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( I .•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 14.

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

2005

Smith to start Buckeyes' next game.

WomEn's CollEge Soccer

New Orleans air putrid
but not overly polluted, A2

COLUMBUS (AP) :_ The
Zwick for
Texas coach Mack Brown,
quarterback carousel at Ohio
two, Smith speaking at 11is weekJy news
State has been unplugged.
for
one, conference in Austtn, satd he
Zwick for was impressed with both
Troy Smith will start for the
· No. 9 Buckeyes on Saturday
, two,
and Ohio State quarterhacks and
against San Diego State, ,
Smith· for understood the dilemma facwhile Justin Zwick - the
one. As a ing TresseL
"The 1oughest thing that
starter the first two games - result, the offense never realhas been relegated to the side- ly got into a rhythm .
can happen is you play them
lines. Coach Jim Tressel said
"There . were some times both and lose," Brown smd.
he couldn't even say for sure when I didn ' t · execute," "It just opens you up forcritif Zwick would play against Tressel said, discussing how icism. It's a very difficult
the ALtec·s.
well he coached during the thing."
·
It was difficult to tell who ga)Tie. "You have to start with , Tressel ·said after the game
was in charge of the offense yourself in the formula. I cer- that he substituted quarterand what the ga~1e plan was tainly didn''t grade a winning backs based on his feelings at
during Saturday\ 25-22 loss perfQrmance."
the mom,ent. On Tuesday, he
to Texas as Tressehhuffled in
Boiled tlown· tQ the cold, was· did not give concrete rea,
quarterbacks like relief pitch- hard numbers, Smith was 5- sons for giving Smith the job..
ers iry a high-scoring game.
for-11 passing for 78 .yards
Asked why he thouglit
Tressel has been roundly and a touchdown and added Smith was what the team
criticized on call-in shows 13 rushes for 27 net yards. He needed now, Tressel said, "I
and in chat rooms since the led . Ohio State to points on think that throughout the
defeat.
five consecutive possessions course of time, it's demon~
"You have to make deci- and a 19-13 lead, then was strated . We've had lots of
sions," Tress,el said Tuesday. suddenly replaced by Zwick. practices, lots of games. It's
The Buckeyes scored three not like we're guessing on
''I' ve never pretend~d that
every decision I've made· was points on drives with Zwick some people that haven't
right. And. I've been re)Tlind- at quarterback. He ended up been around for a while."
ed of that."
. 9-of-15 passing for 66 yards
One thing Tressel said Ohio
.Tressel waffled throughout and gained II yards on five State's quarterback must do is
the nationally televised game canies. He fumbled the bull gel the ball in the hands of
with No. 2 Texas, playing the last time he touched it, all playmakers such as Ted Ginn
Zwick the tirst two series, but snuffing out Ohio State's · Jr. and the rest of Ohio State's
then Smith for five, then final chance.
speedy receiving corps.

. tan

McNe~ar/pholo

University of Rio Grande's Jessica Boltz 111) fights for control of the ball with Cedarville's ·
Jess ica Thomas in the first half of the Redwomen's 1·0 loss against the Yellow Jackets Tuesday
at Evan Davis Field .

Redwomen fall to Cedarville
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SEN TINEL

RIO GRANDE - It was a
tough day for the University
of Rio Grande Red women
soccer t eam . a~ they .dropped a
1-0 deci sion to Cedarv il le on
Tu e~day afternoon ·at Stanley
Eva ns Field.
A first half goal by
Cedarvi lle (4·1. 1-0 AMCS)
was enough to give the Ludy
Jackets the victory. Forward
Li sa Blackburn scored in the
19th minute and that was it
for the scoring.
The visitors pounded the
Rio defense with 23 shots ami
15 on goal. but only one was
able to find the back of the
net.
A stagnant performance by
Rio Grande in the first half

cont ributed to the 1-0 advantage. The Redwomen failed
to ge t a shot 'off in the first
half
·
Rio Grande ( 1-3. 1-3
AMCS) stepped up their
defense in the second half and
kept the Lady Jackets otT tne
board the rest o f the way.
Ri o Grande head coac h
Amber Oliver lauded the
defens.ive efforts of Jenna
Hoffman and Krista Butts.
"We lf honestlv I think the reason we pl:tyed so well defensively is Jenna Hoffm an had a
great game defensively as did
Kri sta Butts," Oliver said.
"They did exce llent, had it not
been for them I think the
game would have been totally
different.
:'Offensively, we just couldn'r get anything going,"
Oliver added. "Just wasn ' t in

it today, I guess."
Rio goalkeeper Jenny
Olding had another outstanding performance in the net,
recording 14 saves. "Jenny's
been fantastic for us all year,"
Oliver said. "We couldn't ask
for more out of her."
. "I wish we could gel more
of her intensity to go around."
The Redwoine[l had only
two shots with one on goaL
Freshman forward Beth
Hoffman had one attempt
stopped by Cedarville goalkeeper Sarah Gibson and she
also missed wide on a shot in
the 63rd minute.
Rio Grande will play its
first non-conference game,
September 20, when t11ey
entertain Marietta College at
4 p.m. The game will be the
fourth of a six-game homesland .

Blue Angels defeat Marietta in three
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@M'r'DAILYTRIBUNE.CO M

MARIETTA - Thirteen
was a lucky number for
Gallia Academy on Tuesday
(w hich was also the 13th ).
The Blue Angels were
strong at the net, amassing 13
kills and. 13 bl ocks, while
snapping ·a short two ·game
losing· slide at Marietta.
· Gallia Academy won in
straight games, 25- 15. 25-17
and 25-23, to improve to 5-2
overall and 3-2 in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League. ·
Felicia Close scored 10
points to pace the winners
followed by Katie Taylor
with nine. Close also led the
way with six kills. Kayla

'

Southern
c

from Page Bl

· Number five man for
Southern Jacob Hunter
came in with a 45, the lead
tne
swung
back
to
Tornadoes in exciting play
and were in first place at
16H to River Valley' s total
of 17·1 and the Falcons we re
third at 178. . .
Also in a close battle for
the fourth spot, South Gallia
pulled it out with another
fifth man score to edge
Bu.ffalo 215-217

Blast
from PageBI

Close

Perry add-ed
four
and
Rvann Leslie
three.
Leslie and
Perry were
also among
the leaders in
bklcks with
six arid three
respectively.
A .I e x i s
Gei•;er
added
c
.

four.·
Abo defensively, Perry had
18 digs, fo llowed by Leslie
with 17. 16 from Close and
1.1 each from Sarah Cochran
and Taylor.
Taylor handed out fiv e
assists, Whitney Mayo four
and Heather Withee three.
The GA HS JUnior varsity
was also u winner. 2S-15. 22·

ciP~e r.
Mei~ ., Lied the

get no

thi rd contest
ut three apie~e. then went on
a 17-T run tn take a 20-10
lc:td . in ~ he finale . The
\larau du-, \\1.:nt tl!l ~~ S-l

entire contest , working it s
way back from a pair of 3- 1
deficir.- .in the firq and third
game,.
MilS hattled back tu a) . ) ... p.un to . :1 ~ ,..... tllL ~. rn1L· .~nd
tie in game one before. 'iurg- -. ~.x ure th&lt;.: v. in.
ing hack to claim the 25- I.J · M eig~ made it a ~wee p on
the night with a 25·3, 25~ I I
ou tcome .
In game two, the hoq, win irt 1hc Jllllior ,· ar~ily con. jumped out to a 7.{) lead and te'l. Patt} Vining had 13 con-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;) II (

sec ulive service point s in

game one to help guide MHS
from an 11 -3 edge to a 24-3
cushion .
In game two. MHS held an
11 -g lead before reeling off a
10-1 run to break open a
clo,e ly-co nte sted
battle. ·
Mtigs improved to 5·0 on the
junior \';tri.;tv 'if&lt;hnn.
· f\ki~ ... r~lurn . . 10 action

tnda\ ' when it travel' 10
GloLi;ter to take on Trimble
in a non·confe'rence TVC
'howuown . Game time i'
slated for 6 p.m

'LNTS • \'ol, ;;;; , No .:!:!

COAL GROVE - River
Valley won its fourth Ohio
Valley Conference volleyball
match in as many tries after a
convincing straight games
win at Coal Grove Tuesday.
The Lady Raiders had little
trouble disposing llf the Lady
Hornets 25-14, 25-9, 25-9.
The win snapped a short
two-game losjng skid for
River Valley, which dropp~d
a pair of contest at the
Athens · Tournament , and

Tlll lltSD.\ Y, SEI'TEI\1 BElt

-

• High School football
previews. See Page B1

J. REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio is still considering
AEP's proposal to recover
costs associated with construction of the state-of-theart plant.
Rennie said it may be
year's end - or later befor e the PUCO hands
down a deci sion on the
company 's proposal to
recover costs.
"Early estimates of an
October decision are probably
too early," Rennie said,' "but
hopefully we' II have a decision by the end of the year."
The period for testimony
on the proposal has closed,

and Rennie said attorneys are
~ow
trading briefs and
responding to written testimony and testimony offered
at public hearings, mcluding .
one at Meigs High School
last month.
In the ·meantime, Rennie
said , AEP hopes to complete
some of the preliminary
work which will be required
for pennits (f the PUCO
approves the cost-recovery
plan. That work, Rennie said,
mclude s
environmental
assessments of the impact of
construction on wetlands and
endangered wildlife on the
property, · archaeological

STAFF REPORT

·OBITUARIES

- - - -- - - - - MERCERVILLt - South
Gallia'.s serving was too
tough to handle as it cruised
to a straight games victory
over visiting Ironton St.
Joseph Tuesday.

• Study: Adult use of
ADHD medicines
.
'
doubles in four years.
See Page A2
• September library
events. See Page A3
• Audijion at Ariel set.
See Page A3
• TOPS honor losers.
See Page A3
• Exhibit on McBee
coming. See · Page A3
• State: Drop in Labor
Day travel hasn't hurt
highway projects:
. See Page AS
• Heavy rain hits N.C.
coast as Ophelia picks up
strength. See Page A5
• Baghdad's deadliest ,
day: AI·Oaida bombings
kill at least 160.
See Page A6

Cand idates for cardiac scoring examinations arc over age 40 and have one or more of
· rhe followin g risk factors for heart disease:

CarJiac !!Cllring examinHtions are perfurmed clt O'Bleness' Radiolog-y aml M~dicallmaging
th~ O'Bieness Medical Park. Our qualifieJ staff
invites yuu to take a c:loser look at e~dvanced diagnostic imaging as we me&lt;lsure progn.·ss
in community hea lth -one pati~nt at a time.

clepartment at the Castrop Center in

,,

fa) O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

~~~c.....,.

vic tints

,.

'A Shelter in the Time of Storm" was the theme fOr an ecu·
menical prayer service at Pomeroy's Riverfront Amphitheater
Wednesday evening. Many local churches skipped the ir mid·
week services to join with others in prayer for, and support
of, victims of Hurricane Katrina. Leaders of the Meigs County
·Cooperative Parish discussed relief efforts now underway in
the parish, and encouraged contributions to Catholic
Charities USA, the United Methodist Committee on Relief,
and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the·three
organizations through which the parish will collect funds for
hurricane relief. Rev. Keith Rader, director of the parish, is
pictured with some of the cleaning kits and health kits now
being collected for distribution along the Gulf Coast 120
· health kits an'd 60 cleaning kits have been collected to date
for the parish's distribution, and others will be collected next
week. The deadline is Sept 23, and lists of items for the
kits are available through the Mulberry Community Center.
B~an

Details on Page A8

'

INDEX
2 SEcrJONS,-

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
NASCAR

-~bituaries

Places to go
Sports
Weather

J. Reed/ photos

morning and returned home
in the afternoon. He said
she is the second one to get
POMEROY - The Meigs on the bus in the morning ,
Local. Board of Education and the last one to get off in
decicted to postpone any the afternoon and had some
action on advertising for suggestions on how the
bids on · five new school schedule could be changed .
buses following a discuss ion · He was asked by the board
on fuel costs and how to to discuss the matter with
reduce them.
Paul McElroy,. bus suphinAt Tuesday night's meeting tende nt.
board member Scott Walton
It was voted to renew the
proposed the board defer contrac t wit h the Galliaaction until the Sept. 27 Meigs Community Action
meeting to allow time to Agency in tlie amount of
investigate the use of propane $ 14,8 10 to provide a
over diesel in the new buses. School-to-Work transition
Walton said there is con- program at Meigs Hi gh
siderable difference in cost School this year.
with propane being much
Also approved was the
Superintendent .member district software
less.
William Buckley said the basic, the educational mancost of getting buses agement information system,
equipped . to use propane the library management syscould increase the cost of tem. and state software develthe buses. He will hiiVe full opment system and the stuinformation on how, the · dent information manag~­
change would affect the dis- ment system service agreetrict at the next meeting.
ments with COG ·SEOVEC
Doug Stewart, parent of a through June 30. 2006.
In personnel matters, the
high school student. met
with the bO\lrd to discus's re s ignatio~s of ' Vicki J.
the sc hedule wheri his · Haley as fourth grade teacher
daughter is picked up in th e due to relocation of her husHOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Cardiac scoring is O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's latest addition to CT, scanning ·
technology. This test for coronary.artery disease measures the amount of calcification in
rhe aneries of the heart. It can help determine whether or not heart disease is present
long before recognizable symptoms develop. 111is non-in vasive test is painless and takes
only a few minutes.
·

information or to sched llle a ca rdi~c scoring exe1mination, Phy sician referral ~
is not rc~uircJ.
·
·

Corps 0f · Engineers will
· require a permi t allowing
AEP to construct dticking
facilities at• the. site and permits to use water from the
Ohio River for the plant's
'operation. Landfill permits
will also be required .
If AEP proceeds with
construction of the IGCC
plant , it will create an esti. mated I ,900 construction
jobs anct 125 permanent
jobs. The con"ruction is
also expected to resu lt in
sign ifi cant ec'o nomic development in · the Great Bend
site near the Ra ve nswood,
ViVa . Bridge.
'·

·,

BY CHARLENE. HOEFLICH

..

Call (7 40) 592-9483 Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. for more ·

. ')' . ,

Meigs Board postpones bus purchases

'WEATIIER

Is your'SC:ore card ft;ll of high numbers? when it comes to cardiac scoring, higher numbers
are definitely not par fur the course and may be indicators of serious health problems.

•Obesity
• High stress levels
•History of smoking
• Diabetes

and soil sam·
piing to determine the nature
of any foundation work
required for construction.
Some of that work is being
performed by AEP, others by
cons ulting .firms
under
AEP's superision . .
"We're doing a lot of pre·
liminary work at the site,''
Renni"C sa id . ''The.re are
various permits that will be
required for construction ,
and AEP hopes to get ahead start on those permits
in hopes that the PUCO will
approve the cost-recovery
plan."
Rennie sai d the U.S.

INSIDE

'

•High blood pressure .
• High LDL or total cholesterol
• Family history of heart disease
• Sedentary lifestyle

". ~ I

\

· ·}t':· s~.

Page AS
• Walter Floyd Roush, 79
• Emil Tascak, 80

nine points apiece. Niki
Fulks led the way, though,
with 13 tallies.
Swain led the way in spiking with five kills, followed
by Fulks with four and two
by Canaday. Canaday was
also the assist leader with 13
and Fulks had a block.

The Lady Rebels served up
· 14 aces total while taking the
volleyball rnatch 25-13, 2515, 75-14. The triumph
raised South Gallia's record
to 3-5.
JiH Swain had six aces
while Glenna Wright had
five and Chelsea Canaday
three - all finished with

assessment~.

Re~nembering . l(atrina's

Rebels beat Ironton St. Joe

SPORTS@MYDAILVSENTINELCOM

""w,mJdail)·-.·ntiru•l,rnm

.

'j.

La~y

:wu:;

.

By BRIAN

GRtAT
BEND
American Electric Power
has begun preliminary ~ ite
work on I ,200 acres in
Lebanon Township, where
·the power company hopes to
build a $1 billion clean-coal
power plant
AEP
Jeff
Rennie,
spokesman, said Wedne sd~y
the co)Tlpany ha s begun
some of the work necessary
to obtain permits required
for construction of its cleancoal. integrated gasification
combined cycle plant. The

improved its ting, going 13-for-16 with
mark to 4-2. four kills, while Taylor sucL a u r e n cessfully hit 9-of II tries for
Bing scored a kill. Bing and Carter both
15
points went 6-for-7 in spiking with
followed by a kill each and Andrea Flint
C a r m a n ·also added a kill in two spike
Waugh with attempts.
a
baker 's
The Lady Hornets did pick
d o z e n . up a win in the junior varsity
K i r s t e n contest by scores of 25-2Q,
Bing
Carter had 21-25, 15-7. Ilimm Corfia
eight
fol- scored eight points in th~·
lowed by seven from Kari . loss.
McFann, Beth Payne with
River Valley is at Jackson
six and three by Brooke 5: 15 today before returning
Taylor.
to OVC play Thursday
Payne led the way 'in hit- against South Point

15 ,

AEP conducting prelbninary site work at Great Bend

SPORTS

25,
15- 11 .
Brittany
Miller scored
I·l
point s
with
four
aces.
Lindsey
Niday
had
nine points,
including
· five
aces,
Taylor
and two kills.
Lindsey
Ward added six points.
Marietta did salvage one
win during .the triple header
in the freshman contest. 2520, 25-22. Brook · Willis
scored 10 for the Angels.
Gallia Academy is at
Athens, a team it defeated in
five sets during the season
opener. on T~ursday .

Medalists for the day Kayla Johnson .
Darrin Reece and Ju stin
were Brad Crouch of
Arnold
each paced the
Southern and Justin No lan
of River Valley, each with White -Falcon s wi·t 43
a su.perb two-over 37 . for apiece. and Danny Rou sh
and Garrett Kaylor each
the day.
For Southern , in addi- ca rd ed 46. Adam Roush
tion to Crouc h. Bryan was next with 49 and
Hitrris fashion ed a dandy Adam Ingles 52. '
Jonathan Wells shot 43
41, Patr ic k Johnson and
to
head South Gallia with
Hunter came in with 45
apiece. Jo'S h Smith added Brody Green neXt at 47.
49 and John Bentz had 53. while · Kevan John·son
posted
62 ,
Jessie
~iver Valley was led by
· No,\ an. Bru ce Stout turned McComas 63 and Jacob
in a solid 42, Craig Barker Wat son 69.
Buffalo Bison's top
('O II ccteu .J5. Craig Jagers
was
Garrett
post~d .f 7 along with 57 .sco rer
Burdette
ul
47
.
from Jarriel Marcu m and
ne ver loo keJ buck in a 25 - 15
win. Welbton pulled to with·
in two poinb at 14- 12, but
the Jack son Countians would

,BY BttAD SHERMAN

Mothman Festival
kicks off Saturday, A7

en

Lady Raiders·stay perfect in OVC
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

I

16 PAGES .

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
BS

As
A7
B Section
AS

© 2do5 Ohl~ Valley PubU.hl1111 Co •

Racine protecting its well water

BY BETH SERGENT
strategies for dealing with posband' s work, of Darrell
BSERGENT@
MVOAI
LYSENTINEL.COM
sible
contaminants from saniJenkins who is retiring as
,
t
ary
sewer
lines such as maincustodian, and of Tana L
RACINE
,
Do
you
know
wining
the
village's routine
Kennedy as a substitute. cook
Travis ,where your0 drinking water inspections of its 24-year-old·
were aceepted.
w.ater lines. Committee memAl:)bott also re signed as comes from
For
residents
of
Racine.
bers ' decided that the lines
senior class advisor.
Hired on supplemental their drinking water comes within the one year time of
contracts .were Linda Lear. from wells but .those wells travel for contaminants should
be "smoked" a~d checked for
lead mentor; and Michael need to be protected .
Racine is the llrst communi- leaks annually. Committee
Kennedy and Vicki Hughes,
ty
in Meigs County to develop member Gary Freeman said
mentors . . Mary A. Arnold
a
source
water (well water) that )&gt; already normal procewas granted maternity leave
and the board approved a protection plan with the help dure for the ,illage. '
\1ayor J. Scott-Hill said the
contract with Rocksprings of community members and
'the
Ohio
Em'ironmental
lines
are in good shape though
rehabilitation Center to pro' the village is looking for fundvide profess ional· therapy Protection Agency.
Last
ryight
·
the
Racine
lng for upgrades. Councilman
services to students in the
.
Source
Water
Protection
Gary
Freeman said. dependdistrict.
Dale Grimmett was hired Committee compiled a list of in.g on funding. ~hat he would
as industrial arts teacher at potential source water coma- like to see manhole covers
Meigs High School on a one- minams that have a one year coated to prevent corrosion.
The committee decided
year contract effective Oct. I time of travel before reaching
that education presented the
pendi~g completion of certi · the villages well water.
Concerned
with
elevated
best strategies for storm drain
fication.
,.
Added to ·the substitute bui normal levels of nitrates and residential contaminants.
teachers list were Jennifer in Racine's well water. the This is in regards to improper
Baldwin. Miquel Bendezu committee identitied possi~ dumping of oil, antifreeze,
Amanda Berent, Christopher hie nitrate comaminants such diesel fuel. etc.
\\.ater well contaminants
J. Blados, Teresa L ·carrolL as sanitary storn1 'ewers .
storm
drains:
hard"
are
stores
can
be everything from motor
Amy
Clark,
Marcus
Crabtree. Cathy
Crow, that tnay sell fertilizers and oil. to insecticides. to fertilizLeslie Dunfee. Linda Dye. greenhouses both present cr. to paint that has been disand defunct.
PleaH see Meigs, AS
The committee disl U&gt;'cd
Please see 'Radne, AS

;
I

'

�. 'r

PageA2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday; September 15, 2005

BY~HEBEND
.

The Daily Sentinel

.

Community Calendar
Bv CAIN BURDEAU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

l
(

NEW ORLEANS - The
putrid air rising . from New
Orleans' slowly . receding
Ooodwalers
was
found
Wednesday . not to be overly
polluted. encouraging news for
a mayor weighing the reopening of the French Quarter and·
other dry pw1s of the citv.
Mayor Ray Nagin had said
a dean bill of health for the
air would allow the tou6stfriend ly French Quarter and
centtal business district to
reope n ;ts early as Monday.
nd whi le the Environmental
rotection Agency still found
the floodwaters coma in ~cl
dangerous levels of sewagerelated bacteria. the air pollutants were ·determined to he
at ac&lt;·eptabk kvc!s.
.
Nagin said he exiJI'cts about
I 80,000 people to ret(n·n tu
the city within a wee~ nr !wo.
wht' n .p&lt;)wer antl .. cv..·er systems arc rcsturcd. Some rctai l~rs shol.l]d he operating by
then. as wei~" two hospital s.
''OIKC the y c·umc hack .
we' ll have the critical services for them lo at lc:tst live
a sem i-norma l life." he said
Wednesday on Cr\N's "Larry
King Live.'·
'In the fu tu re .. the mayor ·
said. he wants a plan for the
city to be in ftll l conlro l of
AP Photo
disaster· ev,u:uatinns. insteatl
Bi
ll
Weeks
and
Rich
Magan
from
Ediso
n,
N.J..
take
air
samples
along
Bourbon
Street
iri
the
French
Quarter
of
New
Orleans
, for
of relying on help from the
the Environmental Protection Agency Wednesday. Wh ile the EPA still found th e floodwaters contained dangero us levels of
federal government.
·-rm not going to plan on the sewage-related bacteria, the air pollutants were found to be at acceptable levels .
cavalry coming ." h ~ said.
On the hard-hit east side,
Wedncsdtly for fai lures and
"To anyone who even sugAbout 40 to 50 percent of
~·U nless they can give me some
incredible comhll1 !hat thi.s has missteps by the state gove rn- gests that this great city the ci ty was still flooded, block after block of oncebeen lixed. I am nnt going to be ment in the immediate after- · should not ,be rebuilt. hear do'w n from 80 percent after Hooded neighborhoods gave
in this position a!!ain ...
math of Hurricane Katrina. this and hear it well: We will Katrina hit, as 53 permanent way to a slim y, putrid muck.
temporary
pumps 'ruined cars, snapped utility
As the grim cleanup contin- She pledged to re.make New rebuild," ·she said. addressing and
worked
to
siphon
ott
8
billion poles and collapsed houses.
ued. Loui siana Gov. Kathleen Orlean\ better.than before the a meetin g of state lawmakers
Virtually all homes bore
in Baton Roug e.
gallons. a day.
storm.
~lanco took respons ibility

marks indicating they had
been 'searched for victims.
None in sight during a pass
throu gh neighborhoods had
an additional numeral that
would indicate bodies.
The
body count in
Louisiana alone climbed to
474 on Wednesday, and it
was e~pected to rise further
as state and federal ollic'ials
we nt about the tedi ous task of
collecting bodies and then
using DNA to identify them .
" It 's going to take months,
maybe years." said Dr. Louis
Cataldi. the coroner for Baton
Rouge Parish. "This is not
going away."
Coast Guard Vice Adm.
Thad Allen, head of the fed-·
era!· hurricane response, outlined the procedures for body
collectiotl,'induding readings
oT ecumenical prayers· and
ceremonial washing of bodies in accordance with vari·
ous religiou's traditions.
"This is a very, very sensitive process," Allen said.
"We are mindful of the dignity that needs to be accorded
to these remains."
The state attorney ge neral's
office said all of its in vestigators have been pulled frqm
other tasks to work on the
Medicaid Fraud Unit, the
team whose work led to
· Tuesday 's negligent homicide charges against the husband-and-wife owners of a
Chalmette nursing home
where 34 elderly residents
drowned in floodwaters.
Kri s Wartell e, a spokeswoman
for
Attorney
General Charles Foti , said
the office has been besieged
with alle ga tion s of neglect
that may have led to injuries
or deaths at n.ursing homes
and hospitals .

'

Roberts heads toward likely Study: Adult use of ADHD medicines doubles in four years
confirmation, stepping
BY ~!~~~N~sJ2~T~~oN
carefully at Senate hearing
BY DAVID ESPO

D-Del. , told the 50-year-old
appeals court ' j ud ge. who
tu rn ed aside qu estions about
WASHINGTON
abortion, the right to die, the
Supreme Gourt nominee John permissibility of torture · and
Roberts carefull y picked his · other issues he, said may come
way th rough a second day of before the court.
questions from the Se nate
Even as Roberts fielded
Judicia ry Committee on questi9ns, there was fres h
Wednesday as Repu bl icans evidence of the contentious
challenged Democrats to sup- issues that await him if he is
' port hi s all-but-certain con fir- confirmed to replace the late
mation as the nation's 17th Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist. There were gasps
chief justice·. .
"If people can't vote for from the· audience when word
you, then I doubt that they was relayed from the commitcan vote for any Republican tee dais that a federal judge in
nomin.ee," said Sen. Orrin California had ruled the
Hatch, R- U'tah.
recitation of the Pledge of
Miqprity Democrats sound- Allegiance in public schools
was unconstitutional because
ed unswayed.
Sen. Charles Schumer told it includes the words " under
Roberts he was "cutting back a God." Roberts was not asked
little on what you said yester- fo r his opinion.
day," referring to an earlier
For the second straight day,
statement that the Constitution Roberts fie lded questions
provides a right to privacy.
calm ly, sun1moning descrip'The New York Democrat tions of past cases from memmade his charge after Roberts ory. He spiced his testimon y
declined to cit~ any examples with a sense of humor, ·
of disagreement with the opin- prom ising at one point that if
ions of Justice Cla re nce con(irmed, he would not seek
Thomas on the subject. a pay raise ··next week."
Thomas has written there is no
Republican s projec.ted ever
general right to privacy, a right greater confidence that he
b ften viewed as the underpin- would soon preside in the
Jling of a right to abortion .
grand marble Supreme Cotlrt
"We are rolliQg the dice · building , across the street
with you." Sen. Jose ph Biden. from the Capitol.
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

TRENTON, N.J. -· Use of
prescriptio n drugs for attention deficit hyperacti vi ty disorder is growing at a faster
rate ·among adults than children, new research show ~. ·
Betwee n 2000 arid 2004,
use of dru gs that help keep
ADHD patients focused lloubled among adults aged 20 to
44, but -rose only 56 percent
among children, according to
data compiled by .Medea
Health Solutions, one of the
.country's largesi prescription
benefit n)anagers.
Franklin
Lake s-based
Medea's study; to be released
Thursday, show s use rose 113
percent among women 20 to
44 and I04 percent among
women 45 to 64, both far
more than among men.

Meanwhile, spe nding on the Adults
with
Attentionmedicines qu ad rupled.
Deficit I Hyper act i v i 1 y
Experts say reasons for the Disorder, an advocacy group.
"We know that 50 perc ent
surge range· from better drugs
and advertising, to parents of of adults continue to have
children new ly diagnosed problems with attention that
with ADHD realizing they affect their functionil\g," and
many now are .. staying on
have the same symptoms.
"We 're seeing about I per- medication beyond adolescent of adults being treated," cerice, Quinn said.
but fo ur times as many are
Meanwhile, awareness of
estimated to have ADHD. Dr. the di sorder is growing
Robert Epstein, Medea's among the public and doctors.
chief medical officer, told The
The makers of Adderall XR
Associated Press.
and Concerta have adv.enised
million their drug s in magazines
Nearly
1.5
Americans 20 and older are geared to parents _of kids with
using the drugs, Medea said. ADHD. And Eli Lilly &amp; Co.,
Those figures dispel earlier · which makes Strattera, has
beliefs .that children "gro~ been running television ads
out of the disorder," said Dr. aimed at adults who may not
Patricia Quinn, a develop- . realize they have the disorder.
mental pediatrician at the
ADHD symptoms include
National Center for Gender ·impulsivity, trouble concenlssues and ADHD, and an trating, disorganization, proadviser to Children and crastination and hyperactivity.

The increased medication
use is good because , along ·
with behav ioral therapy, it can
improve adults' relationships.
job performance, parenting
skill s, even their sex lives,
said Dr. Edward Hallowell.
author of a new A.DHD book.
"Delivered from Distraction."
"Whenever you get someone
with ADHD diag nosed and
treated successfully, everyone
wins," said Hallowell , who
heads an ADHD center in
Sudbury. Mass.
Spending on ADHD medicines has shot up with the
growing popularity of new,
brand-name versions that last
all day, limiting ups and downs
of symptoms. Sales skyrocketed from $759 million in 2000
to $3.1 billion in 2004,' according to IMS Health, a pharmaceutical information and consulting firm.

BY SETH HETTENA
SAN DIEGO - The Bush
administration
said
Wednesday it wil l fortify the
westernmost . stretch of the
U.S.-Mex ico border. despite
concerns the project wi ll harm
a refuge for endangered birds .
Homeland
' Security
Secretary Michael Chertoff
6igned · an environmental·
:Waiver that expedites . the
,Border Patrol's plan s w fill in
canyons and erect a~ditional
fencing along the fina l 3 112
miles of the bord~r beli&gt;re it
meets the Pa~ific Ocean.
Chertoff said the fnrti lie a·
lions would help reduce illegal border crossing s But
Border Pat1;ol Ch1d D.11·id
Aguilar told reporters the pro-'
ject. was a broader effort _to
close gap, thctt te rrori'" and
.
pthers could exploit.
' "This i' about border sccu city," Aguilar said.
: Construction of !he knee
seemed all hut cenain after the
· California Co:L\Ial Commission

•

Thursday, Sept. 15
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will meet in
spec ial session,.6 p.m. at village hall. Fire Department
issues and financial matters
to be discussed.
Monday, Sept. 19
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
ofticc building.
.
RAC IN E
Racine
Village Counci l, 7 p.m.,
municipal building . Bids for
water treatment ' plant · and
concerns over AEP "scrubber' ' to be discussed.
. Tuesday, Sept. 20
RUTLAND Rutland
Village Counc il, 4:30 p.m.,
·
civic center.

Union Veterans of the Civi l
War and Maj. Daniel
McCook Ci rcle Ladies of the
Grand Army of the Republic,
regular meeting. 7: 15 p.m.,
Middleport Masonic Temple:
Dr. Carl Denbow, history
professor at Ohio Universi ty,
to speak. Public invited.
CHESTE R
- Past
Councilors Club of Chester ·
Coun cil 323, Daughters of
America, meet at 7:30 p.m ..
home of Ruth Smith.
Members take gifts for
games.

Church events

Friday, Sept. 16
MIDDI,..EPORT The
Hillsmen
Quartet
of
Prince ton , W. · Va.
at
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene,
7
p.m.
Refreshments.
Saturday, Sept. 17
HARTFO RD Benefit
si ng for the Fall Harves t
Thursday, Sept. 15
RA CINE -Ohio River Gospel Si ng at Church of
Producers. 7 p.m ., Southern Chri st in Christian Union,
Hartford. W. Va.. 7 p.m.
Vo-Ag room .
POMEROY
- Meigs Singers will be Eve lyn Roush ·
County Retired Teachers Family, Henry . and Hest&lt;er
Association, noon luncheo n Eblin , New City Singers and
and
Family .
at Trini ty Church. Speaker Bri an
on pro motin g Meig s Count y, Connections.
barbershop quartet mu sical
program. Members invited
to bring gue·sts. School supplies collec ted. Call 992Saturday, Sept. 17
32 14 or 37!1-6294 for lunch
PORTER - Special serreservations.
vice. 6:30 p.m Clark Chapel
RACINE - Regular meet- Freewill Baptist Church .
ing of Pomeroy-Raci ne Preaching
by
Mike
Lodge #IM, E&amp;AM, with Marmond, singing by Everett
·
work in .Entered Apprentice .Kemper.
degree.- Refreshments.
Sunday, Sept. 18
Friday, Sept.l6
RACINE - Hom ecom ing
POMEROY
Meigs at Mt. Moriah Church of
County Cancer Initiati ve will God, Mill Hill Rd., Racine,
meet at .1:30 p.m. in the con- with dinner at
noon .
ference room at the Mei·gs 'Preaching by Rev. Herman
County Senior Center. Cull Stewart of Oak Hill. Special
992-6626.
singing.
Tuesday, Sept. 20
POM EROY
- Z ion
MIDDLEPORT
Church of Chri st annual
Brooks-Grant Camp Sons of Homeco ming with Sunday

Clubs and
organizations

Homecomings

September library events POMEROY - .September durin g the
Sternwheel
events at the Meigs County Ri ve rfes t. Utilizing tHe
Library include the fall story Ohio Reads Grant, the
time sess ion s which have library will present ventriloalready begun. Story time is quist Mark Wa ~e at 6:30
open to children of all ages. p.m . on Friday. Sept. 2~.
For a complete list of story · From I I a.m .. to I p.m. on
time days and hours contact Saturday, Sept. 24 the
the Meigs County Library at Parties R-Us bounce hou se
and sl ide will be on the
992-5813
The Meigs County Library Po meroy Library front
will also participate in a fam · · parking lot. The library will
ily craft night at 6 p.m. today also supp ly refre shments ofi
at the Eastern Library.
th e front porch at thi s time.
The Pomeroy Library will
All activities are free and
also ho st weekend activities open to the public.

TOPS.honor losers

Administration to fortify westernmost ·
·stretch of U.S.-Mexico border
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

Public meetings

decided Wednesday not to challcnee tlte wai1-cr. said Peter.
We'll. deliver all the local happenings rigbf to your home. Stop by our office
Douglas. the panel\ executive .
director.
.
and subscri be to the Daily Sentinel for 3 months for only $30.19 and receive
Plans call l()r t\vo addi tiona] fence s running parall el to
a FREE comic umbrella*!
the 12-year-old corrugated
If )Oll arc a current ~uh ... crihcr. you Lan recei ve a free umhrclla hy extend ing your suhsc ri (lt inn for h month,.., i·ur only $59. 15.
stee l barrier along the border.
t *l)ay mcnt mu:-.1 he made in pcr~on al the Daily Scntind. Il l Court St. Pomeroy. Ohio in order to n::ccivc' you r Free comic umbrell a.
Sensors and cameras would
Qu ;mtit ic"' are limited.
track any movement.
Previous estimutes ha ve
r------------~---------~------,
pegged the project at $58 million. btlt Aguilar said the fina·l
""thad vet to be determ ined .
. Concern , 01.er illegal immi"Your Hometown Newspaper" ·
bn1p thi -. roupon off i~1 ~lllf \,ffit:c ;tt Ill Cl)llri Sl.. Pomr.:roy. Ohio with your pay ment and receive a FREE L:omic umhrclla.
~ration l.ed Congress to pa" .
legislatior in llJ&lt;I6 requi•ing !he ••
Border Patrol to strengthen the 1l
1
I ha1·c nnl h&lt;:cn a suh,crih&lt;:r in lhc pas! l ll "''Y'· Endoscu ;, my paymcnl nl' $30.191ur 3 m~nlhs ol' !he. Daill· Sentin el.
1
westernmost 14-mile stretch of t 4
1
1
~
.
!he harder. Nine miles were ll•rI D I 1.:um..'nll) ... uh:-.cntx· to the Oaily Sl'n~int'l. EnLio~cd is my payment of S59. 1~ for &lt;a 6 nlonth ~uhscript ion .
I
tilied. ' but environmental• con· :~
••
ccrns and lawsuits held up conNamt:
struction on the las! .&gt; 1/2 miles •C
Addrc,, - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - leadm¥ 10 the occun and I 1/2 •4
·~
n11les hnher easl.
•
••
Earl1er thrs .. ycar. Congre'S ••
~·~
gave Chertolt the po;ver to ••
··•
D
Visa
Expiration Date
Card#--~---sign a broad cnvir011!11Cntal
waiver to fini'lt the .JOb. &lt;:iting :J
D
Expiration Date
•
•
. .·
c.lrd #
.
fears thai tcrroris11 could slip
throu gh an un secured border. ····~·························:r·······:r········ .. :r••:r•:r:r•:r:r•••••••:r••:r·······-TT,.TTT,.,.TT,.TTT+~
- ·~·-························· ----~-- ········ ~
~
.

c

: .

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::

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The Daily Sentinel

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.· :

1

COOLVILLE
Doris
Buchanan was named weekly
be st weight-loss winner at
Tuesday's meeting of TOBS
(Take OtT Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter #OH 2013, Coolville.
There were 24 members and R
guests present.
During the open house
members were presented:
KOPS (Kee p Off . Pounds
Sensibly) . members Roberta
Henderson, Connie Rankin,
Sandee . Wright and Jud y
Dicken, a single yellow rose;
Rankin, one year KOPS charm·
and Henderson, two year
,KOPS charm; Marilyn Holler
and May Frost, half-way to
goal charm; Myrtle Aikin; and
Tom Scyoc, bracelet for first
15-pound loss. ,Members who
had a six'-week straight
weight-loss were recognized:
Wright, Pat Hall, Alkire (2 ),
Darlene Guess. Patty Gabriel.
. Charlotte Norton (2), and
Dicken.
Charms were pr~sented to

1

I

I

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

q

.

·•
"
"
"

~I

~ ~

MasterC~rd

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.. . - ---·--· •......••
•

I
I
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The Daily Sentinel
"
Subscribetooay
992-215\i

·'

Cindy Hyde. contest work;
Amy Richie , scrapbook/photo
album ;
Judy
Morgan,
repo rter; Betty Coen ~ newspaper clippings; Joan Co le,
weekly meeting set-up: and
Hall . flowers.
The .group m eet~ eve ry
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Chu rc h. Weigh -in is from
5: 15 to 6:15p.m. with a meeting at 6:30. For information,
call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
or attend a free meeting.

-~.-

school and worship services
at 9:30 a.m., fnllowed by a
potluck din ner at 12:30.
Concert b.y Freed By Christ, a
local quartet, at 2 p.m.
RUTLAND
Homecoming at the Rutland
Free Wi II Baptist Churc h.
Sund ay school at 10 a.m
carry- in dinner at - noon.
preaching and singing in the
afternoun. Jamie Fonner,
pastor.
POMEROY
- Mt. ·
Hermon United Brethern 'in
Christ· Ch urch, I :30 p.m.
homecoming wit h guest
si ngers, "U niquely Hi s."

PageA3
Thursday, September 15,

Fight over wearing.shorts
is really a battl~ for.respect

DEAR ABBY: The letter
you printed from "Needs
Advice in Texas," whose
mother forced her to · wear
shorts by taking away all her
pants and jeans. tnade me sad
Dear
and angry. What was th is
Abby
woman thinking? I'm now 31
and never wear short s, except
in the gy m or while hiking.
Shorts rar~ l y flatter anyone.
Capri pants and skirts are he re- that she can't make her
flattering, attractive and JUSt own decisions because Mom
as coo l in summer, wi thout is the boss'' How would that
caus ing sel f-consciou sness.
woman react if her husband
That mother needs to learn forced her to wear dothes she
a thing or two not only about fe lt uncomfortable in''
Saturday,Sept.J7
fashion, but also respect for
Rather than· teaching· her
RACINE - · Fink family her daughter. Bei ng 14 and a
reun i.on, noon, Star Mill gi rl is hard enough. - SYM- daughter to be conlident in her
own dec isions, she has insistPark. Racine.
PATHETIC IN BOULDER
ed she be submi ssive. Wasn' t
Sunday, Sept. 18
DEAR- SYM PATHETIC: I there a bener way to help her
RACIN E
Oscar agree that the mother could
Reed/Charles Hysell reunion use some lessons in parenting reel better about her legs&gt; If
will be held at I p.m. at the and d iplomacy; however, not she thinks they' re too big.
Star Mi ll Park, Rac ine. Take eve ry one agrees with us. how about walking or exercising wi th her? It sounds like
a covered dish and -dessert . Read on:
those two could really use
White elephant auction. and
DEAR ABBY: You agreed some quali ty time together. games.
with the GIRL? What were .
RACINE - Gideon Roush you thinking? Your response DANA IN FORT WORTH
DEAR ABBY: My da~gh­
reunion at Star Mill Park in will undermine the authority
ter
(now 18) was the ·Same
Racine. Dinnet at I p.m. Take of th at mother and lead the
way.
I decided long ·ago,
covered dish. Auction will girl to disrespect her moth starting with the "shorts"
follow dimier.
er's decisions. My daughter issue, th&lt;~l there are bigger
had iss ues wi'th wearin g battles to fight. We've been
shorts. too. I chose to have thrm1gh the Goth look, black
her confront her insecurities hair. white makeup. blue hair,
by in sisti ng she wear them. pink hair. boyfriends with
Saturday, Sept. 17
MIDDLEPORT TB After a few random comp li - mohawk s. Dumpster-diving
Clinic will be at Rejoici ng ments fro m friends of hers. wardrobes, 10 glitter, un derLife Church, 'Middleport, 10 .the shorts iss ue is no longe r stated makeup, ·styled hair,
a.m. to noon for skin tests. an iss ue. TRISH IN French manicures, and being
Reading wi ll take place on MONTGOMERY, ALA.
voted , best dre ssed in her
Monday.
DEAR ABBy: The girl told senior year.
her mother she wa ~ se lf-conW~ laugh•about it now. But
scious aboul her legs. so she the bottom line is, my daughforced the girl to wem· sh011s ter has confide nce in hersel f.
anyway?
What was the lesson That mother shoul d count her
Friday, Sept. 23
RACIN E -Edna Knopp,
Racine, will ce lehrate her ·
88th bi rthday on Sept. 23.
He r address is 49800
Portl and Rd .. Racine, Ohio
4577],
GALLIPOLI S - Auditions will be a youth-acted producfor Anita Larsen's "T he tion. I encourage anyone wi th
Velveteen Rabbit", the holi - 'an interest in theater. even
day production of the 2005- those with no prev ious expe2006 Arie l Junior Theatre riem:e, to contaCt me for
season, are sc.heduled for opportunitie s to ge t involved,
Sunday. Sept. IS, from I to 3 hmh on stage (for future prop.m. and, Monday Sept. 19 dtlcti ons) and behind the
from6:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m. at scenes in suc h areas as stage
The Ariel-Dater Hall.
malmging.
lighting.
All youth from first through sound.costumes and props.
12th grades are in vited to
for
"The
Auditions
audition. Amanda Betz. who Velveteen Rabb it" will conpreviously
directed sist of unrehearsed readings
''Ali ce,sAdve ntures
in from the script and move ment
Wonderland" in 2004 returns ex.ercises. Actors can come to
to the Ariel-Dater Hall to either session and should
Wyatt Austin Smith
direct "The Velveteen Rabbit". dress comfortably. Pictures,
Betz said "A lthough this res umes, are welcome, but

Reunions

Other events

Birthdays

ble&gt;Sings. because there are a
lot wor"~ thin gs 10 fight
about. If the girl doesn't mind
the . heat - you know. ii\
rea ll y no one's busine" . -·
. BEEN THERE AND BACK
IN MICH IGAN
DEAR ABBY: I'm a college ~tudent who h a~n-t worn '
shorh in public since m1ddle
school because I don'! keJ
attractiv.e in them , For hqt
summer weather. I "'lH.!~~~t
long. tlowiitg skins - ~11ich
are really "in" ri)!ht now and lo ng su nd re"~s . They're
perfectly acceptable· sunHnerwear, and besit.k.s he ing he(ter suited 'than jeans for hot
weather. they' ll cover' her
legs . That shou ld salisfy the
.n10ther while al luv-ing the
girl to achic1 e · the leve l ol
modesty she de si res. - L.R .
IN S.C. •
DEAR ABBY: Regardb ~
of whether th at poor girl has
nice legs or not. if she's no!
comfortabl e ·wearing shun s
she should not be forced tn. If
she's hot in her jeans. !hat 's
her problem and 1101 her
mother \. Le t's ho p¢ th"l ,
"Needs Advice'' fomets
about thi s when ·she pt!ts,.hcr
mother in a nursing home and
gets to dic!ate whal SHE
wears I
PEGGY Ir-&lt;
CLEVELAND
· '
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van lluren , also
known as Jeann e. Phillips.
and · was founded by h er
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Oear
A hhy
a,1
www:DearAbby.com or P.O.
IJox 69440, Lo.1· A ngele.v, CA
90069.

AUDITION AT ARIEL ~-EJ ·

Smiths
.announce birth

POMEROY- Tabitha and
Adam Sm ith of Pom eroy
announ ce the birth of a son,
. Wyatt Austin. both Jul y 19.
He we igh.ed six pounds,
th ree ounces.
Jl1r. and Mrs. Sm ith have
another son. Tucker. Maternal
gra ndparents are Myrna
Swearingen and Alfred Henry
Lyons of Racine and paternal
grandpare nts ·are Barbara and
Robert Smith of Pomeory.
George Horak of Pomeroy
and the late Elizabeth Horak
and Haro ld and Erma Smith
of Pomeroy are great-grandparents.

not req uired. There are rules
for 30 actors. The show will
also feature a holiday choir
and dancing farie s. Show
dates are Dec . I0 and II.
Jose ph E Wri ght !he m:ll1aging director of The Arie Dater Hal l, and ·proJucer fur
'The Velveteen Ra llhit" said
"We have another · excitinu
s~ason planned. and we look
forward to ha ving eve ryone
join '"·"
"Fairy tale Courtflll11ll .. tlw
first show ot' · the 2005:2006season open&gt; Ott. I. ·For .
ticket informa tion ami p(ices
contact The Aric i-Da1cr Hall
at 740-44!\'ARTS .
~

'

Exhibit on McBee coming .
AJ HENS - The Athens
County Historical Society &amp;
Museum ·will feature a special
ex hibit ''McB ee: A Centu ry of
Success" beginning Sept. 30
and running through Friday,
Dec . 2. .
The exhibit will tell the
story of the McBee Binding

Company and how it grew
from a rail road agent's idea
into an interna tional corporation. The ex hibit is free and
open to tlte pub Iic at the
Alhens Count y Historical
Soc iety &amp; Mu .1eum at 65 N.
CoUI1 Street, Athens . .
The museum 1s open

fr om l 2 to ~ p.m. Monday.
Tuesday. Thursda~
and
Friday. from 12 unt il 7 p.m
on Wcdne&gt;davs and from . I
until 5 p.m. &lt;IIi Saturdays. For
more infonn'ution call th'
museum a! H0-5'!~ - ~:!XO or
'-'isi t
the ir
weh~ite
at
ww w.athensh i~ I o ry .nr!:!.'.

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel ·

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

·Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establislunent of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
· people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
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-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

tldemess
Alaska 011 driDif!g may tuin uJzatS 1¢
Dear Editor:
The Arrti,· National Wi ldlife Refuge (ANWRJ wa&gt; established tn preserve one nf the last pjaces on earth where natur&gt;
is free or human manipu lation. But if Congress passes the curre nt hudget reconciliation bill that author,izes oil drilling in
1\NWR . it wi ll be irrcvm ihly changed.
.
No unc kn ows how much oil might be produced by dri.lling
in ANWR. But it would not put a dent in our dependence on
forei gn nil, wnuld do nothing to strengthen national security,
:md wo uld not salT ..:onsumers a dime at th ~ pump. We do
know th:H the inuustrial development needed to search for that
i&gt;il afkc ts wil dlife. This includes the Caribou who give birth
:tml Ta i ' ~ their young there and the migratory birds that nest
.·

lhl' l'~

duri1lg the ardic summer.

\Vh:u mos t people don't. realize is that 95 percent of the
Nonh Slope (&gt;f Al:tska is open for gas and oil development.
ANW R preserves only five percent of this land area. Are we
' " tuater ialistic that we cannot set aside five percent Qf thi.s
!,tnd f\lr the- rest of creation?
· They are already drilling in Prudhoe Bay, where I visited in
I qy2. It is a spraw ling indu s.trial complex with roads. trucks,
pipel ines and sewage treatment. I saw no indication that the
oil indu , try has an y concern about.the environmental damage
thev h:tve caused there.
·rhi s un spo iled wilderness should not be destroyed by a line
item it) the Federal Budget. Please call or email Sehalors.
De Wine and Voinovich and ask them to oppose the budget
reconcil iation bill unless the ANWR drilling provision is
removed. Representative Strickland also needs to hear from
you . Do this now. as the vote is scheduled for sometime in late
September.
Mary /let/1 Lah .~e
Pomeroy

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

. Touay is Thursday, Sept. 15. the 258th day of 2005. There
ore I07 Jays left in the year.
• Tnuay 's High light in History :
On Sept. 15, 1189. the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs
was renamed the Department of State.
··
On this date:
In 17711, British forces occupi ed New York City during the
American Revolution.
Thought for Tod;ty : "Somewhere the Sky touches the Earth,
and ·the name of that place is the End." - African saying.

•

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.

Pre sident Bush has an
opportunity to recover·
from hi s post-Hurril:anc
Katrina political doldrum s, but Democrats &lt;,to
. them selve s no good by
trying to take political
advantage of a national
tragedy.
There's no question that
Bush's inilial response to
Katrina was late and unin.
spiring . Or !hat his administration 's
eme rgency ·
management showed deep
ang trou bling flaw s. especially in view ,of a conti nuing terrori st threat.
On e particular wor ry
that' s gone unmel)tioncd
so far is: If Homeland
Security
Secretary
M ithael Chertoff has
functionall y
had
to
assume the role of director
of
the
Federal
Emergency .Management
Agency, who's minding
the store on terrorism ?
Already wounded by
high casualty rates in Iraq
and exploding gasoline
prices , Katrina has . sent
Bush's approval ratings
down to 40 percent in the
latest Pew poll and 4 2
percent in a ·CBS/New
York Times poll.
The record suggests,
however, that Bush is
often slow on the uptake
in crises and then ·m anages to recoup. He could
do it again. Mea nwhile,
Democrats hav e had practically nothing constru,c ·tive to say and are losing
credi bilily by placing
blame. solely 011 the fede'ral govern ment.
Bush did a mi ser able
job of attending to the terrorist threat prior to Sept.
II , 200 I:: Hi s immediate
performance that day was
weak.
But he came roaring
back to rally the country,
and he boosted his fo.rtunes in the process,

Thursday, September 15,

- ---

---

--,

wWw .ml:dailysentinel.com

2005

Morton

Kondracke

The immediate Bu sh
respon se to the Indian
Ocean tsunami al so was
tepid . . But then jl ll -out
U.S .-led re li ef efforts
became po ss ibly one of
the ·most important steps
yet taken in the contest
with Islamic extremists.
Bu sh now has the
opportunity to respond to
the nati on's worst national
disaster with a relief and
rebuil ding effort
that
cou ld restore confidence
in his leadership.
There 's an opport'\nity,
too. to change the image
- partly unfair - that
Bush " doesn't care" about
poor black people, those
see n on iel evision as particu larly affe&lt;;ted by lhe
hurri cane.
Swiftly seeking an'd getting $62 billion in relief
start,
funding
is
a
a lt~ou g h Bu sh ha' to
make sure that the mone y
is effi cie ntly spent . It 's
neil a good sign that confusion
reigned
over
FEMA's initial plan to
issue $2,000 debit cards.
Bush plans to make a
speech to the nation about
Katrina , but he should
have done so earlier.
much as he did at the
Washington
National
Cathedral just three d'ays
aft er 9/11. He truly bound
th e country · to a national
purpose. th oug h, in an
addres s to Congress on
Sept. 20, 200 I.
It 's going to be much
harder to unite the country four years on, partly

because a hurri cane is not nothing but critical and
the common enemy . that uncooperattve .
Leaders
AI Qaeda is, but most ly like Rep . Nancy Pelo si
because partisanship now (Calif.) and Sen. Harry
pollutes every aspect of Reid (Nev.) have heaped
pu'blic life:
all blame on the Bu sh
· Beyond words, what administration, neg.lecfing
really cou nts is what kind any mention of glaring
of mechanism Bush puts · failures by the Democratin plac.e to rebuild the· led governments of New
· Gulf Coast, particularly Orle.ans and Loui siana ..·
New Orleans. He needs to
Former President Bill
set ·an overall design and · Ciinton is pitching in io
appo int a recon.struction help, but his wife, . Sen.
administrator who inspires Hillary Rodham Clinton,
immediate confidence.
D-N. Y., has joined her
Co ngress ional leaders party's critical claque.
mention former New York
Besides joining in to •
Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R), demand the firing of
fo rmer CENTCOM co m- FEMA Director Michael
mander Tommy Franks ,or Brown and the appointformer . Secretary of State ment of a 911 !-style
Colin Powell as models in~estigative commission,
for the role. It certainly the 2008 Democra\iC fronwouldJJ ' t hurt if Bush trunner's one distinctive
appointed an African - proposal was to rip
FEMA
out
of
the
American to the post.
Reconstruction of the Department of Homeland
Gulf Coast is going to be Security, a bad idea.
the biggest public works
In the meantime, Sen .
projects in American his- Clinton deliv'ered a speech
tory since construction of to
the
labor-backed .
the federal highway sys- Alliance
for
Retired
tern. While Katrina· will Americans linking Katrina
depress th e U.S . growth to · Bush ' s idea of an
rate and raise un·employ· "ownership society.''
"Well, we saw what that
ment numbers for a quarter or two, in the long run meant in the last .couple
it can be a boon to both.
of days. You can ' t expect
Bush surely will wanl any help from your gov- .
the program to be led by ernment that you pay
· the private sector, bui this taxes to . You can 't expect
also is an opportunity to any help unless you own
put_ in place such ideas as a car, unless you have
Opportunity Zones. plac.es .' enough mo.ney to figure
where small busines ses out how to get your fatuigel tax breaks to rebuild , ly on an airplane to get '
dispo ssessed homeowners away from impending disget low- rate loans , and aster," Clinton said.
sc hool s ~nd hospital s gel
If Bush fails to se ize his
opportunity
to ' lead ,
federal hel p.
On Thursday, Senate Democrats may prosper
-Democrats did offer an politically. But, if he suealternative package to ceeds, all they will be
Bu sh's latest relief plan , remembered for is cheap
including · extra Medicaid shots.
(Morton Kondracke is
coverage, housing vouchers and school assistance . executive editor of Roll
But,
overwhelmingly, ' Call, the newspaper of
Democrats . have been Capitol Hill:)

An equal-opportunity disaster
You .know thing s are
upside-down
when
President Malaprop makes
se nse about race . A
reporter asked Bush about
talk that "there was a
Gene
racial component' to who
Lyons
got no immediate help in
the aftermath of Hurri ca ne
Katrina. "My attitude is
this,"" the president said.
That 's ri(!iculou s. A
"The storm didn ' t discrim ·refugee is so mebody who
inate, and ne ither will the
refuge,
period.
recove ry effort . When . takes
Americans of every race
those Coast Guard c hopand
ethn ic il y are refugees
pers, many of whom were
from Hurricane Katrina .
first on the . sce ne, were
To play the race 'card over
pulling people off roofs,
snineth ing so trivial helps
they didn't check the co lor
nobody. Indeed, Jackson's
of a person's sk in . They
efforts·were so cou nterprow&amp;nted to save lives."
ductive, I'm su rprised
Were the words scripted ? Bush didn ' t make him the
Probably. To the limited new head of FEMA.
ex tent he' s capable· of
Sure .th ere 's a raciaf
empathy, however, Bush is compone nt to· who the
no bigot.
poorest and most vu lneraI'm less sure abo ut · bl e victims of Katrina are:
Queen Moiher Barbara we ' re
talki ng
about
Bush , whose stunn ingly Mi ss iss ippi and Louisiana,
callous remarks abo ut how after all . With regard to
well thing s were working race, e~erybody's feeling
out for the thousands of strong , . ofte n conflicti ng
"u nde rpri vileged" hurri - emotions: pi ty, fear and
ca ne vic tim s in the anger among them. · We
Hou ston Astrodom e need a seriou s dia!ogue,
de li vered with a co nde - nol publicity hound s hol . sce ndin g chu ckle - will lerillg "raci sm'' on national
not soo n .be for gotten. No TV
· home s,
no jobs. · no
But if anything· good can
schoo ls, famil y members be salv aged from the
mi ss ing and Jeared dead. wreckage , it will have to
and the president 's mother start wi th the recog.nition
begrudg'es refugees a free that we Americans are all
meal and a fo ldin g cot in a ·in this togethcf. We need a
baseball
stadium . government that 's compeIncred ibl e.
'tent and works for us alL
Tha t said , Re v. Jesse Right now, we don ' t ha ve
Jack so n made th e most one,. And the main reason
tn ane
contrihution . we don 't. to be perfectly
Jackson chose 'the wo" t bltlnt, is that working-class
natural di saster in U.S. his- Southern whites ten d ' to
tory to start a ;emanti t vote again st thei r own
de bate abou( Afri can - interests. part ly fo r racial
'
Ameri can ; ma rooned by rea .... ons.
the sto rin. He dec reed that
Dem ocrat s have tried for
· ~ r~ fu gees·· was a rac i ~t
ge neration s to craft a popte rm becau se " it doc s not uli st me ssage that cut ;
de sc ribe Ame rican citi - aero" racial lin es. and
ze ns.

have mostly not succeed· inept? Largely because of
et:l . But the Bu sh adminis· the Bu sh administration's
tration's sheer incompe- ideoJ,ogically-driven effort
tence in the face of a nat- to "privatize" the agency,
ural disaster that has ren- slash its budget, and subdered hundreds of thou-. stitute political appointees
sands jobless, homeless for experienced profe sand seemingly hopele ss sional staff: Months before
provides Democrats with Sept. I I. Joe Allbaugh, the
an hi storic opportunity to Bush
appointee
who
re state tht ir case .
· replaced
President
. Here's one example: One Clinton's FEMA director
of President Bu sh's first James Lee Witt, told
official
actions
after Congress that the agency
Katrina was to make an had become "both an overemergency declaration thar sized entitlement program
the
Davis-Bacon
Act · and a disincentive to effec·req ui ring federal contrac- tive state and local risk
tors to pay the "prevailing management."
' local wage" to workers
Then Allbaugh quit to
will not ap ply during the become a lobbyist, turning
recon st ruction effort.. In the job over to his former
the largely non-union Gulf c ollege roommate , the
"Coast area that wage is . rece ntly resigned Michael
roughly $9 an hour Brown .
barely above the poverty
The universally re spectlevel. Bush 's ac tion will
ed Witt delivered a
depress salaries throughout
prophetic warning during a
the region.
2004 Capitol Hill hearing.
Think about it: Working
people throughout the "I am extremely concerned
· region have lo st e.very· that the ability of our
thing . 1'\nd this president 's nation to prepare for and
first thought, along with respond to di saste rs has
awardin g billions of dol- been sharply eroded," Witt
lars in no-bid contracts to said . " I hear from emerHalliburton, Bechtel and
other big GO.P contributors, is to. cut their pay. responders nearl r-e
Republican &gt; have sought. day that the FEMA .they
unsuccessfull y to eliminate knew and worked well
'Davis-Bacon for yea rs. with has no'W disappeared .
According
to
the In fact one state e merWashington Post, they gency manager told me, 'It
consider it "a taxpayer is like a slake has been dri- ··
ven into the heart of emer·
subsidy to unions."
But unions get nothing gency management."'
Like the storm, the Bush
out of the la,_w; only
emploxees do. Cutting administration 'is an equal ··
workers ' sa laries . won' t opportun ity di saster.
s·ave
the
government
I Arkansas
Democratmone y: . it mean s bigger (Jazette columnist Gene
profits for Halliburton , and. Lyons is a national magathe rest. period . Hence zille award winner and co. much of the cas h wi II be author of "T/ie Huntin g of
siph oned out of the region· the
President "
(St:
that need s it so desperate- Martin's Press, 2000). You
•can e-mail Ly01lS at gene·
ly.
And why was FEMA so lrons @sbcglobal.net.)

Obituaries

State: Drop in Labor Day travel hasn't hurt highway projects

COLUM BUS (AP)
However, vehicle miles trav- have tmder wav,'' Taft said . Hurri cane Katrina knoc ked
State officials are closely eled were down 10 percent "There definiteiy will he an out severu l pumping and
watching collection of the over the Labor Day weekend impact on ga&gt; rnx revenu~ s as refin ing operati on&gt; in and
gasol ine tax in the weeks fol- from the same period a year people tlrive more effictently ah1n~ the Gulf of Me.xico.
SYRACUSE -· Walter Floyd Roush, 79. of Syracuse died lowing Hurricane Katrina. but ago,
she said.
and purchase fewer gallon&gt; of The - America n Legisl ative
Thesday, Sept. 13, 2005 at his residence.
they haven 't cut any highway
Skyrocketing gas prices gasoline because of the price." Exc·hange Coum:i L a conserBorn on June 28. 1926 at Broad Run. W Va. , he was the projects the tax funds, a trans- have Gov. Bob Taft con Vehicle miles were down
son Qf the late Walter Kenna Roush.. and Nellie Merle portation spokeswoman said cemed that the state won 't be 1.5 percent in Jul y from Jul y vative omanization of state
Ia ~ m&lt;.~ker~ .. ha., urged ~ lates
(Goodnite) Roush.
Wednesday.
able to repair and build roads 2004, Mendi cino sa id .
· to temporaril y repeal gasoHe was · a striker ·for the Dravo/Union Barge Company, a
The . state has not gauged and bridges at the level that
"It
's
not
a
big
deaL
What
l'itlt' ta.xcs to help consumers.
veteran of the United States Navy. World War II . and a mem-· collections of the 28-cents·a- has been budgeted.
could be a bi g deal is if we' re
But Taft ,aitl that besides
ber of VFW Post 9926 and American Legion Post 140. ·
gallon tax for September, said
"The issue ... is whether down 1.5 percent to 2. percent llllrtin~ hi~hwa\· mnstruction.
He was pr~ceded ,in death , by his wife, Anna Lou Lindsay Mendicino, spokes- we're going to have enough for a few months." she said .
there's no&lt; guaramee retailers
(Stobart) Roush.
woman for the Ohio gas tax coming ·in to support
Gasoline topped $3 a galSurvivors include daughters and sons-in-law, Sharon and 1 Department ofTransp&lt;irtation. our projects that we already,. Ion around the nation after · wou ld low er prices at the
puti1p by a 'imilar amount.
Tom Dtddle of Portersville. Pa., Linda ~nd Larry Fields of
L
.
Syracuse, Debbie and Pat Gress of Granger, Ind.; grandchildren, Steven Diddle, Holly (Doug) Panazzi, Andy (Amie)
F1elds. Kevin (Betsy) Fields, Benjamin Gres , Joseph Gress,
Jonnie Gress. Will Gress: great grandchildren, Sarah Diddle;
Nathan Diddle. Brayden Panazzi, Mainey Panazzi, Brady
Bv PAUL NOWELL
Panazzi, Trevor Fields, Maycee Fields: sister and brother-inASSOCI.ATED PRESS WRITER
law, Marie and Do ~ • Rca of Minersville; brother, John Roush
of New Haven . W Va.; brother and sister-in-law, Nathan and
CAROLINA
BEACH,
tarolyn Roush of Syracuse.
.
·
N.C. - Hurricane Ophelia
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Saturday; Sept. 17 at lashed the North Carolina
the Letart Falls Cemetery ChapeL Mr. Roush will lie in state coast with high winds and
one hour prior to services . Larry Fields will .ofticiate and bur- heavy \a.ins Wednesday,
ial will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. There will be s pecial beginning an an.ticip~ted two-·
serv ices by the American Legion Post 140 and VFW Post day assault that threatened
9926 at the graveside services.
serious flooding and an II. Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept 16 at the foot storm surge .
,
Foglesong· Thcker Funeral ·Home . Flowers may be sent to '-, "If you have not heeded the
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home or a memorial gift sent to warning before, let me be clear
Meigs County Library. Ponwroy.
.
. ·
right now : Ophelia is a danger- •
E-Mail condolences to the family may be sent to foglesong- ous storm," Gov. Mike Easley
tucker@niyway.com
.
·.
said from Raleigh, appealing
especially to those in floodprone areas to evacuate.
Ophelia was moving so
slowly just 7 mph
Wednesday night ·- · that
authorit ies expected . the
storm' s passage through
North Carolina to take 48
GALLIPOLIS - Emil Tascak, 80. Gallipolis, .died hours from the start of rainAP Photo
Thesday, Sept. 13, 2005, al his residence.
fall on the southeastern coast A kitesurfe r kicks up a spray wh ile rid ing the wind and waves genera ted by Hurric ane Ophelia
Services will . be held at 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 15 . Tue sday afternoon to the
2005, at Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis, with storm 's anticipated exit ·into in Nags Head , N.C ., Wednesday. Ophelia continues to threate n the fragile barrier tslands along
the Outer Banks as it continues its track up the Caroli na coast.
Mon signor William Myers officiating. Burial will be in the Atlantic late Thursday.
Centenary Cemetery in Green Township . · ·
The storm had sustained
h
h
southeast of Cape Lookout liurricane s. said Shellev Fran ia ' 1996. A storm surge
·
· 8 ·
Friends may call an hour prior to the service m the funeral
wmds
ot
5
·
mp
•
·
t
e
and
tllO\'t.ng northeast at about Boone, tl1c age ncy ·s team of up to 9 fee t · was forecast
·
1
H
·
c
home.
Nattona
d · 0 1 ,.
urncane enter 7 h
dC · H
along the Paml ico River and
said. Hurri cane warnings
mp towar ape arteras, 1ea er 1or p 1e ta. ·
covered · the entire North . about 85. nnles away.
Pre&gt;ident Bu.sh issued an water wasn't expe,·ted to
Carolina coast from the . Water pushed out of Bogue emergency declaration for 1,7 recede umi I Thursday mornSouth Carolina line to Sound washed mta g ara~es counties in eas tern No rth in g. coun ty 'manager Paul
Virginia, where a tropical and gro und floo~s whtle Carolina. authorizi ng the Spruill said.
Offi cials on the Ou ter
storm warning covered the ocean surf c~ev.ed away the Department of Homelantl '
Banks
warned Ophelia coul d
mouth of Chesapeake Bay.
e~d of a hate I s P.~~~ on Bogue Security and FEMA to coorhring I0 hour' of hun·icaneMore than 12 inches of rain Banks, a ~arner •sl,t.nd..
. dinate disaster relief efforts.
. MIDDLEPORT - Obstetrics and gynecok&gt;gical services at' had fallen on Oak Island at . Followmg ·the cntiCISI11 of
Easley said he had spoken fo rce · 11 inu · to exposed
Pleasant Valley Hospital's Middleport Clinic are not currently the mouth of the Cape Fear Its re~ pon se to Hurn ca1~ e to Homeland Security .chid Hatteras ls lantl. The southavailable as reported in yesterday's paper. However. the se·r·- River. said meteorologist Jeff Katnna,
the
Federal Mi chael Chertotl and that ernmost 1·i1Ltges .of Hatter.as.
vices will be offered in the near future.
·
Orrock with tlie National Emergency
Management National Guard t.eams were FriS&lt;'O an ti Buxton we re
Weather Service in Raleigh.
Agency had 250 workers OA prepared to evaclmte sick; expected to ge t th ~ worst of
the winds and the ll ood in ~.
More than 120,000 homes the ground -. a larger-than· frail and elderly residents.
·•It's an island - the water
and business were without usual
contmge nt g•ven
Craven County expected a
power in eastern North Ophelia 's . size. ~EMA also 6- to 8-l'oot storm surge in the will co me over. i(ll go out Carolina, electric utilities put a m1ltlary olltcer. Coast Harlowe area near th'i: Neu se and we ·ll do it all ove r
said.
·
Guard Rear Adm . Bnan · River- an area that !loaded again." said li felong Buxton
B.v SARAH FREEMAN
the planes and welcome home
On Ocean Isle Beach south Peterman. in place to com- during isabel two years ago. resident Tiffan1· Bt gham. 27.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
'"You grow u·p k1low ing it 's
the • troop s to a ticker-tape of Carolina Beach. a SO-foot mand any federal ~esponse said Stanley Kite, the coun.ty
parade in New York and a tick- section of beachfront road the stnrm m~ght requ1re.
emergency
manageme nt a part of li fe:· she said.
CHICAGO - Chicago on er-tape parade in Chicago."
Ophelia is the 15th named
was washed out by heavy . The storm s slow, meander- · coordinator.
Wednesday became the
Natarus, 71, was in good surf and the only bridge to mg path to t_he coast gave.
The Be~u fort County town storm and se1enth named
nation's largest City to urge condition at Northwestern the island was closed.
FEMA more tune to get statt of Was'hington ordered an hurricane of thi s ycar·s busy
the Bu sh administration to Memorial Hospital and would
Jetnella Gibbs a"nd her fam- on the ground than is usually evacuation of a 20-block area At lantic season. which ends
withdraw U.S. troops from be kept ·overnight for obser- ily made their way to a shel- the case with North Caro lina that !loaded during.Hurricane Nov. 30.
Iraq at once. .
. vat ion, a hospital spokes- ter at a Craven County high
The resolution, · approved woman said.
'
school after the rain started
29-9. seeks an "immediate
During the debate, Aldennan Tuesday.
anp orderly" withdrawaL The Bernard Stone said he had
" We noticed the street was
City Council has 50 aldermen. backed the invasion of Iraq but starting to fill up. and I said;
Chicago joins other cities - changed his ·mind as the death ' It's time to go,"' she said. "I
including San Francisco, Sanla toll of U.S. troops climbed.
know if this little bit here has
Cruz, Calif, 50 communities in
"Do you think we can make hooded the street, what will it
Vennoilt and the Chicago sub- the citizens !'if Iraq accept do when it really pours?"
urb of Evanston - in calling democracy by having our
The storm ·s eye was
for the withdrawal of troops.
troops killed in the roads?" he expected to · brush the coast
The vote followed an hour &gt;'llid . ''We're not supporting between midnight and 2 ·a.m.,
of emotional debate, includ- our troops by having them but it might not come as ~ore
ing an impassioned speech by killed." •
a s it hugs and parallels the
Alderman Burton Natarus, ' Alderman James Balcer barrier islands of the Outer
who fainted afterward. ·
voted against the resolution. Banks through Thursday, ·
"It's time to call a halt to the saying he was demoralized by officials said . .
At II p.m., Ophelia's center
bloodshed,'' he said. "It's ti·me • anti-war senti ment while servwas about 20 miles southto load up the ships. load up ing as a Marine in Vietnam .
HOLZER

Walter.Fioyd Roush

Heavy rain hits N.C. coast as Ophelia picks up strength

Deaths

Emil Tascak

local Briefs

Correction

Chicago City Council urges immediate
·withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq

Sponsored by:

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The new water treatment
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..

The Daily Sentfnel • Page As

.

Thursday, September 15,2005

Bush can recoup from hurricane, but can. Dems?

·The Daily Sentinel

'

Page ·A
4
"

'

----- ;

To schedule your
.,free screening .•.
Call the HMC
Mark_eting Department at

(740) 446-5055
Monday through Friday
'
9:00am " 4:00 pm .

with one·of the
following risk factors:
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�,

PageA6

WORLD
Baghdad's deadliest day: Al-Qaida bombings kill at least 160

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 15, 2005

' .-.
•
•

•
'

least II other car or roadside
bombs shattered what had
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
been a few days of relative
in Baghdad. 1Wo mortar
calm
BAGHDAD, Iraq - More
attacks 1vere reported and-a
than a dozen highly coordinatmultitude of gunbattles brok~
ed bombings ripped through
out
between U.S. and lraljt
Baghdad nn Wednesday,
force s and in;iurgent attackers.
killing at least 160 people and
In addition Wednesda)'.
wounding 570 in the capital's attackers killed 17 men - ·
bloodiest day s ince the end of
including Iraqi drivers and coJ)major combat. Many of the
struction workers for the U.S.
victims were day laborers
military - in a Sunni village
lured by a suicide attacker
notth or Baghdad before dawn.
posing as an employer. , AIThat ruised the death toll in and
Qaida claimed responsibility .
aroun u the capital Wednesday
for the attacks in the name of
to 177. A senior Health
,Sunni insurgents, saying it
Ministry oflkial said 570 peowas a retaliation for the rout
ple w,·re w&lt;Junded in all .
' of militants at a base close to
At k.t-t &gt;ix attacks targeted
the Syrian border.
U.S. forces, Iraqi authoritit:IS
• The spasm ·of violence tersaid . The U.S. military said
rorized the capital for more
there were four direct attacks
than nine hours. The first
. on Americans, with- I0 solattack, at 6:30 a.m .: was the
diers wounded . Nb U.S.
deadliest: a suicide car ' blast
deaths were reponed.
which tore through the preAl-Jaafari. in the United
dominantly Shiite Muslim
States for the almu;tl U.N.
neighborhood of Kazimiyah .
General Assembly meeting,
In what was believed to be a
expressed ;&lt;his personal sornew tactic, the bomber set off
row for the victims of the
the explosive after calling the
attacks," his office said.
construction and other work In Dearborn, Mich ., a
ers to his s mall - ~an and enticDetroit suburb with a large
·ing them with promises of
Iraqi population, al -Jaafari
employment, a witness said.
AP Photo
vowed to fight ·back. "Those
At least 112 people were
· criminals . will not run away
Iraqi
soldiers
secure
the
site
following
an
explosion
in
Baghdad,
Wednesday.
At
least
73
people
were·
killed
and
16f?
wounded
early
killed and more than 200 were
from our justice sy s t~m . Our
wounded, according to Health Wednesday when a suicide bomber detonated his vehicle near a group of construction workers in north Baghdad , police said.
cities, our villages will mlt
Ministry official s. Twisted
Iraqi forces arre sted two what officials have said were Qaida statement posted on a after evacuating all women welcome them," he said.
hulks of vehicles blocked rile
"This is an horrific act of
bloodstained main street in insurgents in connectioil with militants sneaking across the militant Web site. Its authen- and children - as a punish- terror that hurts innocerit
ticity could not be contirmed. ment," the speaker said.
the Kazimiyah bombing, one border from Syria.
Kazimiyah 's Oruba Square.
But most .· of the victims civilians and needs to be conAl-Qaid!l in Iraq said in a It was unclear .why the stateAl-Qaida 's leader in lrag. of them a Palestinian and the
. demned clearly and unequivWednesday
were civilian s.
Abu Musab ai-Zargawi. pur- other a Libyan. Iraqi televi- Web posting thai· it launched ment referred to "yesterday."
At Baghdad's Kazimiyah ocally," State Department
The audiotape was posted
portedly declared ·'all-out 1\'ar·· sion gu01cd Prime Minister the attacks, some less than 10
spokesman Adam Ereli said.
on Shiites. Iraqi troops and the Ibrahim ai-Jaafari as saying. minut.es apart, in response to later Wednesday. The speak- Hospital, dozen s of wounded He also called it "another
men
lay
on
stretchers
and
govemmcnt in an audiotape Al-.laafari also said the sui- the Tal Afa( offensive, which er, introduced as ai-Zarqawi.
case or people with no more
posted Wednesday on an ·cide bomber was a Syrian. began Saturday and evicted a Jordanian, said his militant gurneys, their bandages and . agenda other than to kill,
Internet site known for cany- without offering any details most in surgents from the city forces would attack any Iraqi clothes soaked in blood. One main and destroy."
how the identification was about 50 miles from Syria they believe has cooperated older man in a traditional
ing extremist Islamic content.
Arab gown and checkered · Speaking before al-Qaida's
and 260 miles northwest of with the Tal Afar offensive.
The ai-Zarqawi tape was a made so quickly.
"If proven that any of head scarf sat in a plastic · claim of responsibility; ' a
·
The attacks came as U.S. Baghdad.
clear attempt, coming on the
"To the nation of Islam, we (Iraq's) national guards , chair, his blood-soaked senior American military offiheels of the attacks. to create a and Iraqi forces pres sed their
cial forecast the claini, telling
climate of tear. "'w deeper ~cc­ offensive a,gainst in surgents give you the good new ~ that police or army are agents of underwear c:..x posed and · a The Associated Press he
tarian discord and scare Iraqis in the northern city of Tal the battles of revenge for the the Crusaders, they wi II be trail of dried blood snaking believed the rash of bombings
away from the Oct. 15 referen- Afar and along the Eup!)rates Sunni people of Tal Afar killed and his house will down his legs.
As the hours ticked by, at was in retaliation for Tal Afar.
Riv.er valley, striking hard at began yesterday," said the al- demolished or burned - ·
dum on a new constitution.

BY STEVEN R. HURST

.I

Annan ·defends .U.N. against criticism, urges
summit leaders to restore its credibility
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

UNITED NATIONS After a year of mounting crit-.
icism,
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan defended the
United
Nations
on
Wednesday and urged global
leaders to restore the organization's credibility by adopting broad reforms needed for
the world to act together to
tackle poverty. terrori·sm and
conflict.
Addressing a summit that
he called a year ago in hopes
of winning approval for an
AI' Photo
ambitious blueprint to mod- British prtme minister Tony Blair speaks during a summit of
. ernize the United Nations on world leaders Wednesday at the United Nations.
its 60th anniversary, Annan
told· more than !50 presi - subsidies to promote prosper- who organized .the Live Aid
.den!s, prime ministers and ity and opportunity in poor , concerts and campaigns
kings that "a good stan" had nations, a move that would be against poverty, said he was
sitting in the General
!Jeen made.
worth billions of dollars.
: But he said sharp differ''Either hope will spread, or Assembly chamber with U.N.
ences had blocked "the violence will spread. and we anti-poverty chief· Jeffrey
sweeping and fundamental must take the side of hope," Sachs and ·they couldn't
reform that I and many others he said.
believe what they heard.
believe is required."
"I think he's re~lly throwThis approach and
Instead of a celebration of Bush' s support for achieving . ing down the gauntlet. It's a
U.N. achievements since its U.N. development .goals suc.h very bold move," Geldof said
founding in the ashes of as halving extreme poverty of Bush's trade tariff proposWorld War II, the summit by 2015 - was welcomed b9 al, adding ·that he was
was much more a somber many leaders.
impressed with the . presireappraisal of its shortcomPalestiniim
FDreign dent's acknowledgment that
ings and a debate about how . Minister Nasser AI-Kidwa terrorism "comes from
'·
. ' '""'
,
"
. .
to mee~ the daunting chal- called it' "useful for our com- despair and lack of hope."
I · Ml0 - 200-~oo ; &lt;H , - ~lll (,r,-. :-1ss
lenges of a world becoming mon work here at the U.N."
British Prime · Minister
=
-L.-~~· 01
1
L
D
1
more and more interlinked.
Irish rocker Bob Geldof. Tony Blair said the · United
It began a week after investigators sharply criticized
alleged corruptioil and U.N.
mismanagement of the oilfor-food program in Iraq. and
on a day· when more than 160
people died in attacks in
Baghdad - a harsh reminder
of the .fight against terr&lt;JTism
that was a nlglillght of
' President Bush's speech .
There wer~ some hopeful
·. signs, such as the handshake
!Jelween the )eaders of I~rae!
jlnd Pakistan , whose counDr. Sheets is Board Certified in both Internal Medicine and
t.ries have no diplomatic relaiions. But "there were al so
Pediatrics . He treats children and adults of all ages _.
reminder~
of unresolved
problems, among them the
U.S. decision to have only
two low-level ofticiab attenc;l
the speech by Iran 's new
.
hard-hne president. ·
l!ush broadened the terror~ ism fight beyond the military
arena, saying world leaders
.
have "asolemnobligation" to
To. schedule an appointment call
stop terrorism in ils early
\!.
itages. Declann~ that po.ver·
Athens
Jy breeds despatr and terror·
..
ism he challenged
leadersand
to . l,__ _ _ __,.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
www.holzerc:linic.com
abolish
all trade:: tariffs
_ _ _ _ __;__ _ _ _ _ _...J

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Jared Sheets; :MD, Internal Medicine
Joins Holzer Clinic Athens

MediaJI Excellence.
Local Caring."'

H_O LZER CLINIC

740-589.:_3100

••
__ ,__

._.

· ·Pa~te A7 • The Dailv. Sentinel ·

,, '

.. .
:'Emancipation Moth~an
:Proclamation • NFIEL~:«~&gt;~~~?,~~R~t~~:coM
schedule·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
I·

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'
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...... -

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.

....... ("&gt;l',..

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September

15, 2005

..

'•

Gallia County
Jr. Fairgrounds

Saturday, Sept. 17
Opening ceremony,
,
!0:30a.m.
· Welcome by Emancipation
.Celebration President Andrew
,Gilmore.
."' lnvocationby the Rev. Lynch .
: Song, Negro National Anthem,
slmg by Victoria Lynch.
Pledge of Allegiance.
'. ·Solo by Victoria Lynch.
· Emancipation
Queen
~ontest, under the direction of
-€indy Sexton.
·" Solo by Victoria Lynch.
·
Offering.
Afternoon program,
... ·
I :30 p.m.
Welcome by Emancipation·
·Celebration Vice President
·
Olenn Mil')er.
"" Special music by Men of
•l!Jnion.
Introduction of speaker.
" · Special speaker. Coy Bacon of
•Ironton, former NFLAII-Star.
·,. Special music - TBA.
· Offering.
·:: Closing remarks by Glenn
Miller.
.. ,. HDmecoming reception · at
·fuirgrounds .
Sunday, Sept. 18
. Morning worship service,
' ·
10 a.m.
·
• Music selection by the com. bined choir under the direction
.of Joanna Bass.
· .: Devotional by Deacon
Olenn Miller.
·Music by Just Joy.
- · Offering.
::· Introduction of minister.
~... Sermon by Minister Charles
.~ashington of St. John Baptist
:c;'hurch, Columbus.
;;: ·Afternoon program,
·:
1:30 p.m.
Welcome by Andrew Gilmore.
:',' Special music by Just Joy.
~; Recognition of dignitaries.
' Recognition
of
;Emancipation Board.
· Scholarship presentation by
:Arthur Clark.
: Music by Just Joy.
· Offering.
,
;· Special remarks - Speaker
!TBA.
.· ·
.
: Introduction of speaker.
~ Special speaker- The Rev.
·Robert Graetz of McArthur.
: Music by Just Joy.
'
: Closing remarks by Andrew
:Gilmore.

r.:

Nation s "must give leadership on terrorism," stressing
that there can never be any
excuse for "the random
slaughter of the innocents."
French Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin also
called for ·:resolute action on
everything that fuels terrorism - the inequalities. the
persistence M violence,
injustices and conflicts, the
' lack of understanding among
cultures."
At only lhe third U.N.
Security Council meeting eyer
attended by the national leaders of the i 5 council members, terrorism was also a
focus. The leaders .unani mously passed two resolutions -one aimed a! outlawing the incitement of terrorism
and the other at preventing ·
conflict, especially in Africa.
On the side lines of the
'ummit. a Russian-sponsored
treaty making it a c-rime to
possess radioucti ve material
or weapons with the intention
of committing a terrorist act
began collecting signatures.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin was the tirst to sign,
followed by Bush and French
Prime Minister Dominique
de ,Villepin. . .
Annan argued·that because
the world is imperfect. it
needs the United Nations.

Bv EDITH M. LEDERER

I" •

-.
· They_recently were spotted
111 Mextco and Croatia, but
this weekend, the red eyes
will be back in Point Pleasant.
Saturday kicks off the
fourth annual
I'VIothmail
Festival, and according to Jeff
·Wamsley, who has helped
organize the festival since it
began in 2002, each year continues to grow a·nd improve .·
"Since (2002), it has turned
into a festival that visitors
from all over the United States
and even other countries
attend," Wamsley said. "We
only feel !hat it wjll get big~er
and better with each passmg
y~ar. We are pleased that peo·
pie express their interest in
our town and want to come
back to visit again and again."
Festivities officially begin
at I0 a.m. Saturday at the
Moth man statue · in Gunn
Park , and activities along
Main Street will lake place
until 5 p.m., with a variety of
events, shows and speakers
·
lined up.
Wamsley said the tentative
schedule includes a guest
speaker forum beginning at
noon. The forum will include
author Rosemary Guiley,
news reporter Dave Peyton,
author/ghosthupter
Susan
SheppaFd,
paranormal
Pyau
researcher ·Robin
Bellamy, Mothman comic
book creator Chad Lambert
and
eyewitness
Newell
Partridge . .
The band "Mothman" · of
Ironton, Ohio, will perform ·

Fet+iva( ((ic{(t off Satur_dav
.

·

Nicole Fields/photo
Hundreds of people. likely will pause for a moment this weekend to look at the Mothman statue · in Gunn Park on Main ·
Street. Saturday kicks off the fourth annual Mothman Festival.
throughout the afternoon in
Gunn Park, and Wamsley said
they have entertained guests
at the festival each year since
it began . Butch and Bernie 's

Mothman props and archives
museum from KiHannin g, Pa ..
also will be &lt;rvailable for public viewing. He said . thi s
museum is a hl!ge collection

of items used exclu, ively in
the motton ptcture, "Mothman
Prophecie s," and that- it is the
most elaborate collection in
the world . Admission to the
museum will be $2 for adults
and $ 1 for children under the
age of 12.
Additionally. Mothmanrelated documentarie s and
fil uJs will be shown throughout th e day · in the State
Theatre.
and
Mothman
hayrides will begin at . 8:30
p.m. at the West Virginia State
Farm Mu seum . Ticket s for the
rides. which will leave every
15 minutes. can be purchased
durmg the day at the festival.
Wamsl ey said there will be
more wagons this year to cut
down on waiting, and each
tour last s .approximately 30
minutes. Ticket s for the tour
will be $5 for adults and $3 for
~:hildretJ under the age of 10.
But the ·Mothman isn't the
only reason people should
attend th ~ festival, Wainsley
said . There will be tram tours
throughout downtown Point
Pleasant so visitors can see
sites su&lt;:h as . the Point
Pleasant ·River Museum, TuEndie-Wei State Park . the
riverfront park and touri sm
center. Those tours will be
offered · for $1. which will
cover the cost of a hand;tamp
and allow people to ride the
tram air day.
.
He added that vendors wilh
concessions and merchandise
will he on hand all weekend .
For more information, visit
www.mothmanlives.com or
call the tourism center at (304.1
675-6788.

Whet your appetite for French City Chili Fest
GALLIPOLIS
The
French City Chili Fest 2005 is
scheduled for Saturday, Sept.
17. An annual event, the
French City Chili Fest has new
exciting contests and attractions planned this year.
Food, entertainment, games
and more will comprise this
all-day event ( 10 .a.m. until 6
p.m.), according to Tommie
Vaughn of the Gallipolis
Retail Merchants Association,
sponsor of the event.
Vaughn is this year's cochair. along with Lynne
Hopkins.
"We are looking forward to
yet another well-attended
•

event, both participants and
festival-goers ," said Vaughn .
"This year's ·event will
offer, for the first time, a chili
eating contest," said Hopkins.
"It'll be something you don't
want to miss."
The 2005 French City Chili
Fest will be held in the
Gallipolis
City
Park.
Registration deadline for chili
cook-off participants has been
extended to Friday, Sept. 16.
Entry fee is $30, and all of the
rules for entry are available by
calling the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce office
at (740) 446-0596.
Space is limited, so early

registration is important.
Casfl prizes win be awarded to
the top three teams. Sponsors
for ;the cash prizes a warded
incl!~de first place of $500.
sponsored by The Wiseman
Agency: Steve and Karen
McGhee will sponsor sewnd
plai:e at $300, and Saunders
Insurance Agency is the sponsor for third place at $200.
. Additionally, a "people' s
choice" award will be given
this year, sponsored by Miss
Kelly' s Tavern. Top sponsors
for !he event are Gallipolis
Career. College, Dixon .Tax
Services and Holzer Medical
Center.

Barnstorming
fun at Vinton :
County Air
Show
McARTH L: R
Th e
V:inton Count y Air Sho". set
for
the Vinton Count y
Airport on Sunday. Se pt .. 18. ·
wi ll le atu re ' "'·era ! cti r ;how
ve terans barn :-. tonn ing in vi ntage aircraft . pll:; a few new
llyers who perform darin g
maneuver-. .

One performer. E!llmcrso n
Stewart. will perform hi &gt;
entire act with the e n ~ in e in
hi s aircraft turned off.'
Others who will ·. perform
ha ve been see n on popul ar
tele vi., ion , how; and .wi II present their old-fashinnetl stvle
of .ba(n stormin g in vi ntat!e hiwin g:-, low over th e airpurt.

And. of course. there will he
skydivers, airplane rides.
great barbeq\1e chicken. dinners. and perhaps a fe w surpri se acts to make you laugh.
The airport' s famou s B-BQ . chicken dinners will be
served beginning at I I a.m.

This is a full dinner and the
chicken is cooked over opel)
charcoal pits near the airport· s shelterhou.se. ·
The air show will begin at
I p.m. with skydivers. the
playing of the National
An't11em. anJ then the tlying
begin s. With pros like Harold
John son. Darrel Montgomery
and others. you will not leave
the air show feeling you have
heen let down.
A candy drop fo r kid s.
where candy is dropped from
an airplane onto the ta rmac.
w iII be' held at about 3:30
p.m.
Pil ots . from the Vinton
County Pilots &amp; Boosters
Association will give airplane
rides immediately lolluwing
the show.
The air .show is free, but a
donation of $5 will be asked
tOr parking .
The Vinton Count y Airport
is located about six miles
north of McArthur. ju&gt;t off
Ohio 93'. on Airport Road.
Pilots fly to 221.
For if{(onn al;on about thf!
show, &lt;'all Boo.l'ler Presidem
Nick Ruperr w 1740! 357· .

The park will otter several
exhibits, including motorcycles and automobile dea.\erships. For the children, games
and activities will include face
painting, train rides, and sidewalk art.
Football fans will be able 10
enjoy . Ohio State University
coverage, shown on a large
screen televisio·n sponsored by
Sears of GaUipolis. Tables and
chairs will be set up. and
refreshments will be provided
.by Budweiser and Pepsi.
Vaughn added, "This will
be an event for the family'
or
replr
Everyone is invited to attend 02f&gt;8
and enjoy the festivities. "
.\ pklleh·s @ ;,oomnet.net.

to

Center will host .~
Blue Gator will host CodeTalkers Sept. 21
premiere of 'Ghosts' ( c~:~Tk~~s.
~~:
including

: CHARLESTON - A premiere showing of "Ghosts of
; Green Bottom," a 30-minute
•video on historic archeologi:cal investigations a! the
;Jenkins House, will be held at
•the
Clay
Center
in
w
v
0
·Charleston,
. a., at 8: 0
,: p.m. , Thursday, Sept. 22,
' 2005.
·, ,'' The Jenkins house was
built in 1835 for William
Jenkins, father of Confederate
Gen. Alben Gallatin Jenkins
:t} 830-1864). Jenkins inherit-ed (he house and I,465 acres
. , :Of land at Green ·Bottom from
his father in 1859.
::- Jenkins served in the U.S.
:.t:ongress and the Confederate
:States Congress and became a
:general in the Confederate
;Army. Jenkins died as a result
:of wounds received at the
:Battle of Cloyd's Mountain,
:va., in I 864.
- ..
: The Jenkins Plantation

Museum is located at 8814 Godfather
of Southern
Ohio River Road (W.Va. 2) in Alternative Music, CoL Bruce
Lesage,
about
midway Hampton, Ret., will perform at
between . Huntington and The Blue Gator in Athens on
Point Pleasant. Operated by Sept. 2 1.
the West Virginia Division of
TheCodeT~Ikerscreateahigh Culture and· History, the energy blend of jam-rock with
jazz, country blues and funk.
house is open to visitors
In his fourth decade as a
Tuesday through Saturday touring performer, Hampton 's
from I0 a.m, to 4 p.m:
most notable gig before now
The US
A
C
f
0
· · rmy orps
was as guru and chazoid playEngineers, The West Virginia er in the Aquarium Rescue
Division of Culture and Unit, one of the ·original bands
History and the Greenbott.om of the Horde Tour of a decade
Society are partners in the ago. Since Rodgers writes the
Jenkins Plantation Museum.
bulk ofThe Code Talkers mat,ePlease join the Corps of rial, the songs reach through as
Engineers, the West Virginia many·genres as the lyrics call
Division of Culture ·arid upon .
History and the Greenbottom
In addition to Hamption, the
Society at the Clay Center for band is made up of Bobby Lee
this special premiere show-. Rogers on lead voclas. electric
lng . . This event is free and banJo, acoustic guitar and "air
open to the. public. For more trombone," Tyler ·Greenwell
information,contact
Lisa on drums and vocals, and Ted
Morgan;- project-"manager. "at Pecchio. bas~upfight ba~.s;itnd-~
(304) 399-5545.
- vocals. ·

The CodeTalkers

''

HARDY FALL MUMS

FALL DECORATING

"Perfect to plant or set on
your pOrch or deck" ·
Wide Selection to choose from~

·/M- ali ~· IJrJJ

~

. 1/4 mile north of
2400 Eastern Avenue POO*Oy -Malon Bridge
GaHipolls, Ohio
MISOJI, Wast VIrginia
P.hone (740) 446-1711
Phone (304) 77H'721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

.

~

•

,J "

....

j

p~~ '
neeJJJ

1

·

· Pump~ns · Gourds
Baled Straw · Fodder Shocks
Indian Com · Fall Wreaths
Seasonal Crafts
·

•

. ,.
..-~.-....

.............. -..

··-

·~-

�•

- - - -----~--

.

~- -

------

\

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

.Bill would hide 'lists of gun
permit-holders; governor opposed
-

INSIDE .
The Extra Point, Page B2
OVP Leaders, Page B2
Area League Standings, Page B3
.
Meigs golf wins tri-match at Riverside, Page B3

Thursday, September 15, aoo5

Local Weather

•

-

BY JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

COLUMBUS
The
media would lose access to
lists of concealed-weapons
permit-holders and could
only check with she'riffs "fo,r
specific name s under a bill to
be introduced i"n .the Ohio
House next week. its sponsor
said Wednesday.
The bill also would allow
permit-holders to carry hi dden guns in their cars. remo ving a · requirement that the
weapon be in plain sight or
locked up, said Rep . Jim
Ashtnides, a Cosho.:ton
Republican who spon sored
' the original wncealed-carry
bill that Gov. Bob Taft signed
last year.
Taft had threatened to veto
that bill if it had contained
those provisitins . Although
he haSii't discussed the new
bill with Aslanides, the governor hasn't changed hi s
mirtd , spokesman Mark
Rickel said.
''Those two issue~ were
.very much concern s of his.
Without the provision of
. allowing press access to the
lists, the governor wou ld not
have signed it," Rickel said.
Jeff Garvas of Ohioan.s for

Concealed Carry said that in
the' 17 months the law has
been in effect, the idea has
picked up enough supporters
that the. Lc gis latur~ could
override a Taft veto.
tMany gun owners were
upset when new spapers
acquired lists of permit-holders from sheriffs and publi shed them. Aslanides said.
The owners could become
victims of burglary or other
robberies. he said.
"One of the main targets of
criminals arc handguns ,"
Aslanides sai d. ·'We ' re
putting peopfe out there. with
handguns at risk."
The change wou ld take
transparency from the bill and
would deny the pttblic the
chance to know if sheriffs are
properly fol lowing the per. mining process. said Frank
Deaner. a lobbyist for the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
· "Who knows '' Over time,
there mi ght be a sheriff who's
tctking ~,are of particular
friends. ct pa11ern to who is
ge uing permits. and ~ho is
nut," Deaner said. "This item
in the law is not justa public
recnrd s · item , it' s a public
safety item."
Aslanidcs'
bill
also
removes the "plain sight"

language from current law. he
said. Under cur.rent law, a
motori st with a permit can
wear a hol stered gun, but it
must be visiole to' · law
enforcement officers.
· Another change would
allow off-duty officers to
carry concealed guns inti&gt; any
place they choose. Aslanides
said. Bars, public buildings.
day-care centers and certain
other areas are curremly off.
limits to people with concealed weapons.
"The majority of .the bill
de&lt;tls with the concerns or law
enforcement. We can make ·
the process work better and
give poli.cc ofl1cer.s more latitude." Aslaniiles said . "There
are no drastic changes. This is
simply trying to make everybody safer."
A message seeking comment was left with Toby
Hoover, executive director of
the Ohio Coalition Against
Gun Violence and a longtime
concealed-carry opponent.
Garvas said the bill wou ld
fix some unintended consequences of Aslanides' origi·
nal bill.
"We're definitely in favor
of the things he's done. I cannot tell you if he's gone far
enough," Garvas said.

Thursday, September 15, 2005

City/Region
High I LIM temps

Forecast for Thurtdly, lltpt. 15

Prep Football -

'•'.j,1! l,,''1·1.
'

Tolido•
74"153°

Southeastern Ohio Edition
Mlnaflelde
73"149"

~

76"1 55"

parenthesis)

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Ironton ( 7)
Logan Elm
Gallia Academy_
Hillsboro
Logan
Trimble
(tie) Wheelersburg .
, 8. Nelsonville-Vorl&lt;
9. Piketon
10. Miami Trace

*Colurnbul
78"156"

t._:)

Clnclnnlltl

BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN cages so the children didn't Houchman said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Alford said sometimes social
harm each other.
The attorney for the par- workers are duped by parents
CLEVELAND ~ When ems, David Sherman, issued a putting on a positive show to
authorities in a sma ll ~ north- statement
Wednesday gain adoption approval.
ern Ohio town'. told the nation evening defending the couple.
"Families from rime to time
that several disabled children
"The children have been present well.. They present
were forced by their adoptive out of control and have their home si tuation in a very
parents to sleep in cages, two caused serious harm to them- positive light because they are
questions were immediately selves and each other," the wanting se rvices,- or in this
raised: How could one couple statement read. adding that case more children,'' he said.
be allowed to adopt II chil- Michael Gravelle built the
Cohen raised another possi-.
dren with such special health "enclosures" in order to pro- ble reason why parents might
needs, and why was no one vide the children with a seek multiple adoptions of
checking on them?
secure space while their par- high-maintenance
special
It's hard enough, many say, enrs slept at night..
. needs children: the money
to tinct homes for the nation's
"The Gravelles love and "t!i'ai comes along with them.
nearly 130,000 ehildten await- miss their children and are "Sometimes, not all the time,
ing
permanent
homes . devastated and brokenhearted there is an economic incentive
Adoption
experts
.said with worry, since their chil- ·e.W
t;king_them in," he said.
Wednesday that the Ohio case dren have been ripped away · Ti s unclear how much the
highlights the fact that it's even from them. Their motives and Gravelles recerved 111 governmore difficult to place special intentions wen~ good. They ment assistance. Cleveland's
needs children and screening would n~ver harm a child," county-run agency paid the
prospective parents for those Sherman said. .
faJTiily at least $500 a month
kids is sometimes eased.
Social workers may be to care f9r the one child, a
"There ·s always a pressing unaware of the tiring boy born with HIY.
need to find homes for these demands of caring for disMinimum payments of
children." said Kevin Cohen. abled children and may be $250 .a month per child if the
a Long Island, N.Y., adoption anxious to help· them find fat:nily qualities for state or
attorney wno him se lf was adoptive homes, said Keith federal programs are meant
adopted. He said disabled Alford, a Syracuse University to ~ncourage adoption by
children require more work associate professor who has ensuring families can mainwritten extensively on adop- tain their living standard, said
and patience from parents.
Rhonda Abban, chtef of
The Ohio couple are white tion and family services.
The Gravelles received adoption servires for the
and the children are black. a
group thai historically can be ·:glowing reports" from pri- Ohio Department of Job and
hard to place even if they vate agencies that reviewed Family Services.
don't have disabilities.
them for the adoption of one
McCafferty said that, gcn"The tradition of adoption of the children, 'said Jim erally speaking, more than
in this country is that it's McCafferty. director of the six children shouldn ' t he
been white, healthy infants. Cuyahoga County Department placed in a home, e~pecially
generally adopted.by middle- of Children and Family 1f they have dtsab1ht1es.
Erich Dumbeck. director of
class, Caucasian · couples." Services, which placed the
the Huron County Department
said Gloria Houchman. a· boy with the couple.
Houchman said she wasn't of Job and Family Services,
spokeswoman
for
the
National Adoption Center in familiar with the Gravelles. said there are no limits to how
But she said case -workers many children may be placed
Philadelphia.
examining
a potential adop- in a home but that his agency
Michael
and
Sharen
Gravelle. of Wakeman, have tive family need to be sure makes the child's welfare a
denied abusing or neglec ting that the parents are prepared . key factor. The Gravelle adoptions were arranged outside of
the children, who are ages I to care for the child.
·
''If
a
social
worker
visited
hi s county.
to 14 and have "conditions that
Ohio doesn't require home
include autism and fetal alco- the home and it was obvious
hol syndrome . No charges that the home wasn ' t visits after an adoption is
have 1Jeen tiled. and the chil- equipped and saf~ and the . tlnalized . Dum~ck said his
family cou ldn 't provide for agency did not have contact
dren now are in foster care.
The parents. who ·haven't the child, it would be hard to with the family before
commented publicly. told imagine that even one child Friday's court-ordered search
auihorities that a psychiatri st would be approved. let·alone resulting frqm a complaint .
recommended · using t~e seven or. _eight or I 0 or 12." that he won't discuss.

AEP-=-38;-3'1'-~

-

•

46 .
_38
29
28

6
3

28
21

NR · 19
7

14

Othlts .-Mrc
Fairfield
Union 11, Valley. 8, P&lt;&gt;rtsmouth
West 6. Rock Hill 6, Meigs 5,
Jackson 4. South Gallia 3,

Poltlmouth• •

7VJSQ•

47"

2
10
7
9

WVA .

Chillicothe 2.

GALLIPOUS - A schedUle of upcoming college
tM~nls involving
l&amp;amelrcrn Gallla, Megs and Masoo counlklii.

and hl{tl 6ChOO vaiSity sporting

Thy!'ldgv'l Clln'!e8

Volleyball

Warren (1-2) at Meigs (2-1)
mark in rushing offensively.
MHS coach Mike Chancey feels
this Friday's showdown with the
Warriors should make for an excellent football game.
"Warren is a much-improved football team. They do a good job o(
running and passing the ball ," he
commen ted. "It's going to be a very
good test for us, but I think our
defense is excited about it."

with 330 yards or total offense,
including 220 ru shjng yards on 41
anemg.ts (5.37 yards per carry). The
Warribrs also had II 0 yards of passing and zero turnovers. ·
·
Defensively, the Blue and White
surrendered just 80 rushing yards on
31 Fort Frye carries and held top
rusher Tyler Engle to just48 yards on
13 carries.
The Warriors did allow 289passing
yards on 19-of-36 attempts la.1t w~ek
and did not force an interception.
WHS did have one fumble recovery.
Meigs will look to. improve on its •
33-carry, 299-yard effort against the
Raiders last week.

Please see Meigs, Bl

Southern aims for ,first win over Notre Dame

.

Gallla Academy at Athens, 5:1 5p.m.
Soutt1 Point at River valley, 5:30p.m.
Ohk&gt; Valley Christian at lrooton St Joe, 6

BY Scorr-WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

~m .

Meigs at Belpfe, 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern. 5:55p.m.
Federal Hocking atltastem. 6 p.m.
SOIXer
Gallia Academy at South Point, 7 p.m.
Riverside at AJint Pleasanl, 7 p.m.

GlotoSoccor
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6 p.m.
Golf
TVC Hocking at Pine Hills, 4:30p.m.
Point. Pleasant, Fair1and at River Valley

(CIIflside). 4 ~m :

. Green a1 Eastam
Notre Dame at SOuthern
Trimble at Wahama.

Large 9 inch pot
"Variety of Colors To Choose. From"

Jll8

· Hannan at Burch
Soccer

t s4.98 or3 for$1
I_·,

'

Teays Valley Chr\SUan at Ohio Valley
Christian. 5:30p.m
.
l'ollo)iball
Teays Valley Christian at Ohio Valley
Christian, ·s p.m.

FROST PROOF PANSIES

'

.

Frlday'l aamu
FoatbaH
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant
Symmes Valley al South Gallia
Alexander at AM&gt;r vaney
Warren at Meigs

HARDY FALL GARDEN MUMS

tr~nsactlons, provided by
Kroger- 20.51
Ltd.- 20.59
- -Smith-Partner&amp; at -Adtve!tt- -1
NSC- 36.38
Inc. of Gallipolis.
Oak Hill Financial 30.50
OVB - 25.15
•·
BBT -40.26
Peoples - 28.27
Pepsico - 55.35
Premier - 13.65
Rockwell - 53.85
Rocky Boots - 31.53
RO Shell- 64
SBC- 23.69
Sears- 128.87
Wai-Mart - 44.70
Wendy's- 47.12
Wor~hington - .18.33

Akzo- 41.48
Ashland Inc. - 58.98
AT&amp;T -19.37
BLJ-11.36
Bob ·evans - 23.68
BorgWamer- 57.62
CENX- 23.68
Champion - 4.39
Charming Shops - 11.63
City Holding- 34.95
Col- 47.66
OG -18.94 .
DuPont - 40.08
Federal Mogul - .44
USB- 29.63
Ga,..nett - 71.19
General Electiic - 34.05
Daily stock reports are
GKNLY- 5.15
Harley-oavldson - 51.16 th·e 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
JPM- 34.24

3

POMEROY - A pair of Week)
victors will battle this Friday when
Meigs hosts Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League member Warren in a
pivotal gtidiron matchup at Bob
Roberts Field.
The Marauders (2-1) are coming
off an impressive 35-8 victory over
River Valley last week, while thy
Warriors (1·2) picked up their first.
triumph ·with a si milarly impressive
28-14 win over Fort Frye.
Both combatants held their re'spective opponents to under 100 yards on
the ground Ia" weekend, and eac h
had a player eclipse the century

Junio r runni)lg back Tyler Schaad
(6-foot, 180 pounds) led that offensive attack again st FFHS last week
wi th 15 · carries for I 06 yaPds .
Schaad also had a seven-yard scamper for paydirt.
Junior quarterback Garrett Proctor
(6-2, 160) also had a scoring touchdown .in Jhat Fort Frye victory, rushing for 65 yards on I 0 tries.· Proctor
also completed 4-of-9 passes for. 98
yards. The second-year starter had a
71 -yard sco1ing throw to - J.D.
Harshbarger (6- 1, !50) and was not
intercepted.
·
Josh Offenberger (5- 10, 250) also
-had a scoring run of two yards and
finished with 46 yards on II totes .
Warren finished Friday's contest

.rNP SchEdule .

Local Stocks
ACI '- 63.67

Prev.Voto
1 70

·-=

• 78"158"

~
~

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYD..i.ILYTRIBUNE.COM

sports staff. (Arst-place votes in

t....,)

TNm

Dayton•~

Week 4

Meigs preps for grQund~ war with WarriorS

A loolj atll1e top football teams In
Ohi0 1S Southeast District as voted
by the Ohio Valley f&gt;IJbllshlng

Adoption screening may slacken with hard-to-place children

- --· ·--

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

"Plant Pansies Now For Beautiful
Early Spring Flower Beds"
Also Availi!!ble
• Flowering Cabbage • Flowering Kale

s.tumwgomes ·
l'olloyboll
ScMh Gallia at SciotoYille, 1 I a.m.
SOIXer
Ripley at Point ·Pleasant, 7 p.m.
COliiOCollnly
River Valley at Mohawl&lt; lllllitational, 1o am.
Gallia Academy, Meigs at logan Invitational.
9a.m.
CQIIege Soccer
Madonna at Rio Gmnde, 2 p.m.

I

FALL HOME DECORATING
....._ HEADQUARTERS - ·&amp;

.~ • Pumpkins • Straw
4
•t;. • Squash • Guords

College~

Rio at Mountain State. TBA
Collogt Cross Country
Rio at Friendship lrMtational, 10 a.m.

;.,1..

. -~
• _Fall Wreaths • Fall Flags
And So Much More!

Trimble rallies
to beat Meigs
STAFF REPORT

*FRESH LOAD OF SH.RUBBERY*
"Did You Know Fall Is An Excellent Time
To Plant Trees And Shrubs!"
• Also Large Selection of .Grass Seed!

Watch Your Savings Grow _
""Pansy Pa~ P• ogram""
"During Our Fall 2005 Season
We will be distributing $1.00 of Pansy
Pay Coupons for every $10.00 you
spend in plant purchases with Bob's
Market. You may redeem your coupons
for up to 50% of your plant purchases ·
during March 12th thru April 9th, 2006!"

"MARK YOUR C:ALENDAI\S NOW
.
FOR BOB'S
1ST ANNUAL PANSY FESTIVAL"
. SATURDAY.OCTOBEBITH

• Hourly Drawings • Local Apple Sampling
• Local Entertainment • And So Much More!
Two Convenient LocaiJons:
2400 Eastern Ave.
1/4 Mile North
(Across from KMart)
Pomeroy/Mason
_Jl!!.!!jpo!ll!, Ohio 45631
Mason, WV 25260
·

(740) 446-1711

~ - Phone(304)773-5323

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

I

GLOUSTER - It took tlve
competitive games, but the
Meigs volleyball tt;am fell to
.500 on the season following
Wednesday's 21-25, 27-25,
25-22, 25-27, 12-15 loss to
Trimble in non-conference
action wit~in the Tri- Valley
Conference.
·
1l1e Lady Marauders (3-3, II TVC Ohio) held a twogames-to-one advantage, but
t~e host Tomcats battled back
to claim the hard-fought victory.
Leading the way for the
Maroon and Gold wa~ Sam
Cole with kills and II blocks,
while Amy Barr was highscorer for MHS with 16 points.
Barr added seven kills and
three assists to the setbai:k,
while Cole finished the
evening with seven poims. ·
Brittany Hysell and Cassi
Whan each followed with II
points, with Hysell chipping in
eight kills and two blocks.
Joey Haning led the passing
attack with 28 assists and also
· had eight points, while Leslie
' Preece fimshed the night with
five points_ - - - - . Meigs finished with a 104of-1 09 serving effort in the
loss.
·
· Meigs travels to Belpre
• today to take on the Lady
Eagles in a TVC Ohio contest.
G\1111e time is slated for 6 p.m.

Contact Information
Fax- 1-740446-3008

Thomas

~1&amp;!~11
Do It·Center

E·mall- sportsOmydailysentinel .com

SI&gt;O!Ii..S.tru!
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740} 446-2342. ""' 33
bsl'lerman@myda ilytribune.com

Bryan Watters, Sport. Writer
1740} 446-2342. o&gt;&lt;t. 23
bwaltersG myda1ly1ribune .com
larTy Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675-1333, ext. 19
lcrumO mydaltyregister com

RACINE- This Friday
night the Racine-Southern
Tornadoes (0-3) host the
Portsmouth Notre Dame
Titans (1-2) at Adams
Memorial Field at 7:30
p.m. Southern is coming
off a 24-6 loss to South
Gallia, while Notre Da!lle
suiTe red a 42-6 defeat in
Saturday's
non-league
gaine with the visiting
Buffalo
Bison
from
Buffalo, W.Va.
Scores can indeed be
deceiving. as the scouting
report indicates Notre
Dame had a pretty good
offensive game with over
250 yards. Brad and Brian
Hoover were two of the
main Titan offensive cogs
as was Matt Mader a 210
. pound fullback. Mader
scored the lone touchdown
one week earlier in the
Titan loss to Piketon 39-6.
Both Piketon and Buffalo
are undefeated at 3-0.
Notre Dame won its ·first
game against Harts, W.Va.
39-14. The Titans currently carry 26 on their roster.The Titans have nine players over 200 pounds,
including 255 pound frosh
Paul Wise.
For Notre Dame, fouryear starter Matt Mader
will be calling the snaps.
Junior Brad Hoover and
senior Kurt Harness wi II
be holding down the running back spots while
senior Ben Haaf returns
for his senior season as the
team 's leading receiver.
Although Mader is the
retuming QB, Davis quarterbacked at Piketon-.
· Fast and powerful , Brad
Hoover is a 5-10, 190
pound Jr. who is joined by
his younger brother Bryan

Eastern
looks
to tame
Bobcats
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS There is no way around it.
Eastern has a lot of work to
do to turh around its early
season woes as it faces a
tough opponent Friday night
at East Shade River Stadium.
The Ea~le s· offense exploded out of the gates in week
one with 35 points. but has
since fizzled with onlv seven
points in the past two' weeks.
Even worse. the defense has
given up 163 poims in the
first three games.
Simply put. when you are
giving up 54 points per game,
it is tough to win no matter
how the offense performs.
Eastern (0-3) will have a
chance to correct some of its
early season struggles Friday
night against Green (2-1 ). a
team that is coming off of a
dominating 55 -point win
over Miller last week.
Last year. Green took the
Brad Sherman/photo
game down to the wire as
Southern's Butch Marnhout (21) throws a pass .during Saturday night's 24-6 loss to South
· Eastern needed overtime to
Gallla. Marnhout and the Tornadoes look to gain their first win of 2005 when the Portsmouth
decide the 25- 18 win. Despite
Please see Southern, Bl Notre Dame Titans come to Racine Friday.
_losing most of the team from
I
.'
last season. the Eagles hope
they" can turn their season
around with a similar victory
Friday night.
Green will be lead by a
potent rushing attack which
dow. n s , Justin Bell, Kame ron Sayre,
d e c i BY GARY CLARK
includes the powerful 5-11,
ran
for
'64
Brandon
Fowler
and
Clav
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
sions on
235
pound Mark Castro and
yards and Rou sh along with junior
the curthe speedy Du ~ tin Williams.
c a u g h 1 Brenton Clark all missing
r e n t
The two have provided a
M A~ON,
W.Va.
d ,ca m_
tlve pass- some level of playing time ,
o .owmg successtve roa p a i g n ,
one-two
punch most· of the
es for 34 The absence of this group of
wms over Federal Hockmg e n 1 e r s
season
as
Castro breaks tack-·
y a r d s prominent s~arting members
les and pushes hi s way. to
and Eastern. ·coach Ed tht: out- Trimble (3-0) at Wahama (2-1) w h i 1 e of th.e Bend Area squad. has
positive yardage . while
Cromley's . 12th ranked ing with
Holbert forced the Falcon coaching
Williams
breaks free for big
Wahama Whne F&lt;Ilcon foot- Wahama with an offense comp leted 20-of-44 aerials staff to utili ze several differmns.
ball II welcomes the that is averaging 33.3 points for 18J yards in a 27-25 cot substttutes whrch per- Eastern hopes it can mateh
-unbeaten- lhmble--T-omcats per· game while ~the Wahaoiu win -last year at- 1-ormed ·admrrably- m ~a
its
rival on the ground Friday
to the Bend Area at 7:30 Tomcats' defense has given Ohio University's Peden rese,rve role .. '
. _.
and
' how it is capable of
p.m. Friday for an important up just one touchdown on' Stadium.
..v. HS expenenced tis best· pulling
up big numbers as
grid encounter for· both the season.
This year veteran coach offensive ouung of the year
Ihey rushed for 265 yards last
schools.
Trimble
shutout Phil Faires has senior . 111 dcfeaun g Eustern last
·week
against Wahama .
The White Falcons have Maysville (33-0) in its 2005 returning regulars Trent week by a 35 -7 score. The
Terry Durst has led the
overcome a rash of injuries gridiron opener before Noll (6-foot-2, 230 pounds). Bend Area team .racked up
Eagles attack ;o far this s~a­
to several key starters in handing Alexander a 26-6 Man Christman (6-5, 220), over 500 yards in total
son. putting up 216 yards on
posting a 2-1 record during setback and Southeastern a Brian Barrett (6-1. 160) . . offense as Brent on Clark
44 carrie s. with teammate
the early going in the 2005 41-0 thra shing.
Ryan Nagucki (5- I0. 190). threw for 251 yards. Kris
• Jordan Pierce just behind
football season. Wahama
Although tl)e Athens Tony Troiano (6-2, 290) and Gibbs ran-for 122 yards and
with 120 yards.
dropped a 24-17 qecision to County team lost just four Brent Flowers (6-0. 220) Chase ·Ord scored two
Pierce also leads the way
No. 2 Williamstown in its starters to graduation from a along with · junior Mark tou chdowns after catching
through the air. thro.wing for
season opener before post- 9-2 playoff team in 2004 the Christian
(·6- 1.
210\. five pa5ses for 212 yards.
288 yards. three touchdowns
ing consecutive triumph s Tomcats faced some huge Seniors Anthony Dixon (5On the year. Clark has
and four interceptions on the
over Federal Hocking (14- shoes to fill following the II, 170) and JOey Troiano emerged as the offensi ve
you ng season.
7) and Eastern (3 5-7).
departure of All-State run- (6-3, 175) have also moved leader with 532 yards
Despite the numbers,
Trimble the third Tri- ning back Robby Jenkin s. into .. the Trimble starting through the air on 24-of-59
Eastern comes into the game
aerials witil four touc~a completely different team
Valley. Co~ference opponent quarterback Terry Holbert lineup.
Wahama has been plagued downs and one int erception.
in a row 'for the White and linebackers Derek
than th e one that went 7-3
Falcons and winners of Li skey and Bruce Fouts. by injuries. during the past
' Plene sM Eastern, ill
three straight one-sided · Jenkins scored ·three touch' two weeks with seniors Please see Wahama, Bl

Undefeated Trimble comes to Wahama
F 11

..

�~--

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thur-Sday, September 15,

www.mydailysentinl,!l.com

•

Thursday, September 15,

2005

www.mydailysentinel.com·

2005

Rebels, ·-yikings ready for big .battle -

ExpandEd Glance
Southeeatern Ohio Athletic League
SEOAL
W·L PF
0-0 000
0.0 000
0.0 000

Gallia Academy
Jackson
logan

Athens
Warren
Marietta

OUR .EXPERTS' ;BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBAll GAMES

PA

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Ganton Glenoak 21. Marietta 3
Alt1ens 33, Alexander 18

Ohio Valley Conferen·ce
ovc
·

Brad Sherman

Bryan Walters
Spon~

OV P Sports Editor
Rt'nml : 15 - .l
L1~t Wl'o..:k: 6- 4
(wim1c-r~ in h.ru..d)

Wnt\'t
Record : :!H-1
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Stacey Brewer

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Record : 2.1 -7
Last We ek: fl -2

News Editor

PJgitutor
Jtecortl: I fl-1 4

Rio Gran de AD

1

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Rt·n1rd: 23 -7

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FARMHAND

(740) 448-9777 • (740)

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Yards
406
372
301

Att.
52
39
40

TO
3
4
·1

280

38

4

256
255
226
.216

29
51
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183
173
139
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120
108
96
92
79
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23
25
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20
24
34
22
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10
12
29

4
2

Jared Casey (M)
Curt Waugh (SG)
Butch Marnhout (S)
Bernie Fulks (SG)

Dave Poole (M)
Ctms Edwards (AV) .
Alan Dye {H)
Terry Durst (E)

Brandon WarnEll {PP)
Jayme Haggerty [GA)
Kris Gibbs (W)
Dustin Winters (GAl
Steven Lambert (H)
Travis Riffl8 {PP)
Jordan Pierce (E)
Seth Haner (GA)

Nathan Stafford (W)
Weslon Counts (S)
D~ey Cantrell (SG)
Scott Hunt (RV)

4

2
1
0
1
1
'
1
3

Casey

Passing
Player
Brenton Clark (W)
JeH Golden {GA)
Jordan Pierce (E)
Bryan Morrow (RV)
Seth Williamson (SG)

Brandon Warner tPP)
Aaron Siory (M)
James Casto (PP)
Ryan Chapman (S)

Chris

~dwards

(AV)

Yards
532
420
288
269
182
197

tis '

67

26
20

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. 24
21
19

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12
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59
46
40
44 '
27
29
13
17
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4
1
3
1
3
4
0
0
3
2
2
0
1
1
2
0
0
5
0
0

Clark

Receiving
Player
Chase Ord (W)

Yards
328
283
171
107

Re&lt;.
13

Jayme Haggerty (GA)
Travis Riffle (PP)
Ryan Henry (AV)
Michael Cordell (RV) .
106
B
Dustin McCombs {SG)
103
5
100
7
Terry Durst (E)
Shaphen 'Robinson (GA) 97
6
Bryce Honaker (E)
86
6
Brandon Fowler {W)
72
2
Cody GerlaCh (E)
63
3
Kris Gibbs (W)
62
3
Derrick Beaver (SG)
49
5
. 46
Josh Buzzard (M)
3
Will Slone '(PP)
41
3
Derek Veazey (W)
36
2
Jared Casey (M)
30
3
30 . · 2
Derek Young (E)
27
2
Chris McCoy (GA)
Justin Saunders (GA)
24
2

{"

Meigs
from Page Bl
That effort was led by taii.back Jared Casey. who
amassed I 80 yards and two
scores on I 2 attempts.
Casey 's spectacular night,
however. was ended abruptly in the third quarter when a
leg injury kept him out of the
._ r.t!lLUlthe game. ·
Coach Chansey would not
comment.on Casey's playing
status for Friday.
Casey, the leading rusher
for Meigs and also in the
Ohio Valley Publishing area,
has 406 yards on 52 carries
(7.81 ypc) and three scoring
runs. The senior is also the
second leading, receiver for
MHS with three catches for
30 yards.
Even if Casey doe sn't
play, Meigs stili has a multitude of weapons to choose
from.
•
ruliback Dave Poole has
shared the rushing workload
for Meigs. gaining 256 yards
on 29 totes. Poole has three
touchdown runs in 2005.

TO

2

2
2
0
0

'
2'
''

coach Matt Bokovitz.
to Ironton, while Point Pleasant
Both losses have motivated could put a dagger in any play!he teams to riSe to another off hopes with the brutal schedlevel of play for !his storied ule they stili have remaining.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. rivalry grune.
To win. both teruns will have
- It's that time of year again,
''The game is always a big ·to stop the big play, as both
football season is in full swing ·ganie for us because it is so teams nave players with exploand the annual . meeting close and it has been a rich sive capabihties.
between !he Galiia Academy rivalry tor years now, it is a big
The Big Blacks will face the
Blue Devils and the Point grune tor us as we try to bounce ali-around athlete Jayme
Pleasant Big Blacks is just back after that loss las( week," Haggerty, who contributes sigaround the river .bend.
said Bokovitz.
nificantly no matter where he
While in the past this game
In the rivairy,lhe'Blue Devils plays. So far this season he has
has typically carried a .theme, hold a slim edge on Point nrshed tor 205 yards and four
such as last year's flood bowl, Piea~ant, but have owned the touchdowns and has had 283
this year the match up looks to grune over !he past handful of yards arid two touchdowns ·as
pit two teruns out for n;venge •. years.
the Blue Devils leading receivafter both endured tough home
"It stands out real big for us er.
losses last week.
He will have help in the
tight now because we haven 't
Last Friday. Point fell inches won it in !he past six years, ·it backfield from Dustin Winters,
short of an rmprobabie come- has been a rear struggle for us," . who hw; put up 173 yards on
back against Magnolia, while said Point Pleasant head coach !he ground and from qmuterthe Blue Devils fatled to live up Steve Safford. "These kids back Jeff Golden, who has
10 expectations, falling by I 9 haven't beaten Gallia ¥eland I passed for 420 yards and three
points to Ironton, one of south- think they will be motivated to touchdowns.
east Ohio's best teams.
do so, the kids seem to 'step
''That is !he key right !here,
"We are coming off of a their level of play UP, and l !hey are all capable of making
tough loss where we played think we can compete. '
big plays.'' said Safford. ·
like a bunch of crerun puffs and
It is a game neither terun can
Point Pleasant wi II need to
so we are wanting to get back · afford 10 lose. Gallia Academy limit the number of big J?iays
and play physical football," has opened with a very suc- and control !he clock wrth a
said Gailia Academy head cessful season despite !he loss balanced ott'ensive game pian
BY lARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

0

·Southern.

puzzle possibly out of the
SHS line-up. Additionally,
0
David Myers a key lineman
2
missed sever~ ! plays . with
from
PageBl
2
the
!lu. As a result Chris
'
Cogar. Mall Lehew. Teddy
0'
Hoover,
a
fas
t
I
45
pound
Brown, Zach Imboden. and
Ord
0
freshman. Kurt Harness and R.J . Leach found some addi0
Alex Davis join a solid back- 1ionai playing time.
field. Davis passed for 46
Reportedly, Josh Pape ;ind.
yards against Piketon with Wes. Riftle have been taking
Quarterback Aaron Story
Eric Gulley hauling in ali snaps this week at quarterhas· added 78 yards on the
thre ~ completions for 46
back with junior varsity
yards.
Davis
was
-4-7
with
ground with his I 4 carries
Kreig Kieski also· working
one interception . ·
out at the QB position. Also,
and also has a scor.ing run.
Last week against Buffalo, . Southern has worked on its
S10ry has connected on 9-ofNotre
D'amc had much suc- no quarterback, shotgun
13 pa ss attempts for .1 I 8
cess
within
the 20 yard lines, offense t,hat bas shown some
yards and has one touchbut failed to reap the profits . success the lastlwo games.
down and one interception
its success at midfield. In
of
Like
Notre
·Dame,
this year.
·
that effort. Notre Dame had Southern
had
success
Josh Buzzard has 47 yards
a good mix of passing and between the 20's last week,
and two rushing touchdowns
running succes~ .
but hit the end zone only
on eight carrie s. and he also
Southern has suffered once. At the 5:45 mack of the
ha s 46 yards and two scores
three internal losses this third quarter, Southern full_on three catches .
week .
Lineman
Darin back Weston Counts. hamDefensively. MHS.. has
Teaford has been hospital- mered through · the line and
ized · for the past three days went untouched on an I Iallowed 527 rusHing yards
with an illness. quarterback yard ramble. Counts. a 195
and 4 I I receiving yards for a
Ryan Chapman ips a 'possi- pound junior, filled a huge
total of 938. an average of
ble MCL tear and is our of void in the Tornado running
3 I 3 yards per game. Of
action.
and Mike Brown has game. The PAT pass by .
those 527 ground,. ~ards, the
·.' a' 'bruised sternum and i&gt; Marnhout ·Was ' incomplete,
defense is allowing 4.36
questionable. That amounts · the score 24-6 against the
yards per carry.
"
to three big pieces of the South Gailia Rebels.
C.onverseiy, the Marron
arid Gold are averaging 6.67
yards per carry rushing .
son.
Meigs has outgained their
Green has had its share of
opponents by 24 7 yards
problems early on as well,
(774-527 ) on the ground.
from P;meBl
falling 20-7 to South Gailia
The Marauders will look
and going down to the wire .
to improve its home record
last s,eason. With such a .in a 7-0 grudge match
to 2- I · and increase their
young team. each game is a against Southern.
winning streak io three this
learning process and hope- . Though seeing some early
Friday at Bob Roberts Field.
fully Eastern can correct' Struggles, both teams have
Ki ckoff rs slated for 7:30
some of its problems and shown they are· capable of
. p.m.
turn around the young sea- scoring a high number of

'

Eastern

'

l

Last week. · Southern's
Buddy Young had a fumble
recovery and a sack and Josh
Pape had a 35-yard interception return. Ryan Donaldson
had 'I nine-yard reception
return and Weston ·Counts
had a . fumble recovery.
Marnhout had 52 return
yards to add to his ali-purpose total. Jesse McKnight
had 15-pius tackles for
Southern with Wes Riffle
also having several key tackles· and breaking up a SG
touchdown pass.
Southern's offense proved
to be fairly potent. but was
riddled by untimely penal ties and seven turnovers.
offense
The
Southern
churned out 216 total yards,
led by' a I7-139 game from
Butch Marnhotit. That great
effort was complimented by
a I 5-92 yard game... from
Weston Counts in his first
stint in the backfield. Jesse
McKnight was 5.-I:Z.
Notre Dame saw a similar
fate against Buffalo, making
numerous turnovers and
committing untimely penalties. one which transformed
a first and goal into a 3rd and

38 situation, and ultimately a
no-score possess ion.
Southern 's defense was
tough the first game. but
has shown some vulnerability the fast two games.
The defense gave ~p 378
yards to Symmes Valley
and 3 1I to South Galiia.
That unit will also. miss
Teaford and Brown. The
coa'ching staff. however,
feels that capable replacements wi ll be found to fill
those holes should Brown
and Teaford be sidelined.
Last week, Southern's
offen se carnl.l to life, but
just did not finish. Throw
in the costly turnovers and
Southern's effort to overcome both the Rebels and
its own mistakes were
insurmountable.
Southern eo&lt;teh· -~m~J""" Grueser indicated that his
team will be ready to phty
come this Friday evening.
The Tornadoes .are out to
avenge a 32-0 loss to the
Titans from last season.
Game time is 7:30 at
Adams Field in Racine.

points, the difference is on ed team and are getting betdefense, While Green· has ter each weeli. giving up its
shown it c;an shut team out, smallest point margin of the
doing it twice so far this sea- season last week against
·son, Eastern is still trying to Wahama.
hold an opponent to under
Despite all the numberS,
40 points.
nothing will be answered ·
But ' numbers can · be until Friday night.
·
decei~ing. as Eastern has
The game is set for ·a 7:30
faced two probably playoff p.m. kicl&lt;,off Friday.
contenders
and an undefeat•

a

I

PA
55
63

2·t · 96

48

1-2
1-2
0·3

59
56
75

50
40
26

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. 59

Friday's games
Ale&gt;cander at River Valley
Federal Hocking at Belpre.
Warren at Meigs
Crooksville at Nelsonville-York
Vinton County at Minford
Oak Hill at Wellston
Green at Eastern
1 Bishop Rosecrans a1 Miller
Notre Dame at SOuthern
Trimble at Wahama (WV)
Fort Frye at Waterlord

·W-L PF
2·0. . 35
1·0 19

PA
19
0

Herber1 Hoov~r

1·0
1·0
0-1

Logan
Sissonville

0-1
0·3

16
6
37
14
62

Pt. Pleasant
Wayne·
"Winfield

in your local
newspapers

to pull off a win.
Gailia Academy is not
immune to the big play either,
as Point Pleasant has a number
of big play makers including ·
the Big Blacks' version of
Haggerty in Travis Rjftle.
Riffle has I 73 yards nrshing
with a touchdown and I 7 I
yards receiving with two
scores.
He will be catching passes
fron) ti1e duo of Brandon
Waner and Jrunes Casto. as
both have. traded the starting
quarterback position over the
past three weeks. Both players
can nrn · and pass, making a
lethal combination tor ·the Big
Blacks.
"They h;tve got ' a pretiy
decent foot ball rerun on both
sides of the bail. they are bigger
than us and they look like !hey
are pretty fast so it is going to
be a real challenge this week."
said Bokovitz. ,
The glune is slated' for a 7:30
p.m. kickoff Friday. night at
Sanders Stadium.

ALL
PF
85
B8

W·L PF
PA
3-0 100 6
2-1
66
67
52
'·2 31
0·3 42
163
0·3 12
,94

week

Poe a

Point Pleasant, Blue Devils to square off

Rushing
Player

W-L
2·'
2-1

ooo ooo
000 000
ooo ooo

37
22
16
13

12

Magnolia 28, Point Pleasant 21
W&amp;~ne '!1, Herbert Hoover 16

I

PA

33
59
22
30
62
93
62

Gallia Academy at Po1nt Pleasant·
Herbert Hoover at Logan
Oak H~l al Poca
Winlield at Wayne

Poca t 4, Logan 13, OT
Winfield 22. Sissonv~le 6

I

ALL
W-L PF
2-1 45
1·2 52
3·0 108
2-1 56
2-1 91
1·2 65
0·3 12

Friday's games

Last week

OVP- Leaders (thru Week 3)

78
99
107

Cardinal Conference
CARDINAL

ili~~;fi-:dliiiiiil Catch all the results

11• Eut111 Avenue (St. lt. 7) •

PF

Fairfield Union 21, Nelsonville 13
Jackson 14. Vinton ~nty 6
S. f)oint27. Wellston 20
Wahama 42,_Eastern 7 • ~
Green 55, Mtller 0
Trimble 41, Soutneastern 0
Waterford 27. Cols. Harvest14
South Gallia 24, Southern 6
Atllens 33, Alexander 18
Fed H&lt;x:k 18, Park. Cath. 6

Previous Champions- 2001: Butch Cooper--- 2002: Butch Cooper--- 2003: Brad Sherman--- 2004: Brad Sherman.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENI, INC.

59
44
38

Frlday'o-

Williamstown 27, Belpre 24, 20T

al' Rork J-lill
,It

ALL
PF
PA
70 • 68
118 28
55
88

Chesapeake at lucasville Valley
Sciotoville at Coal Grove
Tolsia at Fairland
A~xander at River valley
PortsmouTh West at Rock Hill
Greei'\I.Jp County at South Point

Meigs 35, Afver Valltly 8

llw:dl'

Portunoutb West

Athens

Wayer)y

Federal Hocking
Eastern
Miller

H :mn~n

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Waterlord

Norrc Dame
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W-L PF PA
o-o 000 000

Trimble

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Wellston
VInton County

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Last week
Chesapeake 33, Symmes V. 7
Sheldon Clark 25, Fairland 18
Meigs 35, River Valley 8
Rock Hta 56, Oak Hill 7
S. Poinl27, Wellston 20
Coal GJOYB 28, MI. Hope 8

Warren

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81
49

Athens at WfN81ty
r Gallla Academy at Point Pleasant
Ironton at Jackson
Logan at ZaneSviUe
Parkersburg South at Marietta
Warren at Meigs· .

Jad(son 14, Vinton County 6
logan 24, Pickerington North 21

Coal Grove
Rock Hill
South Point
Chesapeake
River Valley
Fairland

PA
76
23
51

Frldoy'a-

,.,._ 40. GaJIU. Academy 21
Warren 28, Fort Frye 7

ALL

000
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Non-League
· South Gallta
Waha'ma
Hannan

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3·0

ALL
PF PA
98
48

2·1 73

38

0·3

18

134

Laatweek
Wahama 42, Eastem 7
Bishop Donahue 40, Hannan 12
South Gallia~4. Southern 6

Friday's games
Hannan at Burch
Trim~e at Wahama ·
Symme~ Valley at South Gallia

Meigs takes top honors.
at Riverside tri-match
BY FRANK CAPEHART
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

MASON, W.Va.- For the
second consecutive day on ·
•. their home course, Riverside,
the White FalCon Jinksters put
up decent numbers, only to see
visiting Meigs produce very
fine rounds and carry off tirst
place in a tri-'match Tuesday.
The talented Ohioans used
their depth and balance to
swing the advantage !heir way.
Through the first two -positions, Wahama held a slim one
stroke edge and trailed by just
one after three positions came
in.
But, the next three Meigs
hitters came tllrough with fine
scores. the Ohioans really
moved away 16 a fine 161 total
tor the win. Wahama followed
with another solid I 7 I. while
·Point Pleasant found some
early trouble and finished with
189.
Medalist hono'rs finally
came to · Meigs· Steven
Stewan. in a searing match
with Fakon Justin Arnold.
where Stewart fired 37 and
Arnold was just a single stroke
behind· at 38 in !he highlight
round of the day.

Wahama
from-Page Bi~
. Clark: also has 68 yards rushing through the first ·three
contests of the 2005 campaign . . Ord is the team
leader in receptions with 13 '
grabs for 328 yards and two
scores with Gibbs running
for I 83 yards and Nathan
Stafford totaling 96 yards on
the ground for the White
Falcons.
Ord leads the team in ,coring with I 8 points after scoring three touchdowns while
Sophomore Derek Veazy ioi-.
lows close behind wilh I7
poin1s on one touchdown,
eight of eight point after
kicks and one field goal.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Su'pporting ,
the fine twoover round of
·Stewart, Josh
Venoy carved
out a dandy
40.
while
Jake Venoy
and
Cody
Davidson
fashioned ·
Stewart
i d en l i c aI
soli d rounds
of 42. Then, Kirk Legar was
right there at 43 and Dn1 Reed
added 44·.
For the host Falcons, after
Arnold's sharp 38, Darin
Reece put together a strong
round of 40, Danny Roush
posted 45, Garrett Kaylor
added 48. Adam Roush collected 49, and Adam Ingles
added 54.
Leading Point was J.T.
Reynolds on a well-formed 42
score, while Eric Milhoan
came in well at 45. Team
leader Will Garrison found
trees on !he tirst three holes.
but battled back with two-over
the final six holes to finish
with 50. Justin Duckworth
carded 52, Curt Grimm
churned out 57, Jacob Miller
had 61 and Nathan Sowards
65 .
Defensively
Nathan
Stafford,
Rudy
Ward:
Kameron Sayre and Justin
Bell have been -the-t-eam
leaders with Brent Jones,
Clay Roush. Cody Herdman
and Jamie Davis adding several key &gt;tops in the Wahama
cause. ·
The b~ief series between
the White Falcons and
Trimble is currently deadlocked · at one win apiece
.with · Friday 's encounter
being the rubber match
involving the quickly-devel oping rivals . The Tomcats
claimed a 37-0 decision over
the Bend Area team in I980
with the ·Mason County
,quad evening the cot!nt foi- .
lowin g an exciting 27-25'
victory ih 2004. .
·
Kickoff time at Wahama is
'chedu led for 7:30pm.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MERCERVILLE All
eyes wi II be on South Galli a
High School this Friday
when the host Rebels battle
arch-rival Symmes Valley in
. an attempt to remain unde·
feated on the 2005 season.
·South Gailia (3-0) is off its share a common opponent in
the best start in school histo- 2005 - Southern.
ry, but the Vikings (1-2) own
In Week 2, SVHS claimed
a perfect 8-0 rec.ord against a 28-6 win over the
the Red and Gold. These two Tornadi.Jes and received 167
teams have played every year yards from senior tailback
since SGHS opened its doors Matt Owens (5-foot-10, 185
back in 1996, but last year's pounds). His I 3 carries led a
contest was canceled due 10 rushing .attack that produced
weather.
386 yards rushing and 394
In that 2004 season, SVHS total yards of offense.
·
finished with a J0-2 record
In that contest , SVHS, also
that included a pair of playoff received big rushing efforts
wins in the Division VI play- from Derek Carpenter (5-9,
. offs , Symmes Valley also fin - 170) , Seth Saunders (6-2.
ished second i)l points in 180) anti John Wiseman (6-.0.
Region 23 .
210). Carpenter· added 13
With 14 players returning carries for 58 yards and two .
from that best-ever season at touchdt&gt;wn s, while Saunders
Symmes Valley that included chipped in six totes for 48
the school's first playoff win, yards and a score. Wiseman
SGHS coach lusty Burleson was the second -leadirig rushbelieve~ this Friday's conte st er with seven carries for 85
lakes on a very significant yards. but the senior fullback
importance. ·
was lost for the season with a
"It's probably going to be knee injury.
the biggest game ever played . Quarterback Chris Capper
at South Galiia," ·said completed just I-of-8 passes
Burleson. "Th is' is the kind of for eight yards and was
game where we have to · picked off once in that win.
prove that we can step up and
Defensively.
SVHS
play with the big boys. To be allowed 240 total yards,
one of the top dogs, you have including 220 yards on 3 I
to beat one of the top dogs ." carries. and fon;ed six ·
These two comb~tants turnovers against Southern.

Banged~up

•"01'?

River Valley to face Alexander

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESH IRE - If River
Valley is going . to beat
Alexander this. week, it'll
likely have to happen in the
trenches .
. That's because a pair of
key injuries has left the
Raiders without two of their
biggest. and most experienced offensive ·weapons as
they prepare tu take on the
Spartan.s Friday in Cheshire.
River Valley will be without standout tailback Chris
Edwards and quarterback
Bryan Morrow. who were
both injured during last
week's 35-7 loss at Meigs.
The outlook isn't good for
Edwards. who broke his fibula, and could miss the rest of
tht; se~son . River Valley
coach Gregg Deei said that if
rehab goes well. the senior
could possibly play in the
final two games.
Edwards l ead~ the team
with 255 yards and three
touchdowns. most of those

L~st week, South Galli a playoff points."
claimeda311-216advantage · In big games. turnover,.
in total yardage and forced play a critical role in the outfive turnovers en route to come of the contest.
claiming a 24-6 victory over
After four turnovers in that
the 'Does.
,
win over Southern. Burleson
In !hat victory, Curt Waugh · believes ta~ng care of the
ran wild for 182 yards on I I football will be a huge fac:or
carrie~ and scored twice, in the outc.:ome of this week ',,
while backfield mate Bernie contest.
Fulks added a score on 10
" If we . plan on beating
carrres for 43 yards. Overall . Symmes Valley. we cannQt
SGHS went for 2~5 yards on " afford to make mi&gt;takes.'·
the ground·.
sa id (3urieson . 'They are a Jot
9uarterback : .
Seth bigger than we are. so its on
Wrihamson fimshed 3-of-10 our shoulders to play the mispassmg for 2~ yards, mciud- tak.e-frec game . Th ey cap
rng . a I 2-yard Wstnke to probably get awa)' with it
Derrrck Beaver. rliMmson more than we can."
•
was also p1cked off tw1ce.
. . . .
..
South Galiia, defensively,
Another k~} point 111 thi s
'th
.
game
down to
heid Sou lh ern w1 ou1 a com- 1 · ·· wll I come
h
·
pletion on four tries and ocatwn, as t c Rebels will
picked off two passes in the host t~elf thmJ home ~ame r~t
triumph.
.
;he season. SG,HS . "h1ch 1:'
Although both teams had 4-0. tn. Me,rcen ill e. has hatl
success against SHS, th:it is great
support durrng
where the comparisons end. thts hl stonc&lt;tl stan.
Burle son hel1eves th e
SGHS is looking 10 continue its run toward a first-ever home crowd has made a huge
playoff berth, while Symmes difference, so far. a11d is
Valley. who has made the expectmg much ol the s am~
playoffs the last three years. th~~ Fnday.
. .
.:
is looking to rebound from a
The community support "
33-6 Joss to Chesapeake last really butldrn g. We took our
week.
second-largest gate ever last
Burleson believes this week on a night when Ohio
Friday 's battle takes on State and Texas plaved." said
seperate meanings for two Burleson. " I t.hink that say.s
evcn ly-mat,hed
gridiron somethtng ahout our tans an(l
teams. .
the support we are 'gett1ng
"From our perspective, it's right now. It's been fantas.a big game because we are tic.".
South Gallia's journey for
undefeated," said Burie.son.
"it's big for Symmes ·valley a fourth -straight wins begin&gt;
too, they see us ·as a lot of Friday at 7:30p.m .

coming over the course of
two games, as he never really
got going before his injury
early in the second quarter
last Friday.
Edwards was also the leading rusher in 'the .entire tricou nty area through the first
two weeks of the .season. In
his .absence. a number of
bflcks will be called on ' to
help fill the void.
'The tai lback (position) is
going to be by ~oti1mittee."
admitted Dee I. "We· ve been
mixing it up a lor. ··
Ryan Henry, the starting
wingback, will move to tailback to help out there. He has
57 yards on .1I carries on the
year. Tyler Canaday and
'Jordan Deei, who have

rushed for 47 and 33 yards
respectively, will see carries
as well.
When Henry is at tailback,
Canaday or Billy Writsel will
fi ll the wingback slot.
Morrow's condition, while
still seriOLIS, shouldn't sideline the signal caller for near·
iy as long . He suffered a concussion and is expected to
miss 2cto-3 weeks of action.
With Morrow out, a fresh-'
man will have to pilot the
Raider
offense.
Frosh
Clayton Curnutte will get .the
start, while classmate Jordan
Deei will relieve him, if neeessary.
With much of its big play
punch sidelined. River Valley
will have to rely on th e play
of its offensive line. which
do~ s have a size advantage
ovenhe smaller Spartans.
"This is a game goi11g in
we thought we had a pretty
good shot (of winning)."
Deel smd. "We Jose two big
keys to our offense - we
told the line. they're go ing to
have to step up and try to win

this one for us."
Alexander won a defen sive
struggle, 6-2. last season .ana
has been' victorious in two of
the three all-time -meeting\.
Both teams enter. the contest
with I -~ records. and arc trying to snap two-game sl ides.
But the Athens County
school brings a im le diiTerem
look this campaign. and ha~
its third head coach in thre~
.years in form er Wellston
assistant Sean Arnn .
·
But one beet that hasn't
changed is the running game.
led by four·th -yea r starter
Rylan Kirkendall. which will
be the focu&gt; of Ri\'Cr V;liicy·~
defensive efforts .
·
Also key to the Spartan's
offense is quarterback Matt
Demosky and 'l-i ng he~ck
Zach Hedri ck.
"They ' v'e
got
some
receivers that can get behind
you." Dcel cxpl:1ined. "But
the big thing i' knowing
where the ball is. wi1h guarding pulling and that son or
thing, they run a lot of misdirection...
·

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.Page 84 • The Daily'Sentinel

Thursday, September 15,2005

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The Daily Sentinel"• Page 85

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Houses for Rent
. ... ..
..410
In Memonam
...... 020
Insurance .
. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
. ... 660
L1vestock . .
......630
Lost and Found
.. ... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .
.. ...... 350
Miscellaneous. .. . . .. ... ........ .. ....... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ...............540
Mob1le Home Repalf ..... ............. , ......... .. 860
Mobile Homes for Rent.. ......................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale.. .....
.32D
Money lo Loan
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .
740
Mustcallnstruments .
. 570
Personals •
•• 005
Pets for Sale
.. 560
.. ..... ........ 820
Plumbing &amp; Heating ..
Professional Services ... ... .. . .............. 230
Radio, TV {I&lt; CB Repalf ..........................160
Real Estate Wanted ... ,.. ,......................... 360
Schools lns1ruct1on ........ .... .........1s'0
Seed , Planl &amp; Fertilizer
650
Slluat10ns Wanted
... 120
Space lor Renl
460
Sportmg Goods
520
720
SUV's for Sale
Trucks for Sale ...
715
Uphols1ery .
. .... ... ... .. 870
vans For Sale
.. .. ...... ..... 730
Wan led to Buy .. .. ... ....... ....
.. ..... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ..
.. 620
Wanted To Oo .
. 180
Wanted to Rent
. 470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis.
.. .. 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..
..074
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant . .. ............. 076

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17th 9 00 lo ? 490 Grant
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Reward call (740)662 2022 Fnday·Sunday G1rt &amp; boy

4x4 's For Sale .. .. .. ... ..
.. 725
Announcemenl .... .... .... . . .. ............. 030
Ant1ques .... ... ... .... ........ ...... .. .. ..... 530
Apartments lor Rent... ............................... 440
Auction and Flea Market... ........ .... .... .080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor10s ................ 760
Auto Repalf .
.. .. ... ......... .. .770
.710
Aulos for Sale
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .. .. .. ... .. 750
BU1Id1ng Supplies .
.... .. .. .550
Busmess and Buildings .......................... 340
Bus1ness Opportunity .................. ..............210
Business Training ......... ............... ,......... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........ ........ ,.... 790
Camping Equipment
... .... .... .780
Cards of Thanks
.. .. 010
Child/Elderly Care
.. .. .... ..
.. .190
Electncai/Refngerat1on
.. 840
Equ1pmenl lor Rent...... ......... ... ... .. .. ,.480
Excavating .. , ........................................ 830
Farm EqUipmenl .................,..................... 610
Farms for Rent.. ...................................430
Farms lor Sale .
............................ 330
For Lease ..
.. ................... 490
For Sale
.. ....... 585
590
For Sale or Trade .
frUits &amp; Vegetables
... 580
Furn1shed Rooms ..
.. .. 450
General Haulmg
.. .. .. .. ......850
Giveaway .
... 040
Happy Ads
......050
Hay &amp; Grain
........................640
Help Wanted .............,............................... 110
Home Improvements........... .. , .................810
Homes for Sale .................................. 310
Household Goods. ... ..... ......... ... ... .. 510

MOBILE Ho~iE'i
FORSIIUl

1990 14&gt;e70 3 bedroom trail·
er w/ CIA K1tchen appli
ances Included Must be
moved (740)286·685 1

2000

14x70 Oakwood
Freemon! 3BA 2BA In
Quail Creek very n1ce 740

388·8513 or 740-386·801 7

. ---

Schnauzer male Scar on
ms nghl s1de Lost on SA
790/Hannan Trace Ad area
Call
(740)256 6009
or
(740)645 5285
----------.
lost 3 male Beagles 2
w/co ttars 1 w•tl10ut 911 0/05
Mt
Un10n
Ad
ne ar
Carpenter (740)698 0328
740·593·4997 Wilh any Info

r

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pubtlahlng reserves the right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Errors m~o~at be r•ported on the flrat daV
Tnbune-Santlnet Register will be responsible for no mora than the coat of the 1pac1!1 ocC\Iphtd by the error and only the liratlnMrtlon We
any toea or eKpenae that reaulta from the publication or omission of an advef!1aemenl Corre&lt;:tlon will b.- made in the fir.t available edition
are atwaya confldenllal • Current rate card appllea • All real eltate advertl1ement1 are eubject to the F..-ral Fair Houelng Act of 1968
Mly help wanled flda meet1ng EOE atandardl We will not knowingly accept any advet11elng In vloiat1on ot thalaw

Found g1rls bracelet wlsap
YARDSAI.f·
ph 1re
stone
&amp;ballenna
GAJJ.JPOUS
Bene fit G otf Out1ng
For charms found between Food
Chuck R tch1e to help pay land &amp; dollar store 304 675
rned cal expenses
Seot 8608
5 fam1ty 9 17 05 9am-6pm
241h a1 9 00 AM Pme HillS
Bass boat horse saddle
Golf Course Tro phres tor Found m R1o Grande brown clothes/shoes m1sc 424
l si 2nd and 3rd place and dog w1th htlle bit ol white and Hedgewood Dr off State Sl
othe r
pr zcs
awarded Olack wea r1ng reo collar
Retresh ments
served (7401245 9S38
Benef1t yard sale Thursday
Come out and Help
&amp; Fri day 9am 5 30pm
Found on SA 141 black &amp;
Saturday 9am noon All pro·
Mason County An1mal
1an 1emale Dachshund ceeds go toward hospital
League Inc
Housebroken Ca ll to 1dent
bills 6061 Cora Mill Ad off
1965 Frmgrou nd Road
ly (7401441 9478
SA 3.25 Sorneth1ng for
?I Pleasa nt
Grey/ s11ver
mm1ature everyone•
Slielter Clean Up Day
1

r call 1304167 5-1536

Now you can have borders and oraphlcs
'-'
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iaroe

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads Witt! A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avold Abbreviation•

r__ F.~~.u:•.•)Jl-·' r
r

=-:-----., ..

ptlonal Loca ted m Pomt
leasant WV Code 9905

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1.00 p.m .
Prldey For Sundays Paper

AMER ICA S NUMBER ONE
HOME BUILDER IS Seeking
a career m1nded orgamzed
and energetiC person to sell
h1gh ticket prod ucts and
serv1ces Perseverance and
stron g work eth iC are our
keys to makmg $75K or
more m til e Ins! full year Full
benef1ts rnctudmg match1ng
401K
.Fax
confidential
. resume to Sales Pos1t1on at
(740)446·3599

Employee needed for local
professional practiCe Part
11me pos 1t1on may be come
fullt1me Must be co mfort
able dealing With people
and very detail onented
Pnor off1ce expenence anct
compu ters
sk lis
are
requued Reply m conft
dance to Bo,.; 9 Pomt
Pleasant Aeg1ster 200 Mam
We seek career or1ented
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
IndiVIduals who Wilt stnve to
ach1eve the best m customer
sa11Sfacli0n and team work FAC TS/New Alterna tivesIf you have a des~re to be An Outpatient Alcohol and
successful w11h a goal dnven other Drug agency IS
and grow1ng company we accepting resume for the fol
ott health dental ilfe msur lowlng part-time position
ance prescnpt1on card ' Prevention
Educatorbonus program, pa1d vaca Seeking iin energet1c 1nd1
t1ons 401K and manage- VIdual to work youth and
ment apparel Advancement adults 1n Gatha and Jackson
from w1th1n If you are mter cou nties
Respons1 b1hlres
ested 1n Gall1pohs OhiO or •nclu de but not hmtted to
Charleston wv area apply alcohol tobacco and other
1n person the Burger K1ng drug edUCilllon classroom
tra1mngs
restaurant located at th e presen tatiOns
Ohio R1ver Plaza Gathpohs fa1 rs com mu n1ty events
or ma1t resume to Burger deve(opment and 1mptemenK1ng 65 Upper Atver Ad tat1on of gran! proJects etc
Galhpohs OH 456:31, or fax A m1n1mUm of a Bachefors
Degree reqwed
Send
304-529·0055
resume by September 2 1
Dnver Needed Monday 2005 to FACTS 45 Olive
Fr1d ay No Evenmgs or Street
GallipOlis
Oh•o
Weekends Pa1d Benefits 4563 1 or FAX to {740)446
rnctude VacatlOn S1ck &amp; 8014 EOE MIFIH
Holiday Pay Valid Dnvers
L1 cense
Requned For a limited t1me make 50%
Exper~ence helpful or we w1 1t selling Avofl Ca ll (740)4461ra1n you Apply 1n Person :l:lSB
only to Ruth A1ce Mason
County Action Group INC lmmed1ale Openmg Truck
(PI Pleasant Sen1or Cen lef) Orspatcher Send ~esume
101 2nd Street PI Pleasant to Dispatcher PO Box 390

WV EOE MIF

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Cal! Man(yn 3Q4-a82 2645

Gallipolis OH 45631

Drivers Needed

COL Dnvers w1lling to dnve

lor local ready m1x conc rete
compa ny Expe11ence IS
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
St11rtey Spears 304 preferred but not necessary
Dr ver must be Willing to do
675 1429
pre maintenance on trucks
Barn Help Must be able to &amp; eqUipment yard work &amp;
work around Horses 18 yrs other miscellaneous chores
old or older (304)675 1993
Experience operating equ1p 1
me11t &amp; exira sk 1Us such as
lSI net 1rcu atlon
weld1ng a plus
Sales M ~ nager
Call (304)937 3410
espons1b 1lites 1hcluct
Driven
ecru1trng and tra101ng o
Tearns needed Class A
amers customer serviC
CDL Run Orlando Fl Drop
nd meeting sales goals I
&amp; hook good dnvmg record
u have a pos1t1ve at11
pard vacatron safe~ bonus·
ude are a self-starter
es Columbus OH 866 276
net a 1eam player w
9033
uld 1hke to talk lo you
ust be dependable a
ave rehabte transporta
1on Pos111on offers al
mpany benef•ts 1nclud
ng nealth dental v1s10n
ndllfe msur ance 401k
a1d vacahon and person
I days Please sen
esume to
Paul Barker
Circulation Manager
Ohio Valley Publtehmg
825 Third Ave
Galllpolle, Ohio 45631
Or email to
pbarker0mydally1rl·
bune com

TOP
PAY
BONliSESI

PLUS

5 Needed for Regional
Runa ! One yr ta nker or1
2yrTiexp req

MARTIN TRANSPORT
866 293 7435
EJ~pe nerced

Sewmg a n~
OUIItmg Person needed to
work Full T1me call after S_pm
(304)593.0505 No calls after
7pm No Exper•ence needed
to apply

I

LICENSED SOCIAL
WO RKER
Overbrook Rehab llitet lon
Center IS now accep hn g
resumes lor the pos1t1on of
D~rector of Soc1al Serv1ces
The quahf1 ed cand1dat e
must be a LSW possess1ng
strong verbal ar~d wnnen
communiCatiOn
skills
Med1ca1d Med1care and
MOS ~owledge Long term
care expenence preferred
but • not reqUired Oual1f1ed
candidates
may
sen d
resumes to Charla' Brown
McGu 1re
RN
LNHA
Admm•strator 333 Page
Street Middleport Oh10
45760 EOE

record Also must pass DOT
phySICal and dru g test Van
IS leased on w1lh Panther II
Mus t be llonest dependable
and se lf,su ffiCIB['lt
60"'o
Drlver/40% Owner split
Dnver pays for gas and tolls
owner pays msura nces
qualcom escrows repa1rs
etc (740)446 6688
or

(7401339-4221

How.s

INsrnUCilON

FOR SAul

1304)895&lt;3068
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740-446-4367
1·1300 214-0452
- genpohsca reereollege oom

3 BR 2 bath modular nome
New siding new front and
back porch Located m
Rutland next to Ru tl and
Accredited Uember Accredll ng Elementary school Asking
Call
anytime
Council for lflllependenl Colleges S55 000
end Schools 12748
(740)742·2273
4yrs old 3br, 2ba, w1th fireplace on 1 5 acres 1n Gallla

Co $89 900
1166

(740)709·

5 6 acres on 44 Wayne
lane 2 miles fro m R10 U
WANUD
Brick ranch w1th double
To Do
garage 3 bdr ms 2 baths,
L,.• • •oilioiiiiiO--,J LA DR kitChen, utility room
Appliances mcluded 42x48
Complete yard work and metal pole burld1ng paved
home repa1r 20 years exp dnveway Call (7 40)256Rei (740)446·3882
1925 or 1 877·262 3432 for
- - - - - - - - - - 1nfo or appt
Computer
Repa1r
an d
Anent toni
Troubleshool Web Des1gn
Nelworkmg Programming Local company offenng "NO
Bu•ld New Systems Restore DOWN PAYMENr pro
W1nc:tows
V1rus Removal grams for you to buy your
PhoneH740·992 7903 home •nstead of renting
http 1/www geoc1t1es com/he • 100% fmanclng
ldamn32934 / Emarl hoi · • Less than perfect cred•t
accepted
damn32934@yahoo com
• Paymen t could be the
Expenenced bass playa· same as rent
Locators
seek1ng to play w1th estab- Mortgage

IIIJ

Voca ls Call (7401367·0000

Fall1s Near let us help you
DHK
Clean1ng
&amp;
Powerwash1ng We II cleaner-up &amp; Get R Done Call

740 985 3639 1985
36331740.416·1823

Route Sales

State Certified Li nk
apprc;ved childcare has
Herr Foods, Inc
Is acceptm g resumes for 1mmed1ate openmgs tor
Roule Sales People m th1s ages 6 weeks&amp; up call
area Must posses these Shelly 304 675 2:343 for
r
more dela11s
qualifies
•Clean Dnvmg Record
•Se!l Starter
• Early R1ser
•Good commumcat on sk1 lls
•Strong selling sk1lls
F1rst year 1ncome potential
of $30K+ wlbenef1ts
Send resumes to
Herr FoOds Inc
476 E Seventh Street
Chi lliCOthe OH 45601
Security Patrol Guard
$8 10 Hour
Work 32 hours each week
dur ng mght weekend and
hOI1day sMts Former military safety or secunty expe
nence IS a plus UTRON IS
tocated ,ln Ma soo County
between Pt Pleasant and
Hunt•ngton WV.
Candidates must have
attained age 21 hold U S
cll•zensl'llp and have a
clear
cnmlnal background
Smoke fr ee works ite
To apply prmt apptrcat1on
from
www UTRON ne

11,\\( 1\1

•NOTICh
PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
~o u do business w1th peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
flail unt1l you have 1nves11
b ated the ofienng.

r

MONEY
mLoAN

Bnck Ranch B1dweiVPorter
AI 160, near school grocery sto re and gas station
:3 bedrooms an ~lectric 2
1/2 baths k1fchen Wllh nook,
pantry diSposal m1crowave
grea t room w1th stone/gas
fireplace lormal d1nlng room
w1th
bay
wmdow
study/OffiCe w •th walk-rn
closet Master bedroom and
bath w1th 2 wal k m close ts
Whirlpool lub shower and
dual smks Enclosed baclc.
porch 2 car garage 20x40
•ngrou nd pool oak wood·
work new roof landscap1ng
plus A/C-heat Approx 4
ac res
$179 900,
Call

17401446 9312
Cape Cod Home 2185 SO
Feet 2 112 Ba. 3 Br. 2 Car
Garage &amp; Car Port. Double
Dnveway S1ts on 1/2 acre
lol on dead end Pnvale
DriVe 2 yrs old $, 45 000
1304)593-2864

Fair Hou~ng Act of 1968
whleh m.ha it 111-sp~l to
lldnrtiM ••my
preference:, llmlbdton or
dl~aertmln.tion baNd on
race, eolor, religion, HI:
lamlli.C lllatul or natton.a
origin, Of .ny Intention to
rrr.ake any auch
pnference, limttatton at

Fax completed s1gned
form to
703 369 5298

Brand new 3 bedroom 2
bath manufactured home
Completely set and ready
tor move-1n Features l1v1ng
room, fa m1 ly room and
beautiful sky Ill kitchen
DRASTICALLY AED UCEDII

r

FORRI?Nr

pie
No pets
please
AppiiC:Sttons bemg taken

798 4686
For rent 1 bedroom 1 bath
tully renovated all appl1

FOR R£Nr

gas no pets $290 plt.JS
deposll
(740)339 0362,

1740)441 1184

ances
$500/month 2 bed room 1 bath
$500/depos•t Call (740)446· pa1d $350 month
:l481
sec ur1ty
depos1t

Relmanc1ng ava1leble Call Real -Estate Wanted Local
(740)245·0131
person lookmg for a home to
All cash Mergs or
buy
5 Homes under $10 000 Gallla No double·wrde or
Will c:tel1ver [740 )385·767 1
modular 740 41 63130
IU '\I \I "'i

CLEAN SWEEP SALE. Lol
model clearance All remain·

1ng 2005 s mu st go to make rr~I~O~------....,
room for new homes under
HOUSFS

SAVE ' OAKWOOD HOME S
GALLIPOLIS Calll740)446
:3093

1740124S·5439

~---iifUIIRiioiRmliiiilii..,...J
bedroom hou se
11
Gart1eld Ave
GallipOliS
$300/mo (740)441 0194

Great Used 1994 14x70 3
1740)441 11 84
Bedroom 2 Bath Includes
neat pump Call {740 )385· 1 m1le down 7soutr, beaut•
24:34
lui 11verfront Newly romod
New 3 BR Home Only eled 2BR tbat h home
$189/mo Includes aJc i:iehv screen porch overlooki ng
ery and set up (740)385 nver separate two story
garaQe w1th workben ch
4367
la rge
yard
pnvate
Nice
Used 14x 64
2 References $650/month ...
(740)446-49 22
Bedroom Only $4995 Call depOSit
(740)385-()698
eve n1ngs

Auction

For rent 2 be droom 1 bath
$300/month $300/deposlt

Thursday,

September 22
Glouster,

water

5350
Call

:...174_0.:.14_4_6·.:.34..:8_1_ _ __

'

rL, 1·0-~~,2iOOS..__.,~I i

clean $250 1740)448-0537

~0~~~~~27~u~ ~~~~~~s$4:

ED 6 AFFOADABLEI
Townhouse
apartments
Pe ts
Deposit
Ref and/or small hOuses FOR
(304)675-4674
Galhpohs RENT Call (740)441 1111
Ferry WV
for apphcat1on &amp; 1nformatron
Houses tor rent Pomeroy
Furnished upstaus 3 rooms
area
S275 $400 per M
&amp; bath Clean rei &amp; dep
7 40 4, 6·4906
required No pe1s (740)446·
15 19

- 5:00

Grac10us hv1ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartme nts at Village
Manor
and
Atvers1de
Apartments 1n Mid dleport
From $295·$444 Call 740·
992 ·5064 Equal HOUSing
Oppor tunities

p.m.

OH

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES Hull pottery basket, Acme Potte ry
Chocolate sel (p1tche r/6-cups/platter),
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS Newer Bedroom smte "' / queen

hea dboard / 2-mght stands/ dresser / mul'or I chest of drawers,
Newer Dmmg Room table w /6-cha1rs, Chma Cab1nl:'t, L l\ 1ng room
sofa &amp; matchmg chaar, S \\ 1vel rocker, glass top end &amp; coffee tables,
lamps, 2-bool(shelf umts, Magnavox conSl' l€' TV, small
entertammen t shelf. Optlmus VCR, Marantz 8 track pla)er,
assortm ent of picture fra mes Futon, m Cl' large comput~r desk,
Srnger sewmg mach me m cab met, small kitchen tablr, 1-offtce desk
cha1rs, Chnstmas decorations. miscellaneous dishes. set of Hanover
Chma for 4, beer stems, pots, pans &amp; sma ll kitchen appliances, large
wmdow fan, Robeson kerose ne heater, coolers/Jugs, camprng sto' e
&amp; lanterns, dorm size refngcrator, ahd other miscellaneous 1te m s
TOOLS Wood Pn:x.iucts alf compressor, Nappa battery \':harger
Speedwav bench gnnd er, bench top dnll press. De\Va lt Saws All
Master Mechamc 10" table saw, router, Ci rcular saw, Jtg saw, d nl!
bits. a1r hose, extenston cords, C raftsm11 n 5 hp Shop ' ac, True Value
push lawn mower Tmo fi20 gas snow blower, w~d eater "~ hee l
barrow, h&lt;!nd yard / garden tools, 2-alummum extensto n ladders.
p1eces of duct work ladder Jacks, Truck t()(.) ] box, air 1mp.u:t
wrench~s. trailer Jacks, pop n \eler, _ ' dnve •mpad Snap On \ olt
Ohms meter, 2 t1mmg hghts, bodv rasp, exhaust a nalvzer. electromc
igmhon tester, orb1te r atr sa nder, a1r tools, vtbrator sande-r, dnlls
nuts, bolts, grease guns. CB rad10, and othf'r Itt&gt;rns

TERMS: Ca sh or check w / postl 1VC f D Cht.'&gt;Cks mer S1000 m u st
have bank authonz.atlon of funPs .,, aJ!able FQOd will be a\ at!able
Not responsible for loss or accidents
OWNER: judy D1shon
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER: john PatriCk " Pat" Shefldan
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded m Ohio &amp; WV - Member ol OhiO &amp; Naliona l

Auctioneer Assoc
Apprenti ce AuctiOneer Kerry Shendan Boyd
Emad ShamrockAucnon@aol com
WEB www sham rock~a u chons com
PH: 740· 592--4310 or 8011-419·9122

Honeysuckle H1lls Apts
located on Coton1al Or
behrnd Hi ghway Patrol Post
on Jackson P1ke 2 bedroom
now available Aent starts
$290 month Low &amp; mOder·
ale Income Equal Hous1ng
Oppor tunity (740)446 3344
TOO 1·800·75Q-0750
Midd leport North Fourth
Avenue 2 room effrc1ency
no pets Depos11 &amp; prev1ous
rental references utilities
patd 74D-992·0165
'
Modern

1 bedroom apt

1740)446-0390

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Ohro
(740)446 7444 1-877·830·
9162 Free Est1mates Easy
f1nanc1ng 90 days same as
cash VrsaJ Master Card
Orrve- a· l1ttte save alot

10 Week old AKC Cocker
Spamel Pupp1es
buff
black
bull&amp;whlt e
wtjl te&amp; black
buff&amp;black
Mother and Father on prop
erty ~
Shots
wormed
declawed
$350 00 F1 rm
740-992 7371

John Deere Commercial
Workslte
Produ cts
Compac t E11 cavators1Skld
Steers/Tractor
l oader
Backhoe n stock Check out
6 Rat Terner pu pp1es 6 ou r rental rate s Greal
available
weeks old ready to go f1nancmg
Carm•chael Equ pment Inc
(740)742 1703
(740)446 24 12
AKC Lab pupp1es Yellow or
POLE BUILDINGS
Chocolate 7 wks old $300
Any Style
· Any S1ze
each (740 )256·6733
·custom Bwtt to 111 your
AKC
Register ed
Lab
()
needs
Pupp1es 4 Chocolate
"FREE Estimates
Black first Shots &amp; Wormed
740 596 2909
7 weeks old Pare nts on
Your ProStar Trarler Deal er
S1te $200 each (304)576
Carmrchael Equipment Inc
2222
(740)446-2412
AK C
Registered
W•emarane r PuppieS Will
HAY &amp;
be ready 1n 3·4 weeks Call •----GiiRAiiiilii~i.-,...1

r

Thompsons
Reparr-675 -7388 For sale
re conditioned
automatiC
washers &amp; dryers refr1ge ra
to rs
gas a nd eteclnc
ra ng es alf co nd1t1oners and
wrmg er washers W•ll do
repa1rs on maJOr brands 1n
shOp or at your home
Used FurMure &amp; Appliance
Store, 130 Bulavllle P1ke
Gallipolrs OH 40% off all
k1 ng mattress sets Hrs 11 3

M S (740)446-4782

'

New b1g 2 bedroom apt
Pnvate locat1on close to
nosp•tal
Wate r/sewer
1ncluded No pets DepoSit
requtred
$695Jmonth
(740144 1·11 84

1986 Ford 4x4 li ft k t 300 6
cyl
manual sh1ft Good
truck Trade tor 4 wheeler
{740)338 0436
1988 Foret Ranger V6
4WD Gal t (304)675 6336

r

97 Chevy 1/2 ton Silverado
4x4 extend cab 68 000
miles v1ctory red many
ex tras 1 owne r oever been
smoked 1n pe rfect con d1t on
$11 000 \740)742 2661

JO

VANS
t OK SAI.h

1994 Chevy Lum1na va n 7
seater runs goOd looks
good Ask1ng S 1 000 OBO
(740)441 0488
1996 Ford W 1ndstar 7 pas
senger van 141 000 m1 tes
runs good dark burgundy 10
color S2 000 (740)992
2726
1997
Plymou th Grand
Voyager Wh 1te 2 sl drs
good cond
runs good

$3 500 080 Cal 17401441
0712 \
1998 Dodge Grand CaraiJan
ES While Tan leather ouad
seats rear AIC New t res
loaded
$5 700
OBO

174014 41-0135
1999

Chevr olet Venture
Van bl ue 82 000
m1tes grea t cond1!1011 one
500 (7 40)367
owner
E~ tended

sa

7435 17401339 3955

40 MoTOill'\ u

4 w Hf:£1 f:U.'

f-"

19913 Softa11 Chopper 96 cu
1n S&amp;S en g ne 5 speed
trans day tech frame and
more $14 500 call aller
5 OOpm (304 )675·61 05

650 Yamaha V S!ar Custom
6 300 m1les S3 200 080
(7401256 1618 or (740 )256

6200
. ~ .onda

250 exc cond rode
ve1y little $1500 304 675
87 14 OR {304 }593 0724

98··510 New T1res Brake s
Batt ery C01lpack Maroon
N1ce Truck S3 500 00 740
742 3014

r

Washer $125 Dryer $125
electric range $125 refr.ger
ator $150 chest freeze r
S165
Wll1rlpool
washer/dryer set $250,
couch $125 rocker recl iner
S75 loveseat $50 table &amp;
cha•rs $125 table &amp; cha1rs Would like to buy a purebred
$40 lamps $10 ea ch Dachshund 6mo 2yrs old
Skaggs Appliances 76 V1ne already spayed &amp; housebro
ken (1 40)416· 1251
Sl (740)446·7398

4x4
Foi!SAI.E

...:,-:.5--....,----...,

Don I buy a b1g gas t1og lrke
new 2001 Chevy S 10
Hay···Excellent
Quahly 20 800 m1ies oxte!lded cab
Fef:'el Fema le Sable Shots M• xed Greens $ 2 00 740 .
cost new $20 622 sell for
Cage $50 (304 )675-81 59
949 2241
sa 900 (740)388 0 140 or
t \11,,'\, (,\IHII ' Intll '.
Full blooded P1t Bun pup(740\ 339 0948
pies
$50
each
Call
SSOO Demonstrat1on Bonus
4x4
evenrngs (740)368 0163 or
Let us demo a John Deere Z
FORS\U
1740):388 8901
Trak: or X Serl~:~s All Wheel
Male York1e CKC 7 months Stee r on your !awn a nd
1984 Chevy P1ckup 4x4
old $50!1 Call (7401441 rece 1ve an ext ra S500 off our engme and tr ansmiS SIOn
already
diSCOunted
PfiCes
8841 after 5 OOpm
good body rough 51200
l 1mrted
lime
ofler
Pupp1es- Chihuahuas $200 Carmichae l Equipment Inc (740 )446 2815
Cock a poos $150 &amp; $200
. 0)446·2412
1994 S10 Blazer PW
Rat Terners $100 second
PD AC AT Keyless e ntry
shots &amp; wormed (740)992·
74 OOOm1les extras I Clean
9475
iO
Al!I'Oi
74()..992 7573 $3 500 00
Registered
Ch1huahua ~
mRSA.U
1994 Toyota extended cab
puppy
9wkslold
Ma le
black/white 1st shOts &amp; 1986 Jaguar XKS V 12 4x4 136 000 m las gooo
$5 500
Ci'~ll
wormed Parents on prem1s eng1ne (yes V 12) 2 door cond1hon
(740)388 9125
OS $200 1:3041895 3101
sports car black ta n 1nter

~ New 2BR apts

m town All
electric water/sewer/trash
mcluded CI A S525 rent
ptt.Js depoS it
No pets
(740)441·1184

John Deere 10 It No T1l Dr1U
tor
Rent
Carmichael
Equ1pment (740)446·2412

r

1999 Harley Excellent conditiOn l ull s•ze tour pac
back res! &amp; luggage rack
much mo re 9 000 rtutes
Euros
and Head! ght S12 500
Ca ll (7 40)446
Corners New CD Player 4525 afler 3pm
$7 200 00
Call 740 992
2001
Harley
Dav1dson
02 10
Hentage Solta1l Class1c
99 Honda Accord LX Lots of exce llent condit1on several
S 14 500 phone
extras 3 TV s OVD custom extras
stereo $7 000 (740)709 (7401985 3938
t618
200:: HD Sotta11 Deuce
many extras 1nclud1ng w1de
TRUf:K.'
bre ch•orne Python P1pes
tUR S.\l[
7 000 miles (740)446·2815

Appliance &amp; (304)675 6338

ktMh111111i!M

c \.\11'1-lt' &amp;
!\1muR Hmm;
1986 HAC A!uma Lite XL
Camper
31FT
Balli
AC'Heat Well ma1ntalned
$4 900 1304 )675 8159

SIR\tlt"i
~10

Hm11
h IPRO\l_\ I~:&gt;'TS
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Uncond 1t1ona l lifehme guar
antee Local r.:terences fur
n1sh ed Eslabilshed 1975
Call 24 Hr s (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterp roof1ng

r

'

OltCh!ngiTrenehlng
Serv tc e
4~4 Cornmerc1a l D1tch W1tch
or auto runs wow 1 ne eds
4X4 Tru cli
1!;J97 Ford With SIX 1'18}' btade D1ggmg
exhaust &amp; mmor attn wilt
Ra nger XLT V 6 AutomatiC Deplh up ·o 56" Gas
trade 60s or 70s GM
low M1leage Very Clean Wate
Cable Electnc &amp;
$350008 0 (740)41 6 0918
740 742 3020 or 992 33Qol
Dra1n L1nes 1304 )5"6·9005

r-·-··-·-··-·-··-·-··-··-··-··-·· -··-··~··-··-··-··-·· -1

_=

Reach 3 Counties

I
i

I.

Pl easant Va lley Apa rtment
Are now tak1ng ApplicatiOns
for 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BR
Apphcatrons
are
taken
Monday thru Fnday lrom
900 AM 4 PM OffiCers
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Po1nl Pleasant WV
Phone No •s (304)675·

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE · In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

5806EHO
Tw1n R1vers Tower IS accepl
1ng appliCations for wart1ng
list lor Hud-subSIZed 1· br
apar1ment cell 675 6679

.

1996 Chevy Beretta V6
automa tiC NC ru ns looks
good good gas mileage
$2 200 OBO !740)441
0914

r

Houses for Rent $250 a CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- - - -- - - - - -

EVENING AUCTION

Buy or sell
Antiques, 1124 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
992 2526
Russ Moor e

At ·m s
FOR S~t.f

r

3 &amp; 2 BR apts Close to
Holzer
hospital
W/0
Appliance
•
hookup s
water/sewer
Home for Ren t 111 Glenwood mcluded
Startrng
al
3br 2ba detached Garage
Warehouse
$450/ month 1
depos11
$400Jmonth
plus depoSit
reqUired No pets (740)441
1304)743 6584
m Henderson WV Pre·
11 84
owned appilcanes start1ng at
Homes
fr om
$7000 BEAUTIFUL
APART· $15 &amp; up all under warranty
Foreclosure s VA HUD For MENTS
AT
BUDGET we do serv1ce wo rk on all
liStings 800·391-5228 ext PRICES AT JACKSON
Make and Models (304)675·
1709
ESTATES, -62 Westwood 7999
House for Rent 4 Bedroom Drr\le tro m $344 to $442
Walk Ia shop &amp; mov1es Call
2 Bath Mt Alto WV call
Kenmore ce ramrc flat top
740 446 2568
Equal
(304)458-2443
electnc range Black, \/ery
Hous1ng Opportunity

Auction

10

Home Grown Toma toes 1996 N1ssan Sentra 135 000
F1eld Run $8 per bucket or m1les 2 cwners good cbnd
you piCk $5 per bucket 110n $2 800 l1rm (740)388
SPACE
Extra long TwJn BeCI Quality (7401379 9110
8128
Mattress great for tall per
McKean Farm
1997 Camar o
Metallic
son $200 13041882-2494
large assor tment pumpkins gree n towner/adult owned
Down1own Off1ce Space- 5
guards lndtan corn fodder less than 64 OOOm1l es V6
JET
hay bales (740)446 9442 automat c a1r CD excellent
room su1te $650/mo 1 room
AERATION MOTORS
Centenary
Road a nd
ofr•ce· $225/mo , 2 room Repa ired New &amp; RebUilt In 556
sha rp
S6 BOO
si.Jite $250/mo
Secur1ty St~ Call Ron Evans 1 Gallipolis
17 40)446 0369
depos1t reqUire d ' You pay 800·537·9528
UtllllleS All spaces very n1ce
1999
Ford Taurus V6
Elevator Cau (740j446·3644
eng1ne automat1o transm1s
NEW AND USED STEEL
tor appOintment
s10n power wmdows &amp; door
Steel Beams P pe Rebar 28 camper tra1le r needs locks $2 800 Call (740 )446
For
Concrete
Angle
For Lease Otftce or retat t Channel Flat Bar Steel repa1r make offer ( 1) tread· 0425
milt like new $ 100 (1) setof
spaces 1n very good cond•· Gratmg
For
Dra1ns one row cu lt vator s $75 ( 1) 2000 Chrysler 300M beaut.
l1on Downtown Gallipoli S Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
turnmg plow tor small trac ful gold metal I c 51 Km1 sun
Approx 1600 sq ft each 1 Scrap Metals Open Monday
tor $45 {1) large att1c Ia['I root heated leatli er sears 4
or 2 balh s Lease pnce Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
$100 3H P gasoline eng1ne diSC change r aU the extras
negotiable to encou rag e Friday 8am·4 30pm Closed
a1r compressor (740)256 extra mce
busmes s
Call Thursday
new
Saturday
&amp; 6444
2000
Jeep
Grande
I740)44 6·442S or 17401446· Sunday (740)446-7300
Cherokee 4 WD 51 Km1
3936
For Sale or Lease Storage Extra nice towable with
warehouse cos! $40 000 Blu eOx base plate Both
Galltpohs Retail/Office build
zoned B 3 for Sale lot on pr1ce below Blu e Book
1ng beau11ful country set·
6th Street cost $15 000 can (740)245 5468
ling .4 000 sq ft (ftnlshed) Block bnck sewer pipes days (30 4)675-1 160 n1ghts
2000 K1a Seph1a 4 door
heat and water 1ncluded $ windows lintels etc Claude (304)6 75 6863
automatiC 27mpg i2 ODD
negottable (740}367·7435
Wmte rs A10 Grande OH
I \I&lt;\ I Sl 1'1'1 II S
miles good cond liOn S800
Ca ll 740 245· 5121
.'\:11\ISIO(h.
1n brakes fillers ttreS belts
Offlce/Apartment··3 Story
DAVIDSON METAL
etc tuneup W1!1 take trade
BUilding w1th garage local
10
ROOFING
FARM
Askmg
$4300
OBO
ed 1n downlqwn Pomeroy
'18 Colors
EQUIJ'\-IENT
17401441
9378
Call for Deta1ls
740·992·
'30yr warranty 1n wnt1ng
7851
'Profess1onatlnstal lat10n
D'ro Ftnanc10g f0r up to 36 2001 Dodge Neon automat
1c a1r cond 11011mg 82 000
\It IH 11\\lll..,l
• Free Estimates
months on Joh n Deere
m1les
$2 400
OBO
740 596 2909
Compact and 5000 Senes
(740)256 1652
Tractors w1th John Deere
_
Cred1t approval Check them 2002 Cavaher
59 500
PEl~
out• Carm1chael Equipment m1les
Gun Metal 17 s
fUKSALE
Inc (740)446 2412
Carbon F1ber Muffler Black

Calll7401446 3481

Auction

M USICAL
INSTRUMENTS

I. L,--·III'OiiRiiRENriiiiiliio-.,J

ence needed Water/trash .
pa1d No pets Call {740)388· 2B A Green sch~l district
11 00
no pets Reference &amp; dep
$300 (740 )36~·0632
3 BR I 112 baths house
$450 per mont h depos it 8eauttlu1 nver 111ew 1n
references, no pets Call Kanauga Ideal tor 1·2 pea·

r

080

constructiOn SAVEl SAVE'

FOR RfNr

5 rooms &amp; bath stove &amp;
Calll7401441 0181
refr gerator no pets 50
ACREAGE
Oli ve S\ $350 month Immaculate 2BR 2,.balh
1740144 6·3945
mobile home for rent m the
19 25 Acres Surveyed all
country
$400/month
Anenltonl
Woods Spot for Housmg all
I614)S95 7773 or 1800)798
Utilities e.va1lable Great Local company offenng NO 4686
DOWN PAYMENr pro
Hunting (304)895 :3299
grams for you to buy your Mob1le home s1 tes 1n
Countr y Homes
Shade
2 65 acres 3 100 sq f1 home 1nsread of rentmg
$130 mo (7401385 4019
barn City water eleCIIIC • 10.0% hnancmg
septiC c1ty schools 2 m1les • less !han perfect cred1!
APAII'IMF1ffli
south ot Gallipolis on At accepted
•
Payment
could
be
the
2 18 Pnme locatton wo n 1
last
$55 000
serious same as renl
Mor tgage
Locators 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
1nqu1nes only
(740 )4 41
(740):367·0000
ments furnished and unfur7333
mshed
secunly depos11
Appr } acre near Gallipolis Beautllt.JI 3 bedroom home requ~red no pets 740·992·
In
cou ntry
CIA
Land contract (740 )367
2218
washer'dryer
!look
up
large
7886
yard (614 )595·7773 or BOO· 1BA WID hookup ele clnc or

mobrle home Good cond1·

$28 500

MOBil£ HOMES

Lms&amp;

2002 3BA 2 bath Oakwood
lion

j

lr'"

APARIMENTS

j

Lease 740-985-3504

28 A collage near Pori or
THEISS ROAD, VINTON. $350/dep $350/rent refer

17401446·3487

2570

251S

lools (rom the lale Larry Doshon DIRECTIONS From Rt 13 north
through Glousler to 19 Broad Street," alch for s1gns

All real estate ad'Hrtl~ng
kt thit newtpt~per II
IU~ tO the fect.nd

ct&gt;me~nr

1740)448

Movmg o ut of the .uea and w1ll se ll personal property and some

(7401446.0779

POSTAL JOBS
$15 94-$22 56/hr now hir·
mg For applicatiOn &amp; free
gqvernment JOb mlo ca ll
Amencan Assoc of labor
1·913·599·13 226
24/hrs
amp se rv

APPAAISALII
3218

2000 16x80 mobile home
Many extras Owner w111 pay For sa le t /2 acre lot Gas
water sewe r Call for detailS
to move Call (740)446

Concealed P1stol Class 1995 Doublew1de 3br 2ba
Garage
Oclober 8 9 00 am VFW w/attached
Mason WV Ph (740)84 3 Breezeway &amp; Barn, 1 56
acres Sandhill Ad $72 000
5555 Cell (740141 6-3329

ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT S
needed Apply at 1354
ltshed band
~ ad&lt;.son Ptke GallipoliS

EHO

dr~~ert~ "

Thll MWSIMPIH' will not
knowlnptr accept
Mlv.rttiMIMitta fOf ,...

WV

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W 1n1
I 888 582·3345
IH \11'11\11

,....,. . . hereby
lnfonned tNt atl
dwelllnga ldv...UHd In
thl1 new~~paper are
avalla~• on an ~ual
opportuntty biiMe
For Sale· house 1n Mason
$62 500 house m New

Haven S52 000, (:304)882
fiOME'i

FORSAU

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

1401
Ceda r
Sf
Mea dowbrook
Add
3
Bedrooffi; 1 112 Bath Corner
lot new Roof move·1n con
ct•Mn new Carpet and
Floonng Storage Burld1ng
Fenced rn Back Yard
(304)7'!3-5254 or (304)593
4135

Eagles Club "FREI;:"
Wild Game Dinner
Saturday, September 171h
Feast w•ll be ready at 1.00 pm
Members and Guests Welcome

3200
Foreclosure 7BA 5BA, only
$1 B 000 For listings call
800-39 1-5228 ext F254
Newly remodeled 3 Of 4
bedrooms central air full
basement , hardwood floors
detached garage, large cov·
ered pat1o fenced back
yard close to sthools Pomt
$69 500
Pleasant,

(740)709 1:382
I

Jobs;7.~d[rt~-~
BINGO

eatate which Ia In
vtoi.Uon of lhe 111w Our

LPN
needed
full t•me
Monday Fflday, day shrft no
weekends
no hOlidays
Apply at 936 St At 160
Gallipoli s (740)4.46·9620
NOW HIRING AesCare a
lead1ng provider lo 1nd1v1du
als w1th MRIDD has open
mgs for D~rect Care Staff
You may apply at Middlet on
Eslates 8204 Carla Dnve
Galhpohs OH 45631 no
phone calls please
Equal
Opportu nity
An
Employer FIMIDN

ScHOOlS

ShotoKan Karate Starling
new class Sept 26 2005 at
Carlet on
School
every
Monday an d Thursday 6 00
PM to 7 00 PM 740-985
3994 or 74[)..667·3039

-·FOR·H·Ql.\';ES·R£Nr·

Calll7401446 3570

ere w1th 2 e)(tra acre s

Oearfljir~

1r

.__,1 r·o

10

No down payment appx STATE ROUTE 554, BID- 2 Bedroom House Newly In town 4BA, 38 A, LA, TV Tara
Townhouse
2000 aq ft c/a &amp; heat 3 4 WELL New 4 bedroom, 2 Remodeled Kmeon Ave room 1 month deposi1 with Apartments Very Spac1ous,
bedrooms In Pomeroy 740 bath manufactured home GallipoliS
$550/mo relerences
$650/month 2 Bedrooms CIA. 1 1/2
949·7004
Features INmg room family 17401441· 11 84 (740)441· 17401256·6242
Bath
Adun Pool &amp; Baby
room wtth l1replace and 0194
Pool, PallO Start $385./Mo
Oakwood Home Fireplace, "BON US" room Corner lot
Small 2 Bd house near No Pets
Lease PlUs
Garden Tub Free Dehvery Above ground pool wtth pool 2 bed room house $375 per Tuppers Pla1ns
Non Secunly Depos1t Requ1red
1112 mile out Greer Road house Ready for move-1n mo plus depo s1t &amp; utlhlles Smoker No Pets $400 00 1740)367·7086
Pomt Pleasant W. Va .
PR ICED
UNDER Accept HUD (740)446· M Pl us Deposi t Uti litieS &amp;

G• llia Co11nty OH

· Offtee !lowe-~

r M~s~ I.r..

Bnng thiS ad to Ahsha Cremeans
for 10% off any Ha1r Care Serv1ce

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N 2nd Middleport, OH
992 2725
•
EKpireS 9/30/05

••• Friday, Sept. 16 •••
COVERALL PROGRESSIVE
(INCLUDED IN PACK)

JACKPOT SAYS...

$2000.00
1st "G" out determmes
how many #'s lo hll 1n1
IF NOT HIT FRIDAY NITE
SATURDAY'S JACKPOT
WILL BE

$2500.00
Doors Open 4 00 PM
Early Btrds 5 15 PM
Regular Sess10n 6 30 PM

124 Highland Ave
Pmnt Pleasant WV

•

I.
I

,I
i

I@alltpohs J)ailp UI:nbunr

The Daily Sentinel tlomtl3lrasant l\rg1strr!
L._!~/.~:2~.---. - . -·\~.~:.~:_ . _ . . _ . _\.~. ill:~.ill. _ _j

�Page B6 • The Oajly Sentinel

www.myda.llysentlnel.com

Thursday, September 15, '200.5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Th e Daily Sentinel • Page 87.
'

NEA Crossword
Puzzle
' .

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
)IOTICE TO CON· payment bond and .
performance bond lor
-TRACTORS
·s.alld prapoaal for • 100% of tho contact
lhl Paving or Letart price.
. Township Road 631 - No bidder may wllhJohnson Road, Melga • drow his bid within
County, Ohio will be thirty (30) days after
roi:elvod by the Meigs the actual date of lhe
C o u n t y opening thereof.
Commissioners
at The Meigs County
their office at the Commi s sioner s
Courthouse , resarve the right to
Pomert&gt;y, Ohio 45769 reject any or all bids.
until
1:00
pm., Mlck Davenport, presThursday, September Ident Meigs Count
29 , 2005 and then at Commissioners (9) 6,
1:15 PM at said office 12, 15
opened arid ·read
aloud l or the follow- · - ---'-- - -- 'tng: ·
Public Notice
Paving
ol
Leta rl
Township Road 631- SHERI FF SALES
NUMBER
Johnson Road, Meigs CASE
.
County, Ohio . 16' 05CV051
width,. 4490' length. WELLS FARGO BANK
Specifications provid- Plaintiff vs
Billy J. Trout et al
ed In bid packet.
Specl11callons, and Defendant
bid forms may be Court of Common
secured at the offl~e Pleas, Meigs County,
ol Meigs County Ohio
Commis si oner s, In pursuance of an
COurthouse , order of sale tq me
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- directed from said
Phone 740-992-2895 . . court In the above
A deposit ol odollars entitled action . l ·wlll
will be required lor expose to sale at pubeach set of plans end lic auction' on the
, front steps of the
:specifications.
.Each bid must be Meigs County Court
'8ccompanled
by House on Friday,
J.ithar a bid bond In October 7, 2005 al10
an amount of 100% of am, or said day. the
lhe bid amount with a following described
surety satisfactory to real estate .
tha aforesaid Meigs ·Legal Description :
C o u n t y ·Situated in the State
.Commissioners or l;ly ol OH , · County ol
certified
check, Meigs and In the
or
:Cashiers check, or le.l - Columbia
1er or credit upon a Township
solvent bank in the PARCEL 1: Being in
amount of not less Section 33, Town 9,
than 10% or I he bid Range
15,
Ohio
amount In favor of the Cofnpany's Purchase.
aforeSaid
Meigs Columbia Township,
C o u n t y Meigs
County.
Commissioners. Bid Beginning altha R.E.
Bonds
shall . be corner of Section 33,
by thence North to the ·
accompanied r
prool of Authority or middle of Section 33,
the official or agent t~ence West in lands
signing the bond.
formerly owned by
Bids shall be sealed Wm . Morris; thence
and marked as Bid lor South to the corner of
Latarl Twp Rd 631 - said
Morris'
lot;
Johnson Road Paving
thence west to a lot
Project and mailed or formerly owned· by G.
G. Mclain; thence
delivered to:
Meigs
County south on '" agreed
Comm i ssioners line lo the section
Courthouse
line; thence East on
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
said section line to
Allantion of bidders the place or beginIs called to all ol the ning, containing 66
con- acres more or less.
requirements
tained In thi s bid PARCEL2 : Beginning
peckei, particularly 1o at the middle or the
the Federal Labor West lioe or the S.E.
Standlrdl Provision•
quarter
of
said
and
Davla· Baeon Section 33, thence
Wages, various insur- running Eas~ to the
the
line
ance requirements , fence,
various equal oppor- between H.R. · Laile
tunity provisions, and (sic) and · Rueben
lhl I'I&lt;JUiremant for e
Help Wanted

Walburnrthence Saturday. &amp;ept.-mblr
North along
and 17, 200&amp;. at 10:00 am
fence to Wm. G. at lhl bank'a parking
Caator's llna, thence rot:
Weal to·, Wm . G. 19n Chivy C-1 Truck
Casltor's
corner; CCL 14403443
thence South to the 1992
Olds
98
pace of beginning, Regency
containing 14 acres, 1G3CW53L2N433094
more or leas.
7
Any thing Hauled
PARCEL 3: Beginning 1996 Pontiac Grand
at tile S.W. corner or a P r I x
•Metal,
14 acto lot owned by 1G2WJ12MXTF29363
Wm. G. Castor In said 8
• Appliances,
Section 33; running The Home National
• Cars,
South 5 rods; thence Bank re1arvea the
East 80 rods Ia the. right 1a ro)ecl any or
• Garage Metal
line between H.R. all bids. All .vehicles
Litle and JL. Westfall, are sold, as Is where
C all
thence 8 rods along Is, with no warranties
_
740 742 _2595
said line to tha S.E. exprassed or Implied. · ":=;=::::=;:=;:::::~
corner of said Wm . G. For an appointment r
Casltor's 14 acre lot; IO SH, COli 740·949w.-lioi'ii'li!'lii
thence West 80 rods 2210. Ask tor Sheila.
Ill
to the place of begin- Sincerely,
iii:. 'ii'iillii iii ill li!'
ning, exiSting 4 acres. Sheila Buchanan
G 1 URRQ'Eo.
Parcels 1, 2 and 3 Home National Bank ·
OF BOATS,
D$01810
being
same
real
CAMPERS ETC.
estate conveyed by W. (9) 14,15,16
B. Gregory and wile
AT THE
to Margaret Gregory
MEIGS CO.
by deed ol May 27,
Public Notice
FAIRGROUNDS
1942, or rocord Deed
OCT. 8, 2005
Book 151 page 64, ol PUBLIC NOTICE
the Meigs County NOTICE: Is hereby
9:00AM· 12;00
Deed Records.
given
that
on
For more Info. C!lll
PARCEL4: West forty Saturday, September
740-985-4372
acres of land In the 17. 2005, a1 10:00
South eighty acres of a.m., a public sale will
Fraction
33,
in ,, be hold at 211 W.
Ta~e
Section 27, town 9, Second 51., Pomeroy,
Range
15 ,
Ohio Ohio. The Farmers
Company's Purchase. · Bank and Savings
Parcel 4 being same Company Is selling
Let me dot' for youl
real estate conveyed tor cash In hand or
by Wesley A. Gregory certified check the
and wife to Margaret following collateral :
Gregory by deed ol 2000 · Pontiac Grand
June 16, · 1928, ol A
m
record Deed Book 1G2NE52TXYM72122
134 Page 358, said 2
Meigs County Deed 1998 Ford Expedition
Records.
Eddie
Bauer
Current Owner: Billy 1FMPU18l9WLA7218
J . Trout
0
Property At: 39070 St. · 1999 Jeep Grand
Rt. 689
Cherokee
4x4
Albany, Ohio 45710
1J4GW58NXXC7il696
LEWIS
PP# 05-00282, 05- 7
CONCRETE
00283, 05-00284
The above described
Prior
Deed collaieral will be sold . CONSTRUCTION
References: Volume "as Is-where Is", with
143, Page 825 ·
no expressed
or
Appraised
at ' Implied
warranty
$130,000.00
given.
Terms
of
Saie : For further InformaCannot be sold fro · tion,
or for an
less than 213rds ol the appointment
to
25 Years Experience
appraised value 10% inspect
collateral,
David Lewis
down on day of sale, prior to sale date con 7
cash or . certllled tact Cyndle; ·Stacy or
check, balance due Randy a1 740-99:ion confirmation of 2t36.
sale.
DSO 1285
Robert E. Beagle, (9) 14,15,16
Meigs County Sheriff
:Attorney
fof
the
Plainllll
'Lerner,
Sampson ,
•
&amp;Rothfuss
Phone
P.O. Box 5480
(740) 992-5232
120 E. 4th Street, Blh
·
Floor
SxiO, lOxiO,
Cincinnati, OH 45202
IOx·JS, IOx20,
- 4007
513-241-3100
JOx30
(9)1 , 8, 15

Blgh ami Dry

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE

Public Notlee
The Home Nelional

Bank will aucllon the
foll~wing items on

CLASSIFJEDS
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Buckeye Community
Serv ices, an agency that .provides
services to people with mental
retardation, will be accepting
appli cations and conducting
interviews on Tuesday, September
20. 2005. from 9am-3 prn at lhe Ash
Street Baptist Church in
Middl~port . All applicants must
have a high school diploma or
GED. valid driver's license and
three years good dri ving
experience. $7.25/hr.
Pre-employment Drug Testing.
Equal Opportuniiy Employer.

ac credi te d college or u ni\ ero;;ity . WV S:tatc

Phannac ist Licensure. Two years pharmacist
experience prefe rrcll. Hospita l e-xperience
preferred .

Excellent salary. holidays. health insu ra•Ke
denta l

plan .

l ife

insurance, vacalion, long-term disabil ity and
retirement .
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley H ospiwl
clo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drh·e
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1414.
www.pval ley.org

AAIEOE

r

ADVERTISE YOUR;!~,
BUS.INESS
'

•

C~ I.Sur

.\ilia httm

Y•1MI Soililr

(li-Omr

!.:tOwltr

t.OW11r

[o.llur

"'

Li&lt;ftot.l~

.. '" " ' -

Ill """'

(304) 675-2630 ~

1

insured with State Aut o. Find ou1 how
much ynur sav ings can be.
The Wiscm:m AgencY. Inc.

~·

45 1 Sc~·\llll! Ave nue

S'fiiN Mlnr

~::,:·;:::;

P.O. Ro x 359

•

Galli pnlis, O H 45631-035Y -""
Ph : 800-J92- J209 or 740-41H'~--~ h4.1

*

Tree Service

.
'

Estimates

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND lAWN CARE
'Owner: Jeff Stethem

·

cou/2r

·

Hous~

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-&amp;Biil

PQWER WASHING

.

Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings,

Degrea~.m g

of

.'

.,

Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractm Tra1lers,
.•
Du mp Trucks, painting o.r stainin_g of y~ur deck
•
or log home, Alu mmu m bt 1ght~nmg .
. 1

'

: BARNEY
BUT

Special rates to Tr ucking and Dum p Tr ucking Companies,
LAWN CARE
DIVISION
•I
.
.
.
(Commercial and Rl!!iidl!n t1al)

YA DON'T
HAFTA ...

I CAN'T

PI.AY

1

Mowing, Trimming. Tree Trimming, AeratiGn, Fertilization,

Ati.

Tti~

STATUie
Of LfMrfAiiONS ~ j

,----1

NUTHIN' !!

;THE BORN LOSER

to 101 Ul

.:1

Optional Upgrades Available;
Argon Gas &amp;Heat Mirror

'' P"L fl..I E I'&gt;I. 11\i\i NEW Dl Nt.R ~
0 \J E'..R 01'-1 1'-11~\ f.\
Ill

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1-800-291-5600 740-992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

'

S\'R(.(i, IODI&gt;-.'i !

Dozer -.Skidsteer
Mini Excavator Work

,,

,•

.fTATUTE Of
1MiiATION5!

~

---~

AstraGraph
-... 'llirlhday:
· THING I 'vE E V£ ~ HEAR'[)

IN

MY UI'E.

iJ

.•

•

.

•

'

&lt;

•

' .,

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Rem cOaling
•New Gwagn
• a.etrical &amp; Plumbing

--

v.c. YOUNG Ill
992-1215

..

W'Y 036

P..-.y. Oflla

~ ·!~;;·~-;·~-~;;~~

Electrical
Senrlce

: 1~-, r--.,..,-----.
•

• Complete
Remodeling

17-17-17 -$275 ton {bulk only)
12% Triumph 12% sweet horse feed

55.50150 lb. bag
48% Soybean Meal 113.25/100 lb bag
Cob Meal wi1lt T.M. SaH
$6.501100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Butk only)

Shade

.:SUNSHINE CLUB
.

I C:O'ST

~D1WIT.

AG Service, Inc

35537 St R1 7

~

'

.

"

V-W1fR. em W:.Rf

/

-......

.-·
.
•

• CARPENTRY

• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

-·

74CH67·0544
' 746-367-0536

~~~~.
740-992:jffl .

: .

:•

·~elklwld

••

-· Yellawlibs&amp; rtlrftr.

miru

• · Wolku coon hoinl

ADVERTISE

mixtS
·~~mi•es

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

IMNV CtJTf Mrul

.'

992 ~3194

'

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992-2155

or992- 66J5

tmiS 1111 IBIICl
Insured

Ffee Est11'T'a!es
SeniOr Citizen DIKOUnt
30 Yrs ExpenenCe
740-992·2621 01"

7,~16-41902 ~

N ow Av ailable At

WOLFE.

HEY, I-lOW. ABOUT A
DISPLAY OF AFFECTION?

I

•

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t~~~~~~==::::::::~~j

Scorpion Tractors

MAIWTEWAWCE.

"Taking Th e Sting 0111 Of

Cemllltte 10111 1e111rs
&amp;le•elllllll
WV035Q67

OH 35928

- .

I AM

HOM£

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

(740) 992-0167

Hard \Vork!" ·
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive

Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40h p Kubota Engi nes

BAUM LUMBER
St..Rl. 124 C hester 985-3301

• By BernlclS' B e de Oaol
Tr y to in volve yourself in the yea~
a h ead ,I n pro1ec1s which ·a re Of an
artistic o r crea tive nat u re. in bot h your
caree r a n d personal lite . Even .11 they
don 't all p roduce material benefits.
th ey' ll s UII broaden your hor1zons con ,side rabl y.
V IRGO ~Aug . 23-Sapl . 22 ) If t h e r e
is som eon e you admi re or. love. cton"t
b~ bashf u l · a b o u t el(pressrng your
inte rest or t rue sent iment l oday.
People in g~mera l are mor e receptive
now to th e ove~ure s ot o thers .
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0cl . 23)- Ful"!_d s. fo r
which you 've worked or earned bu t
h ave thus far been w ilhlleld f rom you
fo r same reason should be forthcom ing . If you don""t receive th em today.
they 'll be on their way
·
SCORP IO (Oc t _ 24-Nov: 22) Your
inte n se and conquering personality
seldom goes llfln Oi ice d. bu t today
you ' ll have af1 · addi tiona l dynami c
going lor you . maKing· you a n even
s tronge r s tandout . Show you r s tuff.
SAGITTARIUS ( Nov. 23· D~c . 21} . Don 't restrain or s uppress impulses
today to do so m e thing ex1ra s pecial
lo r som eon e you love . Eve n the s ma ll est expressions of caring will y1eld
you metra devo tia·n ' and endearment rn
ret urn .
C APRICO RN (D ec 22- Jan . 19} · Vary your routines today because it
w111 help tnv tgorate and s timulate y our
outloo k . Bet1er yet. seek o ut a killdred
sp rrr1 who also feels the need l v r
change who 'll help you s hake up lhe
world .
AQUARIUS (.Jan 20-Fe b . 19) - Your
resourcelu lness and Wit are mor.e
than a matc h today lor th ose who are
aggrosswe If you encounttlr a forceful
typo . turn o n the c harm and yo u ' ll
bring this person to tiis or h e r knees
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20) A
number of p leasurable el(pen e nces
are irkely to be 1n the ofhng today, N o
one happening may b e partic u larly
ear1hshakrng. but cotleclivety they ' ll
make lor a memorable day.
ARIES (March 2 1- April
19 ) Altho..Jgh the con tro l of something
important to you may end up being in
th e h a nds o l ot hers rather th a"n you
today. even ts will u nfold rn a m anner
WhiCh 1+'111 bene! II you more th a n 'oth - ,

.,.

Pltost odop! from !he

Millin

-Middlepott's only
Self-51orap"

HCW 1Hf..Y

GQffi 6A&lt;KTO RADIO ,

Ohi o 45769

ELECTRICAl. NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

•6onn&lt;rlst.jwd &amp;collie

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

• New Homes
• Garages

• fOR All YOUR

I

SEU STOIIIGE

' ME TO RAKE YOURLEAVE5 .. .

10x10x10xl0

The Daily Sentinel
.

Cornerstone

&lt;&gt; '

SOMEI-lOW, f THINK YOU AND I
ARE IN TJ.I IS T06ETI-lER .

l-IE SA'{S TO COME BACK IN
A MONT14 .. l-IE'S WAITING FOR
TI-lE LAST LEAF TO FALL .

Gene Anns/Owner·

Pomcro . OH

1.'1(/1 roo pd

Da" id S id~rs
G emologist
(7-10 ) +Ui-3283

•••

G&amp;K SA. NITA.TIIIN
J35b 1 Bailey Run Rd ..

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

·.----------,
ASK 'iOUR DAD IF J.IE WANTS

Friday, S ept. 16, 2005

THAT'S ~HE 5 T lJPI DE":&gt;T

WH!CH 'All VIE \oJfOINT~
t\Nl&gt; ALL OPINION S ARE
CELESRI'\TEt&gt;. No T
C R.IT &lt;C!LE D'

:PEANUTS

Gallipolis. OH

,

taxes

1i

: L---'-

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIISTIIICDH

head

7 Frazier foe
8 Turpentine
source
9 Threshold
10 Escritoire
14 Sports
honorees
15 Gourmet
delicacy

rad ios

51 Sizable
52 In the past .
53 Make after

I.

DILES HEARI\G CE\TER

Operator 740-992-3174
• w eekly Trash S.::r\'ice
-1- yrs of Reliabie Service

6

45 It had three
parts
46 Gallleo 's .
home
47 "Oom-pah"
lnstrume.n t
49' Truckers'

"

--·-

WE 'RE T R'f ll'.j (:, Ttl PRO MOTE A CULT URE IN

Athens

•••

5

Unaware
Fee
Decal bnlnd
FUm crew
member
24 Favored
25 Many South
Africans ·
26 In the
middle
27 Urban
threat
29 Mantra
chants
34 Bauxite
giant
36 Gunsmith
39 Biting lly
43 Felt boots
44 Stanford
rival

!i

=~IG NATE

IMPORTS

1Ke.ep Your \1qney Lx·al)

We do it aner~

.AS LOW AS
$-26~00 PER-MONTH!
~

Hill's Self
Storage

• Vtnyt Siding &amp; • ~ Met Porth Dldc•

•,

.

• Leave a message

•RO&lt;Ifinsl l Gutters

ON THIS PAGE ·OOR
-~

740-142-2193

the deal

••

Call
Danny 740-590-3702

(304) 675-J.IOO

lead: ¥ 8

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celebfity Cipher cryptog rami a1e c·ealed !rom qwta\101\5 by famous people. past and present.

a

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17
HI
20
22

Wintert ime
sound
Shad eggs
- Wiedersehen
Packing
away
Jealous
goddess
Pierre's

ON

--:\ . -......

• Free Estimates
"I nsured"

Pa s~

2
3

l

K&amp;K EXCAVATING

Main Street
Pt. Plea.o;ant, WV
JoAnne Siders

+

Pas ~

Pt:Jss
Pass
· All pa ss

1 Impudent
6 Made
1 video
11 Mall carrier's
beat
12 Drop
·syllables
13 Improve
dreatically
15 Undercover
operetlons
16 Gorge
18 Mousa alert
19 Fralleller
21 Puller's
org.
22 Mom'smom
23 Fabric
sample
25 Zig opposite
28 Fab Four
member
30 Bravo, in
Barcelona
31 Ms.
Thurman
32 Ugh!
33 Damage
35 Eagle's
,claw
37 Green
vegetable
38 Foundry
refusei
40 Pealed
41 News

I
'::M1'&gt;1l

$219

33795 Hiland Road

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available ,

~ t\:T
5 t\:T

East

Albert E1nste1n claimed "Not everytlling
that can be counted , counts. And not
Tti~
· ~~
everything that counts can be counted."
~~
, ~ Bridge players who count find that the1r
play counts tor mora than those who do
not count. ¥aking this grand slam
requires count1ng to 13 - you can. do 1tl
~§
Against seven spades, Wes t leads -the
heart e1gh t.
East's vulnerable three -heart opening
9 -1&gt;
shows a decent seven -c ard suit with
some 6-10 high-ca rd po1n ts. Afte r South
. overcalls in spades, North. launches
r---::-cr;i!i'(""\;;\7-:----~:::;:';;";;'1t:;r.;;:;:::;-:;::::J Blackwood beto re bidding the grand
slam. This is slightly nsky because he
cannot be sure about the diamond suit,
bu t it would be unlucky if seven spades
had no play. ·
There seem to be 13 easy trickS: five
j
spaQes. one heart, four diamonds and
three clubs. The only danger is a bAd diamond break. If West has jack·10·fourth ,
the contract must fail . But if East has
either a s1ngleton honor or any four diamonds, the contract w111 bi makable. The
key is to count out East's hand.
1
1
After winning wi th dummy·s heart ace .
draw tfUIT)p$, keeping a winner on the
board, run the clubs, discarding your
remaining heart , and ruff the heart four in
your hand. What have you fou nd out?
~
~
'iE':&gt; .. AND i\ G¥!.(1\W FO~
You have tearned that East started with
one spade . seven hearts and one cluQ.
mt&gt; ~&gt;-. G'ii£J'.S'&lt; P\.J•\I t.
There for~'! . he must have four diamonds
N'-ID 1\ GREP&gt;-5'1 ...
So; lead' a diamond to dummy's ace and
return a d1amond. putting in your n1ne
when East plays low. (It East incorrectly
splits h1s ·honors. you win the tnck. cross
to dumm~ with a spade, and tak_e a dia·
mond finesse.)

·--

'

·
(Commercial and Residential)
.
Mobile Ham es, Houses, log Homes, Decks, t:?nveways,

Vinyl Double Hung

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

P&lt;Js ~

,.

It .counts to count

IT'5 TOO LAT~
TO FILE MY
GOPY/liGtiT
CLAIM.

30 Yrs. Exp. •In-s. Owner: Ronnie Jones •

2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

janet jeiTcrs

:l •

Open in~

Bucket Truck

••

!il NEW IDEA

~u rth

;:i

• Stump ~inding

t.EWHOLLAf£l

l1_ FAf!MtWtD

Wl"s l

ti

Top • Removal - Trim

Sales • Parts • Setvice

KlngKutt•r

So uth

;, ¥

WINDOW SUPER SALE

740-446-9777

A:!

Ea~t

Vulnerable: Huth

JONES'

JIM'S FIRM EQUIPMENT, INC.

• !!!!!

It
Dea ler:

Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well a~ small ~
lamlscaping jobs such as planting and mulchmg. ' \
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWIST PRICES

www.w i semoma~CIK).I.:lf rll

__... ,.__

Sou th
A A J 10 !J
• 7 2
t K Q !I !I

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It's the Auto/Home Di scount with special
reduced rates if both car an d home are

North
09 1.1 os
~ K Q R 7
• A 4
t A 7 !i 2
oTo K Q 5
Eu!i l
• .,
.
. KQJ I0 9 H:J
• •110 5 3

... ~0!111'71&gt;42 ... .1

.

El r::3

State Auto offers
something special

~ 632

. H :J
+ 4

.
740-667-0700 • 740-843-5264

..i Sorn!v)

· Point l'le.1s.mt. WV

170 l)effer50n Blvd.

Wt•sl

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement •
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med ~
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident "

"W.Irrrr Quu/ity,Compum'u n And Integ rity Come 1hgetlltr"

itMtt L.l'l!t"" II

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:MONTY

• Prompt &amp; quality

Pl easan l Va lley Hosp it al is cur.rently
acce ptin g res um es for a P:'l rl -Time
Pharmacist. BS. Pharmacy. Pha rm. D.
Ph arm acy o r - Ph . D. Phar mac) from

•

Storage

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains, OH
1-41=~ 45783

Pomeroy, Ohio

&lt;Part-Time)

•

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

740-992-6971

PHARMACIST

f.

and Financial Services

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rlder-Push-Weedeatlng
Owner Operated

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Help Wanted

p l an.

Rocky Hupp Insurance

HAR'MON
LAWN CARE

E.n

0

sin g l e/fa m ily

Alder

network
42 Food
add iti ve
43 Boxer
48 Baked item
48 Gum arabic
tree
50 Snake
' charmer' s
wear
54 Leagues
55 Ec ru
56 Chill pepper
dip
57 Tech talk
·
DOWN

~Lr- t4.U~IIT

Eacn lener· 1n tT1e crpher stand! for 8no!Mr

r&lt;X!ay·s clue. J eQuals K

" ZPN
XN

YCGX

G' T

RNOPGRA

IKLWY ?
ON

ILO

IKLWY

PWCH

NOPWH

YLVVN Y WX

ON

OHCXGOGNRCK

VKCMWHY

NOPWH

KGJW

OPGRAY

VWNVKW ."

I. I.

K GJW

J GRA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "A man begins culling h1s wisdorilteeth the first
t1me he bites oil more than he can chew " - Herb Caen

(c)2005 by NEA. Inc

9·15

.....

':=!:t:~' S@~411J-~£tts·
- - -- --'--- IdiOM ... CUIY I. POIUIN ---~-O
· lelttrt ol ....
a&lt;rarnbled •ordt
WOII

h orro n ge
f 04.1r

...

I I I I I, I I
low to form 104Jt WOfcb

PU S OJ T

l

. •r-rR;--E
.·,._r,o__,Trll

_ ll I I I _
law prc!e&gt;sor told h1s
dass. ' If yo' siJnd lor your
rights you'd b~tle· " ·' ~I e.': down

The

I

t:e

on your - - · - · · •

~ MA GOE! Q

:' I I I I I'

(o,..;:.J t•e '~ " tl'l vrl 1e qvO red.
by t,fl ,l'lg in rhe tTh\\"'~ Q word!

y ov develop !lorn ' lep r .v J below

e Pi ~~~::=sll.lltAS I' I' I' I' ,.
IN

·~~=lfTIEIS
S C~AM· L!T S

f-'Jf'ld.

r j.

I I I I I ll

ANSWERS

1-iJzC': - .Lind~· - ; .•~ .' ! lie.

,. : ,_ Cl

..

w~u ~·

'llo&gt;·c "'). ;agge~ do l: bes:.~ smileo lhe lot!ie g ;1, ' be:
cause tf I ddr.'l oc or.e else WOUL O •

ARLO &amp; JANIS
·A G.t.~Tlt M MJ WAIT:.

F02 T~E. LADY fO ~W.OC~T
ilit Tl:U:VI';!IOIJ'

•

'

TAURU S
(Apnl
20-May
20)
~
Anybody who ~ ponds time wrth you
today jsn't like ly 10 accuse you o f
being a dull compamon . You offlitr th e
type of involvement thBI knows t;aow to
turn a boring situB tron into B happen Ing _
·
GEM INI ( May 2 1-JUnB 20)- Be con·
genrallo all and doubly alert in career
maners today. because f resh oppo rl uniltes COIJ!d , come thro~,~,g~east
expec ted source , precipitated by
some varv un\J:sual circumstances .
CANCER ( June·21 · July 22) II ;vou
are unanac hed and look ing for companionship, go places today where
you can meOt n aw people . All you
have to do is look your best. &amp;Kpecl
the best and let Cupid do tfta, r'est .
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 221 - G Ood luct&lt;
tends to tavor you to day In snuatlons

· wnere your p ri mary obfactlve Is to

provide mora or add t o the matena l
secunry o f those who mean B lot to
you You ' ll anraC1 providence

SOUP TO NUTZ
~ AA1I: 6oiN. ()ol,o,)N 1 S1ST~
0 14 "f!aH GIVC IT UP Nm•..l,
195€~ ... 'TOJ ARk HtS'i::IR ~ 179

(
\
OR F'O£ FiVE. M i ~Tl:.&lt;;,
WlliCHt.Vo£ CO.O.E.~ Fll&lt;~f.

�-~J

I

•
www.mydailysentinel.com ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B8

Lady 1\t;arauderS
outlast Belpre,- B1

Eastern netters
sweep Fed Hock, B1

•
.

• If you have a question
or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 18~3 . Gastonia, NC 28053
Nl

)("'I. I

1~ 1

IJUSGU SERIES

fJ, ~· l l l f S

'

CRAFTSMAN fH\IGK

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .

Race: Sylvania 200
Roll 400. It was his third vic- Race: Dover 200
Where: New Hampshire Inter-Whef(t: New Hampshire Inter- tory of the season and came Wliere: Dover (Del.) lnternanational , Speedway (1.058 one week atter.Kyle became tional Speedway (1.0 miles). national· Speedway {1.058
miles), 200 laps/211.6 miles
m1les1. 300 laps/ 317.4 miles. the sport's youngest winner 200 laps/ miles,
When: Saturday, Sept. 17
ever with a victory in FontanQ, When: Saturday, Sept. 24
When: Sunday, Sept. 18
Laat year's wtnner: Travis
Last year's winner : Kurt Calif. If Busch is peaking at Last year's winner: Martin
Kvapi l ·
the right time, then so, too, Truex Jr.
Busch
'
Qualltyln&amp;
record: Jack
Qualifying
record:
David
are
his
teammates.
~Roush
Qualifying record: Ryan NewSprague, Chevrolet, 128.515
man, Dodge, 135.854 mph, Racing produced the first, Green, Chevrolet, 157.916
mph, Sept. 18,2004.
second and third-place finish- mph, June 6, 2004.
Nov. 5, 2004.
Race record : Tony Stewart, ers with Buscn, Matt Ken seth Race record: Dale Earnhardt 'Race record: Jack Sprague,
Pontiac, 118.132 mph, Nov. and Greg Biffle . Kyle Busch, Jr., Chevrolet, 130.152 mph, Chevrolet, 109.244 mph,
July 21. 2001.
iri a Hendrick Motorsports- May 30, i998 . .
7, 1999,
Last
week: Mike S_kinner
Last
week:
Kevin
Harvick
Last week : It seems the Nex- owned Chevrolet, finished
passed
Todd Bodine with 12
fourth
,
All
five
of
the
Roush
won
the
Emerson
Radio
250
tel Cup has become a "Busch
laps to go in the Cheerios
series," as in, t t1e ·brothers entries- Biffle, Mark Martin, on Sept. 9 at Richmondafter
200 on Sept. 8, giving tlle
Busch. Tweny-seven-year-old Busch, Kenseth and Carl Ed- winn~ng the Nextel Cup pole
Kurt and 20-year-o[d Kyle wards - made the Chase for earlier in the evening. Anoth· Toyota driver consecutive
wins, Todd Bodine finished
have won back-to-back races. the Nextel Cup. Owner Jack er Chevrolet driver, Paul
second to Skinner, just as he
Kurt, the reigning Champion, Roush will be shooting for his Menard, finished a ca reerhad in the previous race.
best second.
gave Ford the Chevy Rock &amp; third straight championship.

Race: Sylvania 300

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

,; o ( ' I:\ I'S • \ 'ol. ,;;;, '\o, :.q

'

'

• lady 'Does lend off
Miller. See Page 81

s

liJCI!I&lt;'~~'!ln;·the

Dale
Jarrett
Greg BIHie

Rusty Wallace

Jimmie Johnson

Kurt Busch

u

s

Tony
Raines

Dale Jarrett
vs. Tony Ralnea
Arrj chance Ja"ett had of making the
Chase ended l-.1tl1 a crash he blamed on·
Raines. "I was up beside the '37'
(Raines), It was a lapped car, and he ran
me down on the apron, and it's kind of
hard to steer dOvm ttlere."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Raines was
in more than one incident, and tile

other also involved a Chase con-

What's past is prologue as Nextel Cup roars into the postseason
turer standings, only Stewart and
fourth-place Jimmie Johnson represent that make in the Chase. Wallace,
Jeremy Mayfield and.Newman are the
NASCAR's Ch~se for the Nextel Cup
three Dodge drivers.
begins with Sunday's Sylvania 300 at
Perhaps most significant of all is
New Hampshire International Speedthe
fact that the sport's most successway, a 1.058-mile oval.
ful
driver, four-time champion Jeff
The drivers eligible for the champiGordon, and its most popular, Dale
onship have now been whittled down
Earnhardt
Jr., failed to earn postseato 10, and the massive points differenson berths.
tial between first -place Tony Stewart
The remaining races reflect considand JOih.pJace Ryan Newman 'is much
erable diversity, though the absence
more narrow, as well.
of a road course. is notable. There is
Here's how it works. Following the
one track, Talladega, where carbure26th race, points are reconfigured for
tor restrictor plates are used. Three
the final10 events. Stewart now has
of
the tracks - New Hampshire,
5,050 points, and each of the nine drivDover and Phoenix ~ are roughly a
ers behind has been slotted in incremile in si~e. One, Martinsville, is a
ments of five points. Greg Biffleshort tracli, which, by definition, is a
who would've trailed Stewart by 185
track shorter than a mile' in length.
points had the old, pre-2004 system ·
The
rest - Kansas, Charlotte
,still been in place - now has 5,045.
(Lowe's), Atlanta, Texas and HomeNewman, in lOth place, has 5,005.
stead, Fla. - are in the 1.5-mile
Since Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth
range.
finished the regul~r season in a tie,
. "There's no blueprint," said StewJohn
Clark/
NASCAR
This
Week
both have been assigned 5,015, leaving
art.
"Every year, if you look back over ·
Tony Stewart leads the pack down the
them 35 behind Stewart.
the history of NASCAR , there have
Is it fair? Well, probably rtot to backstretch at Daytona during the season·never
been two years that were identi·
Stewart, who'could finish in the top 10 opening race in Fell,ruary. As the Chase For
cal. Every year is kind of like a
in New Hampshire and be behind the . The Championship begins, the pack Is still
snowflake; they're all different.
current 1Qth.pJace driver, Newman, if chasing Stewart,
You've just got to take the circumNewman should win at a track where
stances
you're dealt eacli week and
he's won in the past.
work
to
consistently
finish in the top
Three of the top 10- Rusty Wal- _
Martin, Edwards and Kenseth- drive five . If you can do that every week,
lace, Mark Martin and Newman Fords, all owned by Jack Roush. Even you'll put yourself into a position to
have yet to win a race this season.
Five - Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, though Chevrolet leads the manufac- win the championship."

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

have yet tO win 8

race Increases, the likelihood
that a champion could be winlass for tlle first time in Cup history. Three previous champions
~Bill Rexford, Benny Parsons
and Kenseth - scored only one
victory during their championship seasons.

"'Just as much of a surprise
was the fact that the 2004
Raybestos Rookie of the Year,
·Kasey Kahne, failed even to .
' make a bid for the race-offs .
Kahne won a race in May but

Is now 20th in the point
standl~gs.

.1'

WHO 'S HOT
AND WHO'S NOT

'

EMA~S

E

R

Tony Stewart

'

'• ·WIIo'i hvt- Greg Biffle is
streak of four straight
Joge10 finishes, and teamMatt Kenseth has top
five of his last six ·

. tender, Jamie McMurray, whose
hopes were dashed,
LEGENI&gt;S ANl&gt; I ot-llc

Consistency In the Chase .
Is the key to victory
A year ago consistency won the

Nextel Cup championship for Kurt
Busch. He only won once during the
raoe-oHs, and that was the very first
race in New Hampshire. But Busch
finished In the top 10 nine times, ·
which enabled him to overcome the

fact that another driver, Jimmie Johnson, won four of the 10 Chase races.

Diverse history of Indy
revealed In new book

We all know that NASCAR never
raced at Indianapolis Motor Sneedway
until 1994, but how about Indy before
the 5007 D. Bruce Scott has written
"Indy: Racing Before the 500" (lndi·
ana Reflections LLC, $59.95), which
tells the story of the track's construe:
tion and the races- cars, motorcy-

~'

.., ..

··'

'\"

'

Matt Kenseth

Carl Edwards

Ryan Newman

WEATI-IER

)

500 in 1911. For more info rmation ,

'VOliU IIJilN

IFn Ill~ IWIM 01111 1!1 Alltl!~
Don't be

~rpriHCI

by
-tiler name chance

W

ithin the last couple of weeks,
I read that Sprint has bought
the Nextel Cup. With this buyout of Nextel , is this going to change
the name of the Nextel tup Series
for the 2006 year? Or is going to reJell Bowers

Jeremy !VIayfleld

• A Hunger For More. ·
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS ·.
• Meigs Intermediate
"donates to Katrina victims.
See Page AS
• Reley reunion held.
See. Page AS

It's become a different world
since the terrorist attacks of .
Sept. 11 and that world
requires that small counties·
like Meigs be prepared for any
number of disasters. Part of
this preparedness is having a
decontamination tent and
portable shelter that can be
deployed at a moment's -notice
and staked at virtually any location, including on asphalt. The
decontamination tent/shelter
cost over $10,000, was paid
for with grants from the Un ited
States Department of
Home land Security and will be
stored in the EMA's new
portab le trailer/command post
for use around the county.
; Here, Dax Holman of the
· Racine Volunteer Fire
Department prepares to inflate
the tent under the instruction of
the manufacturer.'s (Zumro)
salesman Marty Conway of
Akron. After only one minute
the tent was fully inflated with
four pounds of air pressure per
square inch on the corners and
frame creating a surface as
har_d as bricks. Conway
explained how to operate the ·
portable showers to Racine
Volunteer Firemen Timrny
Sands, J. Scott Hill, and EMA
Director Robert Byer. Conway's
demonstration was hel,d in
Racine and was for all GOUntywide, emergency agencies .
Betll Serilent;photo '

go to www. indianareflectlons.com.

E!lgerton, Ohio

Mark Martin

INSIDE

DECONTAMINATION TENT

cles, even balloons- that were run
there before the first Indianapolis

main the Nextel Cup?

.,

efforts," • county than ever.
services a week ago.
.
development
Gullver, is a former busi- Davenport said.
"Thi s is a very critical time
ness owner from Marietta,
Davenport said the possi- for the coun1y, because of
and assumed the economic ' bility of American Electric what is happening and what
development director posi- • Power building a new $1 appears likely to happen in
tion in December, 2004.
billion power plant · in the the months and years ahead,''
"The position of ecunom· Great Bend , and the devel- Davenport said,
ic development director is a opment that .is expected to
Davenport emphasized that
complex and difficult posi- result from that plant - if while commissioners disconPublic
Utilities tinued Gulliver's services for
tion, and the commissioners the
and (G ulliver) mutually Commission
of
Ohio the county, Gulliver left on
agreed lhat we weren't on approves AEP"s cost recov- good terms.
"He is a busi ness ,man, and
the same page in terms of ery plan - makes the posithe county's economic tion more important to the he underSiood the situation

v

', as~was

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY -.
Meigs
County Commissioners have
terminated their · conlraet
with the county's economic
development
director,
Michael Gulliver.
At Thursday's regular commissioners ' meeting, Board
President Mick Davenport
announced that the board
"discontinued" Gulliver's

FElJO OF Tltf. WEFI\

·

~~0;~ race
Kurt
~~;~:~~-In~2004.

Newman -

Commissioners announce .Gulliver's tennination

SPORTS

.THE CHASE FOR THE NEXTEL CUP

Chevy Rock &amp;
~~~Ws~:~ ease, and all the
:1
had ~Wen wrapped
4P 1oni· before the checkered
neg wa'Jed.
~:1' Despite the fact that week to
• week Ford has tM fewest en, irles of any manufacturer, the
; Chase includes five Taurus drivers. all representing Roush
,. Racing, among its 10 0uali,. flers. ·
.
"' !&gt;Jack Roush, ofcourse, is bidding for his third championship
In a.row. Matt Kenseth won the
title In 200~. and Kurt Bu sch
won it last year.
"'It will be interesting to note
how much the absence of Jeff
Gordon and Date Earnhardt Jr. in
the Chase will affect TV ratings
and attendance. Will their fans
still turn out? Alter all, Gordon
and Earnhardt will still be in the
fle!d each week.
c• -.,.lhe feet that three dnvers ~
Rusty wallace, Mark Martin and

'"'"-m)dail)"'"liou·l.mru

1-'RID.\Y . SI·.IYI'I-:l\IBJ-:1{ 11&gt;. :!oo:;

Telecommunications giants Sprint
·and Nexlel have indeed merged. Next
Year, NASCAR's premier series wilT

continue.to be known as Nextel Cup.·
But don't be surprised ifth'ere's a
namp change for 2007.

Dotallo on Pace AS

,-;::.

'--~ -

.INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

·Buckeye Edition
B6
Calendars
As
Classifieds
B2-4
Comics
Bs
A6
Dear Abby
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
- BSection
Weather

were

face d wit h,"
&gt;aid.
Davenport said comm issioner&gt; hope to fi ll the P&lt;"ition of economic development director hefore 'the end
of the year. In the meantime.
he said. Gull iver's adminis-'
trative ass islan t. Brenda
Roush. will oversee the
daily operations of the economi c deve lopment office _
under _
l'Oill,missioners'
superv1s1on .

County award,ed grant
for hospital equipment
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

'.

POMEROY - Meigs County Comm issioners
have received $235,000 from til e U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services for medical e4uipment
they hope will go i'n a new county hospital.
Meeting Thursday. wmmis.,ioncrs announced the
award, which was sec ured by U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D-Lisbon when the county- was trying for
funding to re-open Veterans Meinorial Hospital
thr,ough the Fairly-Qu;liified Hc,lith Care program for
low ~ income communities. While the county did not
receive funding th rough the program, officials hope to
forge ahead with plans fur hosp ital services. and have
turned their attention to construction of a new health
care ~.:ampus at a central \oration in the couniy.
-The grant will be used to purchase a digital imaging system. chemical ami hematology analyzers,
treadmill system and EKG machines. The cou nty will
have until 2010 to purchase the equipment,
"This will greatly assist the county in efforts to
restore hospital services to Meigs County residents.'"
Commissioner Mick Davenport said.
Other business
Commissioners approwd an additional appropria·
tion of $10,000 from their maintenance &lt;fnd opera·
tions line item into the housing line ilem. to make up
a shortfall in paying a $14,410 bi II lor l10using Meigs
County pri soners in the Was hington County Jail .

Please see Grant. AS

Syracuse approves firefigkters
BY BETH SERGENT BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - Firefighters were approved and
financial matters discussed during a special session
of Syracuse Village Council last ni~ht.
Three applicants applied to serve \Vilh the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department and were Ebcr Pickens
·
Jr., Jerry Hammond and Mike Jacb.
Councilman Bob Wood said he onlv knew Pickens
and inquired about the other two appiil:ants.
Mayor Eric Cun_ningh:un. who is also a member of
the fire department, said that Hammond and Jacks
still required some "schooling" hut were approved by
the fire department for service.
The meeting was then called into executive ·session
to discu ss personnel and specifically to "discuss fire
department applications ,"
When the meetin~ was called hack into se"ion
each of the three firefi ghters were vnted upon by ,
council and all three' we re approved. Hammond and
Jac)&lt;s were approved unanimously. Pickens received
one "no" vote from Councilwoman Donna Peterson.
Clerk-Treasurer Sharon Cottrill informed council that spending needed to he · stopped frntll the
general fund.
The ·meeting then went into its second executive
session to di sc~ss financial matters and specitkally,
to discuss "fund s, in the general fund."
. Ql
When council came OLit of executi ve se"ion a
motion was made and passed to pay l'illage employ.
ee Mike Ralston from the street fund instead of the
park fund since mowing sea~on i~ nvcr.
Also council approved drafting a letter tn \'tllage
solicitor Carson Crow asking that the pol ice cruiser
payment and gasoline he paid frc1111 the law enforcement trust fund .
'
··
CounL·i l voted tn 'l't up a lllll L tOr the \·illage'S - ,
w·atcr upgrade projc,·t "hid1 "ill al,h'w Cottrill to

Please see Syracuse, AS

'© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

111tna ... Q"t_.C-,, W.WCIIIl:AI'-IIIL

4262ndAve.
Galllrx&gt;Hs; OH
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

we

' Da~cnport

For Tickets Call

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