥.11ing. Very, wry nice, no
pels. in GanipoNs. (740)&lt;U62003. (740)4~6· t409 or
(740)446·2692

3130.
I{ I \I \ I '

r

"--...iiliitiiiiiit;;._.l
'
$1-1 4 Bedroom HUDI
4% ·- .,, 30 years
8%.
For listings 800·391 ·5226

o

ext F254

------2BR home· Vinton Ave.
$375 mo. .,. sec. dep. You pay
utHKies. Gas haat. (740)446-

36«.

3 • 4 Sr. house, 2 full bath,
garage .. and basement. AJG
and wry clean . 740·949·
2303

.

~~~~

2 Badroom
Apartments Washer/dryer
·
hookup, stove/refrigerator
included, 1 located i'1 city, 1
a
t miO! outside city
: " '·
11

'2

3BR home· SR 554. Bidwell·

$575/mo- Sec. dep. refer. ences, all eioc. (740)446·

.

.

•

r

GooDi
Oak en! ctr
rm suNe

C.rmlchMI

(740~12

tbi

ch

t!:t -------- ,. ,_.

Free Rent
Special

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Starting at S385 sod up

Centralhoat&amp;air,W/0 .
hoolwp. Coin openllod
laundfy, owner pays
water, $8W9r &amp; trash.

Ellm View

Aepalr~~S-7388. For sa~.

re-condtt•oned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera·
tors, gas and electric
r&amp;fl!IIIS air conditioners and
wringe~ washers. Witi do
repairs 00 maJor brands in
shcp or at your home.

r

:
e

Medical AaalstaniiUedlcal Receplionlat
Pleasant l/allay Hospital is Cl.1tT8I'It1y
recruning for .a Medical Receptionist/Medical
Assistant for ns physician offices. The
individual should possess prior physician
office experience
with knowledge of
CPT/ICD-9 coding, front office receptionist
procedures and clinical experience a plus.
Excellent salary, holidays, health insurance
singleflamily
plan,
dental
plan ,
l~e
Insurance, vacation, long-term disability and

u~rs.

JETMOTORS
G.-ustiving. 1andibod. AERATION
room apertments' at Vilage ' Ropeired, New &amp; Relluilt In
Ma,....
and
Riverside Stod&lt; Coli Ron Evans, 1Apartments 1n Middleport. 800-537·9528.
FrOI'n $295-$444. Col 740992·5064. Equol Housing NEW AND USED STUL
0ppoftJn1ties.
Stool Beams Pipe Rebar
-;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;-;;;; For
Concrete,
Angle,
1oklng &amp;ppUtlous tor Cllonnel, Flot Bor, Stoot
one bed ~panments at Grating
For
·Drains,
Spring Valley, Green and Drh,leways &amp; Wafkways. L&amp;l
Brookside apartments. Coli Screp Metals Open Monday.
(740)«6·1599 fur informo· Tuesday, W.dnesday &amp;
tion.
Friday, 8am~:30pm . e-.t
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
One bedroom apa_rtment. ·Sunday. (740)«6-7300

i

r ..
~

__

•
.

~

~~~-

r

·

riO

' '
c.u.us
I
MoroRIIoMis

5yrOidwhAeshorthombu"
full stod&lt;. (740)2~74 .
,

r

8
weei&lt; old
(304)675-1798

pigs

an opplication call (740)«6-

'--llli..........,.,liiiiii
...

4639.
Taking applications Modern
1SA, no pets, $275/mo
includes water &amp; sewer.
$200/dop. Call (740)«6-

Pole

C~ TO OUR TOOl 5 I!

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs County Fa=nds
Arrivol: Oct. 21,
t:OOom-11 :00om
- . , Apll21, 200'1
A fee of $20.00 MH be

·Garages

Maia .

first serve.

Stop &amp; Compare

Service

$35

I

36t7.

er, free delivery. (937)718·
,471 ,
www.natlonwide·
bams.com .

r. r-RIR-:Plmi::-SAIE
·
....- - ,

permit., ..._,

""rl·

Camnolalon,
301 South Foul1h
and adjudication ' - · Street, Room 222,
lng ....,_mull be Coiumbua,Ohlo43215.
ll&gt;: ._ng Clet1c, A Copy o1 the ....,..
Ohio EnvlronmaiiUtl be -....1 on the
Protection
Agency, dlrwctuo within 3 dayli
P.O.
Box
1041, 1t11er filing the ......
Columbus,
Ohio wtlh1he ERAC.
4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 t Appnc Ilion for J*11il
(Telephone: 61 ~ to In2129). "Final Actions: AEP G - Band IGCC
Are ttctlona of the, Project
director which lire SW. " - 33
upon lasuonce or • Great Band, OH
ltlted eflective dale. Action
o.too:
Pun~uant
to Ohio 1010212006
Reviled Code Sactlon Facility Dnc:rfpllon:
3745.04, A ftnelactlon Air
mil)' ba appealed to the UdebtufuCifulb BI,L
Envlro11mental Review ~1
Appeela Commlaslon Appllc.tlon received
(ERAC)
(Formerly for permit to lnatlll
know
ea
the combuatlon tuitllne
Environmental Board No. 1
of Review) by a l'inlil~ of certiwlio Wll a perty to • llcatlon
pi'CICeldlng before the US Army corpa of
director by ftllng an Engtn.re
appeal within 30 dlys Various OH
ol notice of the 11,..1 Action
Date:
~~etlon . Purauenl to 1011112006
Ohio Reviled Code ReceiYfng w.t.n: Ohio
Section 3745.07, A rtvw
Final Action lesulng, Identification No_ :
denying, modifying, D610ttB007
revoking, t&gt;r rwMWing Thla final ICifon not
a permit, llcenae, or pr.., Jej by propo_.
varllnce which Ia not action and Is ....,..
preceded by 1 pro- able 111 ERAC. ,..,.,.
.,.,..., action, may be to 401 Certlflc.tion,
appealed 10 the EIIAC Grant, Pwtalna to
by filing an - 1 H~mtlngton
Dlatrlct
within 30 days of Corpa of Eng'--.
inuance of lhe ftnal (10} 17
action. ERAC appeala,

Inside Storage: $4.00/Jf
Open Span: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1 .OOM
Gall 985-4372
for more Information

Meigs County
Council on Aging

Av•H•ble

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hom~fill System
• Helios System

GENERAL
CONTRAC11NG
• Prompt &amp; quality
wiHtt: .
• Affordable Ra~
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

NOT~IN6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

"Insured"

IS MORE

EMPTI' THAN

70 Pine Strftt • GaUipolis .

AN EMPTI'

446-0007

740-741-2193
• Lea~ a message

MAILSOX ..

Cornerstone
Construction

West Shade Barter Shop

R~tial

Owned &amp; operaitd by
Chris Parker
· 17 yrs. experience.

• Commercial • General Contncting

Painting • Doors • WindowS • Decks

I

• Plumbing • ElccLrica1 7&amp;()..367.QU4

First Barner Shop on

• .-.cooustic Ceiling.

74D-3lt-3412

IF '{OU PUT

'{OOR EAR UP
'(OU CAN
~EARTWE

OCEAN

ROAR ..

lly Lull ClmpDa

..

Coiobity"""' .......... . -.... . . - ........ Elm-~
ctprwraan:ts b' lnlhll'.

BINGO

f

I

..

SUNSHINE CLUB

"SX N ZIIYNI

~P. I'M Al\11,_ H~~~ .
NOf &amp;oYINC:r HER AT AIJ(..TIOI\I
~1'HINio5

MA1'1"eRTO

..
__
.........···--·

F~

YSDTKA." • NXXY JYHKBX "NWW ITY .
KTSXDJ BXY TNJ EBMDBKKYX
JOIIYNI E811 TYWL SX ZMYNIJ."
•

YWSNJ DNXYKKS

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "You 11 never Qet ahead of anyooe IS long as you
Football coadt Lou Holtz
.

lrf to get "'""witlt him.' -

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Entertainment by
Joey Wilcoxon
6:30-7:30

Room Additions &amp;
Aemodoiing
New Glrages
Elect,icel &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; ~rs

Vinyt Skiing I Painting
Patio and Porch Deck•
WV03&amp;725'

VC YOUNG Ill
·~..' ~ ~

t
•

..

. '

.

\
1

~ '·

CONSTRUCTION
Roofing • Sic11ac •
Pmnting

Gutters · Decks- Ek.
Remodeling
For F.,., Courteous

Sen-ice
frte Estilmtes I&lt;
Aft'ordable Prices,

CaD Dennis Boyd

7&lt;W-992-Il89

of

•tow 10 -

imporlant

decisions.

-•r ~

''"" . . . -eli 11=1!

I
'I.·I I I I ./!_... .
M

0

NAW

An old timer sitting on the
dock grinoed and said:ThM
are more fish-taken out of this

.1-,r=:s=~R~E:J~~E=T~~~~ river lhan ever .... in • •r
!

I I' I ,.

O Co..,..,.
"" tlou&lt;klo ........,
by hlhn; ;n the m•SStnQ wordi
l'ou dewelop ffOtft 1t~p No. 3 below

'
~ !'tiNT
NUMIUED lEITERS 1N
llj(St $QIJACfS

I I I lin I. I I

SCIAM.UTS ANSWERS 10116106
Numbly · Issue · Oulrl • Become • SCENERY

•A.lrulr conlenled person: my aunt reli1led Ia me. "is
someone whD lakes a delour and still can enJOY the
SCENERY

ARLO&amp;JANIS

GEMINI (May 21"""" 20) - Things
hawe a way of wortr.:lng out tor your uiti·
mate good , even situations or testy d1s·
turbances initiated by others. Life wia
prove to be en}oyable tor you regardleSS
ot condttlons.
·
CANCER (June 21..July 22) - Make an
efforlto Invest some of your time In qual·
lty. fun events wtth friends. It doesn't mat·
ter whether the actlvtty is phySical or
men18i , it wil

proye 1o revitalize your out·

1001&lt;.

aavanta;e.
VIRGO

~ 5TIU.. ~11'\61 ~

LtW.mP'itl'ZED

~~~~y

(Aug .

23-Sept.

22)

-

l.eodo&lt;Oh", good judgment ord strong
lnttlatlve are aMq!AIIttel upon wh6ch you
can draw. You'll do especially well in
developments that could lead to person·
I I glin .

SOUPTONUTZ
1lle

IOJZ}IOS HaP '1b

f\n ~iR OOG i)o..OI CIT

lMe 'leT's

~ll&lt;H. .

=

-----

calty. Utilize circumstanon to your

GRIZZWELLS

SEAl IT

XYGYII

your endeavors are stronger than usua l
in ways both materially lind p&amp;ychOiogl-

~·-

YOUNG'S

NIIY

lEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) - Your possibilities tor profiting In some manner from

_..

Thursday, October 19th
Serving from 5:30 • 6:30

~BC

enoe will be very pronounced on your
peelS because al~t anything ~u say
or dO wMI haVe a personal impact on
· them . You'll put them at ease end calm
their apprwhensions .

~

(304) &amp;75-38n

two

Fortunately, the aspects lndk:a.te good
judgment on your behalf with resufts of
far':'reaching effects. '
ARIES (March 2t ·lll&gt;ni 18) - Tl)e best
as98t you possess is your faculty 1orseeing things through to ooncluslons that
both please and beneftl: you. Vou aren't
likety to leave undone anything you stan
at this lime .
TAURUS (1\j&gt;ni 20-May 201 - Your P78S·

Doors open 4 pm

124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant

out 10 be 1ar more valu-

vou thought

PISCES (Feb. 20.Mard1 20) -You may
be placed In the position of having 10

GARFIELD

Early birds 5:30 pm
Reg. Sessio~ 6:30 pm

(Dec. 22·Jan. 19) -

resufts may tum

ab6e than

• Bucket Truck

(26#'s or less)
3 Pkgs. $20

.
............

llxtey's cfue: HtJqiJ.!~ X

• ....J.'--.L.--1,
.......J.'--.L.-.1.

AOU.A.RIUS {Jan. 2Q-Feb. 19) - An
Whict'l you've been woli&lt;ing
lor .some time has a good chance ol
coming to a successful oonctus+on. The

Tree Service
• Stllnp Grinding

-

31 Dlle!llmas

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~YOr on

JilES'

• Top • Removal • Trim

38rltck

•.

fN" taD!IIbled wardt

Because you know how to isolate the key
people in situations h i are important to
vou and get them on your side. you 'll be
so effective at whatever ~ do today.

make

Soup Supper

740~992-2161

Wliat wotJtd vou do now?
Although nis not recommended to rtt!Jid
in a flve.card sui!, those spades look like
a ~x~gger. You might mat&lt;e a takeout
double to bring cllbs into the picluro, but
that suit is weal&lt;.
The dolottdols must win five trlcl&lt;s. East
has played high-low in spades, showing
a doubleton. So IOU can take a third
spade trid&lt;. ond you have the heart ace
too. But where is the fifth tricl&lt;?
. ~ South has the points lor his two-heart
bid, East oennot have a club trick. The ·
. only real hope lor success is your ciamonel shcrtage. At Irick three, shift to the

""'·
CAPRICORN

~ALCI.OSE,

lol

eight.

SAGtn;o.RIUS ( - . 23-Dec. 21 I - This
might to one of those lucky days that ,
when you do something wrong, It is likely to tum out right Engage in meaningful
acttvlties while Lady Luck is in your cor-

lcxas Road off Route 7
740-!1115-3616

Wednesday Nite

(cooldltl
WI I

t ~mended that declarer

Yesterday,

.;om ln.

• Siding • Roofing • Roo m Additions • Remodeling

WV Olltl2
OH 3l2oU

.. Blloa--

. shoukllal&lt;e be-n 30 and 50 seconds
to plan the play after the dt.mmy has .
been labled. The doforiders should also
be using this time to lt*lk. In parti&lt;Mar,
eacl! should aSk himself this q - . :
From where Mil we get the tricl&lt;s that we
need to defeat the - ? Often,
answertng thai Mil make the right
dofonse obvious- as in this deal.
Delonding agalnsi three hoirts, you lead
the spade ace: four, nino, '"""'"· You
00f1tinue with the spade jacl&lt;: five, three,

In the year ahead, be optimistic and look
for upswings in your 1118, 1rom finances to
toYe lite to everyctay Issues. PosltiYe convictions will help speed along all the
good things In store for you.
LIBRA jSopt. 23-0ct. 23) - lnftuoncas
you arenl likely to be awaf'tl of at this .
time wiN be taking place on your behatf.
Someone whO likes you is dOing somethWlg Chat wHI prove l.uc:ky lor you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·-· 22) - It won~
take mUCh to get others Interested and
supportive in that which Interests you .
Because your enthUSiasm Is llkety to be
so hight)l contagious, they can'1 help but

1

·

Shlitl

'=' ~~ll-4i.~s·

PEANUTS

~··b'@M•

~Ward

u Khln• 01

33 ~
longl"
:.)
S5 Hard
48 ~&gt;Nih&lt; lor
ballet...
"'rrlfon"
36snp.
51~

_;.:;.;.;;;;.,...;;;....;; - l t r QAY I. -

We Deliver To You!

•a.

47 Slay In lhe

31 Pl)'wond

19 ExCUMmal

Ruiu.,......,.

TRIMMING&amp;

rida

8VICCinM
' 9 Bold -

oljlicll8t

Wed:
1 0 ,0ot.11.1001
By -llocl!t 0001

STANLEY 11tEE

targot?

119 T-ror•

3t Become
-of
IOT40 ~D'-13 Loculi
41 Kind
~

After leading,
keep thinking

Hantallre

42 Aa:

26 NYC Ioeiia
27 walk......
2tl MouN

Del1l

t..

41

25~d'- 43~

7' Dude from

37 Sub .,

BIG NATE

1-74f..99l..tt196

Senior Center
will be having a

$5.00 admission
For info call

Allpass

&amp; llooded
DaUy, W..tly, er
Monthly Plans

$2500

1·304-675-6183

..._

monel, your ruff dofoating the contract.
You collec11wo spades, one heart, one
spade ruff.and one diamond ruff.
Keep your eyes open lor the tricks you
need to down declarer.

Block of Nine
Progressive
Don't Want to be a. Burden
on your family?
I have one opaning lor an
alderly or handicapped female

Pus

your ace, .then lead .the spade lwo (or
queen).East shculdsee whal is needed.
He will trump the tricl&lt; and rotum .a cia-

.

Dopendloble

(740)446.8627.

~Ia

Eat

diamond three.

Fully lnsuml

Call Gary Stanley

ltCCOIIIplnled b a $70 CKC Jack Ruaall Tarrier
filing ,_ which Ill puppies. Coil (740)256-1652
ecommlalon In II chADVERT1SE
cret1on IIIIIY reduce n
by 1111c11rv11 the toppelINlltE
--alta thai
..-yment o1 the full BUUE11N BOARD
amount o1 the ,_ ..__ _ _ _ ___,
-.ld _..,,.
hardahlp,
be
filed
·with:
Envlronmeolf8l Ret11t1tt

I.

Declarer IMil win ln.hwld with his q - .
and lead a low heart, but you rush in with

Aft'ordable

30x50x10

Barns

AKC Siberian Husl&lt;y puppies. Blue eyes, $250. Full
registration, $200, limited
papers, , calm, imelligent.

- · or cart~;
and the epproval or
dlupproval of plono
and
speclflcationa.
"Draft Actlono" ere
written a-.nenll of
the
director · of
E n vl r o n me n t • I
Pr o I acI Io n ' 1
(Director's) Intent with
rwpect
to
the
lsouence, denial, etc.
ol • permit, license,
. order, etc. lnternted
pen10na mey submit
written permit, license,
order, etc . Interested
persona may submit
wrltten commenll or
NqUMI • public meet·
lng regarding dren
actions. Commen11 or
public
meeting
Nquests mull be submltted within 30 deya
of notice of the draft
•IICtlon.
" Proposed
Actions" are wrmen
at.tementa of the
diractor'a intent with
respect
to
the
ia-nce, denial, modi·
ficlllon, revocation, or
ren-al of • permit,
llcanse, or variance.
Written commeniJI and
requests for a public
' meeting regarding a

THE BORN LOSER

fairgrounds 01her lhan
stated dotes. Bulkllng .
spaoe Is first come

·

Remodeling

~

] !A=.U

access is wanted to

·Complete

-

~

d\arged for earty arrival.
late arrival, earty removal,
late removal, or anytJme

• New Homes

LOCi'"'/1

llo

(740)388-9325.

orct.r.); the ltauance,
denial, modlllcatfon or
NWIC8Ilon olllcen-,

~MfL£./

· AT LEAST NOW IT'S

:;;:==:':"~4/l~m~•:·P&lt;l~

$6,995. Pointed metal, sl&lt;l-

2 AKC mole BostonTorrieiS.
Ye1Gtleck, ahots &amp; wormad,
POP, will ocoopt deposit or
doom payment. $350 each

proposed action may
be submitted wtlhln ,30
days of notice of the
propoled action. An
adjudlc.Uon hettrlng
may be held on a proposed action If a ' - ·
lng Nqliest or objec·
lion Ia .-lved by the
OEPA within 30 daya of
iuu....., .of the proposed action. Wrlllen
comments, requnla
for public meetlnga,

t.OVt IS JLJ/111&gt; JUT
IT tMS A GlltAT

Location: 403 112 Third Ave.

Send resumes to: Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human .Resources , 2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-.4340,
fax to (304) 67!H!975, or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org •

Public Notice
County: lleigs
The k&gt;llowlng appllco·
llons and/or verified
complalnll
were
. .-lved, and the fol..
lowing - . propoled,
or fln•t ..,.
lnued, by The Ohio
Env I ro nm ent aI
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) laat w•k.
"Acllona" lncluclt the
adoption, modlflcallon,
or repeal of orders
(-then-gency

ATUAGTI0/11. ·

,~

Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM

BASEMENT .
WATERPROOFING
Uncond~Onal lifetime guar0 .. &amp;
antee. Local referencas fur·
"""""
nishad . Established 1975.
CaN 2~ Hts. (740) 446·
Clean
straw
$2.50. 0870, Rogers Basement
(740)446·3600, (740)645· Waterprooling.
0645.

~~-·

~'""V:_,

, Sf/liSE Of

&amp;

-~~~-':'!"_ _....,

LAI

. Leave Message
All Calls Returned

"ICIEI'ER BULT 'VALLEY
"819011 "HHRSE A LIVE· 1,~-tiiiiiiiiiitiiiiliii.,l.

(740)446-2•12

810

740-992-5458

itft E')(t"flfiMtNTS J/lll&gt;IGATe OLfAGTOilY
Sf/IISI/IIG OF PtffiWMO/IIfS MIGtfT
/
PLAY A ROLf 1/11 ((OMA/IITIG

Hrli s Self
Sto· :C.ge

V6. Call (740)44,.

tank.
new
plumbing,
$10,500 (304)675-4475

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

GOOD lOCATION
IN MIDDLEPORT

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740148 2217

Weot Noltlo

Opening lead: • A

71&amp;-.l67·7Ul

AJC

STOCK~ '"I...CMD- 1969 Airstream (Tagalong)
MAX
•GOOSENECK, 32', good coudttlon. 41new
DUIIPS
•
UTILITY tires, AIC, new ho1 woter

z• z• z•s•

Kim BiU-()Ir.llOI

•~~
FoRSAU:
L.~---iii-0...,1
·•
1998 Dodge caravan

~South

71&amp;--51

-~

8I 6

• AK I

s.ut•
Pass

21 Fat fiddle
2• Baic o.-

DOWN

27 Pllt !Iuman, 1 Rights
raga
30 It may be
.
. . .dit'll
. 2 Elltpla
31 ~
3 Kind
holdar
of thai IPf
32 SIDdiw'- 4 Tumpllre
34 Qya(dladaln
llopa
35 DOgund
5 Poa"a night
..... Ill •
vtlftor
38 Wellanen
8 0., ba1oni

.JI0176
• Qs

'ln Lm:oln SlrCCI: Mi&amp;llcpon. OH

, 997
Jeep
Wrangler
108 000 .,_ • y1 5 spd
•
ITWrvo ""
blld&lt;, lift, $5900 645~717

~ ~:J·JI

• Q •••
•

NOW 0/lfN
Klmmy"s Fumhure
Outlet

5-speod, air, CD, garaged
maintained. $13,000, part·
trade Surprise me mto.
(304'882-3454
'

I

l...tvllsrocx

FOR SAlE

.

187612

South

one bloc!&lt; from GAHs. •jr-&gt;:~~u~rm~;:------.
Washer &amp; dryer -up. For
., _ _

retirement .

AAIEOE

FOR SALE
Building With Or
Without Business

Sell-stor··

4x4

• 9 s
•• 2

Vu~Qenbie: North-South

"Middleport's only

runs great.

Eait

• 3
• J 59 2

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Thll Free 877-669..0007

992-3194
or 992-6635

02 Jeep Rockclimber, 4-cyt.,

•ALUMINUM
Apartments rlq~~mwrolSl•AUJMA
TRAILERS 'Ill&gt;!¥ GOOSE·
(304)882 ..,.17
NECK
HITCHES.
C.nnl~ Equ..,,_,.
...-

(740)367-70,5.
1 BR apt in Sprtng Valley.
HUD/PRC vouchersaccept·
~
ed. W/0 hookups. Call
~.. 1740,,446•0834 or 1740,,645• Fumisltad apt, 3 rooms &amp; - . ·1lex ~r
Pro XLT with
4846 (cel)
bath,
etlan, no leg&amp;latattachment.$500.
pels . .Ref/deposit required. Coli (740)446-0500.
Help Wanted
(740)446-1519.
.

-=======.;:.======:::; '--'-----.,...--·
Help Wantid

r

Jsn.

3644.

• less than perfect credit
acoepted
• Payment could be the
Same as rant.
Mortgage
Locators .
740 367 0000
1 )
'

98 Sabring,

A K J 18 I
10 7

A 93

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

10x10x10xl0

sharp. 740-441;.?278.

•

(JamihJ c•&gt;!iftU:•

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

miles, automatic. $4,500
OBO. CaM (?4Q\256_1253_
'

KQS

•
•

West
• AKQJ2

MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

t

•

53 Jll54 ,...,...

,.:::.
55~.....
15 PloiM
gill
16 WIII,IIIVW. $6 flothlne ..
17 llait•lltll
men thin
11 T-*11 n
57 oan- hrl.
20 loo liulltaig 58 Luxurious
22\Soloof
"SSM'Wn"

10·17-08

10 ~.

•

MONTY

-,---- - - - 2000 Neoo 4 door. air, ·automatte,
$2,700
080.
(740)256·1652
- - -- - - 2002 ~ Cavalier, looks
and runs great. 117,000

Deere

Noltlo

t' •.SAL~&lt;'t'
1.\f.d, 1.1\W
00
•SERVICE•FRE
' EDE.LJVERY
1 DRlT! I

Equipment 1534

$300· - - - - - - 97 John
3tOC 8,000
9
003 t
or (740)"1·1184.
'
hrs. fur 88ie or hire.
.
!lui/hutch $700; 9 cu . ft. (740)388-8228 or (740)""6·
3 bedroom trailer for rent Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br.. No Chest
freezer
$200. 7278 .
·
No pets. Trailer lot for rent. Pets. 7~·5858.
(304t674-5780.
--::-------740-949 2237
- - - - - - - - John Daere 10ft. No Ti Drill
· - - ' - " - BEAUT1FUL
APART·
- - - ·- for
rent.
Carmichael
3br h.t·Home in Gallipolis MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Equipment (740)446·2412.
Ferry call (304)674-4633
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 w
ood
Applbtnce
_ John Deere Mini Excavator/
3Br. Rehklg &amp; Stove,Washer
,
'
estw
Tractor Loader BaclchOe/
5349
1
&amp; Dryer included. Section 8 Dnve from
~ $448.
approved (304 ,576 _2934
Walk to shcp &amp; """""'· Col
W.nthouse Skid Steers. Carmichael
'
740·«6·25119.
Equal
Equipment (740)446·2412
For rent Nice 2 bedroom Housing Opportunity.
In Henderson, WV. Pre· Now Joltn Deere Compacts
mobile home in Country CONVENtENTLY LOCAT· owned Apptianoes starting ond 5000 Series Utility trac·
Homes. $325 + deposit. ED. •FFnanaa• r•
tors OK FIJ:ed for 31
(740)3B5~t 9 .
~ un~
at $75 &amp; up all under
:....c=:....c:....:.:.___ Townhouse apartments, Warranty, also have recon- monthe: ~rough . John
Mobile home for rent. and/or small houses FOR d' . ned . Sc
TV' , Deere Credit. carmichael
8rg
(740)~6~234 , (740)208· RENT. Col (7.n..... ,_, 111 - ~ 10
reen
s Equlpmem~40)&gt;W6,2412
~.b R •1 TV
(304)875- Quality John 7861 .
for application &amp; inlormation.
on
Hoy
Mobil H
a
for
t0
Equl-..t for less-round
e orne Soles
up
t6x80 in Country Homes.
.
balers, square balers &amp;
)38S-40l
Q.
•
New recln..,. $200; sola &amp; I. , _ r condition.,. C1 4 .7%
1740
=~-=-....;.--.....,
seat $400. Molohan Furn. Fixed for 48 months through
-~~
202 Clari&lt; C•·-1 Rd. PtJrter. J 0 h
"-C ed'
"'"~·~~•o
Phone
·(~)388.()173 .
n.
~re
. r II.
FOR REM
Ope 9_3 Sat ly
Carmichael
Equ1pment
~
n
· on ·
(740)446-2412.
.
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Thompsons Appl1ance &amp;

ments, furnished and unfur·
- - - - - - - nished, security deposit
A-1
required, no pets, 740-992·
Localcompanyoffertng "ND 2218.
'
DOWN . PAYh.IENT' pro· - - - - - - grams for you to buy your 1 bdrm apt with stCNe, refrig
home instead of renting.
$350. Water, sewer &amp; trash
·tOO% finarcing
pd.
1740)388·0173,

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1999 Dodge Dakota Tr.
$4,100
·
"1llkt the pain 0111
1997 Moroury GM $4,250
painting-lei us do It
2001 C1levy Covalior $3 BOO
ror you"
.
FARM
2001 Dodge tntrep $3 100
F.Qull't.tmiT
.lnterjor Only
2002 Fora Focus SE ~:SOO
2003 Ford Taurus LX 57:
500
Mobile hOme lot will take •KJEFER BULT "VALLEY Phone (30()675-~52 or
740·985-4180
16$, 1~'s. 12's wide. $125 ~ •HORSE A LIVE· (304)675,1252
Leave message
- 111 ~ref (740'""7· .,.,.... TIWLEll8 "1.0110- - - - - - - - be'•- 6
" .... ' ' ......,
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MAX
•GOOSENECK, 2ooo Mereu
Grand ";;~~·~·~~-~~;;;:
7995.
·
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ry
p
DUIIPS
•
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•ALUIIA
•ALUIIlNUII lion,
76,000/mlles, p.l.l.:.loL&amp;I.I.::III.LLI.t..a.:.t
TRAILERS 'III&gt;W GOOSE- AC,CD,PW seats, mirrors &amp;
IIV\.OU1UI.U
NECK
HITCHES. Mndows. $5,800 (304)675-

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Phillip

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· - - - - - · 2 bedroom, private lot, Avenue, _Galtipoll~:
s1ove-ref rigato r-washer· .A.tsoawiableunitson State ...,
Need to sell your ~e? dryer.
$475.00 month Route 160. Call for ~tails
La!e
lrtl~ntsd!':?rcei
deposit required. 740·992· Pot triendly. (740~Hl194
job
can buy your home. All cash
and QUic* dosing. 740-416·

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ACROSS

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3.2 Acras" MOI'ning Star
Area w/righi·A·Way. 740.949-2544

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

"'&gt;l&amp; 2 br "'&gt;l

neor 1Win R""" T_,iucoept· KIM Fruit! Cherry and • - •
mg oppliCitlons for wolling Hlcl&lt;ory nut siZe, smooth '
ed Socurlly ~sod nri· list tor Hud... l&gt;sizod, 1· br, oldn, 740-992·7~. Virgil's 03 Cholly CS; 04 Hondl
"""""'NqUinld . no pillS oportment, oeN 675-6679 Banyl'atch,St.AI. t24.~lllil CMc. (740)266-t526.
(~)360-0163
Equoi'Houslng Opportunl1y ill
Ohic&gt;
t96t Cadillac COOYOrtlblo.
1BR fumlohod opt., 1BR fur·
lft&lt;E
tOt SuB
\lory good oondlllon, lolthor
niol&gt;od mobile home. No
RliNr
·· (740)245·
pots. Rel/dop. NqUifod. ~
•• eon-Oioi llullding "'FOI' 9142
(740)446~71!2 Gallipolis
Salt" 11100 _ . . fool. all - - - - - - OH.
·
' Commen:i11 building "For porldng. Groot -.. 1992 Aooord, one
Rent" 11100 oquare fool. all lion! 7q l11nl In - · mint oondltion,
2bodrms., taundryrm ., r g &amp; - portdng. Greol loci- 'Gallipoiii.Piioo"Nor•"'tlo" $2,500. C.ll after Spm
rel.furnilhod, 1sU. cleon, In """'· 7q llllrd In
(740)14611997.•
city. (740)44Hl596.
Gallipollo. Rent 'Noga1lolill"
Col Woyno (404)1511 3802 Col Worne (&gt;104~. 1995 Chryolor NY $2.800

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www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

rent.
2
3BR home 01'11'1
$9,995. Wit help deliy. BR, CIA, -n. new carpet,
01)'. C.ll (740)385-7671 .
nice level lot, Rt 833. Small
out bldg. $475 plus U1illtieB
New 2006 Clayton sin· &amp; dep. No pet.. 740.a.3·
glewi&lt;los starting at S199.84 5264.
per month. Trodo·ins wei·
oomes. Coli (740)385.2~. Very nice 2 bedroom hou8e
lms &amp;
with garage rn Crown City.
$500 pkls utrllties. Security
A&lt;liFAGil ·
deposh and references
roqUirad . No pets. Call

-

Tuesday, October 17. 2006
ALLEYOOP

r THinK iT was
a DoGG'1' ·saG .

�•

•

'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinelcom

~~waii quake damage

Thesday, October 17, 2006

Free blood pressure,

· is estimated at
$46 million-plus, A2

glucose tests at
open house, A6

•

Giz
Middleport• Pomeroy, Ohio
:;oli'\IS•\ol .)h '\ P . )I

~

ROBO DOG

The perfect pet, robo dog playfu~wobbles about the house. He even ~ys,fetch· With ..
his very own cheese bone(.!_). Realistic drool feature@adds authenticity
. ·
to this exotic pet. Mouse feed &amp; mouse
.
.
feed with caffeine sold separately.
•

BY BRIM J. R&amp;D

. • All-lVC teams

POMEROY - It seems hard to
imagine in a county with the slate's
highest unemployment figures,' but
one local employer is experiencing
a shortage of the trained workers
he needs to manufacture and ship
his product.
Jim Kessinger of Mountaineer
Metals, located in the former
Midwest Steel building on West
Main Street, is having problems
finding workers who are able to do
the work in his aluminum ·process·
ing plant - and who are willing to
stay with the job.
Kessinge~ purchased the building
and moved his business here earlier
this year from Millwood, W.Va.,
because the facilities allowed him to
expand, but he's been unimpressed
with the JJDlential workforce here.
Frankly, Kessinger is having some
second thoughts about relocating
here, because the workforce here
has proven to be less than adequate.

.® ..

NOT SUITABLE FOR HOMES WITH CATS.

·0BmJARIES

m. underhill ·

BREEO@MVOAILYSOOINEL.COM

amounood See Page 81

USED BY MICE
EVERYWHERE FOR
CAT DISTRACTION

This high energy pet uses
dual mice motors plus a
wobblematic counter weight
system that ensure.s perky
performance under
any circumstance.

. "It's terribly discouraging,"
Kessinger said. ••t .c an) operate a
buisiness without help, and l can't
seem to find good people who are
willing to work."
Kessinger pays between $8 and
12 an hour for saw operato,s, fork·
lift operators and other laborers. He
said he "should have" 25 employees
on the site. He has only 10, and of
those workers, only three are Meigs
County residents. The rest live in
surrounding counties, including
Mason and Jackson, W.Va. ·and
Gallia County.
Kessinger has experienced persistent problems with e·mployees
who hire on to work and then last
only a few days - or even a few
hours. He said the app1icants who
seek work at his plant are consistently underqualified. He said pe
has seen an excessive supply of
welders trained through Meigs
-/
High School, and feels the commuWorkers at Mountaineer Metals cut, sort, ar:~d identify scrap aluminum prodnity oould do a better job of pro-

.......

Pin

•-'*'' c.AS

--------~--~--~----~----------~----------~------------------~"

• Lougean Chancey, 80

Racine officials .
disappointed in
new water weDs

BY Bml SfRGENT
·BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

INSIDE
• U.S. population
passes 3)() mlion.
See Page 14
~ Gamgers hear about
Health Department
services. See Page A3
• Southern to open
after-school enrichment
actil(ities. See .Page A3
•DuPoni:WorkeiS
exposed to C8 show no
ii1Cle8Sed m0r1ality risk.
See Page AS

• Family Medicine.
See Page NS

WF.ATHEit

BY Bml Satau•

•

SYRACUSE - Meigs
County was well represented at the recent 2006 State
Special Olympic Track and
Field Meet in Columbus at
The Ohio State University
and Jesse Owens Track and
Field Stadi~ -A'O.
local athletes joined 3,000
athletes from across Ohio
in competition.
Ability took center stage
as. opposed· to any disability
wttl!'!leveral athletes eamuig
top honors in their events.
Individual results for
Meigs County 3lhletes who ·
competed in dle games are as
follows: Michael Batton, 50
meter run, first place, softball
throw, first place; Manhew
Bella, 50 meter run, f01111h
place, softball throw, serond
place; Bill Brewer, standing
long jump, fOUI1h place, softball throw, first plare; Don

BSERGENT@MYDA.ILYSENTINEL.COM

PI

... - "

~~-me',

,AS

Athlete Bi.ll Brewer acknowledges fhe cr:owd updn receiving his first place medal for the softball throw at the 2006 State Special Olympics.

Council on Aging receives grants

When handle iS 'PlJShad in
dirrection shoWn will~ tit

· ·Jeft@or right@?

BY Cttuui:NE ILa

1CM

HOEFl.ICHII!MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

INDEX
l2

PAGI!S

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds
Editorials

Obituaries

As

®B~
•

ouo~

Sports
Each cplumn. row and square must use Js 7,2,3,&amp; 6, plus the
diagonals must add up to the • shown.(diagonals can

82-4

Bs
A4

Comics

·-··
Rw.a••••

A3
A3 .

Weather

8 Section
A6

POMEROY -TWo new
funding grants, one for
$60,000 for the Wellness
Center, the other for
$7,500 for a new respite
program,
have
been
received by the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
--~-~
The announcement came 2007 officers elected at the annual meeting
of the Meigs
at the annual meeting of County Council on ~ing Tuesday were from left, Kathryn
the Council on Aging held Hart, president, Paul Reed, vice president of personnel and
Tuesday morning ' at the finance; Betty Longenette, secretary; Ben Slawter, treasurer;
Senior Citizens Center. and Alice Wolfe. vice president of program and evaluation.
The $60,000 two-year
grant was given by the time but at a Jesser figure.
program at the Center. Darla
Sisters of St. Joseph
$
Charitable
Foundation .
The · ?,500 grant COJl)eS Hawley, assistant director,
The Sisters have been pro- · from
the
Brookdale who wrote the grant, noted
that il will be for patients
viding suppon for the Foundation and will be used
Well ness Center for some- to develop a daycare respite
P11ase- APic. AS

........

a~o~oe
•

RJKI1 e, AS

URG grouridbreaking set for Friday
S!I'Aff' Ita CRl
POMEROY - Local, state, and federal officials will be'
on hand at II a.m. on friday to officially kick off the con;
struction ·Of lhe University of Rio Grande/Rio Grand(!
Community College Meigs Center.
,
The pmjected $2.3 million, 12,000 square foot school
will "serve as a catalyst for higher education and training
in Meigs County," Economic Development Director
Perry Varnadoe said.
The center wiU be built neu to Meigs Local Middle
School on· seven acres of land donated by the Meigi .
Local School District along U.S. 33. The project is a joint
effort between the Meigs County · Community
Improvement Corporation, which will build the facility,
and Rio Grande.
The Appalachian Regional Commission has committed
$400,000 to the project, Rio Grande has received a
$200,000 capitol budget allocation to assist, and Pomeroy
Attorney Bernard Fultz has contributed $200,000 to make
this facility a reality.
.
''This is a great example ofa community working togeth ~
er to fill vital community need," said CIC President Paul
Reed. "This just adds 10 the optimism we feel about the
future of Meigs County."
·
:
The project is expected to begin construction before
the end of the year, and hopes to be ready for students
late in 2007.

a

®OU8 BOD\)

·~ ®B~UU ~~00~
·~ ®BU. OOODO .• ®UII~
·• ®

PI i• -

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

New officers
elected for 2007

'

2 SocnoNS -

RACINE To say
Racine officials are disappointed in the progress of its
new water wells is an
understatement.
.
At this week's ~ssed
. session of Racine Village
Council the hot topic was
the design on the new wens
ooming up short. The wells
were designed for 500 gallons ,per minute (GPM) but
well four has ended up with
250 GPM and the other,
well five, for 125 · GPM.
Representatives from RLM
Engineering said the data
' umples taken for both
we11s before drilling were
nearly identical though
..fine materials" were dis·
covered in well 5 after·
wards. These fine materials
include vines and the well
5I tntltkl.......,
also contains clay both of

Buffiitgton, I 00 meter walk,
· fifth place, softball throw,

•

......

ucts. rhe owner of the Pomeroy-based oompany has eKperienced significant
problems finding and retaining a qualll,y workforoe since locating here .

Page AS

One of the keys to cartooning is the ability to draw your
character's face in a complete range of angles and still have it
look like the same person. So far we've been working with the
most basic and thus most boring view, straight on.@For the next
several weeks we'll be working on how to. rotate heads.

.. . ,,

Pomeroy aluminum processor finds workforce lacking·.

SPORTS

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