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Page B8 • The Daily 5er'\tinel

.

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

New Orleans mayor
says thousands are
probably dead, A2

Roddick tumbles out in
first round of U.S. Open

.

.

NEW YO RK (AP) - the lines where Muller 's
Andy Roddick wore a look shots landed, as if not
of di sbelief on the court and believin g · hi s - eyes, or
an hour later when he tried watched the replays on the
to make sen se of the beating giant screen atop the stadihe just took.
.
um.
''I don't really remember a
The worst birthday of
Roddi&lt;:k 's li fe ended with loss where I've felt this bad
three stra,ight tiebreak losses · afterwards." Roddick said .
and a shocking first -round "I love playing here. I prob exit from the U.S . Open ably. had the best practice
against a player making his week I've ever had in l.eaddebut in the tournament.
· up. It just didn't tran slat e
Rodukk, the champion tonight. .. . I'm in a littl e bit
two years ago and the No. 4 of shock ri ght now, to be
seed this year, fell 7-6 (4), honest. I' d give anyth ing to
7,6 (8), 7-6 (I) on his 23rd go back four hours right
birthday Tuesday night to now."
Gilles Muller, the first man
Roddick looked shocked
from Luxembourg to com- as he spoke. alternately' starpete in the Open .
ing at his hands and running
The 22 -year-old Muller, his finger s th ro ugh his hair.
"I've put more work in
ranked No. '68 , outhustled,
outmaneuvered and, most mentally and physically in
astonishingly,
out-aced every which way," he said .
Roddick 24-17 to claim hi s "I've never cared so much
second huge upset of the as I care now, which make s
summer. In his first it tough . Last year I didn't
Wimbledon , he beat French work hard . I didn 't even
Open champion Rafael step up. 1 wasn 't training
NadaL
hardly and somehow sn·eakAsked how he managed to ing. out big poin~ .
dismantle Roddick, Muller . "This year I just killed it
replied sheepishly, "I have as far as working hard ' allll
no idea.''
doing all the right things . I
"For n.1e, it was just unbe- took my lumps .... We're
'li ev able to come out here talking about this as a big
today," Muller said . "I told disappointment and I'm still
myself to enjoy it and I did sitting up at th ree 111 the
every minute.''
rankings . I guess that 's a
Roddick hated every good sign. It's tough fo ~ me
minute of it after blowing a to have a lot ot perspecti ve
5-2 lead in the first set and a ri ght now."
chJnce to serve out that set
Muller didn ' t serve as fa st
at 5-3. From then on, as Roddick ·but that didn't
Roddick was frustrated· by .matter. Roddick couldn't
the left- handed Muller 's figure out how to break him
canny mix of angled in the ti ebreaks and in the
groundstrokes and serves, last two se ts. ~.ather than
hi s blend of speeds, and his asserting himself. Roddi ck
amazing ability to hit line looked tlat as Muller dictat·
ed the match ami forced the
after line.
Roddick !lung his racket action. running up 65 winto the ground, dropped it ners to Roddtck s 39,
an~nher time ·in di sgust, and though makmg 33 unforced
kept chomping on a towel errors to IS by Roddtck.
"I took some risks and
during changeovers. More
than a few times he stared at · maybe sometimes I was also

AP photo

Houston Astra Craig Biggio (71fol lows Adam Everett (28) as Morgan Ensberg (14) rounds third
base on his fifth .i nning homer aga1nst the Cincignati Reds in Houston. Tuesday.

Astros beat RedS, 5-2
.

.

HOUSTON 1AP )- Wandy
Rodriottel .ha, been a plea" '"'
s urpr i~e for ' th e 1-!ou.,ton
Astros.
Rodrigue z pitched fi,·c
strong innings and Morgan
Ensberg hit a three-run horner
to help the Astros rally past
the Cincinnati Reds 5-2
Tuesdnv ni ght anu close within a h·alf-game of the NL
wild-card lead .
Rodri.guez (9-6) won for the
fifth time in his las'! seven
decisions. allowing · one run
and four hits anJ uropping his
ERA from a team-high 6.16 to
5.94.
"Nine win s, that's prclt y
good for a guy who diun·t fipure in your rotation at the, start
of the year.'' Houston manager Phi l Garner said. " He
pitched a nice, crisp game. He
was only in trouble in th.it one
inning . That kind of performance gives the team a lift,
especiallY when we ncetlfd
one."
Ensberg 's 34th home run
highlighted a five-run fifth
inning for the Astros.
Hanston (69-62) is tieuwi th
tht' New York Mets in the
wild-card race. just behind
Philadelphia and Fl orida 17062).
''The key to the game was
Wandy thre w five great
innings,"
Ensberg sa1cl.
"Tonight Wandy was .JUSt outstanding. lf.wc score ttve runs
every ni ght. I'm . convinc~d
we'll go to the playoffs .
We've done such a poor job
of scoring for a·bunch of guys
who are pitching their tails
off."
The 'Astros ha ve bac ked

pitch we ll at the beginning o.f
the ye ar ...
Ramon
OrtiL
(8- 10)
allowed five runs and eight
hits in six innings.
·
"He diu a great job. He just
made a few bad pitches in the
fifth." catcher Jason LaRue
said. "Even the home run was
not a bad pitch. Not to take
an ything away fro m Morgan.
but in any other ballpark that
is a routine pop tly. He hit it
just hard enough to get ·it out."
Ortit fell to 2-6 on the road .
"It's crazy. but that 's hasehal l." Ort i1. sa id. "In the fifth ,
I didn't mak e good pitches
when I had to. I hung a slider
to a guy and he hits it out. It
was just a fl y ball, bl!t it' s a
home run here. I felt good. I
have a lot of confide'nce in
myself and my team . I don 't
wor' about this game. I'll
com back. It was just a tlyball. 1ome run. but nothing
can dumge it."
· Ci ncinnati . which 11ad won
four strai ght , loaded the bases
in the ninth aQ itin st Brad
Lidgc on a single by pinchhiller Jacob Cn•L and two
walks . Pinch-hitter Javier
Valemin hit an RBI gro undout before Lidge struck out
Edwin Encarnacion to end
the ~arne .
Adam Dunn's RBI single
put Cincinnati ahead in the
fifth. but pinch-hitter Mike
Lamb had a run-scoring sin ,
gle in the bottom half that
. ended the A&gt;tros' score less
st'reak at 16 innings. Willy
Tave ra s' sacrifice tl y drove
in another run , Craig Biggio
sin gled and En sherg hit hi s
3.J th homer.
Rodrigue z wi th an average of
No tes: Luke Scott. the
7.78 runs a game. more than Astro s· opening da y left
double the team-low 3.61
fie lder. was in the lineup for
Roger
Clemem. the first time since being
given
Rodri guez sta rted the season sen t down to Tripl e-A
at Triple-A Round Rock .
"Since 1 got here, my goal Round Rock May 3. He led
was to make sure 1 pitched the Pacific Coast League in
w~l l every game,·· _Rodri gue-z horne rui1s with 31 when he
smd through an mterpreter. was called' up Monday.....
''I' m not surpri sed wit h wl1at Ci ncin nati is 1-6 at Houston
I've done . Thi s is wl1at I had this sca'lm ... . Hou ston relievin mind. to be able to pitd1 cr Chad Qualb had to jump
this way. My bigge s! conL-ern out of the way in the seve nth
has been learning to speak innin g when plate umpire Tim
English . Bey~nd that. just McClelland and C Hurnberto
keeping confidence has been Quintero inadvertently threw
the big thing. I had to make two balb at hi m at the same
sure ·! kept it even if I didn't time .

Tigers,. Indians postponed
'

'

CLEVELAND (APJ - The
game between the Detroit
Tigers and Cleveland Indians
scheduled for Tuesday night
was postponed because of rain.
A makeup rlate wa, not
immediately set. but the' onl)
dav remaining durin ~ the ;.,rasoil in .,·hicl] both t~;lllh ·"''
.not sch ~du lcd i' SepL X. the
day after a t hre e.- garn~ -., cri -:"
between the AL Central rival '
in Detroit.
"I wa' read y. I wanted to

play." Indians outfielder Coco
Cri &gt;p said . "I think everybody
in this clubhouse came here
ready - even though it's geen
raining all day."
,
The Indians a,rrived at
Jacob' Field tied in the AL
" il d ·C&lt;l ;d r"cc with the Los
' I 'l'k-...
\p~ cl ". 41 !)1_.' ~ ~11 11 \t
hdiind til&lt;' :\ ~ \\ ) \)rl- Y;uikcc, .
B,llh m an a~ e rs m() vcll back
the ir starting pitc l1ers for
WedncsJay night \ lchellulcd
gaml..' .

National league
East Division
w L PC1 GB
Allanl a
74 57 .565 70 62 530 4',
Florida
70 62 .530
Philadelph ia
New York
69 62 .527 5
Wa shingt on
66 63 .5 19 6
Central Division
w L Pel GB
64 49 .632 St. Louis
Houston
69 62 .527 14
64 66 .485 19'.',
Milwaukee
63 69 .477 20'•1
Chicago
Cincinnati
62 69 '.473 21
Pittsburgh·
55 77 .417 28'h
West Division
w L , Pel GB
San Diegp
64 66 492 Arizona
61 72 .459 4\
Los Angeles
60 72 455 5
San Francisco 57 73 .438 7
Colorado '
52 79 .397 12'?

,.,

Tue~day ' s

Florida 7, Sl. Louis 6
N.Y. Mets 6. Phlladelph.ia 4
Washington 3, Atlanta 2
Houston 5, Cincinnati 2
Ch1cago Cubs 6. L.A. Dodgers 3
Pit1sburgh 6, Milwaukee 0
Arizona at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Colorado at San Francisco. 10:15
Wednesday's Games
P1ttsburgh (Redman
5-14) at
Milwaukee (Ohka 9-7) , 2:05p.m.
L.A ." Dodgers (lowe 8·13) at
· Chicago Cubs (Ruscfl 5·7), 2::;!0 p.m.
Arizona (Halsey 8- 11) at San Diego
(Park 3-1 ). 3:35p.m
Colorado (Frar1cis 12·9) at San
Fra llcisco (Co(reia 2·5), 3:35p.m.
Wash ington
(Loaiza 9-9 and
L.Hernandez 14·6) at Atlanta
(Thomson 3·4 and Ramirez 10·8), 2,
4:35p.m.
S1. Louis (Suppan 12·10) at Florida
(Vargas S- 1), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Myers 11·6) at N.Y.
•
Mets (P.Martinez 13-5). 7:10p.m .,
9-B) at
Cmcl nnati
[Claussen
Hou ston (Pettitte 12 ·9) . 8:05p.m.
Thursday's Games
Philadelphia at N.Y. Mats, 1:10 p.m.
Washingtoll at Allanta..7:.35 p.m.
' San Diego at Milwaukee, 8:05 p.m
Cincinnati at HoUston , 8:05p.m~

. ~5

-

56 .569

2

Toronto

66

65 .504

tO',

Baltimore
Tampa Bay

61 70 .466
55 78 .414

15·1
22 ',

Detroit
62 67 .481
Kansas City . 42 se .323
Wast Division
W L Pet
Oakland
74 56 .569
Los Angeles . 73 57 562
Texas
63 69 477
Seat11e
55 75 423

See Page A5
• Family Medicine.

AS

• Stampede in
Baghdad kills hundreds
of Shiite pilgrims, many
women and children.

See Page A6
• Encephalitis killing
· children in Asia who have
no access to vaccines.

See Page' A6
• Focus shifts to Gulf
Coast after Katrina
remnants leave Ohio. .

See Page A7
• Memphis Belle h.e aded
to Air Force museum in .
Ohio. See Page A7

WEATHER

you successfully complete this step, you are eligible to be paid $150.

have your blood tested. You will not be tested for drug use, HIV, or sexually transmitted
diseases. Your privacy will be strictly guarded throughout the information and blood
screening process. After having Your blood drawn , you will be paid $400- ($150 is
for the l'lealth questionnaire and $250 is for blood testing:) Absolutely no blood

Tuesday's Games

testing will be done on children ages 2 and under, and testing on
ages 6 and under is strongly discouraged.
.
.

Lubeck

Wedneedey'e Gemtt
Chicago Wh1te. Sox (C. Her nandez 8·
6) at Texas (Loe 6-4), 2 :05p.m .
Minnesota (Lohse 8·12) at Kansas

'

· Belpre -Little Hocking

Route 95 South,
behind Tebay Oairy.

Stone Rd., otf Wasllington Blvd.,
behirnl Cornerstone Heatthcare.

Now Open!

Now Open!

Pomeroy &amp;
. Tuppers Plains Chester
92 Memorial Drive. ·
Pomeroy, DH.

Opens Aug. 251h

Mason County
326 Ohio River Road
At. 62 North ·
(next to Exxon)
Point Pleasant. WV.

Opens Sept. 8th

(lee 14·4], 7:0S p.m.

Texas a1 Kans as City B 10 p.m
Oak lard at L A Angels. 10 05 p.m

• Goodwill celebrates
first anniversary.

5) Blood Testing: Once your on-site review' is oomplete, you may choose to

19

P.m

See Page A3

site, a nurse will review your questionnaire with you and verify your eligibility Jb

1

ThUrsdav 's Games

• Elberfeld family has
reunion. See Page A3
• Best loser honored
at TOPS meeting :

4) On-site review: When.you oome to your appointment at a mobile testing

12

N Y Yankees at S~;!a,T11e ' 4 35 p m
Tampa Bay at Boston. 7 05 p m
Baltimore at Toron to, 7.07 p.m
Det rOit .al Ch1cago W hite Sox. 8 05

See Page A2 .

consumed water frOm public or private sources within the six
affected water districts for at least one calendar year PRIOR TO
December 3, 2004.

GB

Tampa Bay (Fossum 8·10) at Boston
(Wakefield 13-10 ). r:os p.m .
Ball1more (Chen 1 O..S ) at Toronto
(Chac1n 11·7). 7.07 p.m.
N Y Yanl&lt;;ees (A Johnson 12-8) at
SeaMie (F. Hernandez 2· t ). to·os p.m.
Oak land (Blanton 8-9) at L.A .. Ange ls
(Lackey 10-5), 10 ·05 p m

• Airlines cancel
more flights, prepare for
possible fuel shortages.

.
eligibility by bringing official documentation proving your residence/water usage for at
least one calenqar year. For example, bring a utility bill from January of 2002 and
January of 2003, or bring a 2003 Tax statement. You must prove that you

-

Dwoi1 (Ma roth 11-12) at Cleveland

INSIDE

3) Validation of eligibility: You are responsible for validating your

part~ipate. Wh~

CS HEALTH
l,llC)JI:·CT
Conducted by:
~

BROOKMAR, IN&lt;;:.

Hlllolt'a ~ ~ ......,-.:lh IUio (II oolecfro;j htolltl ~ W'oj lb:d ~

417 Grand Pari~ Drive, Vienna, WV 26105 • 1-800-551-7658 • www.c8hea~~project.org

tricts in Meigs County remain
in the continuous . impro-vement rating for the 2004-2005
school year. Last year, Eastern
High School achieved an
effective rating , and the elementary school a continuous
.
improvement rating.
"We ' re very excited about
our progress and we think
we ' re doing just what we
should
be
doing,"
Rick
Superi'i11endent
Edwards said Wednesday.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

See ·Page

Details on Page A7

•

INDEX
2 SEcrTONS .... t6 PAGES
'

Calendars .
Classifieds

A3

B4-6

Comics ·

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

NASCAR

B8

Places to go

AS

Sports
Weather

B Section
A7

© :ioos Oh!o Valley Publishing Co.

'·

'""' ·'mdaihsmt ind ." ""

I , :!1111:;

·Ouch! Gas surpasses
S3 per gallon in Meigs

.will be contacted by a Brookmar representative to set up an
'appointment for you at one of our testing sites. Do not call us
fOi' an appointment, we will call you.

17',
38

4·5). 2.10 p.m.

Eastern High School also
earned an effective rating on
its building report card, meetTUPPERS PLAINS- The ing six of seven performance
Eastern Lo~al School Di strict standards, while Eastern
has advanced from a rating of . Elementary School was rated
continuous improvement to
an effective rating OQ the in continuous improvement,
most recent report card issued meeting eight of 17 stanby the Ohio Department of dards. The elementary school
mi ssed an effective. rating by
Education.
The di strict met 13 of 23 one-tenth of a performance
perfoqnance indicators on score point.
Both Meigs Local and
the 2004-2005 district report
card issued in . August. · Southern Local sc hool dis-

'

· See Page 81

survey, either on our website or by dropping it off at one of our locations. you

Te)(as B. Chicago Whtte Sox 6. 1st
game
Ch1cago While Sox 8 . Te)(as 0 , 2nd
game
Boston 7. Tampa Bay 6
Detro11 al Cleveland, ppd , ra1n
Toronto 7, Baltimore 2
M in~eso1a 7." Kansas City 4
N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 10:05 p.m .
Oakland at LA, Angals, 10:05 p.m .

Ci1y (Wood

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

• Eagles, Zane Trace
aiming for first victory.

2) Appoinbnent Scheduling: After you have submitted your completed

Central Olvlalon
WLPctGB ·
Chicago
so 50 .615 Cleveland
74 58 .561 7
Minnesota
70 62 .530 11 "·

'llll ii{Sil ,\\ . St ·. l'l'l ·. :\1111 ·. 1{

Eastern dist~ct earns top .rating on state report card

SPORTS

the process. If you don't have the ability to complete the questionnaire online. you
may pick up a copy either at the Brookmar office at 417 Grand Park Drive, Surte
201 in Vienna, or at one of our testing sites. You may.then take the questionnaire
home, fili it out, and drop it off at the teSting site nearest you or tht:) Brookmar office.

W L PciGB

7,6 54

,'jill! · :\ t'S • \ ol. ;; ;; . :\o. 1:1

at our website, www.cBhealthproject.org. This is the fastest and easiElst way to initiate

Easl Divla\on
74

~iddleport • Pomeroy; Ohio

1) Health Questionnaire: You may fill out the hea~h questionnaire online

American League

River City Players
present 'Bye Bye Birdie'
this weekend, AS
~....

There are two distinct components of the project:
the health questionnaire and the blood survey.

p.m.

Boston
New York

lucky, " Muller said.·
If ever a player deserved a
turn of good fortune. and
earned one· by dint of hard
work , it 's Jaines Blake. To
see him play so beautifully
and with unfettered ease 111 a
straight-se ts takedown of
former
finali"
Greg
Rusedski in the afternoon'
was· to watch a man who
summoned a reservoir of
inner strength from a·year of
unrelenting misery.
Backed by his friends and
many fans chanting "James 1
James!" in Arthur Ashe
Stadium. Blake served a 131
mph ace to reac h match.
point,. then. ripped a back- .
hand pass ing shoi to beat
the No. 28 Rusedski. 7-5, 7fi (3), 6-3.
Blake won hi s first tour'
nament in three years on
'Sunday in New Haven,
Conn. , not far from wh ere
he grew up in Fairfield . It
wa&gt; a victory. a ·few weeks
after he reac hed the fi nal in
Washin gto n against Andy
Roddick. that showed how
fm Blake had c:ome since his
lowe st moment s - when he
lay in a· hospital bed 'with a
frac tured nec:k last sp ring
'from a freak accident on
court: oT when he later contracted an il lness that affect ed his sight &lt;md hearing and
temporaril y paralyzcu part
of his face : or when he
watched his father dying of
cancer last sum incr.
UnseeJed, James may not
be a threat to win the Open .
. He 's playing the best tenni s
of his life at age 25. but he
harbor s. no illusion &gt; that
he's in the same clas s as No.
I Roger Federer. who won
his
fir st-rou nd
match
against Czech newcomer
lvo Minar 6-1.6-1 , 6-1 in I
hour. I minute earlier in the
day. or th e No.2 Nadal. who
could end Blake's run in the
third round.

How to Participate in
the C8 Health Proiect

Games

'

POMEROY - . Yesterday
lines began forming at gas
stations with competitive
prices as if-it were a scene out
of the 1970's during the Arab
fuel embargo. only this time
the rise is blamed on
Hurricane Katrina.
·Tom Stewart, executive
vice president of the Ohio Oil
and Gas A~sociation said that
I0 percent of the United
States' refining capacity was
knocked out because of
Katrina causing tt;ijders in
New York City to react nervously and drive up the price
of crude oil.
However. according to
Stewart, this cnsts ts more
about the retineries than the
price and availability of
crude oil. There has not been
a new refinery built in this
country since 1970.
"!am told refintfrs along the
Gulf Coast structurally withstood the storm but the infrastructure that .supports it like
electricity. pipelines, unload,, ~
ing facilities, all of that is shut
down," Stewart said.
Once this crisis is over
Stewart believes that gas
prices will drop and moderate
but when that happens
remains to be seen.
:1.4 l'iiCA'
Stewart sa id representaBu sh
tives
from
the
Administration told· him yesterday that some clean air
restrictions will be lifted in
order to produce more gasoline during the crisis. The
•· De1h Sergen1jpllo1os
Bush Administration also
announced that it was dip- For weeks the public has been speculating when gasoline
ping into the nation's oil would reach $3 per gallon for regular unleaded. Yesterday this
reserveS1o keep up with sup- scene and price were repeated at stations across the county.
ply .and demand.
Getting the crude oil to the
refineries is a problem , especially with the Catlettsburg
Refinery in Catlettsburg. Ky.
which normally gets its oil
directly from a pipeline from
the Gulf of Mexico.
The local problem for
motorists is finding the best
price for gasoline.
Yesterday the price of regular unleaded gasoline in
Meigs County varied greatly
and ro~e quickly, sometimes
by the hour, sometimes as
much as 40 cents per gallon.
At 2:30 p.m. yesterday
prices per gallon for regular
unleaded at three separate .
Pomeroy gas stations were ·
$2.89, $3.09 and $3:19. At
the same time prices per gallon for regular unleaded at
three separate Middleport
. stations were $2.68 and $3.09
at two establtshments.
The difference between the
high price of $3.19 per gallon
in Pomeroy compared to the
lowest price of $2 .68 per gallon in Middleport represented ·
a difference of 51 cents per
gallon at the same time of
day at- st~tions within five
miles of one another.
Paul Amberger of Syracuse fills up his minivan at the Exxon
It was enough to convince Station on West Main Street in Pomeroy which at the time had
motorists 'to shop arout\~ for one of the best prices on regular unleaded in town at $2.69 per
gallon. It didn't take long for lines to form for the cheaper ·price .
Please see Gas. A5
'

CITGO

STOP

~

699

•

The staie rates districts and
individual bui ldings based on
a number of criteria, includ,
ing p~ rforman ce on state profi ciency tests. attendance and
graduation rates. Third grade
students are tested in reading
and math. fourth grader' in
reading, math . . writ ing. sc ience anu citi ze nship. fifth
graders in readin g. sixth
graders in reading. math.
writing. sc: ience and ci tizenship. seventh graders in niath .

eighth graders in r~adi n g and
math, and tenth graders in
readii1g: writing . math. '-l' ience. and social stuuies.
A pass in g grade on the
tenth grade proficiency test is
required for gradumio n, aJld
students lutve seven opportunities to pass all sect ions of
that test 'before the end . of
their ~e 1~ io r year.
Ea&gt;tern students at all levels performed well in the

Please see Eastern. A5

Meigs getting system to·
track dementia patients
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAllYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - An electronic system to track wandering
vic tim s
of
Alzheimer's
and. other
dementia-ty1re disea ses in
Mei gs County cal led "Project
Lifesaver" will be in place
before the month ends.
The program to be irnpl ementeu comes at no cost to
Meigs County. according 10 .
Me igs Co unty Sheriff Bob
Beegle. It is being funued in
both Meigs anu Athens
Count ies 'Wi th a $ 125,000
grant throu gh the Buckeye
Hill s- Hockin g
Vall ey
Regional
Development
Di!)lJ.i,: t/AII.:d

Ag~IH.'}"

Oil

person i' mlSSlng. then
deputies will go to the general loca tion and throUl;h the
car radio dev ice (rece iver) be
abl e to pick up the beep
transm itted from the bracelet
which will kad thet\1 to the
individual .
"But someone has to call in
and report the person missing'' emphasiLed Beegle.
"They have to be wearing the
tran~mitter which sends out
the signal. It's not like .a
house arrest dev ice wh ich
goes off autniliilticall y which
there's a wal k-away."
Accord in g to stari stics
from the .A.rca Agency on :
Aging. more than a hundred
search and re~c uc missions
for wandering victims have
heen conducted in counties
·where the system 1s already
activated and there was 100
·perce nt reco very.
Many times these incidents
end tra gica lly hcc:au se the
indi vidual is not found
qui ck ly enou gh. Project
Li fesaver has been successful because it actuall y locates
the person qu ickl y. before it
is too late." said Joctta Lane.
director of the Area Agencv
on Aging.
'
Whil e no fi~ures were
available for se niors with
Alzheimer 's Disease 111
Meigs County. Lane said that
curre'ntl y in Athens County
there are approximate ly 949
indi viduals who have been
diagnosed ,\; ith the disease.
She added that stati sticall y 60
percent of tbo,e uiagnosed
will begin wa ndering as the

Aging . and a $25.000 a\vanJ
from
th e
Osteopathic
Heritage Foundation . at
Nelsonville.
Beegle said Wednesday
that ·deputies of hi s department will take training in
. implementing the system on
Sept 13 .. 14 and 15. The
training will be given by
deputies of Ross County. one
of the first counties in the ·
state to rece ive the electronic
tracki ng system .
Beegle said that the equipment will be delivered to the
deputies when they complete
the training. Once the radio
receiver devices are in place
and the bracelet tmnsmitters
to be woni by the dementia
victims have · been distributed , Project Lifesaver. will
be activated.
· The way the program
works , according to 1he sher- disei.lse ...progres.'~e:-,. ...
iff, is that if someone calls in
Please see System. AS
and tell s the dispatche r that a .

MEIGS COUNTIAN
RECOGNIZED

·,

. .

Submtnod pho1o

Kenny King of Middleport was recognized at. the Grand
American World Trapshoa.ting Tournament in Vandalia for 25
years oi participating in tha Grand American. He is the f1rst and
only Meigs Counti~n to earn the award . He fi red at and broke
his last clay target "t the Amateur Trapshooting Association's
contests 111 Vandal•a where it has been held since 1924. In
2006 the tournament w111be moved to Sparta. Ill.
'

'

�NATlON

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 1, 2005

New
Orleans mayor says thousands are probably dead, urges .rest to flee
.
Bv ADAM NOSSITER

nowhere for anyone to bathe.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Nagin, whose pre-hunicane
evacuation order got most of
NEW ORLEANS - With
his city of a half a million out
thousands, feared drowned in
of harm 's way, estimated
what could be America's
50,000 to I00,000 people
deadliest natural. di saster in a •
remained, and said that 14.000
century, New Orleans' leaders
to 15,000 a day could be evacall but surrendered the streets
uated in ensuing convoys. .
• to tloodwaters Wednesday
"We have to," Nagin said.
and be gan turnii)g · out the
" It \ not li ving condition s,"
lights on the ruined city He also expressed concern
.
perhaps for months.
about people staying in the
Looting spiraled so out of
water: "Pepple walking in that
control that Mayor Ray
water ~ith those .dead bodies.
Nagin ordered virtually the
it can get in your pores. you
entire police force to abandon
don' t have to drink it." ·
search-and, rescue efforts and
In
addition
to
the
focus on the brazen packs of
Astrodome solution , the
Federal ·
Emergency
thieves who ha ve turned
increasingly hostile.
Management Agency was
Nagin called for an all -out
considering putting people.on
evacuation of the &lt;:ity's
cruise ships. in tent cities.
remaining rcsiuent s. Askeu
mobile honie parks, and sohow nmny people .died. he
called floating dormitories.
said : ''Minimum. hunurcds .
The floodwaters streamed
Most likelv. tlwusands." .
into the city's streets from two
With mtist of the .:ity under
levee breaks near Lake
water. Army engineer' strugPontchartrain a day after New
gled to ·plug New Orleans'
Orleans thought it had
breat:hcu lel'ccs "with giant
escaped catastrophic damage
from Katrina. The lloodwaters
sandbags anu cont:rete b•miers.
and authOiities drew up plans
covered 80 perceni of tlie city,
. ' .
to clear out the tens of thou. in'some areas 20 feet Jeep, in
sands of remaining pcQplc and
a reddish-brown soup . of
practically abandon the bclowsewage,
gasoline and garbage.
AP Photo
sea,level city. Most of the evac- National Gu ard member sg,t. Ricky Wl1eelington. left, halos Tyrone Allen, 2, as he arrives for s he lter at the Louisiana Superdome
Around midd'ay, officials
uees - including thousands in New Orleans in the aftermat11 of Hurricane Katrina Wednesday.
with the state and the Army
.
·
riow suffering in 'the hot and ·
Corps of Engineers said the
muggy Supcrdome - will be our nation's history.'' Bu.,h
water level s between the·city
moved to the Astrodome in said later in a televised
and Lake Pontchanrain had
•Houston. 350 miles away.
equalized, and water had
add ress from the White
There will he a "tntal c'Var- Hnusc. whid1 most victims
siopped spilling into New .
uation of the city. We have to. could not see because power
Orleans. and even .appeared
The city wi ll not he funrtinn- remains out to I million Gulf
to be falling. But the danger
al for two or three months." Coast residents.
was far from over.
Nagin said. And he ' aid peoThe Army Corps of
The federal .government disple wou ld not he allowed patched helicopters. warships
. Engi neers said it planned to
use heavy-duty Chinook heliback into their homes for at and elite SEAL water-rescue
least a month or twn.
copters
to drop 15,000-pound
teams in one uf the biggest
If the n1aynr 's death -toll relief ope rat ions in .U.S. 11istobags of sand and stone as
estimate hold' true. it would ry. aimed at plucking residents
early as Wednesday night
make Katrina the worst natur- from rooftops in th ~ lasrof the
into the 500-foot gap in the
al disaster in the United States "goldt; n 71 hours·· resc uerS.
fai led tloodwall.
since at lea' t the 1906 San say .is"crucial to savin g lives.
But the agency said it was
Francisco earthquake and
..
having
troub le getting the
As fires burned from brotire, which have blamed for ken natural-gas mains, the
'andbags and dozens of IS anywhere from. about 500 to skies above the c ity bttued
foot highway barriers to the ·
6,000 deaths. Katrina would with National Guard and
site because the city's wateralso be the nation's deadliest Coast Guard helicopter' fran ways were blocked by loose
hurricane since 1900. when a tically dropping . basket s to
barge s, boats and large debris.
storm in Ga lveston. Texas. roofs where victims had been
In Washington, the Bush
killed between 6.000 and stranded since the storm
administration decided to
12.000 people.
release crude oil from the fedroared in with a 145 -mph
· AP Photo/The Dallas Momlng New•. Irwin Thompson
In Mi." iss ippi , bodies are .fury Monday. Atop one apart- People walk along Interstate 10 near the Lou isiana Superdome, Wednesday morning in New eral petroleum reserves after
starting to pile Lip at the ment building. two children Orleans. Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans early Monday morning. The Federal Emergency Katrina knocked out 9.5 permorgue in · hard-hit Ha1-ri'on held up a g:ialll sign scrawled Management Agency has provided about 500 buses to transport Hurricane Katrina refugees from cent of the Gulf of Mexico's
output. But because of the
County. Forty corpses have with the words: "He lp us I ' '
the Superdome to the Houston Astrodome.
·
brought to the morgue ' Looters used garbage cans
disruptions and damage to the
Hundreds of people wan- for relief. Hundreds of people 1 refineries, gasoline prites
already. and officials expect &lt;Lild inflatable mattresses to and mostly just stood by and
the death toll in the county to float away with food, blue watched the looting. But dered Lip and down shattered appeared to have . spent the surged above $3 .a gallon in
climb well above 100.
many pans of the country.
j'eans, tennis .shoes, TV sets Nagin later said the looting Interstate I0 - the only mght on a crippled htghway.
Starting Thursday. au thoriPresident Bu s.h tle\v over - even gUns. Outside one had gotten so bad that stop- . major freeway leading into
The death toll has reached at
New Orleans and parts of pharma&lt;:y. thieves comnJan- ping the thieves became the New Orleans from the east ties planned to move at least least 110 in Mississippi alone.
Missi&gt;Sippi's hurricane-blasted deered a forklift and used it to. top priority . for the police pushing shopping carts. laun- 25.000 storm refugees to the B)Jt the full magnitude of the
coastline in Air Force One. push up the storm shutters department.
dry racks, anything ~hey Astrodome in a vast convoy disaster had been u~tclear for
Turning to his aides. he said: and break through the glass.
"They are starting to get could find to carry their of some 500 buses provided days - in pan. because some
"It's totally wiped out. ... It 's The dri ver of a nursing-home closer to heavily populated belongings.
by the federal government. areas
in
both
coastal
devastatin·g . it"s got to be dou- bus surrendered the vehicle to areas -· hotels , hospitals, and
on· some of the few roads With the 'air-condition_ing Mississippi and New Orlean s
bly devastating on the ground ." thugs after being threatc1ied.
we're going to stop it right that were sti ll open, people knocked out, the Superdome are still unreachable. but a lso
"We're dealin g 'with oneof
Police said their tirst prior- now," Nagin said in a state- waved at passing cars with has become stifling·, its toilets because authorities' first prithe worst national disasters i.n ity remained saving lives. ment to The Associated Press. empty water jugs, begging are broken and there is ority has'been the li vi ng.

.

Airlines cancel more flights,
prepare for possible fuel shortages
Bv HARRY R. WEBER
AP BUSINESS WRI TER

ATLANTA - Some major
carriers have canceled tlights
to the New OrleailS and
Gulfport , Mi ss .. airports popular destinations for
tourists. convention partici pants and gamblers - until
at least next week. increasing
financial pressure for the air-·
line s as they also. deal with
potential fuel shortages.
Daily jet fuel production
nationwide has been cut 13
percent be.cause of damage
from the hurricane to Gulf
Coast refineries. according to
Jack Evan s of the Air
Transport Association.
"What it means is there is
less fuel essentiall y." Evans
said Wednesday. "Carriers arc
having to take measures to .
con serve fuel at airports where
they are low and tanker in fuel
when serving some destina-

tions on the East Coast."
Lou i' Armstrone New
Orleans InternationalAirport.
mean while. h&lt;h reopened. 10
allow humanitarian lli ghh in
and t\ut durin g d&lt;lylight
hours. butl',f!iciab are unsure
when t:ommercial scn·i&lt;:c
will resume there. The uncertainty ha.~ mi sed 4ucstion s
about the linancial impact on
the airline' that in part icula r
serve that ai rpo rt . One run way i ~ u..,ahle hut getting lO
the ai rport i' diffi cult. offi ·
cial; 'aid .
Offic ial&gt; 'aiel the 1'\ew
,Orleans airp&lt;JJ1 h'" no ' ignificant airfi eld damage and had
no

~ ta ndin g Wl.i h:r

in l.lircra fl

move ment areas. Tlle aiQJorl

did sustain damage ·to its
roofs. hangars and fencing. At
the Gulfport airport. which is
served by li ve airlines. there
\vas some damage to the con-

trol tower and 10 Air-Tran 's
gate area. said Tad Hutcheson .
an AirTran spokesman .
The flight ·Cancellations
and fuel p.rohlems com e at a
time when lhe major airlines.
especially Delta.. are already
reelim.!.

" I think all of the airlines
will feel this." said airline
expert Te rry Trippler. who
runs a tra vel Web site cheapseats.QO m. " It 's ;i lqtle mom
than a blip. hut New Orleans
and Gulfport alone is not
going to put Deltit imo bankrupi cy. I thin~ $70 a barrel oil
is· the straw that would hreak
the camel's hack."
The airlines that serve the
area:

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR. BUYER ...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
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Borders and Artwork

BY,THE BEND

DEAR ABBY: l was disappectedly one afternoon and
pointed by your answer to
caught them in a compro"Wondering in Illinois," who
mising position. His wife
is jealous of his wife's best
then demanded a divoroe.
.friend·, "Cassandra." You •
Twelve years later, his foraccused her of having a "girlmer wife and her "best
Dear
friend" (and I know you
friend
" are still a couple .
Abby
meam in. the romantic sense
If " Wondering' s" wife
rather than platonic). You
isn't romantically inl'olved
told him they were due for a .
with her frlend , it's time he
long talk.
finds out what's lacking in
. . . In my opinion , the probtheir relationship that she's
lem is the husband's raging bets with oil massages as the getting from the girlfriend .
jealousy. What's the evi- payoff, spend hours a day - AL~O WONDERING IN
dence of lesbian activity? talking or text-messag ing, CALIFORNIA
Their vacations together? ignore the husband to the
DEAR ALSO WONDERThe phone .calls? Obviously. point of rudene ss if he' s ING: Good point.. If there
'this woman is having the around. and the normal rou - isn 't a romance going on,
' kind of fun with her friend . tine of the household is for- marriage counseling could do
that she ·hasn' t had with her gotten because of the distrac- them a world of good. A tnartion. It 's not one thing - ii's
nasty, suspicious husband in
the aggregate. I stand by my riagc can be healed only if
a long time. (I be,t he hardly answer. Head on:
both parties want it to be aild
has two words for her if a
are
willing to cooperate.
DEAR ABBY: I agree that
game is on television.)
DEAR ABBY: It does
"Wondering" needs to find
· Isn't one of the signs of an out what's going on. A friend appear that the wife may be
.abuser when he starts wanti - of mine was married II yea rs having an affair with her
ng to control his wife 's to his high school sweetheart. friend. I am a member of the
friends? l think her husband . She0 too, began spending a Straight Spouse Network, an
needs to get a life and some lot of time with .a female co- organization started by Amity
friends of his own. -. KEE- worker. and he was often Pierce Buxton to help the
LAH IN ITH ACA. N.Y.
excluded. In time, he began straight spouse understand
DEAR KEELAH: When I to resent the massages, trips. the coming-out proce ss of
-advised "Wondering'' that he dinners together and other their gay spouse.
didn't appear to be the first activities thev shared without
.The
Strai ght ~ Spouse
on his wife's list of priorities, him. When he confronted her. Network is a worldwide
I was UNDERSTATING the she ~ccused him of "trying to , organizat ion whose memproblem . .The wife's girl- come between her and her bership comprises current
friend gives her lavish gifts best friend."
,
or former hetero sexual
and pays for their trips
He got the shock of his life spou ses/partn ers of gay, les. together: they make frequent when he walked in unex- bian , bi sexual or transgen-

der mate s and mixed-orientation couples. Our members provide personal. confidential
support
and
resource inforrpation to'
spouses, coup les and families. We are the on ly support
network of this kind in the
world. - MARIANNE IN
GULFPORT, FLA .
DEAR MARIANNE: I am
familiar with the Straight
Spouse Network. which is
.allied with PFLAG , and
have mentioned it in my column before. Dr. Buxton ,
who chairs the SSN, is a
respected researcher and
·author of an excellent book,
"The Other Side of the
Closet'' (John · Wiley &amp; .
Sons). that explains the gay
spouse "dilei11ma" and offers
strategies on how families
can c~lpe when the gay person "comes out." Not surpri singly, that's a complicated and emotionally wrenching process . The network's
Web
site·
is
www.ssnetwk.org:
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

FIVE GENERATIONS-GATHER
This five-generation family recently gathered for a
picture. They are from
the left , Amber O'Brie_n
holding her son, Brayden
O'Brien, and seated
beside her father, Mike
Will, who is next to his
mother, Dottie Wil l, all of
Pomeroy, and her mother, Ethel Leath. who
resides at Overbrook
Center in Middleport.

l "

't

I

Thursday, September 1, 2005

Public meetings

Thursday, Sept. H
CHESTER - Shade River
LDdgc 45 3. 7:.'0 p.m.. at hall .
Saturday, Sept. 3
PORTLAND - Lebanon Refreshments. ·
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.. · RACINE - Th e Aethanv
Dorea&gt;· Sot!Shine Ci rcle will
township building.
meet at 7 p.m. at th e Hcthany
Monday, Sept. 5
SYRACUSE Sutton Dorea&gt; Church. Al l wo men
Township Trustees, 7 p.m., . wel co me .
Friday, Sept. 9
Syracuse Village Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
~ ~c
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees will meet · Wi dow's FeiiDws hi p wi i
at noon at the office bu iIding. meet at noon at Bob EI' ans
Restaurant in \1a:-.on. V..'. Va.
· Tuesday, Sept. 6 ·
RUTLAND
- Rutland
Township Tru-stees, 5· p.m ..
Rutland Fire Station.
. RUTLANb
- Rutland .
Thursday, Sept. I
Village Council , 6:30 p.m. ,
POMEROY - · Rcvil'al
council chambers.
se rvi ce~ at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel. Ohi o 143. 7:-'.0pm
through Sunday. [l·,t ngl i" is
Rev. Earl Newton . Spec ial
smgmg.
Sunday, Sept. I I
RACINE - The annua l
Thursday, Sept. l
Harve st Festival will be held
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 905 3 ·Auxiliary at the St. John Lutheran
will have pizza at 6 p.m., fol- Church. 33441 Pin e Gro ve
Road, Rac ine . Worship will
lowed by 7 p.m. meeting.
be
at I0 a.m. with a ' Jlecial
Friday, Sept. 2 .
mu sic presentati Dn at II a.m .
SALEM CENTER
Meigs County Pomona and a potluck dinner .at noon .
Grange. 7:30 p.m., Star
Grange Hall , three miles north
of Salem ·center on County
Road l. Members to bring
Saturday, Sept. 3
winning c'ontesi items for
LONG
BOTTOM
judgi ng. Star Grange as hosts. Annual i·eunion of the desce nSaturday, Sept. 3
dallls of Ahraham and Marv
SALEM CENTER - Star Will Bahr. Lon g Bmtonl
Grange #77H and Star Juni or Community Cen'ter. Take
Grange #R7X, regular session :Covered dishes. pil·turc s.
with a potluck supper &lt;1t 6:30 silent aul:tion it ems and mem p.m. followed by meeting at ories. Tableware pnm dcd.
7:30 p.m. All members are Meal is at noon with games
urged to attend.
and fellowship to follmv.
HARRI SONVILLE
Sunday, Sept. 4
Harri~onville
Masonic
MASON. WVa. - Annual
Lodge. 7:30 p.m .. lodge hall. Juhnson famil y rewiio11. I
Refreshments. ,
p.m .. Masun City Park. Take
'
Monday, Sept. 5
a covered dish and item for
MASON VFW fi"st the auction .
Labor Day picnic. noon to 4
p.m. There wi ll be hamburgers and hot dogs .· as well as
games and activiti es for chilSunday, Sept. 4
dren and adults. 'Public invited. For more information cal l
POMEROY - Audra Well
(304) 773-&lt;J l&lt;J I .
will ob serve her %th birthThesday, Sept. 1\
day Sept. 4. Carqs m&lt;~ )' be
MIDDLEPORT
scm to her at Dar ~ t Private
Middleport Lodge 363. Care
33 164 .
Home ,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .. Masonic Children 's Home Ro&lt;td.
Temple. Refr.eshments.
PomeroY,. Ohio 4576Y.

Church events

Clubs and
organizations ·

Reunions ·

Birthdays

Submitted photo

Elberleld fa1nily has reunion
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Anderson, Pomeroy ; Brad
annual reunion of the and Heidi Anderson. Albany:
. Elberfeld family, descendants Brian, Brandy. Jensen and
.of Jacob B. and Katie M. Cade Anderson, Rac ine; John
Elberfe ld, was held Aug. 14, A, and Joan An derson,
at the Elberfeld Family Farm Pomeroy: . John H. Gretchen, .
at Tuppers Plains.
Jordan and Noah Anderson,
Those attending enjoyed Pomeroy; George and Mary
outdoor festivities and horse- · Morris, Pomeroy and Bonita
;back riding as well as a cov- Springs, Fla.
·erect dish dinner. The reunion
David and Sara- Deever.
:was attended by famil y mem- Westerville; Jeff, Carey.
· · :hers and friends · from . seven · Lizzie, Brian, and LeighAnn
states nnd surroundiqg areas, Ruhl , Sunbury. Ewan and
and included :
Amy Todd. Columbu s; David
· Jim and Becky Anderson; Swaim , Co lorado Spri ngs,
: Pomeroy : Jean Anderson , Colo.;
Lenore
Swaim,
:circlevi ll e: Pat. Kristen, Colorado Springs, Colo., Ed
:Andrew and Jared Gragan, Elberfeld. Colum bus; Bob
: Reno;
·Erin
Sanchez, and
Bobby
Ruhl ,
Columbus:
Lauren
E. Westerville : John , Lisa, Jacob

and
Alexandra
Deever, Ash land. Ky.; Robert R.
Columbu s: Rachael and Elizabeth. Mason . Georgia
William Downie, Jr., Racine ; and Lillian Slagel , Ironton:
Charlone
Elberfeld, Peter, Stacy, Olivia. Co llin
Pomerov ; Allan and Nora and Landon Dodgion, Wayne.
Elberfeld. Tuppers Plains: W.Va.; Barbara E. K. Dolan.
Andrea
and
Samantha Wtl¥itminster.
Md.:
Jeff,
Swartz, Grandview Heights: Jennifer and Grant Dolan,
Joel Merritt, Grandvi ew Medina ;
Bill,
Barbara ,
Bethany and Billy Brown ,
Heights.
Steve and
Beverly New Windsor. Md.; Gerry
Pomeroy;
Pete
Elberfeld, Gallipolis ; Jack . Dolan,
Rebecca and Meta Hoge, . Mahoney, Pitlsburgh , Pa.:
New Knoxville; Sian , Josh Michael
Mahoney,
and Bobby Coates. Canton; Wildwood. Pa.; Dr. David R.
Kim Polen. Canton ; John and Hall, Parkersburg. W.Va.:
Joan Slagel. Ironton ; Katie Mike and Barbara Carpenter.
lsiah Vienna. ·W.Va.; Greg and
Elder. Bradley and
Pace. Urbana. Ill. : Virginia S. ·su san .King, Mineral Wells,
Wachtman.
Pickerington.; W.Va. : Van and Carolyn Hall.
Ashton and Holden Slagel. Parkersburg. W.Va.

:Best
loser
.
~honored at
COOLVILLE - Joan Cole
was named weekly best
at
weight-loss
winner
. Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
· :Cha·pter # 2013 , coalville ·
:attended by 18 members.
· Mandee Scyoc was named
monthly
and
Charlotte
Norton was named quarterly
. best weight-loss winners .
; It was reported that seven
' members attended the work:shop sponsored by TOPS
·Chapter # 399 at. Manetta.
·Open .house, fund -raiser and
fall rally plans were discussed.
; Leader Pat Snedden ·pre: sented a program entitled
· "Got Calcium?" Tips on cal :cium-rich foods were shared.
: The group Illeet s every
' Tuesday at Torch Bapti st
Church . Weigh-in is from
· 5: 15 to 6: 15 p.nl . with a meet: ing at 6:30p.m. For infohna: tion , call Pat Snedden at 662:2633 or attend a free meeting.
•

\

'

Sale prices Good thru 9nt05

Cold
Pop

20m bouro

0

,,771:

Jewelry
complete Stock
1/Z Price ·
.'

Russell
Stover
.
Peanut Butter Ghosts
'

Reg.39¢

•7e

Only . ,

Claeys Old Fashioned. ·
Hard Candies
.

TOPS
.meeting

$71.60

Sunday

.PageA3

Readers weigh in on wife srelationship with best friend Community Calendar

Sunday

I

·• AtLtnta-ba,ed Delw Air
Lines Inc .. the nation 's thirdl arg e ~·;( carri er. has canceled
all fl ig ht; into and nul of the
Ne w Orleans and Gulfport
airport s throu gh ~1onda y.
spokeswoman Chr is Kell y
said. As for fue l. Delta is
working closel y with s uppli ~
plan s arc in place to deal with
any potcn't ial shortages.
Kell y said .
. • AMR Corp. ·s American
Ai rlines. the n a ti o n '~ hi gg~~t
carrier. cance led 3~ fl ighl' ,1 11
and out of Ne1v Orleans on
Wedn e,day. Spokesman Ti m
Smith 'aid the Fort Wort h.
Texas- based · carrier doc,n· J
ex pect to resum e ~c h ed ul ed
lli gl1h there unti l · nex t
Tuesday at the ea rli est.

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�OPiNION

The Daily Sentinel
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BY

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting thf
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 pf grievances ..
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
, Today is Thursday, Sept. I, the 244th day of 2005. There are
121 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
On Sept. I, 1939. World War II began as Nazi Germany
invaded Poland.
·
On this date:
In 1807. fonncr Vi-=e President Aaron Burr was found innocent of treason.
In 1878, Emma M. Nutt became the first female telephone
operator in the United States, for the Telephone Despatch Co.
of Boston.
In 1905. 100 years ago. Alberta and Saskatchewan entered
Confederation as the eighth and ninth provinces of Canada.
In 1.923. the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Yo ohama were
devastated by an earthquake that claimed some 50.000 lives.
In 1932, New York City Mayor James· J "Gentleman
Jimmy" Walker resigned following charges of aft and cor· ·
ruption in his administration.
In 1945, Americans received word of Japan 's formal surrender that ended World· War II. (Because of the time differem;e.
it was September 2 in Tokyo Bay: where the ceremony took
place.)
In 1951, the United States, Austmlia and New Zealand
signed a mutual defense pact, the ANZUS treaty.
In 1961, the Soviet Union ended a moratorium on atomic
testing with an above-ground nuclear explosion in central Asia.
In 1972. American Bobby Fischer. won the international
chess crow n in Reykjavik. Iceland, defeating Boris Spassky of
the Soviet Union.
In 1983. 269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines
Boeing 747 was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner entered Soviet airspace.
Ten years ago: A ribbon-cutting. ceremony was held for the
Rock and. Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio.
Five years ago: President Clinton deferred a decision on
whether to develop a missile defense system to hi s successor.
One year ago: 'More than I ,000 people were taken hostage
by heavily am1ed Chechen militants at a school in Beslan in
southern Russia; more than 330, mostly children, were eventually killed in three-day ordeal. Militants in Iraq freed seven
employees of a Kuwaiti trucking fi1JII after their employer paid
$500,000 in ransom. The criminal case against Kobe Bryant
case collapsed as prosecutors in Colorado dropped a sexual
assault charge against the NBA star.
Today's Birthdays: Former Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird is 83. Actress Yvonne De Carlo is 83. Former Texas
Governor Ann Richards is 72. Conductor Seiji Ozawa is 70.
Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin is 66. Actor Don Stroud is 62:
Singer Archie Bell is 61. Rock musician Greg Errico is 59.
Singer Barry Gibb is 59. Talk show host Dr. PhiJ .McGraw is
55. Singer Gloria Estefan is 48. Former White House Press
Secretary Dee Dee Myers is 44. Jazz musician Bbney James is
44. Singer-musician Grant Lee Phillips (Grant Lee Buffalo) is
44. Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison is 41. Rap OJ
Spigg Nice (Lost Boyz) is 35. Actor Ricardo Antonio Chavira
("Desperate Housewives'') is 34. Actor Scott Speedman is 30.
Thought for Today: "Nothing succeeds, they say, like success. And cenainly nothing fails like failure." -· Margaret
Drabble, British author.

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Local Briefs

Meigs County
. . . '53.55
' 107.1o
.12.14.21

NOAM SCHEIBER

In 1993 , the journalist
·Jonathan Rauch published
a book call ed ''K indly
Inquisitors.'' in which h~
catalogued contemporary
to
the
threats
Enli ghtenment tr~dition of
seeking truth through logi cal or empirical discourse .
One of Rauch 's points was
that , while this (c lassical )
libe'ral system · for amas sing knowledge appeared to
be under attack from both
the religiou s right and the
multicultural' left. ·in fact
the two groups were muking a version of the same
argument : Marn stream :science didn't accord their
beliefs the respect they
deserved. whether it was
creation science on the one
hand or fe mini st or Afrocentric science on the
other.
Rauch' s book has held
up rema rkably well in the
12 years since it was published. This is particularly
so in light of the current
debate over intdli ge nt
design (ID) - the id~a.
popular on the right, that
life is too complex to hav e
resulted from randon1 vtuiation. Even Pres ident Bush
ha s suggesied , as the creation sc ienti sts (a nd multi culturalists) of th e 1980s
and 1990s did before him,
that both sides of the sup·
posed debate ' be treated as
legitimate in public sc hool
cu·rricula . .
But there was one thing
Rauch didn ' t anticipate. At
the time, he sugges ted that ,
eve n thou gh creationist s
had adopted the tacti cs of
the academic left - the
demand fur equal time they still beiieved in objective truths. They just didn't·
think all of these truths
were discoverable by sci ence. By contrast. today 's
IDers have gone further
and adopted lhe epistemology of the left .- the idea
that ostensibly scie ntific
truths may be ·relative.

Tbe ~nimating principle
of the postmodern left is
the notion that tluth follows . from powe·r and not
from its .intrinsic rightness.
It's a conc,eit that began in
the human ities but eventually spread ·to hard sciences like physics. ''The
point is that neither ' logic
nor mathematics escapes
the contaminati6 n of the
social. " as postmodern
.POoh-bah
Stanley
Aronowitz has put it. What
makes this approach so
radical is it s implication
that the way to win intel lectually is to win politi ·
call y.
In making th ei r arguments, the postmoderni sts
rely heavily 'on the work of
hi storian s of science like
Thomas Kuhn. It was
Kuhn
who
famously
arg ued
that
scientific
..knowledge proceeds as a
seque nce of . "pa radi gm
shifts" - revolutions in
the way we understand the
Wl&gt;rld- and that the shift s
oc cur not sim ply when the
evide nce in favor of the
new paradigm becomes
overwhelming, but when
the people invested in the
old paradigm are in some
sense defeated (w hi ch may
not occur until long after
they 're proved wrung).
Mainstream scie nce has
taken from Kuhn the belief
that evidence and logic are
necessary, if not quite suf·
ficrent, conditions for a
paradi gm shift and that, .in
the long , run , suc'cess iv e
shifts' bring society closer
to objective truth. Where
the postmodernists go
awry is in tlieir emphasis
·on Kuhn's re lativism.
Unfortunately,
th ese
postmodernist ideas have
become a staple of the ID
movement. As laid out i1l a ·
strategic memo produced
Seattle-based
by
the
Discovery Institute, the
leading backer of intelli ge nt design. '"Charles
Darwin, Karl Marx and
Sigmund Freud portrayed

humans not as moral and
spiritua l beings, but as animal s or machines who
inhabited a universe ruled
by
purely
impersonal
forces." There was nothing
particularly
objective
about this view, according
h? the JOers. In stead ,
applying the same reading
of Kuhl1 that the postmodernists embrace, they argue
that it was simp ly the
result of a political struggle between insurgents and
the estab lishment. (In fact,
the IDers frequently ci te
Klthn to this effect.)
Probably
the
c learest
example of this comes
courtesy of Bruce K.
C hapman, the Discovery
In stitute' s president. "A ll
ideas that ach ieve a so rt of
uniform acceptance ulti mately fall apart, whether
it's in the scie nces or phi·
losophy or politics, after a
few people keep knocking
away at it," he recently
told The New York Times.
But tluit 's nlit s. Germ theory. t:elativity, the idea that
the Earth is round - with
apologies
to
Tom
Fric'dman, the fact that all
have' withstood the occasional 'challenge suggests
that truth counts for somethin g.
Chap man might protest
that he's simply proposing
a more accurate a'lternative
to evo lution , the sa me way
Darwin proposed a more
accurate alternative to creationism. But ID isn't a
new theory, just a new
attempt to advance an old
one. with so n1e ne»' empirical claims thrown in for
good . measure. Scientists
can discredit ID using the
exact sa me evidence they
used to debunk creationism. Once you realize this,
it 's no longer possi ble to
interpret Chapman as
echoing the belief in a
steady progre ssion toward
truih.
Like all conservatives, of
course, the !Ders claim to
dec ry relativism and to

embrace absolutes. But ,'
for them, the claim is logically incoherent in a way it
wasn ' t when it came from
thei r creationist predeces·sors. When a proposition is
empirically false, as both
creationi sm and ID (to the
extent that it. make s empirical claims) are, you're
free to assert' its truth; you
just can' t call it science.
The creationists had no
problem with this; they
just rejected any science
.that contradicted the Bible.
But the IDers aspire to scientific
truth.
Unfortunately, the only
way to claim that something empirically false is
scientifically true . is to
question science's capacity
for sorting out truth from
falsehood, the same way
postmodernist s do.
. Conservatives
were
quick to point out the danger of this view in the '80s
and '90s. They argued that
a science that rejected the
idea of truth was vulnerable to tl)e most inane forms
of intellectual hucksterism.
And they were right. It's
not hard to imagi'ne scams
like cold fuston or the
Scientologist critique of
psychiatric drugs gaining
, ground in a world where
science's ability to identify
knowledge has been undermined.
Americans don ' t like
thinkin g of themselves as
backward. As a re sult, the
ri sk from scie nce-rejecting
creationists hasn't · been
particularly acute in recent
decades. But most people
don ' t have very strong
views on the philosophy of
science. If, unlike the post·
modern left , the ID movement can enlist mainstream
conservatives in questioning science's capacity to
produce objective truth,
'then it 's by no means dear
the effort 'won't succeed.
' In that case, it will end up
threatening a whole .Jot
more than just evolutio n.

Democrats show signs of life on Iraq
States will remain in Iraq ·
indefinitely to guar'antee
th e securlty of an Islamic
state a llied with Iran.
Meanwhile,
most
Democrats agree with the
Gene
que sti on put by former
Lyons
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart
i!j a recent Washington
Post column: "(W)hat will
history say about an opposit ion party that stands
sive patriotism ." .
si
lent while all thi s goes
Rooting for America to
succeed in lr&lt;1q? As in on?"
Many have begun to
rooting for the Chicago
Cubs to win the National despair of leadership from
League Central? The bitter the aforementioned U.S.
truth is that we're far senators, all of whom
beyond that. Moreoyer, the vo ted in favor ·of giving
cultural climate is very Bush a blank check on
different. Try as they may, Iraq back .in October 2002,
right -wing
talk
radio and can't ,bring them se lves
savants can't turn grievi ng to adm it they were bam ·
,.
mother turned antiwar pro- boozled .
But there 's at least one
tester Cindy Sheehan into
name-brand
Democrat who
another "Hano i Jane "
Fonda. Partly be•ause wasn ' t obliged to vote in
there 's no military draft, 2002. and whose patrioth ere are no mnbs of ti sm is hard to question :
"Flower Children" chanti· Gen. Wesley. Clark. , Maybe
ng slogans i1i support of that 's why the former
Saddam Hussein or bar- NATO supreme commander and neophyte 2004
baric Iraqi insurgents.
Polls show that · mo st presidential candidate ha s
Americans have made the tak en · the lead . Beginning
basic di stincti on DLC with a trenchant column iii
thinkers feared would the Washington Post and a
escape them. Recent sur- sub se quent appearance on
veys ~ how that the majori -' •NBC New's ' "Meet the
ty. understands that invad- Pcess, ·• Clark has begun a
ing Iraq on a false pretext . calculated assa ult on the
• has made th e nation not Bush administration's Iraq
less, but more vu ln.e.rable· policy from the ·right arid
to AI Qaeda. weak.e ning left simultaneously.
"More than half the
the lJ.S . military. draining
American
people now
the Trea sury. alienating
America 's natural allies be li eve that ·the invasion
among the world 's dem&lt;K-. of Iraq was a mistake ,"
racies, and sowing Arab Clark writes. " They're
fanaticism like &amp;agon ' s right. B.ut it would also be
a mistake to pull out now.
teeth.
Many see llush's famou s or to start pulling out or to
" resolut.e ne ss'' for what it set a date ce rtain for
is: a stubborn ii1ability · tl&gt; pullmg out. In stead 'we
admit error or compromise need a strategy to create a
with rea lit y. And they ' re ·stable , democratizing and
beg inning to wonder if it 's pcacel\ tl state in Iraq - a
the admini stration'
progre:-.- really possibl e the 1.J nited &gt;tratc~y
•
c

Don ' t hold your breath.
but Demo crats· may be
showing signs of life in
the national d~bate over
Iraq . For most of three
years, 'including Sen. John
Kerry's presidential ~.am­
paign. party leaders have
appeared fearful of challenging .George W. Bush 's
belligerent bungling. They
haven't wanted · voters to
mi stake them for · George
McGovern , the WWII
bomhe•r pilot and 1972
Democratic presidential
candidate who made the
mi stake of being right
about Vietnam too soon.
Now that may be changing . As recently as July,
the party. es tabli shment
worried that American s
couldn 't be trusted to
make elementary · distinc·
tions. Writing in the
Democratic
Leadership
Council 's ·
"Blueprint
Magazine," Will Marshall
opined that while "(i)ntellectually. of course, it 's
possible to separate Iraq
and the war on terror,"
Democrat ~ needed to be
wary le st voters mi stake
them for anti-American
hippi e pacifists.
"(A)s th e opposition
• party, " Marshall wrvte
"Demo~rats
~aye
·a
. responsib ility to hold the
White House accoUntable
for the painfully .h iih price
we've paid in lrftq, the
thou sand s
killed and
wounded. and the billions
of dollars spent. But the y
must do so in a way that
· make s it cl ear the y are
rootin g for America to
succeed in l r~q . " .
Marshall urged th e party
to heed th e ~xample of
Sens . Joe Biden. John
Kerry. Evan · Ba yh a nd
Hillary · Rudham Clinton .
"who have set an exymp le'
for

rcspon~ i hle.

has failed to develop and
articulate."
Clark lays down what he
ca\ls "a three-pronged
strategy: diplomatic , political and military" · to deal
with realitie s the Bush
administration ignored in
its half-baked belief that
American · invaders would
be greeted by flower-to ssing throngs. Almost none ,
frankly, have any ' likelihood of being enacted.
Hire
I 0,000
ArabAmerican
translators?
Convene a regional security• council to hash things
out with Iraq' s neighbor.&amp;,
i.e. Iran, Syria. Turkey,
Saudi Arabia, etc.? Not
gonna happen.
·.
And 'then? "If the administration won't adopt a
winning strategy," Clark
writes "then the American
people will be justified in
demanding that it bring
our troops home ."
. He 'doesn '.t pretend that
would be a good thing.
Asked in an online forum
about the consequences of
retreat, Clark concedes
that "(a) n exit that leave s
behind violence, chaos and
civi l war\\'ill be viewed as
a clear American defeat.
And, it will supercharge
terrorists
recruiting ,
increase problems for
American diplomacy .. .
and increase the danger
· closer to home. " ' ·
What Clark only implies
is that tactical' retreat may
end up being the least bad
option .
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Ga~ette column ist Gene
Lyons is a national maga·
:ine award winner and ·co·
auth h1-. nf " The H,unting of
the
President"
(St.
Martin 's Press, 2000). You·
C(l/1 e-mail Lyon.&lt; at genelyons @sbcglo!Jal.net. )

The Daily
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GOODWRL CEI.EBRATES

ARY

No skin tests

.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

"

Thursday, September 1, 2005

With intelligent design,
conservatism has gone postmodern
.

The ·Daily Sentinel
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Thursday, September 1, 2005

PageA4

POMEROY - The Meigs County Tubercul~sis Clinic will
not administer skin tests on Friday. The clinic will be closed on
Sept. 5 for LabQr Day and will be open until 6 p,.m. on Sept. 6.

-

FAMILY MEDICINE -

Modern lupus therapy means
nonnallifespan for most sufferers ·

'I

Question: My dn.:tor thinks
I might have lupus becauS'e of
a chronic rash I have on my
face. She &lt;.:ailed it a butterfl y
rash across my nose and
· cheek s. She want s Ill do several lab tests and says she
will know some rh ing in a
week or so. No one in mv
family has ever had anything
like this. Can you tell me
more about lupus and what
else might &lt;.:a use this rash?
Answer: Lupus is I0 times
more common in women than
· in men. It is also more common in Nati ve Americans:
African Americans, Hispanic
Americans
and
Asian
American s. This disease
starts in the yo ung adult
years. with the onset ltOUally
before age 60.
There are ·two major type s
o.f lupu s. cutaneous lupu s
and systemi&lt;.: lupus erythe·
matosus (S LE) . Cutaneous
lupus affects only the skin .
SLE, on the other hand , can
involve man y different organ
syste ms. The butterlly rash
that your doctor described.
can be a presenting symptom
of both cutaneous lupu s and
. SLE. So me Rat ie nts with
lupu s also ha ve a coinshaped or oval-shaped rash
on areas of the skin that are
exposed . to su nlight. This is
called u discoid rash. There
are other types, and subtypes , of lupus. inc luding a
very rare one induced by cer·
tuin medications.
Cutaneous lupus is usually
less serious and more easily
. treated than SLE. Howeve r,
in about .I 0 percent of the
cases. people with cutaneous
. lupus . eventually develop
full-blown SLE. At this time.
there is no way to predict
who will experience this progression and who will not.
Lupus is classi fied as an
autoimmune disorder without a kn own cause. While· the
immune syste m is supposed
to protect the body from for·
eign invader~ like bacteria
and viruses. in certain diseases the body is unable to
tell the difference between its
own tissues and foreign tis\ sues . In these conditions,
unfortun ate ly, the' body
makes antibodies against
it se lf. Lupus is a prime
example of this type of disor. der. It is a chronic autoimmune disease that can cause
the body's defense mecha·
nisms to attack its own
organs .. In the cutaneous

form, this is confined to the
skin, but in SLE, many organ
systems may be a.ttacked,
including heart, lungs blood,
brain, joints and skin.
Lupus is commonly called
''the great imitator" because
its symptoms are notHpecific. and it is easily confused
with other illnesses. The
most common symptoms are
achy joints, swollen joints,
fever and fatigue. Twentyfive percent of people with
lupu s never have the "classic" butterfly facial rash that
you have. These symptoms
are also known to come and
go, so people often do not
seek medical advice l!arly in
,the illness .
.
Treatment
for
lupus
depends on the type and the
severity of the problem.
M0st people are managed
with non-steroidal .antiinflammatory medication,
but others need steroids and,
sometimes, immunosuppressive medications. This ill ·
ness is not contagious and
currently is not believed to
run in families.
The good news is that with
close medical management
and ,good treatment, most
people with lupus can now
.expect to live a normal lifespan . In fact, less than 20
percent of lupus patients
will die as a result of having
thi s disease.
It sounds like your physician is doing a great job of
investigating your rash. Be
sure to follow her advice for
medications and follow up
evaluations. You can also
find additional reliable information
at
the
Lupus
Foundation of America Web
site: www.lupus.org.
Family Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
0/tio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P. 0.
Box JlO, Athens, Ohio
45701, or via. e-mail to
read erqu e stion s @jam ilymedicinenews.org. Medical
information in this ·Column
is provi4ed · as an educational service only. It does
not replace the judgment
of your personal ph)'sician,
who should be relied on to
dia.gnose and recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns
are available online at
· ww w.familymedicin enews.org.

.

·

.• .

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", .

,.

·' '

..

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,;

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I 1•'

' t' ,,..

t•·.,.tt ..,; - · ·

,I

·

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·

Beth Sergentjpl1oto

Goodwill Industries of Middleport celebrated their first anniversa ry yesterday with prize and food giveaways.. "We wanted to
thank the.community," Lenore Mason, executive directo.r of Goodwill Industries of Southern Ohto Inc. said . "Without co'mmuni·
ty suppor t we are not viable." The Mtddleport store has two full-t ime employees and one part-time employee. The store also
works with the Meig&gt; County Department of Jobs and Family Services tn allowing community servtce and mature servtce workers to work at the store for their benef1ts. Ptctured from left is Mason. Kathy Ftfe, store manager, Frances Tl10mas. employee.
Bertha Miller, assistant man ager. The sto(e . which op"'rates on community donations. is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.. Monday
through Saturday.

Martha Stewart to remove ankle bracelet, regaining her freedom
• BY VERENA DOBNIK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Matt l1a
Stewart was fin ally give n the
signal to step into the future
- on a lighter foot. ·
With a smile on her face,
she told The Associated Press
the irritating electronic ankle
brace let would come off at
12:05 a.m. Thursday. in the
first minutes of the first day
·when she was freed from
house arrest.
The prospect of being rid
of the device filled her with
"nervous excitement," she
told the AP on Wednesday.
For more than five months
of · home confinement including a three-week extension for violating unspecified
probation rules - the monitoring device was her constant companion, broadcast·
AP Photo
ing a signal to federal authorMarth
a
Stewart
shows
off
her
electronic
monitonng
bracelet
in.
response
to
a
question
during
ities who could track her
a
news
conference
as
executive
producer
Mark
Burnett,
center,
and
prestdent
and
CEO
of
every move.
.
In one Internet chat with Martha Stewart Liv1ng Omnimedta, Susan Lyne, right, look on Thur s da~. Aug. 25 in New Yo rk.
fans, she said: "'I hope none Stewart can remove the monitoring bracelet early today afte r comptet1ng the home conf111ement
of you ever has to wear one .:· portt on of her sentenQe. Stewar t was sentenced in 2004 to five mont11s in prison anti ftve
Stewart, 64. was sentenced mont11s of house arrest after she was convicted of lying to authorities abo ut her 2001 sale ol
last year to five month s about 4.000 shares of lmCione Systems Inc. stock.
behind bars and five months
Any further monitoring of whene,·er req ue&gt;ted &lt;tnd sllh·
of house arre.st after she was releasing someone from the
conv icted of lying to authori - device· at end of hou se arrest. Stewart would be by the mit . month!) reports llll het
"We advise the offender in ' reporters and photographers a(.'l•i\·iues.
.
'
ties about her 2001 sale of
De
sp
it
~
the electronic
who
have
followed
her
since
advance
that,
unless
they
oth·
about 4,000 shares of
Stc\1'&lt;11'1
ha, _ heen
shackle
.
erw
ise
hear
from
us.
at
12:0·1
she
was
re
leased
fro
m
a
fedlmCione Systems Inc. stock .,
active.
especially
\\ ith her
tun
.
they
can
cut
the
bracelet
eral prison five month s ago.
Chri s 'Stanton. the chi ef
She wt ll be on prl.\l&gt;miun llagship mat!,tzine. \lart h&lt;t
over 10 points higher at each federal probation officer in oil - it 's just a rubber band."
he
said.
Then.
"all
monitorfor
a year and a hdlf. meaning Stewart Li,·mg. "hen.~ ~he..• \
grade level.
·
New York . said there was a
among other th ings that she ts been \\THing ahuut cno km~
for ing will &lt;·case. ''
procedure
The only other districts in standard
southeastern
Ohio
achieving
·
not. allowed to get drunk. own mu ~sds . chno:-.ing p.tim CLll from PageA1
an effective rating thi s year
a gun or leave the fede r&lt;tl or.... ..,jftln~ fll)llf &lt;llld deterline for $2.69 per gallon.
Amberger jok ed that he court district 1for her other minim.! ,,-J;ether H';L... t i..; i·t L·~h
t areas· of reading and writing, are Athens City, Gallipolis
Nn,~· she'll ·h~ C \ t~n more
wou ld have to take out a loan homes in Conn·ecticut. Maine
and Superintendent Rick City and Warren Local in
to pay the $-+0 It took to fill and the Hampto ns on Long ' isibk .
Edwards said those are sub- Washington County. High
., from Page A1
up his tank . .
" ~lanha." her SlndicateJ
Island . for example) withou t
jeers which are particularly schools in those districts and
"I
guc~s
my
wife
and
I
are
permission. She must meet \\'Ct•kda~ JifCSI! k:-. ~how. flrl' emphasized, especiall y in the · Marietta High School also the best deal and to wait their
g;iing to ha ve to go to with her probation officer mierl'S Sept. I 2
received effective ratings.
elementary leveL .
turn in long lines at the pump . McDon nld s instead of ·!he
"Our students have tradiEdwards said the Eastern
Paul Amberger of Syrac;pse Wildhorse." he laughed.
. tionally ilone well in reading perforn'tance scores are proof
Amberger. "h n is " retired
and writing, and J think th at's that higher teacher salaries do waited in line to fill up hi s
mini
van
yesterday
morning
t:o
n ~:~ rructTon worker. !'aid that
because we' ve been aware of not make for better teachers.
at
the
Exxon
on
West
Main
if
he
were sti ll wmlin~ he 'd
the importance of ge tting stu"We have people doing
have
to ha ve a scpar;~e job
Street
which
at
the
time
still
dents started early in their great things for less and the .
sc hool careers in thm l! sub- proof is in these scores." had re gu lar unleaded gaso- JUSt to pay the g&lt;~s hill.
~lu ~t~ 1-'o' C h.u k~ S1n'tl"l' • I 't ,, , h1. l &lt;'l' \.\.lith
jects." · Edwards said. "A Edwards said. "Our teachers
grea! deal of time is spent in · do great things every day and
Saturday, Sept. 3
\h-1:'" l: knh.'llUr~
the early grades on those they're not compensated as
7:00p.m.
Sd1 ~ ·~ 11
areas, and we also offer after· : well as teachers in other areas
·
Sunday,
Sept.
4
:-\t
!{:, I ~-l
school and supplemental pro- ·of the state."
~
~
.
2:00
pm
&amp;
7:00
pm
R
uti.tn~l.
\111
"It's proof that Eastern stugrams to boost those skills."
Put A Stop to ReRl- Nights And Get A Maruess
The weakest areas for · dents are gett ing as good an
·
Dream
Eastern students - . and most education, or better, than
RESTONIC PILLOW SOFT
RESTONIC SMOOTH TOP
T1d..L'L\ ;\\ .ul.tllk .1 1:
·Student s around the state nearly any in the state." ,
Sy r Warr,'\nty
lyr. W.urnntv
Pum ~o'TU\ ·
are mathematics and sci·
(Editor's Note: Siilte report
Twin Set
$Zl900
$14'1 00
Twin S&lt;&gt;t ..
Farm ~._·r:- IL\11\..
ence, but Edwards noted that . card.s fof all Oh,io school dis·
$ ['l'l 00
rull Set
$279.00
Full Set
Oan·..,
the
elementary student tricts and school . buildings
$}()t)(X)
Q ut&gt;&lt;n '&gt;e!
. ....... $329.00
S\\ 1-., hn &amp; L nh~1..'
Q Ue&lt;'ll Sci.
scores in those areas were all are available o11line at
~l . dJil' l)\11'1 '
higher than ever this year, www.ode.oh.state.us.)
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"As the population grows
and life spans increase •.there
-will be n10re and more victim s of Alzheimer Disease.
Whether being taken care of
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care facilities . wandering will

always be a problem," said
Lane. "That's why it's important that we get thi.ngs in
place." She noted the prediction is for an increase from
the four million victims today
to 14 million by 2020.
The plan is to have all eight
counties in the Distriet 8 Area
Agency on Aging up and running with Project Lifesaver
by the end of this year.

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•

I

'

�.

WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Page A~
Thursday, September t,

2005

•

Stampede .in Baghdad kills hundreds of Shiite pilgrims, many women and children
The ceremonies have often
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
been chaotic, with huge
crowd~ oyenaxing the ability
BAGHDAD.
Iraq
or police and security ser.Panicked by mmor; of a suiV IC CS
to protect them .
cide bomber. thousam.b of
Televisi•&gt;n reports said abo~t
'Shiite pilgrims broke into a
I million pilgrims frorp
StaJ11pcde on ll bridge during ll
Baghdad
and
outlying
religious .
procession '
provinces had gathered near
WednesdHy. crushrng one
. the shrine on Wednesday.
another or plunging 30 ket into
Rctlecting ·the confu sion,
the muddy 'Tigri., river. Ahout
t"asua lty ligures frpm various
800 died. mostly women and ·
govcmment age ncies also.
children. ofti&lt;.:ials 'ltid.
varied wide ly. The Hea lth
Humhds of lo't sandals litMini stry sa id 769 people
tered the two-lane bridge
were ki lied and 307 woun\i··d. ,., hilc th e Interior
whil.e children lloundercd in
the waters below, tryi ng to
Ministry put the figure at 844
reach dry land. The tragedy
dead an. 1 ·158 injured: Th,e
t'O;Inlr~ · .t,iggd Shiite pa.rty
was the single biggest lo~s of
.life known in Iraq since the
gave fi g••:: s of 759 dead a~d
March 2003 U.S.·led invasion .
300 wuuilllcd. Other reports
"We heard that a &gt;tricide
estimated the death toll
attacker was among the
would climb above I .000.
'' Pu shing started when a
crowd:· sHid Fadhel Ali. 28.
barefoot and snaking wd on
rumor was sprc;td by a terror·
the riverbank. "Evcryhody was
ist who claimed that ther;e
·ye lling, so I jumped from the
was a person with an explq.hriclge into the ri ver. swam and
sive · helt, which caust;d
reached the 'bank. I saw
panic," Interior Mini s t~r
women. chi ld ren and Clld men
Bayn Jabr sa id . ''Some fell
tirlling after me into the wmer."
from the bridge. others fell \)n
The nuwd was on c d ~e
the barricades" and were
because of the II 0-dcgree
trampled to death.
•
1\P Photo
heat. a mortar barrage ncar Shiite pilgrims react as they walk past piles of shoes an.d debris at the bridge leading to the shrine in the Baghdad's Kazimiyah
No official offered any evithe Shiite shrine where tliev district : Wednesday. Panic engulfed thousands of Shiites marching across a bridge in a religious procession after rumprs spread dence that Sunni insurgents
,were headed and the ever:· · that a suicrde bomber' was about to attack. triggering a stampede that killed at least 648 people. It was the srngte biggest con- were directly responsible h.Jr
present fear of. su icide firmed toss of life in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion.
spreading the fal se rumor. ,
·
·
bombers. etched in to nw r11o·
Score·s of bodie.s covereD
•
ries after repeated attacks · edge of the Imams bridge, al-Dulaimi, a Sunni, ;aid tc..:t the lives of citizens and memorating the death in the with white sheets lay on th,e
age:tinst largl: n.:li.g iuu:-, gather- which has been closed to · three suicide bombers were organize their processions," year 799 of Imam Moussa sidewalk outside one hospit.ul
ings. Seven peoplE' dicJ in th e civilians for months to prc- stojlped Wednesday some Iraqi Comlnunist Party leader ibn Jaafar al-Kadhim. one of und er the broiling sup
mortar barral!L' th n:c hours venr movement by extremists distance from the shrine, but Hameed Majid Mousa told Al- the 12 principl e Shiite saims bepruse the morgue was
before th e stan1pede. the IJ.S. between the Shiite neighbor- "blew themselves up before Arabiya television. "We all who is buri ed in a mosque in packed. Many or them were
military said .
hood o( Kazimiyah and th e reaching their destination."
know that there are terrorists the northern Baghdad ·neigh· women in black gowns. as
Police later said they found Sunni district of Azamiyah
well as children and old men.
State
Department who lie in wait for such ·events borhood of Kazuniyah .
no explosives at the bridge --·. across the ri ver.
Sobbing relatives wan spokesman Sean McCormack and prepare to ambush the
Since the 2003 ousier of
either on any individual .nr in
among the dead, lift dered
·This trage dy was the direct said in Washington tha,t he people . ... Why are the proces- Saddam Hussein , a Sunni , the
uny ca rs parkeJ nearby . result of terrorism: hundreds was not aware of any·, evi- sions not organized?" .
Shiite politil:al parties have . ing the sheet~ to try to iden Instead. poor cruwd control of inn ocent peopl e, mostly dence that the stampede on
President
Jalal encouraged huge turn ou ts at tify their kin. When the y
Iraqi
and the climate of fear in Iraq women anJ children, have the bridge was caused by a Talabani, a Kurd, told state- rel ig ious fe stivals to display found them. they would
after years of bu llets. bomb- died because of the fear ·and suicide bombing.
mn Iraqiya television that "the the majorit y sect's: power in . shriek in grief. pound their
ings and bloodshed appeareJ panic that terrorists are sowOthers blamed the govern - government should take mea- the new Iraq. Sunni religious c hests or co llapse to the
largely to have c;wsecl the ing in Iraq:· NATO Secretary· ment and the . U.S. -trained sures foi an honest investiga- extremists have often target· gro und , sobbing.
horrific carna~e.
Prime Minister Ibrahim aiGeneral Jaap de Hoop security forces.
tion to determine how failures ed the gatherings to foment
Marchers j;;mmed up at a Sc:heftcr said in a statement.
·"Early 'security measures doubled the casualties:"
se&lt;:tarian war. but that has not Jaafari , a Shiite. dedared a ·
.checkpoint ·at th e western
Defense Minister Saadoun should have been taken to proThe marchers were com- stopped the Shiites.
rhree-duy mourning period .

Bv TERRY

'

:Enceph~itis

killing children in Asia who have no access to vaccines

Bv MARGIE MASON
AP MEDICAL WRITER

HANOI. Vietnam - A
·Japanese encephalitis out'break that ha s killed hun. dreds of children in no[l hern
India and Nepal in recent
weeks has no cure or etfective treatment. It is easily preventable , but the necessary
'vaccines are simply not avail·
:ilble to millions .
The disease : has overwhelmed hospitals in Uttar
Pradesh. India \ most pupulous state, since an outbreak
began there l;rst montn. tl(lore
than 400 have died and about
I, I00 oth ers remain hospital ized . Blindin g headache,,
seizure,. nausea and high
fever usuall y precede death .
Last weei- in the state c:1pital
of Lucknow. a rickshaw driver's 6-year-old son died in hi'
father's arms. gasping for :.
breath DUtsidc a government
hospital. There were no bed'
and not enough doctors tn help
in the Dven:rowded facility. ·
"We can understand the
angtrish of &lt;I father. But what
Glll we do·&gt;" "'ked Dr. Anurag

Yadav, a physician at the hospital. "We do not have space
to admit any more children."
On Wednesday, health ofticial.) in India said 41 children
had died in the previous 24
hours. raising the country\
death toll to 308.
In Nepal. the disease has
also been spreading since April
in the country's south, across
the border from Uttar Prddesh.
Nearly 100 have died there.
About 50.000 cases of
Japanese encephalitis we
recorded each year, according
to · the
World
Health
Organization. Of the surviv urs. up to 75 percent suffer
disabilities. including paralysis and mental retardation.
Thotrgh c,losely related to
We,! Nile virus, this illness
isn't as widely known as
other mo&gt;~iuitu-borne discases such as malaria or
dengue fever. It is found only
in Asia and kills about 15,()()()
people each year.
A Chinese vaccine. made
from~ weakened fonn of the
virus. has been used widely
within tf\C communist country
'ince 19RR. Last year. about

200 deaths were reported
nationwide there, according to
the Chinese Ministry of Health.
Dr. Scott B. Halstead. an
Americw1 research director at
the Pediatric Dengue Vaccine
Initiative, has seen its promise
. firsthand . He conducted a study
in Nepal that showed one injection of the Chinese vaccine was
effective almost immediately
with no side effects.
So far only South Korea,
Nepal and Sri Lanka have
licensed the Chinese vaccine,
but it is still not being widely
used in many places there.
The United States and many
other nations, including India,
rely on limited supplies of
another vaccine ·derived from
mice brains. It is more ex pen·
sive, causes more side effects.
and requires multiple doses
and at least a month to take
effect; said Dr. Julie Jacobson ,
director of . the . Japanese
Encephalitis Project at the
U.S.-based nonprofit PATH .
No Japanese encephalitis
vaccines have been added to
the WHO's prequalified list .
which keeps U.N. agencies
from procuring them and

may also deter some countries from licensing them.
"If the product is oot pre·qualitied, it doesn't mean you
cannot use it. It doesn' t mean
the product is bad." said the
WHO 's Joachim Hombach in
Genev!t. "It just means we
l1ave not seen it."
Halstead . urged affected
countries not to wait for the
WHO's endorsement but to
license the Chinese vaccine
now and begin Immunizing
children in high-risk areas.
"Here
with Japanese
encephalitis. you've got a
vaccine that really works," he
said. "There's no need to
sputter or procrastinate."
Japanese encephalitis is
spread mostly from pigs to people via mosquitos. Annual outbreaks occur across Asia. often
near rice paddies after water is
left .following monsoon rains.
Like polio, only about I in 250
people infected ever develop
symptoms. Japanese encephali tis has also expanded, reaching
northern Australia in the 1990s.

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Focus shifts to Gulf Coast after Katrina remnants leave Ohio
BY JAY COHEN

KI~~EY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI ·- Traffic
through the Port of New
Orleans is going to take a big
'hit becau se of Hurricane
' Katrina, dismpting shipments
Of produce and fuel and possibly backing tip barge traffic .
"Our rivers are truly a system. When you have something happen to one·part of the
·system, it impacts the whole
thing," said David Smith, port
&gt;aptain with Madison Coal &amp;
Supply in Charleston, W.Va.
· ~adiso n charters the towAP Photo
boats that push barges loaded
.
A
barge
moves
up
the
Ohio
River,
Wednesday
in
Cincinnati.
with coal ; iron ore and grain.
Smith, a third-generation Traffic through the Port of New Orleans is going to take a big
' Piverman , spent more than 25 hit because of Hurricane Katrina. interrupting produce ship'years as a pi lot and made ments ·and possibly backing up barge traffic.
many runs to New Orleans.
Other businesses said they
"The city that I'm familiar Mitchell said. "We did not send
the
ship
into
harm's
way."
still assessin_g the
were
with ... I just can't fathom the
He said al,l 20 employees had · damage.
·
destruction," Smith sa id. " It
been
accounted
for,
and
now
·
Akron-based
Goodyear
-Kind of shakes you to your
Chiquita could concentrate on Tire &amp; Rubber Co.. the
foundation."
nation 's largest tiremaker,
' Smith said it was too early the business of bananas.
"We
want
to
try
to
avoid
has
factorie s in Gadsden and
' for Madison ro know what
any
service
disruptions,
and
Decatur,
Ala. , but they were
effects the fuel di sruption
we think we can do that," not in the hurricane's path .
' \Viii have on its business.
Spokesman Keith Pri ce
' About 95 percent of the Gulf Mitchell said.
to
rebuild
its
said
the company had not
Chiquita
plans
of Mexico's oil output was out
·of service due to storm dam- facilities at Gulfport, which determined whether th ere
' age. according to the U.S. handled about 25 percent of might be any long . te rm
company's
banana impact with getting raw mateMinerals
Management the
rials to those plants. or if there
Service. Nearly live million imports to the U.S. last year.
Sluzewski,
spokesman
wiH be any retail im pact.
Jim
~ barrels of production have
The shutdown of pipelines
'!Seen lost since Friday because for Federated pepartment
' bf the storm and the shutdown Stores in Cincinnati, said the that carry fuels to East Coast
company does not depend on markets means that more gaso·
·Of eight refmeries.
· · The nation's largest banana shipments of goods through Iine and diesel wi II have to be
distributor. Cincinnati-based · the Port of New Orleans. But it shipped by barge and by truck,
·Chiquita Brands International. does have about 400 employ- ,according to John Eichberger.
director of motor fuels at the
v;ill temporarily shift opera- ees at stores in the area.
·"We have two Macy's Nat.ional
Association
of
· tions from Gulfport, Miss., to
Freeport. Texas, and Port stores that are in a heavily Convenience Stores.
Nashville-based
Ingram
Everglades, Fla. Spokesman llooded area," Sluzewski
Mike Mitchell said Chiquita said. "We· re working very Barge Co., which operates
anticipated the hurricane's hard to be in touch with our nearly 4.000.barges, had about
'landfall near New Orleans.
employees. but with phone 600 of them in the New
"The ship that was scheduled service out and cell towers Orleans-Baton Rouge area just
to go to Gulfport last Monday down, w·e ·re having a diffi- before the hurricane stmck,
was diverted to Freeport," cult time contacting them."
spokesman Keel Hunt sa id.

COLUMBUS - Ohioans
shifted their focus Wednesday
ro helping people along the
Gulf Coast after the remnams
of Hurricane Katrina passed
through the state, nooding
some roads and low areas but
leaving little damage.
Gov. Bob Taft ordered 1,500
Ohio National Guard troops to
help provide . security and aid
rescue and recovery efforts in
Alabama, Mississippi . and
Louisiana. Education ofticials
said some Ohio school districts would enroll students
made homeless by the powerful hurricane.·
Remnants from Katrina
dumped a strong and steady
rain over much of Ohio on
Tuesday and early Wednesday.
Rainfall totals were about 2. to
5 inches with some of the
hardest hit areas in northeast
Ohio, forecasters said.
"With a usual summer
storm, we can see a'mounts
like that but usually in local ized areas," sa id Kirk

Lombardy,
a
National
Weather Service meteorologi&gt;t in ClevelanJ. "Thi&gt; is a
tropical syst~m. and we don't
sec too man y of th ose up
here. The difference is. it's
more widespread."
· Mostly clear sk ies and temperatures ranging from the
mid-70s to mid-80s were
expected across most of the
state for th e re st of the week.
Taft urged Ohioans to give to
the American Red Cross relief
· fund and keep the victims in
their prayers. The Cincinnati
Bengals said they would
.accept donations for hurricane
victims at their NFL preseason
game against the Indianapolis
Colts on · Friday. Columbusbased
Limited
Brands
announced a $300.000 gift to
the American Red Cross.
Some fam ilies in Alabama,
Mississippi arid Louisiana
began contacting relatives
and school districts in Ohio
about cnrollin~ their children
in classes, said J.C. Benton.
an Ohio Department of
Education spokesman.
Under feder;tl la w, U.S.

pubii•· "·huob must provide
&lt;:hildrcn left homeless ei ther by a natural disaster or
other circumstanc e&gt; - · with
access to an education.
Benton said state oft1cials
were instructing districts to
.. welcome the students.
It was too early to t.etl how
many students would be
enrolling in Ohio schools,
Benton said. Nationally, education offici als estimate hundreds of thousands of displaced students wil l be
atiending schoo l in a dif(erent
district, if not a different state,
as the school year begins.
The State Highway Patrol
believes a wet road cau&gt;ed a
driver to lose control of her
car on a curve and hit an
ambulance Tuesday near
Monroeville in nonhern Ohio.
The car's dri ver. Cassandra
Ground, 19. of Monroeville,
and the woman b'eing transported in the ambulance,
Thelma Ni·edzi nsk i 86. of
Norwalk , died in . the crash.
sa id Lt. Jim Bryan of the
patrol's Norwalk post. He
said the road was not tlooded.

Merhplris Belle headed to Air Force museum in Ohio
MEMPHIS, Tenn . (AP) Supporters of an effort to
ke ep the. Memphi s Belle
World War ·u bomber in its
namesake city say the y' re
giving . up and returning the
plane lo the Air Force to be
placed in a national museum
ncar Dayton , Ohio.
"To the community. it's like
the loss of a landmark," said
. Andy . Pouncey, president of·
the Memphis Belle Memorial
Association. "This plane. is a
landmark in time for folks."
The plane was the first B 17
Flying Fonress to complete
25 bombing runs over Europe
with its original crew.

Col. Robert Morgan piloted
the homber and named the
Belle after hi s wartime girlfriend. Mar~aret Polk of
Memphi,. M~lrgan died last
year in North Carolina.
The airplane ha' heen in the
city since 19-16 after local
leaders resurrected it from a
junk yard for old military
equipment, But loc;rl efforts to
build a permanent museum to.
·display .and preserve the Belle
fell apart last year. ai1d the Air
Force, which own' the plane.
said it intended to take it back.
Pouncey said the bomber's
· move to the National Museum
of the Air Force at Wright-

Patterson Air Force Base could
come as early as Ociober.
It 's "an emotional los s,"
but the muse um may actually
be a better place for the airplane. he 'aid.
"We know it is going to a
place where it will be well
taken care of and a place
where more people can see
it ." Pouncey said.
· U S. Rep. Harold Ford Jr.,
who worked with (ocal, state
and federal officials to try to
retain the Belle. said it will
be misseJ.
"Thi s hi storical treasure
meant a lot to Memphis." the
Democrat said.

Local Weather

T-s Forecast

About 50 .000 cases of Japanese encephatitrs. a mosquito-borne
virus, are reported every year in Asia even though effective
vaccines against ttie disease have been developed.

Forecast tor ThtJrtda~. hptamblr 1

Chy!Regloft
High I Low temps

•••••••••

·Japanese encephalitis
• Spread seasonally from pigs and birds to people ~i a mosquitoes
• Found only in Asia-PacifiC , leading cause of viral encephslitis in Asia
• AI risk : children age 1 to 15 who live in rural areas in endemic region

0 Still has· penodic epidemics
Has controlled the diseas.e by vaccination

M

••• •••••••

Toledo•
77"160"

GJ Endemic countries

·Y1111ng1111Wn •
76.159'

'

RUSSIA

,... .

.MONGOLIA

·~PAN

AFG.

DQtall•~

PAK .

75'158' '
Pnci/il.:

t:._:)

*

CoiunDIII " " ' - .
76" I 58'

t:.....:)

Ocean
Arubian

•. '

f'Ju!ippmt'

Sc"

Sc'U

~, PHI.

SRI

LANKA
Indian Ocean

-

0
0

&lt; MALAY, .

500 k.m

PAPUA NEW '
GUI.NEA

'
INDONESIA

-· -...
.

500 !'ll l

~

~

AUSTRALIA

'

..---,

.I

'

' '

... ~ 1

•
•

First Floor .

Third Floor

• Athens Surgery Center . '
• Eye Physicians and Surgeons of AtfJens, Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, M.D .
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, M.D .

• Athens Pathology ·
Scott A. Jenkinson, D.O.
Ni li Urie li, D.O.
• Lung Diseases, Sleep Medicine
Chnstopher S. Ryckman, M.D ., F. CC P

• 0'81eness Patient Registration Satellite

---

AP

~' Thursday ... Mostly sunny. around 5 mph... Becoming west

~

Located in the O'Bieness Medical Park, the Castrop Center represents the O'Bieness Health System's
commitment to progressive caring for our community. The largest srngle project of a four-phase
expansion plan, the Castrop Center provides convenient access to a va~1ety of medical services .

• 0'8/eness Laboratory Satellite

·'

Torres srirt "

SOURCES : Wof1d Hoalth OrganlzaUon ; Cooter for Oisea!Hl Control and Prev8ntloo

Specials at
-,

Thursday, September 1, 2005

Chlldren .ln rural Asia at risk

·,

Hometown Market and Catering Service

PageA7 ·

OHIO

,Hurricane leaves havoc at Port of New Orleans

Bv SAMEER N. YACOUB

•

..

The Daily Sentinel ·

•fatchy fog in the morning. in the afternoon.
Friday 11ight... Mostly clear. .
:'J'Iighs in the .I ower 80s. West
Lows . in the mid 50s. West
'Winds around 5 mph.
.~ Thursday . 11ight... Mostly winds 5 to I0 mph in the
~ t:Jear. Lows in the upper 50s. evening ... Becoming li ght and
·Y/est winds around 5 mph in variable.
Saturday
through
the evening ... Becoming light
Wed11esday
..
Mostly
clear.
.:and variable.
,
~,: Fridlly... Mostly sunny. Highs High s in the upper 70s. Lows
;4n the mid 80s. North wind~ in the mid 50s.

....

l.ocal Stacks
· NSC - 35.61 ·.
· Oak Hill Rnanclal 30.82
OVB-25
BBT-40.57
Peoples - 28.10
BU -U.81
Pepsico - 54.8~
job Evans - 24.19
.
Premier
- .12.90
:Dor&amp;Wamer - 58.46
Rdckwell - 52.04
:Champion --. 4.48
:Channing Shops - 12.08 Rocky Boots- 30.13
RD Shell - 64.77
:Z:Ity Holding - 36.72
SBC- 24.08
;tol - 48.13 .
Sears - 135.86
:DG -19.06
Wai-Mart - 45.19
:iuPont - 39.57
Wendy's - 44.96
::Jederal Mogul - _42
Worthington - 18.10
29.22
:Jannett - 72.72
:feneral EleCtric - 33.61 Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
;:DKNLY - 5.08
of the previous day's
:~farley Davidson - ·49.26
transactions, provided by
;2PM -33.89
Smith Partners at Advest .
:Sroger- 19.74
Inc. of Gallipolis.
~td.- 21.98
lCI ~ 64.20
AEP- 37.1.8
Akzo- 41.27
Ashland Inc. -'so. 79
AT&amp;T -19.68

• O'Bieness Radiology and Imaging Services
Bon e Density
CT Scan
Mammography
MRI
• 0'81eness Rehabilitation Center
Physical Therapy
Speech Therapy

Second Floor
• American Cancer Society Patient Navigator
Coleen Y Dietsch-Krubl
• Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology
Steven G. ·Cann Jr. , D.O .
• Mountain
View Bone and Joint Clinic ·
"
Steven' M. Mil ler, M.D.

'•

\.

'

• River Rose Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Jane E. Broecl&lt;er, M.D .•
Michael J. Clark , D.O .
Jack M. Ramey, D.O.

• Family Medicine
Linda B• Tome, D.O.
• General Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt; M D , FAC.S .
• Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine
Andrew R. Murry. M D
• Internal Medicine
Paul E. Cadamagnani, D.O.
• MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants
Lucy La Perna, D.O , R.VT
Dav1d R. Richards, D 0, F. ACC, FAS E.
Mitchell J. Silver, D 0 , F. A.C.C.
John F. Tugaoen , M D . F. A C.C
• Neurology
Gary E. Cordingley, M.D , Ph D, F.AA N.
• O'Bieness DermatQiogy Clinic
John .P H1bler, D 0
Ty 0 Hanson, .D .O., Reside nt
J. Michael Holsrnger, D.O., Res rdent
• Otorhinolaryngology (Ear. Nose, and Throat)
Michael W Tome. D 0
• Podiatry
EarlL. Dnggs. D PM

Coming in September!
• Athens Cance; Center- Radiation Oncology
Aaron 0 . Williams. M.D .

;sa-

• Oncology Hematology Consultants
of Southeastern Ohio
Utpal BhanJa, MD . a nd Husarn Rasheed, M.D.

CASTROP,CENTER .
O'Bleness

'

·-

Medocal

Pa1k

75 Hospital Dr , Athens, OH

�~--------~------~.----------------------~----~-----------~·-------------­
•
r,
INSIDE
•

Thursday, September 1,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page.AS • The Daily Sentinel

2005

Thursday, September 1, 2005

'Vibrant Views' exhibit .opens .at ·FAC Sept. .4 Pendleton

Tlsh Hinojosa

Artist to take
Stage at FUl" Peace
POMEROY
Tish
Hinojosa. a h i- lin~ual singer-.
songwriter from 'rcxas. will
bring her multi -c·ultu ral music
to the Fur Peace Station on St.
Clair Road in Pomeroy on
Saturday. Sept. 10. The show
will also fealllre Marv G'mthier.
Hinojosa is tnurir"1g in sttpport ot her latest release. ·"A
Heart Wide OJJcn:· her first
studio. alhum in five ye'ars.
. The di sc feature s an all-star
lineup inrludin~ R'iv Benson
and Cindy Ashdollar'of Asleep
at the Wheel. Flaro Jinienez
and her longtime collabormor.
guitari .~l
and mandolinisl
:Marvin Dykhuis. who will be
joining her on this tour.
.
Gates at the Fur Peace
Station will open at 7 p.m.
wi th showtime at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $18 in advance
and 520 the day of the show.
Tickets can be ordered by
cal ling (NO) 992-2498.
Hinojosa's career highlights
have included a perfom1ance tor
President and Mrs. Bill Clinton at
· the White House. many pertormances at presidemial 'md gubernatorial mauguration events,
numerous· television appeanmces
stateside and abroad. She is
extensively involved in humanitarian
activities
including
spokesperson for the National
Latino Children's Agenda, the
National Association of Bilingual
Education. anu the United Fann
Workers of America.
Of
Mexican
herita~e.
Hinojosa is known for her dlstincttve cross-cultural. music
gained from her hackground
and association with artists in
the contempomry Latin and folk
scene. She embraces in performance pop, rock. tejano and
international styles" of music.

GALLIPOLIS
Accompli shed paint~r .Vivian
Ripley of Columbus. will present her exhibit' entitled
'"Vibrant Views" from Sept. 4
to 28 at the French Art Colony.
She is a ski lled artist o~ varieu .slrbj ect matter. hut inher- ·
ent in all her work s is the
beauty and color and how it is
affected hy light and shade . .
The show is a collection of
her newest work .
"I enjoy the process of interpreting the vari ety of tonal
patterns I preceive or designs I
invent with the limi tless use of
color layered. mixed ;·
glazed or side by siden:· she
said. " I involve my whole
body and emotion."
Vivian has particular interest in painting on location. A
favorite area is Ontario. north
nl Georgian Bay, where the
artist travels at least twice
yearly.
She shares some of her tal · ents by teaching pastel, portraiture, co lored pencil and is
in demand for demonstrations
and workshops.
Her rolor technique is spotlighted in one chapter of 'The
Wat ercolor
Landscape
Techniques of 23 International
Artists.''
published
by
International Artist Publishing
Inc .. September 2003.

Vinton County Air
Show coming in
September
McARTHUR - Mark your
calendars now for one of the
premiere C\ents in Southern
Ohio - the Vinton County
Air Show.
The event will be held at the
Vinton County Airport in
McArthur
on
Sunday,
September 18.
The airpon·s famous barbecue chicken dinners will be
served beginning at II a. in .. fol lowed by the air show at I p.m.
The show will tearure skydivers as well as som~ of the best
acrobatic pilol&gt; in the world.
There will also be a candy
drop for kids. where candy is
dropped from an airplane onto
the tarmac. at approximately
3:30p.m.
cPilots from the Vinton
County Pilots &amp; Boosters
Assoc iation will f,oive airplam;
. rides immediate y following
the show. The air show is free.
but a donation of 55 will be
asked for parkin g.
The Vinton County Airport
is located about s1x miles
north of McArthur. just off
Route 93 on Airport Road .
For information abour tire

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

The Extra Point, Page B2
OVP Football leaders, Page B2
'Burg set to invade Fl'fnch City Friday, Page B3
Rebels look. to keep running, Page B4

·

·

·

.
·

.

Submlned photo
"Red Poppy. II ," a pastel work by Vivian Ripley, of Columbus. Her exhibit opens Sunday at the
French Art Colony.
·
•
Vivian has won many
awards in state, regional and
national shows.
In 2003 , she was one of the
Ohio Watercolor Sodcty
members chosen 10 display in
the Watermedia 2003 exhibit
in Hou ston and that same year,
was accepted into the La Fond

Galleries
Ninth Annual
National
Juried
Pastel
Competition in Pittsburgh.
There will be an opening
reception from 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 4.
The FAC gallery is open
from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday and 1-5 p.m.

Sunday. Office hours are
Tuesday through Friday from
9 a.m. until 5 p.m.
The exhibit is sponsored by
the Stone Jar. French City
Antique and Craft Mall.
Carter's
Plumbing
and
Burnett's
Roofin g
and
Heating .
··

-------------------------------------~------­

River City Players present 'Bye Bye Birdie~ this weekend
RUTLAND . - The River City
Players theater troupe is bringing
another Broadway hit to Meigs
(ounty with its production of the
musical ''Bye Bye Birdie" this weekend .
Performances of "Bye ·Bye J3irdie"
with be at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 3,
and at 2 p.in. and 7 p.m. on Sunday,
Sept. 4 at Meigs Elementary School in
Rutland. Tickets are $6 and can be
p~rrchased at Dan's, Farmers Bank and
the Middleport Department Store, or
by calling 992-6759.
The musical. which debuted in
196 L is full of the sights and sounds
of the early 1960s. including ladies in
fur coats. rock stars in black, leather
biker jackets and upbeat musical num-bers reminiscent of "West Side Story.'"
"Bye ,Bye Birdie" is. the story of
Conrad Birdie (Kylen ((jng) who is a
rock ·n · roll king in the early 1960s,
and who ·is getting drafted into the
Army. much like Elvis did.
Birdie, hi s manager Albert Peterson ·
tSeth Arbright) and long-time secretary Rose (Amy Perrin) end up. in
Sweet Apple, Ohio, where teenage
girls. their jealous boyfriends and
wacky families only complicate matters.
·•B'ye Bye Birdie" has music by
Charles Strouse. lyrics by Lee Adams
and dialogue by Michael Stewart.

~·
.

-·

PrEp Footba/(- WEek Two

Art Center
celebrates
new additions

Southeastern Ohio Edition
A look at the top football teams In
Ohio's Southeast District as voted

ASHLAND , Ky. - Friday. ·
Sept. 2 from 5 pm to 9 p.m.,
the Pendleton Art Center will
celebrat'e the opening of its
newest addition s including the
Pendleton Cafe, Aladdin's Art
Gallery and the completion of
new studios. ·
The Pendleton Cafe menu
will include go urmet coffee and
coffee drinks along with pastries, salads and sandwiches.
Owners Robert and Christy
Gould of Ashland did a lot of
research before selecting the
coffee.
"We ordered over 20 samples
and tested them on family amj
friends ~fore making our tin~l
decision," said Christy. "We are
confident that we are offering
the finestlquality coffee."
·
The· cafe's normal business
hours will be Monday through
Friday. 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
Saturday, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Al so joining th~ center is
Aladdin's Art Gallery. This is
the second location for· the
bu siness , which has been
located at the corner of 13th
Street and Lexington Avenue
for 40 years.
Owner Mary Johnson trav:
elec! to the Pendleton An
Center in Cincinnati and met
with owner Jim Verdin before
.deciding to expand her business
as part of the center in Ashland.
"I was so impressed by what
has been accomplished in
Cincinnati that I wanted to be
part of the center in Ashland .
.The Pendleton is a tremendous new asset to Ashland' s
downtown.'' she said.
The new location will be
open II a.m. to 2 p.m .
· Monday through Friday and
the 13th Street location will
still be serving customers
Monday through Saturday 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. . .
New artists at the Pendleton
include Melissa Brown, a
mosaic stai ned glass artist ;
Jesse Hurst and April
Hackworth. tine gourd carvers; .
Jerry Crabtree and Shelly
Wheeler, traditional stained
glass anists; and potter Je!mifer
Hamilton . They join Artist of
the' Month Alice Aronson. and
many 2005 Cardinal Valley Art
Show artists in welcoming the
public to come enjoy an
evening of celebration and fine
art with great music by the
Ritch Collins Three-a.

by the Ohio

Publishing

Valley

BY lARRY CRUM

sports staff. (First~place votes In
parenthesis)
·

LCRUM@MYDAILYR EGISTER.COM

Prev. Votes
1: 1ronton (5)
1 68
2. Wheelersburg
3 55
3. Galli a Academy (1) 2 47
4. Portsmouth
4 38
5. Miami Trace (1)
5 37
6. Nelsonville-York
8 29
7. Logan Elm
10 24 ·
8. Valley
NR 13
9. Trimble
NR 12
10. Chillicothe
6 11

.Team

receiving votH: Logan
10, Piketon 8, Portsmouth West
6, South Point 6, Jackson 5,

Other11

Rock Hill 5, Hillsboro 4, Adena 3,
Chesapeake ·3, South Galli a 1.

Pllllllllll"l Poll

0
A look at the top

football teams In

the Ohio Valley publishing sports
Team
1. Parkersburg (5)

Pre•• Vol..
1 58

2. Wayne (1)
Cebeii ·Midtand
4, Williamstown
5, Capital
6. Buffalo
7. Parkersburg South
8. Nitro
9. Herbert Hoover
10. Riverside
3.

Other11

Winfiel~

2
4
3

49
32

7

19

8
9

BY BRYAN ·WALTERS
BWA LTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUt-:~E .COM

31

28
27

10 16
NR 15
NR 12

receiving

Hurricane
Huntington
P"arkersburg
Washington

votes:

11, Poca 8,
7. Ravenswood 6;
Catholic 5, George
4, St. Albans 1,

1.

~Schedule
'

GALLIPOLIS- A sched ule o! upcoming college
aocl high school varsity a~ng wents invot~ing

· teams from Gatlia, Meigs and Mason counties.

Thursday's Qllmet
Volleyball
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30p.m
01/C/Harman at Southern, 5:55 p.m.
Soccer
Galtia Academy at oh10 Valley Chnstian,
5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville. S::ll p.m.
Glr1s Soccer
Point Pleasant at SissorMIIe, 7:3J p.m

Golf
TVC HoQ;Jng al Forest Hills, 4:30p.m.
South GaHia, Galia AcaciC~ at We!Eton
(Fairgreen s). 4'30 p.m
Meigs at Point Pleasant (Hidden Valley). 4:30
,p.m.

Friday, Seplember 2
Foolbol
Nelsonville-Yorio;, at Rfver Valley
INhoolersttJrg at Gama Academy
Meigs at Athens
South Galia at Green
Eastern at Zane Trace
Symmes Valley a! Soulhem
A::Nnt f"'easant at Sissorlv•le
Wahama at Federal Hockilg
College Soccer
Al.bum Montgomery at Rio Grande, 3 p.m
College Volleybol
Rio at Rcberts weseyan lnvil.aOOnal, TEA
College Cross Coun1y •

Kid's Day at Bob Evans Farm set for Sept.lO

~

I

'

Nicholas County · High School at Point

Pleasant, 11 a.m.

.

.

the best-tasting, lresbest .·
produce in town••• at
reasonable prices·, ·
satislaction guaranteed!

·

CfOS8 Coonlry
Gall~a Academy. River Valley at Warren
Invitational. 10 a.m.

Sports

Bri~s

Katiina forces Rio
to alter Invitational
RIO GRANDE - Due to
the wrath of Hurricane
Katrina, the University of
Mobile. the lOth ranked
NAIA team in the coun ty.
will not be able to participate in thiS -weekend's 2005
Rio Grande Men's Soccer
Invitati onal.
Mobile will be replaced
College
.. of .
Bryan
Tennessee.

Submitted
pholo

'.
Come on over to Bob's
..

.

Satunlay'sgameo
Foolbol
Haman at Montcalm
Volleyball
Southe~ at Waterbrd, 1 p.m.
Oak HNEastem at Gallia Academy, 11 a.m.
Soccer
logall at Galia Academy, 1 p.m
. Nicholas County High School at Point
Pleasant, 1 p.m.
Girls Soccer

Ventriloquist
Debbie
·. Walker of
Vinton is
seen at a
recent Kid's
Day at the
Craft Barn on
the Bob
Evans Farm
•
at Rio
Grande.

Two Convenient Locations:
114 Mile·North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart) Gallipolis,
(740)

I

1

Contact Information
· Fax::..._ 1-740-446-3008

E-mail -;- sportsO myda.itysentinei.C?'"

Soorts st.n
/

'

bad . If history repeats itself, .
as it tends to do, then the
Marauders should be all
smiles heading into this
weekend's game. The season so far looks very similar
. to last year, with both teams
entering ·into the game with
the same records, losing by
.very similar margins as last
year as well.
And if history continues
. fan McNemar/OVP file
along the same path, then
Meigs
senior
Brandon
Kimes
(80)
drags
a
Gallia
Academy
defender
for
a
two-yard
gain during
hopefully Meigs can repeat
last
Friday's
28·6
loss
at
Bob
Roberts
Field.
MHS
offensive
lineman
Jamie
Ellis
(55)
is leading
last year's 40-6 pounding of
the way for Kimes. The Marauders travel to The Plains. to take on the Athen s Bul ldogs in a battle of winless teams.
··
Please see Meigs, B1

Eastern, Pioneers ~im for first victory

staff. (First-place votes in parenthesis)

Rio at Shawnee State InvitationaL 4 p.m.

RIO GRANDE - Craft projects, entertainment, games and
activities are planned for children during Kid's Day at the Bob
Evans Farm Craft Barn on Saturday, Sept. I0.
Free activities and "make and take crafts:· will be part of the
celebration from II a.m. ·to 2 p.m.·
Activities include an appearance by .ventriloquist Debbie
Walkefi of Vinton at I :30 p.m. Face painting, tractor-drawn
wagon rides. yard games- including hula hoop, bean bag toss.
basketball. bubbles . jump rope and chalk drawing, the Bossard
Memorial Library Book Mobile ; and tours of the Homestead
Mu ;e um - will all be offered for children free of charge . .
Craft Barn staff will also assist children with foam art projects for $2: painted cats. bats and ghosts for $1; and ghost lollipops for 50 cents.
In addition. the first 50 children at Kid's Day will receive a
free pencil and all children will receive a ticket for free admission to the 35th annual Bob Evans Farm Festival. which will be
held Oct. 14, 15 aP.d 16.
·
For more information about Kid's Day or other events at the
slrow. ceil/ Stne Keller &lt;it Bob Evans Farm, those interested should call the limn on Ohio
. (740) 286-5998 or replr to 588 in Ri o Grande. The Craft Barn features a large assortment
spknnrs @:.uomli e t. n,t~t .
of ti ne fo lk art and one-of-a-kind items.
·
·

THE PLAINS _ Four
quarters of football, 48 min. utes, that is what makes up a
night of high school football
and remembering that can
be the difference in winning
and losing.
As Meigs travels to
Athens• Friday night; they
will need .to keep that in
mind as they look to spark a
win after last week's 28-6
loss to Gallia Academy.
Athens will also enter tire
game on a losing note,
falling 39-21 to rival
Nelsonville- York in week
one.
Meigs had hoped to enter
into the match up against the
B'ulldogs with a win, and it
seemed they might do. . so

only down one point at the
half last Friday. But a disastrous second half allowed Gallia Academy to run away
with the game and ,send
Meigs t&lt;J another seasonopening loss. ·
But the news is not 'an

Western West VIrginia as voted by

For more information about
tile evem and ami/able studio
· space comao Girra Dickeris at
(606) 369-()()()(}.

'
Cast
members of 'Bye Bye Birdie'

Marauders, Athens
looking for first win

Brad Sherm•n, Sporttl Edttor
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bshermanOrT1'(daitytribune.com
Bryln Watters, SJ)orta Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
bwattersOmydailytribunt .com

Lony Crum, Spona Wrtto&lt;
t304)67~1333, ""'- 19 •
Ierum 0 rnyda•tyreg iS1er.com

I

KINNIKINNICK
Eastern suffered a tough
growing pain opening
night in its 54-35 road loss
to South Gallia to start the
2005 season.
The lesson learned from
that first-ever loss to the
Rehels is that defense
plays a very important factor in the outcome of the
contest, no matter how
many points you score .
The Eagles (0-1) will
look to tighten up a
defense that surrendered
432 yards of total offense
last week, including 419
on the ground. against a
veteran corp from Zane
Trace this Friday in
· Chillicothe.
ZTHS returns 17 lettermen and seven starters on
each side of the ball from a
team that a season ago finished 9-2, made the play offs in Division IV Region 15, and captured
the school's first outright
Scioto Valley Conference
crown in the league's 43year history.
The ,Pioneers also posted
a 24-14 victory over this•
Green and White group a
season ago en route to capturing their fourth overall
SVC'title.
With that much t)repowc'
er back for another goaround, Zane Trace is
e·xpecting another run at
the SVC championship
anil another berth in the
playoffs.
Back to guide a roster of
63 offensively will be
quarterback Zack Roll,
\'lho threw a pair of touchdown strikes during last
Brad Sherman!OVP file
week's setback.
Eastern junior quarterback Jordan Pierce (7) runs for some yardage during last Friday·s· 54-.
35 loss to South Galli a. Pierce· and the Eagles will look to get in the win column this Friday
Please see Eastern, BJ when they travel to Kinnikinnick to battle winless Zane Trace.
·
·

Wahama·s.eeks first win
against Federal Hocking
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

STEWART

After

falling short during it s
founh quarter comeback
rally, coach Ed Cromley's
Wahama White Falcon foot-'
ball team will travel to
Federal Hocking on Friday
it;t search of its first grid win
of the 2005 season.
The White Falcons gave
up the winning' touchdown
against
visiting
Williamstown with just I :33
remaining after the Falcons
had rallied. with 10 fourth
period points to knot the
scqre at 17-17 ·against the
Yellow
Jacket s.

.
,

Williamstown
went on to post
the 24-17 win
and hand the
Bend ,
Area
team its second
consecutive
seas?'! opemng
setback.
This week Wahama finds
itself opposite what may be
the best Federal Hocking
grid 1.1 ever with · the
Lancers 2005 expectations
running very high under
new head coach Bob
Sprin);ler.
Spnnger and assistant
coach Joe Memel came to
federal Hocking from thl!
coaching ranks of a s uc~ssful Parkersburg South pro-

Tornadoes
look to
tear down
Yikings
'

Bv Scon WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Last war on
their way to a state· playoff
berth. the Symmes Valley
Vikings
pounded
the
Southern Tornadoes ·U-6. but
in 2005 on its home turf.
Southern hope s to turn the
tables on the Vikings.
Symme s Valley lost II
players from that team. but
still
has several key
rcturuces, and mme than
average size all across the
board~ Still. Southern stacks
up fairly well.
The inexperienced Vikings
fell 27-14 to Huntington
Ross, which is considered a
coniende r in the Scioto
Valley Conference title race.
last Friday. The game's stats
were almost e·ve n. The
Vikings had 242 total yards
and Huntin~ton 241. ·
Bob
Southern' coach
Grueser said . "Ob' iously. we
are not pleased with our 48
vards o ff~Jbe from last week.
We hope to !Urn that around.
Our defense did a credible
job. They were on the field a
lot and toughed it out several
times inside the twenty. Still,
we' can do ,bellcr."
·
Please see Southern, 81

RVHS, Buckeyes battle ·
to remain .undefeated
BY BRYAN WALTERS
6WA.LT£RS@MY0AILYTRIBUNE.COM

Ja\ Edwards
mid
Bear
Lewis
that
.:an hurt you
at anytime."
· That
trio
accounted for
all but ' 16 of
the Buckew&gt;' 452 rushing
vards in ·la;t week's 39-21
COmeback YiCIOry O\er \·isiting
Athen,.
· Jolle} had a game-high 247
vards on 13 carries at taJihack, ·
induuing three touchdown
run; of ?-7. 91 and 69 yards.
Edwards joined in the ground
attac k with I~ attempts for 135
I' ards· and added another' 65
\·ards through the air at quarter-

gram and with them comes
the lofty expectations for
CHESHIRE- Ri,·cr Valle\
the current season. The
charged out to a '30-6 halftime
Lancers lost onlv three gridadvantage last "eek against
ders to graduation fronl the
Ross Southeastern and cruised
23 players remaining folt.o a 30-20 'ictOJ)' to open the
lowing a 3-7 campaign last.
2
005 home season.
·
year which gives the Ohio
The Raiders ( 1-01 are goi ng
based team a wea 1th of
to
need twice that effort this
r1eturmng
·
·
expenence.
Friday against
two-time
Because of the addition of
defending
Tri-Valley
Springer and Me mel. and
• Conference Ohio Divi sio n
· the prior success they bring
ch=pion Nelsonville-York ( 1with them more .than 60
0) if they hope to repeat that
candidates reported for the
· result.
preseason
a1
Federal
That is. accordin g to RVHS
Hocking this fa ll .
1 coach Greg~ DeeL
,
"Nelson\'tllc·
York
·is
tradi·
In its opener at Caldwell .
ba&lt;:k
.
tionally
a
very
good
football
last week, the Lancers
Edwards added a touchdown
, team:
commented Deel. run of 47 yards. while Lewis
dropped a 19-6 decision
'They have three realh 2ood
' killed players in Da,ici Jolle~. ·
Please see Battle, Bl
PIHse see Wahania, BJ
.I

�r

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 1,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Thursday, September 1,

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAtlYTR tBUNE.COM

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOl FOOTBAll GAMES

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MOntcalm

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"
!-lJmtan Jt
Montcalm

Meigs :

Rushing
Yards
182
146
137

87
70
·67

~ '1

1

0
0
0
0
0
1
0
2
0
1
0
0
0

'

19
2
10

41
41
39

14

37
36
32
26
23

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1
0

2
7
12
21

61
60
59
53

Butch Marnhout ~S )
Jared Cas ey (M)
Brandon Warne r (PP)
Alan Dye (H)
Dewey Cantrell (SG )
Jordan Pierce (E)
Scott Hunt (-AV)
Travis Riffle (PP)
Jayme Haggerty (GAl
Ryan Henry (RV)
Bryan Morrow (AV)
Dus tin Winters (GA l

2
2

"

62
62

from PageBl

TO
2

Att
26
16
17
14
6

8
6
' 4
4

9

Edwards

Pa11sing ·
Player

Yards Camp. An.
11
17

Jordan Pi~rce (E )
Jeff Golden (GA)
Brenton Clark (W) ·
Bryan Morrow (AV )
Brandon Warne1 (PP)

210
165
158
125

James Cast o (PP)
Alan Dye (H)
Seth Williamson (SG )
Eric VanMeter (M)
Aaron Story (M )
Ryan Chapman (S)

7

.14

TO Int.
3
2
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10

0

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6
4

35

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13
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• 3
4
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Receiving
Player
Jayme Haggerty (GM
Ryan Henry (RV)
Bryce Honaker (E)
Cody Gerlach (E)
Travis Riffle (PP}

Brandon Fowler (W)
Chase Ord (W)
Michael Cordell (RV)
Terry Durst (E)

Kns Gibbs (W)·
Will Slone (PP)
Derek Your~g {E)
Shaphen Robinson (GA)
Justin Saunders {GA)
~ am Sayre (W)
Jared Casey {M )
Cart Leap (H)
Dernck Beaver (SG )
Dewey Wroten (PP)
Mark Fooce (PP)

Yards

Rec.

TO

105

4

1

67
66
65

3
4
2

0
2

57
54
50
49
40

2
1
4
2
2

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0
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25
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Athens.
To do so, the Marauders
will have to fix some of the
mistakes that plagued them
last week, as they look to face
a much·impro~ed Athens
squad.
"They execute well , especially offensively and they
move the football on every body they have played." said
Meigs head wach Mike
Chancey. "I feel like we will
have our work cut out for us
and it should be a very good
football game ,"
. Some of the playe" Meigs
will have to watch out for
include a pair o[ very talented

Southern
from l&gt;age 8 l

1
1
1

37

14

Pierce

Haggerty

Southern 's Jesse McKnight
and Darin Teaford led the
Tornado tacklers with 14
apiece, while Buddy Young
and Weston Counts were
always in and around the
ball. Both had fumhle recoveries as well.
Turnovers,
especially
turnovers on special teams
killed Symmes Valley last
week . After stalling on their
lirst drive, the Vikings were set
to punt the ball away when the
snap wenl'lhrough the· punters'

Roberts and Zach Catania.
To be $Uccessful, Meigs
will have to use their rushing
auack . of David Poole ,and
Jared Casey, who racked up
67 yards and 60 yards respeclively last week against
Gallia Academy.
.
The Marauders will also
have .the , advantage of two~
talented quarterbacks who
wtll be tradtng th~ spot
throughout the year m Enc
Van Meier and Aaron Story,
Sophomore Story got 10 see
some action last week after
starter VanMeter was injured,
bul Cham;ey says the injury
was
not
serious and
VanMeter will be available
this weekend,
. Most would think having
two good quarterbacks would
cause problems, but Chancey
says that in fact the situation

running backs in Chris
Stadler and Mitch Spires.
Spires led the Bulldogs 'with
, 785 yards rushing and six
touchdowns last year, while
Stadler was not far behind
with 438 yards and a score
last season.
The .duo played an excel-·
lent first game against
Nelsonville- York
with
s·tadler amassing 153 yards
and a touchdown on 21 carries and Spires who collected
87 yards on 19 carries,
Also in the lineup is quarterback Chri.~ Carpinelli, a
dangerous player who played
some last year. Carpinelli
opened the season with I 06
yards and two touchdowns
against the Buckeyes.
Athens also has a hard-hilling, strong defense anchored
by senior linebackers Kurt
lead when Symmes Valley
fumbled a punt return that was
covered by Bobby. Sams on the
Vikings' 41-yard line.
1-tuntinglon held a 13-0 lead
until late tn the tirst half when
Symmes Valley titilback Derek
Carpenter broke free on a 7.yard run, closing the gap to 13. 7 with .four minutes. left in the
half. Bob Michael kicked the
extra point to make it 13-7.
Symmes had trouble stopping Huntsman back Kody
Waterbury, but last season so
did everyone else. Waterbury, a
returning LOOO yltfd rusher,
posted a third ·score at the 8:21
, matk of the third quarter on a
one-yard plunge that put
Huntington ahead 27-7,
Symmes'. Derek Carpenter
added a one-yard score of his
own with 2:53 left in the fourth,
but it would be the Vikings'last
threat.
Southern will have to watch

year, but replacing .that experi , ence proved to be succc"ful · leg{ re,ulting in a Hunhnlen
la~t week against Athe n~ .
possession on the Vikings' 12The ollensc abo pmvcd to yard line. Eight minutes l;ncr.
from Page 81
be cflicicnt. running only .tO the Huntsmen i(lUnd themplay' compared to AtheJh · 5~. s~ l\ cs in positi&lt;in to add tn the
Defen sively Nc l, nn villeadded the final paydirt score
York
· allowed 3'1'1 yanb of
with a I 0-yard scamper to go
total
olfen,e, inc ludin ~ 293
along with hi s 54 yanh on 12
rushing yards on -17 attcrnpt&gt;.
carries a1 fullback.
TI1e Bucks retum Jolle) and
Those efforts allowed
Edward;
at the comcl'., L~ wi ,
NYHS to post 517 total yards
at·
linebacker.
and bm h
Buf!k[rt:&amp;
of offense m overcoming a 21,_,._,.,, ,_ ,..,,,......_.....;
Hodgson
and
Steve
Young
at
. 18 halliimc delicit and that
-J/
balance of offensive efficiency defensive ends. Filling in the
will play a large pan in lhi ' · holes left by Perkins, McClain
and Wend will prove to be the
week's game at RVHS .
''Speed will be a big factor in big key to the success of this
·
iiiiBuck he~
this game, and they have a lot defense,
.........
Deel
is
aware
of
the
of it:' commented Dee!. ''We
have to keep the ball a')l'ay Buckeyes' retuming talent and .
from that offense."
I , what they lost from a season
Joe Schmelzer had the lone ago. and he r\!members that his
Buckeye reception last week, a team was able to upset NYHS
65-yan;l completion from two years ago in Cheshire.
If the Silver and Black hope
Edwards, Josh Hodgson and
Logan transfer Gene Hartman 'to duplicate that success of
should also see tim e at wide- 2003. Deel believes hi&gt; team
will have to have a more conout.
~-.
sistent
ef!'on .against the Bucks
Tight end Adam Wagner,
and offensive linem~n Jon than they showed lust week
McCulloch and Travis Saylor against Southeastern.
"We have 10 play four quar. ..::::"...:' -~ ....... ~~
also return to the starting line ~
up from last year's playoff ters of wide·open , efficient
~~ · -· · ·=
football this week 10 hang with·
squad,
The losses of Ernie Perkins. 1 lhis group," said Deel. "Our
Mike McClain and Joe Martin defense has to stop the big
· io the offensive line left •some play, and our offense has to
questions at the start·. of the consistently score."

Battle

H:mn.m at
Mgnlcalm

Catch all the results
in the
Sunday Times-

,_....

Player
Chri s Edwards (RV )
Curt Waugh (SG)
Bernie Futks (S G)
Terry Durst (E)
Brenton Cla1k (W )
Dave Poote {M)
Derrick Beaver (SG)
Seth Haner (GA)

;H~

200 I: Butch Cooper --- 2002: Butch Cooper--- 2003: Brad Sherman--- 2004: Brad Sherman.

·sHENNIU

OVP Leaders (thru Week I)

the one"two punch of Man
Owens and Carpelller. Owens
ran 10 times for 107 yltfds w1d
Carpenter had nine rushes for
90 yard to lead the Vikings.
John Wiseman was 3- 19, and
Seth Saunders 3- 14. · Chris
· Capper (5-9-1 37) is the
Symmes quanerback. He is a
scrambler, a capable passer,
and is an anchor on the offense .
Carpenter (3-36) was last
·week's main taroet nul of the
backfield. Mall 5wens caught
two passes for one yard . .
Offensively last week,
Soulhem"s Butch Mamhoutled
the Tomadoes with 12 carries
for 61 yards and two receptions
for six yards. Defensively,
Jesse McKnight and Ryan
Donl!ldson hacl sacks. Weston
Counts had two fumble recoveries and Young one.
Either because of poor timing, tumovers, and good Green
defense, Southern never really

is a good one for, the offense.
"We don' t feel like we have
a quarterback controversy,
we feel like we have two
good ones," Chancey said.
On paper, the two teams
look very similar, but it can
be easy to look past an
Athens team that went 1-9
last season and hasn ' t·made a
playoff appearance in 15
years. Meios must enter into
"
.
the game _ prepar~d to play a
much tm~roved Bulldogs
sq uad for tour lull quarters,
minimizing mistakes to walk
away wtth a VICtory m the
early .2005 football season, ·
"We only get 10 Friday
nights and thi s is number
two, so we just have to take
them one' at a time and be
ready to play some football." ·
said Chancey.

had a sustained,drive last week.
To ·be successfu l, 'SHS has to
get even bigger numbers from
Marnhoul and more production
from backs McKnight and
. Donaldson, Yet, the backs can't
do it all . Southem's line missed
numerous blocking assignments, pulling their backs in
peril and especially quarterback Ryan Chapman 's ability
to gel off the passes he wanted,
Grueser indicated that much
of the week was dedicated to
offense, and perfecting timing
and assignments. Look for an
improved offensive effort this
Friday night.
Although Southem relied on
its defense · lasl week, the·
defense must egual or exceed
last week's effort. It cannot
give up 241 yards as
Huntington did,
All in all it s~ould add Uf? to
a pretty good game. Game ltme
ts 7:30p,m, Fnday,
.

..

~--

-·

__

" . . '. ~: _ :)iW.M
.. .

ian McNemar/OVP file

Wahama c.oach Ed Cromley addresses his White Falcons fo llowing Friday's 24-17 loss to
Williamstown, Cromley and Wahama cross over into Ohio to take on Federal Hocking this Friday
'in Stewart

W:ahama
from Page Bl
with that early season loss
caljSing a sprinkling of apprehensio(t surrounding the
Lancers camp, Penalties and
reports of the lack of conditioning were two rilajor factors in a game many Federal
. Hocking followers thought
they could and would win.
Wahama is another team port~ayed to be a victory for the
Lancers in their home opener
on Friday night
'"Federal Hocking appears
c
.
to be a wide open f .enstve
team
. .1 that pauerns
h w, its y·offense
. ..
,stmt ar to w at est rrgmt?,
University tries to do,
Falcon ,.coach Ed · Cromley .
said, They have a lot of
numbe ~ out and the1r quarterback ts a real threat to run
the" football as well as pass,
.He'll be a concern for us
throughout the evening."
· Senior Tyler Jarvis (6-foot1. 220 pounds), a fourth year
starter. will likely get the call
at quarterback after being the
·Lancers leading rusher as a
.tailback the past three sea.sons. From the tirst day of
practice when Springer and

°

Memel saw Jarvi s throwing last
week
against
the 'football knew they want- Williamstown
w·ith .the
ed him ro make the switch Yellow Jackets scoring three
from running back to quaner- touchdowns on a 20Cyard
back,
pass play, a 41-yard scoring ·
The lone setback in the r€ception and an 86 yard
backfield with Jarvis figures ki,koff return and are workto be se nior Brandon ing on preventing that from
Barnhart (6-L 175) with the . happening again. Other than
wide receivers being senior those three plays and a couA.J. Smith (5- I L 160) and pie of Williamston gai ns that
juniors Tyler Chadwell (5-8, were negated by penalties the
155). Evan Garrell (6-0, Bend Area defense held the
175), Grady Dalzell (6-3, Yellow Jackets in check.
170) and Brant Day (6-3,
Led by se nior linebackers
210). ·
Kame ron Sayre, Nathan
A huge offensive line is Swfford and Justin Bell the
e~pected to be comprised of WHS defen~e held the
senior c;enter Sean Murphy Yellow Jackets star running
(6- 1, 2.10), senior guard back, Tyler Lowers, to just63
Dakota Jarvis (5- 11 , 270), ya rds on the ground.
senior tackle Nick Springer However, the Falcon sec(6--4, 225), sop homorc guar d on dary gave up two touc hMorgan Staley (6-4, 260) artd downs and 131 yards through
junior tackle· Adam Tale (6-2, the air to the visitors.
250). · ·
Offensively junior quarter'"Federal Hocking played a back,· Brenlon Clark, was the
good Caldwell team prelty Falcons chief offense weapon
even last week." said wi th a standout performance
Cromley, "Playing at their in his first varsil)' start
place makes it extremely . Clark ran 56 yar&lt;!s for one
imponant that we get off to a Falcon score and tossed a 54
good start. We'll have to yard scoring pass to. Brandon
contain Jarvis and his double Fowler for another. Clark 's
threat while establishing a throwing arm also set up a 20
balanced auack of our own in yard field goal by the
order to be · ·successfuL"' Falcons' Derek Veazy with
Cromley added.
Chase Ord grabbing four.
The White Falcons were passes for 50 yards on the
susceptible to. the big play night.

One score went to returning wideout Ben Hayne s,
and the other covered 16
yards to newcomer Mark
Harrington at the tight end
spot.
.
Also returning for Zane
Trace are running back Ben
Haynes and fullback Josey
Wells. Haynes will share
time with Cody Lawhorn
and Chance Sowers al tail back, while Wells will see a
bulk of the work after averaging five yards a carry in
2004.
.
Joining
Haynes
and
Harrington in the passing
allack are Lawhorn and
Justin Shitlen.
Three offensive linemen
return from a year ago, as
Nick Jones (!i·foot-4, 305
pounds), Ricky Kemper and
J.D, Smith will again lead
the charge at the point of
attack:
'
Vying for the final two
line spots are D.J. Moore,
Rob Delong , Anthony
Meadows, Justin Wiley,
Josh Mummey and Seth

McClarren.
54 seconds left in the con But this team was al so hit test. Th eir comeback bi d
hard by graduation and play- came up short however
ers lost, particularly ~11-state when Heath recovered the
running back Anthony ensuing onside kick to run
Hitchens, out the clock,
Hitchens, a · sophomore
The hosts will al so look to
now attendin g. Chillicothe · their 5-2· defense to ha ve
High SchooL look over more of a better stan thi '
1:700 ru'shing yards and 20 week again st Eastern. maktouchdowns
to
the ing fo r an intriguing
Cavaliers.
malchup betwet;ns hungry
The Ross Countians also for a first win.
lost SVC Lineman of the
Haynes, Brandon Street
Year Man Brooks, honor- and Chris King ·return to the
able mention all-state line- secondary, while Shiflett.
back er Miles Wright and Ste ve North , Danny Saultz,
starters 'Josh Ward (LB) , · Justin Miller and Robert
Curtis Chaffin (OLIDL) , Skinner are all fightin g for
Chris Davis (TE/DE) and t.he tinal starting position . .
Returning up front are
cornerback Brian Burdette
to graduation·.
defensive ends Harrington
· Playing their first game and Smith, wi th Lawhorn,
without Hitchens and com- Mummey, Wile y, Jones and
pany, the· Pioneers (0- 1) al so Ricky Kemper also expected
learned a valuable lesson to see time in the trenches.
Lawhorn, Sowers, King
last week· in their 27-22 loss
at Heath - slow starts can and Brandon Stephens are
come back to haunt you .
all vying to replace the two
The Red and Blue allowed open spots at linebacker.
ZTHS ~l so returns the
Heath to jump out to a convinc ing 27-0 advantage after 2004 Ki cker of the Year in
an 87-yard touc hdown Cody Williams. and Roll
return of the kickoff l&lt;J start will once · agaip handle tile
punting duties.
the second half.
Zane Trace responded · Eastern anu Zan e Trace
with 22 unanswered points, will kickoff this Fridav at
'
pulling to within five with 730 p.m.

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•

Center· Education and Conference Center.

:hJI

--

give the Devils' secondary point
total a boost - provided they
win,
With games looming against
tough opponents like Ironton
and Chilltcolhe, winning a big ,
point~ game as early as possible
·will certainly ease the pressure
later this month.
Gone from last year's
Wheelersburg team is quarter,
back Tom Kaskey, who threw
for 221 yards agai)lsl the
Gallians. and his two favorite
receivers Matt Watson and
Brian Stephenson,
But the 'Burg still features a
very big, physical offensive
line, leu by guard James
Conkey (6-foot-2 , 258 pounds).
The linemen. who all range
from 225 to 305 _pounds, will be
blocking a different-looking
backfield from last year,
Running back Brandon
White. who ran for 44:3 yards
and eight touchdowns in 2004, ·
is the Pirates' top offensive
returnee,
.
lan McNemar/OVP file
White is joined in the backtield by Brandon Jackson, while Gallia Academy's Dustin Winters drags a Meigs defender durJohn Storey, a scrambler, lines ing Friday's 28-6 win over the Marauders. Winters and the Blue
Devils will host Wheelersburg Friday in Ga llipolis,
up under center.

Fedl·r.ll Hm· ki11 g

Wabama at

Z ane Trace

E.t .,lt'rtl

. GALLIPOLIS - Even after
· a comfortable 28-6 win over
: Meigs, the question still
: remains - how good is Gallia
Academy?
"We don't know how good
we are yet," admitted coach
Matt Bokovitz, ·whose team
: played only one solid half of
:football in that season·opening
·VICtOry,
· "We'll still wrutmg on our
·kids to come out and play
aggres'sive from the openirig
whistle, We did not do that last
week, it took them a whole half
:to wake up, it seemed like!'
: The Blue Devils will need a
:better start this Friaay, when
, hopefully several quesllons will
be answered , as poweiful
Wheelersburg, last · year 's
. Division V regional runner-up,
:comes to Memorial Field,
• It will be size vs, speed in an
: intriguing match-up. possibly
:one of the best anywhere in the
·state Friday night
There will be no lime to

spare, or room for error, this penalty for only having six men
\Jme,
on the line ·of scrimmage, cou"We can not do that this week pled with a 15-yarder for argu·
against
a
team
like mg the call, knocked the 'Burg
Wheelersburg and expect to out of scoring range,
win," Bokovitz said of his
While Wheelersburg is trying
club's slow slart.
to avoid an 0-2 slart, Gallia
Gallia Academy suffered Academy will be vying for
through a lathargic first 24 min- valuable playoff points early in
utes in its opener. and only led the season,
the Marauders by a point at the
It was mistake-riddled 35-12
break But Jeff Golden threw · lo~s to the Pirates last year that
two touchdown passes and kept the Devils from a sixth
Jayme Haggerty rushed for consecutive trip to the postseaanolher ·score a' the Blue Devil son, It was one that Bokovitz
offense awoke and pulled away. believes his team let slip away,
On the other hand, offense considering GAHS held. the
was at a premiem farther down edge in total yardage, but comthe river last week,
rrutted five turno,.ers.
The Pirates enter Friday's
"We really felt if we would
game off a frustrating 7-6 Week have won that ~arne, we would
I loss at Ironton, as two penal- have been in,' he said. "That
ties kept them from pulling off was our opportunity to pull one
the upset, or at least from pro- off and we just didn't ,get it
longing the game,
done.
An unsportsmanlike conduct
"For us, our mentality is. this
call after a touchdown pushed is a playoff game. If they want
them out of extra !JOint range to be in the playoffs, they want
· midway through the third quar- win this one - this one will get
ter after the orange and black us there real quick,"
had taken a 6-0 lead,
Wheelersburg, a perennial
Then late in the game and powerhouse, always racks up
deep in Ironton territory, a plenty of victories and could

Poinr Pl l' as'm t
;1t Sjupnyille

Zane Tra ce

E.Na n .11

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Burg set to invade French City Friday

•

Brad Sherman

2005

'

....

Arec

To The ,

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio State Football
Coach J,im Tressel is predicting
The Buck~yes will compete for the
National Championship this year.

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�(

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September :1,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Rebels ,look to keep on runnin ~ against Green
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MVDA!LYTRIBUNE COM

•

FRANKLIN FURNACEFrom a bunch of underdogs to
the darlings of Galha County
- much has changed m a
week's ttme for South Galha.
A 54-35 vtctory over Eastern
m the htgh school football season opener ratsed more than a
few eyebrows, and has people
talkmg about the htgh sconng.
btg·play Rebels
It was vtewed as an upset by
many, as South Galha had
never beaten the Eagles their
stx previous meetmgs, or ever
opened the season wnh a vtctory. Butts wasn't a surpnse to
coaQh Justy Burleson and hts
staff
"We've always thought thts
was posstble," he satd "We
knew wnh the expenence we
. had commg m from the lower
grades, mtxed m wtth a few
real good seniOrs - we
thought tl everythmg cl tcked,
we could take a lew people by
surpnse"
The first group taken by surpnse was Eastern ·s defense, as

South Gallia 's runners zipped
past would-be tacklers for 419
yards a week ago Semor Cun
Waugh rushed for 146 yards
whtle classmate Bernte Fulks
went for 137
South Gal ha, whtch has
extsted smce 1996, has a 15-64
record smce beginnmg an
entirely-varsity schedule m
1997 However, the program
conttnues tts steady growth
and is now reapmg the benefits
from a newly-formed JUmor
varstty feeder program.
The school's best-ever
record came m 2003, when
Burleson gutded the Rebels to
a 5-5 mark m hts rookie season
at the helm It South Galha
continues to run wtld hke last
Fnday, a first-ever wmmng
season should be an attamable
goal.
Sull ndmg htgh from the
openmg week vtctory, not
even remnants from Humcane
Katnna could dampen the
Rebels' spmts m practtce thts
week as they prepared for
Fnday's meeung wtth Green
"We've had a real! y good
week of practtce," Burleson
srud. "Usually when you have

a week like we've h,td. wtth
the weather and everything.
it's a lot harder to mamtam that
strong tempo and that has not
been a problem whatsoever
"As long as we keep the sw:cess rolhng, I thmk tt' ll only
get better"
To keep rolhng, South
Galha, whtch ts also facmg tts
first road test , wtll have to lind
a way to stop Green's pumshmg fullback Mark Castro
Castro, who wetghs m at
235 pounds, ran over the
Rebels last season - amassing 189 yards m a 20-7 vtctory
"We're not a btg team.
we've got some guys that wtll
hit," explamed Burleson, "but
an;yttme you h,tve 240 pounds
(takmg) on !50 or 170 - tt's
phystcs an.d t~e btg guy ts
gomg to wm most ttmes.
"We have to slow htm up at
the !me of scnmmage before
he gets up a head of steam •·
Also seemg cames wtll be
Dustm Wtlhams, who ran for
75 yards m ht s team's 7-0 wm
at Southern m Week I
Also returmng from a year

ago ts startmg quarterback
Derek Lewts, prob,tbly the
team's best athlete Green\
btggest challenge IS replacmg
three oiTenstve linemen, whtch
were btg keys to the power
1 unm ng game second year
coach Kevm Shendan favors.
On defense, the Bobcats
should offer more reststance
than E.tstem - as that unit ts
led by a htg, talented pmr of
detenst ve ends m Casto and
Ry.m Kimber
"As long as we can slow
those btg ends up, I thmk we'll
be all nght" Burleson ' stated
''If we don't do somethmg
with those guys. they're gomg
to make hfe rough on you
When they htt they really
bnng a load ..
Green's wm over South
Galha last season was tts tihal
taste ot vtctory unttl Week I 0
as It fimshed 3-7 It was the
best record smce 200 I tor a
program that has averaged JUSt
two wms per season over the
last decade
Ktck-off is slated for 7 30
p m Fnday at Green Htgh
School.

Point looks to rebound against Sissonville
BY lARRY CRUM
LC RU M@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

SISSONVILLE, W.Va -· It
wasn 't the start to the season
Pomt Pleasant had twped tor.
but 111 no W&lt;IY wtll the Btg
Blacks be giVIng up
In fact Pomt heads mto
Stssonvtlle wtth confidence 11
can get the JOb done agamst the
tharleston area team m ns
Cardmal Conference·opener
"We should be able to compete better than last week, they
are not the team Rtpley ts nght
now. we are certamly gmng up
there wtth an tdea we can wm
the game, but we are gomg to
have to play well to do so,"
satd Pomt Pleasant head coach
Ste'e Satlord.
In ordet to play well. Point ts
gomg to need to tmprove on
some areas that really hun 11
last week agamst Rtpley, mamly turnovers and field posltlon
Throughout the game, a break
down of the ktckmg game
allowed the Ytkmgs to have
good tleld posmon while the

Btg Blacks spent most of the
game on thetr own end of the
lield
"We JUSt gave Rtpley a shon
field and you JUSt can't beat a
team when you gtve that good
ot field postuon, so we are
gomg to work on the kicking
game a lot thts week," satd
Safford
Another area Pomt wtll need
to work on ts tack! mg. as
Rtpley running back Parker
Deem racked up three touchdowns on 138 yards rushmg
last
week.
Thankfully.
Stssonvtlle does not bnng the
kind of power back the Btg
Blacks faced last week, but
they sun can't look past
Indtans back Chns Boggess, a
retummg staner from last year
who put up 51 yards in last
years 21-0 Pomt wm
Also
returnmg
for
Stssonvtlle ts quanerback
Myles Henson, who completed
live passes for 62 yards m last
years meetmg
Surular to the Btg Blacks,
the lndtans dropped thetr season opener last week as well,

talhng to Poca The Dots had
no trouble movmg the ball
agamst Stssonvtlle, puttmg up
223 yards to the Indian's mne.
whtle Stssonvtlle's lone score
m the game came on a ktck off
return, leavmg many questmns
as to what the offense can do
Stssonvtlle dtd step up m the
second half however, shutting
out Poca after halftime with
much tmproved defenstve play
That defense wtll have to
work extra hard thts commg
Fnday, however, as Pmnt plans
to keep Its balanced pass-run
attack whtle movmg a couple
people around to make the
offense more potent Ltst
week. the Btg Blacks bal.mced
137 yards passing w11h 112
yards rushmg m the matchup
agamst Rtpley
Whtle quanerback Brandon
Warner staned the game, he
was qUickly moved to the
backlield to help utthze hts
runmng abtlitles whtle James
Casto moved back to yuaner·
back, a spot he IS qUite tamthur
wtth, startmg the last ftvc
games of last year under center

Warner went 4-tor- 10 wtth
70 yards and a touchdown and
added 59 yards rushmg on I I
carnes When Casto stepped
m, he qmckly made hts expenence felt, throwmg 3-for-4 for
37 yards wtth a touchdown.
"We may settle in on one or
the other and tt may be Casto
thts week, because wtth
Warner's runnmg abthty, we
could use htm more at the tulf
back posttlon, keepmg m mmd
that he can operate out ot the
quarterback position a~ well,"
satd Safford "He ts pt etty
valuable offenstvely and with
Casto's cxpenence 10 the past,
we don't lose a lot from one
thmg to another"
Also playmg m the back
lield wtll be Mark Foose, Jarod
Stouffer, Travts Rttt1e and oosstbl y Seth Becknar, who wtll
be avatlable this week for some
play after suffenng a broken
thumb 111 the off-season, gtvmg
the Btg Blacks qutte a btl of
depth m the backfield headmg
to Charleston for the match
wtth Stssonvt!le to open conterence play

2005

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
SEOAL
W-L PF
o-o
000
0-0 000
0-0 000
000
o-o 000
0-Q
000

Gall a Academy
Jackson
Athens
Logan

o-o

Man~tta

Warren

ALL
W-L PF
1 0 28
1·0 14
0-1
21
0-1
Q-1 1
0-1
7

PA
000
000
000
000
000
000

o

PA
6
0
39
7
32
20

Nelsonv Ue-York 39 Athens 21
Gallla Academy 28 Me1gs 6

Frldoy'oMBIOS at Athens
WheelOilib.Jrg at Gall~ /'Uderrr;

JackSOn 14, Wellston o
Lancaster 7 Logan 0
Morgan 32 Marietta 7
Belpre 20 Warren 7

Waverly Jad&lt;san •
Chlllrolhe at Logan
Cambfidge at Marietta
Philo at Warren

lilt WHk

W·L

PF

PA

W·L

ChesapeaKe

(}()
().0
().0
().0
().0
().0

000
000
000
000
000
000

1-Q
1-0
l 0
01

Fairland
Coal Grove

000
000
000
000
000
000

A1ver Valley

0-1
0·1

ALL
PF
30
22
21

20

20
7
6
27

6
14

48
36

W(lrfne 0/N) at Chesapeake
Falrv~ (KY) at Coal GFalriand at Winfield (Jtfl/)
Nelsonv!lle-'tbrk at River Valley
Rock Hill at Vintof\COuntt
Sooth Po1nt at lrontoo

Portsmouth W 48 Fairland 6
RM!r Yal~ 30 Sou1hea5lem 20
Rock H1tl 22 Toll s1a 7
South Po1nt 21 V1nton
6

to

Ohio Dlvltlon
TVC
W·L
().0
().0

Tnmbkl
Eastern
Federal Hockmg
Miller
Southern
Waterford

ALL

PF

PA
000 000
000 000

00

000 000
00 000 000
0·0
000 000
00 000 000
Hocking Dlvlalon
W-L
().0

00
00
0·0

(}()
(}()

W·L PF

PA

10
1-0
1·0
01
0 1

0

0.1

PA
000
000
000
000
000
000

PF

000
000
000
000
000
000

W·L
1·0

Q-1
01
0·1

().1
01

26
20
39

6
6
0
PF

33
35
6

21
28
21

14
PA
0

54

0

32
26

0
18

7
33

Cardinal Conference
CARDINAL

Poe a
Herbert Hoover
logan
Wayne
W1nf1eld
Pt Pleasant
S•ssonv1lle ,

W-l
1·0
().0
().0
(}()
0·0
0·0
0·1

Pf
000
000
000
000
000
000
000

ALL

W.L PF
1-Q 21

PA

000
000
000
000
000
000
000

1-Q
10

29
12

1-Q

27

(}()

0

12
6

().j

().1

PA
6
19

10
0
0
31

21

Frtday't QllmN
Point Pleasant at Slssor"MIIe
Roane County at Herbert Hoover
Johnson Central (Ky) at logan

lilt WHk
Ripley 31 Pomt Pleasant 12
Hoover 29 Ravenswood 19
logan 12 Man 10
Poca 21, S•ssonv111e 6
Wayne 27 lawrence Co 0
W1nf1eld a\ Humcane ppd

W"ffO

at Chesapeake (Ohio)

Fan1and (Ohio)

at Winfield

Non-League
ALL
South Galha
Hannan
Wahama

W-L
10
01
0-1

Last week
Hamlin 40 Hamlin 0
W1lhamson 24 Wahama 17
South Galha 54 Eastern 35

PF

PA
35
40
24

54
0
17

FridoyoglrMO
Wahama at Federal Hock•ng
South Gallia at Green
Solurtlay, Sep1onQr 3
Hannan at Monlealm

following vehicle
1996 Dodge
Van
Serial
No.
2B7KB31Z9TK118410
- V-8 with wheelchair
hit
Meigs
Industries
reserves the nght to

reject any and all bids
.or sell lo the highest
bidder 1ndlvidually,
which ever brings the
highest return • lo
Meigs lnduslrles, Inc.

PUBLIC SALE
Notice Ia hereby
given
that
on
September 3, 2005 at
10:00 a m a pubttc
sate witt be held lor
the purpose of satls·
tying a landlord's tlen
on the content• of

sell-service storage
room. The goods to
be sold are described
generally as household. The room witt be
opened for viewing

Vehicle witt be sold as
Is condtllon.
To Inspect vehicle
during normal busl·
ness hours, call 1740.992-6681. Bids
will be open on
September B, 2005 al
11 00 a.m. al Metga
Industries
Send seated btda to

lmmedlalety prior to
sollcl1allon of bids
Description of properly
11
fottowo.
Studio opeake,.., mat·
trass q, box prlngs q,

Execullve

play pen , Chrlstmll
decoration, pictureo.
coffee table, stereo,
toys, bag cloths,
answering machine.
Bay
t25
Name.

Director

{BIDS)

Meigs

Industries, Inc.

P.O Box 307 • 1310
Carleton Street
Syracuse, Ohio 4Sn9
{8) 25, 26, 28, 29, 30,
31 , (9)1

Help Wanted

~

V

computer
components, kids stuff,
matching couch and
love seat, end table,
cookw1re, furniture,

Thicker,

Autumn

Addreu:

P.O.

Box

• Help Wanted

MEDICAL RECORD .
TRANSCRIPTIONIST

'
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal
1s currently
. acceplmg resumes for a Med1cal Record
Transcnpuom sl Regtstered Health
lnformalmn TechmC1an preferred One to
three years of med1cal transcnpt10n
Mmtmum speed of 60 words
1~xpenence
per mmute
.
Excellent sa lary, hohdays. health
msuraricc smgle/famdy plan , dental plan,
!tfe 1nsurance vacation. long -term
d1sab1llly and retirement
Send

re s ume ~ 10

PleaS¥nt Valley Hospttal,
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dn ve.
Pom l Pleasa111. WV 25550
(304)675 4340

www pvalley org
AA/EOE
t

Every Friday &amp; Satu[day
Doors Open 4 00 pm
Early Btrds 5 15 pm
Reg. Sesston 6·30 pm

Public Notice
SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
05CV051
WELLS
FARGO
BANK Ptalntm vs
Billy J. Trout et al
Defendant

acres more or lass

PARCEL2 Beginning
al the middle of the
West line o1 the S.E.
quarter
of
said
Sectton 33, thence
running Eas1 to the
fence ,
the
line
between H R La1te
(sic) and F1ueben
Walburn ,
thence

North
fence

along and
to Wm . G
Castor's line, thence
West lo Wm
G

Casltor's

corner ,

thence South lo the
pace of beginning,

containing 14 acres,
more or less.
PARCEL 3· Beginning
at the S W corner of a
14 acre lot owned by

Court of Common
Pleas, Metga County,
Ohio
In pursuance ol an
order of sale to me Wm. G Ceslor In said
dlrectad from said Section 33, running
court In the B!bove
South 5 rods; thence
enlflled action, I will
East 80 rods to the
expose to sale at pub- line between H R
lic auction on lhe Litle and JL Weslfall,
front stepo of lhe thence 8 rods along
Metgo County Court said line to lha S.E
Houoe on Frldoy, corner of said Wm . G.
October 7, 2005 II 10 • Cuhor'a 14 acre lot,
am, of oald day, the thence West 80 rods
following described to the place of beginreal eotate.
ning, eJdstlng 4 acres
Legal Deoc:rtptlon.
Parcels 1, 2 and 3
Situated In the Stele being
same
real
of OH, County of estata conveyed by
Meigs and tn the W B Gregory and
Columbia
of wife to Margaret
Gregory by deed of
Townohlp
PARCEL 1: Being In May 27, 1942, of
Section 33, Town 9, record Deed Book
Rango
15,
Ohio 151 pegs 64, of tho
Com.,.ny'l Purchase, Meigs County Deed
Columbia Townshtp , Records
Matga
County
PARCEL4: Wasl forty
acres of land In the
Beginning at the R E
comer of Section 33, South eighty acres o1
33,
In
thence North to the Fraction
mlddlo of Section 33, Section 27, town 9,
thence Wast In Ianda Range
15,
Ohio
formerly owned by Company 's Purchase
Wm. Morris; lhence
Parcel 4 betng same
South to the corner ol
real estate conveyed
said
Morris'
lot;
by Wesley A Gregory
and wife to Margaret
thence west to a lol
formerly owned by G. Gregory by deed of
G Mclain, lhanca June 16, 1928. of
south on an agreed record Dead Book
line to the section
t 34 Page 358, sa1d
line, lh1nce East on
M11gs County Deed
said section line to Records
the place of begin- Current Owner: Billy
ning, containing 66 J Trout
I

Properly AI 39070 Sl
Rt 689
Albany, Ohio 45710 ·
PPt 05-00282, 0500283, 05-00284
Prior
Deed
References: Volume
143, Page 825
Appratsed
at
$130,00000
Terms
of
Sale.

Estate Yard Sale
Sept 3, 9-?
MaJor appltances. table/cha1rs,
dtshes on Starcher Road,
Pomeroy. Oh10 located beyond
Holzer Chntc lotlow s1gns close to
Beech Grove
Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Sept 4
10 00 am
Norntnattons of offtcers

Cannot be sold fro

tess than 2/3rds of
the appraised value
10% down on day of
sate, cash or certified
check, balance due
on conflrma,lon ol

Party for members after meet1ng

sale.

Ractne Frre Dept
Chtcken BBQ &amp;
Homemade Ice Cream
Sunday, Sept 4th
Servtng begtns 11 00 a m.

Robert E Beqgte ,
Matgs County Sheriff ·
Attorney

for

the

Plaintm
Lerner,
Sampson,
&amp;Rothfuss

P.O. Box 5480
120 E 4th Street, 8th
Aoor
'
Cincinnati, OH 45202

50% off Storewide!
Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry
Now through 8/13

-4007
513-241-~100

{9)t , 8, 15

KIT &amp; CARLYL-~E~.---------...._

r
r~--•I'E-~.SON-•MS~-.,.1~
\ \ \01 \ 1 I \ II '\l"'i

~=~

SATURDAY SPECIAL
• $5 PACKS •

$1000 COVERALL
$1500 BLOCK OF 9
(If not htt Fnday)

4·Famoly yard sale The
Parts Barn Name brand
Seeking Female Compamoo boys s•zes 8 14 Plus size
40
to
50
POSSible clothmg &amp; lo ts of m sc
Comm1tment Send letter Thurs 9/1-? 9 OOam? Bad
Ph No Pcture
~ weather postpones to follow
55 1 Constitution Dnve tng week
Wmchester. KY 40391
586 Ann Dr1ve Frt-Sat 6
m1les south Rt 7 ofl
GIVEAWAY
Raccoon Ad Boys 8 12
womens 3 26 bunk bed
Giveaway to good home rescue heroes
female Calico cat 1yr old
spayed
Call
l1nda 8 !THies out 218 8 00?
(740)441 9347
Fr day &amp; Saturday Sept 2nd
&amp; 3rd Ram or shine
G1veaway to good home
4th
Ave
Sam-?
Cats male S1amese lemale 8111
black Angora and yellow Th\Jrs/Fn (1st/2nd) lots of
tabby 3M old 740.992 c lothmg toys and other
m1sc stuff
2399

r

$500 4 Leaf Clover
•No PAYOUT CUTS
124 Highland Ave

Potnt Pleasant, WV
304-675-3Bn

9731 State Rt 7S Thurs 9
3 Sat 9 3 tamps picture &amp;
m1sc 1tems If ra1n w1ll be m
Found Older York1e at the breezeway
pound weanng co llar To · - - - - - - - - Bidwell Umted Method•st
identtfy call (740)441 0490
C
hurch 111 Church St
Found All black Siamese cat i'lavmg yard sale Sept 2nd
w1th cream and brown k tten 3rd 9am-Spm
w•th
perfect
markm gs - - - - - - - - SpnngValley446·4488
Boys clothas (O 5) tlouse
wares bed toys bead•ng
m1sc Frt/Sat 8 OOam Stone
Harbor Route 588
1ng soccer and football
cleats s•ze 7 to 13 Toys
F1ve family garage sale 522 puzzles and games most
Left Fork Ad past
like new Books hard and
Caldwell Truck1ng turn Rt paperback Some 1urnlture
112 m1 on At 9am 5pm Fn twtn bed frames chairs, etc
Sat
Antiques
collector Lots ot miscellaneous Items
1 - DAY ONLY! Mulli·lam 1tems lawn traC1ors, g~rls such as b1cycles e loom
e1.:.
c _ __ __
Uy Garage Sale Sat 9/3!05 cloth ng 3 ant~que autos _lu..:g.:.ga:::g::•.:..c.
9am 4pm 565 Georges household and hundreds of Large sale (Someth ng lor
Creek Clolhmg household other 1tems
everyone) Household items
1tems Tupperware Avon
large/s mall tools
guns
Fnday and Saturday 9 5 3
vanely of m1sc
clottirng 160 2 m•les past
m1les out 588 from town
Holzer tum on Kerr Road
2336 Centenary Ad Sepl
FndayfSaturday 8 2 Home then on Pme Hill Road
2&amp;3 10 00 ? Chtfd1 en cloth
remodel sohd wood doors 9/2/05 9/3/05
ing Home lnt etc baskets
eleclncaf couch hshmg -M-u-lh:.:..cla.:.m.:.o.:.
ly::_ga-r-a-ge-s-a-le
3 family garage sale ram or lures. toys 212 Kell y Drive
sh•ne 15 Ann Dr 911 913
Sept 2nd &amp; 3rd 8 OOam-?
Aa1n or Sh•ne Antique
Sam Spm Vanety o1 . m1sc Garage sale 6 m•les below
glassware
turMure
Galltpohs
At
7S
3
or
4
famcheap
tly lots of n1ce th1ngs 912 Longaberger name brand
clothmg
co llechbles
Garage sale Sat Sept 3 913 8 30-?
Tupperware and much more 1
9 OOam 4 OOpm Kerr Ad
across fro m Llvtn g Water Household Items kid S/adult 271 McCully Road
m1sc
Clay ::.:..:.::.:::..:.:.:.:..:.::.:::..:._ __
Church Mens clothmg (Size clothing
Large 6x)(l() scrubs name Township building Thursday Sale Jumbo m Centenary
brand cfothmg housewares &amp; Fnday 9f1 912 9am 4pm Fnday &amp; Saturday loads ot
name brand clothes ~1ds
adults m•sc

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale . .. .
Announcement .
Antiques
Apartments for Rent
Auction and Flea Market..
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
Auto Repair. .• .•. .•.• .. ..••

.. ............ 725
•. .
. 030
.. .. .. •. . •. 530
. 440

.•. .... ... 080
. 760
. no

. 71 o

Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale

750

Building Supplies

.. 550

Business and Buildings ..
340
Business Opportunity
. .• • 210
Business Training .... ... ..
.
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. ... . •. . •• ••••.. 790
Camping Equipment •
• ~
780
Cards of Thanks
•• •• • • ••• 010

FREE BINGO
American Legton Mtddleport
September 3
5 Early B1rd Games Starling al 5 pm
Starltng at 6 30 pm
Play1ng B1ngo lor FREE
1st &amp; 2nd Paper Pack Free
A«er 1st and 2nd paper pack
$5 00 each
Guaranteed $60.00 a Game
Starburst $1 ,050 00
Door Pnze $1 ,000 Crank II

$6 ,000

190

Electrical/Refrigeration
.... .• B40
Equipment for Rent
. 480
Excavating. .. .•. . •• ••.
.• 830
Farm Equipment
.. 810
Farms lor Rent •
430 "
Farms for Sale
•.. 330
For Lease..... .. ..
. 490
For Sale
•
.•. 585
For sale or Trade
• . .
•. 590
Frulla &amp; Vegetables. .. .................. ...... ... .580
Fumlahed Rooms . ..
........450
General Hauling...... ...
. • . .. 850
Giveaway
.. • •...•. ....•. 040

Happy Ado .... ••• •..•.....
Hay &amp; Grain . .

. . ....050'
•.••••••..•840

Help Wanted. ..
• .. . 110
Home Improvements•. ,............. . ..
.. .810
........31 0
Homes for Sale
Household Goods •. ..•. ... . . . .. . .• ••. .• 510
Houses for Rent
• ..
410
In Memoriam....... ... ..• • . .. . . . . 020
In au ranee.. • .. . . .... .•..•.... ............. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .• . ... . 880
Livestock.
••..... . . .. .630
Loat and Found
. . ......••. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage. ..•• •• ... . .
350
Miscellaneous.. • .
. .. .• •.••.• 110
Miscellaneous MerchandiH • . ... .. .540
Mobile Home Repair ... .. ............. .... ... 861)
Mobile Homes tor Rent. .
.420
Mobile Homes lor Sale.. .•• .••.... ..
, .. 320
Money to Loan .
• • . . . •220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .
740
Musical Instruments
.........•...••.•.. 570

·t······· ... ..........

Get A Jump
on

Personals •. •. ..• ..•
Pete tor Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Professional Services .. ..
Radio, TV a CB Repair
Real Estate W.nted . .. ..
SChoola Instruction. .
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . .
Sltuallons Wanted .
Space for Rent .... .

-C)

Shop

'

2005 by NEA, Inc

www com•c• com

Classifieds!

005
.• 560
.. . 820
. . 230
•. •.. 160
.
360
. ••••.••...•. 150
.. . 650
.... 120
..460

Sporting Goods •

520

SUV'a lor Sale . ...
Truekl for Sale

... 720
. 715

Upholstery .

4!?~"'\
'-"-&lt;"'-( utt'i

b"'=~

Large 3 fam1ly yard sale·
715 Third Avenue in lot neiCI
to house Fnday September
2 and Saturday September
3rd Many new and hardly·
worn name brand young
men 5 and boys clotrung
s•zes lrom 10 10 33 wa•st
1eans Mens and womens
clothmg mclud1ng ..Wmen s
dress clothes s1ze 12
Several coats Brands such
as Lev1 Polo Amencan
Eagle etc mens womens
and children s shoes mclud·

r

.

Vane For S.le. • , .. •
Wanted to Buy
. ..
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .
wanted To Do ..
Wanted to Rent
. ..
..

Vird Sele- Gallipolis .. ... ... . •. .
Yard Sai•Pomeroy(Middle
Yard Sale-Pt Pleasant .. •.

. 870
730
090
..620
.. 180
. . .... 470

. 072
...... 074
078

v

(304) 675-1333'

Dally In - Column: 1•00 p.m.
Monday-Prlday for Insertion
:In Na:.:~ Day•• Paper
Sunday J:n-Column t 1.00 p.m.

Business Day• Pr-Ior To
Publication
sunday Dl•play: 1:00 pP•o~&gt;poo.r

Sunday• Paper

YARD SAI.E-

I'OMEROVIMIDoLE

Huge yi.rd sa le Several
Nascar Items entertamment
exerc1se equ1p
center
name brand clothing home
Interior to mtJCh to list Sept
2 3 Bam 4 30pm 2110 of a
m11e SA 554E follow stgns

FOUNil

(740) 992-2156
Display Ads

4

Huge garage sale Sept
1 2 &amp;3
9am-5pm
Little
Kyger Ad 1 m1le past R•ver
Valley H S

Los'r AND

Child/Elderly Care

lwr1ghlCIIc rwt

r

Register·

Ya rd sale September 3 at 41
Hilda Dr Baby clothes men
&amp; women 8·3 00
sale 912 9/3
Yard
IntersectiOn Keeter and
Buoce Woman men, bOys
lothes. nurse uniforms

C

miSC
McCoy, Rosev1lle
We l ler
potlery
other
anttques 22 mag nile 2
compound
bows,
blue
loVeseat much morel

r~~~y~r

F1rst t1 me yard sale Sept
2nd &amp; 3rd 9 5pm 45
Atver vlewplace 2 blocks
I rom Valley Lumber clothes
bedd1ng household &amp; lots of
msc
F1rsl time yard sale
Furmture Ant1ques Crocks
Clothing Tools Hosp1tal bed
and More September 1 to
September 3
South 5th
M1ddleport •
Garage Sale· Sept 1·2·3
Whites H1ll Ad Rutland
Oh10
Garage Sale Ran or Sh1ne
Sept 1st &amp; 2nd 9 OOAM to
5 OOPM 1 m•l e on eashan
Ad comtng from Rac1ne
Garage Sale Salem Center
Sep t 1 2-3
3 Fa m11ies
Aa1n or Sh1na
Huge 5 Fam1ly Garage Sale
Sept 6 &amp; 7
8 00 4 00
Evans 52544 Bald Knob
St1versv1lle Road Portla nd

Thurs1 Fn 8 ? At 7 2 mles
north of Chester hundreds
of m1sc Items

.:.._..::_.:._:.:c._.:._____

Yard Sale· septembe r 1st &amp;
2nd 41190 Laurel Cliff Ad
Pomeroy
Ohto
Mildled
H· ·•
__~_so
_n______
Yard Sale
Sept 3 4 5
8 00-4 00
$5 00 per Waf
marl s1ze bag
Clothes
books and m•sc 11ems
Yard/Ftorch/lndoor Sale· 893

r

S Third Middleport Sept 1

3 9am-4pm rain or shme

2 Family 2 Day Yard Sale
Smith

Goegtern

Road
Pomeroy OH(off
Flatwoods Road) Fr.day
9/2105 9 00-5 00 Saturday
9/3105
900200
mm1
blmds
golf bag
toys
women s mens and bOYs
clothmg kitChenware
much more

Thu..-•day for Sunday•

r

YARUSAI.E-

Pr. PLEAsANT

yARD SAJ£·
Pl. PI.EASAJI(f

L~-------3 Family Yard Sale Sept 2nd
&amp; 3 rd 9001111400 At 62
South top of Oead Man 5 Ht!l
on the nghl
Wtndows

and S•nks Mrcrowave Stand
Clothes lots of MISC

Now you can have borders ond graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~~
Jr1'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

£•

110

HEU' WAIVI'EIJ

HEI P WAN'IlJJ

1

11'\\(' 1\1

lfap WAN'IllJ

LICENSED SOCIAL
SECURITf OFFICERS
WORKER
Overb rook Re hablhlat1o n
FuJI T1me pos111on n
Cente r IS now accepting
Gall1pohs
resumes fo r the pos t1on of
$8 00 per hOur
Dtrector of Soc1a1 Serv ces
Wed Thu Fn Sat
The qualtf•ed ca nd1d ate
4pm mtdntghl
must be a LSW possess1ng
Must be 18 years or older
stron g verbal and wntten
Have own veh1cle VOL
commun•cat1on
skills and a clean cr1mmal record
Expenence m Secur ty or
Med1ca1d Med1care and
MOS knowledge Long ter m Law Enforcemenl preferred
ca re eKper1ance preferred
We Prov1de
but not reqwred Qual•l ed
Pa1d Tra1mng
candidates
may
send
Pa1d Vacations
resumes to Charla Brow nHealth Benet ts offered
An Eltcellenl way to earn McGwre
AN
LNHA
Please call
money The New Av on
Admrnt stralor 333 Page
Man Fr
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Street Middleport Ohi o
9am-3pm
45760 EOE
1 BOO 869 89 75
Appalachian T re IS look1ng
Contine ntal Secret
for a General Serv1ce - - - - - - - - Serv1ce Bureau Inc
Person
Stop by our loca LPN
needed
full·l•me
Drug Free Workplace
!!On @ 4 26 VIand St PI Monday Fr1day day shift nb
EOE
Pleas tor a Appl cation
weekends no holidays
Apply at 936 St At 160 The
Athens Me gs
Are you look ng for a change Galhpohs (740) 446·9620
Educational Serv ce Center
m your nurs1ng? Full t1me or - - - ' - - - - - - - IS seekmg an educat1onat
Part t1me AN needed lor
a1de for Me1gs County
growmg
home
health
School.s Must meet H•ghly
agency Fle1t1bl e scheduling
Qualified Standard tor OhiO
compet11tve wagos wllh ben
Educat onal
A•de
ellis Call toll free 1 866
Certdtcatlon Salary based
3681100
on cert1frcal1on and expen
NE ProJect Manager for ence
Th is pos I on has
Hugh 5 Farruly Garage Sale AVONI All Areas To Buy or salary poston Le ad team Board approved benefits
Sh1rloy Spears 304 of ass slan ts 1n reset of retail Letter of Interest resume
At 2 JCT 87 M II Crk Rd Sell
675
1429
d1sptays for hOme 1mprove
Sepl1234567
Stone
ment retailer Crew mgmt and references must be
Jar Iron Sk1llets Old Clock
rccc1ved by 12 00 noon
Cook Needed
and planogram eltp a must
Old Furn1ture Glassware
September 9 Subm1t to
Trvl may be up to 3 wks
Lmen s Set Rmgs Pots
John
D
Costanz o
per
day
Monday
Expenses
pd
+
per
drem
6
Hours
Pans lots More
Supenntendenl
Athens
Friday day Shift Only no Must possess reliable trans
Movmg Sale Everythmg eve n1ngs or weekends Pad porfatlon Se nd 1esume to Me1gs Educa.t1 onal Serv ce
goes 704 Manett a Road benel1ts 1nclude vacahon JOrdan JUStus @resourcep co Center PO Box 684 320
112 E Ma1n St Pomeroy
Sept 1st thru3rd 8 4
SICk
&amp;
holiday
pay m or taK to 888 501-7972
OH
45769
Equal
E10;penence helpful or we w II . , . - - - - - - . , - - Opportun1 ty
Yard Sale 1 Day Only
~~~ y~~e ~p~a;~ ~~:~;~o Ohio Val ley Home Health Employer/Prov•der
Sept 3rd Bam 12 noon
2914 Spruce Ave
2369 Mason County Achon Inc hmng Full Time AN s 150
Smoots
Group Inc (Pt Pleasant Compettt1ve Wages Mileage
Womens &amp; Mens Clothe s
INS11W(,0'
Senior Center) 101 2 nd and benefitS nclud1ng health
Shoes Baskets 0 1shes
lawn Ch81rs &amp; Tools
Street Pt Pleasant WV
nsurance Apply al 1480
EOE MJF A!A
Jackson P1ke Galhpol s or Concealed P stol Class
Yard Sale Fn and Sat Sept
phone toll free H366 441 September 3 9 00 am VFW
2&amp;3 9 5pm, 452 Cen ter St
1393
Expandmg mto Mason WV Ph (7 40)843
Dnvers Needed
Mason Home Items Ntce
COL Onvers Willing to dnve Mason County WV WV 5555 Cell (7 40)416 3329
Cloth1ng N1ntendo Super
lor local ready m1x-concrete AN s encouraged to apply
Playslatlons
N1ntendo
Gallipolis Career College
company Expenence 1s
OUTSIDE SALES
w/games M 1~ 1tems
(Careers Close To Home)
preferred but not necessary
REPRES ENT A TIVF.
Call Today! 740-446-4367
Yard Sale Saturday Sept Drrver must be w1 111ng to do
1 800 214 0452
3rd Home lnlenor Books pre ma1ntenance on trucks
Gallipol iS
The
Dally
www gall poiiSCllr~col age com
&amp;
eqwpment
yard
work
&amp;
Otrls Clothes Jumor SIZe 4·
Ace ed ted i.4embel AcC!ed hr&gt;g
s acceptmg
Tnbun&amp;
8 Boys Clothes 12H 16H other miSCellaneous chores
Goune• lor frodepen6enl Co leges
resumes for a lul l hme
Expenence
operatmg
equ1p
ana Sci'IOOis 12748
Womens Dresses 12 to 16
outSide sales represents
Apple Grove Selby lane ment &amp; extra sk1lls such as
170
t1ve to JOin our sales team
weldtng a plus
across from MillStOne Rd
ML'CELLA~\J ll S
and
to
mana
ge
an
estab·
Call (304)937·3410
ltsfrled
acccrunt
list
wh1le
\\'ANTH&gt;
Gallipolis Career College 1s ca11 1ng on new accounts
DIRECT TV 3 room wrth
L---oimiloiBiiuvilio-- presently
an The successful cand1date
seekmg
Trvo FR6E' t 45 channel s
mstructor who can teach w1tl be a diSCiplined sell
only $39 00 per month Ask
Absolute Top DOllar US
M1crosoft OffiCe classes A motived team player that
how to get FREE HBO
S•lver and Gold Coms
mm mum of a bachelors understands the 1mpor
MAX and hOme enterta•n
Proqfsets Gold A1ngs Pre
lance
ol
develop1ng
degree
1s
reqUi red
ment system Call 800 523
1935
US
Currency
strong
mtltually
benef•
7556 for detatls
Sohta1re Otamonds M T S Interested cand•dates can
tax or ematl thetr resumes to Cia I bus1ness relation
Com Shop 151 Second
1111
W\XIl])
sh ps w1lh our customers
446 41 24 or tdaniCkl@galAvenue Gallipolis 740 446
Do
hpol•scareerconege com
2842
The 1dea1 candidate will
_::.:.__ _ _ _ _ __
Art of Color mte nor extermr
Real-Estate Wanted local HEALTHCARE SERVICES have sale expenence For
lnlftrVIeW
house pamhng Free estr
person look•ng tor a home to GROUP
The
largest conhdent1al
buy All caSh
Me1gs or prov1 der ot housekeeprng please send resume and
mates. Call (740)388 !1950
Gall•a No double w de or and laundry serv1ces to the cover letter to Gallipolis
modular 740 41 6 3 130
long term care rndustry 1S Da11y Tnbune Attn Jom
Complete yard work and
look ng lor exper~encetl Freeland 825 Th1rd Ave.
home repmr 20 years exp
housekeepmg/
laundry Gallipolis Ohto 45631
Ref (740}446 3682
superv1sors If you want to
Repan
and
EMTs Computer
grow wtttl a well establrshed ParamediCS
&amp;
~ publocly held compacy needed Apply a! t354 Troubleshoot Web Des~gn
Networking Programmmg
.1
Hru\VANllll 1 please lax resumes to 614 Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
Bwld New Systems Resto're
734·9754 or call 1 BOO 804
Windows V1rus Removal
0551 ext 93
Posrtton Open•ng Cltnrca l
PhoneN740 992 7903
CriSIS
ASSIStantS
1oo
http ttwww geoc1t1es cornfho
Help WanteCI Overbrook
Stab111zat10n Un•t located 1n
tdamn32934 / Emall ho t
Center 1Scurrently accept1ng
Ga ll pahs OH Must be able
damn32934 @yahoo com
appllcatmns for Pari T1me
to work shllt work week
LPNs for the 7am to 7pm
TO
ends and hohdays H1gh I 1.\ lll babystt 1n my Home
st·Htt Please come 1n and 1111
DRIVE
SchOol graduate or GED close to School &amp; Hosp1ta!
out an apphcauon at 333
reqUired
Valid Ortver s References
Available
Page Stree1 M ddleporl
lrcense
wtth
the
ab1l1ty
to
be
(304)675
4471
NO EXPERIENCE NECESS...RY
OH . EOE
covered on Agency s Fleet
• FLU l ME CLASSES
COl TRAINING
1nsurance plan F~rst A1d and Inter or/EIO;IefiO' , , Pa nt1ng
Hmng
Buns
Party
Barn
' f !O,IoNCING AVAILA8LE
Power
Wasnmg
Pos1t10n aM
JOB PLACEMENT
deli/driVe thru,carry
out CPR requ1red
Reasonable rates refe r
ENROLl NO loiOH
o1
requ
res
d1rect
care
Must be at least 19 yrs old
ences e~~:pe nenced Free
Pte~\ up appl1cali0n M F 8 4 cltel'\ts S6 67 per hour Send
resumes !O Manager of eshmates Ca ll !7401742
ALLIANCE
Resources 2013 or (740)645·2638
Lead Gu11ar st also plays Human
TRACTOR TRAILER
b
k Woodland Centers 3086
TRAINING CENTER S
ass seek.ng to JOin a war
State Certil ed t.: 1nk
WYTHEVILLE VA
ng band ot to start one State Route 160 Gallipolis af)proved ch1ldcare has
Gen1e country countr} rock OhtO 45631
1mmea am openmgs lor
1-B00-334-1203
cl assrc rOck Call t304)675
ages 6 weeks&amp; up ca l
-••ttnetlllctol'lrtto~&amp;~c.JITI
1451
POSTAL JOBS
Shelly 304 675 2343 lo r
L...!!!~~!!!!!~!!!:.l~-' ___:.,.cc-":c-:c:-:-- S,S 94 $22 56/ht now h1r more deta11s
1 WORKERS NEEDED
LICENSED SOCIAL
1ng For aophcauon &amp; tree - - - - - . . . . . , - - OO
•
WOAKEO
Assemble crafts
2
D0
4
U
Overbrook Renab •ht 8tlon gove rnment JOb 1nlo call T w 0
wood tlems
Honest
Amencan Assoc of labor Dependable
Center
1s
now
acceptmg
·ate
To $480/wk
and E•celle"t
24 /hrs O'sc '
"
Mater~als provided
resumes for ti'e pos1l1on of 1·913 599 8226
Refere nces
Hbmes and
Free Information pkg 24Hr D1rector of Soc1al ServiCe&amp; emp Sef'~
Offtces
Mary (740 992
801-428-4649
The quallllfd candidate - - - - - - - - - 7414 )
---'----~~- must be a LSW possess1ng Res1dent al
Treatment
Overbrook Center IS current strong verbal and wr •lten F9CI1Ify 1or boys now hrr1ng
1y accept 1 ~g apphcat 1ons ior commun1catton
skriiS D1rect Care Workers Pay
a full ' t1me adm1nrstrat1ve Med1ca d Med 1care ano based on expenence pad
secretary Computer sktlls MDS knOI.Iedge Long te rm 1nsurance {740)379 9083
1crosoft Word care expenence prelerred ctam J.pm Man
required
and Excel expenence pre but not req,.nrea Ouall' ed
ferred
Benefits package cand1 dates
may
send True~ Dr vers
Neeoed
ava1lable Please stop try resumes to
t'larle Brown Handerson WV based earn
.
our offiCe and complete an McGwre
AN
LNHA er iOOkmg lor expenenced
apphca!IOn No phone calls Adm1n1strator 333 Page Class A ,COL Onvers
please 333 l:ag~et
Stree
M1ddteport Oh10 Interested
pa111es
call
Mtddleport OH 45760 E
EOE
t:l04 )675 7434

3 Fam11y Yard-Sale Power
Washer Canon Camcorder
w1th
d1g1tal
Camera
Housewares
G1rls
&amp;
Ctothmg
Women
Convection Oven Ste reo
Cabmet Na scar Kntves
4 Families Garage Sa les 1n much more Fr1 &amp; Sat Sept
R1ggs Crest Manor Turn At 2 3 9-?
6 Stoneybro ok
o" ot Rt 7 above lhe TP Estates
Chester Water Co Rd
28
Locust Grove take f~rst tu rn Appliances
Furniture
to R1ght 1nto A1ggs AdditiOn Household Items A little of
Children s VCR mov1es everyth1ng 229 Belle Ad
clothes good toys ant1que 3A m1les out Sandhill Fnday
dtshes furmture baskets &amp; Saturday
pictures and much more
Saturday Sept3rd 8 00 Garage Sale 904 Fourth
Street New Haven
Turn
5 00 ra•n or shme
right at the Tenn1s Court
685 Gen Hart Parkway 4 Sept 2 &amp; 3 AntiQue secre
Fam1ly
Collectible Ball tary &amp; L1brary tabl e furn1
Cards Beantes &amp; lots mtsc lure tools tool box home
Ra1n or Shme September tntenor ilems &amp; etc
,st 2nd &amp; 3rd
- - - - - - -- - Gtgant•c Sale Everythi'ng
8 111
Cross
reSidence lmagmable Rt87 to l eon
Ptckens Streel
Racme Baden Sept t 2 3 3rd House
Sept 2nd~rd Women s &amp; on nght (304)895 3828
girls Clothing and shoes
Huge Yard Sale Fn &amp; Sat 9
Crafts
4
Furniture Gun Cabtf'let
----,--~~--Family Sale 34870 St Rt 7 Cloth1ng Household Goods
Pomeroy Oh past skating 1/8-mtle out Crab Creek Ad
rmk north 9 4 ram cancels Beale Meadow Ad

35880
Flatwoods
Ad •
Pomeroy great back to
school clothe s for boys &amp;
g~rls lad1es casual &amp; dress
clothes n~ce mens sui ts
s zes 42·46 Sept 2·3

Sat 3 Sept 9 5 6309 St At 1
Huge 11'ld00r yard sale P1ne
588 Boys clothes furmture
Grove Ad at the old l&amp;l ttre
decorat1ons
women s
bam GigantiC selectiOn of
clothes etc
Clothes tor the ent1re lam1ly
formal
Sat Sept 3rd 9am 4pm Nurs•ng scrubs
large
160 North hrsl leh past the gowns(some
Korner, t mile out Junto1 women s) Video cameras
boy &amp; adult clothes daybed adult b1cycle CO changers
for vehiCles Su11 cases A
Trash &amp; Treasure Sale 1111 huge selectiOn of baby
Oh10 Ave (across from F1rst mfanl &amp; to ddler clothes
Baptist
Church)Sat Sun Youth bed and a good van
8 OOam ? Electnc cook ety of baby gear If you re
exerc1se
IJ1ke having a baby don t mtss
stove
Longaberger
Halloween this yard satel September
c o s tume ~
2nd&amp;3rd 9-5
Christmas/Halloween decor
clothm \J
k1tchen ttems Mov•ng Out Sale Sept 1st
to 3rd 8 00 to 4 00 Death
much more 4 fam•IY sate
m the family all 1tems must
Yard sale at 1939 Chatham go
35822 St At 143
St 1st 2nd &amp; 3rd Antiques Harnsonv1lle OH Call 740
ch1ldrens clothes furniture 698 9758(hene)
dishes
N1ce 2 family yard sale
Yard
sate
Saturday 1641
l •ncoln
He1ghts
September 3 1686 UllCOin Everytt11ng cheap Sept 1st
P1ke
Baby/toddler
g1rl
&amp; 2nd
clothes like oew mens XL
womens M and L. fan and Saturday- huge four fam1ly
wmter crahs toys etc Ra1n namebrand clothing carpet
date 1Oth Neighbors hav.n~ Longaberger mtsc At 143
sale elsa Don t m1ss out three m•les from At 7
great quality 1tems
Sept 2 3,&amp;5 4 Fam1ty yard
Yard sale Sept 1 thru 5 sale 1 mile off Rl 7 on 124
Kmck
knacks
clothes 1st house on Ba1fey Run
tabkls puules etc Burnett Road
Ad Kanauga
September 2nd &amp; 3rd SAM
Yard sale Sept 1. 2 3, 9am 5PM Sulnner Road oH 248
1 3775 Bulav•lle Ptke
m Chester

'432!0

All Dl•play· 12 Noon 2

• All ads must be prepaid'

Gogantoc yardlcra1t sale
Sept 2·3 across from
G1ovannls Crown C1ty Baby
boys g1rls Jumors ladles
clothing
cralts.
ect
Fantastic condttiOn &amp; pr1cesl

r

Autos lor Sale ..

SAVINGS

... THE
NEiiiSPA PER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!.'

1

Sentinel

Word Ads

~or-

cc

BINGO

422, City Racine,
Ohlo45n1
Terms of sale witt be
c81h or certified fund.
Htlt's Sell Storage
29670 Baohan Rd ,
Raclna, OH 45n1
{8), 31 (9)1 ,2

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

7

Frlday'8 ga11'181
Trimble at Alexander
Belpre at Fort Rye
Mei~s at Athens
Nelsonville-York at River Valley
Rock Hill at Vinton COunty
Wellston at Minford
Eastern at Zane Trace
Wahama ('i'N) at Federal Hocking
Miller at Newscomerstown
Symmes Valley at Southern
Watertord at Frontier

last WMk
Alexander 26 M•ller o
Belpre 20 Warren 7
Gailla Academy 28 Meigs 6
Nelsonv~lle- Vorl&lt; 39 Athens 21
South Po1nt 21 VInton Co 6
Jackson 14 Wellston 0
South Gallla 54 Eastern as
Caldwell 17 Fed Hock 6
Green 7 Southern 0
Trimble 33 Maysville 0
Beallsville 33 Waterford 18

BLIC
NOTICES
Public Notice

Ocftfee llo~.s-

Tri-Valley Conference

Nelsonv1lle York
Meigs
Vinton County
Wellston

llblp Caun1y OH

hi One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECtS
PLUS YOUR AD

PA

Frldoy'oga,_

La1t week
Portsmouth 27, Chesapeake 20
Piketon 36 Coal Grove 14

Alexander
Belpre

ster

~e

al

Ohio Valle&amp;~onlerence

Rock Hill
South Point

www.mydallysentlnel.com

mrtbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIE ·D

Expanded GlancE

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Meigs
Industries
Incorporated will be
accepting btds for the

Thursday, September 1, 2005

An established bus1ness n
Gallipolis Is lookln{l lor one
h ghly mo11vated salespor
son w til a strong work ethiC
to JOin our company Are you
look ng lor full-11me work?
Are you looking tor a perm a
nant full t1me po s1t1on? Are
you 1nteresled In unlim ted
earnmgs potenllal? All
replies w111 be kept tn stnct
co nfide nce
Send
your
resume to CLA Box 569 c1o
Gallipolis Tnbune PO Box
469 Gallipolis OH 45631

r

BtJSL\b'iS
Ot,'OKn'NIT\
oNOTIC to
HID VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bus•ness w1th peo
pie you know and NOT 1
end money through th
ma1l UJllll you have mves11
aled the offenn

MoNH
IU loAN

Borrow Smart Contac
he Oh•o D•v1s on o
Fmanc al
lnst tuiiOn
ff1ce of Consume
Ha1rs BEFORE you re l1
ance your home o
bta•n a loan BEWAA
1 requests tor any larg

dvance payrnenls o
ees or 1nsurance Cal
he Off1ce ol Consurne
!fa rs toll tree at 1 866
78 0003 to learn 11 th
ongago broker
o
IS
proper!
ender
censed (Th•s rs a publl
entiCe announcemen
rom th e 011 a Va lle

~P=ub:l:os:h•:co=Co:m:p:•:n:)=~
I!!

PHon~"lU"l \I

SFR\ICES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY fSSt?
No Fee Unless We W n1
1 888 582 3345
~l\ll'l\ll·

10

112 Pleasant Street 3
Bedroo m 1 1 2 BaHls
Fam•ly Room D•n•ng Room
Full Basement
StorAge
Bldg Garage New Central
Au Cond New W r. dows
(304)675 4034
4yrs old 3br 2oa w1tl1 l 1re
place on 1 5 acres n coun
try SB9900 !740)7091166
Athml 1on 1
Local compary oHerong NO
poo
DOWN PAYMENT
grams 10 1 yo to buy yow
home onsleac! at rent ng
• t 00° e f1nan c1ng
• Less tha n pertect credrt
acceptea
Payment could oe !he
same as rem
Locators
Mongage
(740 )367 0000
.

to

-

110

LEARN

M

Fn

c

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Hmu:;·
tnRS\1~

G:t

All real II!Stale advll!rt lstng
m this newspaper rs
subject to t~ Federll'll
Fa1r Housmg Act of 1968
wh1ch makes rt tllegal to
advertise any
preferen ce 1tmnat1on or
drscnmln8tlon based on
race color rehgton se•
tamu .. t status or nattonal
on gm or any 1nlen11on to
male any such
preference llmrt.etiOI"' or
dtsrmmmatton
Th1s newspaper Will nol
knowingly accept
eclverttsements tor reel
estate whrch 15m
vrola11on of the l&amp;w Our
readers are hereby
Informe-d tt'lat all
dwellll"'gs edvert1s6d in
!h1a newspaper are
av1111111ble on an equal
o~portuntly bues

.

r-.Jewly ernoue •ed 3 or -4
bedrooms certral "r lui
basemern '1ar dwood froJrs
oetached garagE lllrge CO\
ered ;..a • o fe nced bac•
yaro clo se tr scnoo1c:. Port
Pleasant
$69 5QC:
(7401709 1382
R• 2 N 3br F-ul s ze
Bc sement a B 1Cl&lt; 1 Ca1 •
Garage
3 br 2 l1&lt;~ S t gle Ca
Garage Camp Cof'ley Atea
(3(}41995·3129

~ ~l&lt;•m ~ H 0 \I FS
mR S\t

12xto5 38R 'T1C'I

SJ 200 oao

~

e nome

-.. od... e 24sr.

or 1:'40137'9 2923

'

14:.:64
Used
2
Betl r~.,'C'm Onlv 54q95 Call
i7 -1 1'\IJ85 009P.

N•ce

�•

·Thursday, September 1, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Thursd,y, September 1, 2005
.-LLEYOOP

LIVElffilCK
27 Acres , Ooublewlde, 3
bedroom , 2 b·ath, Lg
,Outbuilding, LG Sheet long
.Hollow Ad in letart $65,000
aher 2pm {304)895·8770 or
1304)593-8139

14x70 trailer lor rent, $300.
$250 fo r deposit, Hud
approved, (740)742-2714

Appliance

'l&lt;fJ

HlRRENT

7783

t

L(JfS &amp;
ACRHGE

2.65 acres 3. 100 sq. ft
barn, city water. electnc.
sep1ic, c1ty schools. 2 mites
sou1t1 ot GallipOlis on At
.218 Prime location, won 't
lasl.
$55,000. serious
inqu1ries only
(7 40)44 17333 .

t and 2 bedroom ·apart-.
ments, fur n1shed anci untur·
nished . secur1ty deposit
reQUired. no pets. 740-992·
2218

'
2 bedroom apt. on SA 1'-BO.
Fully remodeled. central air,
washer/dryer hOokup. stove
&amp; refngerator mcluded
$460/mo. (740)441-0 194.
(740)441-1 184

s

For Renr Trailer Lot, 75 a '2 bedroom apt. on SA 850.
Brand Now Cenlrai air,
month (304)675 -4874
stove &amp; refrigerator includ For sale : 1 acre m/1 Willi ed . washer/dryer hookup.
older MH Bidwell/Porter $700/mo. (7 40)441·0194 ,
area . $26 .000 080. Call (740)44, -11 84
(740)388-8702
alter
2 bedroom . 1 bath. water
5:30pm
paid, $350 month. $350
security
depos11.
Call
RIAL E."fATI:
(740)446-3481
"~\,'\111-J&gt; l

SSOO Demonstration Bonus·
Let us demo a John Deere Z
Trak or X Series AII·Wheel
Steer on your lawn and
receive an extra SSOO oil our
already discounted prices.
limited
time
offer.
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter. Ohio. {740)446-24 12. '
( 740)446- 7444 1·8 77 ·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
AUI'(X)
tinai'ICing, 90 days same as
cash . VISa/ Master Card
FOR SALE
Dnve- a·. httle save alot.

1 bedroom house.
tt
Garfield Ave. Gallipolis .
$300!mo. (7401441·0194 ,
(740)441·1 164.

Oct 1st. 740-41 6-1'387.
(740)753·2595

s~

AmlQUE'i

01 Pontiac Grand AM, 5·
Speed. AC , good Gas
Mileage, Looks' Sharp,
$4 ,900 (740)441 -824 1 or
(304)675-7998

· Designed to Heal Your Home
and Your Hot Water'

• Garage Melal ·
Call

Morris

Equipment
LLC.
740-742-2455

• Repairs
• Parts
• Service
Trucks Dozers
• Specialty • Clutches
• Bwkes

oap_

740• 698• 6809

L~:!~Tu~ppers Plains, OH

10

45783
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement · :
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • AcCident ·

No Lawn
Small
Call 742-2595 ·
Rlder-Push-Weedeating
Owner Operated

let me :Jc. 1\ for youl

Now enrolling students for the
2205~2006 school year.
Grades K·4 through 12

K-4 Open House
Aug. 25th at 7:00PM
For more information call
.740-992-3824 or 740-667-0338

sa

''

..:IlL

~
JIM'S FIRM EQUIPMENT, INC.
..,..., , . _ .

Ot-O.L.AfD

Sales • Pa rts • Service

'

25Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

11·5·-

Storage

TRUCKS-

L__,.:FO-R:,:SALE~~-,..1

Phone ·

14

44

..
....

Pomeroy, Ohio

..,.,.,,., ,.
.,...,,.,
,._,

l:ome By I t'ab

Pl ayer, 5 speed manual
l ra nsmission, Very goOd
Friday. ~am-4 : 30pm . Closed condition. $3,200 (304)675·
Saturday
&amp; 1849 after 4:30
ThUrsday.
Sunday. (740)446-7300
.,;,,;..;.;.;_,.;;,;.._ _ __,

RI 'IIDING
SUI'J'IJ],:S

r

~

, . , . . . . . . 1111

4x4

FiJRSALE

"lawn c.nd

1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
Block, briclo\. sewer pipes.
$3000 OBO. Calll740 )286w1ndows . lin tels. etc. Claude
8523 atler 6 m.
Winters, Rio G1ande, OH
Call 740-245°5121 . '

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

FoHSALE

~ ."'GI E I\IJAYott?
30 Yrs. Exp. •Ins. Owner:
Free

·ALONZO Q.
fOttl&gt;WEILLER

Ronnie Jones

Owner; Jeff Stethem

ci FARMHANO [i NEW IO EA

SICt:~IZING

POWER WASHING

:

(Comme•cial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Hom es, Decks, Driveways, 1
Sidewa lks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment! Boats, Campers, Trador. Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of yo ur deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
~
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies,

LAWN CARE DIVISION

.

..

' BARNEY
: ...-----------.,..---~------..A FIELb TRIP !!
TH ' CHILbREN'S
OH, BOY!!
MUSEUM

'

(Comme1cial and Residential)
•
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fet'tili zati on~
Spriying of fence lines, Leal Removal, as wel l as srnall ,
landscaping jobs slJ ch as planting and mulching.
,

FREE ESTIMATES •

~UARANTEED

OVER IN
PINE'&lt;
CREEK!!

HOPE THAR NOT
LOOKIN" TO ADD TO

TMAR COLLECTION

LOWEST PRICES

!

',

WINDOW SUPER SALE ·
Vinyl Double Hung

$219

;

••••

"

•

',THE BORN LOSER

Upg"dts Avalla~e;

"·

i'IE.PTUNE'S

'"
"''"

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

(,()INc. OUT OF

W/o..TER~ED

~USII'&lt;E5S .Jf"ll.t.

E1'\PORIV1'\

Pomeroy, OH

HOlliE

IMI'RoVEMENrS
50,020 miles, all Power,
loaded. new Tires . Quad
Seats. Sunroof. CD, Hitch.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
rema1ning Warranty, . nice. .
AKC
Basset
Hound $ t 2.900 OBO, (304.}675- Uncot'1 ditiona! lifetime guar·
Pupp1es. 8wks old. Tri-Color. 5253
antee. local references
St75 each (304)576·2126
nished. Establlshed 1975.

I

I

2002 HO Softa.il O~uce .
many extras including wide
t1re. chrome. P•ttnoio Pipes

,,
7,000 miles. (740)446·28
15

tur-

Call 24 H"- (740) 4460870 . Roge rs Basement
Waterproofing.

r

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ExCAVATING

Dftchlng/Tl'enehlng
Servle8
4x4 Commercial Ditch·Witch
wtlt1 six-way blade. DiggingDepth up to 5'6· . Gas.
Water, Cable, ElectnC &amp;
Dram Lines (304)576-9005

We do tt allexcepl
furnace wortc

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv oJfins
Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Years Local Ex

leace

Cornerstone
Electrlcal
Service ·
' • f OR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.

l

Athens

MINLEfS
SElf STORAGE

DILES HEARI~G CE\TER
G&amp;WPOLIS

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

' O!i'fl Stcoo4 ,;,,_
1.\.llll!iMI'NOI&lt;:tl

~\b. l'IM. I:.ll-!fm

1619

174111...

992-3194
or 992·6635
"Middloport's only
Sell-Storage"

.ROBERT
BISSELL
COIIISTIIICDOII
·New Hom es
• Garages

·Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

!ACKSO,~
Dl Jlum Slnot

ATIIE~ :
l7l W.. lllilo ~

"""""'ftl-.t.li~BM;.

Oprdbt·.fd. I:JI.~

~lod . V!bi. TIIGI:.»5pt

04111116-1430

IF I STAND HERE, I
CAN SEE TI-lE Ll TTLE
RED HAIRED &amp;II!Rllllf.IEI~I
SHE COMES our OF
HER I-lOUSE ...

~~"PPliun: i

04t);M.JI71 '

S-UREA. • $205 ton 109 dreu your
~ meal
with T.M. salt 15.7511 DOl b. bag
Ai!WI'p' I Rotowil;k pa1tun1
renovators rentataval ..blt.
J\lushroom l:umpost A\·aiiMt)fl'
.aGll So~ bean Meal Si3.25 100/lb
HI spreudt'r buggies lll'ailabl t' for~
Ainu~· paslu ll' rmontors &amp; Stfders a,·ailable lo nnt.
LicenSt'diiJ:ln&gt;numist on starT av11ilabh.• for cnnsuhing.

DOM6E5T PERSON I,

IN TI.I E LuORLD ..

= ~·----------------------------,

~

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ¥

OF COURSE, IF SHE
SEES ME PEEK ING
AROUND TI&lt;ISTREE,
SHE'LL TI.IINK I'M

· Ohio 45769

••

@

~~~------~---~'llj~

:GARFIELD

-::r-r------------=-:-\--,,
I'M OOINC":I TO L-eAP
a

•
••
•••
••

7~-992-3

· Woll&lt;u coon ~Oilld

2003 Coactlman 24FT. TT
Bath. AC , Furnace. Sleeps
5, $9.000 {304)675-1444

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; q uality

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
' Leave a message

0

I

OKAY, l 'M GOINc;. TO
WAP17L-E OVeR TO THA"f
PONU"f

0

0

ADVERTISE

MANY~mMieSI
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;··

ON "I"HAT DONUT!

•

mixu

2001 Jayco Des1gner Senes
27AKS. 5ltl Wheel. Lots of
accessor1es
$21 .000
(304/675-2246

I

....

PI«JS&lt; adopt from the
Metgs Cotrtty ~otrtd
and !!19-~ q frtend or life.

1999 Sta1 Craft Soft SK:Ie
13FT. Truck Camper. Self
Conta1ned. Furnace Sleeps
4: Clean. Good Condition
S5 .000 (304)675-4()82

i

!i

740-367-0544
740.367-0536

r ~~f~ l

I

·n L 1l-l€'r RJr

&gt;

38244

· Yel'ow lObs &amp;relrieY&lt;r
mix-es
· German shepard &amp;collie

AROUNDT!.!E
TREE, 11LL
NEVER SEE
HER ...

WHICH E)(PLAINS

Will' I'M STANDING
IN A 8ATC!.l OF
POISON OAK _

.,!

• CARPENTRY

• Nomgi011 elk hotlld

DON'T PEEK

WHICH MEANS
I PROBABLY
AM THE
DUMSEST
PERSON IN
TI.IE WORLD

HIM UIJDER 9¥ITI-I

• RooF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE #

sur IF r

••
~$UNSHINE CLUB

• MOBILI HOME
REPAIRS

Honda Recon exc. cond.
$1 .700 call (304)675-87.14

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

~~-

. ~Hupp , ·

10xiOxiOx20

• Roofing I Gutters
• Vl_nyt Siding &amp; P1lntlng
• Patio and Porch Decks

SALE

V:J ~=OLSI
I__
.

G&amp;R SANITATION

•New a..• Electrical • Plumbing

... , 1{\ ]( 1 ...

P£rs

FOR

* Week ly Trash Service
4 yrs of Rel iable Service
(Kce]l Your Muncy U ll;'';~ll

•.Room Adc:IH:Ions •

740-992·2975

~~--=-----; .2002 Kia Sedona Van ,

,' Rc)cik.!•ia-"~
IMPORTS

Gt!ne AnnsiOwnerOperator 740-992-3174

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
H ill's Se lf
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohto
45771

74D-949-2217

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'1130'

Now Available AI

BAUl\1 LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"'Taki11g 7:/te Sti11g Out Of
Hard ~lork !"'
•
Mid-Size -I Wheel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

Hours

BAUM LUMBER

7:00 AM · 8:00PM

St. Rl. 124 Chester · 985-3301

11J'~lp-J

East

Pas~

It
3•

Pass

Pass

PaHs

Pas~

Q

. • "'"
" ""'""'~
!&gt;l
....
·~;Oi;O
...-"' ~~
·&lt;l'$11\~(tJ•
.

.'\lor tb

.~RIZZWELLS
,,

:: ~ 'H .., YoU~ -...--. __,
:: f\WT l¥tl'"'
:· a.A~"11 '!
"
""
,,

....__,_~

1 Pasture

plaln1s

2 Es1een\ed
one
3 Mellower
4 Mr. Brynner
5 Thel
23 TV hookup 44 Marahal'e
neighbor · 24 EKcuse me ! ·
badge
6 Fortune 500 25 1899 gold· 47 Totally
abbr.

rush town

botch

7 Hammerhead 28 A few thou 48 SCulpture
kin
•
29 Courtroom
and dance
8 Plan
ri1ual .
49 Gul1arls1

I.

of action

Tarzan 's

9 Fez wearer
10 Sorori1y

reader s

20 Cut, perhapS

a poke to

45 Pre1end
21 One of 1Wo 42 Half a
46 Caspian Sea 22 Be
Melville ti11e
ailvenb.JrOUI 43 - ma1er
ttibutary

Is

AGAIN.

1

Office: (740) 991-1804 Cell: (740) 517-6883

.

West

Run of luck
Pardons

DOWN

31 e,eod
- Paul
lor a gyro 51 El chimp
32 Reconnol· 52 Hasp.
36 All ot
letter
tered
workers
37 Toolshed
11 Ocean
'33 Routic!Table 54 Tip of a pen
Item
game fish
knight
38 No1forward 12 Diagnostic 37 Ad 39 End a
aid (hrph.)
committee
meeting
17 John,
40 Noisy birds
42 JAMA
in Glas\iow 41 Give

Samuel Johnson clairried: "A man ought
lo read just as his 'im:lination leads h1m; ••
for what he reads as a task will do him lit tle good." That might be true when read :
ing a Oook, but is not right for bridge play·
ars. Reading ·the· bidding and the play
critical to success.
In this deal, if you were South, how-would
you plan ·1he play in tour spades atter
West flas led the heari nine in answer to
his partner's overcall?
If yo u use negative doubles, your onespade .response promises at least five
spades. (With only four spades, you
would make a negative double.) Despite
a heart queen that looks useless (but
proves 10 be invalu able), Norlh has
enough to Jump-rebid three spades,
whic h shows lour-card supPort and a si~r:­
loser hand. You , with nine poinls, smell a
game, so bid that game.
·w ith two diamond losers, yo u can afford
one cl ub loser, not two. But be fore
assuming th at East has the club ate, you
should.read the lead. Since you have the
heart eight, West's nine is surely either a
singleton or top of , a doubleton:· ~ With
three low cards .in his partner's bid suil ,
West would -should! -lead his lowest
card.) This . means that East must hav:e
the king and 10 of hearts. You no longer
care who holds the club ace. Cover
West's heart nine with dummy's queen.
and captu re East's king with your ace.
Draw trumps ending in the dummy, then
play a heart to your eight. Cash the heart
jack. discarding a club from the dummy,
and play on diamonds. You .lose only two
diamonds and one club.

All~

yorHoLE ~ ~-

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

or
Bob 740-843-5437

- ·ng

'204 Condor Stoeet

c ompo ser

32
34
35
.

Trust the lead,
f_
ind the play

LOOt:S Lit:~ T~~ MAYOil
/
ANI&gt; CITY C-OUNCIL

K&amp;K EXCAVATING

Pomcro, OH

1\'l• .f rn. i t '.t' mil_
f r nwke.f

DAVIDSON METAL
ROORNG
1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
" 18 Colors
ES, White. Tan leather. quad
'30yr. warranty in wrillng
seats. rear AJC, New tires,
·Professional' Installation
$6,00
0 80 .
loaded.
• F.ree Estimates 4P
- (740)4~1-{)135
740-596-2909

t K QJ

:fRANK &amp; EARNEST

QUALITY WINOOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1-800-291·5600 740·992-4119

o rwue'..,.

3356 1 Dailey Run Rd.,

Gravely
Tractor Sales
&amp; Service

VANS

r

~rden

TraCtors are o ur '
•.
Business...
not o ur sideline."

¥

Opening lead: • 9

Argon Gas &amp; Heal Minor

740-446~9777
KlngKutt.r

' South

Top • Removal • Trim

Call
Danny 740-590-3702

33795 Hiland Road

1997 Ford .Ranger XLT
Pickup, . Stepside
bed,
_
Miles,
NC
.
CD
89 000

0 5

Dea'lcr: North

Tree Service

'

Janel Jeffers

•

a

"K t 07652

Q JH
South
. JB764
• A J II
t B3 2
• K 3

JONES'

O ption ~

Dozer .:: Skid steer
Mini Excavator Work

(740) 992·5232
SxlO, lOxlO,
10xl5, 10x20,
10x30

1993 Red Chevy C3500, 6.5
Turbo,
Diesel
Dull y,
Ex tended Cab. 2WD, XM
Radio, PW/ Pl . Auto, $7,000
1996 BlacK Chevy S-1 0,
ElCtended
Cab,
Auto,
PW/ Pl, Runnin g Boards.
4X4 $5,000 1304)593-5073

53 2
9 •

.. AI0974'l •

INSTALLED
to 101 Uf

2150 Eastern Ave .
Gallipo lis , OH 45631

~!!!!!

llgh and Dry

.

f;ast

•
•

740· 667·0700 1·888-HUPP234
'

HARMON ·
LAWN CARE

River Valley Christian Academy

door, V6, CO, all power, air,
remote entry. 72,000 miles.
$5,800. (740)388·0332.

A K

Q 3
Ai0974
6 5

58 Uncle - Alee

Commotion

14 .Granny ''
chair
15 Caa1f1Woy's
refuge
18 Narrow inlet
1 Squirrel
hangout
19 Delivered a .
me88age .
23 FedEx 1ruck
26 Rackt1
27 Othello's foe
30 Eluds

Q 10

•

Vulnerable: East-West

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

r~~~~~::~

13

09-t)l-05

•
t
•

West

1•

To

for Fann Equipment-

1996 Chevy Berett a, V6,
au tomati c, AJC, runs. looks
good. goo d gas mileage.
$2:2oo
1740)4 41 0914.

Contact._
DAN BURKE

•
:MONTY

1540

3br, House AC 5400 a
month plus Utilities . Ret , No
Pets (304) 675 _4874
_ ____:__:______ _ _ _ _
Attention!
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to bu}' your
home 1nstead of renting .
• 100"'c financing
• Less than perfect credit
acceoted
·
• Payment could be lhf'
S•.• u:
cr::::--~=----..,
~- same as rent.
•UR R£r.-' r
riO '· _
FARM
.-;;,;,;;,;,;,;._p~
J;"n.orr
Mortgage
Locato rs .
(740)36 7-oooo ' _
"iiiiiii'l""
""' ii'IENT
iiiti;,..,l
Downtown Office Space- 5 ..__oii
---.
Hous€ lor Rent Pt. Pleasant room su1te S650/m c: 1 room 0% Financing fer up to 36
$400 (304 )67 5·554 0 or otf1ce.· $225/rno .. 2 room months on John Deere
{304 )675-4024, ask to r sw te S250tmo Secunty Compact and 5000 Se11es
Nancy. Homesteacl Realty depoSit requ1red . You pay Tractors with J.ohn Deere
utilities. All spaces very.nice. C1ed1t approval Check them
Broker
'
Elevator Call l740t446- 3644 out' CarmiChael Equipmerlt
House for Rent m Pomt 101 a_~pomt ment
Inc (740\446-24 12 ..
·Pleasant (304)675·6224
1
For Lease. 01f ce or reta tl Jot,n Deere tO tt No Til Drill
l;j ~ all 2 Bd House. 4 m•les
Rent
Carmtchaal
spaces .n "ery good condl- ,fo·
fr0fY'I Tuopers Pla 1n~ on 68 ,
!ton. Dowfl town Gallipolis , EQuipme nt (740)446-2412.
West Idea! !01 I or 2 per- App rox 1600 sq tt ea ch 1
sons Kitchen appliances or 2 bath s. Lease pr1ce John Qeere Commercial
washe rtdrye• hook-up large neg ohtb!e to e:1courage Workaite
PrQducl a
y~:w:i . &amp; s:orage shed
No new
busmess
Call Compact E)(cavatorstSkid
ln,p de pets. Non smblo\er 1 (740)446·442S Of (740 ~446- Steers Tractor
Loader
Year lease. SA00 '00 a M 39:}6
BaL-khOe tn.stock Cneck out
plus $400 00 oep"JSII an()
our rental rates Gl'eal
available
•Jttltltes AvtulaOie Sept 1st Pnme ·eomme1c1al Spacg at t 111 anc 1ng
740-985-3604
Spnng Vattey Plaza. 3.000 CarmiChael EQuipment Inc
sq ft Cali [740)446-3481
(7401446·2412.
Spac1ou~ JBR 2BA 0 /R
\
ll
iH
II
\\IH
\
1
15 x2 ~ LR +Aawump. 20
POLE BUILDINGS ·
"Any Myie
' ';\ 11y S1ze
mm
to GaltQO its' R IC' ..,1,.
0 - - - -- - - - ,
Grande r;o ~rnolo:;l"g n·&gt;
li&lt;H. ~1-.HOI .U
' C.Jst::&gt;ITI BUill to f1t your
mdoo r
pet:
S5UO.no
GtX"lf)'oi
needs
1n&lt;:ludes -Natcr (740)379·
'FREE Estma tt~
9465
Ktrby 06 2000 sweeper •
740·596·2909
Run s great, all anachments -Yo_u_'_P_w_S_:_.::a,-=-T
-=-,.=,=--.,::,- -.-.,-.,
0
1
T-.~~o o Dearoorr h;:luse tor •ent
1nchJ11ng snampoo anacn at 1549 State Route 7 nonh rnent 5200, 174(] 1367 _7630 Carm1chael EqUipment Inc
fi4'J) ~,A6 -0 177
17401446-2 412

r.,.__

OUTSIDE .
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

• Cars,

1993 Grand Prix SE, White,
20Ft Leather Seats. runs
good , body needs WOrk
$300 (304)882·3236

AKC Reg. Beagles, Lemon .
4
Patch , $150, 7 wks old.
Tara
Townhouse {304)576·2241
02 Harley Davidson , Ultre
Apartments. Very Spac1ous.
AKC registered 10 weeks Classic. tow mile6. excellent
2 Bedrooms. CfA , 1 112 old Female
Pomeranian condit1on (304 )895--3825
Bath. Adult Pool -&amp;,. Baby puppy
Shots, Wormed .
Pool , Pat1o, Start $385/Mo. Partially House trained . 1980 Harley FLT. 5 Speed,
·No Pets. Lease Plus
Rubber Mount Custom
'i300 1304)882-3236
Security Deposit Aequ1red.
Aoa:d King_ Conversion.
(740)367-7086.
AKC Reg•stered fern . Boxer S9.000 or offer (304)6757 months old. fawn color, 4975
Twin A1verS Tower is acceptand has had all shots . · - - - - - - - - ing applications lor wa1\lng $200.00. 740·992·1812 or 1992 Harley Davidson Ultra
list tor HL1d -subs1zed, 1· br. 416-5410
ClassiC. wlmatching Trailer,
apartment. call 675-6679
&amp; many Extras $12.900
• \H\1 -.. t 1'1' 1 II ..,
EHO
OBO 1304)458-1886
,\I I\ I 'd O( k.

'·

41800 SR #7

• A pplia nces,

1865 Muttang F11tb1ck
AangQOn Red .e!llterior; bl acK
interior, 6 cycle , 3 speed, a1r
conditioning, radio, good
driver. Rust. hee AZ car.
Pnce : $19,000.00.
Hill's
Automotive Classic CSr
Resto ration &amp; Parts, Inc
Bashan
Road,
29670
Racine, Ohio 45771 . Phone
740-949·2217.
We'bsite:
www.hillsresto.com

$2,500 0 8 0 . (740)256·
1652.
_
:_:2:.__o_td-s-AI-e-,o-.-S-ilv-e-,_-4
2_:_
00

Hupp Insurance
Financial Services

Hauled
. • Metal,

740· 742·2595
~======~

No rth

Ro~r:kv

A n y thing

95 Cadillac Eldorado ETC ,
Buv or selL Riverine Northstar, tow miles.
Antiques, 11 24 East. Main 99 SUburban . 2WD. LS
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- package. {740)446- 1810.·
992-2526 . Russ Moore.
Divorce Sale Extremely
owner
l,.uxurious Jaguar.
M l&lt;;C'tUANFlliJS
Ford 8000 Trae!or, call for
M ERt.ltANDISE
price's Day (304)773-5333 .
__"--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l Eveni ng (304)773-6000

JETMOTORS
AERATION
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
APART· Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET 800-537 -9528.
MENTS
PRICES AT . JACKSON.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive !rom $ 344 10 $442 Klaus 33 Bulb Tanning Bed.
$700.00. 740-247-2727_
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
740·446·2568 .
Equal NEW AND USED STEEL
Hous1ng Opportumty.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete .
Angle,
Clean 2 bedroom apt stove,
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
1efnd ., water, trash illcluded.
Grating
For
Drain;;,
RentS~ . deposit required .
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
(740)446-7620. (740)441 Scrap Metals Open Monday,
9872
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

:i

Hauling
Service

1997 Honda Civic 109,000
mi . After market accesBrowning Sweet 16 $650; sories, 38+ mpg . Clean ,
Remington 11-48 16ga . black/black. Call (740)441 $250; Remington 870 12ga. 9865. Wingmaster 2brls $350; 2Aemingto n 1100 12ga. 2000 Kia Sephia. 4 poor.
Franchi 4BAL ·i2ga. $450; automatic, 27mpg, 72, 000
S&amp;W 19 357 B"brl $400; miles, good condition. $800
S&amp;W 29 44mag. 6"brl $425; in b ra~es , fillers, llres, belts
Romanian AK47 75rd drum etc. tuneup. Will take trade.
$4300
0 80 .
4·30rd clip $400 : Davis Asking
38spl derringer chrome (740)441-9378.
$1 40. (740)446·2905 .
2001 Neon, automati c, air
Reming ton Rifle, Modal 700, conditioning, 82,000 miles, -

i

·2 Bdrm, 1 Bath , AJC .
Refridg, Stove , WID includ ed _' $450 month, $200
deposit. No Pets Ret. Req. CONVENIENTLY U) CAT •
(304)6~4·0471
ED &amp; AFFORDABt E!
Townhouse
apartments.
;:!SA cottage near Porter.
and/or small hOuses FOR
$350/dep. $350/rent_. refer·
RENT Call (740.)441-1111
ence needed Water/trash
for application 8. 1nlorm.ation
paid . No pets. Call (740)3881Hl0.
FUrr\ished ups!Ms, 3 rooms
&amp; .bath. Clea'n. ret &amp; dep
2BR hol"((e. 1601 Graham
required No pets. (740 )446School Rd. Water. trash .
1519.
stove. retngerator. furnished
$400/mo nth. $200/deposit Gracious li vi ng. 1 and 2 bed(740)446-0050
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
A1vers ide
2BR. tBA 541 Roush lane. Apa ~tm e nls m Middleport
Cheshn e. Oh10. No pet&amp;. From $295-$-444 . Call 740·
$450/mo. $450 d9POSII. 992-5064 . Equal Housing
(74Q.)367·7412 leave mes- Qpportunllies.
sage.
Pleasan t Valley Apartment
. 3 bedroom. 1 bath House on Are now tak1ng ApplicatiOns
Bud Chattin $400 Deposit. tor 2BA . 3BR &amp; 4BR .,
$425 Month No Pet:; Applications ar.e taken
(304)675-2708
Monday lhru Fllday. from
9:00
A.M .-4 PM . Office !s
3 bedroom, 2 tul! bath. 2 hvLocateo at 1151 Evergreen
ingrooms. dinmg , large
Dnve Pomt Pleasant. WV
t 1tchen , basement, ' targe
PhOne No. IS (304)6 75fenced b\1Ckyl!-rd. Southern
School Oistnct Ava ilable 580£ . E.H 0

1

5

loelle

a

!!

50 Pro1ea1
53 Hold out
Muddy
55 Whiz kids
Ouo1a
56 Zero
Speaker's
through
plllform
nine
"K1mlo Khan" 57 Leng1h unll s

12

in Henderson , WV
Preowned appticanes starling at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do serv1ce work on all
Make and Models (304)675·
7999

Cal . 223, Bull earreH, Bi·
P6d Scope, laminated
Stock. like new $500 Firm
(304)675-2902
·

661 Third , Gallipolis 2 bedI Bu y Homes - Local person room. unfurnished. no pets.
buys homes. Confidential . Depos1t &amp; rent $300. leave
Ou1ck cash J1m 740-992- messe.ge (740)245-9595.
6300. No calls after 9
Apartment for rent, 1-bed"
IH \ I \I '
room . located 1205 Ohio St.
Pt. Pleasant . $300/month.
water sewage 11"1Ciuded
(304 )675-6666

Bedroom House m
Syracuse. tor Rent No Pets
$400 Month S400 Depos1t
(304 )675-5332

ACROSS

Phillip

Warehouse

r

APAIIl~frM'S

born 3·05·tO· 4·05, call
(304)675-4508 0' (304)5930003
alter
3pm,
or

Alder

Great Used 1994 14 • 70 _ 3 Ava ilat&gt;te September 1st.
Bedroom. 2 Bath. Includes 2BD w/new carper , AIC ,
Iron!
porch .
121C24
heat pump. Call (740)385· $3001mth .
$300/depoSit .
2434.
Rutland
area.
Mike- ThomJ:;soris Appliance &amp;
R:epair-075-7388. For sale,
New 3 " BR Home Only (740)742·2595
$~89/mo. lnclu«;les ale. deli't- CB-ea-,'-,-,1u_l_'_lv-e,-v7 ie-w--in re- condit iOned automatic
ery and set up. (740)385- Kanauga Ideal tqr t-2 peo- washers &amp; dryers, relrigerato rs, gas and electric
4367.
pte. Np pets, please
ranges. air conditioners, and
STATE ROUTE 554, BID- Applications being taken wringer washers, Will do
WELL: New 4 bedroom .. 2 Call (740)441 -0181
repairs on major brands 1n
bath manufactured home. Bidwell area. remode led , shop or at your htlme.
Features living room. family cl ean. 26R. t BA. S375/mo.,
room w1tt1 fireplace and depos 1t requ 1red. no pets. Used Furniture &amp; Appliance
Store, 130 BulavUie Pike ,
"BONUS " room . Corner lot. (304)576-4037 alter Spm .
Gallipolis,
OH. 40% ott all
Above QrOund pool with pool
' house. Ready · for move-in . For rent' in New Haven. king manress se1s. Hrs. 11·3
PR ICED
UNDER newly remodeled 3 beqroom M-S (740)446-4782.
APPRAISAL! !
(740)446- mob1te home, ale, fully _fur- Washer $125; Dryer $125;
nished. 1nclue!es dish wash3218.
electric range $125: refrigerer, wid. micro &amp; TV. cable
THEISS AQAD, VINTON : hookups 1n all bedrooms. all ator $150: chest freezer
Whirlpool
Brand new · 3 bedroom, 2 utilitieS . oa1d 1nc luding cSbte', $165;
was
her/drye
r
set
$250:
·bath manufactured home. $115 each per week for 2
·Corripletely set and ready renters. $1 00 eB cti per week couch $125 : rocker recliner
for move-in . Features living tor 3 renter s. (330)336-5708 $75; loveseat 550; table &amp;
chairs $125; table &amp; chairs
room, family room and Of 330-464 -9424
$40; lamps $1 o each .
beaLthful sky lit kitch'en .
Nice
3br,
2ba,
w1
th
CIA.
Call
SKaggs
Appliances, 76 Vine
DRASTICALLY AEDU CED! I
(740)256-14 17
st.(740j446-n98
Call (740)446-3570,
·used 3br. Cameron $2 ,500
.mu st be moved (304)675-

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

BOer Bucks S100 to $250,

M.H .
in
2
Bedroom
Middleport. All electric, no
ins1de pets $375.00 plus
6 Homes under $10 ,000. deposit. 740.992·3194 .
Will deliver. (740)385-7671 .
2 Bedroom mobile home in
CL EAN SWEEP SALE : Lot Racine. $3'55 .00 Month .
1 year
·model clearance. Al l remain· S355.00 depos1t
Jng 2005's must go to make lease. No pets. No calls
•room for new homes under after 9PM. 740-992-5039
:construction. SAVE! SAVE!
3 bedroom mobile home for
-SAVE! OAKWOOD HOMES.
rent
in
rhe
country.
GALLIPOLIS Call (740)446(740125~-6574
3093.

The Dail y Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
!Ale billy Clpllel Ctyplogtams a-~ Clesll!d _11om quolallonsl)y !amoos peopl~ . paSIIlJI(I p!eset11.

Each ler.ar 1~ !he ciDhl!l SIB~ lor ~~othe!

To&lt;Jsy·'s clue: 8 equsls C

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REVVLW

P

YVPMY

SVGZ

CEHMBZW

RSZF

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GF
RSZ
JZEZ

GPMKW. "

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PM

XHMYCVEK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Bad times have a scientific value ... we learn
geolog~ lhe morning after the earthquake." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 9·1

-~:

F riday, Sept. 2, 2005
By B e rnice B e de Oa ol
In the. year ahead it will bo to your
advantage to ma.ke e conce rted effort
to expan(j your range of interests and
acquaintances. The great er your circle of friendships are, the g'r eat er you r
scope and potential 'tor success w ill
be.
'
VI RGO ( Aug. 23-SepL 22) - Some
restriCt ive conditions th at h ave been
holding you back co uld bo alleviated
starting today_ You sh·ould be able to
acl with greater independence and be
able to accomplish quite a bit .
LIBR A
(Sept. 23-0ct. . 23)
Frequentl y. a confidential tip or
·~in si d e" intormat1on is passed on to u s .
by we ll·inl eotioned fi'ionds, but is usually is of li111e value . This isn't like ly Ia
be the case for you today. however.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Even
if associates express a great deal o f
doubt, approach a new pro ject ! hat
interests you with optimism and hope
tOday. Your vision and posit ive thinKing
has greater clar ity than theirs.
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) Conditions that have an a tfect upon
you r work or career are now starting
to alter. themselves in ways that· will
favor ·you . Proceed on you r present
course today -and flow with the t1de of
events
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - An
interesting proposal may be brou ght
to you today by an associate who is
prettY bright. It does have potertial,
but. nevertheless. it'll be still up lo you
and him /her to make something of it.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb_ 19) - A
comme rcia l matter may show fresh '
potential Ieday. Check il out ca refu11y,
because there is a strong possibility
you wi ll be able to get it ro lling.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) - Any
_hew alliances you form at !his point 111
t1m'e could have tar-reaching , positive
e ffects in some area o f your lite, espe cia lly if an enterprising individuAl is
inVOlved. Seek out strong allies.
ARIES {March 21-Aprll t9 ) If '
you're looking lor something dillere nl .
this is a fine day for you to pursue' .a
new activity or interest. e•the( •as an
avocation or a vocation . Measu res
you take now Will havtl importance. _
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) - ,
Enterprises or aclivilies you are
asked lo organtze today Will have
excellent ch~nces of being a smashIng succoss, providod you mo:~ke certain that you do things the way you ,
think best .
GEMINI (May 21-.June 201 Something is presently developing tor
you at th is time that will eJ~ert a subtle ,
but importEint influence on your bas1c
lifestyle. Don 't be fear1ul , because il
will bring benetHs.
CANCER (June 21·JuiY 22) - · tt 's
quite pbsslbte that you might come up
with a rather Ingenious concept today.
but It Is' Important that you act on it
promptly. Don 't Ignore or at1empt to
' postpone Ita Implementation .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It you
devote your anerglaa and Intellect to
ptlraonal accumulation today. there Ia
a goOd ch ance that you can acore olg .
You won't . De aaHiah about II. lu•t
maraty looking C'IUt ror' No. , .

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SCRAM·LETS ANSW ERS e- "-"
Suckle. Filth . Wafer. Ens tgrr·, INSECTS
I necer seem
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even the mtg:,t1est animalts annoyed b)' the smallest of

INSECiS

ARLO•&amp; JANIS

1100K YOU

StR IOO!&gt;l.~'

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G~l/~ YOU

GOOD /oi.O!JEY'

SOUP TO NUTZ
"IOTA~I-Y:
FR~.4kY:

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�•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 88

Thursday, September I, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

PoUntPleasantnruwn
home after surviving
hurricane, AS

Free square dancing
lesson offered, A6

e

.. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/O The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893,
Nt

""-It

l

ot ' t

•t • .. .,.

1~11

•t.

I

off Jeff Burton by .511 of a ·Race: Ameriques! 300
Raco: NCTS 200
Where: California Speedway, second in a two-tap shootout Where: Califo rnia Speedway, Where: Richmond IVa.) InterFontana [2.0 miles). 250 at the end. It was Ken seth's Fontana (2.0 miles; . 150 national Raceway (.75
first victory in 57 races, and laps/ 300 miles.
laps/ 500 miles.
miles), 200 laps/150 m11es.
the victory left Kenseth 11th When: Saturday, Sept. 3
When : Sunday, Sept. 4
When: Thursday, Sept. 8
last year's winner : Elliott in the points standings, on ly Laat year's winner: Greg Bif· · Last year's winner: Ted Musa position out of a race -off fle
Sadler
. grave
Qualifying record : Kyle birth entering the fina l two Qualifying record: Tony Stew- Qllallfylng record: Jamie Me- ·
Busch. Chevrolet. 188.245 regular-!:eason races. At- art, Chevrolet. · 185.941 Murray, Dodge, 125.436
mph, Feb. 25. 2005.
though it was his first Bri stol mph, April 26, 2003.
mph, Sept. 9, 2004.
Race record: Jeff Gordon. victory. it was hts seventh Race record : Hank Pa rker , Race r(tcord: Bob KeselowsChevrolet. 155.012 mph, top-10 finish in his past eight Jr, Chevrolet, 155.957 mph, ki, Dodge , 104.167 mph,
visits to the .533-mile track. April28, 2001 .
June 22.1997. ·
Sept. 4, 1997.
Last week: For Matt Nex&lt;el Cup points leader Tony Last week : 'Ryan Newman , in Last week: Mike Skinner, ir.~
Kenset h. the third time Stewart. outside.the top 10 a Dodge, won for the third a Toyota, won the O'Reilly
proved to be the charm. Tile for much of the night, ap- week in a row, taking the 200 at Bristol.
Sharp1e 500 was the third peared near the front as if by Food City 250 at Bristol.
race he domin8ted but the magic. keeping his edge and
f~rst he won. The 2003 Cup finishing 1n the top 10 for the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Race:.Sony HD 500

Mallt-llenseth, counted out of
title chase only a tew'races
ago, now is only 11 points out of
~ 1he top 10. He became the 11th
;N

""'' ,

I
•

driver to win a.race this year.

tj;IIIJ~ff Gor,don's upward mobility
.-illc0f1tlnued with a sixth-place fin·
~~1$h In the Sharpie 500. lncredl~- bly, Gordon now resides in the
top 10 witlrtwo races remaining
·• before the Chase begins.
. ~Tony Stewart's eighth-place finIsh was his worsl showing in the
past 10 races. but it padded his
• points lead to 213. Ten races
ago, he was 380 points beh1nd
Jimmie Johnson and in 10th ·
place. Of course. the edge will
mean little after two more races .
. ~Stewart's lead over 10th-place
Gordon is 611 points, If Stewart .
maintains the lead. which is al-

ct1amp10n ted 415 out of a

~ The

ON MONDAY
POMEROY - The Daily
Sentinel will not be published
Monday, Sept. 5, to allow its
emp loyees lo observe the
Labor D:•:. hbliday.
Regular publication and
business
hours
resume
Tuesday, Sept. 6.

10th consecutive race. Stew-

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

BRANDON WHITI ,

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES

~-"

FEUD OF THE WEEK

ing. Harvick has been

t~ lking

•

about moving on, and a split ap-

pears to be getting more and
more likely. Where wilf Harv1 ck

wind up? That's .hard to say.
~A s expected. Scott Riggs iv1ll
move with ht s sponsor. Valva-

line, to Ray Evernham·s Dodge
operatien next year. Sterling

Marlin appears to be his likely
successor at MB2 Motorsports.

players Roger Staubach
and Troy Aikman plan to debut

~!:&gt; -NFL

their own Nextei ·Cup team next

year.· Could that be where Harvlck is heade d? Or m1ght he

land at Joe Gibbs Racing in
Gibbs' No. 11 Chevrolet?
~Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s title hopes I.
are ail but dead. He would have

to make up 117 points in two
races in order to. make the top

10. He would 'also have to move
past Gordon . Kenseth. Jam ie
McMurray, Elliott Sadler and
· Dale Jarrett m the standmgs.

to his Bristol tiff w1th
Jarrett, Ryan Newman's status

~Than ks

Is suddenly uncertain. He

~e­

mains ninth in ·lhe standings.
but he's only 10 ahead of Gordon, 31 ahead of Kenseth and .
32 ahead of McMurray.
WHO'S HOf
ANU WHO'S NOJ

• Who's hot

Matt
Kenseth has
three topfive finishes·

In the past
four races.

.'.. Jeff Burton's

sec.-

ond-place
finish
at
· Bristol was his best of the
· season.

.

~Who 'I

not- Jamie McMurray.

drapped from 10th to 12th In
1 the points standings as a result of his Bristol showing . ...
'"'Dale Jarrett fel t from 11th to
"' .14th . .

• Southern sweeps
tri-match. See Page 81

E

s

1ence

Ryan
Newman

u

s

Jarrett

Ryan Newman
vs. Dale Jarrett

Whitt's breakthrough showing he's learning to pick his spots
On July 23, Brandon Whitt, a 22year·old from El Cajon, Calif., enjoyed
a career breakthrough by winning the
Crafts man Truck Series race at Me·mphis Motorsports Park, a .75-mile oval
in Millington, Tenn. .
·
Whitt had demonstrated considerable promise b~fore, but Memphis signaled his arrival as one of the sport's
genuine· up-and-comers. Finally, ·in
Memphis, he managed to put it all together.
"Jt was frustrating because we were
running so well," Whitt said. "The
team was really coming together, but
until Memphis, we just couldn't make
it through those last 15-20 laps when
everything was happening. Finally, we
reached the point where we put it together, and we started making it to the
end of races and getting some good
finishes.
"We fin ished in the top 10 in Kentucky (July 9) and won Memphis, so
that showed we were starting to get
the bugs out. The team's coming together great. We've got a great. relationship witH TRD (Toyota Racing Development). They're helping us move
forward. Everything's really falling
into place."
Whitt said his viCtory was more
than just a·matter of luck evening out.
"Adversity will teach you something," he sa id . "Every time something happened. I learned something.
The feel right before a tire blows out,
for instance. There were things I had
never experienced before. For me, I
learned the different feels of stuff
that. was about to happen or could've
happened. From that aspect, there
wer~ a lot of pluses that came out of
what seemed at the ·time like bad luck.
· "A couple of problems have reoccurred, and because I've learned some
things, we've been able to cure them
just like that. We're not guessing anymore. We've been through it."
Whitt has also learned to pick his
spots . Young drivers have a tendency

ticularly devasta ting blowto Jarrett's

I'm saying.··

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: -Jarrett de·
clined comment after the incidents.

but 1t seemed remarkable that a veteran d,river wou ld do something so
obviously destruc tive to his t itle

hopes. As one o-bserver noted.
'Maybe it just felt good.'-

LEGENDS AND LORE

NASCAR haa been coming
to California for years
California Speedway only joined
the Cup circuit 1n 1997, but NASCAR
has hejd races in Southern California
almost from the very be'ginning. The

Fontana track is located only a few
miles from two major tracks that are
no longer in operation. A huge shOp-

ping mall exists where Ontario Motor
Speedway, a 2.5-mile track. once
stood, and the historic Riverside
road course hosted Cup events from

1958 through 1988. Races were run

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert E. Burris, 58
• Violet Ferguson, 88

INSIDE
• AHunger For More.
See Page A2
• Fall classes offered at
Ariel. See Page AS
• MSWCD contest
winners announced.
See Page A6

WEATHER

at Carrell Speedway, in Gardena .

from 1951 through 1954, and Ascot
Stadium·. 1n Los Angeles. was the
scene of race!? from 1957 through

1961.

FAN Tlf"':S

.
Three-day ticket package
available for Atlanta
Atlanta Moto'r Speedway is of-

gressive. If you take too ·many
chances, you're going tb wind up 'in
the fence.' Tnere's a time and a place,
and you've got to pick and choose and
just be smart.''

Contact Monte Dutton at
. hmduttonSO@aol.com

.A. reques1 from Lebanon
Tm'n'hip.Trustec s to rename
t:ounly road 705 lo "N uBegi nnin g
Road"
wus
approved.
The wad was &lt;.:rc«lcd "' pmt
of the Ohi p Depanmehl or
Transportalion 's Ra vemwood
Cnnncclor project and was
adde u 10 Lebanon Township's
road inventory in 2003 eiTeclive Jan. I. 2004 but was
never llamed .
Please see Paving. AS

.

·R
io
Grande
Early morning fire damages official dies
•
downtown Middleport boil .....·S in accident
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

fered ·a three-day ticket package for
$69 tha t incl udes admission to five
events over three days on the Oct.

28-30 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500
weekend . The package inc ludes admission to qualifying, an all-star Legends Cars race. the !ROC season finale , a Craftsman Twck Series race

and the Nextel Cup' 500-miler. For
more information. go tO www.atlantamotorspeedway.com or call the tick-

•.

BEFORE THE RACE STOP IN AND
VISIT OUR DELl OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

Ice Clilll Baar

........ far Caiflli!llf

RIO GR.A.NDE - DeanS.
Brown. an alumnus of the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community Coltege
who fill ed several ad minis- .
trat ive· posts in a 36-year ..
caree r with the universit y,
died of injuries• suffered in a
lraffi c accident in .Circleville
on Thur,day.
Brown. 65. who was Rio
Grande·, vice president for
cnrollmenl and in stitutional
advancement. was returning
to· Rio Grande follvwing a
&lt;rip w California to vi sit with
alumni and members of the
board of trustees when his
car was .stru ck hy a traclortrailer. Th e acc ident also
causeu the Jeath of a motor-

mornm g,

tiona l,' said Newman. -and that's all

to seize every opportunity, which creates a higher likelihood of trouble and
also makes their moves predictable to
more experienced drivers they are attempting to pass.
·
"My spotter tells me all the time to
be aggressively smart," Whitt said.
"You've got to pick your spot to beag-

tag of $399.975 and ;hat ;he · · Meigs County Gr:1111 ' . D;i\'CilJ&gt;Prl said they are curapplication is for Iss ue 2 .A.clinini , trator Jea n Tn1"ell rcntl y ;a lkin g wi;h office
funds.
informed the connnissioncrs hokkrs to .sec whal c:lm be
The agreemeni w'!' pre- that she would dc l1ver 1hc done at 1hc coun ;y ie\ ·cl to.
sen ted by Sara 'wi&lt;lpol of on&gt; 'bid . rcc:eived for th e bnth S:i\:e mt&gt;ney and have
Meigs County Engineer · Syra&lt;.:usc wa ter pump pri1jct:t futu re at:c:cs.s I&lt;&gt; fuel.
Eugene Tripleit \ office. .
lo lhc Syr:ICUSC Water Board
C'ommi '&lt; i(lncrs
al'o
The agreement require s · for rev iew. The hid c:am accepted tlw lcrm s.a nd cnn clt O!;vc T01~nsh1p to prol'·;uc from Smilh's Drilling in liOn s ol ihc (&lt;HlillHin.[ty
fund s totaling 2.36 percent of Creo la for $X.663 for dcli v- Hou sing
. lm prnvcme nt
. the project while Orange e ry and in.stallalion of &lt;he Program "htc:h rei;Hcd tn
Township is required to pay pump and n&lt;'olo r.
pul1c&lt;c' and proceuurcs. The
.43 percent and the Meigs
.A.s for the current &gt;pike in pol~c:e s and ·procedures
County Commissioners will .gas prices Sh eets and rcquncu approval m orde r lor
provide 28.2 1 percent.
Commissioner
Mick CHIP to rl'l easc fund s.

MIDDLEPORT - .A. downtown
Midaleport business and residenlial
building was de&gt;~royed by fire and
an adjace'nt structure damaged by
smoke and water early Thursday

chance of making t he Chase. "Mine
was unintentional, and his was inten-

Brandon Whitt, 22, recently won his first Craftsman Truck Series race. He's beginning to
find that patience on the track is one of racing's great virtues.

POMEROY - , Yesterday
the
Meig s·
County
Conimission voted to. enter
into a cooperative H,greement
with' Olive and Oran ge
Townships to submit an
applicalion to the Ohio
Pttblic Works Commission
for lhc Round 20 Meigs
County Paving Project.
Comm issioner Jim Sheels
said the project has a price

applying for Issue 2 funds for paving

The two tangled twice during the
-turning right into Newman whi le
Newman's Dodge was pa ss ing him
on the outside - represe"nted a par-

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

""" ·""&lt;lail"''"l"u·l.,-.. ,u

BY .CHARL.ENE. HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Sharpie 500. and Jarrett's "payback'

et office at (770) 946-4211.

&amp; Supply
Co.

SPORTS

R

Harvick and owner Richard Childress appears to be deteriorat-

v

No. 38 CURE 'AUTISM Now TOYOTA

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Th is Week

relationship between Kevin

IHIII\\ , SI .I''II ·. \IIII ·. H :!. :!UU:;

No SENTINEL .. CQmmission

possible 500 laps, holding art nnished eighth.

.most a certainty now, and if Gor-

don rema ins in 10th place , the
two will' be separated by only 45
points entenng the final 10 races.
thanks to the Chase format.

-; (Jti '\ 1'-&gt;•\(JI&lt;-;:; ' " - 11

.A.ecording to a report from
Middleport fire ehief Jeff Darst,
both of the second story apartments
in 1he brick building localed at 30
North Sec:ond St. and owned by Rex
and Brenda Darst of Syracuse, were
occupied , but the street level business room was not. The apartment
re sidents. were already out of the
building when firemen arrived at
the sce ne . ·
Th e chief said lh e fire which
apparently started in one of the two
second floor apartments remains
unuer investigation. "We can' t determine .the cause until we can get in
and take a look and we can't make
an assessmenl of damage until after
;hat." said the fire chief. .A.s for the
adjacen l unoccupied
building,
owneu by· Sandy lannarelli of
Middleport. he said it had only
smoke and water damage . ·
The mosl extensive damage in the
Darst building was confined lo the
hack apartment. according to the
chief. who noted that the ..entire area
has been roped off now because of
some danger 9f partial collapse of
the walls.
"A section of the roof has already
fa llei1 in and some parts of the building are not looking lOt\ good and
might fall." he said.
.
Approximately 50 volunteer firemen
from four departments were on the

'·

cycle passenge r.

Dr. Barrv Dor.sev . . Rio
Granue ·' jJre,iuen t: said
Brown' s dcalh was a shock to
the c:ampus' ami co-workers.
Fall seme"er. at Rio Gmnde
be(!an las; wee k.
-~To say he will b.e sorely
mi ssed is cert ainly an
Please' see Accident. AS

Tuppers Plains

receives grant for
·new fire truck
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO EFllC H @' MYD ~I LYS ENTINEL . CO M

Charlene Hoefllchj photo

Fire gutted the two apartments on the second floor of this downtown MiddJe port buildTUPPERS PLAINS - The
ing. lhe roof collapsed and the area arounq the building has now been roped off
Tuppers
Plain s
Fire
because of a possible partial wall collapse.
Please see Fire, AS
! Department has been awarded a HclJ1teland SecuritY fedDotalls on Page A8
era! ~ rant ur S~61.~5o ·w be
used - on the pmchase of a
g ;J.~( l lin ~· j._ up ~.-~l lllpi.lred 11 1 , llt'W fir~.:.• truck .
_ . .
Bv BETH SERGENT
B.SERGE~T@ MYDAIL YS ENTI NEL.COM la~t n:ar a! thi:-. time de .. pite 1 Announcemcn1 ot the led.thc jimt p .in pri&lt;.:cs.
l er;\l ~ra nt was made ,hy U.S.
Tom
Siew
art.
executive
Senator M&lt;ke De\),me (RPOMEROY - With the
2 SECTIONS- J6 PAGES
sudden rise ·jn gaso liqc ' 'iee pre sident of th~ Ohi o Oh) who noted thal th~. grant
Buckeye Edition
B8
part ot lm F;rehglller
price' lhi s week many peo- 'and Gas .A."ociation said that
respected
colleague
in
his
Inves
tment and Re sponse
a
1
Calendars
A3 .
ple are wondering what ean
be don e to eas~ hcin g lleld told him that the onll \ Enhanccmcm !FIRE ! .A.ct
Classifieds
84-6
pinched at lhe pump short of thin~ 1l1a1 \\'ill hrin ~ dnwi1 which provide, fnr con!petiComics
B7~
riding their bicycle s or hors- gas - prices is ··denl'and tive gra nt s to local fire
destn&lt;clion ."
1· departments 10 help .them betDear Abby
A3
es to work.
Demand tk,tructinn is the ter serYe and prntt'L·t res1d~nts
Although ex pe n s arllic iE&lt;;litorials
·A4
po111t
''here people ge&lt; so led and their pr&lt;'pen, .
pale the spiked prices to
up
\\
ith
the price tiMt the! .· .. Thi:-, j, gPnd !l~·w, for ~ur
Faith • Values
A2-3
eventually go dow n afler the
l lkp,&lt;rtmem _;utu il s g&lt;&gt;.nd tor
etlecrs of Hurrica ne Katrina quit Lhing the product
Movies
As
Stcw,u!
~u c "cd that ga' the l'(llimy. &gt;lml Jell Nc\\ell.
sub ~ id e. thl' pi-icc-. r._)f gasoObituaries
prin:-. \\Ill ii, J\ L' tn rt".lt:h S:=i ,1 1 fi re chJeL after t1c111~ .id\ J:-.ed
As
line will iio doub t be high 1!allnu h~.:f{ lJ\~ l'l.lll ,umcr' \~ !ll \\ 'c dnc ~ Ja~· 111,g_ ht that th e
Beth S.Uugenlfphoto
B Section
Sports
Th is long line at a local gas station in Pomeroy shows that becau:-;c consumer demand dcc:itlcd !hat. thcy·,c·. hat! .~ ra nl had been awarded.
AB consumers will shop around and wait in line for the best price re~ain s hi gh. •
Weather
Please see Pump. AS
· Please see Fire truck. AS
In fac t the Jenwnd ftir
on gasoline .
© 2oos Ohio Valle}· Publishing Co.
.

pl.llChed at the pump, hOW tO save

INDEX

1

"

·

1

1

'
ROAR, the roar of the crowd, the roar of
the band filling the stadiuni; these are the
sounds_you 've been waiting to hear.
. . . . . _ _ ...

5

,WI'WOieA'--L

106 North Second Ave .. • Middleport, OH

But... admit i't, other roars have taken their
toll: loud music, highway noise., power tools .
Get back to the top of your game with the best
hearing.

.Diles Demo Days September 7, 8, 9
r

..

•

~ CALLTODAY

. 740.594.3571
800.237.7716

DILES

ARING CENTER
275 West Union St., Athens

•

-~ ·

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                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17564">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17563">
              <text>September 1, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
