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PageD6:

GARDENING

'

Sunday, October 29, 2oo6

.

Now's the ti1ne to ensure your
greenhouse is ready for winter

Owen second, on
to state, Bt

Eagles soar, Bt

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR I&gt;P WEEKLY FEATURES

I

NEW MARKET, Va. October is the time of xear
when greenhouse gardeners get serious.
. The, emph;~si s changes
from simply stretching the
growing season to plant
survival, . ensuring that
tender shrubs, vegetables
or flowers make it through
the potentially lethal · c hill
of winter.
An estimated 7 million
American households have
greenhouses, accerding to
Bruce Bunerfield, research
· director for the National
Gardening
Association.
Most use them to over-winter bulbs, perennials and
. container plants; get an
early start on spring with
seed trays; toughen plants
for transplanting; or even
serve as entertainment
annexes, places for wine
and appetizers or just reading a book accompanied by
the sound of 'rain drumming on the roof.
Roger Marshall, author
of "How to Build Your
· Own ·Greenhouse" (Storey
Publishing), does all those
things and more. He also
uses one of his two backyard greenhouses for supplementary home heating.
"After about 10 a.m. on
a sunny February day, the ·
attached greenhouse gets
up to about 80 degrees,"
Marshall said. "I can open
the window between my
studio and the Jean-to and
catch . the aromas from
. AP photo
trees and flowers along This is the time of year to insulate greenhouses to ensure your tender plants survive the
with pulling in some radi- winter. Art Hegeman of New Market. Va., uses inexpensive foam sheeting to seal open
ant warmth."
spaces against drafts and a gas heater that will continue operating despite power outages.
•
Now is an opportune Along with tropical flowers and cool weather vegetables such as spinach, he also keeps
a
time to clean and winterize cockatiel and several finches in his greenhouse.
~
hobby greenhouses. That
includes disinfecting all gies one to l l/2 · (plant good electricity alterna- heated sections of the
growing surfaces; power- hardiriess) zones warmer tives, although they should house, or cover them with
washing roof panels and than they would be if they be vented,
newspaper or other insulatoutside walls to remove were growing in the
" Another
emergency ing materials until the
algae, tree sap and pollen ground. That means 5 to step that can be taken is problem is resolved.
residue; coating the cedar 10 degrees warmer." ·
to dra;n the househol.d
If nothing else, a cozy .
or redwood frames with
Stale air can be a prob- water heater and place greenhouse can provide an
teak oil or some kind of !em with greenhouses, buckets of hot water in offbeat wintertime retreat.
preservative; and Jubricat- espeCially
in
winter. the greenhouse," accord"The best pan of all this ·
mg vent openings and Warmed air should be cir- ing to a fact sheet on the is that oR a cold February
door hinges.
culated evenly · to keep Web
site
Charley's · day, instead of·heading to
"You need to check your pockets of cold from form- Greenhouse and Garden.
Florida, I just walk into
heating ·s ystem early," ing around plants near the
"If the greenhouse starts the greenhouse, sit do.wn
Marshall said. "If you ground.
to freeze, the water will and take it all in,:·
don't, y ou could run into
"If you use a heater, buy freeze first, and as it does Marshall said.
trouble if you need to wait one with a fan on · it," it will release heat. This
for parts."
' On the Net:
Marshall said. "Ventilation wiil give. the plants an
Other winterizing sug- is important. "
additional buffer before
For more about building
·
gestions:
You can keep energy they start to freeze."
and operating a hobby
• Install a layer of inex-·
costs down by using atherIt's also a good idea to greenhouse, see this West
pensive bubble wrap on
mostat to control the beatet, ,. have a battery -operated Virginia·
University
inside walls and replace
said
Mike
Helle,
sales
.
a
nd
alarm
set
to
go
off
if
temExtension Service Web site:
broken panes.·Secure glass
!llarketing
manager
for
peratures
in
the
greenhouse
http: llwww. wvu . edul
or poly sections to the
Sunshine
GardenHouse
in
start
to
fall.
You
always
can
718agexten!hortcultlgreenframework
to protect
Longview, Wash.
,bring treas~red plants into houlbui[ding.htm.
against wind.
"
Most
greenhouses
need
• Stack insulating bales
of straw or hay along only be kept just above the
freezing temperature, not
exposed walls.
• Caulk drafty air spaces. tropical," Helle said. "You
Seal openings around doors can find gas or . electric
· and vents with foam tape. heaters to fit your greenUse aerosol cans of foam house. Think about nonfor plugging holes around.. electrical backups if you
electrical boxes or along want to avoid trouble during power outages."
• F«fE 2~7 ~ 14ochnic:al Support
floors and foundations.
• Drain wat;::r lines unless
A generator is a good
• Unlimited Hw,., No Co1-dl
• 10 E-moil Add,_
you plan to heat your · idea if you value your overgreenhouse through winter. wintering plants. Propane . • FIIEE Spom .
Many greenhouse grow- or kerosene heaters also are
ers, including Marshall,
operate either warm (night
temperatures . 65 to 70
degrees) or cold (night 35
to 45 ), although there are
variations (cool, 45 to 50
degrees, and moderate. 55 .
to 60).
"I run heat into the leanto in winter, where I have
my orc h a~d (of lemon,
lime and banana trees) and
anything else needing ele vated
temperatures,"
Marsha ll said . "We had
enough oranges from our
trees last winter to make
marmalade and we grew
tired of Key Lime pies."
Hi; frees tand ing gre en house, mea nw hile , goes
unheated, used primaril y
for growi ng such tough
cool-weath er -cro ps a ~
spinac h. cabbage and artichokes .
" I ca n safe ly harvest
until Thanksgiving," sa id
M ars ha ll , who lives in
James town, · R.I. " By
using bubble wrap on the
wall s and throwing fleece
covers over , the plants. I
probably keep my veg-

Middleport • Pome roy, Ohio
;,o &lt; 1·. \ITS • \·ol. :;h . :'oio ..) '1

:\10:\D \'r . OCTOBER :Jo, 2006

~s

SPORTS
• Southern keeps Eagles
winless. See Pnge Bl

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Gary Wayland, 69

INSIDE
• Law You Can Use .
See Page A2
• Land transfers.
See Page AS
• Fewer arrests made at
annual Halloween bash
in Athens. See Page A6
.• Ashtabula hopes river
cleanup leads to rebirth .
See Page A6

"""

J.

"'"!.'"'" "' "'' ' · "'"

toPomerov

bc~n. '"w~·re all in this -together,"
and he ha' promised an '"honest. eth ica l and lran,parcnl administration,"
POMEROY - Mak ing hi s first
if dectcd.
offic ial ca m p~ i g n vi sit to Me igs
Strickland also mad e a pledge:
CoUiity since the governor 's race
That be wou ld move the governor's
began. U.S . Rep . Ted Strickl and. Doffice from the Ri fe Towe r where it
Lisbon, recalled his close re lationis no w. '"bal·k ll&gt; the .statehouse
ships with M e i g~ Cou nty conwhere il belongs."
stituents and the support he has tra. Such a move, h~ sa id. would be
ditio nall y enjoyed from both
'ymbolic.
Republicans and Oemocrats here .
" It\ close to the people, it's accesAs part of a tour of the southeastsible to the peopk. an9 it would
ern Ohi o cou nt ies which help make
. keep state gowrnme nt more
up his Sixth Congressional Distri cl ,
acco untable symbolil·ally to the peoStrickland sto pped in Pome roy
p1e. "
.
Satu rday to address supporters and
Strickland ~va' accompanie&lt;.l on
promote t he De mocratic ticket for
hi
s
·vi, it hy two me mbers of the
statewide offi ce. He an·i ved from
sta
tew1de
Democratic tic ket, and by
.Mar ietta anc.l was heading next to •
the Democrat who hope' to succeed
Vinton Count y.
Stri ck la nJ in Congress, Charli e
"Meigs County ha1 been good to
Wi lso n. Wihon won a wri te-in camus and we· ve tri ed to be good to
paign fnr the nomi nation in las t
you:· Strickl and said after introducspring\ pr imary.
-ing his wife, Frances .
Brian J . Reed/photo
Strickland also encouraged sup"This county has suffered a lot .
U.S.
Re
p.
T
ed
Stri
ckl
and
greeted
supporters
after
a
speech
along
the
Oh
io
port
of Debbie Philli ps. the Athens
but you 've worked hard to keep thi s
River
in
Pome
roy
Saturday.
Demonat
runni ng fo r th e 92nd .
\.
region vi able for the futu re,"
Strickl and said . "Thank you for your primary . th at yea r to fe llow Count y told him during his llr.' t Hou se District seat, c iti ng his need
faith, and thank you for cari ng for Congressma1i Bob McEwen · in a campa ign !hat Meigs County was a for support ive Democratic legisladivisive· rnce that many of Mill er's hopeless cause for hi h1 - that he . tors to help with the refo rm s he has
others in your communi ty."
Since he f1rst won th e Democratic loyal supporters fo und offensive. co ul d ne,er w in an e lecti on in proposed .
Jenn ifer Bnumer. candidate for
primary for the U .S. House in 1992 , The liberal-lean in g Stric kl and Meigs or Washington Counties.
"He did n't kn ow what he was Sec retary of State and Richard
Strickland has ne ver lost an e lection ga ined many of Mil lei·'s bipartisan
Cordray. ca ndidate for Treasurer of
talk ing about." Strickland said.
;n Republican Meigs County. U.S . supporte rs.
Strick land said his message du ring State. also addre,sed th e crowd of
Rep. Clarence Miller, immense ly
Stri ckland sa id Saturday a promi popular here, lost the Repub lican nent Republican in his nat ive Sci(llo the guhcrnatorial campaign has approximalcly 100.

BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pumpkinport

Antiquity
man dead
incilleged
shooting
incident

1

ANiiQC ITY - George
Donald Stobarl of Antiquity
wa;, dead on arri val at a
hos pital
Huntington
·s aturday eve1ii ng where he
'"" lifefl ighted for treatmen! of inj uries ·allegedl y.
,uffcrcd in a shootin g inciJ~nt.

i\ccordi ng to Bob Beegle.
.'-'leig' Cou nty Sheriff, the
body was ta ken to the
' ·l nn tgnmery
Count y
Cnron~r·s office in Dayton
fm an autnp'y.
Beecle said the incidem
rcmaill~ under .investigation

and tha t the re has .been no
Jcterm ina't inn a' to whether
any other perso n was
invol\·ec.l. Stnbart . according
to the 'hcriff. was about 68.
The BC I was o n th e
"ene a, · V:'as Matthew
Dmw huc. Meics Co unt y
ass i ~tant prosecl1tor. alon£·
with officers of the sheriff's
offict'.

• Democrats claim ·
momentum, Republicans
hope to mobilize base as
Nov. 7 vote nears .
See Page A6

............ , .,.

Brian J. Reedlpholo

WEATHER

Trick or treat brought out many pretty. funny and scary characters to the streets of Midd leport Thu rsday night. The
Halloween festivities are·'not ove r quite yet, though. The Middleport Community Association will sponsor its second. annu
al Pumpki nport event Monday eve ning, with activities for children and adults. alike. Aubrey Lyons . 5. Pomeroy, and 011via
Wyatt, 5, Middleport, look over the selection of pumpkins at Mitc h's produce stand. in preparation for the pumpkin dec·
orati ng contest to be held as pa rt of to night's event. School-aged children are invited to enter the ir decorated or carved
pumpkins in a contest for prizes, including a bicycle and gift certificates. Me rchants will hold special Moonlight Madne ss
'promotions, and free refreshments· will be.served. T~e event begins at 6 p.m. in downtown Middleport. Regist ration for

~:; :;;;;~; '""i\,i;~h'of Dimes honors Torres
'Enduring
Freed.om'

Detalta on Page A6

BY CHARLENE HOEFL:ICH

HOEFUCHIIMYDAILYSENTINEL coM

POM'E ROY Norma
Torres. RN. · BSN . MS Ed.
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM has bee n selected "by the
March of Dimes for thi'
RACINE - - Wit h only year' s
Lifetime
two soldiers left oQ its maii- Ach ievemenl Award .
mg list the Enduring
Torres will be honored and
Freedom Su pport Group presented the award at the
was preparing to go into organ ization's annua l Health
retirement once th ose two
Leadership Awards lun returned home around
cheon
to be he ld nt the
Christmas but in a matter of ·
Greek
Orthodox
Cath~dral.
weeks that has chan ged and
the group now has eight ser- 555 N. Hig h Street in
vice men in need .of it' sup- Columbus at I I:30 a.m. nn
Nov. 15.
pm1.
"The Health Leader,hip
Enduring
Freedom
Lu11cheon i' an
Award;
Member
Jan
Cardone
opportunily
for health care
laughed and sai~. '"We're
profes,ionals
to recognize
back . We ' re coming ovt of
semi -retirement hu t th at's and applaud their ov. n." '&lt;lY"'
l&gt;r.
R1chard
l\kCicaJ.
okay "ith u, ...
Profes,or of PediaTri c' at
the Ohio State Liniversit)
Ple•se see Duty, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

INDEX
2 S ECilONS- 12 P AGFS

-fJt

LIN C O LN

~MERCURY .

Glllllllls, II

A2
Calendars
Classifieds
B2-4
Comics
Bs
Annie's Mailbox A2
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
A5
B Section
Sports
"
A6
Weather
© aoob Ohio Valk"Y PUblishing Co.
v

.

Norma Torres
and Children\ Hospit :d ·
March of Dime' Board d1air
and
He alth
l.caucr,hlp
c\\\anJ..., l'nnH nith't' ~.: n l'll &lt;llr
~ k llllh"d 1' 1•11 " 1 ,!11"' 11
tc&gt;l\11·res. llthers Ill he rccc&gt;gn_;tell :md honuml 11 the

•

LandlordS
·re.qui• re·d to
.

register
i properties

1

luncheon will k leaucn in
the fields of ad' am·cd prac- 1
STAFF REPORT
l ice nur,ing . l"l&gt;rporatc. i NEWS@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
hcalih ca re support. nursing. \
communit) ph y"cia n. and
POMEI-tOY - A n e\\~
public hcalih care.
1 'tate' Ia\\" re4u1re' owners ol
Torre,. retired health wm -~ rc\ldcntwl re ntal property lo
mi" 1011 .,r anJ nursing Jirec - re gJSter I heir prupertie; wi th
wr ~~ the Mcig;, Count~ the counl\ auditor. Meigs
Health Department. Ill\\\ 1 Count~ AL1di10r Mary Bye'rserving a' th" .:finical ,upe1 - • Hill said.
, isor of home care servie·cs ' The nc" law is part of
c&gt;ll"c rcd thrn u~h 1hc Me·i~s Substitute· House Bill 2'!4.
c.,u 11 ty Cl&gt;un~-il on .\gin~. "h1ch became hi\\ 011 SepL
\\",IS ,clc.:tcd fm the ''r!': 11 uch , The 11e\\ rental rcgi,trJtation\ tor :1\lard lwc:~t"'' lillll rcr.juirc' re·nt:d property
nf he'! '" t1cmc 11 J., 11 , contri - "" 11crs tn pnn ide the audibut ion' to health care ...
tor "1th contact mforma,\ n:llive' nf "Jc\\ Yorh tion. including a telephone
Cit). she came to Oh 1o in the numha. mahmg it ca,ier tc•
I,Jtl' 197(k Her "nr~ has ~cl ill touch "llh the O\\ ner
hcen dcclic:ned tn \\riling ;n the ncm of ,, pmhle1~
~ 1 a 11 t , dnd c..:-ttl'L' \ hn1 \,
"11h thc11· prnpl~rt ~. The new
~u,h ,,,· 11 1 ~· '&gt;pc·,·,·h """ lc'qlllle'llll'l11 "'" ,trcamlme

Please see Torres. AS

Please see landlords. As·
'

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�.,

•

BYTH

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday. Oct. 30
POMEROY - V~tcrans
Serv ice Commi"ion. 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy.

Wednesday. Nov. I ·
REEDSVILLE -· Olive
Saturday, Nov. 4
Township Trustees. regular
SALEM CENTER '-Star
~ess ion , 5:30p.m., township
Grange #77'13 and Star Junior
garage.
Grange #878 meet for potluek
· PAGEVLLE
- Scipio • supper at 6:30p.m .. followed
Township Trustees will by meeting at 7:30. All memineet at 6:30 p.m. Pagevi \\e bers are urged to attend.
town hall.
Monday. Nov. 6
R UTLAND - f{utland
Township Trustees meet in
regu Jar session; 5: 15 p.111 ..
Rutland Fire Station. ·

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 30
POMEROY. - Oh-Kan
Coin Club. 7 p.m .. Pomeroy
Library.

\

Tuesday; Oct. .H
CHESTER Chester
Council 323 , Daughters of
America wi ll meet at 7 p.m.,
at the Masonic ha II. The
chang.e is due to Election
Day u•e M the hall .
Wednesday, Nov. I
POMEROY
- The
Middleport Literary C lub
w ill meet at 2 p.m.· at the
Pomeroy Li~rary. Nadine
Goebel
will
rev iew
Labyrinth by Kate Mossc.

Thursday, Nov. 9
CHESTER - Shade River ·
Lodge will _m eet at 7:30p.m.
at the halL New ofticers will
be elected. Annual dues m·e
payab le. Oyster stew wi ll be
served followjng the meeting . .

,

Other events
Fridav, Nov. 3
NEW HAVEN, W.Va . Oh-Kan Coin C lub exhibit
at the City National bank, 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the lobby.
Ex t ensiv~ display, soine
coi n appraiSal.

Birthday
Saturday, Nov. 4
SYRACUSE - Edward
Wells will celebrate his 90th
birthday Nov. 4. Cards may
be sent to him at P. 0. Box
836, Svracuse, Ohio 457791.
His daughters are Ruetta
,( Bob) Crow or Syracu&gt;e and
Jane (Danny) Mitchell of
Ravenswood. W.Va.

Annie's Mailbox
Dad doesn't know if
· he ·should butt out

.•

t hin~ :-.

..

i-. ta lt.. inl.:!
" l&lt;~mpe~- question .~ to mllliesmailbox@comcasl.nel, or write
and :-&gt;cream-., non"cn'l' at me.
then tums :m&gt;lllld and as~s for 10: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
m~ t1clr. She cne"' hell frus- Box /18190 , Chicago, fL
I rated and tim"' s thmgs when 60611 . To find !Jill more

•

.'

·I

New ba'nkruptcy·law limits filing choices
Q.: Is it true that, the new bankruptcy law might Internet.
affect whaf type of bankruptey I might choose tofile?
A.: Ye s. Your abilit y to choose may be limited by a
"mean&gt; test " you must· now complete to determine the type
of-bankruptcy for which you are e li gi bl e. The " means test"
form is now part of the consumer 's bankruptcy case fi ling,
and it compares your last six months actua l household
income to the med ian hou~ehold income level reported by
~mmhes . of the same s1ze 111 your area. If your household
mcome IS above the medtan , the n your-househo ld expens· es are examined as well. If more tha n 50 percent of your
~-ebts arc business-related debts, then you do not have to
tile a· means test.

.'

'

Ho~·e\'er. the scs~ions must. he with•a credit coun-

se)or that has hecn arproved for bankruptcy counse li ng by
the executive Office o r the United; States Trus!ee.
•
Q.; What happens during counseling?
'A.: Before filing for bankruptcy. you must review your
· bi ll s -and budget with a credit counselor who wi ll discuss
non-bankruptcy alternatives (called pre-bankruptcy couns.c ling). The second counsel ing sessiorl (called debtor edu cation) mus.t occur after you have filed your case, but
before the 45th day fo ll owing your first schedul ed hearing
\vith the bankruptcy trustee (called a "Sect ion 34 1" meetin g).
·
·Debtor education involves a financial management course.

.

.

'

Q.: How might the means test affect my bankruptcy?
A.: If your hou seho ld income is helow tl1e median. you
"m file either a Chapter 7 "stra ight liquidatiqn:· bankruptcy or a threc "to-fivc- ycar Chapter \3 repayment plm\ bank ~
ruptcy. II', however. your income is above the median
(assuming yours is a consulner debt bankruptcy). and your
hou sehold expenses result in excess · income for your
household , then you wi ll not have the option of filing a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy. In stead, you will be limited to filing
e ither a Chapter 1.1 or Chapter I I repayment plan.

Q.: What types of documents will I need when I file

Donald "Davey" Denney Ill
" Love Vou Hug Bug!''
LJD~e;::a~nn~l~e~&amp;~~~H~Il~l_) IG1ramlma &amp;. Grandpa Wigal
Jace Anden Hill
"Love ya!"

hankruptcy?
·
· A.: In adqition to your pre-bankruptcy cou nse ling cer~
tificate, you wi ll need a record of the last six months'
income used to calcu late the "means test;" including actual pay stubs rece ived in the last two months before filing.
and your la&gt;t two to three years' tax returns. Additionally,
you may be asked to rroduce the following documentation:
• deeds. mortgages, motor vehicle and memorandum
' Q.: What are the differences between the types of titles, as well as bank and investment accounts;
• any divorce or chi ld support records. and records of ahy
bankruptcy?
lawsuits or judgments; and
A.: In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, an examiner (the
·• the last couple of months of bills and a credit report (to
"trustee") may se ll assets with non.-_exempt e4uity (such as
e nsure that all debts have been listed).
a car with no loan agai nst it. cash in the ba:nk. or tax
refunds) to pay off some of your debts.
The remaining debts are discharged (legally forgiven).
Q.: When should I consult an attorney about banka lthough some debts. such as studen t loans , c hild support ruptcy?
and spousal support. cannot be discharged.
A.: You ·should consult with an attorney experienced in
In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. you ke.e p your property bankruptcy issues when you believe you will not be able to
while repaying. a potion of your debts over time. Your . continue to pay yimr b ills on time. have been sued on your
repayment amount is based on what the court finds to b~ debts. or · are uncertain as to your rights concern in g . the
reasonable.
debts you owe . Depending uron your particular s ituation ,
A C hapter II bankruptcy is usuall y reserved for big husi - your attorney can help you decide if it would be to your
nesses or very wealthy people . Most cons umers file under advantage to file bankruptcy or to avoid bankruptcy.
Chapter 7 or C hapter 13. There is also a C hapter 12 bankLaw You Can Use is a weekly comumer legal informaruptcy that can be used by family farmers and fishermen .
tion
column provided by tire Ohio State Bar Association
Bankruptcies filed under Chapter I I or 12 do not reql)irc
the means testing and counseli ng that is required for indi- (OSBA). Tlris article was prepared by Columbus attomey
Lloyd D. Colren and Cantorr attorney Anthony j.
·
vid ua ls filin g under. Chapter 7 or 13.

Q.: Must I now go through counselin~: ifl intend to tile
for bank ruptcy?
A.: Yes~ - You ·are now required to have two counseling
sess i on~. O)Je before· filiilg and o ne afterward, but you can
complete t'h em in persl.)n. over the phone. or across the

.•

how to. · sav_e . on u.tility- reports. A th ank
.' · you card
ex penses. He said one can wi1s signed · for Dennis
save as much as 10 percent a Leone for his assistance to
year on heating and cooling · the group and a get well card
by setti ng the thermostat as was $igned for Vinas Lee.
low as is comfortable · in
Joan Corder reported that
w inter and as h igh as is com- she has five applications for
fottable in the summer.
the schol arship . Ida Diehl
He e ncouraged members· volunteered to replace the
to shop for energy suppliers , late Jim Hupp on the schol· and look into · the Home arship committee. ·
Energy Assistan~:e Program.
Maxine Whitehead reportand distributed handouts to ed on the progress of the
the members .
retirement planning commit. Park 4 Barbershop Quartet tee .
The
Supplementa l
entertained.
Retirement Planning Seminar
A brief bLisincss meet in~ will be held from 6:30 to 8:30
followed, with th e secre~ p.m. on Nov. \3 at Meigs
tary 's
and
tt:eas urcr\ Midd le Sc hool cafeteria.

.·

"We Love You!'
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Kylle Metheney
Love, ·
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Lauren June Smith
"We Love you"
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Isaiah
Anna Norman .'Grandma
Victoria Norman &amp;

"Love You!"
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Rohan Holter Hugle
"Love Yal"
Gi-ammy &amp; Jim

Jordan Alley
Love, Grandma &amp; Grandpa
Nobles and Aunt Michelle

Braylon Paul Harrison
We Love You
Grandpa &amp; Grammy

Andrew Riffle
"Love ya!''
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Kylie Metheney
Love,·
Maw Maw &amp; Paw Paw

Faith Lillian Roush
Love Vou!
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Lila Jo Cooper
We LoveVou!
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Alexa Ingels

Josie Ellen

Ethan

&amp; Brooke

"Love you!"
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Troy &amp; Bridgett Bauer

Grant Smith
Loveya
Milford &amp; 'Rollllllne Frederick

Jorja Jae Lisle
· "Love you"
Daddy &amp; Mommy

Daddy, Mommy &amp;

David McTurner Clifford
We IO'Ve you·
Mom&amp;Dad

Josiah Reith Smith
Mi Mi's Little Man

Brayden Otto
"We Love Vou"
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Marlo Norris
"Love Va"
Grandparents· ' '
Darrell &amp; Jan Norris,

"Love You!"

.. ..,.
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Specialist addresses retired teachers
POMEROY
Roy
Hoe liar
of
the
Ohio
Consume r Counc il was the
guest speaker at the recent
meeting of the Meigs
County Retired Teachers.
held at Trinity . Ch urch in
Pomeroy.
Gay Perrin . . president,
opened the meeting w ith the
Pledge to the American Flag,
and Ida Diehl had a devotiona! reading. "Autumn at
the L11kc," and had prayer
before the meal , served to 17
members and one guest by
the ladies of the church.
Hoe ller is an education
specialist who talked about

. Tessa Nicole Coates

·.

DeGirolamo. For infomwtion about a variety of legal
topic.~, visit ihe OSBA's Web site at www.olliobar.org.
Articles appearing in this column are intmded to provide
broad, general information about tire law. Before apply·
ing this information to a specific legal problem, readers
are urged to seek tire ad1•ice of a licemed attorney.

..
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'

Representatives of the STRS.
a local CPA and tax and
investment consultant and a
representative of ' the Ohio
Retired Teachers Association
will be , the speaker;;. The
meeting is to update on pro- .
je~:ted
STRS
benefits.
Members volmiteered to help
with refreshments.
Debbie Roush · donated
door prizes which were
awarded to Janice Weber.
Nadine Goehel , 'Jean Alkire
and John Riebel.
The next meeting wi ll be
Dec. 7 and members are to
bring chi ldren's and teens·
books for God 's NET.

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Marlo Manhattan Norris
"We Love Vou
1st Halloween!"'

&amp;

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•

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Savannah Barnes

"Lo'\•e You'~.

.,

&amp;

Bonnie Sue Miller

"LOve ya!"

I

Chase Lee Kef:o
"Love ya!'~
Dadd)' &amp; Amanda

Hope Eli7.aheth Reed
Kisses and Hugs ·
Love, Mamaw Jane

IJessil:a Paige Workman
" "Love ya!"
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Momm) &amp; lladd)
(; randparl'nt ,.
Dan &amp; Sherri Uar;t

IM:aw Maw &amp; Paw Paw Sp~1u~
Clarinda Spaun

.lorja Uo,lt . LIUrt&gt;n
\I arlo 'wrrh
I o'l'. \hm \h1" \.
I uri Uill. .lamn· J.i..,lt.lkhhit•
.I an \ nrri, K Lori llnjljl

Devon Hutbh:ard

'•Lo.ve Ya!''
Mommy, Daddy,

Audrey 'kfurncr ClifTord
··Lme Ya!"
\lom &amp; Dud

,.

"Love Ya"
· Mommy &amp; J)addy

.

Mitchel Evans
Mom&amp; Dad
Grandma &amp; Pop

MamawJane

"Love ya!''
HLuu~ ~a:··

Alexis Smith
hLove'Vou!n
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Braylon Harrison

"'Love Ya!"

Rece Parker Sigman
Hailey :\1adison Darst

'

Isaiah Kipling Reed

Sk· h;~s

atigry. II' all)Dlle sugges ts ,he about /im1ie's Mailbox , and
calm do"n. it makes her more read features by other
upset. She ha-. 11 a\~eu out of Creators Svndlcate writers
v..urk "~1:lng "he 1' lJUitllll~. and cartooni.\ 1.\. ,,;,, ;I lhr
then n&gt;mc·, h.. ,· k tilL' llc'\1 tlii\ ( n •at11n 'iy11dicatf! ~l'e/J
ThL" h( f"' nc,~r )J11]d ... lll~r paJ.:c at w.ww.crl'ator{i.Com.

The Daily Senti nele ;• A3

~w.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 30,2006

~\cnont: '

about her

Monday, October 30, 2006

'

accountable.
Whe n Debbie storm s out
li~ e that. I am the one stuck
Dear Annie: My son and · doing her .J·ob ·and mine. I
his wife have been married . c.: an't- take much more. The
10 years and haw a young boss is no help , and my cosoiL 1 have·a wonder1ul re ia- workers have no clue what _
tionship witlnhem and love to do . either. Any suggesthem very much.
.
tions? _ Out of Ideas
Th'e problem is.! thtnk my
Dear Out of Ideas: We
daug hter-In -law.
w ho know working· with Debbierecently ,ra ned h~r own
b d'ffi It b t
1
busi ness ..i, having an affa ir . mus1 e 1 tcu ' u Pease
wi th . a m&lt;lll 16 ~years her real~ze that she can not .
junior - and to make mat- entn ely control her behavters worse. he's a n employee tor. She has a disabJhty. It ·
or hct·s. Although my wife m1ght help for yo u and your
and 1 live two states away. co-workers to educate yourwe visit l'requ~ntly. a nd selves about Debbii's parwe've 'een thin;::s' ·that ticular injury and what. if
would sLrggest an atl'air.
anything. you can do to ail eIf exposure to· STDs and viate the work problem.
the destruction of the fami ly Contac t the Brain Injury ·
were not enough. the h1wyer Association of America
in me sees ca tastrorhe if this (www.biiwsa.org) at 820 1
ll1ng e\oilcs mto a sex ual Greensboro Dr., Suite 6\1.
harassment lawsuit. I , want McLean ·. VA 2i102.
to mnfq.mt my daughter-inDear Annie; This is for
law pri\.clicly . tell her of my ·'Up to My Neck in Sunny
,u,picion' · and oiler my Florida."
who survived
legal help lu chan a way out
melanoma . and was upset
of th is me". Of cour, e. if I . 1
d d
1
LJ!ll \\tong. my relationship. w 1en pebp e stare an comwi th h~ r could be mined for mented on her facial scar. '
all time and thi s may pr~I. too. was. diagnosed with
\Cnl me from seeing my melanoma. and it merastagrands(&gt;n. an unhcamblc sized and went into . my
thuugh\ . On the nther hand. lymph systeni. After surgery,
if I am ri ~h l. I belie\'~ I can I was left in a wheelc hair.
be or in;)ncasu l'ahlc ass is - , "Sunny" has l,egs that work
lance. ~h \1 ik says I .s hould and a heart th~t heats. People
butt u ul . Is she ri ght '' gawk at everything , good and
What To Do, What To Do? bad . Her scar is a badge of
ncarWimt To Do: Yes. We honor. Live, girl! 1 have been
know h&lt;m \llllch ynu want to doing 1t seven . years past my
prevc•m a d~&gt;aster. but you expirationdate . - Wheeling
have no prnnt that your With My Horses and On
daughter-n1- law ha~ put l1er- My Own in Hemet, Calif.
sell Ill a CUlll JJrunmmg post Dear Hemet: We admire
t\011. and act: U ~IIh! her 1:-. com~.:.
h
h
dl
• t e person w o regar ess
lu cause hard feelings. petiod.
. ..
'
.
. .
All you ,-. 111 do is make it ot cuc~mstances. enJOYS life
clc~1r. 111 ~enera\ Ienm. rh'at if to the tulle st. You are a role ·
they C\l'l~ necd legal help. you model for us all. Thanks for
will he there proti:ssio nally as writing .
well as emotional\\. Because
Dear Readers: Tomorrow
you \me them.
•
IS
Halloween. Trick-orDear ,- \nnie: 1 have a tre ate rs should dress . in
problem with a co-w orke r. 1lame-retardant costumes that
" Debbie" suffered a brain don ' t obstruct walki[lg or
injun 111 '" car a&lt;:(·ident 10 vision. Be careful. Have fun.
year~ a~n. I tr~ tu underArmie's Mailbox is .ljlril·
,wnd her h~h 't' ior but am ten by Kathy Mitchell and
ha' 111 g a \~1'\ hard time Marcy Sugar, longtime edidealing \\ilh ' 11.
tor!i rJj tile Ann Landers
Dehh~e· " p;&gt;nmnid and colum11. f&gt;[ease e·mail_vour
_BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

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.Law You Can Use

Pat Holter is hostess.
J&lt;'riday, Nov. 3
RACINE- Meigs County
Pomona Grange meet wi th
Oftlcers Conference beginning at 6:30 p.m. fo llowed py
meetinr: at 7:30, Racine
Grange'Ha\1.

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Xander Fisher

'"Love YaP·
Grandma &amp; Grandpa Fisher

Braydon Jacob Otto
"LOve ya buddy"
Aunt Katie

We love you!
Grandparents • Melford &amp;

' Romaine Frederick

Ava Roush
Love you!
Mommy &amp; Dadd)·

�I

~onday,Ckiober30,2oo6

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher ·
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no lau' respecting an
es~blishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress cif grievances.
The First Amendment to the

-

u;s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct 30, the 303rd day of 2006. There are
62 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 30, 1938, the radio play ''The War of the Worlds,"
starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS. (The live dnu;na, which
employed f;lk.e news reports, panicked some listeners who
thought its portntyal of a Martian invasion was real.)
On this date:
In 1735, the second president of the United States, John
Adams, wa-&lt; born in Braintree, Mass.
In 1944, the Martha Graham ballet "Appalachian Spring,"
with'. music by Aaron Copland, premiered at the Library of
Congress in Washington, D.C., with Graham in a leading role.
In 1953, Gen. George C. Marshall was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize. Dr. Albert Schweitzer received the Peace Prize
for 1952.
In 1975, the New York Daily News ran the headline "Ford
to City: Drop Dead" a day after President Ford said he would
veto any proposed federal bailout of New York City.
In 1995, by a razor-thin vote of50.6percentto49.4 percent•.
Federalists prevailed over separatists in Quebec in a secession
referendllffi. ·
Ten years ago: After a four-hour trial, a Chinese court sentenced pro-democracy activist Wang Dan to 11 years in prison
for "conspiring to subvert the Chinese government." (Wang
was freed in April 1998 and sent into exile in the United
States.)
Five years ago: Ford Motor Co. chairman Wtlliam Clay
Ford Jr. took over as chief executive after the ouster of Jacques
Na5ser. NASA's 200 I Mars Odyssey snapped its flfSt picture
of Mars, one week after the spacecraft safely arrived in orbit
around the Red Planet. Ukraine destroyed its last nuclear mis·
sile silo, fulftlling a pledge to give up the vast nuclear arsenal
it had inherited after the breakup of the fonner Soviet Union.
The New YorkYankees won Game 3 of the World Series 2-1
cutting the Arizona Diamondbacks' lead to 2-1.
One year ago: The body of Rosa Parks arrived at the U.S.
Capitol, where the civil rights pioneer became the first woman
to lie in honor in the Rotunda: President Bush and congressional leaders paused to lay wreaths by her casket. Baseball
Hall of Fame catcher and manager AI Lopez died in Tampa,
A a., at age 'c;7.
.
lbought for Today: ."Cuando · amor no es locura, no es
amor." (When love is not madness; it is not love.) - Pedro
Cal\leron de Ia Barca, Spanish dramatist (1600-1681).

Election letter advisory
Effective Tuesday, Oct. 31, letters dealing wilh the
Nov. 7 election will not be accepted for publication.
Letters or guest viewpoints accepted prior to the deadline will be published.
. .

LETTERS TO. THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Correc:tlon Policy

Published every attemoon, Monday

Our main concern in all stones IS to
through Frida~.
be accurate . If you.know of an error Pomeroy, Oh10
in a story, call the newsroom at ( 740)

992·2156.
Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are: ·

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, EX1 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed , Ext. 14 ,

Reporter: Be1h Sergent , E•t 13

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postage paid at Pomeroy.
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the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmuter: Send address correctiOns to The Daily SenbneL 111 Cour1
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able.

Mail Subscription ·
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52Weeks

'32.26
'64.20
'127 .11

Outside Meigs County
. 13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Having spent a good bit of
. ink and space critiquing the
president's war policy, I
decided to do what many
voters do at this point in the
election cycle: pay close
attention to what politicians
say. Take House Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi, for
· instance. On "60 Minutes''
recently, .Pelosi offered her
take on the so-called war on
· terror- which does not, she
exglained, extend to Iraq.
Do you not ·think that the
war. in Iraq, now, today, is
the war on terrorT' Lesley
Stahl asked.
"No. The war on terror is
the war in Afghanistan,"
Pelosi replied.
·
''But doo 't you think the
terrorists have moved into
Iraq now?" Stahl continued.
"They have," Pelosi
agreed. "The jihadists (are)
in Iraq. But that doesn't
mean we stay there. They'll
stay there as long as we're ·
there."
We stay. The ')ihadists"
stay. We go. They go.
(Never mind resident death
squads.) There's a certain
logic to Pelosi's strategy that
.is practically feasible - · so
long as the tooth fairy isn't
busy. But such fairy tales are
no substitute for foreign policy.
Not that Pelosi fancies
herself a grand strategist.
"Ask Nancy · Pelosi to
describe herself," says Stahl,

' 53. 55
' 107 10
'214.21

Diana
West

"and the first thing out of her
mouth is that ..."
Suspense: Is it that she is
the · increasingly familiar
face of the Democratic
Pany? Potentially the first
woman Speaker of the
House?
Nope. That fi~t thing out
of Pelosi's mouth is .that
"she's a mother of five and a
grandmother of five." This is
quite often the first thing out
of her mouth ·- so often,
perhaps, that its very repetitiveness may explain a
recent news item. Earlier this
month, while demanding a
House Ethics Committee
investigation in the e)[-Rep.
Mark Foley scandal, "Pelosi
was booed by Republicans
.when she mentioned that she
is a mother of five and a
grandmother," reported the
Seattle Post lntelhgencer.
Now I can relate. After all,
it's countdown time to
Election Day, Iraq is chaotic,
our own country has no control of its borders. and the
leading elected Democrat in
the land wants voters to

Obituaries

2006

Land transfers

I&gt;OMEROY
- Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following
POMEROY - Gar) Aldwyn Wayland, 69. of Pomeroy transfers of real estate a'
d1ed unexpectedly Sunday Oct. 29. 2006. at Holzer posted in her office:
Medical Center in Gallipoli~.
Harold Clil)ton Oxley, Jr.,
He. was bom Oct. R. 1937 in Syracuse. son of the late deceased, to Charlyo Ox.ley,
Jennmgs Bryan and Edna MCJrguerite Eichinger Wayland.
affidavit, Columbia.
G1ry retired from the raii P •d. \\here he worked as a conCharlyo Oxley to Charles
-. He \'. a' a U.S.A n
·rai- Yi ng from 1955 to Hubert Butterworth, deed·,
i"-"' · a member of the Br&lt;.. . J Chu1c:h of Christ and the Columbia.
United Transportation Work ers .
,
Alpha G. Butcher to· Rex
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by a daugh- D. Vance, deed, Scipio.
ter Lrsa Ann Wayland, and a· brother, Jennings Bryan
Pamela L. Carter, Pamela
Wayland. Jr.
L
Boso, to Beneficial
Surviving are his wife . Sonja Sue Hendricks Wayland of Mortgage Co. of Ohio, slierPomeroy; sons. Michael Bryan (Carla) Wayland of Geneva, iff's deed, Sutton.
and Jeffrey Alan (Debbie} Wayland of Pomeroy; grandchilBeneficial Ohio, Inc . to
dren: Brenton M1chael Wayland, Cohn Matthew Wayland, Daniel H: James, Ruth E.
Stephen Edward Fen:i,. Jeremy Tyler Wayland and Morgan James, deed, Sutton.
Emma L. Lathey. deceased,
Ntchole Wayland\ a brother, Ira Milton (Carlyn) Wayland
to Adrian Lathey. affidavit.
of Big Prairie; and several nieces and nephews.
Service will be held a II a.m. on Wednesday. Nov. I, Chester. ·
Danny Wickerham. Jane
2006, at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home
Wickerham . to Bernard V.
with Rev. Doug Shamblin officiating.
Burial will follow at Meigs Memorial Gardens in Fultz, deed, Village . of
Ponieroy. ·
·
Pomeroy.
,
Marilyn
Russell
,
Kent
H.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home. and may send online condolences to Russell, to Bernard V. Fultz.
deed, Village of Pomeroy. ·
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.
Sue Wickerham, Russell
Memorial contributions may be made to the Unverferth
House , 190 King Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43210, which pro- Wickerham. to Bernard V
vides special lodging and support for heatt transplant fam- Fultz, deed, Village of
ilis.
·
Pomeroy.
Jennifer L. Toops, Eric
Todd Toops , to Dwaine E.
Allen, Sonia J. Allen; deed,
Page At
Rutland.
Howard
E.
Copley,
Barbara
A.
Copley,
Susan
soldiers
from
What Cardone means reflects
when she says "we're back" Racine. Eastern · High Wallbrown , to Tuppers
is the group will unexpect- School graduates and tours Plains-Chester Water District,
·
edly be packing holiday , of duty in Iraq, Afghanistan right of way, Lebanoti.
Kent
Stewart.
Re
Stewart.
care packages for soldiers anp Guantanamo Bay. The
on Nov. 7 in the basement sudden surge in member- to TP-CWD; right of way.
of the Racine First Baptist ship also demonstrates just Bedford . .
Mary London, Mary L.
Church
once
again . how dangerous and chaotic
Guinther.
John D. Pravdica ,
Enduring Freedom will be the world still is but like
using money from commu- Cardone said. "We'll be Patricia L. Cox, James, F.
Cox. Sandra L. Moore ,
nity donations to fill and there."
Douglas B. Moore, to Donald
mai I the packages at no cost
Although Cardone and F. Hendricks. deed, Village of
to the soldiers. six of which member Kay Warden often
are from Meigs County, one joke about quitting neither Syracuse . .
C.R.
Pullins . .. ·Nancy
.is from Athens County and will let the other stop ..Both
to
Charles Burton
Pullins.
one is ii·om Cincinnati.
women along··with member Valentino. Margaret E.
The care packages will Elizabeth (Sissy) Wolfe
be stocked with candy. com- have been with Enduring Valentino, deed, Chester. ·
· Eugene W: Ritchie to TPpact discs and other items
Freedom since day one in CWD. 1ight of way, Chester.
•. evoking the comforts of 200 I. Since then the · group . Marvin Hill to TP-CWD,
home. Cardone said this
of way, Sutton.
year Christmas cards will be has sent care packages to right
Brian
Phillips. Stacy
literally
hundreds
of
service
mcluded in the care packPhillips.
to
TP-CWD.1ight
of
ages so that soldier' can men and women serving
Scipio.
send holiday greeti np back their country overseas and way.
Paul · Phillips. Diane
within
the
United
States.
to loved ones.
Phillips , to TP-CWD. right of
Those w.is hing to donate Thankfully . of those hun- way, Scipio.
.
items for the care packages dreds. none of have been
Krisit
M.
Reaser.
Steve
or to have a solider placed lost in battle.
Just as the soldiers wait Reaser, to Stephen L.
on the ·group'.s mailing lisf
Should is. deed. Lebanon.
may call Cardone at 949- to complete their mission so
Joseph P. Rodetus. Amber
2449. The group can also be does Enduring Freedom as D. Roderus. to John P.
reached. at P.O. Box 376. it gears up for another round Roderus, deed, Sutton.
of names. another care
Racine. 45771.
Oris L. Smith, deceased . to
The latest · Enduring package, another name not Patricia Smith, affidavit.
list forgotten.
Freedom
mailing
Village of Syracuse.
T. Dwain Sayre. Marilyn
K. Sayre. toT. Dwain Sayre.
Lebanon ..
Page At
Randy Butcher, Robin
Butcher, to 'Jesse J. Wood ,
Hearin g
Clinic
and University Early Childhood deed. Salisbury.
Appalachian Dental Clinic . Center. Mass is also the ·
Henry Hensley , Beverly
started to help the people of author of "In Beauty May Hensley, to Melissa Scyoc,
She . Walk: Hiking the deed. Olive.
Meigs County.
·
.
· Eva Robson. deceased. to
Along with the numerous Appalachian Trail at 60."
Tickets for the event are Matthew J. Williams. Jessica
clinics she helped stan and
$50
each or $450 for a table L. Williams, deed, Salisbury.
support. Torres also helped
Charles L. Pickett, Anna S.
get funding for program' of 10. Foi· further infonnathat aid women and infanh. tion on tickets. contact Pickett.' to William R. Green.
such as the Women·, Health Stacey Kyser at the March deed, Bedford.
Betty
Jane
Manley.
Services
and · Family of Dimes at (800). 686deceased. to O'Dell Carl
Planning.
Breast
and 2569.
"The mi ssion of the Manley. affidavit, Village of
Cervical Cancer Program.
and Infant and Children March of Dimes is to Middleport.
Betty Jean Maurer, Betty J.
Supplemental
Feeding improve the health of babies
Program. just to name a by preventing birth defects. Maurer, to Mary Lou
premature 1hirth and infant Patterson. deed. Salisbury.
few.
Torres is currently the mortality. ~The mi-sion of · Betty Jean Maurer. Betty J.
project manager of the the Healt 1 Lead,~rship Maurer, to Steven Rav
'Think Pink" ·program. Award' Lu chcon is to H('IOVer. deed, Salisbury. '
Avon
D.
Aarcher.
.
those
· . which incrca~c~ awareness honor
lo
Leona
Ellen
deceased.
of the need for breast health individuals /organ izations
Archer,
certificate
of
transfer.
care and provides funding who have supported this
effort )Jy demonstrating Salisbury.
for mammograms .
Juanita Y. Frederick.
exemplary
leadersh ip in
The key note speaker of
Juanita
Hensler. to Daniel C.
the March of Dimes event matcmal and infant health,"
Hensler,
deeil, Sutton.
will be Dr. Le,lie Mass. said McClcad. March of
Homesales, Inc. to Daniel
director of Ohio Wesleyan Dimes board chaim1an.
H. James. Ruth E. James.
deed, Village of Middleport.
Jayne Elizabeth Hobbs . to
from Page At
Michael David Hobbs, deed.
Scipio.
.
'
Countrytyme ALC. Ltd. to
and centrali ze information wi ll be important in ord&lt;;!r to Richard L Barcus, Molly J.
pertaining to rental proper- reach out and collect infor- Barcus, deed, Letart.
·
ties in one location. In the mation -on re,idenrial rental
Countrytyme ALC. Ltd. to
past, different . municipali- properties in this county. Richard L Barcus. Molly J.
ties had different require- The rental registra tion
ments and different fonm. · infonnatibn. she said. wi ll
Hill said she and her staff be a useful tool for the •·omplan to work with local munities.
cities, townships. \'illage'
Forms are now available
and apartment as,ociat ions
at
Hill's office in the courtto help spread 1he word
about the new reg.i,tration house. Office hours are 8:30 .
requirement and it' poten- a.m. to 4:30 p.m .. Monday
•
. tial benefit. Communication through Friday.

Gary Wayland

·know she's ... a mommy and interests, and now it will be
in the hands of America's
a granny?
Back to Stahl's interview. children. I don't mean to
"As she's poised to go down imply my male colleagues
in history books if the . will have any less integrity....
Democrats win the House- But I don't know that a man
suddenly (thankfully) a gen- can say that as easily as a
uine "if' again - ''what woman can."
Nancy Pelosi wants you to
Frankly, I don't know that
· know is ... .''
a rnan carl say that as easily,
No suspense this time. In either - · or anyone 'else for
these, the politics of person- that matter. And how did
al distraction, what Pelosi "America's children" get
wants you to know are not into it?
her far-left views on immiThi' is another one of
gration, national defense. Pelo'i 's precious .qtch.homosexual marriage, etc. phrases. usually connected
"When it comes to her real by suffering to Republicans,
goal in life. she's just like as in: "Mr. Speaker, as we
any other woman her age," leave for this Christmas
Stahl, urn, reports: ''I'm a recess. let us say, 'God bless
gmnpmother," Pelosi says. you' to the A mericlil_! people
"It's great. It's fabulous. Tt by . voting against this
was my goal in .Ji1e and now Republican budget and state·
I've achieved it."
How great; how fabulous ment of injustice . and
but Speaker of the immorality, and let us not let
House? This is the voice of the special interest goose get
fat at · the expense of
the professional woman or, rather. the Professional America's children."
Say "God bless you" by
Woman, the kind of gal who
voting
against the GOP budbrings sex (her own) into
get?
Interesting
way of woreverything. Even into the job
of Speaker of the House. "I shipping Pelosi's got there.
think the · fact that I am a · Meanwhile, if the lady has
woman will raise expecta- her way. the gavel will soon
tions in terms of more hope be .in the hands of
in government, and I will not · "America's children." And
disappoint,"
Pelosi that would ~urely mean the
"explained" to· the Los nation's goose is cooked.
(DiatUI West is a colunmist
Angeles Times . Oh, brother.
There's more: "The gavel · fur The Washingum Times.
of the speaker of the House She can be conracted via
is in the hands of special dianawest@ 1·e rizmr.ner.)

AND I Al«ii TIUNK

CH~tOPRm llEG\'1;
lS EXAGG~RATING

nus "PEATII"
TiliNG!

Duty rrom

Torres rrom

.

ALL BUSINESS: Countrywide Financial
CEO gets retirement pay.even when not retiring
AP BUSINESS WRITER ·-

The .Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 30,

Prqfessional woman

BY RACHEL BECK

Letters to t!te editor are welcome. Tirey s!tould be less
than 300 words. Allleners are subJect to editing, must be
signed, and include. address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
tl)&lt;lnks. to organizations wuf indi"iduals wiU not be accepted for publicatior1.

Page.A4

NEW YORK .,.- As if
Countrywide
Financial
Cor:p.'s CEO isn't getting
paid enough, the mortgage
lender's board is taking the
unprecedented step of lavishing him with $10 million
in retirement money.
And he isn't even retiring.
Countrywide is spinning
it as a ~·reimbursement"
because Angelo Mozilo
agreed to stay on at the
helm until 2009 instead of
retiring . this year as was
expeeted. That will come on
lOP. of the hefty salary he
wtll get to stay at work. ·
The company released
details of Mozilo's financial
package on the same day it
announced plans to lay off
2.500 Countrywide employees. Talk about tone-deaf
timing.
Mozilo has long drawn
flak for his pay, which the
Calabasas,
Calif.-based
company has defended as
appropriate since under
Mozilo's
watch
Countrywide has become
the nation's largest mort·gage lender:
Over the last decade,
Countrywide's market capitalization has gone from just
over $2 billion to levels
above $20 billion. Its stock
has had more than a sevenfold gain during that time
- which shows that shareholders have been rewarded.
But some inve~tors 'till

think Mozilo's big payouts
show his too-cozy relationship with board members
who are supposed to be
monitoring hts work.
Last year, Mozilo made
. nearly $142 million, including $2.7 million in salary,
$19.6 million in bonus and
$119 million in realized
stock-option gains. · That 's
not all -. he got plenty of
perks, including $40,282 for
country-club memberships,
$230,452 for personal use
of company aircraft and
$29,750 for tax and investment advice, according to
securities filings. ~
That made him the sixtb
highest-paid executive in
corporate America, according to a study of 2005 compensation at I ,400 public
companies by the independent governance research
finn The Corporate Library.
Mozilo, who co-founded
Countrywide and has been
at the. helm since 1998. was
expec.ted to retire this year,
but last Friday the company
announced he would stay on
through 2009.
When details of his contract were released in a regulatory filing on Tuesday. it
first
looked
like
Countrywide had gotten the
message that Mozilo's compensation was out of hand.
His base pay had been cut to
$1.9 million. while his
bonus would range from $4
million to S.l 0 million annually depending on the company's return on e4u ity and
net income.

But thrown into the mix rankle the pension plan of
was also the promise of the the American Federation of
retirement "reimbursement" State,
County
·and
that would pay Mozilo $10 Municipal Employees, a
mill ion over the next three Wa~hin gton-based governyears, an arrangement that merit workers union .
compensation experts say
It s proposal to give
may be the first of its kind. Countrywide shareholders
Of that, $5 million is guar- an annual nonbinding advianteed while the rest is con- sory vote on executive com·
tingent on the company's pensation was defeatet! last
shareholder return ranking
at the median or, above spring by a narrow margin
those in the Standard &amp; - 43 percent for, 55 perPoor's Financial Services cent against and 2 percent
abstaini ng. This week, they
Index .
"This is allowing him to took up that cause again, filhave his cake and literally ing to have the proposal
eal it too," said Patrick voted on, by shareholders at
McGurn, executive vice . next year's.annual meeting.
"It takes a huge amouin of
president and special counsel
to
Institutional creativity . to . put more
Shareholder Services, a money ·in this CEO's pockproxy advisory finn. "He is. et," said Richard Ferlauto,
entitled to get retirement director of pension and benpay even though he chose to efits
policy for
the
not retire and still work. his AFSCME. ''The compensanot -a reimbursement. h is tion committee Of this board
an entitlem.:nt."
is failing to do ih job. They
Countrywide declined to are either deaf to shareholdcomment beyond what was . ers or totally incompetent."
said in the· securities filing ..
Still, many on Wall Street
News of the pensioit pay- have decided to look the
a~
the other way. Analysts cheered
out
came
Countrywide annoui1ced
Tuesday that it earned $648 during the company's conmillion in the third quarter, ference call that' Mozi lo was
up only slightly from $634 sticking around. The stock
million a year earlier. in recerll days has jumped
Facing a &gt;lowdown in its JO percellt to more than $38
lending lm&gt;ines&gt; due to the a share, largely fueled by
hou,ing
slump, news that Countryside
Countrywide also said it would buy back $1 billion
plans to cut $500 million in 10 $2 billion worth of stock
expen'e'.
which
will in the fourth quarter.
include reducing ir-, work
That cnnvenienliy man force by 2.500. or 5 percent. aged to dim the spotlight on
Mo1.ilo\ .pay continue&gt; to Mozi lo ·s r~tirem,,nt pay.
'

Landlords

AmEL

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE

RE-ELECT

MICK

DAVENPORT.
IIIGS

.

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~ERII:NCE,

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•.

Eblin.
Barcus. deed. Letart.
Martha Chevalier. Garv
Ilvllia
.lean
Roxie E. Ford to Sandra K. Che\ al icr. to Kathet') n S. de&lt;:,:a,ed . tn Robcn Ehlin.
nf
May'. deed. Olive .
Cremean,. Evereu Reece affidavit .
Diana K. Dillon. Diana K. Crernean,. deed. Orance.
M1ddleP" 111 .
Bowles. to Robert M.
April Smith. Thoi11a' e .
Janet F. Thei"'. decea&gt;~d.
Bowles, deed. Village of Smith. Ray N. . Shasteen. to I-rani- S. Herald. deed.
Pomeroy.
Garnette Shasteen. Ray N. Sunon.
Arhea
Lynn
Moore, Shasteen. John L Shasteen.
Gene Ed\~ell'd lmbody.
to · Donald Joan Shasteen. deed, Villacc Cathlt•en lmlxxl; . lo Huhert
deceased.
M0•·&lt;'1and, Robin Moreland. of Pomeroy.
W. Johnson Ill. Krista M.
deed. Olive.
Johnson.
LiL·~d. Orange .
William D. Durst. Mru1ha
Bruce L. Moore. ·Alfred D. Durst. to Jeffery C. Kimes.
William B. Buck. Patricia
Comcll, Pearl K. Moore, Diana C. Kimes. deed. Olive. J. Bud. . to William 0 .
Dale McKee, Mark A. Game,_ Cardlyn J. Games.
Karen Moore, Daniel R.
Moore,
Raymond
E. Cottrill, deed, Salem.
deed. Sai!ShUQ I\'illage of
Johnson, Stephanie Johnson.
Shirley Ann Buckner to Pomcrm.
Janet ' K. Graham. Harold
Ruth Keplar, Gladys J. David Wayne Hubbard.deed.
D.· Graham. to Ronald J.
'Skivers . to Robin Moreland. Salem. ·
Lu ella
C.
Donald Moreland. deed.
Donald Bunce. Michelle Raymond.
RaymnnJ
.
deed
.
Scipio
.
Olive.
Bunce, to Tuppers PlainsMildred Grate to Grate
Daniel E. Cremeans. Chester Water District . right
Invcstments. Ltd .. corrective
Barbara J . Cremeans, to of way, Bedford.
Charles F. Steels. Joan R.
Rodney Beegle to TP- deed. Rutland .
Mildred Grate to Gratt;
Steels. deed. Scipio.
CWD , right of way, Lebanon.
Arzilla Fields. to William
Adelio Zamorano to TP- Investments . Ltd .. con·ective
D. Stewart. Sharon Stewart, ."CWD. right of way. Bedford. deed. Rutland .
Nom1an S. Lanier. Laura Y.
deed. Village of Rutland.
John Pickens. to TP-CWD.
Lanier. to Cheryl P. Ellis.
Home, Vest Capital . LLC, rig hi of way. Lebanon.
to Aegis Mortgage . Corp ..
Carol Pickens to TP-CWD. Gary E. Ellis. deed . Village of
Middlepon .
U.C. Lending. affidavit. ri~ht of wav. Lebat1on.
Thomas Bernard Hart.
Village of Middleport.
~&lt;;ara Williams to Leading
Randy S. Smith. Beverly Creek Con&gt;ervancy District. Cecilia Hai1. lo Leonard D..
Stotts. Hilda M . Sloth. deed.
D. Smith, to James W. tight of way. Salisbury.
Stewart. Kathy I. Stewart.
Jeffrey C. Shiflet. Teresa Bedford.
Chri,tophcr C . Anthony.
ea&lt;;ement.
~.Shifflet. to LCCD. right of
Brandon C. Anthony. to Glen ·
Howard B. Caldwell. Jr.. way, Rutland.
Marvene Y. Caldwell. to
Brian L Young to LCCD. Robem , Hailey' Dawn
Howard B. ·Caldwell Ill. right of way. Salem.
. Robert,. deed. Salem.
Helen Marie Boyd. Donna _
Robert J. Caldwell, Mat1eena
Scipio Township· Trustees
M.
Boyd. to Da\'id L Boyd
Y. Baum, deed. Orange.
to LCCD. right of way.
II.
Donna
M. Boyd. deed.
Howard B. Caldwell. Jr.. Scipio.
·
Howard B. Caldwell Ill.
Betty Dunkle to LCCD. VilUge of Middleport.
Panwla Namcnyi. Eman uel
Marvene Y. Caldwell, Becky right of way. Salem.
Namenyi.
lo Harold T.
Caldwell, to Howard B.
Amy Bravelman. Paul
Blanken&gt;hip.
Diane S.
Caldwell Ill, deed, Orange.
Ncidhat1. to LCCD. right of
Blankenship. rcka'e of easeJames E. Bush . Tina M. way. Rutland .
Bush, to Nancy Sue Harrison.
Keith Kennedy, Irene ment.
L.oi' kan Mu~ra~c to John
deed, Rutland.
Kennedy. to Christopher K.
M.
Papc . Jr.. dceJ. Sutton.
Clarence
T.
Wolfe. Haning, deed. Rutland.
Gary R. Canlerhury. Doris
Anthony T. Wolfe. to TPBeverly Hemley. Henr)
CWD, right of way, Letart.
Hen,ley. to Ronnie Hensley. CanterbUi'). to Richard
Hage11y. Dorothy Haget1y.
Barbara Pierce, Clarence deed. Olive.
deed.
Salem. ·
T. Wolle, Rosalie Wolfe, to
Frank Cleland 16 Delores
Joanna Stout. deceased. to .
TP-CWD . right of way. M. Cleland. affidavit.
Letart.
·
Rode1ick E. Grimm to Don Granville C. Stout. celtifiJ.P. Morgan Chase Bank. H. Dunfee, Dmne E. Dunfee . . cate . Columbia.
David E. Jenkin,. Ginger
· Bank One, to Joshua L. d~ed. Sulton.
Jenkins.
Kim B. 1\eal. Mary
Wilson. Amy M. Wilson.
Doris Ann Ihie to Don H.
deed. Rutland.
Dunfee, Diane E. Dunfee . Ann Neal. Kit R. :-leal. Carol
Neal. Jeffrey Lee Neal. to
James C. Stamper to easement.
Butcher. Robin
Sheena L Casto. deed, Olive.
Diane Robinson. Jackie · Randy
Willi am
D.
Butcher.
Ronnie Vance, Rosema1y Ray Robinson. to Ricardo
Jennfer
B. Vance. Mont Vance. Joyce Bolin. Brenda E. Bolin. deed. K raw,uyn.
Kraw"zyn . Carol' Neal.
A. Vance. to Ronnie Vance. Rutlal1c,L
Rosemary 'B. Vance. deed .
Steven .1. Romine to Tina Jeffrey Lee Neal. to Randy
Butcher. Robin Butcher.
Scipio.
Romine. deed. Columbia.
Wanda L Eads to Lesley
James
Bryon · Brent deed .
Bobby
Smallwood.
R. Gibbs. deed. Rutland. ·
O'Brien. J.B. O'Brien.
tn
Bufnrd
dccca,ed
,
Raymond L Andrews. deceased. James B. O'Brien ,
Smallwood.
CL"'lificate
of
Mecan L. Andrews, to Bo decea,sed. to Roberta C.
transfers.
Salem.
FraZ.ier, Donna Frazier, deed. O'Brien, · Roberta
M.
Panv L. Hanillln to John
Village of Pomeroy.
O'Brien. affidavit. Villa~e of
M.
Spires. Angel:! S. Spires.
Brenda K. Curfman. Pc11.neroy/Rutland.
deed.
Rutland.
Timothy A. Curfman. to Ivan
Roberta C. O'Brien.
Randy
Hamon
to
D.
Lavender.
Theresa Roberta M. O'Brien. to
Lavender. deed. Sutton.
Patrick H. O'Brien. James Household Rea lty Cnrp .. affiKathy J. Barrell. Charlie Michael O'Brien, . Peggy davit.
Randy A. Hamon to
BatTett. Jr.. to Mark E. Lynn Han·is. Pamela Sue
Hou,chold
Rcah) Coq) ..
Proffitt , Nola R. Proffitt. O' Brienc deed. Village of
deed . Columbia .
deed, Sutton.
Pomeroy/Rutland.
Scott M. Jnhn,on. Karin
Fanners Bank and Savings
Harold W. Hanson. Jr ..
John
son. to Christopher
Co. to Bryan D. Enright. Linda L Hansoti. to Ricky J.
Davis.
Jennifer . Davi,, deed.
Cynthia Ann Enright. deed. Sm ith . Angclia D. Smith.
Rutland .
Rutland .
deed. Villa[!e of M1ddlepoit.
Otis L. Smith. deceased. to
Secretary of Hou,ing and
Patricia Smith, ce1tiiicate of Urban Development to
transfer. Chester.
Joshua L. Reed. Amanda G.
Paul 0. Clay. Dora A. Clay.' Reed: deed, Ot·ange ..
to Fanners Bank and Savings
Patsv R. Fowler to Ed\\ in
r
ESTABLI)HED 1895
Co.. deed. Village of J. Fo~' lcr. Gloria Fowler.
Syracuse.
deed. Rutland.
HAUNTED
James M. Dawson. Toni J.
Patsy R. Fowler lo 1-::Ui.v in
Dawson, to Rocky R. Hupp. .1 . Fowler, Gloria Fowler. ARIEL THEATRE
Carol J. Hupp . deed. VIllage deed. Rutland.
3 Trrrif) ing Floors
of Middleport.
A"ociated Fabricator,.
John T. Gruescr. Juanita P. inc.. Fulton Thompson ·
Oct. 26-31
Giueser. to Jim D. Allman. Tractor. to 'Gerald Robe11
. Open Ni~htl~ at 6 pm
agreement. Sutton.,
Thompson.
Alice
$7 Adults
· John Ru ssell F. Krider, Thompson. deed. Village of
deceased, to Janel A. Krider. Pomeroy.
· $5 Studcts
affidavit. Lebanon .
Patsy R. Fowler to Thomas
IF YOll DARE!
Terry Keiser. Ten·y De E. Fowkr. Mal)' M. Fe"' ler.
Keiser. Christine Keiser. to deed. Rutland .
The Ariel-Dater Hall
Lynn A. Benson. deed. Olive.
-128 Sec. Ave. G.lllipolis, OH •
Ruth M. Mays , to Shen-~ L
Alben Vancooncy . Teresa May' Franci,. deed. Oli' e.
740-446-AIUS (2787)
'
'
Vancooney. to Kri&gt;ti L.
Braley, deed, Rutland.
·
Christine Yvonne Walker
to Eric S. Walker. affidavit.
Rutland. ·
Ralph J. Harden. deceased.
to N. Jean Cleek, Neva Jean
In compliance with provision' of Scclio.n
Cleek Harden, affidavit.
5721 .03 of th~ Revised Code of. the State of
Sutton .
Thelma · Montgomery
Ohio. there will be published on No\ ember 17th
_Crabtree.
Thelma
and November 24 . 2006 . in thi -. ne \"paper. a
Montgomery. deceased, to
David W. Landaker. deed.
delinquent land list containing 1hc lbcription of
Salisbury.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-.

The Daily Sentinl'l • Page .-\5'

www .mydailysentinet:com

the propeny as it appears on t h,· ta\ I ist. the
name of the person in whose name the prnperty
is listed. the amount of taxes and pe nalti'' ' due
and unpaid.
Each p;ar,on charged with real prnpc rt: Ja'l.cs
and penalties may pa~ the full amount o1 taxes at
the Meig-. County Trcasurcr\ Offi ce by -+:00
p.m . on :-.Jowmbcr 6. ~006.tn ;noid pu blication.
To a\oid additional interest char!!l'd nn
December 1st. a ta.\pa) 'C r llHl) ent er into a
· written agrcemelll with the Count) Tr,·asurer to
pay one-fifth (I I)) of the dcltnquenl ta \ c-. .
\LII'\. T 8\- cr-Hill

�N

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Monday, October 30, 2006

ASHTABULA (APl
A
S:iO million envirunmental
cleanup under way in the
Ashtahula Rivrr has resi dents hoping the project wi ll
'park ~ rebirth for thi&gt; fo~
mer industrial city.
More than 500.000 cubic
yards · of mud polluted with
heavy metals. cancer-causing chem icals nnd radioactil~e material arc bein g
dredged from the river and
hauled t.o
landfill. The
dredging began ]a,t month.
.. We've been wailing tor
thi' a long time.'' · said
.Gretchen
Friend.
an
Ashtabula native and 0wner
of ·the Riverfront Trader. a
. nautical gift shop. "I think
our day has.come.''
'The ri-ver is cons idered
nne of the most polluted on
the Great Lakes and was a
longtime dumping ground
for former chemical plants
and other indtJstrics. In
1983. the state advised people nnt to eat fish out of the
river near Lake Erie because
of the contamination.
The river al~o tilled with
silt and is now onlv 12 feet
deep at its deepest point.
makin11 it difficult'for hoats
to navrgate. After th e· dredging, the river will be 18 feet
to 20 feet deep.
City Manager Anthony
Cantagallo wants to turn
Ashtabula into a tourist destination similar to Canada\
Niagara-on -the-Lake .
a

BvTOM RAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

town along Lake
Ontario that ·s surrounded by
wineries and home to the ·
popular Shaw FestivaL
Tourism
already
is
A&gt;htabula County's Nn. I
industry.
with
visitors
spending$276 million in the
co unty two years ago. The
county's attractions include
15 wineries, 16 covered
bridges. a maritime museum. ~ Underground Railroad
Finnishmuseum
and
Amt'rican cultural center.
Communitv and busines.
leaders said ~there are signs
of a comeback in the city
about 50 mi lcs east of
Cleveland . The school district i&gt; building seven new
school buildings and the
Hotel Ashtabula downtown
is being converted into condominiums. New restaurants
are opening and city leaders
arc trying to fill 44 vacant
stores -along Main Street.
"There's a feeling of rei ief
to get this pone finally ." Ron
Phelps, . owner of Jack's
Marina, said a bout the
dredging. "We won't have to
worry if the fish are safe' to
eat or not. or about kids
playing in the _river."
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency is paying
$25 million . toward the
cleaoup. with the state paying $7 million and companies that contributed to the
pollution paying $I 8 million.

Local Weather
Tllllts Forecast

V

0

.'

Cloudy , .'C_)
.
.Showers

, 1 .1 , ·

·
Ra1n

~
• •

Fewer arrests made at annual Halloween bash in Athens ·
Official~ wi th the univer-

sity and city had promised
be tougher this vear on
pa11ygoer~ who got out of
line during the event. which
inc Iudcs free conce11s and
costume judging.
· The pm1y has attracted as
many as 20J)flQ people to
to

downtown Athens in the past.
but city Police Chief Rick
Mayer said th b ycar·s crowd
was the smallest in years.
Polic.e could not provide a
specific crowd estimate.
The tradition . which is not
sanctioned by the universi ty, began in 1974.

Rain delaying harvest, worrying Ohio fanners .·
COLUMBUS (APl
Wet weather has put Ohio\
harvest behind schedule. and
it's al~o threatening to make
the . corn and soybean crop
smaller this year.
The wet fall is .. shaping up
to be a p~oblem for us:· said
Peter Thomison. an a~nino­
mi't specializing in~ corn
with Ohio State University
Exten,ion.
Only 18 pei-cent of the
state's corn crop had been
harvested a:, of last "cck a time when ~0 percent is
usually finished. according
to the National Agricultural
StatiStics Sen ice. Soybeans are ''I"' hehind.
About half of the sovhean
crop has hecn fiflishcd~ compared "ith 75 percent in
most ) ears .
Farmers don·, want to tal-e
their hem 1 com hines in the
wet tie]d, because !he equipment could compact the ""'
nr gel damaged. said Jim
Ramey. director ol Ohio·,
stati,tic.s sen 1ce offic~ .
Rainfall has been ahmc
a1crage 'aero" much ol !he
state. said Don Ht1ghcs . a
meteorologist '"th the
\'atJon al Weather Sen 1ce
office 111 Wilmlil~ t&lt;lll .
Cnlumhus. fo~· c"\ampk.

has received 5.6 inches more
than average si nce the
beg inning of September.
Dayton . has had 4.7 inchc.s
and Cincinnati was at 3.6
inches.
Less than two months ago.
nearly all of the 'tate·, soybean and corn crop "'as iri
fair to excellent condition .

Ohio's com yield was predieted to be 160 bushels per
· acre. ·above the state record
of 158 in 2004.
Now the delay in harvestin!! could chani'.e that.
Jt's po&gt;Siblc - to have wet
field' and good yield, .
Thomi,on said. But the barve&gt;t can become more costly

and increase fuel co,ts.
Soybean~ arc at a more
cri ti cal point. Ramey said.
Some soybean pods are
'PI itting and the beans are
dropping out. More delays
-could make the harvest le"
profitable. he said. It 's. too
early to say how much has
been lo&gt;t. Ramey said.

.
.91&amp;cc=,.u-g

..9\' ,... .p.~
.

Snow ~
•• •• •

Weather Underground • AP

Monday ... Mostly· sunny.
Not a&gt; cool with highs in the
lower 70s. South winds 5 to
10 mph.
Monday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 40s.
South winds around 5 mph .
1\Jesday...Partlv cloudy
with a 50 percent ·chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s. Southwest winds 5 to
lO mph .
•
Thesday night ...Mmtly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s. Notthwest

winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday
through
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s. Lows
around 40.
Thursday night and
Friday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Highs in the upper 40s.
.Friday night through
Saturday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
Highs in the upper 40s.
Sunday ..• Mostly ' sunny.
Highs in the lower 50s.

ELECT
Ernest "Ike" Spencer
Your Full Time

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

~e,'-7·e,~~
&amp;

Bl ·

qu~int

WASHINGTON
Republicans on Sunday said
a major voter turnout e1To!1
would help them stay in
power after the Nov: 7 elections. while Democrats
claimed momentum as they
seek to tap into voter unhappiness over Iraq .
Both sides agreed that the
war in Iraq was a leading. if
not central. issue in the contests to decide control of the
House and Senaie.
"This election is becoming
more and more a refercndwn
on George Bush. hi s failed
policies both overseas and at
home with a rubber stamp
AP photo
Congress:· said Sen. Charb Independence Party candidate Robert Fitzgerald, center. speaks during a Senate debate
Schumer of New York. heaJ witl1 cl1a11engers. Republican Mark Ken nedy, left . and Democrat ·Amy Klobuchar Sunday in
of the Senate Democratic St. Paul, Minn.
·
campaign committee.
His Republican counter" addition to new offensives in R;,ngcl \ own remark that he . The ad Joe' not mention
pa11. Sen . Elizabeth Dole of Kansas. Kcntuck v and New couicl not think of one of that Ford is bl;,d . Civil
No11h Carolina. said Iraq Hamps hire. officials dis- Bu,h·, tax cuh that merited ri!!hts groups complained the
and the broader fight against closed plans to run com mer- renem1l
commercial
make&gt;
an
"Once again the vice pres- implicit appeal 10 a dccpterrorism were impo11ant cials against Republican Rep.
issues, but "President Bush's Jim Walsh this wee!- in the ident hasn't the ,li~ htest 'eatcd racial li-ars about
name is not on the ballot." area ~rou.nd Syracuse. N .Y.
clue about what he's talk in~ black men and white women ..
Democrats , she said. were
House Majority . Leader about. He's never talked
"] don't think race had
trying "to· make it a national .John Boehner. R-Ohio. saiJ .with me and neither has any- anythi ng to do with th at ad. I
referendum."
polls showing a Democratic one in the administration just think it wa&lt; an uncalledSchumer and Dole were advantage. especially in the about taxe&gt;," Range l said for. despicable. in appropriamong the politicians and . Hot~&gt;e ...don't mcah anything . Sundav. Rangel sa id~his own ate ad.'' Ford said. He added.
party leaders who sparred on because what we have are 435 remarks refeJT~d to broad- .. The patty of family values
the Sunday talk shows just individual races all arou nd the based tax overhnul e fforts .
should not have run thar in
nine days before the elec- countrv. local candidates ·nm"What I did say was that. Tennessee or anywhere. for
tions.
ning oi1 local issues:·
if they want to have tax that matter.''
Democrats need a gain of
"If we mobili ze all our reforni. if they want simpli rnrd's GOP opponent. fnr15 seats to win control of the voters. we'll do well on fication. everything has to mer Chatt anoo ga. Tenn .,
435-member House and six Election Day... Bochner be on the table:· Rangel mayor Bob Corker. was
seats to claim the 100-mem- said .
said.
invited to ap pear with Ford
ber Senate .
"The pundih are looking
Democratic party chief hut was not available.
With approval slumping at this as a national elec- Howard
Dean
said accorc.l111g to the Fox ne·tfor both the wai" and the lion .:: said House Speake!' Democi·ah "have no in ten, · work.
president. recent polls show Dennis Hastert . R-Ill. "This tion of raising taxes except · Mehlman · repeated his
Democrats have their best · eleetion is district-oy-dis- on the people who have got asse ttion that the RNC had
City/Region
chance to reclaim 'the Hou se triet. It 's about members of enormous tax breaks - like no control over the indepenHigh I Low temps
Forecast
for
Monday,
Oct..
30
since the GOP swept them · Congress getting out a1id the oil companie' - from dently produced ad. even
from power in 1994. and a ta lking to their constituents the Republicans.··
though the RNC paid for it.
shot at capturing the Senate ahout what they've been
In Senate races , both
Also Sunday. rivals in
a&gt; well.
ab le to accomplish.··
national parties were focus- Maryland's closely watched
As the candidates entered
Kl'n Mehlman. chairman in g on a dwindling number Se11ate race held a nationally
their final full week of cam- of the Republican National of &gt;tales. notably Tennessee. televised debate in which
paigning. House Democrats Committee. sounded a com- Missouri : New Jersey and' Republican
candidate
Youngstown•
worked to emphasize the mon Republican theme - Virginia.
Michael Steele, the lieu 54•1as•
a
Democratic-led
GOP role in the Iraq war. that
Democrats had strong tenant governor. said tre Iraq
a..nlflekl•h
The party's campaign com- Congress would mean high- leads agai nst Republican was "a mess" and blamed the
ss•t38•
mittee said it would air tele- enaxes. Democrats accused incumbents in Rhode Island , Pentagon for poor planning.
•.
I
vision commercials criticiz- him of scJre tactics.
Montana. Pennsylvania and Democratic Rep. Ben Cardin
f
ing Republicans for supportMehlman
suggested Ohio. .
repeated his oppositim1 to
ing the war in about a dozen "acrosHhe- board
tax
·'The momentum here is the war and said he hoped
4;Deyton.
* .Columbus
competitive races in the increases affcctinc million:, outstanding on our side:· C.S. troops could be withss·142•
47.143.
coming days.
of Americans" if Democratic said
Democratic · Rep. drawn hy 2007; he called . '
"Despite a war gone Rep . Charle' Rangel became Harold Ford of Tcnnes-ee. that a goal, not a deadline.
I
.
wrong and no plan for victo- chairman of the tax-writin g vying fm the seat now held
A poll rele ased Sunday by .
ry. politicians like (Rep.) House Ways and Mean; by retiring Senate Majmity Th e Washington Post had
•• •
Rob Simmons keep voting Committee. The New York Leader Rill Frist.
Cardin leading Steele by . ll
to stay the course again and lawmaker is now the panel's
Ford denou nced a, .. a percentage points .
·
again." says one commer- senior Democrat.
piece of smut'' an RNCIn the New Jersey Senate
cia!, airing in Connecticut.
Last week. Vice Presidclll financed TV attack ad in race. Democratic Sen. Robert
Democrats have increased Dick . Cheney contended which a white woman with Menendez held a slight lead
the number of races where Rangel wanted to undo pop- ba1'e shoulders says she met over Republican Tom Kean
they are adve1tising in recent ular tax cuts enack I during Ford at a "Playboy pany;· Jr.. 48-42 pereent in a poll
~ Cloudy ~ Thu~r- -~ Flumes ~ Ice
days, a sign of confidence a' Bush's first term . Cheney's looks into the camera and pub·lished Sunday in The
the election approaches. ln claim was based in part on whispers. "Harold, call me." Record of Bergen County.
Partly ~ ' ' ' ' ' ~ " " ' ~ . .... ~

drinking,
polic_e
said.
Twenty-three. were Ohio
University students.
F.ire
The
Athens
DcpatJ.ment also is investigati ng three vehicle fire~ as
possible arsons.
Police made 95 arrests
last year ancJ &lt;J8 in 2004.

Sports in brief, Page B2
Wahama secures playolf spot. Page B2

Ashtabula hop€s river
cleanup leads to rebirth

lvote

ATHENS (APl - Police
made 82 an·csts at an annual Halloween block pa11y.
slightly fewer than last year.
pol ice said Sunday.
Most of the people aJTested over the weekend were
charged with disorderly
conduct and underage

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

River Valley Health
&amp; VVellness Center

Monday, October 30, 2006

Eag
BY ASHLEY SHAW
SrDRTS@MVDAILYSENTINEL COM

WELLSTON - Eastern
got its fiN ta,tc of lo,ing
Saturday. :md oh,·inuslj c.lidn·l like It much.
After droppmg. '" fir'l set
of the year tu South Web,ter.
the Lad~ F.af!le' came
storming had It) win the
fin; II three. and "ith it. the
DiYI\ion
IV Soptheast
District volleyball champiO!hhip.
The Ladv Ea ~ ]e,. now a
perfect ~4-0 on the sea&lt;on.
won h) score' of I R-~.'i. ~516. 25-19. 2S-12 . . 1t's the
program·s foUJ:th distri ct
titl e over the last tivc vear~.
lt 'et&lt;, up a dream Jnatchup for an) vollcyhall fan in
southeastern Ohio. Eaqern
will meet the 'econd-ranked
~

c

team in the state. Adena. in a
regional :,cmifinal 6 p.m.
Wedncsdav at Lancaster
Hieh School.
Tickets ar~- ou 'ale at
Ea,tt"rn Hieh School. and a
percentage 'of all ticket proceeds that are sold there go
to the school.
After being beaten in the
first game. the Lady Eagles

.Please see Eagles. 86·

Charlie Shepherd/photo

Eastern coach Howie Caldwell talks with his team during a
postseason game Thursday. The Lady Eagles defeated
South Webster 3-1 Saturday to win the district tournament.

'
Southern keeps.
Eagles
winless with 40-8 win
BY ScoTT WoLFE

Marnhout.
who
has
been nursing
an
injury, did
not
see
action
1n
the
first
quarter and
also mi ssed .
nearly · half
of th e second period .
Seniors
from · &amp;oth
c I u b s
played their
last gridIrOn game.
Eastern
seniors
were honored in a
pre-game

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS Reminiscent of the 1975 .
mud ·bowl plaved at East
Shade River Stadium, the
Southern Tornadoes whirled
to an impressive 40-8 TriValley Conference victory
over the rival Eastern Eagles
· Saturday night. Southern
Pierce
ended the season at 6-4. (2-3
TVC ) repo11edly their best
overall record since 1983.
Eastern ended up winless at
0-10.
Heavy rains left 'the East
Shade River stadium turf
soggy and damp. making it
difficult to identify ·players
on the field. yet at the same
time providing the pe1fect
stage for a clos.e, exciting
Wltlatch
first half battle. The second
half stage saw Southern ceremony6Cody Gerlach.
dominate the action putting Chad Whitlat ch: and Derek
24 unanswered points on the Young. Southern seniors
scoreboard to route the were Darin Teaford. Jesse
Eagles.
McKnight ,
Ryan
-The stan of the game was Donaldson. Jordan Pierce ,
delayed a littl e over fnrty Weston Counts, RJ . Leach.
minutes because of a power Derek
Smith,
Randy
outage. Another additional Collins. Chris Cogar. Nick
note of interest was that
Southern ru,hing star Butch . PIHse see Southem, 86

Owen·second, on to state
BY

lARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MVDAILVREG!STER .COM

PICKERINGTON
Even. without a team backin$ him up. Eastern's
M1chael Owen was a man
on a miS\ion Saturday with a
second place li ni sh at the
boys regional eros!&gt; country
meet to move on to the state
meet next Saturdav.
Owen's time of '!7:24 was
just behind Mt. Gilead's
Cameron John son who finished with a time of 16:54 to
win the Division J. Region
II race. followed hy Zach
Yerub (17:32). Brian Cull
(17:33) and Nick Moscato
(17:40).
St. John Central won the
team ·event with a dominuting 45 points, followed by
Mt.
Gilead
(77),
Fredericktown
I 130).
Lafayette Ridgewood (159)
and Grandvi e" Height&gt;
( 162).
South Gallia abo had a

single runner in the
field
as
Steven Call ·
finished
64th with a
time
of
19:18.
In
the
Division 2.
Region 7
Owen
meet it wa:,
Galen Dills
of Unioto taking ll"i with a
time of 17:06. followed by
E1han Naylor 117:29 ).
Nathan Edwards I 17 :3J ).
Tyler Cant le~ · (: 7:37J atJJ
Andrew Clark ( 17:4h) .
Ovewll . Dill&lt; strong fin ish paced Unioto as they
took the !cam win 1\'ith 75
points.
follnwetl · hy
Cia) mnnt ('l.l ). Circle\ ille
( 113 ). Warren 1117 l and
Logan Elm (]53 ).
Individually. RiYer Valle)
was Jcpre&gt;ented at the

At Pleasant Valley H()spital; W(! take the~~~ ~~~unit) hospital" to heart.
To us, it's more 'than jiJSraname.lt reflects a 'comm.i~m .
h:\l.~l~ to the
people who live here iDd.'work
hete'.
.· ~ • · ·
.

.

'

.

.

We answer 01~ tg YQU.tfhm 's .w~~ \\e put aldt~'t"enet:g)'
care programs.Ji~e healtlbcrecnings, suppoh g.n.1ups,and
local businesses and se.n~Qf citizen ~nter~ .'
'
At Pleasant Valley ij.Cspital, oar personalmeasur&lt;? of :-.ucc ,
. community. V. ~together. we'll continue to ddi\er the 1
the local area ~•.and deserves. ·
.

cal1h of our
le\'!el:.(l f health care

ITAL

&amp;- VMkll t/~Mtlil.lt 11/ut 1/l"ff~la

"'' ~lt4.

Please see Owen. 86

ination~ at

•

PLEA~

&amp;~9 tlftJ.IIIf

· ·e health

!f4 ,

· e.w ~~ tJNi

Hours:

s,.

~"J~cs-Thur

: ::

8-6:30

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Medicare Patients Never Pay A Deductible!
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• Experienced in Village Government &amp;
local school board dynamics
• Acti1·e member of American Legion Post
11(1(12 . Gold Wing' Chapter E-.l &amp; Shade
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• Vietnam Veteran US. Na"

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'

•

�•

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wahama
6 14
Par' Catholic 0 0

0

7 -

0

6

Southern 40, Eastern 8
Southern
Eostern

6

F1rst Quarter

W-Kns G1bb!:&gt; 94 ktckoff return
(k1ck fa1ledi 11 45
Second Quarter
W-B rent Jones 4 run (Derek
Veazy k1ck ) 1o 4 6

W-Brenton Clark 31 run (Voazy
kick) 3 05
Fourth Qyarter
W- Brent Jones 2 ru n 'run latled\

834
PC-Joh ti Buellet 19 pass tram
Jaso A W1lllams (run failed) 4 02
PC
20
45-115
149

F1rst Downs

9

Rushes-yards

29-182
55
237
3-6-0

21 -3 6

2-1
5-45

2-1
1-10

PassH&gt;g yards
Total yards
Comp-an-1nt

264

3
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

k

Sconng summary

w

Bv

Cardenas 1 14 Cote Cwynar 1-9
27

Individual Statistics
Rushing W- B1enton Clark 12-62
Derek Veazy 8-60 , Kns G1bbs 2-33
M1ca1ah Bra1ch 2-13 Jacob Roach
3-8 , Bre11' Jones 2-6
PC-Tommy
Brunom
18-64
Ri chard Chnsty 16-34 Brad Wilson
2-8 Jas on Wtlltams 7-5 Joh n
Boelter 2 -4
Passing· W- Brenton Clark 2 6-0
55
PC-Jason W1ll1ams 21-36 3 149
Recervrng W- Garrel1 Underwood
2-4 7 Kns G1bbs 1-8
PC-R1chard Chnsty 8-59 John
Boelter 6·23 Tommy Brunon1 3-23
Ou1nt1n Collie 2·21
Cameron

•

8
8

8

Monday, OCtober 30, 2006

Wahama secures playoff spot with win

Saturday's Boxscores
Wahama 27,
Parkersburg Catholic 7

Monday, October 30, 2006

www. mydailysentinel.com

0 24 -

40

Parkershurc Calholk due
n~ell an enormous hole after
fallmc 10 the Whtte Falcon'
for ;tie n1mh 11mc 111 HI ou1
10~'ThL'
Cru..,,11Jer..,
dropped to 11-_:\ on the sc'asn11
and "til app.trenll) need an
upset wm over 2nd rated
Wtlliamstowl1 111 order to
~rad the pl.t)ofl f1cld of 16
Followtng Gibb~· ,;unnmg 94 yard kickoff return
Wahama went on to create a
20-0 halftime bulge wnh a
patrol second period~cor~'Brent Jone\ hurst through
the lme on a lour yard run
early 111 the second quaner
before
Brenton
Clark
weaved hts way through the
Parkersb urg
Catho!tc
defense for a 31 yard touchdown scamper late in the
half
Derck Veazey had his
consecutive
potnt-aftertouchdown strettk come tn
an end at 28 111 a ro" fol lo" mg a 1111\s after the
Fa!cm1s f1rst touchdown but
the JUnior place - k1~ker
regrouped to boot three
straight PAT tnes later in the

PARI\ERSBURG - Kn,
0 0 0 6
Gthb, returned the opcmng
1 ~1ckofl 9-l 1 Jrd' lor a luu.hScoring summary
F1rst Quarter
down
before
.JOlmng
5-Weston Counts 16 run (Counts
l'•hcatah
Branch.
Brem
run) 7 57
Jonc' and Derd. VcJ7CI in
E-Derek Young 45 Interception
return (Gerlach run) 6 07
wrecktng havoc "11h- the
Second Quarter
Parker,burg
Cmholtc
S-Jordan Pterce 24 run
offense
Sallttda)
mght as
1Marnhout run) 32
eighth ranked Wahama blew
fou rth Quarter
S-Jordan P tf" ce 5 run {P•erce
pa't
I he
I ('Jth
1ated
run ) 5 26
Cru,adcr~ for an mlluent1al
S-Wes R1ffle 21 pa s~ from Ryan
17-6 gnd vtctory at StadJUm
Chapman (Marnhout run) 3 11
Field tn Parker,bur£ on a
$-Counts 8 ru n (Counts run) 1 48
cold bluster) cvenmg.
s
E
The " m assures the White
F1rst Downs "" 17
4
Fa!com
of a berth m the
Rushmg yards
258
120
field of 16 playpost-season
10
Pass1ng yards
61
Total yards
130
319
off panrc1pant~ as Wahama
Comp-an-mt
2-3-0
3-5-1
claimed its \eventh trtumph
0-0
Fumbles-lost
5-1
tn a row after openmg the
Penalt1es-yards
9-71
11-138
2006 'ca,on wnh back--to:
lndrvidual Statrstics
back Jos-e ' In adullton the
Rushing • S~Wes Counts 19 90
WHS VICIOt\ more than
Butch , Marnhout 16-B Jordan
l1kely
&lt;lr~trnyed • ' the
P1 ercfi; 6·53 Ryan Chapman 3-5
f'ru,ader'
Lhance, of a I 'lth
Ryan Donaldson 1·6
E-GerlacR-15-74 Kyle Rawson 7'tratght tnp to the Class A
11
Derek Young 7-11 , Chad
playoft\ tht ;, )Cdr.
Wh1tlalch 8-24
Wahama tmpro1es to 7-2
Passtng
S- Chapman 3-4·1 ,
lollo"ine the "1n and ckn
P•erce 1 · 1-0
E-Oerek Young 1-2-0
M1ke
'entre J. ItN wund home e\'enin~
Johnson 1- 1-0
The -lone WHS touchgame 1n 1he po,;-season
Receiving S- Wes Rtffle 2 - 3~
down
of 1hc second half was
"1th a v1ctnt\ over Win
NICk Buck 1 26
Coum~ In lh regLtiDt season set up b} a 30 yard Km
E - Codey Gerlach 1 1 Derek
Young 1-9
ltnal c
nc\1
11cek G1bhs run In the CrusaLier

n1ne 111 sl dol' n' and picked
up '}_~/ ~ards 1n total
,,fknsc 1n t&gt;nl) .'17 play'
Clark h.10 62 ) ants nn the

two 1 arJ ltnc "here lone'
aeatri et\l the call lor Ihe
score ,~, ,, sh,m plun~c tni&lt;'
the mtddlc
'"lar~er,hun.!
( Jthnlll'
dl nJed 1he ~hutnut "ilh a
l.t'c
1nuchdt"' 11
"hen
Crusader quarterhack Ja\on
\\'tlliams
found
John
Boelter :lcr&lt;"' ihc mtddle
for a 19 yard sL'&lt;nlng ltM
The try for the two- poml
conversion wa' unsuccessful and Wahama came away
l'tih the C'JUCtal 27-6 Inumph.
The
Fa1con
delense
forced Catholtc out of 11s
usually.·
comfonahlc
ground oriented offen'c
early· on which u!t1matel)
proved to be the difference
in
the
game.
The
CrU'.ader; ran an exlruordinary 82 offens1ve pia~' and
recorded 20 fn-st downs but
JUSt 11:5 total yards &lt;)n the
ground caused PCH S w
abandon its running £3me
and take the airways
Wt!ltams connected on 21
-of 36 passes for 149 yard'
and a touchdown but mos1
of hts aerials were short
gatos and Wahama tntercepted three of h" offermgs
'fhe 'Whtte Falcon&gt; ta lh ed

\calL'\

n1ound \\ 11h

h()

llL'lllll£!

and G1hhs -'-~- Clart
compleied three ol "' passes for 55 yards with Garrell
Undetv."i'tl ptabbing two
recept1on' lo1 -17 yards.
Deten'" ell
M ic aiah
Branch tm ned 1n his best
performance of the season
wtth a team high 16 tackles.
Gtbh' added 12 stops and
forced several more hurries
on 1he part of the Catholic
offense with Veazey also
addmg 12 tackles. Jones
had nine while Jordan
Roush came up with etghl
stops for the Bend Area
defensive unit.
Clark
picked off two Parkersburg ·
Cathohc pa&gt;ses whi Je
G1bbs mtercepted another
w1th Veazey recovenng a
Crusader fumble.
Wahama will travel to
Wirt County ne xt week m
the Falcons regular season
fmale. WHS wi ll be pursuing tts eighth straight win
and possi bly a first ro~nd .
home
playoff
date
Parkersburg Cathohc v1sits
Williamstown in its regula1
season concl uston

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FOOTil'\11

OSUhammers
Golden Gophers
COLUMBLS I API
Ohto Stare·, defense I' pn111ng that C/i. pCt\CilCC Is 0\'C\r:Jted
While quattcrbac·J.. Trov
up
h1s
Smtt'1 huffed
Hctsman Ttophy numbers
by run11111~ for one touchdown ,\lld thtov. mp fn1
a not hc1. top-rani-cd Oh1o
Slate·, detense domtnmed 111
a
-1-1-0
1 1ctory
01 er
Mtnne,ola on Saturda).
An1on1o Ptttmal1 rushed
lot 1wo scores for th e
Buci-cyes (9-0 5-0 Big Ten).
"ho have won every game
thts season by al least 17
pc11nt' The' play lo11 ly

'&lt;ell Yn1 k lip hi end Ch1 Js
B.tker 111 tl1e fm.tl mmute
was called oul &lt;•I hounJs.
gnmg
the
C!e1 eland
Browns a ~O-L~ II i no\CI the·
leis on Sunda\.
Tt atlm g 20-13. the Jels (4-1) slopped ihe Brm&lt;ns (2-5)
on three \tratght plays and
got lhe ball back on a punl
With
1.56 left
Chad
Pennington then moved his
cl ub to the Browns 24-y.trd
Ime with I :06 left before
1h1 n11 1ng .1n 1ncomple tion
and ha' mg a pass tipped.
On
fourth-and-4.
Pennmgton lofted a pass to
Ba~er who c.tUghl he hall
wtth one hand. hut belote he
could get etlhrt of h" teet
down. Baker was dnlled
from the side by defenstve
had Broclnev Pool. who
senl Bakel sprawlmg out ol
hounJ, Baker held the b&lt;ill
and 1he nlttctal~ did no1

Surprising Ohio Stewart wins,
Johnson moves up
keeps winning

race~

rcma111111g

Chase co11tcndct' Dale
Earnhardl Jr and Kcnset~
foug.h1 it ou1 for tlmd place.

HAMPTON. G.t. 1AP1- with EarnhLliJL \\ 111111n!! the
KF.'-'T lAP\ - Voncane .'It th ts potlll. Ton) Stc"art hallie r., tnLhe'
()"ens .mel Kdh tn McRae h rdcmp ~Hll) lor pndc and
L'lll'h 1 d!l I u1 d tnuchdn~ n
v.1ns On Stilldd) at All.tnta
'H I
.111J Oh"' 'napped Ken t Molnr Speedw,l\. he stole
Stdlc.., l t\C·game v.mntng
the 'J10iltghl ltoltl 11ie 1111~
sttc.ti- with a 17-7 ltelor~ L'OillelldCI\ 1\'llh d \.1 Ill thai
S.tlurd.l\
clcatly made h1m proud.
01'
scored on a 17victory
Sle" arl. "ho L1ilcd to
1 .uJ run 111 the ftN qu~ner
.JIICt 1\ent State"s Jake qualt1) lot ihc 10-i.tce
CLEVELAND (API 1\dro) punted out o1 bounds Ch."e tn1 Lh,Jmptonshtp
The
calch nr was 11 nne'&gt;
McRae. who ru&gt;hed lor 103 after \.1 1nnmg h1' second
was
incredible
The ru\\'ard' "n 26 c.ttJtes. had a 'o- Nextcl Cup tllle last season.
mg
was
inercdulou'
yard scon ng run for the he ld oft Cha'c dt tvet Jimmie
A potenttal one-hc~11deJ
Bob~ats (6-3. 4- 1 Mid - Johnson !01 hts fourth \ICtotymg
touchdown grah h)
A~ncrican Conference) 1n ry of the season and second

Browns catch a
break in

ens

1mmediatclv make a call.
The\• huddled for several
seconds hefore referee Mtke
Carey s~ud Baker oould not
ha1 e made the catch m
hl1Unds

Vick tears up
Bengals in win
CINCII\NATI CAP)
M1chael Vick 'ure showed ·em
what they"ve 1111ssed
Vtci- threw three touchdown
pa•scs on Sunday. repeatedly
s!ippmg out of tacklers' grasp.
while leadmg the Atlanta
Falcons to a 29--27 victorv over
a G'mcmnati Bengals teai11 that
had nevet :.een anything quite
ltke hun
- The mercun,tl quw1erback
has led ihe Falcons (5-2) to
con•ccutne "1n' over the
defcnJmg Super Bcowl champion Steders and the defendmg
AFC :&gt;lotth champton Bcngals

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

--------..,----_;O.;.r..,Fa;;ox.To
.

Oearl~irM

~

Monday-Frid•y for Insertion 'In Next D•v·s Paper
Sunday Jn-cotumn: 1:00 p .M.
FrldiiV For Sundays Paper

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

• Aft

• Start Your Ads Wlttt .- Keyword •

II!Ciude COmplete

DeK:rlption • Include A Prkie .. Avoid A.bbr@viatkN'Is
• Incl"de Phone Number Arid Address When Needed

Ohio \Ialiey
Pub118hlng reael\les
tho right IO edit,
Nted or ctncel any
ad at any time
Must

r
r-'------"".Ij
4

, .nu•·

" NOTICE TO · TAXPAY
ERS
Reference:
5715.17 Ohio Revised
Code _
The Me1gs County
Board of Revls1on has
completed 1ts work of
equalization. The tax
returns for tax year
2006
have
been
revised and the \lalua·
t1ons completed and
are open for public
1nspect1on In the off1ce
of the Me1gs County
Auditor, Second Floor
Courthouse . Second
Street. Pomeroy, Oh10
Complarnts aga1nst the
valuations. as established for ta• year 2006
must be made '"
accorda"ce
w1th
Section 5715 19 of the
OhiO Revase~ Code
These
complaints
must be f1led m the
County
Auditor 's
Off1ce on or before the
· 31st day of March
2007. All complaints
filed w1th the county
Auditor will be heard
by
the
Board
of
ReviSion 1n the manner
provtded by Sect1on
571515 of the Oh1o
Rev•se&lt;J Code
Mary T Byer·HIII
Me1gs County aud1tor
1101 27 29 30 31 (11)
1 2 3 5. 6 7

Public Nottce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Rev1sed
Code
Sectoons 3501 11 (G)
5705 19 5705 25
NotiCe !S hereby g1ven
that 1n pursuance of a
Resotut10 n
of the
VIllage Council of the
VIllage ot Syracuse
Syracuse
Ohio
passed on the 6th day
of July 2006. there w 1ll
be submitted to a vote
of the people of sa•d
subdiVISIOn · a t
a
·General Election to be
held •n the V•llage of
Syracuse . Oh10 at the
regular places of vot •ng there in 6n the 7th
day of November 2006

the question ollevylng
a tax 1n excess of the
ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Syracuse
Village for the purpose
of Fire Protect1on
Satd tax being
A
renewal of a tax of 1
mill and an tncrease of
.5 mtll to constttute a
tax of 1.5 m1lls at a rate
no exceeding 1 5 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ($0.15) fifteen cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuat1on.
for
five
(S}years.
The Polls for sa1d
Electton Will open at
6 30 o 'clock A.M. and
rema in open until 7 30
0 clock P.M of satd
day
,
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Me1gs
County Ohto

-------Public Notice
-------The
Village
of
Middleport will accept
sealed b1ds for a contract for Solid Waste
Collection &amp; Disposal
tor the 2007 year,
January 1 to December
31 2007 Sealed bids
-nust be del l\lered to
the Middleport WB'ier
Department end the
deadline 1or b1ds IS
November 10th 2006
at 4 30 p m Contract
Will be awarded on
November 13. 2006.
The Village has the
nght to accept or reject
any or all b1ds.
(101 23 25 27. 30 , (11)
1 3

Public Notice
-------NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILl LIMITATION
Relnsed
Code.
SeCI!Ons 3501 11 (G).
5705 19 5705 25
Not1ce IS hereby g1ven

tu

"nH'"'~

that In pursuance of a General Election to be
Resolution
of
the held in the Village of
Board
of
County Middteporl,Ohio. at the
Commis1oners of the regular places of vat·
County
of
Meigs mg therein, on the 7th
Pomeroy,
Oh1o
day of November, 2006
.passed on t he 2oth day the quest1on of levymg
of April, 2006, there wtll a tax, tn e)Ccess of the
be submitted to a vote ten mii.J hmrtatlon. for
of the people of satd the
benefit
of
subd1v1osn
at
a Middleport V•llage for
General electton to be t he purpose of current
held in the County of expenses
Meigs Oh10, at the reg- Said tax being
a
ular places .. of votmg rep lacement of taw of3
there1n on the 7th day m1lls at a rate not
of November 2006 the eKceed&lt;ng 3 (three)
question of le\lying' a mrlls for each one doitax, in excess of the lar of valuat1on. which
te.n m111' limitation, for amounts to t hirty cents
the beneftt of Me1gs (S 3Q) for each one
County General Health ~ hundred dollars of valD1stnet lor the purpose uatron tor hve- (5)

of current expenses
Sard tax bemg
A
renewal of a tax of 1
m111 at a rate not excedmg 1 (one)m1lls for
John
N.lhle. each one dollar of valuChairperson
at1on. wrch amounts to
Alta D.Smith. Director
ten cents (SO 10) for

Dated: Sept 5, 2006
(101 23 30

Kl ~ h t

eac~ one hundred dol-

Iars of valuatiOn, for
five (5) years.
The Polls for sa1d
Elect1on wtll open al
6.30 O'clock A.M an9

remarn open unt11 7.30

years
The Polls tor sa1d
Election w111 open at
6 30 o clock A M an·d
rema1n open unhl 7 30
o 'clock PM ot sa•d
day
By order of the Board
of Etectoons of Mo1gs
County. Ohio .
John
N.
lhle.
Cha.rperson
Rrta 0 Smith D~rector
Dated September 5,
2006
(1 0) 23, 30

o 'clock PM of sa1d
day
By order of the Board
Public Not1ce .
of Electtosn, of Me1gs
County Oh10
thte, NOTICE OF ELECTION
John
N
ON TAX
LEVY IN
Chairperson
R1ta 0 Smrth , Dtrector EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Dated : June 28, 2006
Revtsed
Code ,
(10) 23.30
Sections 350'1.11 (G].
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby given
Public Notice
t hat m pursuanGe of a
NOTICE OF ELECTION Resolution
of
the
ON TAX LEVY IN Board of Township
EXCESS OF THE TEN Trustees
of
the
MILL LIMITATION
Township of Rutland,
Revised
Code Rutland. Oh1o, passed
Sect1ons 3501 11 (G) on the 30th day of
570519 5705 25
June, 2006 . there Will
Not1ce IS hereby gtven be submitted to a vote
that 1n pursuance of a of the people of sa1d
Resolu1lon
of
the subdiviSIOn
at
a
Village CQunc11 o1 the General election to be
Village of Moddleport held 1n the Township of
Middleport ,
Oh1o Rutland. Oh1o, at the
passed on the ~ ()th day regular places of votot July 2006 t"'ere wtll mg therem, on the 7th
be submttted 10 a vote day of November, 2006.
dl the people ol sr~•d .he quest1on of le\lylng
subd•vlt.ton
a1
a R tax 10 eJ:cess of the

'

on
SAVINGS

fr!
&lt;7~1;;" '!!o RI4+-\T Wl'tt
~~1'1~£. ~~~'- iJp Ft&gt;11..
r\l\l.-l.-OW~f3N Wi110N WE''VE' Gr&gt;l

Puhlic.: N•nth:f.-• ... in N •~VVl'&gt; l »tllpc.oi'&lt;Lo.
ll'•·li,. .._-r._-d Ri~ht tn '' li{nu•- l")u•u.

Human Resources ,

4x4's For Sate .......,...................................... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlqu'es ................................... ,,..,..............530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .. ,.........:................080
Auto Par1s I&lt; Accessories .......................... 760
Aulo Repalr ......... ..................... .............. ...... 770
Aulot! for Sale .................... ,,, .......................710
Boals &amp; MotONI for Sate ............................. 750
Building Supptles .........,, ...... .......................550
Business and Bulldtngs ............................. 340
Bualness Oppor1untty........... ......................21 0
Busl.,... Tralntng ....................................... 140
C.mpers 1&lt; Motor Homes ........................... 790
C8mpl11!1 Equipment ................................... 780
C.rds of Thanlts ..........................................010
Chlld/Eicterty Care ..... ...... -- --- -------··-----------·--190
Etectrlcai/Retrlgetlltlon ... ... .. ........... , .. ___ ....840
Equipment for Rent ............... .. ........... .... ,...480
ExCIJvatlng ..... .. ............. .. . .................. ·----- ... 830
Farm Equipment .. -------····· ..... ..........: .........610
Farms for Rent ....... .....................................430
Farms for Sate ............................................330

2520 Valley Dnve
25550
(304) 675-4340
Fax (304) 675"6975

For lA- ........ .............................. ............ 490
For Sale ........................................................585
For Sate or Trade ........................................ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .......... ........................580
Fumlahed Rooms .......................................450

PART-TIME
Pleasant Val ley Hosp1tal IS c urrently
accep t 1ng

serve until ·the next
annual election when
a director shall be
elected for the unexpired term.
(1 0) 30

resumes

Nurse. Applicants must have a curren t

Shop e
Classifieds!

0

West Vtrg1n1a RN license Computer skills
requ ned Knowledge of or back ground 1n
1nfec!lon

control/employee

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

laws
ARTICLE tV- BOARD
OF DIRECTORS
Section 1 The Board of
D1rectors
shall
mcrease from fifteen
(15) to e1ghteen (18)
d1rectors by the addltron on new director
each year tor the next
three years. beg1nn1ng
wJth election of 2007
1or term begmnmg
December 1 2007
Section 3 If any member of the Board of
01rectors m1sses four

meetmgs m a fiscal

h ea lth •

,

benefJCJal

Heal th msurance Single/family plan ,
dental plan, vacat1on and ret trement
Send resumes to

0

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

c/o

REGISTERED NURSES

Pomt Pleasant, WV

Pleasani Val l ey Home Health / Hosp1ce
and

Pr1vale

Duty

JS

cow

h 1r 1ng

contmgency Reg1stered Nurses fo r h ome

or apply onlme at www.pvalley org

care cases 1n Gallia, Me1gs and Mason

AA/EOE

nursmg expenence 1s requned .
0&gt; rnore 1nformat1on, contact

The Board of Directors
of the Meigs County
Agricultural Soc1ety
has or proposed. by a
majority of the Board
of Directors. at then
regu lar
scheduled
meeting on October 2,
2006, votm g tn 1avor of
placmg the followrng
amendment on ballot
If the mator lty of the
membership votrng on
the proposed amend·
ment on November 6
2006 s hall adopt such
amendments. rt shall
become a part of the
constitu tion
or
by

Part - t1m e . -

tnlect1on Control/Employee Health Staff

Coun t1es FleXIble scheduling One year
Public Notice

for

T1a Wooten at

Help W~nted

Help Wanted

(304) 675-7400

Genenil Haullng ..................................., ...... .850
0'-ay ..................... .............................. .040
MIJppy Ads ...................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain.................................................640
Help wanted .....,.....,................... ·-------.......... 11 o
Home lmprovementa ...................................810
l!omea for Sale .................................... ........ 31 0
Houaeheld Goods ..... ·-· ....... ---------....... ------·-51 0
Housel for Rent... ............................ .......... 410

In Memorlam ................................................ 020

AA/EOE

Get Your Message Ac~oss
Wrth A Daily Sentinel

BUlLETIN BOARD
'1 0"' column inch weekdays
'17~' column 1nch Sat or Sunday

lnaurance .......................................... ........ 130

Pleasa·nt Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center has openings
for ce-rtified Nursing Assistants.
Twelve hour shifts, shift
differentiaJ , excellent salary,
holidays, health insurance,
single/family plan, dental. life
insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement
For information, please contact:

A GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFl
FOR YOUR CHILD '

Jusl Me ' M u;~c
Personal,zea C Os &amp; 8ook&gt;
N ~·vecnber 3 2(106

9 arr · ~ pm
P\'H M a1n Lob b y
Vegg,eTa les W ggles
Ba rney &amp; Elmo
For more 1nto plea se call

PVH CJrr11'1 Jn!t~ Rela!1vns
.l.J4 f"' 414[ Ex• ~ 1?(,
~L '11 ,..... lS Jf\1\"TED'

Angie Cleland
Dtrector of Nursing

(304) 675-5236
AA/EOE

Utwn &amp; Garden !'qulpment.. ...................... IIO
Uvestock......................................................630
LDet and Found ........................................... oeo
Lola &amp; Acr.age .................................... ,......350
Mlacei~Mteoua .......... .................................... 170
Mllcettaneous Merchandlu,,,, ................ ,,,540

MobUe Horne Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Homel for Rent .........................., .... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate .............................,.. 320

Money to Loan .............................................220

llcltorcycles t. 4 Wheelera ..............,........,.. 740
MUll teal tntilrumenta ... ,, , ,•. ,,........ ,---·- ... ---· 570

l'ersonala ............................... ,,, .......... ,........ oos

,... tor S.le ................................................ 580
Plumbing I&lt; Heatlng ,................. .................. 820
Protesolonal SerVIces .......... ,................ ,,.,,. 230
RHio, TV t. CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Eotlte Wanted ............. , ............. ,........ 360
Schoololnotructlon .................................... t50
Sled , Plant &amp; Fer1ttlzor .............................. 650
SHuatlon&amp; Wanted ... ........... .................... ,. 120
Space for Rent. .............. ,............................. 460
Spot'1111!1 Gooda .......... ,............................. 520
SUV'a for Sate ..................: ....................... 720
Truclul for Sate ..,:,..................................... 715
Upholatery ........,, .... ,....,.... .............. , ....... 870
V1111a For Sate ............................... ------ ....... 730
Wanted to Buy ........................................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ................ 620
Wanted To Do ........................................... 180
Wanted to Rant ........................................... 470
Yard Sate- Galtlpotlo ................................. :.072
Yard Sale·"-'&lt;ly/Mtddte ....... ·-------------· 074
Y
Sate-Pl. Plelaant... ........ ··-------------- ... 076

Management~

•

AI John Sang Ford·

www.com1cs com

~

Local

II '-'

-n

Manufacturer

Plono apply
It:

tn

2150-Avo.... ,

HEU'W~

Gollipollo, OH.

LPN/RN 's
needed
m
Gelhpohs Oh•o Pecflatnc
case Oays!PT Call Pnrnar\'
Care Nurstng Serv1ces at
800-5,8-2273 or 61 4-764·
0960 and ask for Jean

t.&lt;2 $
&lt;$
LEARN
TO DRIVE

MDS NURSE Rod&lt;spnngs
RehBbtlllaiiOn Center a 100-

' FUi.l llldE CLASSES'
• COl TRAINING'
' FINANCII!;G AVAILABLE'
• JOB PLACEI.I~T· '

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
tRAINING CENTERS

1-800·334-1203
l1101ltrlt1D!'Irlllel C0:'1

wood 11ems
To $480/wl&lt;
Matenals prOir'•ded
FreE' lnformatron pkg 24Hr
801 -428....649

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15 67.$2619/hr , now hirIng For appbcatlol'l and free

gOYemsment tob ll"lto call
Amencan Assoc ot labo1 1913·599-8042, 24/nrs emp

serv
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon

Call Manlyn 304 882 -2645
AVON ' All Area• ' To Suy or
Sell Sh~rley Spears 304 675-, 429
BODY SHOP
TECHNICIAN
El(perlenced only ICAR certlf led a plus smol&lt;e tree
workplace
Appl~ 1n person at
Smltn GM Superatote
1900 Eastern Ave
Gatllpohs Ohio
Glenn Lawson Shop
Manager

bed s\&lt;111110 nursing IBCillty ~
currently seeking a MDS
Nurse to manage with our
Progra m Candidatas mUS1
have e. valid RN Ohio Hcensure and at least one year of
management exper.ence
EntOY an e•cellent support
system from our Regional
MDS team which offers
assistance In problem solv·
lng and Implementing systems We offer oompetfttve
wages end a team·based
worktng
env1ronmen1
Interested
candidates
should
appl~
to
Rocksprings Rehab11ltahon
Center, 36759 Aooksprlng&amp;
Road
Pome roy,
Otuo
45769 EJctendlcare Health
ServiCeS, Inc ls an equal

Fruth Inc IS seeking a an opportunity employer that
assoc•ate to work In fh'e encourages
workplacfl
warehouse OuaHf1ed cand1· diversity M!F ON
dates must have a valid dnvMEDI HOME HEAlTH
ersllcense be able to hM at
AGENCY
least BO lbs on a regular
baSIS heve a high school
HAS OPEN! NOS FOR
diploma or equivalent aM
bfr Bble to tolerate extreme
........ PRN RN._....
tempera1ures 11 Interested
please mall your resume to
$28 PER HOUR/
cruth Corporate Off•ce attn
$42 PEA VISIT
Human
FlesourcesWarehouse Position, RA 1 Call Vicki Reynold&amp;. AN.
Box 332 Point P:es.s.ant wv
CllniCIII Manage• al
25550
"-lo pnone cans
(740)«41-1799 or 1-800please 1
48 ~-63~

"ii!~i;i!i~~!i!i!i"iiffi ------,:--~- - - - - - - - Help wan1&amp;a at Darst Group N&amp;ed HVAC Installer helper
manufllcturlng dNign
Home wol'tl:mg with elderly, and service tech Exp
experlen"'~ Autoced
heavy l!fting Involved 740- deSired Dut will naln nght
know~dge Appty 1,.
992-5023
persons Apply at Comfort
2150 Ealttrn Av•
A1r 1160 J&amp;~son Pike
Galllpnlla, Ohio ar
Here we GROW agam l
auDmlt mwne 10 SFS
Friendly Eff1c1ent Office No experience necenary
1'ruc*
Inc. p,o,
Staf1 Needed tor Bus~ Apply In persol" trom noon-3
eo. 718 , Qalllpolla, Chiropractic Off•ce Please et Duke Cleaners 656

IIi O.lgn Englneer-2 yr

s.•.

OH 45631 .

HAND-DELIVER resumes
Bai:l&lt;
to
Heallh
cn1roptaC11c
1OA
Old
Airport Ret Gall\poll8 Cell
(740~46-7480 tor more
lniormatlon

10

II"KE MORE IIO!IIEYI
•$8.50/hoUf
•Full and Part time
schedules
• Med•cal Benefits
·Pend Training
•Vacauons every
mo.,ths
Ano Muc~ More'

I

04LL ~VI

1..tn""6M2 47

6

Lincoln-Mercury we've
established a 35 year
reputation o1 honssty
tntegrlty and outstanding
customer serv•ee- before
and after the sale With
the honest produc1s on
the marke1 and as the
fastest grow1ng dealership In our reg1on. we're
add•ng Sales Assoc•ates
to better servtce our
customers

lo - )o

loolclhg 1or welders

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts ,

t he best

management team In the
country to ass1st you
Compensation·
Bonuses, comm!SIOn,
health care. O•sabJI1!y
long Term Care and
more

0

SFS ll'uck S..,

Ill

• ,.,., ,

ASSOCIATES

No phono cotta p~.

-

•

Jo1n the w1nmng leam1
Training- Two week In!·
t1al &amp; onentat ton classes
with continued on gOing
traln1ng

0

CLASSIFIED INOEX

INFEGION CONTROL/
EMPLOYEE HEALTif STAfF NURSE

ten mill lim1tat1on, for year. the Board may
the benefn of Rutland upon two·thlrds vote of
Township, lor the pur- the Board of Directors,
pose of mamtaming declare his/her posicemetenes said tax tion
vacant
and
b~mg a replacement of appoint a successor to
a tax of 0.3 m1ll at a
rate not exceedmg 0.3
m1lls for each one dollar of valuation, wh1ch
amounts to three cents
($0 .03) for each one
hundred dollars of valuation, for f1ve years
(5).
The Polls for said
Election wtll open at
6·30 o clock A M and
remain open until 7:30
o 'clock P.M . of said
day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Mergs
County, Ohio
John
N.lhle
Cha1rperson
R1ta D.Smlth, Director
Dated Sept 5, 2006
(1 0) 23, 30

0

r•-H•

Local Employer lOoking to
h1re full ttme ReceptioniSt
Must be last learn1ng anQ
able to mult11ask. and !randle
stress Computer knov.leoge
1s a plus Pay &amp;tar1il out at
SB 00/hr
Please send
resume to CLA Box ~ c:o
Gallipolis Tribi.Jne PO Sox

!!,!,,.....,ut...,!l:!341!!!fll........!IJ 469 Gall1p0(1S 0H 45631

5econcJ AVG
--------Overbrook c.nter Is currently accepting appllclt1ons tor
lull and part time AN's
Competli:1W! wages and benellts pactage avellab6e An
Interested applicants Should
p1d&lt; up an applicatiOn at 33J
Page S1reet. Mlddlecort.
OH For aoaruonal tmormaliOn olease COI"tact Ho!ile at
74()1992-6472 EOE

home Pnvate orsem1pnvate
room with balh t have 20
years of expenence &amp; reference Call (740)446·4300

SALES

0

messagt

no

~

t; AI'JbY Fo!t \/lfllo~W'~
"\~\ C-~- QlZ. -ltzt'AT612.S. ·

White cal wltan spots on
head &amp; tall bl a~ collar Absolute Top Dollar u S
S1lver and Gold Corns.
(740)446-9636
Proofsets Gold Amgs, Pre~ 935
US
Currency,
SOIIIB!re 01amonds- M T S
Co1n Shop 151 Second
FOUND Small male Temer, Avenue GallipoliS 740-446white &amp; black on Bethel 2842
Road (3o4)675-2634
Buytng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
Lost- Brown &amp; Whne 3 yr old Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
13041773 5343
male B01eer On Mill Creek Salvage
(740)446-0731 or 740-441; (3041674-1374
7573
Cars any cond or l1xable
In (740)38 8-8228
Lost Boxer 1Masllff
Evergreen area Very friendWant to I&gt;Uy new and old
ly Fawn color answers to funk carsJtrucks/vans 740·
Ace Reward {740)441· 416-,594 or 740-416-1588
0858 0' (74())709-1931
Will pick up unwanted and
JUnk
B•cyclos
Phone
(740 ,379-9278 please teave
\1 1'1 '~\'

CompaniOn end care grver
Atterrtfont
for an elderly person In my Local company offermg •NO

1\cce?'&gt; 'fo 1t11'&gt; !!&gt;J(,- \boWl. o;::

i

I.

t.,r':o:":E:IP:~:·AN=rrnD=~I tj ~~-Y It.,r1.0-·FOR·Ho·~-AU--,l

v. .RDSAI.E· 1
PoMEMO\IM..mot£ .

To good home Young iiSiihl:;n•:;...~~----,
female Beagle 6 mo old k1d
WANmJ
lnendly (7401379-9445
'1U IlL~

Help Wanted

POLICIES: Ottlo YllfltV Publletllng Nle!'VH the right to edll, tefect, Of tlnoel any ld et any time Error a muel bt r.port.d on ttMI flrw1 d1y ol
TrlbuM-Santlniii-Reglflt.r will be te&amp;ponstble for no mora thin the oost olthe IJM08 ocoophrd by the enot end only lhe 11,.1 lnMrtlon We
1ny to. or ••pen• ttalt rautts from the publication or omission ol 1n sdv.rt!Hrnent Correction will be mfldlln IIMI llrM IVIIIM:IIe edlllon
ara IIWIYI contldtntlll • Current r11e e~fd IPPIIM • All rtll eatete edvertltemenls 1re
to ttte Feden.l F1l1 Houalng Act of 1968
&amp;COel'tl onty help WI !'lied ldl meeting EOE st.endlrda We will
I
olin. I. .

kitncarlyle@!comcast net

"I I, I I t ! -.

Help Wanted

ads must be pn~paid•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Found Sunday Mrx colored .....
female dog w!blue collar
w/4 wh1te paws (740}446- Nov 1-4
Ant1que 1tems,
9937
diShes cast Iron ware old
cane cha1rs Library table
Free to a good home 4 yr lamps, Misc. rtems 9 00 old Collie m•x Great w1th 5 00 3 1353 Noble Summ 1t
ch1ldren (740)286-2674
Road, M1ddlepor1 Ra1n or

B

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
au..ness Days Prior To
Publlca1:1on
Sunday Display: t:OO
Thurwct-v for Sundavs·--·-·

Y.Uill SAU

GIVE.\WAY

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
Borders $3.00/per ad
eiilll
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

DtsDiay Ads

Dally In ..COlumn: 1:00 p .m.

I

Get A Jump

l\egt~ter

ca~r:; (740) 44&amp;-2342 (74o) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Sports Around the Nation
1n the ltrst sewn t,lces ol1he
1111111 11' and Notlhwe"ern the '&gt;l.'COJld
hn1h c-7_the next 111 o wceh
Ohio·, M,JII La,hcr added 20011 pl:l\ l1fh
11 htlc tun mg up for the re~u­ ,t •o-ya1d tteld goal
The runner-up l1msh ""'
l.tr-sea,ol1 Imale a£amst No
)Usl ftnc w1th John,nn.
:_ \11ch1ean on N'm. 18 at
lhnu eh. '" he moveJ "tt!Hn
Ohll1 Sta:hum
2h )lOtnts ol sene' leader
Matt 1\enseth '-'tlh three

Websjtes:
www.mydailytrlbune.dom
www.mydailysenlinel.com
www myda1lyreg1sler com

Sentinel

• Ads Should Run 7 DaV5

COLLF&lt;.E

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

~
Inc.

2006 by NEA,

Port-Tlmo Rotan Cfell&lt;
tt you are look1ng 10 start
Sara Lee/Hamer's Is
seeking a customer oriented person to worlt: In
the Gallipolis Bakery
Outlel Store
Duties
mclude reQ•ster opera·
tlen, llft.ng and movmg
Inventory,
slacking
shel\les
answering
phones and ass•sllng
shoppers
Ouallhed
appl1cants must be 18
yea/5 ol age and have a
HS dtplofTla or GEO
IndiVIduals must be
available
to
woril;
Monday- Saturday,
9am- 6pm and worll:
20--40 hOurs per week
The
pos1t1on pays
$6/hour no benefits
ln1erested persons may
apply In the Gallipolis
store located at 1708
Eastern Avenue
No
phone cells please
EOE

a new career or maybe
you don't teet you're pa•d
or 11 eated as well as you
should be and 1f you're
tired of working for
someone who .sn't
wcrk1ng lor you g•ve
Pat H1ll or BreO Sang
a call today
(74()1446-9800 0'
1-800-272-5179
You mey also apply m
person at
195 Upper R1ver Ad
G8J IIpoi1S Oh•o
Monday-FrKJay

a;;:::;:::::::!
.,

I~

•

SaloOLs
INS'11UCTIO:'Ii

Concealed P1stol Class
Ohio WV Nov 4, 2006,
$75 oo
9 ooam vr:w
Mason WV (740l!l43-S555,
74()-&lt;16-3329

r

iO

BllSM"$

OPPolm.JNrt'\'

~=~=:;==~
•NOTICE•

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

lNG CO recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to sena money
through rhe maJl until you
have 1nvestlgeted the
offering

r

DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home Instead of re nt1ng
• 100°10 l•nancmg
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
..
' Payment could be the
same as re nt
Mortgage
~ocators

(7401367-0000
Beaut•ful Ranch Style Home
cin 2 112 acres Must see to
apprec1ate
2br 2ba,
kitchen d1mng room, 11vtng
room temlly roo m 2 car
garage
Pnce reduced
$149 000 080 (304)675·
4235 or (304}593·3220

MONEV
TO l..o,\N

Borrow Smart Contact
the Oh•o D•v•slon of
Fmanclal
Institution's
OH1 ce of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE: you refi nance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of r&amp;quests for any large
advance payments ot
tees or Insurance Call the
OffiCe of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866·
278-0003 to leam It the
mortgage broker
or
lender
IS
properl y
\ICSnsed (ThiS IS a pUbliC
serv1ce ennouneement
from the Oh•o Valley
Publ1sh1ng Company)

New HelJlC Cuts Curl also

Fo11 Hille r price vary depend
lng on langlh of ha1r
'Where· All Abou1 You SIKJh
and Ma1n St Pt Pleasanl ,
WVA 304:675-1~11
Sue Underwood Spem!.l
1O"'t!·oH perm, color , cap

h!lte
Oeb1
Adkins
l1cense
Massage Therapy 20°10~oH

All real nblte advarttalng
In lhla new1papar Is
aub}ect to the F.den1
Fair Houalng Act ot 1188
wnkh mtkes tt lltegel to
advtrtlee "any
prefer.noe, llmltMton or
dl.crlmlnatlon belled on
race, calar, rellglan, MK

hlmii!M statu• or nltional
origin, or 1ny Intention to

IMke•nv such
prelerenc., limitation or

dlscrlmtnatlon."
This newspaper will not
lcnowlnglv accept
advertisements for rNI
fttlte which Is In
vloi1Uon of the law Our
readers,,. hereby

lntorrn.d thlt all
dwetllnga advertited In
this ~apeper are.
awallable on an eqUII
opportunity baAS.
House and Lot for Sale! 3
Bt , 2 Bath home on apprO)(
3 acre W/new roo1, heat
pump S S S1de by stde and
au filtration electric heat.
wlsta nd b~ pwpane fore
place and oulslde storage
bulld1ng In pnvate setting,
located on Forest Run
Road Racme Ohio Call
740-949-2658
levemngs
onM
-''-----,--Ranch style home on .2 6
acres overlooking the beautlfut Oh1o River 1n Long
Bottom, Ohio located at
618~8 SA 124 Thts sb:
room house mcludes 2 5
bedrooms one full bath ana
8 three quarter balh 1421

TURNED DOWN ON
GIIIIIpolle career COllege SOCIAL: SECURITY ISSI7
(Careers Close To Home)
No Fee Unless We W•Q'
l!!tiB!!!!!!I!!!!!I!I!!I!!!!!IJ Call TOday! 740-446'·4367
1·888·582-3345
PositiOn A\lallable
1-800·214 0452
Fuel truck drtver, musl have www ;aiiiPOIISCI~rcollege oom "::111'""-~----,
Class B COL Hazmat &amp; Accreditee M~mber Acc,edllnliil U
eouro1 lor lndfiJJendfont Colleges r10
HOMES
Tanker preferred but Non •nO
School!! 12748
FOR SALE.
square feat of ltvmg space
Hazmat,. I Tanker will be
·--iiiiiiiii;._.l
with full llfliShed basement
constdered local route, 170
~bscEJA'IEOl;s
I
and an anached two car
good hours good benefits 1
•
. 1 1/2 Story, 3Br f88th AIt garage Also mcludes a 32
ClA Booc :iiHi c/o Gallipolis
electnc, Rlver1ront property ., 40 healeel metal outside
Tribune PO SoiC 469 Amos and Son's Tras h on But*town Road Letarl bu.ldmg wilt', concrete fioor
Gallipolis Oh1o 45621
Service, Firewood &amp; EX1ra Porch &amp; 0~ 740·949· •A-orne IS equipped with heatlng, cooling, water and all
HaunnQ, Reasonable Rates, 2253
electr~c ut1llt1 es
Some
Heap Acceplod 1740)388
2 story 3 bedroom ~ bath k1lchen appliances are
Leading The Way 0371
roo m house In Chester 2 1nclvded For more •nlormaR&amp;J 1rucldng now Hiring at
WA.Wtl)
car garage large lot asking Mn cs.n 740-985-3315(d8)'our New Haven WV
$68 000 740-949-194 9
To Do
tlme)
or
740·992Termtnal 'For Aeg•onat
I
3 bedroom home tor sale on 2071 (evenmg)
PriCe
Hauls·Dump D•v 1 year
DOrtl.t want ./our Loved
OTR
land .::ontract 5 miles from ~S1c:6cc0cc
.Dccooccoc:o_-:--_ __
OnM In 1 Nursing home
verifiAble 9Xp
Holzer or slore (7 40)388 Aanell Style Home Yost r
t have openmgs for 2
Call 1-800-462-9385 ask 1or
822B
Road wl1h 2 Acres 3 bedfemale&amp; 2 males or a cou
Kent
pie In my home 24 hr care 4 rental hbuses "For Sale' rooms, 2 bath s garage,
expe r~ence ra1es
Gooe! 1ncome proctucmg encloseO breezeway Pool
cRheaal?!ngfolnr "a carewr..
arrdJ1n~:ptndy 25 yrs
startlnQ a1 $1 ,500
properties Great iocallon l and Spa mcluded
rv
•
,......
Call 740·9 92·
1
3041675·6
183
Puce(&amp;) are ~ Negotiable S83 500
for a CHHA ctass beglnnmg
4001
Motivated
Seller '
In
Nov 6 Applications must be
Call
Wayne
submitted by No&lt;~ 3 We can La af removal Please call Gallipolis
au•st with job placement f7.01245-931 D or (740)339- (404 )456-3802
II;ICI 1110 have • poeltlon• 3612
7-room House white frame
4 Bedroom. 2 Bath
opens for PCA, CHHA and
below
Point
Ray &amp; Son's Complete Car located
STNA • (740)992,0990 1·
C1eantng 26,5 1/2 Jackson Pleasant In Gallipolis Ferry
888-993-()990
A:ve P1 PI8RS8n1 , WV (304) on Johnson LA'l8 towa rd tl'la
615-7375
we wash by hill LarQe 101 1ar~e garage
TractDr Traile r drl\18111 wlltl 2
yrs COl and some flatbed haM special complete was 1aM8d yard now paln1 cer
mymldwearhome.com
elq)enence Onver average&amp; jOD S. 00 off Elf!erior wash pet eleculc heat turna(.;S
water
ploes
PriCE'O
reduced
(7 40)828-2750
$600 00 to $900 00 '''" jobs $2 so oH
SS 000 wll lng -t o· negotlale
home af1er t8~~:ea
Home
Three
Bedroom
Two
every week end DeUverlog Will sh with elderly person or (7401446-062f
Bathroom o\18rSized two car
persons,
will
do
hghl
houseto OH KY VA ,WV IN 33().
keepmg e;,d tl~~: mt~als '" AbOU1 ~000 oo.... n 812 S gatage storage bulldi!'\Q 1/2
527-2789
dOwntown G!lllllpolls or RIO 3td Ave , t.Mdleport Totally ecre level lot Well mam~eovced
Granae
area
PMne remodeled 3 bedrooms 1 talnea home
Turlloy Procewlng
bath
Perlert cred•l no1 S89.9DO
(740)24S 5633
740-949-801 D,
Map neect.d, men or
reqwred Payment S525
women Lowto Turloo\&gt;
Appra1sed $70 000
740
Farm, Oft: HUI , Ohto
367·7129
MOIIILf: Hor.m;
(700)682-7&amp;70
FUR Su.E
Home away from home
Great used 38A hom(l onty
Elderly men ano wdmen 1n
my house 30 years expen
S9 995 W1!l help wnh dellv·
ery Call (740\385-7 671
enoo 740-667 6668

R&amp;J TRUCKING

FIND A Jot;t
IN THE CLAS$1FIEDS

1111111 ..

sam
_.,_

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

r

I

�Monday, October 30, 2006

Pllge 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

The Daily

~
FOIIIblo.'f
2000 Fleetwood 14•60, liko 38R ,

new, Cllnlral air, 2 bedroom.
big bath, stove, $15,500.
14x70 Clayton, 3 bedroom,
1 bath, stove.' refrigerator.

SM

Den,

Home,
Chester
Twp .,
FIat w o o d s- N e a r
Rocksprings area Deposit
and references. (740) 992-

new carpet, excellent condi- 4025

~::____ _ _ _ __

tioo. (740\44li-8955.

building, appliances stay,
Anantlon!
af"'ingled root, nice counlry Local company oHertng 'NO
oelling. $57.000. (740)256- DOWN PAYMENT' pro8801 .
grams for you to buy your
2003 1SxBO. Fleelwooel. home 1nstead of renting.
38R, 28A, vinyl siding, shin- ' 100% flna!"(:1ng
gle roof, central air included, • Less then pertarn credit
nice Home Call for pricing. accepted
Day11me
(740)388·0000, • Payment could be the
Evening
(740)388·8017. same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
Cell (7.00)645-61 50 6, 14 &amp;
(740)3!37-0000
16 wide's 10 choOse from.
Clean, nice 2br new paln1 1
New 2006 Clayton sin· carpet. heat pump, garage,
glewides startulQ at $ 199 ·84 tull basement Ref. Oep, No
per month. Trade-ins wei·
comes. Call (7.001385-2434. ~Pe:.:t:.:s(:_:30&lt;:_:.::16::.7:.:5·:.:5_;16:::2_ __

i

Coll10doy before they ore all
gone. Lllurel Commons
ApartmeniS (304)273-3344

Sr.. No

PRICES

AT

Prime building lot in Bidwell
2 lots combined Sewer and
water. tap 1nsta1\e&lt;:l. -Pa~Jeo
road with allay access.
Modulars and Ooublewtdes
allowed. No owner flnancI"'I"No reallors $39,0110 lor
both lots. Must be sold
togelh,er. Call · T M. Wooten
(505)281·4430.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apanmelll$.
and'or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (7(0)441-1111
tor application &amp; Information.

2 bedroom, AJC. porch 8
awning. Very, very nice. no
pels. In Gallipolis. (740)446·
2003, (740)446-1409 01
_i7_4.:.01_4A.:.6.:.·2::.6.:c92::_____
3 Br. tn:uler. 1 112 bath.
Asking 5425 per month plus

I:.: .: : _: ______

deposit. 740·24..1-581 1 ask
l!!~-~----,
lor
J.A.
I'l 10 ., H~
Trailer for rent in Portland. 2
"--"""FORiiiiiioliDiiiiiiitrriiroo_.. Br. No pets. Available Nov.
1. $400.00. 740-843-5546.
$148/mi!l 4 Bedroom HUD!
A
'
4%. down. 30 years @ 8%. ·.
. · PARTh!ENTS
n-- "
For listings 800-391-5:22.8
FOR IU.J'II
ext F254

r

-r

1 and 2 t&gt;edroom apart-

2 Bd, 480 Paxton Ad . $275 ments. furnishec and unfur-

month, $275 deposit, WD/H, nished, security .deposit
6 months lease. you pay UT. reqwred, no pefs, 740-992Hud ok. (740)446·2515, oot 2218
cats
1 Br. Apt. for rent In
2 bedroom house on State Syracuse 740-992-4568.
Route 588. Pets welcome!
Call (740)441·0194
1BA furnished apt Suitable
for 1 adult. Private driveway
2BA home· Vinton Ave. with
carport.
Ret/dep.
S375 mo.+ sec. dep. You pav required.
$375/mo.
utilities. Gas heat (740)448- (740)446-4782.
3644.
2 bedroom Apt available In
3 BOA+ 2 112 baths, 2 car Syracus,$200.00 deposit
garage, all appli~nces- clOse $350.00 · per month rent.
.to HOI!"'er hospital. $750 Rent Includes water. sewer.
month. (740).W1-Q310
trash. No pets. Suffi9ient
Income
3 bedroom house close to .
_ _needed
1. to quality.
740 378 611
library and schools. No pets. ...:.::..=.:.:..:.:.:..::______
(740~446_1162.
Apartment for rent, 1-2
Bdrm ., remodeled, new carSA 554 , s ·dwell
38R •--IIUitft:l·
1
pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
· $575/mo- sec. dep. refer- sewer, trash pd. Middlepon.
ences. all etec. (740)446- $425.00. No pets. Ref
3644.
required. 740-843-5264.

West

•
•

Apartments
Have pie1ure 13•17 of rtta
35th
president
Johri
Fitzgerald kJaclt Kennedy
and brother Aobar1 Francis
"Bobby" Kennedy Legisla.tor
on same picture. nice,
$2,000,
by
sanger,
740!992·5616

p«J

00 Atero 4dr, auto, loaded
979eech Street
$3500
M~ddl
rt
01 Grand Pnx GT 2dr, auto, .
I
epo • OH
toaded$7999
99 Daawoo Nubrle 4dr,
lea1har,sunrool$2395
992-3194
97 F-150 4x4, V6. 5spd
992'-6635

Living room suite, end
tables, lamps, Cllnlng table,
srove, trig. Call (7401446674t.

•

MJScru..~
~

~;:.2500

FARM

rgm;.mg
____

V8, 4•4· auto

. • :ddleporl's only

54195

w/mirror, &amp; chesler drawers 1-,_..
$300, car bed $ 2S (304)675 • •KIEFEA
BUILT •vALLEY
-.
6717
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE- - - - - - - - &amp;lOCK TRAILERS 'LOADJET
MAX
'GOOSENECK,
AERATION MOTORS
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
Garage
Apt
2br. Aepalr.ed. New &amp; Rebui~ In .... UMA
•LUIIINUM
$oc 80/month. In "'
"ason . WV Sl'~ Call Ron Evans 1
L
·"
f ,.st and last months rent In
"-"'"·
· • TRAILERS *BlW GOOSE·
800·5:37-9528.
NECK
HITCHES.
atJvance . (304)773-5040 or
Carmichael
Equipment
(3"')773 9181
-·
·
~
•
NEW AND USEO STEEL (7(0)"6-2412
Gracious liYing. 1 and 2 bed- Steel Beams. Pipe Rehar
room apartments at Village For
Concrete,
Ar
Jl.m's Farm Equipment
Manor
and
Riverside Channel. Flat Bar, Slt:&lt;:l
2150 Eastern Avenue
Apartments· in Middleport. Grating
For·
Drains,
GallipoHs, OH 45631
From $295-$444. Call 740· Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L ·
(740)446-97n
992-5064 Equal Housing Scrap Metals Open Monday, Get your new Holland Hay
_Op:::po:.:_rl.:cun_it.:.ie_s.____ Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; $Equipment earty and save
Fridav.. Bam-4·30pm. Closed 1,000 off on round balers
1
·
1mmacu ate
2 bedroom Thursda\J.
Saturda\J
&amp; and discbine
for October
'
'
apartment in the country. Sunday.(740)446-7300
plus0%Jo(4years.
New carpet ,&amp; cabinets, - - - - - - - - - c_ _ _.,.:.._ _~freshly paintOO &amp; decorated, WANTED: Responsible part
Jim's Farm Equipment
W/Ohookup. Beautifulcoun- to take on small monthly
2G15011 Ea,_st80rnHAva6nu3e
trv setting. Must see to
a ipOIS,
45 1I
payments on High Definition
(740)446 9777'
appreciate.
$399/mo. Big Screen TV. 1·800-398- G
•
E
ds ·
{614)595-7773 or 1-800- 3970 .
et your ar1Y 8 ir
erv1ce
798-4686.
done now before the spring
rush
on
your
Farm
In Gallipolis. clean, upstairs,
PEls
Equipment. Call for appoint2 bedrooms. 2 bath, dish·
FORSALE
mentordropby. F'ickupand
washer, WID hookup, -$500.
deliver available
'
deposit,
references. AKC Miniature Schnauzer
1740}446·9209.
Jim's Farm Equlpm8nt
pups. Satt &amp; pepper &amp; black
2150 Eastern Ave
New 2BA
apartments. &amp; silver.. 1 lemale. 2 males.
Ga11""'1.
'""31
"'" rs, 0"
n ~
Washer/dryer
hoo+!up, 1740)3SII·0435.
(740)446-9m
stove/refrigerator induded.
Also, unfts on SA 160. !lets AKC Registered Yorkshire Several used 3 point Tillers
41oot
Welcome\ (740)441..0194.
Terrier, 5-monlhs old. male.
Black and Gold, 4 ~/2 lbs.
51ool
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· Sf"'Its up to date., house
61oot
lng applications lor wahlng trained. crate trained. $500 Starting price $795.
l~t lor Hud~sized, 1· br, (3Q.4)8S2- 3236
Jim's Farm Equipment
apartment, call S75-6S79 - - - - - - - 2tSO Eastern Avenue
Equal Housing Opponunlty American Bull puppies
Gallipolis. OH 45631
· SPACE
N.K.C 5 males, $600. Taking
(740)446-9777
n-...
dep. Ready on 11 .2. 05 . 1_

self-Storage•

$2095
95 Dakota V6, Sspd, 4x4
01 S-10 E". cab, V6, auto
$4695
97 Camary 4cyl. sunrool.
loaded $3995
9
5 Eclipse 2dr, auto, AJC
'$2388
92 Delta 88 '4dr, V6, loaded
$1450
98 Wlndslor V6, loaded
$1895
92 F-250 VB·. sspd, 4x4
$2999
92 0-2500 cargo van. VB.
auto, AJC. low miles $2500

---:-:-=:-==

Rome Auto Sales
(7'n)441·9544 .
____:._~
_ _ _ _ __
1989 Corvette Convertible.
59,000 actual miles, ex.
cond. $11,800 . (740)4457578.
.

1997 F'lymouth Breeze, 4
door. 4, cylinder. $2.199(304)675-4624 7am-7pm
only
..,..:__ _:__ _:_
1999 Chevy Cavalier, 4
Door, Auto,' $2800 080:
2001 Chrysler Sebring, 4
Door, Auto, $3800 080;
2000 Dodge Quad Cab
Truck, $7500 OSO;
2003 Quad Cab Dodge.
$16,000 080.
(740)256~189
1999 Chrysler Cirrus $2350
080. (740)256-6169.
2002 Chevy Cavalier. looks
and runs great. 117,000
miles, automatiC, $4.500
080. can (7401256-1253

r

~15
TRUCKS
~L--.;;FORiiiitiiiSAiiLiiii.:_.,.,

t.tti·--FORililli"""liilt;,;.'-,.1

216-692-1261 or (740)25660_5_7_· - - - - - - New tractor seats avaitable
Commercial building "For _
at a price of $59.95.
Renf' 1600 square teet, off
Jim's Farm Equipment.
street pe.r.king. Great IOC8· ~ CKC Yor1&lt;1e/Shlh Tzu
2150 Eastern Avenue
tion! 749 Third AV'9nua in
puppies, 6 weeks old. $350
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Gallipolis. Rent "Negotiable" cash.
(7(0)379-2701.
1740)4.46-9777.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802 (740)339-3453.
New Massey
Compact
Tractors Ferguson
0% fixed
lor 36 months, plus ex1ra 5%
discount on units in srock
wtth QOOd se(ecllon

.,

·
90 Ford ~anger runs great
S5000 miles. (740)388·
8228 _

':

4x4

rso

HOME

IMPRoVEME'ITS

Quality John Oelra Hly

mOwer conditioners 04.7-lb
Fixed for 48 months through
Johii
Deere
Credit .
Carmichael
Equipment
(7401446·2412.

'

Reach

YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

"MA'TTf~ INTO ENf~GY"···

/r

740-992-5458

TttiS ISN'T ONf OF
TttOSf ttOICEY FAI&gt;

leave Message

DI~TS,

All Calls Returned

IS li,

~~Mit .f iNSniN?
,

,-

~"" &amp; l 'itd FurhltLirr .

74tt-367·7442
Kim Hi't.-01\ ntr

Htll's Self
Storage
Racine , Ohio

,

~:?.~Mil• li',dO'

•. ' 19 ,,•• "
&amp;'

\;o.

'f'l.~

'Oi

oij

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

P"----..,;.--.
LOCiQ/. /y
MQI".I4
14
Qeanlng

Service

I SHORE COULD USE A

HardwoOd Clblnmy A!ld FurnHUre

740.446.9200
2A59 S1. Rt.

TMATAWAY,

HAN'D GITTIN' THEM
SPOILT VEG'TABLES
OUTIA TH'
ROOT
YOU GOT
CELLAR,
IT, MAW !!

..--.tlmb«l'Ct'ftkcablaet1'y.oom

160 • Gallipolis

45771
740-949·2217

L&gt; "''I .! II

FELLERS !!

--'-"'""'

I I Ill'

ROBERT
BISSELL

I 0 \1 1: 1 II
tt l\~ I Rt t I Il l '\

COISliUCDII

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

• NeW Homes

~ ':Cit'~.Ot~~
. ~·-·~r-~~
~1 \ '
·~
. - .····
'
'
..'

• Garages

THE BORN LOSER
p-kELLO . "=:::;;;~Tl
'

.

• Complete

'

26 Years Experience

Remodeling

740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

p-1-\t.LLO, 11\CTI-\(.~! l T~T""" p-l KNOW -I '"""• JUS\ CA.U£1&gt; .
'&lt;OU Wf.RE.
G&gt;Ot~G TO
TO~IFYOU
GOT 1'1'1 E:AAI LI
EMNL TO

6i.AtNS 7
T~IS l::t
r-\011-'.fR'

David Lewis

141·992-1611

s~e:a-~

]n!)ured

1-'ree Estimates

lO~(,

1&gt;\S.-

Affordable

Dependable
FuRy Insured
&amp; Bonded
Daily; Weekly, pr
Monthll' Plans
Available
1-740-992-61%

lu
.

'

Comolote Tree Core
ToP-~ trtm; Cab!. Remont

~,. ..... t~·"=~·~~
.....,_··-~·,...,
,,........, .... -~ 1 :::,NOtl
.. ...
Rick Jotmson Jr... Owner
:ZOY~

,,..._

01

We Deliver To You!
• Home o,_-ygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

work

W'St Shade Barber Shop
Owned &amp; operated by

Chri!-t Parker
17 yrs. experience.
Fi.rM Bartx:r Shop 011

Texas Road off Rourc 7

( } amllq.....~.,l('l:"i"1r.a~3"'~~­
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

PEANUTS
HERE'S T~E WORLD WAR I
FL'!'IN6 ACE SITTIN6 !N A
SMALL FRENC~ CAFE..
T~E WAR DRAGS ON .. .
~E IS DEPRE55ED..

C~ARLES, YOUR

DOG IS IN OIJR

KITC~EN AGAIN
D~INK!NG

ALL
OUR ROOT SEER ..

GENERAL PEII.S~IN6
5A't'5 fOR 'r'OU TO
GET SACK TO T~E
AERODROME RI6~T
AWAY . ;..._ _

11

446-0007

.®., . Cornerstone ·
l!i':l '; fil · Construction
Residential ~ Commercial•_ General Contracting
Painlmg • Dror-. • W1ndnw~ • Decks
• Siding • Rt':ufing • R(1om AdJiti om, • R..:rnodeling
WV 031992
• Pl umhing • Ele&lt;:tricnl · 740·367..0544
OH 31244
• An:-n u~lit· Ceiling
7.t0·339·3&lt;112

SUNSHINE CLUB

JOlES'

Tree se·rvice
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

'

THeRE''5 A 0001? OCARY
MOVIe ON 1"V 1"0NI&amp;HT

Pia~:~~

!

'INVA~ION OF THe
!50-FOOT ADOL-t:5CENT5"

I

TONIGI&lt;T,

I

Ill

THOUGH,

YOUWOOU1

Be c.oRRe.c.T

Dally

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

.

. . . . I;R_. . _ _

PIV.IIPHIICES.

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• &amp;

Aemodoellng
NewQ.ragn

E'-Otrloal

•

a. Plwmblng

Aootlng &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding 1: Pelntlng

P•tlo •nd Porch Dectl•

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

The Daily Sentinel
. (740) 992

155

M]

6215

Poul(lrnv O~HO
'J· Vr,,,.._,r&gt;riltlx'('l('r" r

I

SEALIT
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing - Siding-

. Pointing
Gutters • Decks- Ek.
Remodeling

For Fast Courteous
Sen·it-e
Fre• Estimases &amp;
Mlorduhle Prices,
Callllonnis Boyd

740-992·11 9

Q4

North

F-ast

4•

Pass
All pass

tricks too soon

I 3115\ ~LI ztD TVI:. S?IO"i
Mo~ or·MY Ltfr

A\011:&gt;1\-\6
Llrt'S

L\11\.£
1-\k'?,_E~

:t ~W/«$ Flt!iU~ :1

WAS ~:;T\1"\ttl "To
?~EWv

M'1 \.ll'E:

A'l0\\:&gt;11'\6, l-lrt'5

~~
IM~T~I

\\A$'5L.e:'? !

18
20

22
23
24

item

57 Has
diamond
permission
Pool length 58 Instant •awn
Clap of
59 June
thunder
honorees ·
MldeaslliUe
Here in Paris
DOWN
Court event
Big gun
1 Steal
21 Lad. in
Antenna type. 2 Egg on
Oaxaca
Gesture
3 Hang-glide 24 Oz. or tsp.
25 Japanese
Feminine
4 Balloon

40 Awfeladed
41 Safari
reader
42 Tanered

s'1de

43 Paired,

vendor's

drama

27 Property
~
.
claim
5 Place to
- 29 In "ogue
s1ore books
30 Bon Voyage 6 Amold or
parties
Selleck
(hyph.}
7 Tale of
34 Kfnd o1 hut
adventure
37 Genre
8 Hold on
38 Motives
light
39 Listlessness 9 Breokfast
41 Soli ripe
strip
cheese ... · 10 -one's
43 Pro vote
wheels
44
13 Rubbed out
46 Moon track . 19 Cry
49 Servlrig of
.ol discovery

Fable.......,

26 Mont
neighMr
27 Dregs
28 Not Dem. or
Rep.
30 Reserved
31 Dorsal32 Winter
ailment
33 Snowmobile
part
35 Tease
36 They get
endorsed
39 Always.
in poems

as oxen
44 Tinned
meat
45 Honoots ~
47 Where
Keokuk Is
48 Nailed at a
slant
51 - -Magnon
man
53 Almoss-greds

Henry' David Thoreau wrote, "VVhat is
called resignation is confirmed desperation .~

That was true of the man who declared
this tour·heart contract. West led the
spade jack: two, ace, tour. East returned
the spade queen: king, ruff. West led the
diamond queen: king. ace. ruff. Declarer
played a trump to dummy's queen . then
led a club to his queen. When that lost to
the king, South resigned, throwing his
cards onto the table and conceding
down one. ~rll .dlscard one spade on my
club ace, out you must get a .second
spade trick."
How Should Souft1 have made hiS contract?
If West had bravely used the Unusual
No-Trump, overcalling two no-trump to
show h1s m1nor two-suiter, East would
hMe b1d five diamonds To defeat that
contract, the delenclers must lind their
club ruff. wh1ch is easier sa1d than done.
And South might have b1d live hearts
anyway, But one can understand Wes''s
reticence, given the unfavorable vulnerability and his partner's silence.·
The club finesse w8.s hopeless. East had
already produced the spade ace-queen
and diamond ac;e, so could not also have
\he club king. South should have organized a loser-on-loser endplay. Aher rutting the diamond ace. declarer plays a
trump to the board. ruffs a diamond.
cas~es the club ace, trumps a club, and
ruffs the last diamond. Now SOuth leads
ttle club queen and discards a spade
lrom the board.
On West's forced minor-suit return . the
last of the dummy's spades disappears
while South ruffs m his hand. Decla rer
loses only one spade. one spade ruff
and one club
·

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by L.uis Campos
Ceretlrity Copheo

Tuesday. Oct. 31,2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
Mofe opportunities than usual will be
coming yOur way, so taKe d1 rect control
over !hose SI~Uations that affect your porSonal in1erests. Wilh you m· cha rge, th1ngs
will evotve as you !tke
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - Spmeone·
to whom you've been drawn ·but never.
really got a chance to gel to know may
cross your path. Both you and thiS lndNidual will have much to admire in oach
other.
SAGITIAA!US (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - Keep
In mind It 'is always tnc bottom tine that
counts, so don't lose s1ght ol an objeclove
that still hasn't been achieved :rhings w1fl
turn around in 'ways the floodgates can
open.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) - There
is a good chance you'll be the rec1p re.nt ot
some happy tidings that w1ll serve to eJe- .
vale your hopes and wishes, Slarl mal11ng
plans t o~ take advantage ot the new!;
Immediately.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - A persistent hunch you've been having lately
may become a reality when ·you 1o11ow
~our 1
nstincls toward acl1revmg a goal It
cOuld be Just the ttcket that'll put you on a
winning 1raek.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - There
Could be justilicat1on for your oplimtsm,
panicularly if i1 pen ains 10 1nvotvements
with friends . You m1ght receive an in'Jilation tO be part Of
aCtiVity 1hat appeals
to you.
'
ARIES (March 21-April 1'9)- Life has a
way•of coming back at us. and today could
be just such a l1me tor you Fortunately.
it's apt ro be someone doing sorne1hmg
nice f01 you to repay some cons1deratton
you showed
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Almougll
you tend to be somewha1 of a loner at
t1mes. you w11J bE! tar tuck1er team•ng LIP
with an assoc1ate who has the same goal
as you .. L~rge mutual benel1ts could be
derived
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- ThiS IS not a
day 10 PU1 an5• limitaTions on your goals
and ObJeCtives. You can accomplish far
· more than usual because. once you get
1nvolved. things will rwtomiltlcally go your
way
C ANC~R (June 21-Juty 22) ~ Eve n it
you,re not much ol a gambler. 1h1S could
be one ol those lucky' day~ where you can
do quite 'gl'ell in developments that contaon
elemen1s ol chancf; eMclud1ng pure reCklessness .
LEO (July 23·4ug 22) - You w1il be at
your besl1n rornl endeavors that reqUire a.
team effort G1ve thiS area senolls
thought.
·
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221 - Anyt•me you
can proftt from someone else's e)(perr ence and wisdom do so lfs eas1er than
learning 1h1ngs the hard· way
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 231 - It you lh1nK
past effons have gone unno11ced or unappreciated., that unpress1on shall change
Someone is likely to do gnmeth1ng ntce lor
you because of what you did lor llim or
her.

_

cr)'omgrom are crealed ~orn QUOI.aflons :!\' taiT·OU~ PfG[.II~ cast aM present
EocllleUer in lhO? Clphe• s~fliJs lor ar&gt;e~the·

Today's c,'ue. i equalS"

" TY .EULUFX · UX
-

KDGJMUD

KMG

VKXGH

VA. LZG

K VEYYH

VGNKD
YO

XTYML ."

"KEE

TYEULUFX

LZG . UDHUAAGMGDFG

CKPYMULI .''

-

PXCGX

MGXLYD
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "We have enough people who lellltl,ke 1( IS- now
we could use a lew who te ll tl like it can be · ·_ Robert Orben

.':~~:~:~' S©RJJ)..~-l6t-~s·

~:~:

ldittd ~y CLAY R.' P O l l A N - = - - - - -

"'our 'Birthday:

an

740-985·3616

unt

Pass

G

BIG NATE

ACE TRU Sfl?VICE

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRJIC11NG
• Prompt &amp;quality

West

14
15
16

He gave up

T 'A

GARFIELD

(740) 446-2342

chorus
54 Formic acid
producer
55 Dried-up
56 Washstond

11 Reed
instrument
12 Fabulous

17

· ' Opening lead: • J

19 7i.tn...-~ 111 Str~~.l \1Hidl~no·rt . OI-l
7411 _794 .11751 .~

,_.....,==

Equipment for less-round
balers, square balers &amp;

I•

Outlet

LL--:riFiiOIIIiiiiiiSAu:liii-_.1
':~"~'
~":'~:"i~"~t"";';:~
r
1996 XLT Exp~rer. $3,000
~
- -

SOul\

Klmmy's furniture

29670 Bashan Road

r

1Daill' m:rtbune

filler 52 Hecklers'

Sau~­

Marie
8 NBC

o!o AQIOO

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

~========~
r=~~=~;~~~~~~===~
NOW OPfN

John Deere Mini E&gt;cavator/
•.Affordable Rates
Tracror Loader Backhoe/
WA::~ING
• References
Skid Steers. Carm·,cheet
A"ar"lable
Unconditional lifetime guar·•
Equipment (740 )445-2412
antee. Local references fur- · • Free Estimates
"Insured"
New John Deere Compacts nlsh&amp;d. EstabliShed ,975.
and 5000 Series Utility trac- Call 24 Mrs. (7.00) 446Call Gary Stanley
tors Co% Fixed for 36 OS70, Rogers Basemen!
740- 742 •2293
mqntha through John Waterproofing.
• leave a message
Deere Credit. Carmicf"'ael
Equipment (740)446·2412

~allipolis

1 Wallet

S

East

·-

l .,'A I fvN
IN MIDDlEPORT

10X10x10x20

John. Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
for
rent
Carmichael
Eq~1pment (740)446·241 2 .

'

J
6

.A

FOR SALE
BUI"Idl"ng With Or
Without 0"'
Business
~"'~'[)
U"VV

"' 2

• QJ965
'+ 5At0872
. K J9653
,f. iO B 7
South
o!oK 143
.AJ10 982

•

lll ~B.ass-tneiir.ibabyiiiibediii.i direios er r10

~

MONTY

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

Taking applications, 3 bed·
room , t bath, 1 car garage,
outbuildmg. Green School
- - - - -District $550imo $550 Garage Apartment for Rent
cteposl1 (7 40)245 -0372
2123 112 L1ncoln Ave. 1br,
pets.
Rei/Dep.
1420 MOBILE HOMES no
•--·Fii'OiiRiiREiiii~loiT;..-' $300/month (30.)675-2749

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile
homes located in Family
Park. Please Gall (740)441 -

+K43

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Ellm View

~

North
11!·30-flfi
olo 8652
.KQ i43

•
•

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
(jmni}1J (e))'tij§:l

, Drive rrom $349 to $448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opponunlty.

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartmanrs
• Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer!dryer hookup
•All electric-averaging
$50·$60/month
:52::6::•::.
· - - - - - - •Owner pays warer, sewer.
N1ce hOme In Spring Valley.
trash
3BA. 1.5 bath. nice neigh(304)882,3017 ·
borhood. Dave (7 40)4410114,8-5.

7f1'l3

Need to sell your home?
late on payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death ? 1
can buy your home. All cash
and quid&lt;. closing 740-4 16·
3130.

_ _,

JACKSON

House•for rent Pomeroo,, .2
BR, CIA. clean, new carpel.
!lobi.. Home Lot for IWit
nice level lot. Rl 833. Smell
near Vinton. Call (7,40)44,·
out bldg. $475 plus utilities
&amp; dep. No pets. 740-843Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
MObile Home Park in
Gallipolis,
OH .
Phone
(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
1409.

r•

iijr;;;~~;;;.;...

ESTATES, 52 Westwood

ACRE,I,GE

buner

50 Recoil

competitor

Pets. 740-992-5858.
fbsF.HOU&gt;
BEAUTIFUL
APriiRT· L _ _ _Gooos
____pl
IIENTS
AT
BUDGET '

For rem. 5 room house in
Gallipolis. ~7 40 ) 4 46-0974

,,,_

Phillip
Alder

everything, stantng at $425.

4 bedroom house, Addtson
Apt. for rent 2 or 3
200~ , 16~~:80 2 acres. 1011:16 Pike Ph (7 40)4-41-2760

loTs&amp;

ACROSS

apartments in the area.
Newt)' renovated , brancl new

Page BS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

28TH. A Hidden Treasure. Largesl

SeRtinel •

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I,,,~;

"''

Frisky · Queen • RobOI-' UrtbC!III· i'PUNY
Dis l,eveledwoman to fnend. "I ha ve lound ihal I af ·
ways dtg up the pas! by trytrtg lo ftnd somci111ng rn a

. TRUNK ..

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
T Dcf.J'r

THtrlK THe

UNICEF Fi:'U•. ."'.:::i.

LISe

dn

a fl,r t N fSaLL
) .1

~· \

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'

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Eagles

Monday,

www .m ydailysentinel.com

Owen

the l;tclies set'\ ed at 100 percent: Katie .Hayman scored

II ;.cn•iee point.s. Ke ls!
from Page Bl
from Page Bl
Ho lter added two a' Jid
bar,') Winebrenner.
Al&lt;o adding pain" from TC!!i,lllal meet b)' Vi nce
returned to their u&lt;ual form
devastating
the
Sout h the 'cl'\·icc line were lillian Weathcrstcin who placed
Webster Jeeps in the next Brannon with 17. Enn .l5th of the 125 runner with
WebL'r ~0. and Bi"ell 11·ith a time of 19:09.
three games.
.
Easte rn , fina ll'y ta;. ting a nllle.
. 1 The ~ irl' race produced
toss with the 25- 18 set- • At th~ n~t Weber wa' ill .,ome ,(ron~. lontl fini~her~
control. blockma 12 ,,1 the a~ v~ ell.
back, too k offense. · and Jeep&lt; ,pil..cs and killing 11.
G;tllia . Academy\ girh
stepped up. dommatmg the Havman led wit ll 15 kill;.. cro~-.. cn unr·rv team is known
rest of the matc hes 2)- 16. wi'nchrenncr added cidit for bei ng ai11(mg the state'&gt;
25 - 19 and 25- 12.
.
a111.1 Bran ill)ll he lped o ut be,t and on Saturday they
Fo r ·the Eagles. Bn tt any wit h fiw.
' had an ''pportunity to back
Bissell post~d 35 assis ts a' · All ,,f the Lady Eagle&lt; that tip.
h&gt;r the first time 1n school
' she led the Eastern offense. pa"c' the ba ll well to their
hi,rmy
th e· Lady Angel'
At the service line, three of setter.

claimed the regional · cross
~oumry title and adva nce to
the qate toumament for the
second year in a· row. Galli a
Academy qualified for the
state la't sca,on wtt h a
fou rth place fin ish at the
r~giona meet.. but behind illl
even beller run for the
Ange ls th i, year. the Blue
anJWhitc arc cro" ·coumry
regiona l champions.
The Ladv An~el' won the
Divi&gt;ion Ill title by a vei!Y
narrPI\ five roinh over
Indian
Va llcv.
Gallw
AL·adem\ . I · ·
··,·n
Adkins. \\-·ho \\\I ll u1L ~1 rls
race with a ume or 2tJ:-IO.
fi imhi.Od wttll 9X points. fnlloll~d 'tw Indian ,Valley with

Southern
from Page 81
Buc k, J.R. Hupp. Scott
Musser, and Eric Zeiner.
Sou thern was led by Sr.
Wes Counts who ramb led 90
yards on 19 carries and two
touchdow ns,
Butch
Marnhout was 16-S I, Jordan
Pierce was 6-53 wi th two
touchdow ns, ami Ryan
Chapman was J-5 for 61
yard s and a touchdown. Wes
Riffle caught two passes for
35 yards. and Nic k Buck
ca ught one . for ·'2ft yard,.
Southern had 20 first dow ns
compared to Eastern's four.
Eastern' s · Cody Ge rl ach
was a bright spot in the
Eastern offe nse. Ge rla ch
ru shed 15 times fo r 74
yards. plus had a treme ndous defensive game. Kyle
Rawson and Derek You n ~
were each 7- 11 rushing and
Chad Whitlatch was ~'l-24 .
Derek Young caug ht a pass
for nine yard~s. wh ile servi ng
as the Eastern quanerbac k
the first half. Mike John so n
quarterbacked the second
half as Young moved into a
backfie ld position o r wide~
out. Gerlac h caught one pass
for a yard.
.
A big story of the game
came in the seco nd ha lf,
when Eastern was penalized
with
much
regularity.
Eastern . collected II ll ags
for 138 vards, while
Southern was whi stled for
nine miscues for the night
with nearly half the yards of
Eastern at 7S.
Eastern came out of the
gate with an off- ba lance.
ri ght winged offen se. tll en
mixed up their initial drive
with a power I alig nme nt.
Southern took possess ion
off the first Eastern pu nt.
then ran four plays that covered 55 yards in a dri ve that
cu lminated with a 16-yard
Weston Counts' touchdo•1n.
Counts added the extras at
the 7:5 7 mark of the first
quar:ter and Southern led 80.
Eastern gambl ed on its
next possession, when wtth
a 4th and one situatio n, the
Eagles lined up in punt formation. The shon snap went
to Cody Gerl ac h, who in
turn was dropped shoi1 of
the li ne. Southern took over
on their own 45 yard line.

Brad Sherman/photo
Southern's Wes Counts weaves betwee~ Eastern defenders during the Tornadoes 40-8 victory ·Friday nigl1t in Tuppers Plains.
Run nin ~ from a fu ll-hnuse.
Southcn1 wa, 'uccessful ai
runn ing eood. old-fa,hioncd
;. ma&gt;h l1louth foo tball. Wi th
a l'ir'l and goal at the six.
Chad Wh itlatch sta~ked up
South ern for a one-vard
loss. One play liner.
Sout he rn fumb led and an
uni den tifi ed Eau le recO\ered al the line' of scrimmage. That play wa' at the
epicenter of Southern·,
crumb ling momentum.,
On the second play of
Southern's third po;.session.
Eas1Crn\ Derek Young read
a Ryan Chapman j\as;..
,naggeJ the in terception and
ran 45 yards to pay dtrt.
Cody Gerlach ran in the
ext ra,s- and the ganle . was
tied 8-8 at the 3:0i mark of
the scw nd pctiod.
Eastern held Southern O'l
the en..,uing po~"'ession , hu1
a rough ing the l..ickei pena lty gave Southem renewed
life. Butch Marnhout ran fnr
a fiN down, but Eastern\ Rman front he ld Southern at
bay nn run' up the middle.
On third and long. Marnhout
got outside for JO yards for
anothe r fiN down, then on
the firs t play from scrimmage. Jordo n Pierce ran lor
the gold. Pierce ramb led 24
yard' around the rig ht end
and eYadcd ., cveral Ea,tern
tacklers to regain the lead
for Southern. 'Marnhout ran
the PAT run ror a 16-S SHS
lead at til~ :.'2 mark of the .
~econd quai1cr.
Some additional excite-

103 poi nt ~. Harrison Central
with 13 1 pomts, Ct rc lev tlle
wi th : 148 points . and
Zanesville with 171 pomh.
· Adkins paced the fie ld by
almost a minute over second
place Al anna Seamon of
Clairsv ill e who ftnt shed
with a time of 21:50. followed by Emily E\ck holt of
Circlevi lle (2 1:54). Megan
Melsheimer of Zanesv tll e
(2 1:56) and Beth Bea ubout
(21:59)
Bu t a' ,trong as Adkins
wa&lt;. vou arc on ly as strong
:·
icir rellow ru nner' .tml the~ were strong to. ·
Lee An n Tow send placed
nint h wi th a time of 22 : 10,
Carol Fahmy wa' 14th wi th

a time of 22:26, Ge nna
Baker finished 46th with a
time of 23:54. Andrea
Wiseman was 56th wi th a
ti me of 24:24, Ali i Saunders
was 65th with a time of
24:50 and Aarika Stan ley
~laced I lOth with a time of
_7:56.
.
Meigs also had ru nners m
the regional mee t.. wtth
Devan Soul sby postmg · a
very strong 32nd place. finish of the 123 runners wtth a
time of 23 :3.1 and Kimberly
Swisher placed 54th with a
•
time of 24:23.
Owen . and the Ga lli a
Academy girls will move on
to the state meet next
Saturday.

Eagles never again penetrated the 15-yard line on the
drive, not later on in the contest.
Earl y in the fourt h quarte r so me ex tra curric ul ar
act ion a fter th e wh istl e
res ulted in three dead ball ·
foul s and a tim e out to cool
off the s teami n ~ combata nts. Two personai fo uls
offset, and a third was
marched oiT aga in st the
Eagles. handing SHS a fi rst
down. Wes Counts picked
up another first dow n, then
two more fl ags waved, and
a n Eas tern player was
e jected. That pu shed the
tiall to the fi ve yard line,
first and goal for Southern .
An encroac hm ent call
aga in st · South ern pushed
· the ball back to the nine
,yard line ·afte r a ga in of
one. Marnhout bro ught it
back to the fi 've yard line.
third and goa l. Chapman
took the snap a nd pitched
right , allowing Pie rce to
sc ramble to the end zone
for his seco nd score.
Pierce also added the ext ra
poi nt s and Sotithern l·ed· 24R at the 5 SR mark .
A
seco nd
onside
So ut~ e m k it:k was recovered hy th e Tornadoes on
the ensuing ki t; k off.
Southern took over on the
37 yard line. South ern
marc-hed 63 va rd s with the
help of anoiher un sportsma nlike pe nalt y fro m
Easte rn .
The Sou thern .

drive ended on a 21-yard
Chapman to Wes Ri ffle
touchdown connection as
time was winding dow n in
the final round. Marnho ut
added the extras at the 3: II
mark and Southern led 308.
Easte rn ran off a couple
plays in trying to catch up,
but flllnbled. Chris Cogar
pi Cked up th e fumbl e
N ick
Buc k
recove ry.
snagged a Chapman pass
fo r 26 ya rds and a first
dow n.
.t he n
Ryan
Donaldso n ran fo r six
yards. Co unts then took a n
A nthony Shambl in handoff
for Southern 's last score at
the l :48 mark. Coun ts
added the ex.tras . as
Southern led 40-8.
Eastem took o ver after
the SHS ki ck, and Southern
was called for an un spm1smanlike penalt y. Time ran
o ut on th e possession and
th e ga me e nded with
Southern on top in the 40-8
route.
Defensive standolltS for
Southern
we re
Darin
Teaford. Jesse McKni g ht,
Wes Riffle, Mike Brown ,
Zach Sigmund. R.J . Le ach •.
Jordan Pie rce, · and Ni c k
Buck, Ea; te rn stando ut s
we re Cody Gerlach. Dere k
Yo un g, Chad Whitla tch,
]&lt;.elly Winebrenner, Dani el
Buckl ey, Ben Buckl ey,
Josh Collins. Kyle Rawson,
A lan Watson .. an d C ra ig
Hensley.

Major
Earl Jones

Army
VietNam
U!\'1.', Yr)ur Family

Ad With .Photo- $14.00

Hedy M. Windsor, ·MD

(Shown actual siLe)

Photo of
Your
Veteran

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• '(JyiK'COlogical.:xam ination:,

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C/O The Daily Sentinel
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:
Pomeroy, OH 45769
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I In Honor of (name and rank)
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: Dates of Active Duty .

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Now accepting appoin.tme:nts &amp; new ~tieats! .
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Dr. Windsor will begin her :practice on Noverobe~: l3;.20Q6 ·

•

Referendum
Explanadon and Argument

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION

REFERENDUM ON
AMENDED SUBSTITUTE
SENATE BILL NO. 7

in Support of Issue 1

AGAINST ISSUE 1

Vote YES Og I que I

Vote NO on Issue 1

(Submitted by Referendum Petition)

Voting "YES". preserves the rights of lnj~red
"'orken so they are compensated quickly and fairly
and promotes common~nse cost-saving reforms for
employen.

Senate Bill 7 is a devious attack on injured workers'
benefits in just another effort to pay for "Coingate" and
other bad io.vestment "kick~back" schemes oil the backs
of injured workers. Don't let them get away with taking
your family's benefits. Vote NO to reject Senate Bill 7.

1

'

Sball certain meas•res from Amended Substitute
Sen.ite 8111 No. 7 to reform Ohio's Worken'
Compeuntlon La"' he approved?
Amended Substitute Senate Bill No.7 makes changes
to Ohio's Workers' Compensation Law, including
the following:
• Changes procedures for dete'miining the amount of
compensation ibat may be received for wage loss
or pennanent total disability.
• ·Allows workers' compensation and benefits to
be. awarded to · a victim of sexual assault at the
worlcplace.
• Prohibits certainprisoners from receiving workers'
compensation and benefits while confined to a
county jail and designates the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation Special Investigation Department a
criminal justice agency.
• Exempts the addresses and phone numbers of
workers receiving workers'· compensation and
benefits from Ohio's Public Records Law and ftom
public access, except to journalists.
• Allows 'employment in a sheltered workshop for
injured workers with traumatic bmin injuries even
if a worker is receiving workers' compensation and
benefits.
• Requires that workers demonstrate. "substantial
aggravation" of a pre~xisting condition by certain
objective criteria before workers' compensation
and benefits may be awarded, specifies eligibility
qualifications for permanent total disability
compensation, and reduces the time frame for
which claims may be brought.
· • Improves the ability to settle workers' compensation
claims under certain conditions, voids certain
settlement agreements upon death, increases
amounts available on specified attorneys • ·fees ·
and changes rules of procedure related to certain
appeals.
.
• Prevents the Workers' Compensation Oversight
cOmmission from setting a different policy than
requirements outlined in Ohio law [!:garding who
may serve as investment managers.
• Allows self-insuring employers to pay
coinpensation and benefits directly under certain
conditions.
IF APPROVED, THESE AMENDMENTS
AND ENACTMENTS WILL BE EFFECTIVE
IMMEDIATELY.
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
SECTIONS OF LAW BE
APPROVED?
~YES

(To approve the sectiqos of law)
&lt;&gt;NO (To reject the·sections oflaw)

r-----------------,

1969-1971

"·

Full Tnt, BaUot Language, Esplanation and Arguments for the Referendum of Proposed Amendments to and En,actments of Statutory Law
to be Submitted at the General Election, November 7, 1006.

Honor Our
Heroes

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

11&lt;,1"
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. ..Ripley Office:

· ·-Point Pleasant Office:
'304-675-4839

30, 2006

held and the Eagles took
over after a de flected S HS
punt.
Fresh man
Mike
Johnson took over at quarte rback for the Eagles. while
annrher ~Lnrc before the Derek Youn~ moved to tailhalf. pa"in~ un,uccessfu llv hack. The" Eas.tern drive
on th~ first attempt from the stalled after three plays. and
Eas tern 3~ yard Iinc. the · Eag les punted. Defense
Marnhout ra n for seve n high tis hted the th ird period
yards on the. next pl&lt;~y. then as oftense lor both clubs
the Tnrnadne' called time was at a premiu m..
ou t. Chapman pitc hed out to · Ea,tern marched to the
.Jordan Pierce, who threw a Southern 11-yard li ne only
halfback pass to Wcs Riffle to have a fabe start push the
down the , ide linc to the 17. Eagb nut of a third and one
With .H&gt; lel't Southern got si tuation. .
Southe rn 's
off a pa" and drew a pass defense tightened and the
intett'erence call to the eight
yard line. Southern the n had
a chance at an untimed play
from the eight as Eas terh
·
called time out.
With tlm·c receil'c rs nut to .
the ricin and OiiC tO the left.
Sotlt 11cm appeareJ to go for
the P'"'· but handed nil tn
Count s up the midd le.
Cnu!1l' pottndcJ out sel'en
On November I I, our nation will pau.~e to pay tribute to the thousands
1ard' hu t wa, dropped by
se1 cwl Eagles 'hon of the
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
2-oal line.
crises and peace.·
- At the half. Snuthem 's
Thi.1 Veteran ~~ Day, the Daily Se11tinel will publish a very special tribute
Counts wa' 11-56 rushing.'
Pi~rce 5-46. McKn ight 5. honoring area veteraus. You ca11 join in our salute by i11cludin~ the
28. \-1 ci rn houl 5-28 and
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
Chapman ~-5. The team
haLl 13 first du11 ns at the
.1erving in any bra.nch of the U.S. Armed Forces.
half. cumparcd tn Ea,tern's
Your choice of Two Styles ...
twn . Fo r Ea;.tern. Cody
Gerlach was 9-51· ru,hing,
Ad Onl y $7.00
while YoutH! had the 451 Please Fill Out And Return With 1
(s hown actua l size)
v,lnl inte rception retu rn .
Your Payment to:
:
:
· Ea,tern J,. idcd off to
Sout hern to l1C£i n the ·sec- '
In Honor Of
1
VETERAN SALUTE
I
oml ha lf. E&lt;i&lt;le.rn\ defense
mcnt "ro'e when a squib
like hick res ulted in a
Southern 1msscssion as time
waned before llalftime.
Sout hern attempted to get in

1'1. /111/I((JJ( I Ti~~

i

Octo~r

304~372~575'6

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In Honor Of

• .Pelvic 1ntlammatory di &lt;&gt;cases &amp;. pcly i,· p.tin

Corporal
Bob Johnson

• •Cysts and tumors or o1·aries .. utcru~ and fema k ''r!!&lt;lll'
'
.
• 'liysterept0my, L3paro &gt;.:op) &amp;. nth~r female surgcric,

1991-1992
\larint'~ lll·~('rt

; .Pap smear &amp; breast C\ am'
• ~omplete blood anal)' ,i,. tnkcti ons, evaluations &amp; therapy

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
..
·Tu fa..r:,~

,I p,.,p,,til(alt

Storm

l.nH, Your li'amilv
/
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FULL TEXT OF THE
SECTIONS OF LAW
TO BE REFERRED

Sectio•• of law fro• Am.
S•b. s. B. No. 7 to be referred to tho electors for
tlteir approval or rejecdoa:

(Language added by the Acl
is underlined. Language de:
leted by the Act is indicated
by a strikethrough.)

The industrial commission shall be
Soc. 4JZI.JD.

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Pomeroy, OH 45769.
(740) 992-2 155 .

Sec. 4111.11. (A) There is

SECTION I :

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The commissioo shall keep
a separate record of its proceedings relative to claims
roming before it for compensation for injured and
. the dependents of killed employees, which record shall
contain its findings and the
award in each such claim for
compensation considered by ·
it, and in all such claims the
reasons for the allowance or
• rejection thereof shall be
stated in said record.

sesslo~

and

open for the transaction of
business during all business
hours of every day excepting
SUr!days and legal holidays.
The sessions of .the commission shall be open to the
public and.shall stand and be
adjowned without further
notice thereof on its record.
All of the proceedings of the
commission shall be shown
on its record, which shall
be a public record except as
proyidcd in section 4123,88
of lhe Revised Code, and all
voting shall be had by calling
the name of each member of
the industrial commission
by the executive director,

and each member 's vote
shall be recorded on the record of proceedings as cast

hereby created the ·workers' compensation oversight
commission consisting of

eleven members, of which
members the governor sh~l
appoint five with the advice
and Consent ofthc senate. Of
the five members the governor appoints, two shall be individuals who, on account of
~ir

previous vocation, ema

ployment, or affiliatiOns, can
be classed as representative
of employees, at least one of
whom is representative of
employees who are members
of an employee organization;
two shall be individua Is who,
on account of their previou.s
vocation, employment, or
affiliations, can be classed as
representative of employers,··
one of whom represents selfinsuring employers and one
of whom has experience as
an employer in compliance
with section 41 23.l5 of the

S.B. 7 was passed by a majority of Ohio's legislators
who worked with employee rights advocates and Ohio's
employers to ensure Ohio workers are protected if they
are injured during work, while also preserving Ohio
jobs with cost-saving changes for employers. Special
interest groups who were unsuccessful in blocking the
bill during the legislative process have led an effort to
prevent enactment of this meaningful reform measure of
the Workers' Compensation system. Your "YES" vote
will ensure these needed reforms become taw.
S.B. 7 increases protections against fraud · in Ohio,'s
Workers' Compensation system and does the following:
)&gt; Speeds up compensation for Ohio's injured
workers
l&gt;- Better protects women in the worlcplace
l&gt; Provides oppor):unities for job creation and job
..J
retention in Ohio
Voting "YES" will:
./
./
./

./

./
./

In 1997, lawmakers tried to pass a similar bill to benefit
greedy corpomtions saying it was necessary to save

businesses $200 million per year. Less than 2 weeks
after voters like yourself stood up and said NO to those .
.take-aways, the truth was exposed when the BWC gave
empll,yers over $2 Billion of injured workers' monies.
Since then, the BWC has given employers refunds or
credits of over $12 BILLION of money eannarked
for injured wl:&gt;rkers, their widows and orphans! Big
business ·and greedy corporations lied to us then, and they
are uylng to lie to us again now. We voted against their
greed in 1997 - we need to do it again this November. ·
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!
Only the injured worker take-away provisions of this
bill are being challenged. Be truthful with Ohio's
families and tell them the benefits that Senate Bill 7 will
eliminate:

Improve a system where injured workers receive
needed care and return to work quickly;
Fix current flaws in the system that result in costly
.
waste, fraud and abuse;
Stop those who prey on injured workers by
protecting workers ' privacy by removing their
home addresses and telephone numbers from
public record;
For the. first time, allow workers' compensation
benefits if woman is sexually assaulted while
at work;
Prohibit prisoners from continuing to collect
Workers' Compelisation benefits while in jail;
Ensure more than $100 million in savings to the
system that protects injured workers and helps
employers reinvest in their businesses so they
may preserve and create Ohio jobs.

- Cuts the time a claim remains open for the
payment of compensation and medical benefits
from I0 to 5 years .
Reduces non-working wage loss compensation
from 200 to 52 weeks.
Reverses 5 separate Supreme Court Cases
which t:)l!ed in favor of granting workers' ngbts
and benefits.

a

·- ·Discriminates against oldeT workers or anyone
who has had a previous injury by eliminating
their ability to file ·a claim for a pre-existing
condi!ion unless the new injury substantially
aggravates it.
Protect younelf. Protect your family.
Protect Ohio.

Support Injured worken. Preserve and Create jobs.
Vote "YES" on Issue I .

Vote NO on In• 1
Submitted by: State Representative Stephen Buehrer
and State Senator Gary Cates.

Revised Code other than ·•
self-insuring employer, and
one of those two representatives also shall represent
employers whose employees are not members of an
employee organization; and
one shall represent the public and also be an individual
who, on account of the indi-

vidual's previous vocation,
employment, or affiliations,
cannot be classed as either
predominantly representative of employees or of employers. The governor shall
select the chairperson of
the commission who shall
setve as chairperson at the
plea~ure of the governor. No
more than three members
appointed by the governor
shall belong to or be affiliated with the same political
party.

Each of these five members shall have at least three
yeaiS' experience in the field
of insurance. finance, workers' · compensation, law, ac-

countiltg, actliarial, JM'I'Onnel. investments, or data
processing, or in the management of an organization
whose size is commensurate

with that of the bureau of
workers' compensation. At
least one of these five members shall be an anomey licensed under Chapter 4705.
of the Revised Code to practice law in this state.

Of the initial appoint·
ments made t9 the commission, ihe governor shall
appoint one member who
represents employees to a
Ulm1 ending one year aftj:l' September I , 1995, one
member who represents
employers to a term ending
two years afttr September I,.,
t995, the member who represents the public to a tenn
ending three years after September I , I 995, one member
who represents employees
to a tenn ending four yean
(B)

after September I, 1995, and
one member who represents
employers io a term ending
five years after September
I, 1995. Thereafter, tenns
of office shall be for three
years, with each tenn ending
on the same day of the same
month as did the tenn that it
succeeds. Each member shall
hold office from the date of
the member's appointment.
until the end of the tenn for 1
which the meinber Was appointed.
The governor sh~l not appoint any JM'I'OD to more
than two full tenns of office
. on the commission. This re-

striction does not prevent
the governor from appointing a JM'I'On to fill a vacancy
caused by the death, resigna·
lion, or removal of a com·
mission member and also
appointing that JM'I'On twice
to full tenus on the commission. or from appointing a

person previously appointed
to fill less than a full tenn
twice to full tenns on the

Submitted by: Commi~ee to Proteci Injured Workers,
Widows and Orphans, Lloyd C. Mahaffey, James W.
Harris and Sarah Ogdahl

suant to division (C) of seclion 4121.123 of the Revised
Code, the nominating committee shall submit to the
governor, for the initial appoinbnents, a list oontaining
four separate names for each

of the members on the commission. Within

fourteen

days after the submission of
the list, the governor shall
appoint individuals from the
list.
For the appointment of the
member who is represents- .
live of employees who are
members of an employee,
organization, both for ·initial
appointments and for the filling of vacancies, the list of
four names submitted by the
nominating ~mittee shall
be comprised of four individuals who are members of
the hugest statewide labor
federation.
Thereafter, within sixty days
after a vacancy occurring as
a result of the expiration of
a tenn and within thirty days
after other vacancies occura
die commission, the

ring on
1

nominating committee shalt'
submit a list containing' four
names for each vacancy.

exPiration date of the mem-

Within fourteen days after

ber's tenn until a successor
talces office or until a period
of sixty days has elapsed,
whichever occurs first .

the submission of the Jist,

(C) In .,;aking appoin~ts
to the commission, the gova

ernor shall select the mem·
hers from the list of. names
submitted by the workers '
compensation • oversight
comm•ss1on

nom1nating
committee plli'Sd811t to thi ~
division. Within fourteen

days after the governor calls
the initial meeting of the
nominating committee pur·

would result in more than

three members of the commission belonging to or be·
ing affiliated with the same
political party. The committee shall include on the list .
for the filling of vacancies
only the names 6f anomcys
admitted to · practice law
in this state ,if, to fulfill the
requirement of division (A)
of section 4121.12 of the
Revised Code, the vacancy
must be filled by an attorney.

In order for the name of ""
individual to be submitted
to the go~ernor under this
division, the nominating

committee shall approve the
individual by an affinnative vote of a majority of it•
members.

the executive committee of

commission. Any member

appointed to fill a vacancy
occurring prior to the expiration date of the tenn for
which the member's predecessot was appointed shall
hold office as a member for
the remainder of that tenn .
. A member ~hall continue
in office subsequent to the

individual by the governor ·

the governor shall appoint
individuals from the list.
With respect to the filling of

(D)

The commission shall

aiso consist of two members,
known as the investment expert members. One invest·
ment «pert mom bet' shall be

appointed by the treasurer of
state and one investment ex-

pert member shall be jointly
appointed by the speaker of
the house of representatives
and the president of the senate . Each investment expert

member shall have the following qualifications:
(I ) Be

a resident of this

State:-~

vacancies, the nominating

"'c

comminee shall provide
governor with a list of four

individuals who are, in the

judgment of the nominating
committee, the most full y
qualified to accede to mem-

(2) Within the three years
immediately preceding the
appointment, ·not have been
employed by the bureau of
workers' compensation or bY
any 'person, partnership, or

bership on th'e commission.
The nom~nating committee

corporation that has provid-

shall not include the name ·
of an ittdi,•iduat upon the Iist
for the filling of vacancies
if the appOintment of that

a financial or investment nature, including the management, analysis,. supervision.

ed

to

the bureau services of

or investment of ~sets;

�Full Ten, BaDot Language, Explanation. and Arguments for the Referendum of Proposed Ameodments to and Enactments of Statutory lAw
to be Submitted at the Genenl Election, November 7, 2006;

FuU Telt, Ballot Laaguage, Explanation and Arpments for the Referendum of Propoted Amendments to and Enactments or Stahltory lAw
.to be Submitted at the General Election, November 7, 2006.

Referendum
(3) Have direct experience
in the management, analysis,
supervision, or invesnnent
of assets.

The chairperson of the commission shall set the meeting
· dates of the cornm~ssion as
neces"!!'Y to perform the duties of the commission under
this chapter and Chapters
4123., 4127., and 4131. of
the Revised Code. The commission shall meet at least
nin~ times during the period
commencing on the first day
of September and ending on
the thirty-first day of August
of the following year. The
administrator of workers'
compensation shall provide
professional and clerical ~­

Terms of office of the investment experJ members shall
be for three years, with each
term ending on the same day
of the same month as did the
term that it succeeds. Each
member shall hold office for
the date of the member's ap. pointment ·until the end of
the term for which the member. was appointed. The president, speaker, and treasurer.
sistance to the commission,
shall not appoint any person
·: as the commission coOsiders
to more· than two full renns
of office on the commission.
appropriate. '
This restriction does not pre(G) The commission shall:
vent the president, speaker,
and treasurer from appoint- ·
(I) Review progress of the
ing a person to fill a vacancy
bureau in meeting its cost
caused by the death, resignaand quality objectives and in
tion, or removal of a com~
mission member and also
complying \Vith this chapter
and Chapters 4123 ., 4127 .,
appointing that person twice
and 4131. of the Revised
to full terms on the commission, or from appointing a
Code;
person previously appointed
(2) Issue an annual repon
to fill less than a full renn
twice to full terms ,on the
on the cost and quality obconunission. Any in,·estment
jectives of the bureau to
the president of the senate,
expert member appointed to
the speaker of the house of
fill a vacancy occwring prior
representatives, and the govto the expir.ation of the term
for which the member's preernor;
decessor was appointed shall
( 3) Review all independent
hold office until the end of
financial audit~ of the buthat term. The member shall
reau. The administrator shall
continue in office subse~
provide access tQ records of
quent to the expir.ation date
the bureau to facilitate the
of the member's term unreview required under this
til the member's successor
takes office or unti I a period
division.
of., sixty days has elapsed,
(4) Study issues as requested
whichever occurs first.
by the administrator or the
The investment expert memgovernor;
bers of the oversight com(5) Contract with an indemission shall vote only on
pendent actuarial firm to asinvestment matters.
Sist the co"mmission in mak(E) The remaining four
ing recommendations to the
administrator regarding premembers of the commission
mium rates;
shall be the chairperson and
ranking minority member of
the standing committees of
(6) Establish objectives,
the llouse•of·rqn'esentatives
policies, and·'CI'tu.ria'fot the
and of the senate to which
adniinisldtion of the investlegislation concerning this
,' ment ~ that include
·asset aliocation targets and
chapter and Chapters 4123 ..
4127., and 4131. of theReranges, risk factors, asvised Code normally are
set class benchmarks, time
horizons, total return obreferred, or a designee of
the chairperson or ranking
jectives, and perfor.mance
minority member. provided
evaluation guidelines, and
that the designee is a memmonitor the administrator's
ber of the standing commitprogress in implementing
the objectives, policies. and
tee. Legislative members
shall serve during the sescriteria on a quarterly basis.
The commission shan not
sion of the gener.al assembly
to which they are elected and
specitY in the obiectives.
for 3li long as they are memoolicjes and criteria that the
admjnjsqator or emplo,yees
bers of the genernl assembly.
of the bureau are orohibited
Legislative members shall
serve in an advisory capac~
·from conductio&amp; busiriess ~
ity to the commission and
with an inveStment rrtanaae= t
shall have no voting rights
meat firm. any investment
on matters coming before
IDJllll¥ement professional
the commiSsion. Memberassociated with that firm.
. ship on the commission by
any third partv solicitor aslegislative members shall
sociated with that finn or
any political action commitnot be deemed as holding a
public office.
tee con!rolled by that firm or
con!rolled by an investment
(F) All members of the commanagemen1 professional of
that finn based on criteria
mission shall receive their
that are more resqjctjyc than
reasonable and necessary
expenses pursua~t to section
the rcstrjctions described in
djyjsjons 00 and CZl of sec126.31 of the Revised Code
while · engaged in the pertion 3517.p of the Revised
formance ·of their duries as
C2!k. The commission shall
members. Members appointreview and publish the objectives, policies, and crite- ·
ed by the governor and the
ria no less than annually and
investtnent expert members
also shall receive an annual
shall make copies available
salary not to exceed eighteen
to interested parties. The
thousand dollars payable on
commission shall prohibi~
the following basis:
on a prospective basis, any
specific investment it finds
(I) Except as provided in dito be contrary to its investment objectives, policies,
vision (F)(2) of this section,
and criteria. . .
a member shall receive two
.thousand dollars ·during a
month in which the member
The objectives, policies. and
attends one or more meetcriteria adopted by the comings of the commission and
miSsion for the oper.ation of
shall receive no payment
the investment progr.am shall
during a month in which the
prohibit investing assets of
member attends no meeting
funds, directly or indirectly,
of the commission.
in vehicles that target any of
the following :
(2) A member may receive
(a) Coins;
no more than the annual
e~ghteen thousand dollar salary regardless of the num(b) Artwork;
ber of meetings held by the
commission during a year or
(c) Horses;
the number of meetings in
.(d) Jewelry or gems;
excess of nine within a year
that the member attends.

(e) Stamps;
. (f) Antiques;
(g) Artifacts;
(h) Collectibles;
(i) M~orabilia;
(j) Similar unregulated investments that are not commonly pan of an institutional
portfolio, that lack liquidity,
and that lack readily determinable valuation.

(7) Specify in the objectives,
policies, and criteria for the.
investment program that the
adminisln!tor is permitted to
invest in an investment class
only if the commission, by
a majority vote, opens that
class. After the commission
opens a .class but prior to the
administrator investing in
that class, the commission
shall adopt rules establishing due diligence standaids
for employees: of the bureau
to follow when investing in
that class and shall establish
policies aad procedures to
review and monitor the performance and value of each
investtnent class. The commission shall submit a repon
annually on the performance
and value of each investment class to the governor,
the president and minority
leader of the senate, and the
speaker and minority leader
of the house of representatives. The commission may
vote to close any investment
class.
. (8) Advise and consent on
all of the following:
(a) Administrative rules the
administrator submits to it
pursuant to division (B)(5)
of section 4121 .121 of the
Revised Code for the classification of occupations· or
industries, for premium mtes
' and contributions,• for the
antount to be credited to the
.. surplus fund, fa&lt; - rul~ and
systems of r.ating, r.ate revisions, and merit rating;
(b) The overall policy of the

bureau of workers' compensation as set by the administrator;
(c) The duties and authority confenred upon the administrator pursuant to section 4121.37 of the Revised
Code;
(d) Rules the administrator
adopts for the health partnership program and the qualified health plan system, as
provided in sections4121.44,
4121.441, and 4121.442 of
the Revised Code;
(e) Rules the administrator submits to it pursuant to
Chaptei4167. of the Revised
Code regarding the public
employment risk reduction
progr.am and the protection
of public health care workers from exposure incidents.
As used in this division,
"puplic health care worker"
and "exposure incident"
have the same meanings .as
in section 4167.25 of theRevised Code.

(9) Perform all duties required
under
section
4121.125 of the Revised
Code.
(Hj' The office of a member
of the commis$ion who is
convicted of or pleads guilty
to a felony, a theft offense as
defined in section 2913.Gl
of the Revised Code, or a
violation of section I 02.02,
102.03, 102.04, 2921.02,
2921.11, 2921.13, 2921.31,
2921.41 , 2921.42, 2921.43,
JJr 2921.44 of the Revised
Code shall be deemed vacant. The vacancy shllll be
fi lied in the same manner
as the original appointment.
A person who bas pleaded
guilty to or been convicted
of an offense of that nature is

ineligible to be a member of
the commission. A member
who receives a bill of indictment for any of the offenses
specified in this section shall
be automatically suspended
from the commission pending resolution of the .criminal matter.
(I) As used in this section,

uernployce

organization"

means any labor or bona
fide organization in which
employees participate and
which exists for the purpose, in whole or in part,
of dealing with employers
concerning grievances, labor disputes, wages, hours,
terms and other conditions
o( employment.
Sec. 412!.UI. The bureau
of workers· compensation
sgecial jnyestiption department is a criminal iuslice agency in investigating
reported violations of law
relating to workers' compensation and as such may
APPLY for access to the computerized databases administered by the national crim¢
jnfonnation center or the law
enforcement automated data
sys~ jn Ohjo and to otber

COl!Jillllerized databases administered for the curpose
of makin&amp; crimjnal justice
lnfonnation accessible to
state and crimjnal justice
qencjes .
Sec. 4123.01. As u..OO in
this chapter:
(A)(l) "Employee" means:
(a) Every person in the service of the state, or of any
county, municipal cotporation; township, or school
district therein, including
regular members of lawfully
constituted police and fire
departments of .municipal
corporations and townships;
whether paid or volunteer,
tlnd wherever serving within
the state or on temporary
..signment outsidll ..thereof, .
and executive officers of
boards of education, under
any appointment or contract
of hire, express or implied,
-oral or written, including

any elected official ot the
state, or of any county, municipal corporatiort, or township, or members of boards
of education.
As used in division (A)(l)(a)

the same business Or in or
about the same establishment
under any conttact of hire,
express or implied, or.al or
written, including aliens and
minors, househOld workers
who earn one hundred sixty
dollars or more in cash in
any calendar quarter from a
single household and casual
workers who earn one hun~
dred sixty dollars or more in
cash in any calendar quarter
from a single employer, or
(ii) is bound by any such
contract of hire or by any
other written contract, to pay
into the state insurance fund ·
the pmniums provided by .
· this chapter.
(c) Every person who performs ialxir or provides services pursuant to a construction contract, as defined in
section 4123 .79 of the Revised Code, if at least ten of
the following criteria apply:
(i) The person
to comply with
from the other
party regarding
or method of

is required
instructions
contracting
the manner
performing

(i) Off-duty peace officers. As
used in division (A)(l)(a)(i)
. 'of this section, "peace offi.
cer" has the same meaning
as in section 2935.01 of the
Revised Code.
(ii) Off-duty firelight=,
whether paid or volunteer,
of a lawfully constituted fire
department.
(iii) Off-duty first responders, emergency medical
technicians-basic, emergency medical technicians-intermediate, or emergency medical ~hnicians-par.amedic,
whether paid or volunteer,
of an ambulance service
organization or emergency
medical service organization
pursuant to Chapter 4765. of
the Revised Code.
(b) Every person in the ser-

vice of 8ny person. firm, or
private corporation, including any public service corporation, that (i) employs one
or mor~ persons regularly in

or contract, preaently covering them, or the pun:base of
which they may be considering, to determine whether
such policy, plan, or contract
excludes benefits for illness
or injury that they might
ha•e elected to have covered
by workers' compensation.

Every person in the service
of any independent contractor or subcontractor who has
failed to pay into the state
insurance fund the amount
of premium determined and
fixed by the administrator of
workers' compensation for
the person's employment or
occupation or if a seW·insuring employer has failed to
pay compensation and benefits directly to the employer's injured and to the dependents of the employer's
killed employees as required
by section 4123..15 of the
Revised·Code, shall be considered as the employee of
the person who has entered
into a contract, whether
written or verbal, with such
independent contractor unless such employees or their
legal representatives or beneficiaries elect, after injury
or death, to regard such in·
dependent contractor as the
employer.

(iii) The person's services
are. integrated into the regular functioning of the other
contracting party;

(v) The person is hired, supervised, or paid by the other
contraCting party;

mean:
(a) A duly ordained, commissioned, or licensed min~
ister or assistant or associate
minister of a church in the
e"ercise of ministry;

(vi) A continuing relationship exists between the person and the other contracting party that contemplates
continuing or recurring work
even if the work is not full
time;
. (vii) The petsaa's houn ..of
work are established by the
other contracting party;
(viii) The person is required
to devote full time to the
business of the other contracting party; ·
(ix) .The person is required
to perform the work on the
premises of the other contracting party;
(x) The person is required
to follow the order of work
set by the other contracting
party;

(xi) The person is required to
make oral or written reports
of progress to the other contracting party; _
(xii) The person is paid for
services on a regular basis
such as hourly; weekly, or
monthly;
(xiii) The person's expenses
are paid for by the other C911·
tracting party; ,
(xiv) The person's tools and
materials are ' furnished by
the other contracting party;
(xv) The person is provided ·
with the facilities used to
perform services;
(xvi) The person does notrealize li profit or suffer a loss
as a result of the services
provided;
(xvii) The person is not perfanning services for a number of employers at the same
time;
(xviii) The person does not
make the same services
available to the generul public;
(xix) The other contracting
party has a right to discharge
the person; . ·
_(xx) The person has the righi
to end the relationship with

f':"'l corppration;
(c) An individual incorporated as a corporation; or
(d) An individual who otherwise is ail emPloyee of an
employer but who signs the
waiver and affidavit specified in section 4123.15 of
the Revised Code on the
condition that the administrator has granted a waiver
and exception to the individ~~ ~s employer under section 4123.15 oftbe Revised
• Code.

1

Any employer may elect to
include as an "employee"
within this chapter, ·any
son excluded from the definition of "employee" pursuant to division (A)(2) of this
~tion. If an employer is a
partoership, sole proprietorship, individual incotporated
l!5 a corporation, or fam11y
farm corporation, such employer may elect to include
as an: ·employee" within this
chapter, any member of such
partnership, the owner of the
sole proprietorship, the individual incorporated as a corporation, or the officers' of
the family farm cotpor.ation.
In the event of an election,
the employer shall serve
upon the bureau of workers' compensation writtennotice naming the persons ·
to be covered, include such
employee 's
remuneration
for premium purposes in all
future payroll. reports, and
no person excluded from
the definition pf"employee"
pursuant to division lA)(2)
of this section, proprietor.
individual incotpor.ated as a
·corporation, or panner shall
be deemed an employee
within this division until the
employer has served such
notice.

Per-

For infonnational purposes
only, the bureau shall prescribe such language as it
considers appropriate, on
such of its fonns as it considers appropriate, to advise
employers of their right ' to
elect to include as an "employee" within this chapter a
sole proprietor, any member
of a partnership, an individual incotporated as a corporation, the officers of a family
farm 90rpor.arion, or a person
.excluded from the definition
of "employee" under division (A)(2) ef
. this section
that they shciuld check any
health and disability insurance policy. or other fonn
of health and disability plan

.

(E) "Family farm corpora-

tion" means a .corporation
founded for the purpose of
farming agricultural land in
which the majority ·of the
voting stock is held by and
the tnajority of the stockholders are persons or the
spouse of persons related to
each other within the fourth
degree of kinship, according to the rules of the civil
law, ·and at least one of the
related persons is residing
on or actively operating the
farm, and none of whose
stockholders are a cotporation. A family farm cotporation does not cease to qualify
under this division where,
by.reason of aay devise, bequest, or the operation of the
laws of descent or distribution, the ownership of !!,hares
of voting •tock is transferred
to another person, as long as
that person is within thc degree of lcinsbip stipulated in
this division.

(2) Every perlion, finn, professional employer organization as defined in section 4125.01 of the Revised
Code, and private corporation, including aay public
service corporation, that (a)
has in service one or more
employees or shared employees regularly in the same
business or in or about the
same establishment under
any contract of hire, express
or implied, oral or writteD,
or (b) is bound by any such
contract of hire or by any
other writteD contract, to pay
into the Insurance fund the
premiwns provided by this
chapter.

(b) Any officer of a fal]lily

(iv) The person is required
to perform the Work personally;

humous child and a child
legally adopted prior to the
injury.

(I) The state, including state
hospitals, each county, m)lnicipal corporation, toWnship, school district, aad
hospital owned by a political
subdivision or subdivisions
· other than the state;

(2) "Employee" does not

(ii) The person is required by
the other contracting party to
have particular training;

(D) ''Child'' includes a post-

(B) "Employer" means:

services~

of this section, the tenn uemployee" includes the following persons when responding
to ,.. inberen~y dangerous
situation that calls for an immediate response on the pan
of the person, regardless of
whether the person is within
the limits of the jurisdiction of the person's regular .
employment or voluntary
service When responding, on
the coodition that the person
respoods to the situation as
the person otherwise would
if the person were on duty in
the person's jurisdiction:

Referendum

the other contracting party
without incurring liability
pursuant to an employment
contract or' agreement .

means a disease contracted
in the coU!liC of employmen~
which by its causes Md the
characteristics of its manifestation or the condition of
the employment results in a
hazard which distinguishes
the employment in character
from employment generally,
and the employment creates
a risk of contracting the disease in greater degree and in
a different manner from the
public in general. ·
(G) "Self-insuring employer" means an employer who
is granted the privilege of
paying compensation and
benefits directly under section 4123.35 of the Reviled
Code, including a board of
county commissioneno for
.the sole purpose of constructing a sports facility as
defined in section 307.696 of
the Revised Code, provided
that the electonl of the county in whieb the sports facility
is to be built have approved
coilstruction of a sports facility by ballot election no later
than November 6, 1997.

(C) "Injury" includes any

injury, whether caused by
external accidental means
or accidental in character
and result, received in the
coone of, and arising out of,
the injured employee's employment. "Injury." does not
include:

physjca)

harm to

engage or

partjcjpate:

(2) InjUry or disability caused
primarily by the natural deterioration of tissue, an ~
part of_ the body;

or

(3) Injury or disability incurred in voluntary puticipation in an employer...pon. oored recreation or fimess
activity if the employee signs
a waiver of the employee's
right to compensation or
benefiis under this chapter
prior to engaging in the recreation or fitness activity;
(41 A condition that J!!HX·
jstCd an jnjurv ynJcss that
pre:existing condition js
substantially aemyatr4 by
the injyty Such a :urhstnotial
•aewation must be d?rnmenk4 by obiectjve ditr~
nostic findin&amp;S, objective
clinical findings. or objective test results. Subiec;tive
compl•ints may be evidence
of such a substantial aggravation Howa:yer :WWcctive
complaints without objective diunostic findjogs
obioctiyc ¢1injcal findjnp.
or objective test results are
insufficient jg substaptiatc a
suhmantial MiiiJivation.

If an action has been commenced in a court of a
county other than a rourt of
a county having jurisdiction
over the action, the court,
upon notice by any party •or
upon its own motion, shall
transfer the action to a court
of a county having jurisdiction.

(F) "Occupational disease"

All such employers are
subject to this chapter. Any
member of a firm or association, who regularly perform.•
mani&amp;al labor in or about a
mine, factory, or other e""'QIishment, including a household establishment, shall be
considered an employee in·
determining whether such
person, finn, or private corporation, or pnblic service
corporation, has iii its service, one or more employe&lt;.; and the employer shall
report the income derived
from such labor to the bureau as part of the payroll
of such employer, ·and such
member shall thereupon be
entitled to aU the benefits of
an employee.

(I) Psychiatric conditions
except where the cWment's
mvchiaqjc conditions have
arisen from an injury or occupationaJ disease sustejped
by that claimant or where the
clnjmgpt •s PIII1'Chjatrjc CODditions have arisen &amp;om scwal ·
ooMucr in which the clejWant WIS forced l!y threat of

whic:h the expoaure which
caused the disease occurred.
Like appeal may he taken
from an order of a staff bearing officer made under division (D) of section 4123.5 11
of the Revised Code from
whic:h the commission has
refusecJ to hear an _appeal.
The appellant shall file the
notice of appeal with a court
of common pleas within sixty daya after the date of the
receipt of the order appealed
from or the date of receipt of
the order of the commission
refusins to hear an appeal of
a staff bearing officer's decision wtder division (D) of
section 4123.511 of the Revised Code. The filing of the
notice of the appeal with the
court is the only act required
to perfect the appeal.

'

(H 1 "Public employer"
means aa employer as defined in division (B)(I) of
thi~ section.

"Sexual cootfuct" 1JJ(jDS
vaginal jntg'qnlj"se between

(J}

a male

and

tercourse

female; anal inapd cun·

fellah~

nmops betweeg persons
rel[l!llless of &amp;Cw!er; and,

,.

without priyilece to· do so.
the jnsmtjon however slj&amp;Jrt.
of any part of the bodv or
W' instrument aanms
or other object into the va&amp;i·
naJ or anal cavitv of another
Pepelration however sljdJt
is sufficient to complete v!ljina) or anal intercourse.

Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in this section, if
the commission determines
under section 4123.522 of
tlie Revised Code that an
employee, employer, or their
respective representatives
have not received writteD
notice of an order or decision which is appealable to a
court under this section and
which gr.ants . relief pursuant to section 4123.522 of
the Revised Code, the party
granted the relief has sixty
daya from receipt of the order wtder section 4123.522
of the Revised Code to file
a notice of appeal under this
section.
(B) The notice of appeal
shall slate the tlliunes of the
claimant and the employer,
the number of the claim, the
date of the order appealed
from, and the fact .that the
. appellant appeals therefrom.
The administrator of

work·

'l"DP"'M'ion,

the

m •

The claimant shall, within
thirty days after the filing
of the notice of appeal, file
a petition containing a statement of facts in ordinary and
concise language showing a
cause of action to participate
or to continue to participate
in the fund and setting forth
the basis for the jurisdiction
of the coun over the action.
Further pleadings shall he
had in accordance with the
Rules of Civil Procedure,
provided that service of summons on such petition shall
not he required and provided
Ihat the claimant I1JdiY pot
dismjss Jbc complajnt withouttbeemployer'sCODSeQtif .
lhe employer js the pany that
filed lhe oolice of ljlpC!!I Ill

coon puauant to tbjs sstjoo

The clerk of the coun shall,
upon receipt thereof, transmit by certified mail a copy
thereOf to each party named
in the notice of appeal other
than the claimant. Any party
may file with the clerk prior
to the trial of the action a
deposition of any phys.ician
taken in accordance with the
provisions of the Revised
Code, which deposition may
be read in the trial of the actio~ even though the physician is a resident of or subject to service in the county
in which the trial is had. The
bureau of workers' compensation shall pay the cost of
the stenographic deposition
filed in court and of copies
of the stenogr.aphic deposition for each party from the
swplus fund and charge the
costs thereof against .the unsuccessful party if the claimant's right to participate or
continue to participate is
finally sustained or established in the appeal. In the
event the deposition is taken and filed, the physician
whose deposition is taken
is not required to respond to
any subpoena issued in the
ttial .of the &amp;&lt;~lion. The coun,
or the jury under the instructions of tile c\)!1!1, if a jury is
demanded, shall determine
Jbc right of the claimant to
participate or to continue to
participate in the fund upon
the evidence addueed at the
hearing of the action.

(\laimaot, and the employer

shall he parties to the appeal
.and the court, upon the application of the commission;
shall make the commission
a party. The party filing the
appeal shall serve a copy of
the ·notice of appeal on the
·adusuishatoa of workcnt

(E) The coun shall certify
its decision to the commission and the certificate shall
be entered in the records of
the court. Appeals from the
judgment arc governed by
the law applicable to the appeal of civil actions.

eompcaasatiou administrator
at the ·central office of the
bureau of workers' com·
penaation in Columbus. The
administrator shall notify the
employer that if the employer fails to become an active
party to the appeal, then the
administrator may act on behalf of the employer and the
results of the appeal could
have an adverse effect upon
the employer's premium
mtes.

(C) The anorney general or
Sec. 41:13.51:1. (A) The
one or more of the ~ttomey
claimant or the employer
may appeal an order of the . · general's assistants or special counsel designated by .
iodustrial commission made
the attorney general shall ·
unckr divisioli (E) of secrepresent the admitiistrator
tion4123.511 ofthe Revised
and the commission. In the
Code in any injury or occuevent the attorney gener.al or
pational diseise case, other
the attorney general's desthan a decision as to the exignated assistmlts or spetent of disability to the court
cial counsel are absent, the
of common pleas of the
. administrator or the comCOWlty in which ibe injury
was inftictcd or in which the
mission shall select one or
more of the attorneys in the
contract of employment was
employ of the administramade if the injury occurred
lol' or the commission ,as the
outside the sta~. or in which
administrator's atton:tey or
the contract of employment
the commission's auorney
was made if the exposure
in the appeal. Any attorney .
occuned outside the state. If
so employed shall continue •
no common, pleas court has
the representation during the
jurisdiction for the purposes
entire period of the appeal
of an appeal by the use of
and in · all bearings thereof ·
the juriSdictional requirements described in this divi,
e•cept where the continued
sion, the appellant may use
rep&lt;CSCIItation hecl&gt;mes impractical.
the venue provisions in the
Rules of Civil Procedure to
(D) Upon receipt of notice
.vest jurisdiction in a court.
If the claim is for an occuof appeal, the cleric of courts .
shall provide notice to all
patioual di...lsc, the appeal
parties who are appellees
shall he to the court of common pleas of the county in
and to the commission.

(F) The c~st of any legal
proceedings authoriud by
this section, including an
attorney's fee to the claimant's attorney to be fi•ed by
the trial judge, based upon
the effort expended, in the ·
event the claimant's right
to participate or to continue
to participate in the fund is
established upon the final
determination of an appeil,
shall be taxed against the
employer or the commission'
if the commission or the administrator rather than the
employer contested the right ·
of ihe claimant to participate
in the fund. The attorney's
fee shall not exceed twenl)
1m: forty·IWP hundred dollars.

(G) lfthe finding of the coun
or the verdict of the jury rs
in favor of the claimant's
right to participate in the
fund. the commission and
the administrator shall thereafter proceed in the matter
of the claim as if the judg'
ment were the decision of
the conunission, subject to
the power of modification
provided by section 4123.52
of the Revised Code.
(H) An ·appeal from an order issued under division
(E) of section 4123.511 of
the Reyised Code or any action filed in court in a case
in which an uward of compensation has been made
shall not stay the payment
of compensation under the

award or payment of compensation for &amp;ubsequent
periods of total diaability
during the pendency of the
appeal. If, in a-final administrative or judicial action, it
i• determined that payments
of compensation or benefits,
or both, made to or on behalf of a claimant should not
have been made, the amount
thereof shall be charged to ·
the surplus fund under division (B) of section 4123.34
of the Revised Code. In the
event the employer is ·a swe
risk, the amount shall not be
chuged to the employer'•
c•perience. In the event the
employer is a self-insuring
employer, ""e self-insuring
employer shall deduct the
amount from the paid com- .
pensation the self-insuring
employer reports Ill the administrator under division
(L) of section 4123.3S of the
Revised Code. Ml

A self-insurini mQployer

may eJect to oav oomnsation and benefits ui¥R
Ibis Section djrec~y Ill 111
· employee or an employee's
depepden(S by fi!jnK an Illplication with the bureau

workers' · wnnrnetipn
not more tbgn one bnwlmd

of

cidJI)' days 111d nm leullw)
ninety cJavs before the tim
day pf the employer's next
sjx.-month coverage period,
If the self-insuring employer
timely files (be appljcatipn,
the applicatjon is effective on
the first day of lllc employer's next sjx-mopth coyer-

, • nmoo nrovidod ma• the

admini•(IJior sball compute
the employer '• assessment
for the SUQ!lus fund due with
respect to llle period dwina
which that application ·waS
filed wi!hout n:uro to the
filin&amp; of the qljsation On
and aftq the effeCtive detr of
the eJQPioyer 's election. the
self..insuring nop1nm sbpu
nay djmC*hr to m c;mplqyec
or to an employee's dcpm-

dema

C9'DDM'gtjqn

the payment of medical
benefits under this chapter;
in which uuat the nMMiifi .
cation, eh•IIJC, Rndh'IJ er

the absence of payment ·of
· compensation under sectioo
4123 .57, 4123.58, or division (A) or (B) of section
4123.56 of the Revised Code
or wages in lieu of compen~
satioo in a manner !10 as to
satisfy the requirements of
section 4123.84 of the Revised Code, in which event
the. modification, change,
finding, or awanl shall be
riladc within 1m 1m ycars
from the date of the last
payment of compensation
or from the date of death,
nor unless writteD notice of
claim for the specific part or
pans of the body injured or
disabled has been given as
provided in section 4123.84
or 4123.85 of the Revised
Code, Lid thea..,]k commission shall not make any
modification, change, finding, or awurd which shall
award compensation for a
back period in excess of two
ycars prior to the date of
filing application therefor.
This section does not affoct
the right of a claimant to
compensation accruing &amp;ul&gt;sequent to the filing of any
such application, provided
the application is filed within the time limit provided in
this section.
This section does not deprive the commission of
its continuing jurisdiction
to ~e the q-rions
raised by any application for
modification of award which
has been filed with the commission after June I, 1932,
and prior to the expiration
of the applicable period but
in respect to which no award ·:
has been gr.anted or denied
duriq the applicable period.

end

hencli!s Wider this sectiop
repl!less of the date of (be
injury or oooupetiooaJ dia:
ease. ewJ the snployq ahell
recoiyc no mogc;y or qr.ditJ
from lhe !ii!JII!w; fiwJ oo IG·
COWlt of tbqr payments end
shalt not he rwuired to·pay
any amoupts jnto the 1111'plus fund on lff9!JDI pf Ibis
sectjop The electjoo mp
under this djyjsjoo is irreyet=
~

All actions ind proceedings
under this section Which are
the subject of an appeal to
the court of common pleas
or the coun of appeals •hall
he preferred over all other
civil actions except election
causes, irrespective of position on the calendar.
This section applies to all
decisions of the commission or the administrator
on November 2, 1959, ~d
all claims filed thereafter.
are governed by sections
4123.51i and 4123.512 of
the Revised Code.
Any action pending in common pleas court or any
other court on January I ,
1986, under this section is
governed by former sections 4123.514, 4123.515,
4123 .516, and 4123.519 and
section 4123.522 of theRevised Code.
Sec. 4123.51. The jurisdiction of .the industrial commission and the authority of
the administrator of workers' compensation over each
case is continuing. and the
commission may make soch
modification or change with
respect to former finqings or
ord1:11 with respect thereto,
as, in its opinion is justified.
No modification ·or change
nor any finding or award in
respect of any claim shall
be made with respect to disability. compensation, dependency, or benefits, after
ott-~ years from the date
of injury in the absence of

The commission may, by
general rules, provide·for tbe
.destruction of files of c..C.
in which no further action
may be taken.
The commission and administrator of workerS' compensation each may, by genenl
rules, provide for the reterltion and deslruction of all
other records in their posses
sion or under their control
pursuant to section 121.211
and sections 149.34 to
149.36 of the Revised Code.
The bureau of workers' compensation may purchase or
rent required equipment for
the document retention media, as determined necessary
to preserve the records: Photographs, microphotographs,
microfilm, films, or otber
direct document retention
media, when properly identified, have the same effect
as the original record and
may be offered- in like manner and may be received as
evidence in proceedings hefore the industrial commission, staff heanng officers,
and district bearing officers,
and in any court where the
original record could have
been introduced.
\

Sec. 4!ll54. (A) Every
· employee, who is injured
or who contracts an occupational disease, and the depeudents of each employee·
who i~ killed, or dies as the
result of an occupational di•e.S. contracted in the course
of employment, wherever
such injury has occurred or
occupational disease bas
been contracted, provided
the same were not :
(1) Purpo&lt;ely self-inflicted;
or
(2) Caused by the employee
being intoxicated or under
the influence of a controlled
.substance not prescribed by
a physician where the intoxication or being under the
influence of the controlled

�l'rotloled

Full Ten, Ballot Lupage, Esplaaatioa ud Arpmeatl for tile Rerereadam of
Ameaimeat. to and Eaactmenh of Statutory Law
to be Sabmltted at tile Genenl Electloa, November 7, 2006.

Full Ttlt, BaUot Laapage, Esplanatlon and Arguments for the Referendum or Pnposed AmendmeatJ to and Enactments of Statutory Law
to be Submitted at the Geaenl Election, November 7, 2006.

•

Referendum
substance not prescribed by
a physician wss the proximate cause of the injury, is
entitled to receive, either directly from the employee's
self-insuring employer as
provided in section 4123.35
of the Revised Code, or from
the state insuranee tlmd, the
. compensation for loss sustained on account of the injury, occupational diseue,
or death, and the medical,
nurse, anc~· hospital seivices and medicines. and the
amount of funeral expenses
in case of death, as lll'e provided by this chapter.
(B) For the purpose of Ibis
section, provided that .an
employer hss posted written lloliee to employees
that the results of, or the
employee's refusal to sub. mit to, any chemical test
described under this division
may affect the employee's
eligibility for compensation ·
and benefits punuant to this
chapter and Chapter 4121.
of the Revised Code, there
is a rebuttable presumption
that an employee is intoxicated or under the influence
of a controlled substance not
pt'cscribed by the. employee's physician and that being
intoxicated or under the inftuenee of a controlled subst.nce not prescn'bed by the
employee's physician is the
proximatt cause of an injury
under either of the following

of urine;
(iv) For opiates, two thouSIIIId nanograms per millili- .
ter of urine;
(v) For phencyclidine, twen- ·
ty-five nanograms per milliliter of urine.
(d) The employee, throuih a
qualifYing chemical test administered within thirty-two
hours of an injwy, is determined to have barbitursleS,
methabenzodiazepincs,
done, orpropoxyphene in the
employee's systtm that tests
above levels established by
liboratories certified by the
United States department of
health and human services.
(2) When the employee
. refuses to submit 'to a requested chemical teat; on the
condition that that employee
is or was given notice that
the refusal to submit to any
chemical teat desCribed in division (B)( I) of this aectjon
may affect the · employee;•
eligibility for compensation
and benefits under this chapter and Chapter 4121. of the
Revised Code.
(C)( I) For purposes of division (B) of this section, a
chemical rest is a qualifying
chemical test if it is administered to an employee after an
injury under at leut one of
the following conditions:

(a) The employee. through a
qualifYing chemical test ad. mini9tered within eight hours.
of an injury, is determined to
have an alcohol concentration level ·equal \o or in excess of the levels established
in divisions (A)(! )(b) to (i)
of section 4511.19ofthe Revised Code;

(h) The employ!1", through
a qualifYing chemical test
administered within thiriytwo hours of an injury, is. derennined to have one of the
following controlled substances not prescribed by the
employee's physician in the
employee's system that tests
above the following levels
in an enzyme multiplied
immunosssay
~hnique
screening test and above the
levels established in division
(B)ffl(J)W of this section in
a gas chromat()graphy mass
speetrometty test:
(i) For amphetamines, one
thousand nanogl&amp;llls per
milliliter of urii1e:
Iii) For cannabinoids, fifty
nanO$flUJlS per milliliter ot
unne~

. (iii) For cocaine, including
crack eoeainc, three hundred
nanograms per millilittr of
urine;

(iv) For opiates, two thousand nanograms per millili-

tet"of wine;
(v) For phencyclidine, twenty-five nanograms per milliliter of urine.
(c) The employee, through
a qualifying chemical test
administered within thirtytWo hours of an injwy, is determined to have one of the
following controlled substances not prescribed by the
·· employee's physician in the
employee's system that tests
above the following levels
by a gas chromatography
msss spectrometry ttst:
(i) For amphetamines, five
hundred nanograms per milliliter of urine;
(ii} For cannabinoids, fifteen
nanograms per milliliter of
unnc;
(iii) For cocaine, including .
crack cocaine, one hundred
. fifty nanograms per milliliter

(0) Nothing in this section
ahall be construed to alf.Ct
the rights of an employer to
· teat employees for alcohol or
· controlled substance abqse.
(E) For the purpooe of this

section, liboratories certified by the United States
department of health and human services or laboratories
that meet or exeeed the standards of that department for
laboratory certification shall
be used for ·processing the
ttst results of a qualifYing
chemical tesL
(F) The written notice required by division (B) of this
section shall bo the same size
or larger then the certificate
of premium poyment notice
furnished by the bureau of
worl&lt;ers' contp&lt;DSation and .
shall be posted by the employer in the same location
as the certificate of pt:emium
·payment llolice or the certificate of self-insurance.

IGl If a f9!!!tition that pu:·
C'istM an injury js sub-

SQrially agmyttt4 by Jbe
jpim

conditions:
. (I) When any one or more of
the following is true:

ployer, that are determined
by the employee's superviaor to po!IC a substantial risk
of physical injury or property damage and that appear
to be related to the use of
alcohol or a controlled substarn:c and that do not appear
allributable to other factors.

(a)Whentheemployee'semployer had reasoniblc cause
to suspect•that the employee
may be intoxicated dr under
the inftuence of a con.trolled
substance not prescribed by
the employee's physician;

IIJd

chat subpMal
is docwneotcd
d. ob'
.
~. find ..
DYdccbVCOMilDOSbC

Uemvation

jOg ohjoctiyc·· clinjW find·
inp orobjectiyc 1CQ inuJts
DO f'f"IV!1!8tioo Q( bcocfits
an; payable Jw:eug of the
tKC:&lt;:Jisrina fX"'djrioo 9DCC

· tbet rmfiJion bas
(b) At the request of a poliee ofticer pursuant to scction4511.191 oftheRevised
Code, and not at the requett
of the employee's employer;
(c) At the request of a licensed phyaic,i.u, who ia not

employed by the employee's
employer, and not II the request of the employee's em- ,
pioyer.
(2) As used in division
(C)(IXa) of this section,
"reuonablc
cause" means
.
but is not limited to, evidence that an employee is
or was uoing alcohol .o r a
controlled substanee drawn
from specific, objective facts
and reasonable infcrenccos
drawn from these facts in
light of experience and training. These facts and inferences may be based on, but
are not limited to, any of the
following:

.

(a) Observable phenomena,
such as direct observation of
US&lt;', possession, or diatributinn ofalcohol or a controlled
subso:illee, ..- of the physical
symy··,ms of being under
the inft""""~ of alcohol or
• conn oil..; ., ,,bstancc, such
as but not limited to •lurred
~ech, dilllc&lt;l pupils, odor
of alcoliol or a controlled
substc~ee. changes.in affect,
or dyoa;nic .mood swings;

(h) A pa.tan of abnormal
conduc~ er ·ntic or iberrsnt
behavior, o· deteriorating
woit perfonnance such as
frequ.:nt absenteeism, excessive tardiness, or TCClUTCI'It
accidents, that appears to be
related to the use of alcohol
or a controlled substance,
and does not appear to be at. tributable to other factors;
(c) The identification of an
employee as the focus of a

criminal invem:igation into
unauthorized . possession,
use, or trafticking of a controlled substanee;
(d) A repon of use of alcohol or a controlled subotanee
provided by a reliabl&lt; ond
credible source;
(c) Repeated or tlagrant vio-

lations of the safety or worl&lt;
rules of the employee '1 em-

Mnmcd

to a Jcyel that woold bayc

siS'=' withm•t the jpjil[y

an Whenever, with reopect
to an employee of an employer who ia subject to and
has complied with this chowter. there it . ~i,lity ·. Qf
. conftoct with reopcct to the
application ofwodm' compenlltion laws because the
contract of employment is
entered into and all or some
portion of the worl&lt; is or is
to be performed in a state or
states other than Ohio, the
employer and the employee
may agree to be bound by
the laws of this state or by
the laws of some other statt
in whi(lh all
some portion
of the wodt of the employee is to be performed. The
agreement shall be in writing and ahall be filed with
the bunoau of wmtcrs' compensation within ten days
after it is executed and shall
remain in force until terminaled or modified by agreement of the plll'lies similarly
filed. If the agreement is to
be bound by the laws of this
&amp;tate and the employer has
complied with thia chapter, ·
then the employee is entitled
to compensation and benefits regardlesa of Where the
injury occura or the disease
is contracted and the rights
of the employee and the
employee's dependents under tbe laws of tbi• state are
the exclusive remedy against
the employer on account of
injury, disease, i&gt;r death in
the course of and arising out
of the employee's employment. If the agreement is to
be bound by the laws of another statt "!'&lt;~ the employer
has complied with the laws
of thai state, th&lt; rights of
the employee and the employee's dependents uoder
the laws of that state are the
exclusive remedy against
the employe.: on account of
injury, disease, or death in
the course of and arising out
of the employee's employment without regard to ·the
place where the injwy was
suatained or the disease contracted.

or

If any employee or the
""'''loyee's dependents are
awarded worl:er&lt;' compen·
sation benefits or recover

damage&amp; from the employer
under the laws of another
statt, the amount awarded
or recovered., whether paid
or to be paid in future installments, shall be credited
on the amount' of any award
of compensation or benefits
made to the employee or the
employee's dependents by
thebuieau.
If an employee is a reaident
of a statt· other than this
state and is insured under
th&lt; woiters' compensation
law or similar laws ofa state
other than this alate, the employee and the employee's
dependents are not entitled
to receive· compensation or
benefits under this chapter,
on account of injury, disease,
or death arisins out of or in
the course of employment
while temP&lt;;rarily within
this state, and the rights of
the employee and the employee"s dependents under
the laws of the other state are
the exclusive remedy ·against
the employer on account of
the injury, disease, or death.
Compensation or
benefits are not payibte to
a claimant during the period
of confinement of the claimant in any state or federal
correctional institutiOII......Jl[
'jo MY countY iail in lieu of
iocerrmtjoo in a ,,.,"C or
federal com;ctiooa! inllitu·
liiiD. whether in this or any
other statt for conviction of
violation of any state or federal ctiminallaw.
(H)(!)

Sec. 4113.!6.. (A) Except
as provided in division (0)
of this section, in the case
of temporary disability,
an employee shall receive
sixty-six and two-thirds per
cent of the employee's average weekly wage so long
· as such disability is total,
not to exceed a maximum
amount of weekly compensation which is equal to the
statewide average weekly
wage as defined in division
(C) of section 4123.62 of the
Revised· Code, and not less
than a minimum amount of
compensation which is equal
to thirty-three and one-third
per eent of the statewide
average weekly wage as defined in division (C) of section 4123.62 of the Revised
Code unless the employee's
wage is less than thirty-three
and on&lt;-third per eent of the

minimum statewide average weekly wage, in whi&lt;;h
event the employee shall reeeive compensation equal to
the employee's full wages;
provided that for the first
twelve week&gt; of total disability the employee shall
receive seventy-two per cent
of the employee's full weekly wage, but not to exceed a
maximum amount of weekly
compensation which is equal
to the leuor of the statewide
average weekly wage as de. fined in division (C) ofsection 4123 .62 of the Revised
Code or one hundred per
eent of the employee's ~
talce-home weekly wage. In
the case of a self-insuring
employer, payments shall
be for a duration based upon
the medical reports of the attending physician . If the employer disputes the attending
physician's report, payments
may be terminated only upon
application and hearing by a
district hearing officer pursuant to division (C)' of section4123.511 oftheRevised
Code. Payments shall continue pending the determina-

tion or the matter, however
payment shall not be made
for the period when any employee has returned to work,
when an· employees treating
physician has made a written
statement that the employee
is capable of returning to the
employee's fonncr positio:.
of employmen~ when ¥'..0.
within the physical capabilities of the employee i• made
available by the &lt;mployer or
another employer, or when
the employee has reached 'the

maximum medical improveIIICIII. WbCre the employee
is capable of worlc. activity,
hot the employee's employer is unable to offer the employee any employment, the
employee shall register with
the director of job and family services, who shall assist the employee in finding
suitable employment: 'f.'\le
rennination of temporal}'
total disability, whether by
order or otherwise, does not
preclud&lt; the commencement
of tempotary total di"'!bility
at another point in time if
the employee again becomes
temporarily totally disabled.
· After two hundred weeks
of temporary total disability
benefits, the medical section of the bureau of workers' compensation lihall
schedule the claimant for an
examination for an evaluation to detennine whether or
not the temporary disability
has become permanent. A
self-insuring employer shall
notify the bureau immediately after payment of two
hundred weeks of temporary
total disability and request
that the bureau schedule the
·claimant for such an examination.
When the employee is
awarded compensation for
temporary total disability for
a period for which the employee bas received benefits
under Chapter 4141. of the
Revised Code, · the bureau
shall pay an amount equal
to the amount received from
the award to tht director of
job and family services and
the director shall ·credit the
amount to the accounts of the
employers to whose accounts
the payment of benefits was
charged or is chargeabl&lt; to
the extent it wu charged or
is chargeable.
If any compensation under
this section has been paid
for the oame period or pe·
riods for which temporary
nonoccupational
accident
and sickness insurance is or
has been paid pursuant to an
insurance policy or program
to which the employer .has
made the entire contribulion
or payment for providing in-

surance or under a nonoccupational accident and sick- ·
ness program fully funded
by the employer, compensation paid under this section
for the period or periOds
llhall be paid only to the extent by which the payment
or payments exceeds the
amount of the nonocx:upational insuranc&lt; or program
paid or payable. Offset of the
compensation shall be made
only upon the prior order of
the bW'Cau or industrial commission or agreement of the
claimant.

A• used in this division, "net
take-home weekly wage"
means the amount obtained
by dividing an employee's
total remuneration, as defin~ in section 4141.01 of
the Revised Code, paid to
• or earned by the employee
during the first four of the
last five completed calendar
quarters which immediately
precede the first day of the
employee's entitlement to
benefiL&lt; under this division,
by the number of weeks during which the employee W.s
paid or earned remuneration
during those four quarters,
less the amount of local,
state, and federal income
taxes deducted f..- each such
weel:.
(B) Wbere{Wf an employee in a claim allowed under
this chapter suffers a wage
'. oss as a result of returning
to employment other than
the employee's former position of employment or-u

a acsult of heiug waabtc 10
find: cntpiO) litcht m1sistt:ut
with the claimaut 's phjsieal ·
capabilities due to an in-

jury or occwmtionaJ direr.
the employee shall receive

compensation at sixty-six
and two-thirds per cent of
the difference between the
employee's aycrage weekly
wage km and (be employee's present MQJipgs not_ to
· e•ceed the statewide average
weekly wage 1\H a period
not to execcd rwo h•acd
'lt"C'Cb. The mymcpta
continue for tm tO a maxirmnn of two bundn;Ji wttJd
but the noymepts shall be reduced by the &lt;!l!Tt!5MIIftin'l
ownbcf' of w_eeks .in which
the employee receives PAYments pursLJIOt to divjsjoo
IBI of section 4121 67 or
the Revised Code,

ma.v

(2) If

an erriployee jn a claim

allowed under _this ch'OW
suffm a wai( lou

M

a re-

sult of beine unable to fipd
employment consjstent with
the employee's disabilitY rcndtina from the enmloyee's
iniwv or occupational disease. the employee shall re-

ceive compensation at sixtysjx. and two-thirds per cent
ofthe ditren:nce between me
employee's average wecktv
wage and the employCc 's
prqent eaminas not to
exceed the statewide aycr11'1" weekly waae. The pay·
meots may continue for yp
to a myjmum of fifty-two
weeks The first twetJIY-six
woc;k., of payments uodt;r diyjsion CB)(2l of this gctjoo
shall be in addition to the

Referendum

two-thirds per cent of the
statewide average weekly
wage as defined in division
(C) of section 4123.62 of
the Revised Code in effect
on the date gf injurt or on
the date the disability due
10 the occJ!I!IIIiooal disease
buim, nor not less than a
minimum amount of weekly
compensation which is equal
to fifty per cent of the statewide average weekly wage
as defined in division (C) of
scttion 4123.62 of the Revised Code in effect on the
date of jniury or on the date
lhc disabiliiV dye to the occuppringa) disease begjns.
unless the employee's averag&lt; w~kly wage is less than
fifty per cent of the stattwide
average weekly wage at the
lillie of the injury, in which
event be the employee shall
receive compensation in
an amount equal to Iris
employee's average weeldy
wage.

=

(B) In the event the weekly

f3l The employee retired or
Ofbc;rwjse voluntarily abandoned W workfon:e for
rrens unrciBtcd tp the pilowed iniury or occupational
djy•g

!41 The employee has not
mpaed in cducationa1 or
rehahititatiyc efforts to en- ·
haoo: !be employee's employability, wdess !!!!!:h effOJtl are dMminn' to be in
~
IEl CP'DIISiation payable
under this section for permanent total disability is In
addition to benefits payable
under division (B) of section 4123.57 of the Revised
Code.
IF\ If ID

employee

IS

awarded compensation

for

nmn•ocnt total disabilitY

under

thjs section' M&amp;euy
the employee sustained a
traumatjc brain iQiwy. the
employee js entitled 10 ]bat
COOJllCOption regardless of

the cmployc;e 's employment

c1ypt&lt;;r receives compensation W)der division (Bll2l
of this section in excess of
twenty-six werfs the num-

workers'
compensation
amount when combined
with disability benefits received·pursuant to the Social
Security Act is less than the
otatewide average weekly
wage as defined in divisi'?"
(C) of section 4123.62 of
the Revised Code, then the
maximum amount of weekly
compensation shall be the
statewide average weekly
wage as defined in division
(C) of section 4123.62 ofthe
Revised Code. At any time
that social security disability
benefits terminate or are reduced, the woiters' compensation award shall be recomputed to 'p ay the maximum
amount pennined under this

ber of weeks Of comni:nsa-

division.

Sec. 4113.61. The av~ge
weekly wage
an injured

(C) 'RIC lon 01 ion of &amp;&amp;
manent total digbility shall

employee at the time of the
injury or at the tiine disability due to the occnparional
disease begins is the hssis
upon which to compute benefito.

of two buqdted
weeks of J!I.YD1C1IIS allowod

m!!jmnm

•mdm- djyjsjon

(8)( 1)

of tbis

scctioo, If an employee Pi
a clejm allowed undq Jbjs

R&amp;XHKtingnwmbqof~b

in exceg of twepty-liX apd
yp to fifty-two 11w is allowable uQdq divisiqu CBV ll of
this section,
131 The Dumber of weeks
of wqc loss PI,Yable W an

cmplo.m; uqdcr divisions
(Bl(!l BDd (2\ of this section
shall not exceed twp bnMrr4
and twenty-Six ws*s in the

aan;sut;

be compensated '!ff9"diog
this section ogly whcaJ at

to

least one of tbe followina

"'lies tO the claimant· ·
(I) The clnjmagt bas lost. or
1oi1.JM use of both hands &lt;ir
both arms, or both feet or
both legs, or both eyes, or of
Bny two ther\,of, wmtitatcs

tubcl and peaauaaaead disabil
it), to be wmpcnsatcd ac•
eording ta dai~ oteeti~. Com
penmtion· boweyer. the loss

(C) In the event an employee
of a professional sports franchise domiciled in this state
is disabled as the reault of
an injury or occupational
disesse, the. total unount
of payments made under a
CQiltract of hire or collective
bargaining agreement to the
employee during a period
of disability is deemed an
advanced payment of compensation payable under
sections 4123.56 to 4123.58
of the Revised Code. The
employer shall · be reimbursed the total amount of
the advanced payments out
of any award of compensation made pursuant to ~e~:­
rions 4123 .56 to 4123.58 of
the Revised Code.
(D) If BD employee receives

temporary total disability
benefits pursuant to division
(A) of this section and social
seeurity retirement benefits
pursuant to the "Social Security Act," the weeldy benefit amount under division
(A) of this section shall not
exceed sixty-six and twot!&gt;irds per eent of the statewide averag&lt; weekly wage
as defined in division (C) of
section 4123 .62 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 4123-58_ (A) In cases
of permanent total disability,
the employee shall receive
an award to cootinue until
hit the cnrioyq:'s death in
the amount of sixty-aix ond
two-thirds per cent of his lbG
&lt;:mployee's av~. weekly
wage, but, exoept as otberwtse provided · in diviaion ·
(B) of this section, not more
than a maximum amount of
weeldy compensation which
'" equal to sixty-aix ond

or loss of use of one liJ$

does !!01 cooslilatc lhc loss
or lop of use of two body

The iD)J)Iiancot result..
ing from the employee's jn~
jwy or nrometional diresc

(2)

preycng the employee· from

enuaina in &amp;Wittincx1 remunerative enmloyment utilizing the employment skj!!s
that the c:mp!gyee hss or
mav ressonibly be gpccted
to deyelop

&lt;m Permanent total disabjljty shall DOl be 9 ' 1'I "CC' •trd
when the , muoo the employee js ueblc to mgegc in
snejnsd rymuwgtiyc

em-

ploymc:ot is due: to lillY ofthe
followjng M'!OO' wbc#w

jndjvidually ot ig oombina- .
lilm;
( 1)

lmpairments of

oul a pro'I'W of n:babilitation· for handicawd
indiyiduals or to provide
tbCse jgdiyiduals witb re-

cam

munerative eqllo,yment or
other occnpetional rebabili·
. tatjng actjyity

of

tion a)lowab)e . node; diyi-

sion (Bl( I) of tbjs section
shall bi: reduced by the CQ(-

ip a sheltered wmkrfiqp sub:
KIJU&amp;QI to !be award, on the
cogdjtjon that the employee
docs not receive ipcome
cmnpenatjon. or rmlunerJtion from that employment
in excess of two tbonyM
dolJan in any golcndar QJWter As usn' jp this djyjsjon.
'"sheltered worksboj)" ?"C"P'
a state agency or nonprofit
nrgapjgrioo e&amp;tabljsbed to

the

em~

plpyee that are not the reSult
of an allowed jnjwy or occu-

patiopal disrue:
f21 Solely the employee's
age or aging:

In cases of temporary total
disability the compensation
for the first twelve weeks
for which compensation is
payable shali be based on
the full weekly wage of the
claimant at the time ~
injury or at the time of the
disabiliiy due to occupation. al disesse begins; when a
factory, mine, or other plaee
of employment is worl&lt;ins
·ahon time in order to divide
worlc. among the employees,
the bureau of workers' compensation shall mke that fact
into consideration when determining the wage for the
first twelve weeks of temporary total disability.
Compensation for all tiu1ber
temporary total disability
shall be based as provided
for permanent disability
claims.

In death, permanent ,tollll
disabiUty !:laima. permanent
partial disability claims,
and impainnent of earnings
claims, the claimant's or the
deccdeitt's average weekly
wage for the year preced·
ing the injUiy or the date
the disability due to the occupational disease begins
is the weekly wage upon
which compensation shall
be bL..d. In asceftaining the
average weekly wage for the
year previous to the injury,
or ihe dat&lt; the disability due

to the OCI)upational disease

begins any period of unemployment due to siclmeu,
industrial depression, atrike,
loc~out, or other cause beyond the employee's control
shall be eJiminated.

In cases where there are
special circumstances under
which the iverage weekly
wage cannot justly be determined by applying this
sectilln, the administrator
of worlc.ers' compensation, .
in determining the average
weekly wage in such eases, ·
shall use such method as will

en&amp;ble him"thl: adminillmlnr
to do substantial justice to
the claimants. proy)dcd that
the edmjnj-or Wll not
· 'l'&amp;'kulatc the claiJD8nfs
aygqe weekly waae for.
awards for 9Ci'JP'JU'1lt to:
tal disability ' solely for the
M'W" Jbat . the clajJDMt
continued workill'l and !be
c!ajmapt's wages incrwcd

following the injurv.
Sec. 4113.65. (A) A state
fund employer or the em" ployee of such an employer
may fil&lt; an appiiearion with
the adminiointor of worl&lt;ers' compensation for ap. proval of a final settlement
of a claim under this chapter.
The application shall include
the settlement agreement,
end

except

as

otherwise

specified in this diyjsion

be signed by the claimant
and employer, and clearly
set forth the circumstances
by reason of which the pro:
posed senlement is deemed
desirable and that the parties
agree to the terms of the set·
tlement agreement pro • idcd
that the apee1nent need not
be signi:d b) the Cmploy a
A clpjmep! may tile
appljqrioo whtwu an
employer's sjgnatun; jn the

if-1he.

an

follpwina situations·
Ill The employer is .0 longer doing business in OhiD7
~~
(2) IbC•claim no Jonitt ·ja
jn the

employer's jmlnstrja}

accident or occn=tjona}
disresc experience u ptQ-:
vidcd in divisiqn CBl of ace-

lion 4123 34 of the Revised
Code and W claimant no
lonaer js emploved with that
employer;

(Jl The employes bas liiled
to coroply with section
4123.35 of the Revised

Code.
lfa clainiant files an IPJ!Iication without an employer's

sjgnature. and the smployq
still js doina bwijnc;p in this
state. the edmjnjsgtpr WU
send writtco DO!ice of the
applicatjoo to the employer

jmmediarcJy upon nsipt
of lbG IPJ!licalion If k
CDIPioyer faib to rcspgn4 to
the notice within rhiny days
after the notjce js sm• lhc
awljcation need pot f91!bjn
the employer's sigp•h!m

If

a state fund employer
or an employee of sliCh· an
employer has not filed an
appli~tion for a final settlement under this division, the
administrator may file an
application on behalf of the
employer or the employee,
provided that the administrator gives notice of the filing
to the employer and the employee and to the represen-

tative of record of lhc employer and of the employee
immediately upon the filing.
An application filed by the
administrator shall contain
all of the information incl
signatures required of an
employer or an employee
wbo files an application .
under this division. Every
self-insuring employer that
enters into a final settlement
agreement with an employee ·
lihall mail, withiD seven days
of.exccutins the agreement,
a copy of the agreemet~t to
the administrator and the
employee's repreaentative.
The administrator shall
place the agreement into the
claimant's file.
(B) Exeepr as provided in
divi.sions (C) and (0) of this
section, a settlement agreed
to under tbjs section is binding upon all parties thereto
and ss to items, injuries,
and occupational diseases
to which the settlement applies.
(C) No settlement agreed to

under division (A) of this
section or agreed 10 by a
self-insuring employer. and
the self-insuring employer's
employee shall take ~~ect
until thiny days after ~
administrator approvea the
settlement for statt fund
employees and employers,
or after the self-inlltllins employes and employee sip
the final settlement agreement During the thirty-day
period; the .employer, employee, or administrator, for
state. fund settlemel}ts, and
the employer or employee,
for self-insuring settlements,.
may withdraw coosent to the
settlement by an employer
providing written notice to
the ' employer's employee
and the administrator or by
an employee providing written lloliee to the employee's
employer and the administrator, or by the administratOr providing wri\ten noti&lt;:e
to the state tlmd employer
ari&lt;t etnjilby'et:. !fan employee dies dwi01 !be thinv-da.v
wajtjo&amp; pcriQd followioa the
!lili)!PYil of a oettlemept the
scnJsnmr f!O be yojdcd bv
any party for good cause

shoWn.
(0) At the time of agre&lt;Dient to any final settlement
agreement uhder division
(A) oftbis section or agreementbetween a self-insuring
employer and the self-insuring employer's employee,
the administrator, for statt
fund settlements, and the
self-insuring employer, for.
self-insuring
settlements, ·
immediately shall send a
copy of the agreement to
the industrial commission
who shall assign the matter
to a staft'hearing ofticer. The
staff hearing officer shall determine. within the time tim. itati0111 specified in division
(C) of this section, whether
the settlement agreement is
or is not a gross miSea.riage
ofjustK:e. If the staffhcarins
ofticer determines within
that time period that the setdc:ment agreement is clearly
unfair, the staff hearing officer lihall issue an order
disapproving the settlement
agreement. If the staff hearing officer determines that
the settlement agreement is
not clearly unfair or fails to
IICI within those time limits,

the settlement agreement is
approved.

(E) A settlement entered into
under this section may pertain to one or more claims
· of a claimant, or one or
more parts of a claim, or the
compensation . or benefits
pertaining to either, or any
combination thefeof, provided that nothing in this
section shall be interpreted
to require a claimant to enter
into a settlement agreement
for every claim that baS
been 'filed with the bureau of
worl&lt;ers' compensation by
that claimant under Chapter
412i., 4123., 4127 .. or 4131 .
of~ Revised Code.
(F) A settlement entered
into Wldcr this section is not
appealable under section
4123.511 or4123 .512 of the
Revised Code.

Sec. 4123.81'-.

(A} .No per-

son shall orally or in writing, directly or indirectly, or
through any agent or. other
person fraudulently hold

dress or" telephone number .
of a claimant. regardless of
whether the clajmant.-s c!ajm
is acrjye or clOsed js not a
public record. No person
shall solicit or obtain any
such information from any
such employee without first
having obtained an authorization therefor as provided
in this section.
CC) Except u otherwise
specified in djyjsioo (0) Of

this sectiOn jnfonnation
kept by the cgmroissjon or
the bureau pursuant to this
section is for ·me exclusive
use and jnfonnation of m~
'CO!MliSSiOD and the hweau
jn the discharge of their official duties and shall not
be open ro Jhe public nor be

Buy

used jo
court jn any action or orocecdjog oendina
therein. unless the commission or the bweau is a party
to the action or proccedine.
Tbs: information. ho" MI.
may be tabulated and pub=

hsbed by the commission or

himself the person's self

the bureau jo statistical fonn
for the use and infonnation
pf other state agencies and

out or repre~nt himself~

tbe public.

pcrson's self or his lliY-I!f
!be person's partners or assOciates ss authorized by a
claimant or employer to take
charge of, or represent the
claimant or employer in respect of, any claim or matter
in connection therewith be·
for~ the bureau of workers·.
compensation or the industrial commission or its dis~
trict or staff hearing oijlcers.
No pellion shall directly or
indirectly solicit authority,
or pay or give anything of ,
value to BDother person to
solicit authority, or accept
or receive pay or anything of
value from another per.~on
for soliciting authority, from
a claimant or employer to
take charge of, or represent
the claimant or employer in
respect of, any claim or appeal which is or may be filed
with the' bureau or .commission. No 'person shall, without prior aut!Klrlry ·from the
bureau, a member of the
conunission, the claimant,
or the employer, examine or
directly or indirectly cause
or employ another person
to examine any claim file
or any other file penaining thereto. No person shall
forge an authorization for
the purpose of examining
or cause another person to
&lt;ltamine any such fi Ie.' No
district or staff hearing officer or other employee of the
bureau or commission, notwithstanding the provisions
of section 4123.27 of the
Revised Code, shall divulge
anyinfonnationinrespcctof
any claim or appeal which is
or may be filed with a disUict or staff hearing officer,
the bureau, or commission to ·
any pers()n other than members of the ccmmissioo or to
the superior of the employee
except opon authorization of
the administrator of woiters'
compensation or a member
of the .c ommission or upon
authorization of the claimant
or employer.~
(Bl The records described
or referred to jn djyjsjon
&lt;Al of tbjs section arc not
pybhc records as &lt;;iefined in
division &lt;AXD of section
149.43 of !he ReYlli!!~
Any information directly or
jndjrectly identifyin&amp; the ad·

CDK ll Uoon receivina a
written request made and
sj;ned by a journaUsL the
commission or the bureau
shall disclose to the ioumal. ist the address or addres.ws
and telephone number or
numbers of claimants, reaardtess of whether dtejr
claims arc actjve or closed.
and the dcpepdcnts gf those
claimants.

(21 A journalist is permitted
to RQJJeS\ the information
described in diyision fOX 1l
of this sectjon for multip)c
workrs or denendcnts in
one wxjnen reQ,Uest

131 A joumalisl sball include
all of the following in the
written reguest ·
(a) The jourrialist"s" name.
tide and si&amp;narure· .
' .; [

(bl The name and title of tbe
journalist's enwJoyer:

(cl A statement !bat !be djsclosure of the jnfonnatioo
sought is in 1he public inter·
·~

C4l Neither the commission
nor the bureaU may igqujre

as to the me"cific public interest served h)' d1e disFiosyre
of 'jnformatjon reguested by
a journalist under djyisjon
COl of tNs s&lt;eti9R
CE) As u.wd jn this section.
.. journalist" has the same
meaning as jn djvjsion

CB)(5l of section 149 43 of
the Revised Co&lt;le.
,SECTION 2.That existing
sections 2913.48, 3121.034,
3121.037,
4111.02,
[4121 .10. 4121 .12,] 4121.44,
4121.441 ,
(4123.01 ,]
4123.29. 4123.32, 4123.35.
(4123 .512,4123.52,4123.54,
4123.56,]4123.57, (4123.58,
4123.61 , 4t23 .65 , 4123.88,]
5703.21, and 5747.18 of the
Revised Code are hereby repealed. (Only the language
contained in brackets in this
section is being referred lo
the electors).

•

�F11U Ten, B.not Lnp5ae, E ......•atloa.ud .u,pmeall for Amendments to !he Ohio Constitutioa Proposed by
llildattve ftddsa te he S.bmltted at tile Geaeral Eleetioa; November 7, 2006.

FaU Text, Ballot Language, Explanatioa and Arguments for Ameadmeatl to the Olalo Conatihltioa Propoaed by
laltiative Petition to be Submitted at the General Election, November 7, 2006.

Proposed Amendment to the Ohio Constitution
"employ," "person" and "independent contractor" have ·
the same meanings as Wider the federal Fair Labor
Standards Act Qr its successor law, except that '.'employer"
shall also include the state and every political subdivision
and "employee" shall not include an individual employed
in or about the 'property of the employer or ll)dividual's
tesidenGe on a casual basis. Only the exemptions set forth
in this section"shall apply to this section.
·

2

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITU,TION
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

To adopt Section 34• of Article II of the Constitution
or tbe State or Ohio.

"·

Except as provided in this section, every employer
shall pay their employees a wage '~te of not Jess than An employer shallot the time ofhire provide an employee
six" dollars and eighty-five cents per hour beginnirig the employer's name, address, · telephone number, and
January I, 2007. 01) the thirtieth day of each September, other contact information and update such information
beginning in 2007, this state miaimum wage rate shall bC when it changes. An employer shall maintain a recotd of
incre&amp;sed effective the first day of the following January the name, address, occupation, pay rate, hours wurked
by the rate of inflation for the twelve month period prior for each day worked and each amount paid an employee
to that September according to the consumer price index for a period of not less than three years following the
or its successor index for all urban wage earners 11nd last date .the employee was employed. Such information
· clerical workers for all items as calculated by the federal · shall be provided without charge to an employee or
goveriUliCnt rounded to the nearest five cents. Employees person acting on behalf of an employee upon request.
under the age of sixteen and. employees of .businesses An employee, person acting on behalf of one or more
with annual gross receipts of two hundred fifty thousand employees and/or any other interested party may file a ,
dollars· or less for the preceding calendar year shall be complaint with the state for a violation of any provision
paid a wage rate of not less than that established under of this section or any law or regulation implementing its
the federal Fair Labor Standards Act or its successor .law. provisions. Such complaint shall be promptly investigated
This gross revenue figure shall he increased each year and resolved by the state. The employee's name shall
beginning January I, 2008 by the change in the consumer be kept confidential unless disclosure is necessary .to
price index or its successor index in the same manner resolution of a complaint and the employee consents to ·
as the required aonual adjustment in the mininium wage disclosure. The state may on its own initiative investigate
rate set forth above roWtded tb the nearest one thousand an employer's compliance with this section and any law
dollars. An employer may pay an employee less than, but or regulation implementing its provisions. The employer
not less than half, the minimum wage rate required by shall make available to the state any records related to
this section if the employer is able to demonstrate that such investigation and other information required for
the employee receives tips that combined with the wages enforcement of this· section or any law or regulation
paid by the employer are .equal to or greater ihan the implementing its provisions. No employer shall discharge
minimum wage rate for all hours worked. The provisions or in any other manner discriminate or retaliate against
of this section shall not apply to employees of a solely an employee for exercising any right Wider this section
family owned and operated business who are family or any law or regulation implementing its provisions
members of an owner. The state may issue licenses to or against any person for providing assistance to an
employers authorizing. payment of a wage rate below employee or information regarding the same.
that required by this section to individuals with mentlll or
physical disabilities that may otherwise adversely affect An action for equitable and monetary relief may be
brought against an employer by tbe attorney general and/
their opportunity for employment.
or an employee or person acting on .behalfofan employee
As used .in this section: "employer,"· "employee," or all similarly situated employees in any court of

competent jurisdiction, including the common pleas court
of 1111 employee's coWtty. of residence, for any violation
of this section or any law or regulation implementing its
provisions wjthin three years of the violation or of when
'
the violation ceased if it was of a continuing nature, or
within one year after notification to the employee of
· final disposition by the state of a complaint for the same
violation, whichever is later. There shall be no exhaustion
requirement, n!l procedural, pleading or burden of proof
requirements beyond those that apply generally to ci.vil
suits in order to maintain sqch action and no liability for
costs or attorney's fees on an employee except lipOD a
findiog that such action was frivolous in accordance with
the same standards that apply generally in civil suits.
Where an employer is foWld by ·the state or a court to
ha~e violated any jlrovision of this section, the entployer
shall within thirty days of the finding pay the employee ·
back wages, damages, and the employee's costs and
reasonable attorney's fees. Damages shall be calculated
as art additional two times the amoWtt of the back wages ··
and in the case of a violation of an anti-retaliation
provision an amount set by the state or court sufficient to
compensate the employee and deter future violations, but
not less than one hundred fifty dollars for each day that
the violation continued Payment under this pilragraph
shall not be stayed pending any appeal.
.

This section shall be liberally consbued in favor of its
purposes. Laws may be passed to implement iis provisions
and create additional remedies, increase the minimum
wage rate and extend the coverage of the section, but
in no maaner restricting any provision of the section or
the power of municipalities Wider Article XVIII of this
·
constitution with respect to the same.
If any part of this section is held invalid, the remainder
of the section shall not be affected by such holding and
shall continue in full force and effect.
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.
C&gt;YES
C&gt;NO

ARGUMENT AND ·EXPLANATION
IN SUPPORT OF ISSUE 2

Explanation and Argument
Against Issue l

Vote n5 on Issue 2 to restore the value ofthe minimum wage so hard
working Ohioans .are able to provide for themselves and their families.
Raising the wage will encourage per.ional responsibility and lift many
low-wa~ wilrkers·out of poverty.
·

Vote NO on Issue 2 for these re1101111:

The real value of the federal inlalmum wqe hilS reached a SO-year
low because it has not kept up with the rising cost of living. Today, 11
full-time worker at the current minimum wage of$5.15 earns just $206
per week, or $10,712 per year, well below the poverty line for a family
of three.
We can do better. The Ohio Minimum Wage Amendment would
restore the value that the minimum wage has lost over time.
Tbe Amendment would raise Oiilo's minimum ·wage from $5.15
to 56.85 per hour on January 1, 2007. Each year afterwards, the
miniml!ril wage would increase if the cost of living rises, protecting
Ohio's lowest paid workers from losing ground. It also provides
enforcement measures, similar to the federal minimum wage law, so
Ohioans can protect themselves agains! unscrupuious employers.
·
The Amendment would r~ise wages for over 700,000 Ohio worken.
On average, these workers provide half of their families' weekly
earnings. Nearly three-quarters,of the workers who would benefit are
adults over twenty. MOre: than 250,000 Ohio children have a parent
who will benefit.
Twenty-two other states have raised the minimum wage above the
federal level and studies show · that raising tbe mlnim•m wqe
subst1ntlally helps families while Improving tile overall ecoaomy.
Between 1997 and 2003, states with higher minimum wages had more
overall job growth.
Ohioans have always valued hard work, but our minimum wage has not
kept pace. We believe honest work deserves honest pay. Vote :rQ on
Issue 2 to restore .the value ofthe mlalmum w1ge for bard worklag
Ohioans.
Prepared by: Ohioans for a Fair Minimum Wage,
Hon. C. J. Prentiss, Pierrette M. Talley, Katrin Heins, and Gary L.
Coles
·

FULL TEXT OF
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
THE OHIO FAIR
MINIMUM WAGE
AMENDMENT
Be it Re..o/ved by the People
of the State of Ohio that
Anic/e II, Section 34a of the
Ohio Cnnstitution i_~ hCrehJ

enacted ru·foiJow.\·:·

ARTICLE II, Section J.4a
.Except as provJded in this
section, every employer shall
pay their employees a w.age

rate of not less than si• dollars and eighty-five cents per
hour beginning January I,
2007. On the thirtieth day of
each September, beginning
in 2007, this state minimum

wage rate shall be increased
effective the first day of the
following January by the rate
of inflation for the twelve
month period prior to that
September according to the
consumer prict index or its
s.uccessor index for all urban
wage earners and clerical
. workers for all items aS cal·

culated by the federal government rounded to the nearest

lntraslon tllto .your ,~aai,PriVIcy. Baclcers say
· '·' dle •amaiclment•is •aboor the minimurit• wage,~ut read the fine print.
· It gives employees or any person ·acting ;on fiebaliof"Brl employee
the right to demand private salary records for all employees (not just
)lourly workers). This will give access to your private information,
which could then become public. Disclosure of borne addresses and
other personal data will put you at risk of identity theft.

•

It's. ~ .m•sllve

• Records requlremenb are eoltly ud ope11 employen to
b1rassmeat. The amendment was drafted by anti-business activists
who propose that all public and private employers - including stilte
and local governments and homeowners - maintain decades worth of
records while employees are working and three years afterward. This
will cost millions of dollars, yet employers will have to provide these
records without charge to any employee or.employee representative
who asks.' Unhappy workers or activist organizations :will have
authority to make repeated,costly requests.
• Tbe 1mendment means a huge lacrease in tile cost of goverameat.
State and local governments will be saddled both with enforcing
the amendment and meeting their own costly obligations as major
employers. You'll foot the bill.
• Tbe amendmeatdoesa 't reaDy Hlp low-lacome Obloans. A higher·
minimum wage will trigger thousands of layoffs in lower-payingjobs
- hurting, rather than helping, Ohioans who need higher wages the
most. Better approache.s are to increase the federal Earned Income
Tax Credit and to improve job-development and training.
• As part of the Constitution, the amendment caanot easUy be
ch•nged to corred unintended conseqaeaces. This amendment,
~ which . is hostile to both .employers . and employees, will damage
Ohio's job climate. The legislature·will be powerless to fix it.•
"

VOTE NO ON ISSUE 2.
Submitted by Ohio1ns to Protect Penonll PrlVIey
John C. Mahaney; Jr., Andrew Doeh~t~l .and :ry Pille

five cents. Employees under
in the minimum wage rate
the age of sixteen and em- , set forth above rounded to
ployees of businesses wjth · the nearest one thousand dolannual gross receipts of two
lars. An employer may pay an
hundred fifty thousand dolemployee less than, but not
lars or less for the preceding
less than half, the minimum
calendar year shall be paid
wage rate required by this
a wage rate of not less than
section if the employer is able
that es1abhshr.id Wider the
to demonstrllte that the emfederal Fair Labor Standards
ployee receives tips that comAct or its successOr law. This
bined with the wages paid
gross revenue figure shall be
by the employer are equal
increased each year beginto or greater than the mini·
ning January I, 2008 by .the
mwn wage rate for all hours
change in the consumer price
worked. The provisions of
index or its successor index
this section shall not apply·to
in the salne manner as the
employees of a solely family
required annual adjusunent
owned and operated business

.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE
ADOPTED?

who are family members of
an owner. The state may issue
licenses to employers authorizing payment of a wage rate
below that required by this
, ~on to individuals with
mental or physical disabilities
that may otherwise adversely
~ect their opportunity for
employmenL
As used in this section: "employer," "emplOyee," "em-

, ploy," ·'person". and "iode·

pendent conlrBclor" have the
same meanings as under thC
federal Fair Labor Standards
Act or iii s~sor law, ex-

that "employer" shall
also include the state and every political subdivision and
."employee" shall not include
ui individual employed in
or about .the propeny of tho
employer or indivl.dual's residence on a cuual basis. Only
• the eo.empliona set fOrth in
this section shall apply to this

·Proposed Amendment to the Ohio Constitution
An action
IIIOildlry

for equitable and
relief may be
brought agsiost an employer
by tbc lttomey seneral and/or
111 employee or peiSOil acting
on behalf of an employee or
alllimilarly situsted employ... in soy court of competent
jurildidion, including the
comn1011 pleas court ofan em.ployee's county of residence,
lOr my violation of this sec- .
lion or any law or regu!ation
implementing its provisioO.

within tbn:c yean of tbc violftion or of when tbc violslion ceased if it was of a continuing naiute, or within one
year after notification to the
employee or final ditpositioo
by the state of a complsint lOr
the same violation,~
is later. 'l'bele shall be no exhaustion requin:mcot, no procedural, plesdiDg or bunlen
ofproof~ta beyond

those that

lflllly gencnlly to

c!vil suits in order to msintaiD

shall not be stayed pending
any appeal.
·

XVIII of this constitution
with respect to the same.

This sectioo shall be liberally

If any pan of this section is
held invalid. the remainder
of the section shall not be affected by such holding and
~hall continue in full force
and effect.

construed in favor of its pur·

poses. Laws may be passed to
implement its provisions and

create

~dditional

remedies,

increase the minimum wage

rate and extend the coverage

but not less than one hundred
fifty dollars for each day that

ner restricting any provision

the violation continued. Payment Wider this paragraph

of the section or the power of
mWiicipalities under Alticte

of the section, but in no man-

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION .
AGAINST ISSUE 3

LEARN AND EA,JlN INITIATIVE

To adopt Sectloa 12 of Article XV or tile
Coallltlltloa of tbe State of Ohio.
This amendment to the Constitution would:
• Permit up to 31,500 slot machines at seven borse·
l"llling ~ks and at two Cleveland non-track
{ocations:
.
• Permit expanded gaming in the four Cuyahoga
County locations if approved by the COUDty's
voters.
• Distribute the revenues as'follows:
. • 55% to the slot and casino owners and
operators.
• 300/o to the Boatd of Regents for college
scholarsblps and grants to eligible students and
administration of the program.
• The remaining revenues ·to be divided among
local governments, race tracks for purse mcmey,
gambling addiction services, and
• The · administration of the Gaming Integrity
Commission comprised of five ·members
appointed by the governor and the majority
legislative leaders.
• The moneys provided by this amendment are to
supplement and not supplant existing and .future
constitutional obligations to post-SCcondary
education and local governments.

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

C&gt;YES
C&gt;NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE
ADOPTED? .
, ' J,
''

FULL TEXT OF
AMENDMENT

An employer llhall at the time
of hire provide an employee
the employer's name, ad·
·dress, telephone number. and
other contact infonnation
and update such information
when it changes. An employer shall maintain a record of
the name, address, occupation, pay rate, hours worked
for each day worlced and each
amoWit paid 111 employee for
a period of not less than three
yean follqwing the last date
the employee was employed.
Such information shall be
provided without chsrge to 111
employee or penon scting on·
behalf of an employee upon
request. An employee, person Mting on behalf of one or
more employees and/or any
other interested party may file
a complaint with the state for
a violation of lily provision
of this section or any law or
regulation implementing .its
provisions. Such complaint
•
shall be promptly
investigated and resolved by the
state. The employee's name
shall be kept confidential unless disclosure is necessary to
resolution of a complaint and
the employee consents to disclosure. The state nuiy on its
own initiative investigate 111
employer's compliance with
this section and any law or
regulation implementing its
provisions. The· employer
shall make 'available to the
state any recools ·related to
· such investigation and other
information required for en-,
fortet,lent of this section or
any law or regulation implementing its provisions. No
employer shall disclWge or
in lilY other manner discrimi. nate or retaliate against an
employee for e¥fCising any
right under this section or any
law or regulatioq implementing its provisions or against
any person for providing as.
sisW1ce to an employee or
infonnation regarding the

ployee's costs and reasonable
attorney's fees. Damages shall
be calculated as so additional
two times the amount of the
hl.:k wsges .and in the case of
a Violstion or sn anti-retalia·
rion provision an amount set
by the state or cowt sullicient
to compensate the employee
and deter future violations,

"

cept

section.

such action and no liability
lOr COlli, oi sttomey'• fees
on so employee nccpt upon
a fiDdina that such 1C1ion was
mvolous in accordsnce witb
tbc S11111C lllsndsnls that spply genmlly in civil suits.
Whae.an cmptoyCr is found .
by tbc or 5 court to have
violated sny provisiOn of this
seetion, tbc employer . shall
within thirty days or tbc lind·
iD8 psy the employee hl.:k
waaes, dama&amp;es. "and the em-

Be it resolved by the

people
of the s- of Obio, thai the
c-illllion of the State of
Ohio be .,_.Jed by adopting Section 12 ofArticle XV,
to read as follows:

'·.·

es, wtifonn tuition grmts, in
an amount not to exceed the
ava.ge UllCiaJnduale tuition cbargecl by Ohio public
wtiversities, shall be aWIId·
ed to the top 6ve peR)elll of
·students at cscb &amp;llCll"lllited
public and non-public bigh
school who attend soy public or indqiendent not-for·
profit institution of higher
education authorized by the
Ohio Board of Regents and
that has its principal office
within this state. Such lu·
ilion grants shall be baaed
solely on academic meril

A "yes" vote on Issue 3 would provide thousands o(Ohio's
hatd-wodcing . higb school students with scholarships
to Ohio's colleges and universities. All studepts will
be eligible to earn these scholarships, which would. be
funded from the ~ of expanded gam)lling-slot
machines at the seven COJI!IIlen:ial horse l"llling tiacks,
and II two ·ctUd.Uily specified locations in Cleveland's
entataimncnt district. Issue 3 would also provide new
fimds fur economic ~opment and job creation for
· communities throughout Ohio:

PROTECT OHIO CHILDREN ANp FAMILIES
VOTE "NO" on ISSUE 3

PletiSe VINe NOon the LeamiiiiiiEIUit CasiM ~
Awutulwultt. This dishonest plan, filled with loopholes,
will not ·deliver the" benefits promised. A handful of
casino developers want to use your Constitution for their
personal gain, but it will ruin lives.
Why so many are votiq NO on Issue 3·

Unlike the piooeeds from the Joncry, Learn and Eam
acholarship flmtls would be free from control ofpoliticians
who now. simply reduce education's general ~venue

&gt;

fimds by the amount ofloncry proceeds. Issue 3 expressly .
prOhibits the ~on of such fimds by providing that the
money generated for scholarships and local communities'
economic development Will supplement, not supplant,
monies curreatly appropriated for these purposet. The
scllolarship monies will be placed in individual aCCOWlts
for Ohio's primary and secondary sc.hool students under
the direct eootrol of the Ohio Bolrd of Regents. The
legislature will be powerless to divert this money for
.politicians' pet projecta.

&gt;

Under Issue 3, the locations U¥1 nmnber of slot machines
would be strictly limited, and would be regulated by the
new Gaming Integrity Commission, which Will operate
without general revenue tax dollars. .
Each year, OhiOIIIIS spend billions of dollars on gaming
entertainment in neighboring states and Canada. This
amendment will help keep that money in Ohio for the
benefit of Obio and its children. .Money now spent by
OhiOIIIIS on gaming in Indiana, Michigan, West Virginia,
and Canada (and soon, P~:DJ~Sylvania), benefits the
residenta of those places. The money •pent by Ohioans
.. Oil ibis fonn of entertainment lbouldbeaefit Ohioans, not
out-of-state interests.
·

&gt;
&gt;
&gt;

&gt;
&gt;

a

&gt;
~

~te Yes for Obio's Children.
Vote yes on Issue 3..
.

Submitted by: Ohio Learn and Earn Committee,
J. &lt;Rgg Jlau&amp;ht, David L. Hopcraft and Linda J. Siefkas

Learn and Earn Casinos will create at least
109,000 NEW gambllq 1ddltll, ruining ihe
lives of hWldreds of thousands of families.
Remember the Lottery? It didn't save Ohio
public ""hoots. Learn and Earn Casinos are 'a
bad deli! for students, parents, and colleges,
Learn and Earn creates 1 priVIte •onopoly for
a handful of casino owners. Gambling proceeds
are exempted from state and local taxes.
Learn and Earn Casinos will pi~ NO money
In the Ohio Geaerll Revea•e Fuad- aot oae
dollar for tbe State Treasury.
Issue 3 will not stop Ohioans from traveling
to gamble but will grant llcelises to out-ef
state operators and drain more doUan from
Ohio.
·
Ohio casinos will drain $2 blnton .from the
local economy costlnlli Ohio jobs.
Learn and Earn LOOPHOLES will leave
thousands of · students without scholarships.
There are go gyemtm on ' how much
scholarshiPs will be worth or when thev wU! be
Only the top 5% of students will qualify
for tuition grantS whiCh disappear ·after 12
. years.
Learn and Earn will push Ohio into a Class
III gambling state maldnc It easter fer trtbal
casinos to open in Obio.
Community leaden, elected oiBclab ,ud
many Ohio ne"ti'Splpen are urxtq a "NO"
vote oa Learn and E1ra 's gt~~~~bUag cuiDOI.

Don't gamble away Ohio's futllre. P!"otect Ohio's
families and children. Vote NO on ISSUE 3.

No more than
smount, 111 additional one
The Vote NO Casinos Committee
three thouslnd five hundred
percent of gross · slot maStat~ A':'ditor Betty Montgomery, Co:.Chair
. audl devices may be operchine revenue sluill be paid
David Zanotti, President, The Ohio Roundtable, Coatiod at Ill)' one &amp;i:ility, Cl\·
to the state to psy for.gamChair
cept that facilities located
bling addiction services; an
Within
the
same
county
may,
.
additional
six -tenths of one
"For the JIIIIPOSC of inspirby ,.._ncnt, provide for
percent of gross slot maing students to aspire to
to the state for distribution
this section:
tbc llalllfer of such devices
chine revenue llhall be paid
college at 111 early age, to
to
all
other
counties
pursu~
between such facilities, proto the municipality or town' iinprove students' academic
ant to the local government
The amounts paid to the
vided
that
no
more
than
four
llhip
in which each facilpRpsl8lion, and to mal&lt;e
revenue
assistance
fund,
state
pursuant . to this sec·
thouslnd such devices may
ity is locate&lt;!; an additional
college affordable for stuwhich
proceeds
Aha
II
bC
ex.
tion
do
not diminish the
Notwithstanding any otbcr
be operated at a facility not
three percent of gross slot
. dents and their fiunilies, the ·
penliCd
for
economic
deve~­
General
Assembly's con·
provision of this Constitu·
located at a permitted commachine revenue shall be diObio Board of Regents shall
opinent or ·capital improvestitutional obligations. 1"be
lion, slot machines shall be
mercial bone racing track.
vided equally and paid to the
award undergnlduate higher
ment
projects.
In
addition
·
nioneys
expended hereunder
permitted at the sevar percounty in which each facil- ·
Nothing in this section shall
education scholarships and
to
the
foregoing
amounts.,
on
scholarships·
and grants
mitted. commercial horse
ity is located and the coWity
be intapcted to Bllthorize
tuition grams for United
. an additional six percent of
shall supplement, not 'Ill':
rscing tracks, and at two · live games associated with
seat of that county, which
States citizens who are resi·
gross
slot
machine
revenue
plant,
per-student. state relocations each fionting on
casinos, including, but .not
proceeds shall be expended
dents &lt;&gt;fthis state commenca~
facilities
located
at
each
sources
appropriated for
the existing msin cbsnnel
for economic development
limited to mulette, card
ing witll the lint high school
pennitted commercial horse
posl;secondary educational
of the Cuyshoga River in
games; 'l nd dice games, exprojects; an additional ~ight­
class groduatinB two years
racing
track
shall
be
used
by
programs
and purposes prior
cept that such games may be
tcntbs of &lt;&gt;ne percent of
following the IIJIIKOval of . the City of Cleveland, ooc
those
tracks
for.
purse
monto
or
after
the approval of
on the west hank within the
conducted at the non-track · gross slot machine revenue
this amendment. Eligibility
ey. In the event that devices
this amendment The monarea generslly known. as
shall be paid to the COWity
facilities and at the facilities
c:riteria for such sch\llarshjps
are
transferred
betw~u
faies distributed to counties,
the NBIItica Entertsinment
located at a penriittecl com· in which the non-track faand grmts. lnd tbc amounts.
cilities
located
at
pennitted
townships,
and JDWiicipaliComplex and with frontage
cilities are located, which
m«eial horse racing track
'\ :sJiau be established solely
commercial horse .racing
tie• hereunder shall suppleof IIJIIKOximslcly 1,430 feet
proceeds shall be expenaed
situated wholly .or partially
by the Ohio Board· of Ret!'acks
as
provided.
in
this.
ment, not supplant, monies
in length. extending S60 feet
within Cuyahoga County
for . economic developgents. Such scholarships
section,
the
transferee
facilappropriated
for those COWl·
i.o tbc northwest a!ld 870 feet
ment projects;'an additional
if the voters of Cuyahoga
and grmt&gt;; shall include only
ity
shall
distribute
·equally
tics,
~wnships,
and rilunici·
· to the southeast of tbc inter· County approve the conduct
eight-tenths of one percent
· the following:
palities prior to or after the
the amount of funds this
section of the
line of
of gross slot machine revof such additional games by
'
·
approval
of this amendment
section
provides
for
purse
vacated Main Avenue and
5 majority
]llo such
enue shall be paid to the
(A)lndividuallearn andesm
money
between
the
transThe
amoWits
paid to the state
the Cuyshoga River, and
city in which the non-track
vote may be conducted prior
scholarship JICCOWits for curor any COWity, township, or
feror and transferee tracks.
one on tbc east bank within
to tbc fourth gmersl election
facilities are located, which
reot and future students who,
municipality pur.;tlant to this
An
additional
six
percent
of
the area generally !mown
proceeds shall be expended
following the IIJIIKOVal of
prior to enrolling in college,
gross
slot
machine
rC,·enue
section
shall oot be subject
., Tower City and starting
for economic development
this~
take core and lldvinced aca3t non-track facilities shall
to any tax or expenditure
at the ·northeast corner of
projects; an additio~al four
demic courses, participate in
bC
deposited
into
the
Ohio
limitation. With the e•cepWest Third Street, where it
tenths of one-percent of
Thirty ·percent of gross slot
, college readiness programs,
simulcast
horse
racing
purse
tion
of the foregoing sixmeets tbc east hank ot the
machine revenue shall be
gross slot machine revenue
usessment, and testing at
fund for distribution as pr~
tenths of one percent that is
Cuyahoga River and ext&lt;ndshall be divided equally. 11td
psid to the state and shall be
any sccredited public or
vidcd
by
law.
The
proceeds
paid to the mWiicipality or
ing north ·and west along the
paid to a county that ha.• a
used, · without necessity of
non-public high school in
of any additional games, if
township in which a facility
east bank of tbc Cuyahoga
population of at least seven
sppropristioo by tbc Gencrsl '
tbii state, and contribute to
authorized
by
voters
pursuis located, and notwithstandRiver for not more than
Asocmbly, notwithstanding
hundred and fifty thousand
public life through voluntary
ant
to
this
section,
shall
be
ing
the requirements, limi-.
1,700 feet and having a
persons and not more than
section 22 of Article II oftbc
civic activity, and who at·
tations,
or prohibitions , of
distributed in the same mandqlth of not more than &lt;460
Ohio Coostitutioo, oolely for
one permitted commemal
ltlDd any public or indepenArticle Vlll, or of Sections
ner as the proceeds from the
feet from the east bai&gt;k of
horse racing track, and the
the scholarshjps sod grm~
dent not-for-profit institution
5,
6, and II of Article Xll
operauon
of
slot
machines.
the Cuyahoga River. The
county seat of such county,
provided for in this section
of higher education BllthoNo other fees or taxes may
of the Ohio Constitution, all
games Blllhorized in this occ, and tbc related ·administnl.which proceeds shall be exrized by the Ohio Board of
be
applied
to
or
levied
of the monies distributed to
tion sball be conducted only ·
pended for economi&lt;O devel•
tive costs for administerRegents and that has its princounties and muniCipalities
against
gross
slot
machine
at tbc locations authorized
ing soch scholanbips and
opment projects; and an adcipal office within this state.
in which a faciliry at which ·
revenue
or
thl!
amou·
n
ts
wa•
herein, and, in the disaetion
diticlnal two and four-tenths ,
I .,.•
grsnls.
gered or the proceeds of the
siot . machines are per.mitted
of the facility owner, may be
percent of gross slot rna·
(B) For the first twelve such
shall be, and any ofthe manby
other
games
authorized
conducted twenty-four hours
chine revenue shall be paid ·
In addition to the forgoing
high school graduating class·

centa:

ca&lt;:b day.

vote.

..

ume.

·----· - - -

--·- - · --

----

- · - - - - - -- -

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>October 30, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3989">
      <name>wayland</name>
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</item>
