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Page ·B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 28, 20Q5

www .mydailysentinel.com

Redwomen
drop
home
opener
to
Mal~ne
Reds win
minor
..
leagu~ title

Submlled pholo

The Rutland Reds recently grabbed the Minor League
Champtonship. The team is ·seen here with their trophies from
the win. The Reds are front row frpm left Trey Coates. Clint
Lambert, Brayden Kopec, Jack Lem ley and Austin Wolfe . ·
Second row is Tanner Vanaman. Jefferey Teachout, A.J . Kopec.
Nathan Vanaman, Austin Welch and Zach Coates. In back are
coaches Rick Weaver, Vince Vanaman and Joey Coates.

PrEp VollEyball -

Gallia roundup

River Valley .burns
Lady Dragons
River Valley return s home
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
today to host Warren in a nonleague matchup." Game time
PROCTORVILLE - River is slated for 5:30p.m.
Valley increased its Ohio
Valley Conference volleyball
.winning streak to 26 games
after Tuesday's 25-12. 17-25.
25-17, 25-9 victory over .host
Fairland.
The Lady Raiders improved
tbeir OVC record to 7-0 with
GALLIPOLIS ·__ Ohio
the victory and also moved a Valley Chri stian rallied to win
game over .500 overall by the final two- games against
· ·visittn g
Wood
Cou nt y
improving to 7.-6 in 2005 .
·Carnian Waugh paced the Christian Tuesday- keeping
Silver and Black with 20 the Ltdv' Defenders' win
points. while Brooke Taylor streak intact.
·
and Lauren Bing also had
The Lady. Defenders won a
double-digits in points with nail-biting 17-25. 25-23. 23. 13 and 10, respectively.
_25. 25-2~. 18-16 decision at
Beth Payne led the net the First Baptist Activities
attack with 17 kills on ]1-(lf- Building to post their ninth
36 ·hit_ting. Kirsten Caner strai ght win and . improve to
added 10 kills for RVHS and 12-1 on the season
Taylor chipped in nine kills to
It was the second time in
the triumph.
three matches that OVCS had
aing added six kills and heen pushed to five games:
Andrea Flint had a pair of the blue ·,ind gold.also needed
kills, while Kari McFann con- five to beat ~Grace Christian
eluded the River Valley night last Fridav.
with five points.
Junior ·Julie Hussell ·we!ll
RVHS also claimed a 26- 20- for-2 1 at the serv ice line
24, 25,12 victory in the junior with 13 points to pace the
' varsity
contest.
Hal ey winner&gt;. followed closely by
Marcum led the Raiders with sophomore Megan . Sheets
nine points, while Ashley with a doze n .on 16-for- 17
Fitch · and
Samantha serving.
OVCS senior setter Sarah
Simmonds each chipped in
five points.
Burleson added nine points
The junior varsity Raiders and sophomore Heather
improved their season mark Wagner was a perfect at the
to 6-5 overall and ri-1 in con- line wi th seven markers.
Senior Kristi DaYis added
ferenc.e.
River Valley made it a clean five. junior Kalce Edmonds
sweep oh the night with a 25- three und freshman Andrea
II, 25-20 victory in the fresh- VanMeter chipped iti one.
men tilt. Tara Workman let!
Ohio Valley Chri ~tian is at
the way with 13 points ,
South Gal_l ia Thursday. ·
STAFF REPORT

Lady Defenders
need five to chop
down Wood Co.

Snyder looking ahead
to conference opener
HUNTINGTON.
W.Va.
(AP) - Coming off a di sappointing los~ is never easy. ,but
Marshall coach Mark Snyder
knew thi s season needed to
have a one,_game-at-a-.time
·
approach.
Therefore. Snyder sounded
quite confident· in his resol"e
that a loss to UCF on Saturday
that ended the Golden
Knights' 17-game losing
streak, the longest in the
nation , was nothing more than
growing pains and a valuabk
lesson.
"When . you turn the ball
over, you don't make teams
beat you: you heat yourself."'
Snyder said. "We"vc learned if
you don 't tak
. e_~are \lf the foolbalL you lose .
1

•

·out
from Page Bl
and Kirk Legar &gt;hoi 93 tu"
round out the Marauders·
. scoring.
For Gallia Academy. Greg
Russell turned in a solid ll-+
followed by an 87 from A~dy
Noe, Ky-le Hunter's 92 and a
I

Marshall has II turnovers in
three games. ranki ng it 109th
out of 117 Division I-A teams.
Quarterb.acks Jimmy Skinner
and Bernie Morris haw combined for eight of the team ·s
II turnovers.
Against UCF, Morris was
pulled in the second quaner
after fumbling to set up the
Gqldcn Knights' first touchdown. Skinner calile on to
throw for nearly 300 yards. but
he also had three turnovers.
Despite Morris' problems.
Snyder has tabbed him as the
starter for Sa!llrday's home
contest .a~ainst SMU. His
teammates-are rallviri£ around
the sophomore in hopes of
ui\ in~ him·.

hi~

confiJenc.e .

back .Il l from Trants Stout and
Tyler Hotlck.
' Bruce Stout had the best
day for Rtver Valley with j
92 . Ju st in Nolan was next
with 94 followed by 96 from
Craig Jager' and Craig
Barker's 97.
In oth&lt;!r• loc-al rounds that
didn"t count toward the ream
tal lie&gt;. Meigs· ban Bookman
&gt;hot il 99: Jarid \olarcum uf
Ri1·er Valley had a 10.1 .

BY MARK WILLIAMS

,

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball team
finally got to pl.ay before the
home folks as they hosted
the Malone Pioneers on
Tuesday night at the Newt
Oliver Arena in the 2005
home opener.
'
Rio Grande captured the
first game of the evening but
could not carry the momentum through 10 - victory as
Malone · won the match in
four games, 23-30, 30-21,
30-17 and 30-28.
Rio Grande (3-14 , 0-3
AMCS) · lo st for the sixth
consecutive
time.
The
Redwomen built a 22- 17
lead in the first game by
playing with great intensity.
The Redwomen would lead
by as many as nine (28-19)
in the first game before ultimately taking the game 3023.
Malone (8-11, 1-2 AMCS)
was in control in game two
fro m the start. gaining a lead
of 28-14 before allowing the

Redwomen to mal&lt;:e a run to
cut it to nine (30-21 ).
Rio would lead early in the
third game, 7-3, but again
could not hold on as Malone
surged ahead and won 30-17.
The fourth game was the·
most thrilling of the night.
Rio began the game with
three unanswered points
only to see· Malone take a
lead of 18-11 . The Pioneers
struggled serving the ball in
the fourth game, allowing
the Redwomen to make a
hard charge. Rio would battle back to take a brief 28-27
advamage but in the end fell
30-28. The win for Malone was
the 12th consecutive triumph
over Rio Grande in the
series. Rio's last win over
Malone was October 18,
19~ .
'
Junior
outside
hitter
Lindsay Urton had the best
game of her career, belting
19 kill s Without an error.
Urton also produced 20 digs
on the defensive end.
Rio Grande head coach
Patsy Fields knew Urton had
a tremendous individual per-

formance.
"She played .
super, I knew she was having
a great game, I didn't know
for sure," Fields said . ''I
thought she played well
defensively · also, she just
really played well."
Fre shman outside/middle
hiller Jessica Rodgers add~d
15 kills, 27 digs, two blocks
and four block asststs.
Junior setter Jessica Veach
handed out 34 assists and
posted 22 d1gs. on defense:
Sorhomore _ hbero Jodt
Snuth paced the defense
wnh, a match-htgh, 30 dt~s
and freshman..-;- Stephame
Lapp tallted 26 dtgs.
Malone had four players in
double figures in kills, led by
Amber Chafins with 20.
Ashley Yocum added 15 ,
R"acquel O' Hara 13 and
Catie Huggins 10.
Chafins also Jed the
Pioneer defense with 21 digs
while b'Hara added 18.
Katie Wright continued her
stellar play at setter, delivering 51 assists. Yocum had
four blocks.
Fields said the failing to
hold the momentum is a

problem that her team has
not learned to overcome.
"That's what we do, we
come out and play with great
intensity the first game and
then we act like. 'hey it's
time to go home' ," she said.
"We don't keep the ijltensity
up throughout the inatch.
"That's exactly what we
did at Mountain State"
Fields added. "I don't.kno~
how you work on that, but
we've got to work on it."
Fields was stre ssing · no
mistakes
when
the .
Redwomen grabbed the lead
in the fourth game. "When
h (M 1
ach Tan a
Y
s e
a one co .
Hockman) called u'!'eout w~
were ahead, I sa1d we c.an t
.mtss lhts serve, JUSt gettt 111
and get to our spots, o.~
course \lie ~~tss the .serve,
Ftelds satd: You can I make
an error, but with . freshmen
that's going to happen."
Rio Grande will _get right
back mto the fire wllh a road
trip to Columbus to face
Ohio
Dominican
on
T~ursday. Game time is set
for 7 p.m.

'

HMC's Halstead
receives ~ward, As
'

Rio
from PageBl
as many as I,500 runners. in
our meet," Willey.. said.
"Looking at the list (of
teams) it looks like it's going
to be a balanced meet, great
competition.
.;Hopefully the weather's
going to cooperate," Willey
added. "We'd like it to be a
little cooler and obviously
no rain so everybody can get
out and have a great race."
The college teams that will
compete are: Alderson
Broaddus. University of
· Charleston. Davis &amp; Elkins.
Fairmont State, Glenville
State. Kentucky Christian ,
Pikevi lie
College,
University of Rio Grande·
and Shawnee State.
.
The college men begin the
event with an 8,000-meter
(5-mile) race at 9 a.m. Th'e
college women will follow
at approximately '9:50 a.m.
The high school teams are
divided into seeded and
unseeded teams. The boys
seeded teams are: Ashland
Paul
Blazer,
Athens ,
Chesapeake ,
Cincinnati
Hills Chri,tian Academy,

said.
Scott Kazmir (I 0-9) held
Cleveland to one run in six
innings and Julio Lugo hit a
three-run homer as Tampa
Bay built a five-run lead.
"We couldn't get to Kazmir.
He was the story," · Indians
manager Eric Wedge said.
Former Indians pitcher
Danys Baez got Ronnie
Belliard to hit into a gameending double play with the
tying run on third, handing
Cleveland consecutive losses
for the first time since Sept. 34 at Minnesota.
.
"We knew Cleveland would
come back at us. What a big
double play at the end/'
Tampa Bay manager Lou
Piniella said. "This is a good

win against a team that's really been playing great."
·
The announcement of
Chicago's 3-2 loss drew one
of the · biggest cheers of the
night. The Indians noticed as
well, but downplayed their
scoreboard watching.
"If we watched as much as
you guys would like u$ to
watch, we wouldn't have time
to play the game," Wedge told
reporters.
The Indians have struggled
against Tampa Bay this season, getting swept in ·a threegame series at Jacobs Field in
mid-August. They have two
games remaining against the
Devil Rays before a threegame home series against
Chicago to finish the season.

Circleville, Eastern Meigs,
Fort Loramie, Fairland,
Gallia Academy, George
Washington, Goshen, Logan
·Elm, Minford, Peebles,
Ravenswood, · Ridgewood,
River Valley, Scott, Unioto
and Vinton County.
The high school boys'
seeded teams will race at 2
p.m .
The high school boys'
unseeded teams are: Adena,
Belpre, Clay, Covington ,
Leesburg Fairfield, Fairfield
Union, Glenwood New
Boston, Ironton, Logan,
Manchester,
Northwest,
Rock Hill, South Charleston,
Southern,
Southeastern,
Trimble, Valley, Waverly,
Wellston , Wheel_ersburg,
Whiteoak and Zane Trace.
The high school boys'
unseeded teams finish up the
·event. with an approximate
·
. stan time of 2:40p.m.
The high school girls; .
seeded teams are: Ashland
Paul Blazer, Chesapeake,
'Circleville·, Fort Loramie,
Galli a Academy, · George
Washington,
Lancaster,
Logan Elm, McAuley,
Minford, Peebles, Scou and
Zane Trace.
The high school girls'
seeded teams will race at

Circleville, Clay, Leesburg
12:40 p.m.
The high school girls' Fairfield. Fairfield Union,
unseeded teams are: Adena, Fairland. Gallia Academy,
Washington,
Athens,
Belpre,
Clay, George
Minford,
Covington, Eastern Meigs, Manchester,
Ravenswood,
Leesburg Fairfield, Fairfield Piketon,
Union, Fairland, Glenwood Ripley, River Valley, Scott,
Southeastern,
New
Boston,
Goshen, Southern ,
Wellston,
Ironton, Logan, Manchester, Trimble,
Northwest, Paint Valley, Wheelersburg, Whiteoak,
Ridgewood, · River Valley, Unioto and Vinton County.
The junior high girls' will
Rock Hill, Smith Charleston,
Southern ,
Southe~stern , race at II :25 a.m.
Trimble, Unioto, Valley,
One of the unique aspects
Vinton County, Waver!)'&gt; of the Rio Invitational is the
Wellston and Wheelersburg. Open Race, which is open to .
The high school girls' all runners except high
unseeded teams will race at school cross country run1:20 p.m. .
·
ners. The Open Race is set
The junior high boys ' for HUO a.m.
teams are: Ashland Paul
Bob Evans Farms, Inc. is
Blazer, Athens, Belpre, sponsoring the event. Willey
Circleville, Clay, Leesburg is appreciative of all those
Fairfield. Fairfield Union, who help pull the event off.
Fairland, Gallia Academy,
George Washington, Logan "If wasn't for the . support
Elm, Manchester. Piketon , that we get . from Ray
Ravenswood, Ridgewood , McKinniss at the farm and
Ripley, River Valley, Rock Bob Evans we couldn't put
Hill, · Scou, ·Southeastern, on as a nice a meet as we
Southern, Trimble, Waverly, do,'' Willey said. "They just
Wellston,
Wheelersburg, do a great job for us and it's
Whiteoak, Unioto and so greatly appreciated."
"We really couldn't do it
Vinton County.
The junior high boys· will . without them, so we can't
thank them enough for all
race at 12:05 p.m.
The junior liigh girls' the help they've given us
teams are: Ashland Paul through the years," Willey
Blazer, Athens, Belpre, added.

''

;;o ( I \ IS • \ ol. ;;;;. \ o . ;~ :!

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

c.ommtsstoners have "identified at least three sites near
Rocksprings as potential
POMEROY - · Meigs locations for a medical camCounty
Commissioners pus, which would ultimately
have narrowed their search include a small inpatient hosfor a site for a new county pital with a 24-hour emerhospital , and may issue gency room. Landowners
bonds to acquire land and have been contacted about
build the facility.
the sale of the properties, but
Wednesday, Meigs County . one site in particular has been
Mick selected as a first choice,
Commissioner
Davenport confirmed that Davenport said. That location

• Rio soccer gets past
ODU.
Page 81

see

Call (740) 592-9642 for:
Imber Coppinger, D.O . .
Family Practice

Geriatric and Internal Medicine

Audrius·Ruksenas. M.D.

.
Margaret Tonkovich, C.N.P.

lias not been identified
because of pending negotations for its purchase.·
"The new Otedical campus
will be built in a location
central to the county,"
Davenport said.
Davenport said 0' Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
has been working closely
with commissioners in the
effort to acquire a site, and
has expressed interest in

operating the facility once it
is built. The Meigs Medical
Clinic; which 0' Bleness
opened earlier this year in the
Medical Arts building across
from the abandoned Veterans
Memorial Hospi tal. has been
well-received, he said, and
could be ex panded in the
month s ahead, with a family
physican's practice, 'and lab
and X-ray servi ces.
Commissiorier Jim Sheets

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Tammy Hutton
• AHred Windon
'

INSIDE ·
• Chester Council
honors grandparents.
See Page A3
• MlddleP.,Ort youth struck
by car. See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS

WEATHER

POMEROY - In an effort
to reduce the number of fatal '
accidents in Meig~ County, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office
and the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol will
begin increasing · enforcement
effons in Meigs County beginning Saturday, Oct. I.
The project will run
through Nov. 30. This project
is aimed at reducing the number of rural traffic fatalities in
Meigs County.
In 2004, three people lost
their lives in three fatal crashes. Thus far in 2005, the patrol
has investigated five fatal
crashes with five fatalities.
"This is a trend that we hope .
to reverse," said Lt. Richard
E. Grau, the post commander.
"This enforcement effort will
run between the hours of 6
p.m. and I0 p.m. on varying
days of the week . Officers
from both agencies wi II participate in an effort lo gain
public awareness and reduce
traffic crashes.

Please see Increase, AS

PomeroyPD
investigates
• •
arson, nussmg
person, accidents
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detltlto on P... AS

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt
recently released the following ·information regarding
current cases his department
IS mvesttgatmg.
On Sept. 25 Patrolman Josh
Ridenour was called to the
scene of a· garage fire at 435
Rutland Street, Pomeroy, at
the home of Woodrow and
'·
Jamie Richards .
The Pomeroy PD reported
that Middleport Fire Chief
Jeff Darst ·concluded the fire
·was no accident.
Upon further investigation of
the incident Ridenour arrested
Brian A. Roush, 32. Pomeroy.
who was charged with arson
for his alleged involvement.
Ridenour reported that
Roush later admitted to setting the garage on fire by
igniting greasy rags and paper.
Both Roush and the
Please see Pomeroy; AS '
• ~

A3
84-6
B7

DearAbby
Editorials

A3
A-4

NASCAR
Obituaries
Places to go

BB

Sports
Weather

" '" ' ""·1. .-. "u .

As
A7
B Section

AB

© aoos Ohio Valley PubU.hlnt~ Co.

•

•

•

..1

said a $235,000 grant award
from the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services.
announced earlier this month,
would be used to purchase
nece ~sary medi cal equipment
for the new hospital. The
grant was awarded for" purchase of a digital imaging
system, chemical and hematolog)'- analyzers. treadmlll

Please see Hospital, AS

Rutland's
-Vennari Park.
to receive
playground
equipment

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

Comi~

Our healthcare professionals are available by appointment
Monday through Friday B a.m. to 5 p.m. at 510 West Union St.
in Athens.

' " ' " . m ~ d ; d l~

:!'), :!OO:J

Increased
enforcement set for Meigs

Calendars
Classifieds

MARY HOPE GRIFFlN, M.D., F.A.A.P., Pediatrics

I Ill I{S ll \\ , Sl·. I" I I \I H I.K

Commissioners·narrow search for site of new hospital

SPORTS

2 SI!CilONS- 16 PAGFS

we·lcoming ...

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

INDEX

HEALTH FIRST
CARE - CE-NTER

Call (740).594-7979 for :
R.K. Giri, M.D.

"We need to remember the
adversity · that we overcame
this year," Indians right fielder Casey Blake said.
"Hopefully, that will help us
the next five games."
· Cleveland staged a comeback on RBI doubles by
pinch-hitter Ben Broussard
and Blake in the eighth inning
off Joe Borowski. But
Borowski struck out Grady
Sizemore to end the threat.
Baez
allowed
Victor
Martinez 's RBI single to center in the ninth before earning
his 40th save in 48 chances.
Kazmir walked five but
worked out of a bases-loaded
jam in the second and left
another two stranded in the
third.

Ariel Jr. Theatre
presents 'Fairy Tale
Courtroom,' A7

"1 .

Indians fall to Devil Rays, maintain wi1~-card lead
CLEVELAND(AP) - · The
Indians lost the game, but didn't lose any ground. ·
Cleveland came up short of
a comeback against Tampa
Bay, losing 5-4 Tuesday night
to remain two games behind
first-place Chicago in the AL
Central. The Indians lead the
wild-card standings but have
lhe same record as~Boston and
New York, who are tied atop
the AL East.
. The Indians. who trailed the
White Sox by 15 games on
Aug . I, promised to do what
they have done .all year - put
the loss behind them and
move on.
"We' ll just come back
tomorrow and go at it again,"
Indians outtielder Coco Crisp

~

BY .BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

-..

-"1~·

Charione Hoeftlch/photo
Kathryn Hart, center, donates her doll collection to the Senior Citizens Center for the 'Make a
Difference Day" auction, Oct. 22. The dolls are currently on display at the Farmers Bank. Here
Debbie Jones. Center employee, and Paul Reed, Meigs County Council on Aging president,
accept the dolls from Hart.

Costumed dolls donated for auction
.
.
.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Remember
when the Farmers Bank had a
dress-a-doll contest every
year during the holiday season?
·
The bank provided the
dolls and then area residents
took them home, created
beautiful . costumes and
returned them to the bank for

display. The dolls _were
judged in several categories,
prizes were awarded, and
then they were auctioned off
by Dan Smith with the pro~
ceeds going to the Meigs
County United Fund.
Thi s year 13 of those dolls
purchased by Kathryn Han
over the years at the Farmers
Bank auctions will be put on
the auction block for a second time. This time proceeds

will go into the required
$3.400 · match for a new
home-de livered meal truck
and other service programs to
Meigs County's elderly and
handicapped citizens.
The dolls will be included
in items being collected for
the second annual Make a
Difference Day auction of the
Meigs County Council on

Please see Dolls, AS

RUTLAND - Rutland's
Jim Vennari Park will soon
be home to naw playground
equipment, barbecue grills;
benches and a water fountain
thanks to a $26, 181 grant
from Ohio Nature Works.
Rutland Mayor April Burke
said the items were ordered
two weeks ago and should
at'five within the next month.
Volunteers
from
the
-Rutland '· Churcl! of the
Nazarene
and
Rutland
Church of God have agreed
to assemble the playground
equipment - which Burke
hopes to have up by
Halloween for a type of block
· party for children. However,
Burke said that party depends
on when the equipment act!J·
ally arrives.

Please see Park. AS

P9meroy
merchants
plan historical
waJ.king tour :
BY CHARLENE HDEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Trackiftg
system·designed to find the lost
.
.

.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- A new program employs the latest technology to provide rapid
response and rescue service
for those suffering from
dementia and other disorders
who have wandered away
fr9m their homes.
Through a $125,000 grant
from Buckeye Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District and the
Area Agency on Aging, and
$25,000
from
the
Osteopathic
Heritage
Foundation of -Nelsonville,
Project Lifesaver uses an
electronic tracking system to
locate the mi ssing.
The county has received 17
small bracelet transmitters
for patients and two receivers

Please see Tracking. AS ·

POMEROY - A historical
walking tour of Pomeroy on
Nov. 5 as a kickoff to holiday
events in the village is being
pI an ned by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
·
Meeting with the merchants' committee Wednesday
to discuss and formulate a plan
for the tour 'wa5 local historian
Mike Gerlach of Middleport.
His schedule permitting. he
will be leading two tours
through the downtown providing information on buildings
and businesses and their sig- ·
nificance in Pomeroy's history
a$ a Gennan industrial village.
Plans were made for
Gerlach
to accompany some
B~an J. Reed/ photo
of the merchants on a "walkLocal men trained in the use of Project Lifesaver's search and through" tour of the village
rescue equipment are pictured with re presentatives of the )"hen he will suggest points
Area Agency on Aging, which has helped fund the program. L- of historical interest as they
r, Tim King of King's Ace Hardware, who donated toolboxes for relate 10 happenings in the
the program, Randy Arnold, Scott Trussell, Joetta Lane. early years.
Director of ,the Area Agency on Aging, and Meche lie Adams of
Please see Merchants, AS
the AAA/Project Lifesaver -progra.m. ·

.,

Mary Hope Griffin, M.D.
Pediatrics

Internal Medicine
'
.
"

Family Practice
WHEN YOU NEED CARE, CHOOSE HEALTH FIRST!

an all •liate ot tne

~

O'BLENESSl\,
HEALTH SYSTEM

....
. AI Ple•unt V1IJt, Hotpltll, we wanl to show how much we truly caru ·about our community. In ·
colllboratlon with the Mtlp Co1nty Chamber or Commtrti, PVH will provide FREE tint aid kit$ to all
lllllal chun:he1 A tynaaoauc• In Mclp County upon reque11 (whllt 1uppllt! last). ·
Thlt 1¥ our way of saylna Wfll11k Y01" for making u1 your h'CalthcarC provider of choi~c.
For more lnlonnatlon or to amnac a time to 'pick-up a flrst aid kit for your congregation. plcuse cull.
('740) !Jt2-5005.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
H_O SPITAL
•

�..

'

.

. I.

•

PageA2

NATION
Heat, unexpectedly big crow.d make · $10 bill gets makeover
FEMA close Houston relief center early

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 29,

.

.

.

~

Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

The bill overall has a subtle
orange background. ·The yellow is seen in small lOs around
WASHINGTON - Hooray the torch on the front of the
for the red, yellow and bill. There are also small yelBv JUAN A. LOZANO
orange! Those are the colors low 10s to the right of the U.S.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
featured on the newly Treasury building, wliich
redesigned $10 bill; the third remainsonthebackofthebill.
HOUSTON - Saying they
The makeover of the $10
currency denomination to add
were caught oft~guard by the
splashes of color to the tradi- bill follows similar colorizanumber of people in need,
tJOnal green of U.S. currency. tion of the $20 bill in 2003
FEMA officials closed a relief
Some 800 million of the and the $50 bill last year. .
center early on . Wednesday
new bills will be put into cirPlans call for the $10!) bill to
after some of the hundreds of
culation
starting
early
next
be
redesigned in 2007, a ro.llhurricane victims in line began .
year
in
the
government's
latout
delayed so more security
fainting in triple-digit heat.
est effort to stay ahead of features can be added to the
-The midday closing of the
tech-savvy counterfeiters.
favorite denomination of counHouston disaster relief center
"The craftsmanship that terfeiters outside the United
came as officials in areas hit
goes into our .currency · is States. There are no plans to
hardest by Hurricane Rita
unmatched anywhere in the
criticized FEMA's response
world. so is our commitment change the $1, $2 and $5 bills.
to the storm, with one calling
·
d. th
Other security features of
to sateguar mg .at currency," . the $10 bill. which were intro- .
for a commission to examine
said Treasury Secretar.y John
the emergency response.
Snow, who participated in an · duced in an earlier makeover,
Across southeastern Texas,
unveiling ceremony on Ellis include a plastic security
!he
Federal
Emergencx
Island in the New York harbor. thread that repeats "USA Ten"
Management Agency delivered
The location was selected in tiny print. There is also a
ice, water and packaged meals
to highlight one of the bill 's watermark that can be seen
to residents who rode out la&gt;t
new features - a red-image when the bill is held up to the
week's hurricane, which blew
. of the Statue of Liberty's light, and color-shifting ink
ashore at Sabine Pass in East
torch on the left stde of a that makes the numeral •; I0"
Texa&gt; early Saturday.
revised portrait of Alexander to the right of I:Iamilton
AP Photo
But the age ncy was not
Hamilton, the first $ecretary change color from copper to
ready for the roughly 1.,500 Houston Police officer Bobby Alaniz watches the line at the Federal Emergency Management .of the Treasury, who is shown green when the bill is tilted.
people
displaced
by Agency hurricane relief center in Houston, Wednesday. Saying they were caught off-guard by the without the .traditional oval . _ Each bill denomination has
Hurricanes Rita and Katrina number of people in need, FEMA officials closed the center early on Wednesday after some of frame around his portrait
different colors mixed in with
who sought help at the the hundreds of hurricane victims in line began fainting in triple-digit heat.
Also highlighted in red i~ the .. the traditional green. For the
Houston .. center when it
• - phrase from the Constitution $20, the addittonal colors
reopened Wednesday.
situation, said Mike Casella, Judge Carl ·Griftlth, whose whomever remains."
"We the People" on the right were peach and blue while
Perry, ·meanwhile, issued side of Hamilton's portrait. the $50 bill has blue and red.
The center, offering help another FEMA spokesman .
county includes Beaumont,
from a variety government
Frances Deculus,. 65, of said FEMA's response has an eniergency order allowing
the utility Entergy to immediimd private organizations. Beaumont got in line at 3 been inadequate. ··
initially opened for Katrina . a.m. and emerged shortly
Griffith said ·he has asked ately erect temporary lines
i~
refugees. ft closed last week before the center shut down. Gov. Rick Perry to set up a and plug into the Houston
when Houston was evacuated She said that all she was able commission to study the area's power supply to get
before Rita.
to do was register for'FEMA emergency response to Rita. electricity tlowtng to the
· The line starte·d forming assistance, and that she will Congress is holding hearings hardest hit areas.
center would overshadow and
Bv AMY WESTFELDT
But it could take three to
Tuesday night, and as tem- have to return to actually get this week on the .federal govASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
take space from the separate
ernment's
response
to four weeks to restore power
peratures reached rec.ord any help . .
-memorial devoted to the 2,749 .
·
to those areas of southeast
highs, some people fainted
;,We don 't know what to Katrina.
NEW YORK- Bowing to World Trade Center dead and
and had to be carried off by do. It's frustrating, We have
FEMA spokesman Ross Texas where nearly all trans- pressure from Sept. II fami- would dishonor them by fospolice and other refugees.
five small children," said Fredenburg in Austin said mission lines are down and lies, Gov. George Pataki on . teeing debate about the attacks
FEMA spokesman Justin Deculus, who is staying in a communications
between homes are so damaged they Wednesday removed a pro- and other world events.
Dombrowski said the agency Houston hotel with 12 other Austin and rural East Texas can't safely receive electrici- posed freedom center from
"Freedom should unify us.
have been troubled, in part ty, said Paul Hudson, chair- the space reserved for it near This center has not," Pataki
closed the center for the day relatives.
because of the heat and the
Dombrowski said FEMA is because of power problems. man of the state's Public the planned World Trade said. "Today there remains too
Center memorial, saying the much opposition, too much
unexpectedly large crowds. asking refugees who do not But he said FEMA had set up Utility Commission.
museum project had aroused controvl!rsy over the programIn
rural
Tyler
County,
north
Those already in line were need help right away to wait 27 di stribution points in 27
of Beaumont, volunteer fire- "too much opposition, too ming of the IFC. ... We must
a few days. He also encour- southeastern Texas cities. .
allowed to enier.
''I don't know what could fighters di stributed food, much controversy."
FEMA said it would reopen aged refugees to register.with
·move forward with our ftrst
Patak.i initially said the state priority, .the creation of an
the center Thursday morning FEMA by ielephone or the have been done better since the water and ice to hundreds of
materials were in place before residents trapped in their would help the International inspiring memorial to pay triband keep it operating into the Internet.
Local officials, including the hurricane," Fredenburg homes by fuel shortages or Freedom Center ftnd another ute to our lost loved ones and
evening seven days a ·week.
The agency was also making Port Arthur Mayor Oscar said. "We're doing everything by huge fallen trees blocking home, but center officials said tell their stories to the world."
they weren't interested and
dirt roads out.
plans to deal with any similar Ortiz and Jefferson County we can to get water anq icc to the one-lane,
.
lnternation~l
Freedom
considered the project dead.
.
Pataki said a planned cul- Center officials said in a
tural building meant for the statement that they· did not
freedom ~enter would now believe there was a viable .
tell only the story of the Sept. location for their museum
in the public's interest, argu- million retirees receive health Justice Clarence Thomas Bv M.ARYCLAIRE DALE
elsewhere at the site.
II, 200 I, terrorist attacks.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ing that em~ l o~ers might oth- care coverage from former in ah Internet access case
"We consider our work,
The Lower Manhattan
erwtse elimtnate rellree employers. Of those, between known as the "Brand X" case Development Corp., created therefore, · to have been
health benefits altogether.
- PHILADELPHIA
3 million and 4 million are - said in June that judges by Patak.i and former Mayor brought.to an end," they said.
Reversi ng her earlier deci'The AARP questions that under age 65.
should gene~ally d~fer to the Rudolph Giuliani to rebuild the
The c.ampaign by Sept. II
sion, a federal judge mled assumption.
Brody initially ruled that expertise of federal agencies. trade center site, will work. on families to oust the freedom
tflat companies may offer
"There are so many factors companies, to comply with
Brody said Tuesday she SeP.t. 11_-related content for the center had grown to' include
younger retirees better health driving employers away from federal age-discrimination must therefore uphold · the building, LMDC spokesman four police and fire unions,
care benefits than they give retiree health benefits ... esca- laws, could offer separate EEOC's request to depart . John Gallagher said.
an online petition with more
older retirees who qualify for Jating health costs, demo- pacl&gt;ages only if they were of .from the.equal value or equal · The decision followed than 40;000 signatures, and
Medicare.
graphics; all s011s of things equal value or provided equal benefit standard of the Age months of acrimony. with several politicians including
The AARP sued over the influence employers•· deci- benefits.
·
Discrimination
in some Sept. II families and · Giuliani and Sen. Hillary
rule change proposed by the sions," AARP Foundation
Then Supreme Court Employment Act.
politicians saying the freedom Rodham Clinton.
Equal
Employment attorney Laurie McCann said.
Opportunity Commission on
The EEOC exemption
grounds that unequal health would let employers cut
packages amount to age dis- health benefits for older
crimination.
retirees while offering no
U.S. District Judge Anita guarantees
to
younger
B. Brody initially agreed, · employees, McCann said.
Some large employers and
granting an injunction in
March that barred the federal unions support two-tier beneagency from adopting the fit plans, saying that younger
rule. Howev~r. ·a recent U.S. retirees need more generous
Supreme Court ruling in an bridge policies until they are
unrelated case compelled her eligible for Medicare , the
to change course, she said in federal program that provides
a ruling Tuesday.
health benefits for more than
Brody prohibited the 40 million older and disabled
agency from acting, though , Americans.
until the AARP has a chance
;,We think that retirees of
to appeaL
all ages could end up, inadA lawyer for the AARP. vertently, having a reduction
which sued on behalf of sev- 'or Jo ~s of benefits if the
eral members who saw their AARP position were to prehealth benefits decline when vail," said Paul Dennett, a
they turned 65, said an appeal vice president at the
.' is'likely.
American Benefits Council,
EEOC Chairwoman Cari which represents many large
We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
M.
Dominguez
said U.S. companies.
r.
Wednesday the rule change is
Between 10 million 'and 15

Proposed freedom museum dropped
from World Trade Center memorial site

.

~udge:

.

Companies can offer two-tier retiree health packages

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Thursday, September 29,

.

2005

PageA3

BY THE BEND
Wife shygiene habits get under mans skin

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

20a5

DEAR ABBY: I have been
port and doesn' t feel a need
Public meeting at 6 ·p.m. at Special singing by Country married to a wonderful
to pay it.)
the Tuppers Plains firehouse. Gospel and others. Linda woman, "Leora," for 35
I realize Anita is doing t~s
Officers for the Tuppers Damewood. pastor.
years. We have five grown
. Saturday, Oct. l
to embarrass John ·and me,
SYRACUSE -Syracuse children any parent would be
PORTLAND - Lebanon Plains baseball and softball
and I don 't know what to do
Township Trustees will meet · program for the 2006 season Church of th e Nazarene's proud of. Throughout our
when she start &gt; these· "conDear
will
be
discussed
and
pfficers
first
Biker
Sunday,
II
a.m.
!1Jarhage,
I
worked
while
versations'' I've ne ve r met
at 7:30 p.m. at the township
elected.
Abby
Free food, music, 'fellowship. Leora took care of the ch ilbuilding.
anyone so cynical. defensive.
MIDDLEPORT
Pastor Steve Combs of Leave dren. I retired about three
·
Monday, Oct. 3
verballY abusive and in need
.
Middleport
Lodge
363,
a
Mark
Ministries
at
Grove
Now
I
am
home
months
ago
.
of coJJnseling. She's also a~
SYRACUSE
-Sutton
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the city Church of the Nazarene with Leora all the time a·nd
alcoholic in denial , but sli~
Towns~.iP trustees, 7 p.m. at
Masonic ._
Temple. will speak. ' Information at have just realized that she
doesn't have to be drunk tfl
the Syracuse village hall .
Refreshments.
992-7138 or 992-2514.
bathes only about three three months ago and now start these conversatioOJi.
COOLVILLE
CHESTER
Chester
RACINE - Mt. Moriah time s a week . This has not you ' re at · home with your This is one of the reasons
Community education meetCouncil,
Daughers
of
Church
of God. Mile Hi II, only upset me, hut also di s- wife "'all the time." If ever I Anita doesn 't ha ve custocly
ing about Medicare 's new
will
meet
at
7
p.m.
America,
Racine, will present skit, gusts me!
heard abou 1 someone who of their minor children.
coverage for prescription
at
the'
Masonic
building.
"Will
You
be
There?"
at
the
6
I
know
she
used
Jo
bathe
needed to get out and find a
l ha ve tried ignoring her.
drugs, I to 3 p.m. at the
in
spection
.
will
be
Annual
p.m. service at the church.
the childre n every night when hobby, do vol unteer work or but she'l l stand there and talk
'Coolville United Methodist
they were little, · and she start a new business, it is yo u. to the back of my head. and
Church. The event is being held and members are
reminded
to
wear
white.
inSisted they bathe regularly For the sake of your mar- the comments get incrL· asing ~
hosted by Arcadia Nursing
growmg
up. When I asked riage, please stop obsessing ly personal and intrusive.
Center.
Contact
Kathy
h~r
abo
ut.
this, she ,;aid she about your wife's hygiene.
How can I stop Anita in her
McDaniel with questions,
Friday, Sept. 30
0 h~
s
"always
bathed
when
she
people
with
oily
ski
n.
For
tracks
EMBARRASSED
7'40-667-3 156.
MIODLEPORT - Free
needed
it
,"
and
that
might
be
.
or
in
professions
where
their
IN PENNSYLVANI A
RACINE . -Racine
·Wednesday, Sept. 28
dinner at the Middleport
nightly
or
not.
She
attribsk
in
becomes
sweaty
or
DEAR EMBARRASSED: .
Village Council, regular sesPOMEROY- Community Church of Christ Family Life
utes
this
to
being
raised
on
a
soiled.
a
daily
bath
is
a
must.
One way to stop lier would be ·
sion, 7 p.m., . Racine prayer service, 7 p.m., Center, 4 :30 to 6:30 p.m.
ranch
where
water
was
However,
for
people
with
dry
to turn around. look her in th~
Municipal Building.
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Everyone welcome .
scarce.
Abby,
we
Ji
ve
quite
or
delicate
skin,
a
sponge
eye
and say. "Anita. I know
Sunday, Oct. 2
Saturday, Oct. 1
comfortably.
The
co,;t
of
bath
may
do
the
job
very
you are bitter and angry, but
PORTER
Earthen · POMEROY _ Pet ble~sis
not
an
issue.
well.
If
you
haven't
noticed
water
·
the
kind of underwear he
Vessels will · be singing at , ing in honor of the feast of St.
until
now
that
your
wife
didI
tolc:l
her
that
people
have
chooses is up to him and Js
6:30 'IIp.m.
· 0 fA SStSSI
· ·, 1: 15 p.m.,
.Clark
C Chapel Francts
to
bathe
daily
in
order
to
be
day.
it's
time
n't
bathe
every
Freew1 Bapttst
longe r your bu sin e". So
hurch.
parking lot of Grace
She
asked
if
I
could
for
'you
to
ask
yourself
why
clean.
Thursday,. Sept. 29
PORTER - Special ser- Episcopal Church. The bless- ever tell she hadn 't bathed you are digging for trouble. knock it off." And then ;mile.
DEAR ABBY: I'll be brief.
SYRACUSE- W:ildwood vice at Clark Chapel Free . ing pf pets and animals is
At
the
rare
you'
re
going,
you
daily
and
the
answer
is
no,
Can
a person get an ST.Ij&gt;
Garden Club will meet at Will Baptist Church, 6:3Q open to the public.
but
I
know
now,
and
it
bothcould
wind
.up
with
more
from oral sex 0 - NEEDS
noon at the home of Shirley p.m. with singing by Duane
lhan separate bedrooms.
ers me .
TO KNOW IN ORAN(iE
· Hamm who will conduct a and . Diane Bing, preaching
DEAR
ABBY:
My
fian
ce,
tell
her
that
people
COUNTY
.
Please
program on gourds. Take by Pastor Clyde Ferrell.
"Jahn
,''
wears
women's
have to bathe daily to remove
DEAR
NEEDS
Tb
KYGER - Benefit si ng
potluck dish for luncheon. ·
and
hose.
He
likes
underwear
cells.
etc.
She
dead
skin
KNOW:
Ye
s.
and
that
is
why
Friday, Sept. 30
for · the Fall Harvest Gospel
Saturday, Oct. l
VINCENT
-Lester seems to think if I couldn 't it, and I realize it doesn ' t it is so important to know th~
HARRISONVILLE - The Sing 7 p.m. at the Old Kyger
Harri sonville Lodge 411 will Free Will Baptist. Church. Seaman will observe hi s 90th tell for 35 years that she has- mean he 's gay. That 's not the person and hi s or her health
status before beginning a ,;e~­
meet at 7:30p.m. at the hall. Singers. Glorybound quartet, birthday on Sept. 30. Cards n't bathed every day the topic problem. ·
His
ex-wife,
~'A
nita
,"
is
not
an
issue.
It's
getting
to
ual relationship .
Narrow Way, Proclaim, may be sent to him at 10720
Refreshments .
insists
on
starting
conversathe
point
that
l
don'
t
want
'to
Dear Abby is wrilletr by .
·Teresa Preston, and Brian and State Route 550, Vincent,
Sunday, Oct. 2
with
me
about
it
,
prefersleep in the same bed with tions
Abigail Van Buren, also
Ohio 45784.
GALLIPOLIS - The Oh- Family Connection.
her
knowing
she
hasn
't
ably
within
earshot
of
others.
known as ]eamte Phillips, ami
Thursday, Oct. 6
Sunday, Oct. 2
KAN Coin Club will hold its
day.
SEPAShe
asked,
in
front
of
their
bathed
that
· was founded by her mothe11
POMEROY - Roy Miller
annual fall coin show from 9
BIOWELL Earthen
attorneys
after
a
recent
court
RATE
BEDROOMS
IN
THE
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Holiday Vessels will be singing at 7 will observe hi s 90th birthday
hearing,
if
I
"liked"
the
fact
FUTURE
Abby at www.lJearAbby.c~
Inn.
p.m. at the Springfield on Oct. 6. Cards may be sent
DEAR
.
SEPARATE
BEDthat
John
wears
women
's
silk
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
to him at 450!!0 Baum
Monday, Oct. .3
Baptist Church.
1 (S he owes child sup- Angeles, CA 90069. ·
panties
ROOMS:
You
say
you
retired
Add'ition Road, Pomeroy,
RACINE
Racine
POMEROY
·
Chapter 134, OES, 7:309 Homecoming at South Bethel Ohio 45769.
POMEROY - Kathleen
p.m. at the hall. Plans for Community- Church, Silver
installation, white elephant Ridge across from Eastern Scott will celebrate her IDOth
sale, and refreshments fol- High School. Sunday school birthday on Oct. 6. Cards
lowing .
.9 · a.m., church service. 10 may be sent to her at 32300
COOLVILLE- Joan Cole Charlolle Norton for best Members participated in ' a
a.m., lunch at noon, after- Minersville Road, Pomeroy,
Thesday, Oct. 4
was named weekly best · monthly and best quarterly Chinese aucti01i fund-rai·ser. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS
noon service. 1.30 p.m . Ohio 45769.
at weight loss and to Jodi Bailey
weight-loss
winner
The group meets every
Tuesday's meeting of TOPS for her. six -weeks-straight Tuesday at Torch ' Baptist
~Take Off Pounds Sensibly) weight loss.
Church: Weigh-in is from
#OH
2013.
Plans were discussed 5:15 to 6:\5 p.m. with a meeL'
Chapter
Coolville. There were 20 regarding October parades in ing at 6:30. For information.
Coolvi lle aild Tuppers Plains call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
RACINE - The Oscar
Attending were Bill Hysell, Middleport; Sherry, Shawn, members present.
Recognition was given to and the upcoming fall rally. or attend
a free meeting.
.
,,
Reed/Charles Hysell reunion Roger and Jane Hysell , Billy Mckenzie and Rebecca Mace,
as held recently at Star Mill Hysell , Gary Hysell, Cody all of Nelsonville ; Kay
park in Racine. ·
Hysell, Mary Johnson, Ryan Spencer, Kyle Johnson of
Officers were reelected for Caruthers, Charlotte Hysell , Syracuse; Billie, Eric and
another year. ·Prizes were Kathy and Kasey Roush and Mikey Sayre, and Destiny
given to Flossie Hysell, the Rachael Pli ss, all of Pomeroy ; Hysell, all of Racine; Larry
oldest; Charlotte Hysell, the David a·nd Nancy Haggy, Hysell and Autumn . Kurl of
Coming
youngest,' and Larry Hysell Mike and Joy Hysell. Josh. Columbus. Mary Lynd of
Audrey
and Portsmouth, Mark Johnson ,
who traveled the farthest. Courtney
Cody Hysell won · the door Charlotte Hyse ll and Flossie Mason. W. Va.; Joe McClure,
Leon, W. Va. : Tom and Barb
prize. A moment of prayer Hysell, all of Rutland.
was held by Julie Hysell. A
Paul, Debbie, Nathan, and Varian , .West Columbia, W.
dinner was served and the 49 Gabriel Hysell , Mi sty Cline, Va.; Bobbie Adkins, Amanda
attending enjoyed fellowship Jessie
Hoffman,
Betty Boster. and Anthony Borden
Johnson, Boti Johnson, all of of Point Pleasant, W. Va.
in the afternoon.

Public meetings

Other events

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

Losers honored at TOPS meeting

Reed~ Hysell

families hold reunion

Briday, October 1st
to

Home National Bank

Chester Council honors grandparents
.

'

CHESTER
day
was
Grandparents
observed when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America. met at the Masonic
building in Chest~r.
Thelma White , councilor,
presided at the meeting with
the Lord's Prayer and·pledges
to the American and Christian
flags being given.
Ju.nior past councilor
Marge Fetty, protem, read
the · 55th Psa lm. Esther·
Smith, chairman of the good
of the order committee, had
grandparents stand · for
recognitio!) . She·read a poem
to them and then presented
gifts to ~ary Jo Barringer,
the youngest grandparent,
and Thelma White·, the most

grandchildren.
Fleming. Inspection was
Reported ill were Esther announced for Oct. 4 at 7:30
Hardin in a Columbus hospi- .p.m. and members were
tal, Opal' Hollon and Faye reminded to wear white.
Quarterly birthdays were
Kirkhart, both home recuperating from surgery. and Helen -· observed. Gifts were at each
Wolf at Kimes Nursing Home place and a birthday cake was
at Athens recuperating from served ..Celebrating were Julie
surgery. Officers' reports Fleming, Barbara Sargent,
were given..
Jean Wel sh, Doris Grueser,
Charlotte Grant, represe'lita- Laura Mae Nice, and Mary K'.
tive to state session, gave a Holter. Door prizes were won
report, and financial secre- by Jo Ann Ritchie, lnzy
tary, Esther Smith read a Newell, Everett Grant, and
thank you from Helen Taylor, Nathan Biggs. Others attendstate councilor, thanking ing were Betty Biggs, Gary ,
members that assisted at state Holter, Sandra White, and
session.Tne ways•andmeans Marge Fetty. The Past
committee held a silent auc- Councilors Club will meet on
tion. Refreshments were Oct. 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the
served by Erma Cleland, home of Ruth · Smith with
Dorothy Myers and Julie Doris Grueser ~s co-hostess.

OH·
·

third. Darla's Big Indian Chili
made . by Darla and Doug
Swann. In the business category tlrst went to K92 The Frog;
second to Denise Bunce. attorney, and third to JetT Circle of
the Union Chili builders.
Fuzzy Pete's team of June Ann
· and Pete Peyton ~on the

..

People's Choice award for the
third year in a row.
Cookoff chairman was .
Belva Workman with 14
teams competing. She s.iid the
teams. judges. Mason VFW.
and Kathy VanMeter can be
credited with the success of
the cookoff.

Presents.... , .
A Coirt:and

·

Curte~cy Exhibition

· ' \.• : ~;..t,of*'""·;' ' ,. ·.-· Old Currency
,\tl, ' :

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The Qaily Sentinel • ,Subscribe today • 992-2155

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Door Prizes Every Hour

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WINNERS ANNOUNCED
POMEROY - Grandma's
Chili made by the team of
Margaret Gum and Lori
Patterson. took tirst' place in
the annual chili cookoff held
at the Sternwheel Festival.
Other winners were second
place BBJ, Bob Workman,
Jeannie Arms and Bob Anns:

COIN . CL

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Racine

Syracuse

740-949-2210

740-992-6333

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•.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel·

The .Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallys~ntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

..•
•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

..

• Congress shall make no law respecting an
·'establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
~f speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Coverage
rfizltels' nothing short ofoutstanding
Dear Editor:

· I w'" the Meigs High School golf coach for 17 years and
hi1ve been the tournament director for the Riverside High
School Invitational for the past 12 years.
Mr. Bryan Walters of The Daily Sentinel spans staff covered high school golf for Meigs, Eastern and Southern this
season. His coverage was nothing shan of outstanding. His
recent report regarding the 15-team invitational was informative. timely and very well written. His two action photos
would rival any spans photos in the country.
Although mahy might consider interscholastic golf to be a
"minor" sport, Mr. Walters obviously does not. His effons and
d~dication are greatly appreciated by area players, parents and
supporters of high school golf.
John T&lt;raw.,czyn
Meigs High School

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day of 2005. There are
93 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History:
On Sept. 29. 1978, Pope John Paul I was found dead in his
Vatican apartment just over a month after becoming head of the
Roman Catholic Church.
·6n this date:
·
' In 1789, the' U.S. War Department established a regular army
with a strength of several hundred men.
In 1829. London's reorganized police force, which became
known as Scotland Yard. went on duty.
In 1918, Allied forces scored a decisive breakthrough of the
Hindenburg Line during World War I.
· In 1943, General Dwight D. Eisenhower and Italian Marshal
Pietro Badoglio signed an armist1ce aboard the British ship
Nelson off Malta.
~ In 1955, a one-act version of the .Anhur Miller play "A View.
From the Bridge" opened in New York. (Miller later turned it
into a two-act play.)
,
In 1979. Pope John Paul U became the first pope to visit
!Jl!land as he arrived for a three-day tour.
In 1982, seven•people in the Chicago area died after unwittingly taking Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with
cyanide.
· In 1988. the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Cape
Canavet'al, Fla.. marking America's return to manned space
!light following the Challenger disaster.
·In 1994. the House voted to end the age-old pructice of lobby,ists buying meals and entenainment for members of Congress.
Five years ago: Israeli riot police stormed a major Jerusalem
sllrine and opened fire on stone-throwing Muslim worshippers,
killing four Palestinians and wounding 175.
One year ago: A video surfaced showing Kenneth Bigley, a
. British hostage held by Iraqi militants, pleading for ~elp between
the bars of a makeshtft cage. (Bigley was later killed.) The privately built SpaceShipOne rocket plane hurtled past the edge of
eanh 's atmosphere, completing the first stage of a quest to win
the $10 million Ansari X Prize.
Thought for Today. "If you want work well done. select a busy
man - the other kind has not time." - Eiben Hubbard,
American author and publisher (1856-1915).

.

-

.

'

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: Reader Services · ·

(USPs 213·9601
·
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

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accura'te II you knoW of an error m a
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Thursday, September 29,

2005

~
KOI"dacke

pages of the newspaper, for
everything we do and say."
· I once wrote an · article
saying that you'd expect a
president to come from
Arkansas about as soon as
a great international leader
would
emerge
from
Bolivi a. 1 wrote that in
1991 , and Bill Clinton
promptly did it. Can light ning strike twice?
Odder still, bqth Clinton
and Huckabee hail from
Hope,
Ark.
Michael
Barone, in his" Almanac of
American
Politics,"
observed that Huckabee
stayed there ami, whereas
ClinLOn
went
to
Georgetown and Yale Law
School, Huckabee attended
Ouachita
Baptist
University
and
Southwestern
Baptist
Theological Seminary on
his way to becoming a
politicwn .
Clinton now has a reputation for being nearly the
wo,rld's all-time champion
natural politician, but
Huckabee comes off as
.being just as personable,
accomplished and emp'athetic as Clinton did as ·
governor - · and without
the baggage of venomous
hatred from local enemies.
Huckabee gets high
marks from local journalists and political scientists
for the state's absorption of
recent hurricane victims,
his outreach to AfricanAmericans and Hispanics,
and willingness to take
risks to improve education
and raise· taxes to pay for
it.
On the. other hand, there
seems to be something in
Arkansas·
water
that
inspires a Clintonesque
detachment from reality.
Huckabee told me that he

won 49 percent of the governors to emulate his
African-American
vote Arkansas program and, as
during hi s 2002 ·re-election he says, "change the cui·
cont~st
with then-State ture" on obesity the way
Treasurer Jimmie Lou it's previously been done
Fisher, ,a weak candidate on smoking and litter.
After a number of "eduwhom he managed to beat'
cation
presidents," the
by only a 53 percent to 47
United States needs a
percent margin overall.
One journalist called his "health care president"
claim "fantastical." And who will expand insurance
while political scienti&amp;t Jay coverage, improve quality
Barth of Arkansas' Hendrix and bring down costs that
College credited Huckabee threaten Jo bankrupt priwith winning endorsements vate companies and govfrom some major black ernment treasuries .
On hot-button issues
Democrats and campaigning with Baptist eloquence · beyond health, Huckabee is
in black churches, he an amalgam. He 's strongly
looked up election data that pro-life, has been a highchallenges ·
Huckabee's profile backer of "covenant
. marriage" (w\lich sets strict
claim.
In two heavily black limits on when couples
Little Rock precincts, 91 may divorce), opposes
stem-cell
and 92, Huckabee certainly embryonic
did better than then-GOP research and supports
Sen. Tim Hutchinson did in President Bush on the Iraq
Hutchinson 's losing bid War. But he leans toward
against
then-Attorney McCain 's postUon on
General Mark Pryor. Still, immigration, which is to
he lost those precincts allow illegals to obtain
badly, 366-71 and 508-74, work permits and eventual
legal status.
respectively.
As NGA chairman, he's
Huckabee won 43 percent of the vote in majori- also opposed Bush 's agenty-black Lee County and da on Medicaid - Bush
49 p~rcent in Phillips wants funding cuts to drive
C.ounty in the Mississippi reform, the governors want
delta, but did so largely by the reverse - and on the
of
providing
winning most of the coun- means
ties'' white votes, Barth Medicaid to hurricane
evacuees.
said.
Politically, Huckabee has
"He certainly does a lot
better
with
African- had his ups and downs in
Americans than
most his home state. His poor
Southern Republicans do," showing in 2002 followed
Barth said. "And he tries his wife's effort to run for
harder. But I'd say he prob- secretary of state, as well
ably won 18 to 20 percent, as controversial pardons he
granted to dangerous felons
not '49 percent."
That said, Huckabee and allegations that he
deserves credit for making accepted expensive gifts
himself into a health from friends.
On the other hand, he
expert. starting by ' losing
enjoyed
a 67 percent
110 pounds and writing a
book about it, then launch- approval · rating in the
ing "Healthy Arkansas," a Arkansas Poll last year,
64
percent .
multiphase
program including
designed to encourage among .African-Americans.
weight loss, exercise and Among other comparisons
check-ups to ward off,..,dis- that might be made to
ease.
- I
Clinton. he's a comeback
He recently unveiled his kid.
".Healthy America" cam.(Morton Kondracke is
paign as NGA president at execurive editor of Roll
the National Press Club, Call, the newspaper of
and he's trying to get other Capitol Hill.)

l

MIDDLEPORT
A
Middleport youth was transpaned by Lifetlight to the trauma center at Huntington-Cabell
Hospital Wednesday night after
being struck by a car at the
intersection of Sycamore and
General Haninger Parkway in
Middleport.
· According to Middlepon

'lammyHutton

LANGSVILLE - Tammy K. Wright Hutton, 35,
Langsville, died Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2005, as the result of a
motorcycle accident.
She was born Nov. 24, 1969, in GallipoJis, daughter of the
late Sharon Whitlatch Wright and Michael (Lynn) Wrighf of
Middleport. She was a graduate ()f Meigs High School and an
avid motorcyclist, taking pan in all local fundraising runs.
She is survived by her husband, Terry Hutton; her daughter,
Sharo11 Hutton; her paternal grandmother, Jean Wright; her Animal rescuer charged
maternal grandparents, James and Virginia Whitlatch; brothPAINESVILLE (AP) - A
ers, Jason (Kristen) Wright and Caleb Shuler; her mother-in- woman who authorities say
law and father-in-law, Minnie and Charlie Young; a special was an animal rescuer has
aunt and uncle, Sahdy and Bennie Wright; and several more been charged with abandonaunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews, sisters-in-law and ing 33 kittens in two parks in
brothers-in-law.
•
nonheast Ohio.
Besides her mother, she was preceded in death by a brother,
Lake Metroparks rangers
David Michael Wright, and her paternal grandfather, Lloyd charged Michelle M. Murray,
"Poppy" Wright.
25, with abandoning domesA graveside service will be at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 1, tic animals, a second-degree
2005, at Beech Grove Cemetery with Rev. Glenn Rowe offi- misdemeanor.
ciating. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at the
She is scheduled to appear
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Hop;\j).
in Painesville Municipal
The family asks that memorial contributions be made for Coun on Oct. 13. She faces
funeral expenses .
· 90 days in jail and a $750 fine
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- if convicted.
homes.com.

The most telling description of the Bush administration to date may have
come from a While House
aide who used the term
"reality-based''
as
an
Gene
insult. According to jourLyons
nalist Ron Suskind. who
described the incident in a
2004 article, the aide
mocked the stuffy, pedantic, presumably liqeral with a government .of ideoview " that solutiens (to logues and cronies, w·ho
political problem s) emerge when things get tough,
from .. . judicious study of sound awfully like Marxist
· apparatchiks chanting the
discernible reality."
"That's not the way the party line.
Actually. that line's gotworld really works anymore," he added. " We're ten somewhat muddled
an empire now. and when since Hurricane · Katrina .
we act , we create our own With President Bush jetreality. And while you're ting back and forth to the
Gulf Coast in a frantic
studying that reality effort to show concern.
judiciqusly, as you will we'll act again , creating &lt;.iOP robo-pundits in the
. other new realities. which n ~ tion 's great metropolitan
you can study too. and newspapers have taken to
that's how things will sort . portraying FEMA's failures
out. We're history' s actors as an inevitable result of
... anq you. all of you, will . government ineptitude.
Funny. that 's not what
be left to just study what
they
thou ght about Bush's
we ao."
Well. hi story 's actors are utopian sc heme to democsuddenly hunting . for a ralize the Middle East. But
revi sed script' According hold that thought.
New York ·Times columto The Washington Post.
with tlie president 's poll nist David Brooks even
numbers sinking , White resoned to the old Soviet
House "(a)ides who. never device of calling White
betrayed se lf-doubt now House critics mentally ill ,
talk in private of failures describing Democrats as
selling the American peo- "psychologically aggrievple on the Iraq War, the . ed." "wrapped in their own
presidem' s Social Securil y rage ," ·and displaymg
plan and hi s response to " anger in almost climcal
form ."
Hurri cane Katrina."
I gue ss nobody he loved
We ' ve had .quite ~ nough
drowned.
sale smanship. thank you.
Meanwhile.
a
lOp
Historicall y a pragmatic
Republi
can
close
to
the
people resi stant to abstract
Wh'ite
Hou
se"
blamed
thi
ideology. Americans wa nt
"actors" who resolve the fir s! lady. It' s hard to
nation 's prohlems. no1 imagine anything more
asmme.
or
thespians. Many are wak - crave n
According
to
this
brave
ing to the reality that a
one-party
Republi ca n soul. who spoke anonyregime has left us stuck mously to Was hington Post

reporters, " Laura Bush was dictated, getting rid of a
among those counseling Treasury Secretary (Paul
Bush to change his cowboy O'Neill) who correctly pre. i!)lage during the final four dicted the war would cost
ye ars." Mr. Anonymous tens of billions more than ,
thinks the president needs White House, philosophers
to get his swagger back.
dreamed, rejecting detailed
At the expense of sound- State Department plans for
ing hopelesslY. old-fash- rebuilding Iraq in favor of
ioned, I'd suggest Bush pie-in-the-sky sch~mes to
has less of an image prob- turn the fractured nation
lem than a (dread word) into a corporate utopia,
..:reality problem. Nobody turning a $300 billion budneeds a cowboy when his get surplus into a $550 bilhouse is under water. Nor lion (and . counting) deticit
will all the swaggering through reckless tax cuts ...
Such a list could· go on
!light deck photo ops in
' indefinitely.
the' world balance the bud- almost
get or extricate U.S. troops Slashing FEMA's budget,
from an increasingly grim, and replacing its experienced professional .staff
chaotic mess in Iraq.
The Bush administra- with · hacks and cronies
tion's fundamental problem wasn't a mistake; it was
is that it has substituted absolutely characteristic of
ideology for practicality the Bush administration's
and loyalty for competence vision of government as a
at every turn. It's running panisan spoils system.
the country like a busi'ness ,
Even . worse than its
all right. Unfortunately, reliance upon abstract idethat busine ss is Enron, ology has been the White
· combining fantastical theo- · House's remarkable inabilries and astonishing greed. ity to admit error. Partly
Because the Republicans due to Republican-style
also control both houses of political correctness, partly
Congress and have voted . to the cult of personality
in lockstep on virtually surrounding
President
every key issue. partisan Bush himself whose
dogma ha s taken prece- fabled "gut instincts" were
dence above all competing supposed to make up for
values.
his manifest intellectual
The result has been mis- shortcomings
the
management and ,incompe- administration finds it ·
tence on an heroic scale: almost impossible to adjust
ignoring the terrorist threat to altered circumstances.
until Sept. II because AI · They ' ve created their
Qaeda was a "Clinton own reality all right. Alas,
issue." driving the country the rest of us have to live
into war in Iraq by conjur- there, too.
ing imaginary nuclear
. (Arkansas
Democrat:· mushroom clouds." forc - Gazette co'/um11ist Gene
ing the · retirement of mili- LyoriS is a llatiOI!al magatary leaders (Gen . Eric zine award winner and coShinseki ) who warned that aurlwr of " Tile Huming of
pacifyin g Iraq . would tile
President" • (St .
require hundred s . of thou- Martinl· Press. 2000). You
sand s more troop s than can e-mail Lyo11s at geneneQ-conse rvative theory lyons @sbcg /obal.11e'r.)

\

•

with abandoning kittens
Murray could not be reached
for comme11t Wednesday night.
No home listing wa~ available.
Murray told 'the rangers
that she left the kittens they
found last week because she
was moving and having personal problems.
Chief
Ranger Mike Burko said:
Candace Henzel, executive
direCtor of the Lake County
Humane Society, said Murray
came to the society on Aug.
16 and offered to take any
animals that were going to be
killed.

Merchants

Deaths
AHred Windon
POMEROY -Alfred ll. Windon, 117 Wehe Terrace
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2005, at his residence:
Arrangements are under the direction of Ewing Funeral
Horne in Pomeroy and will be announced upon completion.

Local Briefs
Book signing
POMEROY - Local author and Meigs County native
Michele Zirkle Starcher will be signing copies of her book
"The Ornery Angel" from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. thts Saturday at the
Pomeroy L1brary. The book which is described as part insfirational non-fiction, part teenage self-help is priced at ·$ 3.
Starcher lives in Clifton, W.Ya. and is a language ans teacher
at Waham.a Junior and Senior High School.

Tracking

For the Record

from PageA1

Highway Patrol

for use by those trained in the
search and rescue operations:
Deputy Scott Trussell , Randy
Arnold of Common Pleas
Coun, David Dowler; Larry
Byer and Chris Shank of the
Department of Job and ·
Family Services and David
Warner of the Prosecuting
Attorney's Office.
Those who join the program are equipped with a
personalized radio transmitter worn as a wristband. The
band emits a unique tracking
signal every second. 24 hours
a day. Special tracking equipment' uses a variety of directional antennas and a receiver
·to pick up the signal in the
event the wearer of the wrist-·
band is missing.
The searches begin ·in a
general area where the person
may be missing, and the sig-

RACINE - Misty K: Porter, 33, 46996 Morning Star
Road, Racine, was cited for failure to yield from a private
drive by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
following a two-vehicle accident Tuesday on County Road
30 (Morning Star).
.
Troopers said Poner was southbound in a private drive, twotenths of a mile east of U.S. 33, at 8:45 a.m. when she attempted to turn east onto Morning Star and collided with an eastbound cardriven'by Billie J. Cunningham, 38,47381 Morning
Star Road, Racine·.
Damage to both vehicles was functional.
CARPENTER - Danny L. Sams, 50, Stewan, was cited for
a stop sign violation by the patrol following .a one-vehicle
accident Monday on County Road I0 (State Farm) at the
intersection with Ohio 143.
Troopers said Sams was westbound on State Farm at 9:33
p.m. when he failed to stop for the stop sign at the intersection
itild struck an embankment. The van he drove then ovenurned
on its top.
The vehicle had functional damage .

•••

CHESTER - Larry G. Johnson, 61, 35744 New Lima
Road, Rutland, was cited for fail~re to control by the patrol
following a one-car accident .Monday on Ohio 7 near Chester.
Troopers said Johnson was northbound at 12:20 p.m. when
he lost control on wet roadway, went off the left side of the
road and struck a ditch.
The car had disabling damage.

•••

POMEROY - Beverly L. Codner, 74, 51260 Hoback
Road, Racine, was cited for assured clear distance by the
eatrol following a two-vehicle accident Monday on Ohio 7 at
the intersectioo with Ohio 124.
Troopers said COdner was southbound on 7 at 11:15 a.m.
when she failed to slow in time and struck the rear of a car driven by Linda K. Hirst, 35, 33560 Beech Grove Road, R,utland,
who had slowed to make a right turn onto 124.
Damage to both vehicles was functional.

Dolls ·
from PageA1
Aging to begin at 10 a.m. on
Oct. 22 in front of the Senior
Citizens Center. Auctioneer
Dan Smith will donate his

time to the fund raiser.
Donations for the auction
can be taken to the Senior
Center. Larger items can be
pickt;d up. Everything except
clothes will be accepted. For
more information or to
arrange an appointment for
pickup call 992-2161.

Increase

Hutton, 35, Langsville, was
pronounced de!ld at the scene
by ·MeigS' County Coroner
from Page A1
Dr. Douglas Hunter after the
motorcycle on which she was
"It is not the intention of a passenger struck a deer and
either agency to solely issue went off the left side of the ..
road, leaving driver Terry L.
citations, however, both will Hutton, 42, Langsville, in the
be strictly enforcing all traffic eastbOund lane of 124.
laws espectally those that are
Tammy Hutton landed in
known to be traffic crash caus- the westbound lane of the
!~g violations," Grau said. · highway and was struck by a
We .are stnvmg to educate the pickup truck driven-by Allen
pubhc and gam voluntary D. Stacy, 62, Langsville, the
compliance. We encoura~;e patrol reponed.
'
anyone who observes erratic
Terry Hutton was airlifted
or aggressive driving behav- to
Cabell
Huntington
iors or an impaired driver to Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.,
contact either agency."
by MedFlight. Stacy was not
The latest Meigs fatality injured.
occurred Tuesday at 9:05
Troopers said the coroner is
p.m. on Ohio 124, about assisting in the investigation
three miles west of Rutland.
to determine which crash
Troopers said Tammy K. caused the fatality.

from Page A1
R!;!gardless of · when the
equipment arrives and is
'assembled Burke says it will
be up before winter. .
The playground equipment
will include a jungle gym,
sea-saws, spring horses for
infants, benches along the
C'i'eek and a swing for adult s
to sit on while they watch the
children pla'ying.
Jim Vennari Park will also
get horse shoe pits for tournaments, a decorative fence. a
wheelchair accessible ramp
to the shelter house and limestone in the parking lot as
part of the grant.
Burke said the park will
have attractions for people
ages one s to 90.

HMC's Halstead receives award
GALLIPOLIS - Dawn
Halstead.
direclor
of
Volunteer Services and
Lifeline at Holzer Medical
Center, was recently recognized by Lifeline at th eir
headquaners in Fram1 ngham ,
Mass ., as a valuable member
of the Lifeline Academy. .
Founded in 1974. Lif~line
Systems is the large st person-·
al response service in North
America . The comj5:111y has
helped over live million at risk elders and their famili es
gain added peace of mind.
The Lifeline service provides
immediate help lui subscribers
24 hours per d~y. 365 days per
week, at the simple !ouch of a
lightweight, waterproof button
worn around the wrist or as a
pendant. The service is affordable at $30 a month with a onetime professional installatiOn
fee of only $20. Halstead
emphasized there are no longterm contracts.
•
"The Lifeline Academy,
established in 200 I, represents a membership of our
best 200 community partners
out of 2,500 natioitwide. who
continue to demonstrate an
extraordinary level of commitment to helping mo re

elders and their familie s benefi t from L1feline. while a1
the 'same lime serving the
goals of !heir organization to
li ve its mission succe,ssfully."
· explains Ronal d Fein s1e1n .
Pre s1dent iJnd CEO of
·Lifelin e SySiems. Inc.
"It is an honor to be recognized for doing work that I
love." said Halsiead , who has
shown consistent efforts 10
.educate both in1ernal and external networks of health and
communuy services prufesswnals on ihe value of Lifeline .
Hol zer Medi cal Center
Lifeline was established in
1983 and since ihen ha s
helped over 2.000 elders live
more safely in the1r own
home s. Today. calls are
received not only from health
profe ssionals. .but al so from
the adult children anJ fami lies of elders seeking ways to
redu ce the caretakinu load
and maximize 1heir sl1ow of
caring. Locally. Lifeline serVIces Galha , Jackson , Meigs
and Vmtnn counlies in Ohio.
and Mason Co unt y. W.Va.
To learn more about
Lifeline services. call Holzer
Medical Center 111 Galhp,olcs
al (740) 44fl-5056.
·

Hospital

Roush told Richards 1he
garage was on fire and helped
put it out.
On Tuesday the Pomeroy
from PageA1
Police Department was called
to
the residence of Alfred B.
Richards live on Rutland
Windon,
81, at 117 Wehe
Streei.
According to witness inter- Terrace, Pomeroy. at the
views Roush came to the request of Windon's acquainRichards' residence and tances who had not seen or
requested that his girlfriend heard from him in a few days.
Assistant Police Chief Joe
and her daughter be brought
home by Mrs . Richards Kirby ' Jr. alld Sgt. Ronald
"within the next hour." After Spaun entered Windon's resithat request was made Mr. dence to find Windon who
Richards told police that had expired. Pomeroy Police
Roush stayed on hi s propeny Chief Mark E. Proffitt said
for another "live or 10 min· Meigs rnunly Coroner.
utes" and then , according to Douglas Hunter found the
Mr. Richard's account, Roush death to/be of natural cau ses.
Donald W. Kirkbridge,
informed Mr. Rtchards that
Whipple. reported that a van
his garage was on fire .
Police also reported that he was driving owned by the

Park

Submitted photo

Dawn Halstead with a special award is Bnan Cavanaugh of
Lifeline Systems.

nal becomes louder on the
receiver as those searching
become closer to the missing
person. Those trained in the
rescue operation can locate a
missin·g person wearing a
wristband within an average
of 30 minutes:
In the past, the only option
available to locate those who
will likelv 1swe bonds In
wandered away· was a
finance construction
'
lengthy search. Sometimes,
"The county i&gt; vinuafly
the mtssing person•was found
debt .free , so bonds could be
· from Page A1
too late. Last year. an Athens
issued w11hou1 any problem,"
County man was found dead
Dav enport scud . "MCI!!S
in the gravel pits near Letart system and EKG machine s. County has one of I he lowest
Falls after he became disori- Sheets said other equipment
in the Veterans Memorial debt rates in the slate , and
ented and lost.
Those suffering from Hospital building is still suit- one of the be sl bond ralings."
Only bond s i&gt;Sued for the
Alzheimer' s Disease and able for use, while other
constru
ction
of
1he
other dementia disorders. equipment· will hliYC to be
Department
oi:Job
and
Family
Down's Syndrome, autism , purchased. He said the cost
traumatic brain injuries and of equipping a new hospital Services in 1991 remain outcognitive impairments, are all &lt;:ould be as much as $ 1 mil- standing, Davenpurt said.
"Once the site selecl ion is
candidates for enrollment in lion above construction costs.
Sheet s said the commission- identified. the 1ea l work will
the project, but must be evaluated by the Area Agency on ers do not know. at thi s time. begin," D&lt;l\ enporl s,rid :
what the cost will he in con- "Establishing a ne1v medi cal
Aging, at (809) 331-2644.
The Area Agency on Aging structing a new hospital. and campus to serve the count y
hopes to make additional trans- will not know until plans are will involve a lr&gt;l nf planning
mitters available later this year. completed. Commissioners and a lot of work. "

Pomeroy

(

•

Mayor Sandy lanmirelli, who
spoke on behalf of the investigating officer, the accident
occurred about 8 p.'m. She
said that apparently Charlie
Fitzpatrick, about 12, ran out
into the street in the path of a
vehicle.
·
The accident remains under
investigat'ion.

the big fire of 185 I.
One of the things Gerlach
emphasized was accuracy.
"Be sure everything is prefrom PageA1
sented accurately. Be who you
are.
Don't say 'Washington
One of the features proposed
by Gerlach to bring attention to slept here' if he didn't."
Also discussed was the posevents occurring over the years sibility of merchants creating
was using 4X4 colored posts picture displays ·for their winwith painted symbols marking dows showing early businessthe historical significance of es which occupied their buildthat location. The' posts should ings along with a printed hisbe different colors and str:jtegi- tory. Self-directed tours using
cally placed to attract attention, an informational guidebook
he suggested.
were proposed by Bobbie Karr
The possibility of using as an alteti'tative when guided
posts to mark the height of the tours were not scheduled.
Ohio River to give visitors a
Susan Clark Is chairman of
visual image of how high the the walking tour with planning
water came up in flood times to be continued at the Oct. 11
was proposed as well as meeting of the Merchants
marking the downtown area Association of which John
which burned down during Musser is president.

•••

--Political correctness, ·GOP-. style

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

Middleport youth struck by ~r

Obituaries

AnotherArkansas governor eyes presidential rnn
Conceivably there will be
two Republican presidential candidates in 2008
who'll make a top priority
of one of America's biggest
lo.ng-term domestic issues : ·
health care.
One; obviously, is Senate
Majority leader Bill Frist
(Tenn.). a he;~rt surgeon
who's an expert on everything from inle~tiou s diseases to health care information technology.
The other, less obviously.
is Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee. who came to the
issue by . a perso nal
"epiphany " -. being , told
by his doctor that he . was
so fat he'd be dead in 10
years - and now has made
disease prevention thr&lt;rogh
healthy lifestyles a major
theme of his governorship
and his chairmanship of the
National
Governors
Association (NGA) .
A long shot for the nomination in" a field currently
dominated by such · household names as Sen. John
McCain (Ari z.) and former
New York City Mayor
Rudy Giuliani as well as
Washington-based
pols
such as Frist and Sen. ·
George
Allen
(Ya.},
Huckabee nevertheless IS
testing the waters. And he
thinks he has advantages
over Frist and other senators.
"I think people are looking for a pragmati st who
can approach problem s and
solve them. rather than
simply deliberating on
th,em," he told me in an
interview last week.
"I think one advantage
governors have is that their
experience in government
is practical in solving
everyday
problems ,
whether it 's education or
road-building or cleaning
up the environment or promoting the state's economic development: job cre ation.''
Governors, he said, "are
not so much about making
speeches as making decisions. And we're held
accountable, I can assure
you, every day o0 the front

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 29, :zoos

The shelter hou se at Jim
Vennari Park currently is
open for all Meigs County
re sidents to enjoy. Including
those wishing to have yard
.sales (free of charge )'the first
weekend of the months of
May,
June,
August,
September and October.
The shelter house can be
reserved for reunions . and
parties only by . calling
Rutland's village office at
742-2121 though usi ng the
shelter how..e for yard sales is
on a tirst come first serve
basis.
·
There are no activities permitted at the shelter house
during services at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene .
Next year Burke hopes to
apply for another grant to
receive funding fo r basket ball couns and a public rest
room ncar Jim Vennari Park .

Gelco Corporalion was space al Fruth's Pharnw c·y
parked in the Ri1e-A1d when she stn1c·k a park('d
Pharmacy parking 101 on Sept. .;ehi cle owneJ hv Dwa1ne E.
21 while he worked inside the Allen, Pomerov.· Fra nk was
store. Kirkbridge said ~e Jmer cited for unproj;cr hacking. .
discovered hi s wh.istler radar
Terrv.
R.
Shreves.
detector missing from the van. Clarkshui·g, W.Va . failed to
Kenneth Hobbs, Pomeroy. . stop and struok a velm·l.c un reported that his residence at vcn by , Rebecca J. T11plett .
1747 Chester Road .haJ been Pomeroy. as Tii Jllell atlemptbroken into on Sept. 21 . Hobbs ed to pull oul ol I he parkmg
reported a DVD playe r, ,DVD lot al th~. Wil~lho ~s~ l at~.
and YHS movies and a pack- Sl'lreves "'·" cncd lr 1 .r-su rcd
age of tobacco had been stolen. cleared di stance.
.
..
l.fic
,'
de
All
mer
dents
rcma111
ts·
1
1
T1a 1 11 c1 1 . .
.
b 1 p under
Rhonda J. Frank. Pomewy 1nvcst1gat1on y 11e omeroy
was backing out of a parking Pollee Depanmenl .
'

Russell Stover
Serving you sinqe ~ 946 w1th Candy
quality prescription service
Greet1ng Cards
at competitive· prices.
Name Brand Colognes

We honor most third
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�PageA6 ·

WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday, September 29; 2005

Woman suicide bomber kills six
Military calls it new
tactic by insurgents
BY LEE KEATH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP Photo

Or. Tsunemi Kubodera. of the National Science Museum, speaks to The Associated Press about

agiant squid his researc h team photographed in the wild for the first tinw at the museum in

Tokyo Wednesday. His team · tracked the 8-meter (26-foot) long Archlteuthis as it attacked prey
at 900 meters (yards) deep off the coast of Japan's Bonin islands. Shown in the background
is another giant squid his team captured in 1996 in the Japan Sea.

Japanese scientists photograph giant
squid live in the wild for first tim~
Bv ERIC TALMADGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

:TOKYO -. When a nearly
20-foot long tentacle was
hauled abo,ird his research
ship, Tstmcmi Kubodera
knew he had something big.
Then it began sucking on hi s
hands . But what came next
excited him mu.&gt;t - hundreds of photos of a purplishreO ~ea· monster doing bailie

3 ,0()0 feet drep.
It was a rare 'giant squid, a
creature that unril then had
e luded ohservation in the
wild.
·
Kubodera 's team captured
pholos of the 26-foot-\ong
beast attacking its bait, then
·stru ggling for more than four
hours to get free. The squid
pulled so hard on the line
baited with shrimp that·.it severed one of its own tentacles.
" It was quite an ex peri ence
to feel the sti ll-fun ctionin g
tentacle on· my hand,"
Kubodcra. a researcher with
J.upun's

Naliont.~l

S&lt;.:ience

called "the holy grail" of. tentacles can be seen stretching out toward the bait,
deep-sea animals.
The results were nul grasping il and pulling away
announced until thi s week, in a ball. It is then seen strugwhen the y were· published in gling 10 get itself free of the
Wednesday's issue of the jig attached to the line under
British
journal,
the the remote-controlled camProceedings of the Royal era. The struggle took place
B:
Biological at a depth or between 2,000Society
Sciences. Kyoichi Mori , of 3,000 feel .
th e
Ogasawara
Whale
Kudodera said catching the
Walchtng Association, co- squid on film was the result
authored the study.
of I0 years of sleuthing.
Giani squid are the world 's
Me added that he had some
largest invertebrates, having help - . from a popu[ation of
been known to exceed 50 sperm whales.
feet. Kubodera said the one
"We knew that they fed on
he · call £h t on camera· was the squid, and we knew when
probably .an adult female. He and how deep they.dived," he
said the squid's tentacle said; "So we used them to
would not gro w back, but its lead us to the squid."
life was nol in dang~r.
Kudodera and hi s team
- The photos earned the team found the squid ;1bout I0
cheers from researchers · miles off the remote island of
around the world, largely Chichijima, which is .about
because of the difficulty of 600 mil es southeast of'
finding the mysterious giant. Tokyo~· They had been con"That's geuing footage of a duelin g expeditions in the
real sea monster," said Randy · areq for about three years
Kochevar, a deep-sea biolo- before they actually succeedgist with 1he Monterey Bay ed in making their first conAquarium in California. Wei at 9:15a.m. on Sept. 20
"Nobody has been able to last year.
.
observe a large giant squid
"We were very lucky," he
where i1 lives. There are peo- said. "A lol or research went
ple who said it would never into it, but still , others have
be done. It's really an incredtried and not succeeded.'.'
ible accomplishment."
The photos - taken with
strobe lighl s al 30-second
intervals - also shed some
new light on the animal's
behavior.
·'We (hink it is a much
more active predator than •
was · previously thought,"
Kubodera said Wednesday.
"It had previously been seen
as more lethargic. and nol as

Museum . loki The Ass'Ociated
Pres.s. "But 1he photo.s were
eve n better."
· For centuries .giant squ ids.
formally ca lled Arcl1iteuthis.
have been the stu ff of legends, appearing in tlie myths
of ancient Greece or attacking a submarine in Jules
Verne ' s "20,000 Leagues
UnJer the Sea.'' But they had
never been seen in their nat.. vral habitat, only caught in
fishing nets or washed ashore ,
dead or dying.
·. ' The Japanese team . cappi ng a three-year effort,
filmed the creature in
..
.
Seplcmber of last year. l"tnd- :-,Lrong."
In the pictures, the sq uid's
)ng what one researcher

DaimlerChrysler to cut 8,500 jobs
at its Mercedes group in Gennany
Bv MATT MOORE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

FRANKFURT. Germany
Gcrman American
au tomake r DaimlerChrysler
AG said Wednesday it will
cut 8.500 jobs at ils Mercedes
Car Group in a bid to return
the troubled brand 10 profitability.
The company said Ihe cuts,
whi ch will lake place in
Germany, witl come through
vulu ntary termination agreements over the nex t 12
monlhs a'nd result in charges
of &lt;J50 million euros t$1.11
billion ).
DaimlerChrysler said the
charges will be 'posted in the
fourt h quarter and ·aren ' t
expected to haniper the company 's
outlook.
The
atltomaker had sa id previously that it expects to beat last's
year operating prol"tl of 5.8
billion euros.
:The announcement from the
'l&gt;mpany's headquarters in
S)uttgart came after Dielcr
~tscile . who look control of
Mercede' this month and is ' et
to become chief executive of
DaimleJ{:hrysler at the beg in-·
n ing of 2()()(i, outlined Ihe plan
10 the company 's superv isory.
board in the United States curtier in the day.
: DaimlerChrysler shares
closed up nearly 4 percent at
45 .65 euros ($54 .95) in
.frdnkfurt trading. The ' company 's U.S.-traded shares
g'dined $1.89, or 3.6 percent,
fo $54.72 in early afternoon
....~-

.

4

'

BAGHDAD, Iraq . A
woman disguised in a man's
robes and headdress ~lipped
into a line of army recruits
Wednesday . and detonated
explosives strapped to her
body, killing at least six recruits
and wounding 35 - lhe firs!
known suicide attack by a
woman in lntq's insurgency.
The attack in Tal Afar near
the Syrian border appeared
aimed at showing that militants could still strike in a
town where U.S. and Iraqi·
offensives drove out insurgents' only two weeks ago. A
female suicide bomber n1ay
have been chosen because she
co uld get through checkpoints· al which women ure
rarely searched - then don
her disguise lo join the line of
men, Iraqi officials said.
Iraq's mosl no10rious insurgent group, ai-Qaida in Iraq.
claimed responsibility for the
attack in an lnlernel statemen!, saying it was . carried
out by a "blessed sister.:·
The bombing came a clay
after U.S. and Iraqi officials
announced their t't&gt;rces killed
the: second-in-command of alQaida in Iraq, Abdullah Abu
Azzain, in a raid in Baghdad
over the weekend. His death
has not slowed insurge nt violence, with at least 84 people
- including seven U.S. service members - killed in
auacks since Sunday.
President Bush warned violence will increa se in the
days leading up to a key Oct.
·15 referendum on a new constitution, a document that has
sharply divided Iraq's Shiite
Muslim majority . and the
Sunni minority that forms the
backbone of the insurgency.
"We can expect they ' ll do
everything in their power to
try 10 stop the march of freedom," Bush said. "And our
troops are ready for it."
The
U.S.
military
announced Wednesday that
two more American soldiers
and an airman were killed in
violence and a Marine was
killed by a non-combat gunshot. The deaths brought to
1.929 the number of U.S . serv,ice members who have died

Baghde~O

IRAQ

since the Iraq war started in
March 2003, according to an
Associated Press count.
In the holy city of Naja!·,
south of Baghdad, an attacker
set off an explosioA in the
home of a bodyguard of radical Shiite cleric .,Moqtada aiSadr on W~d n esday, killing
two people and woundmg
tive, al-Sadr aides and a hos'
pita! ofticial said.
In Ihe altack all he Tal Afar
army recruitment celller. the
female suicide bomber was
wearing a lradilional white
"di,hdasha" robe and a
checkered kaffiya headscarf
- both worn only by men to blend in with the •tine of
Iraqi applicants, Maj. Jamil ·
Mohammed 'Saleh said.
She detonated ex plosive s
· packed with metal balls and
hidden under her clothes,
Saleh said. Six recruits were
killed and 35 wounded, said
hospital oflicials in Tal Afar,
260 miles northwest of
Baghpad. ,
In a photo of the attacker's ·
head taken by Saleh and shown
to AP. the wommf appeared to
be in her curly 20s with dark
eyes, Iight skin and brownish
hair. Saleh said it was not
known whether she was Iraqi .
US. and Iraqi troops swept
through Tal Afar in a Sept. 812 offensive, with Iraqi
aulhorities claiming . nearly
200 suspected militams were
killed and 315 capiUred,
though many of the insurgents in the town escaped.
Since then the bulk of the
forces participating in the
offensive withdrew, 'though a
U.S. base remains.
It was the first known lime
that a woman has succeeded
in carry-ing out a suicide
bombing in Iraq s ince the
insL~rgency began, th ough it
was not the first attempt.
In March, fo ur women,
reportedly sent by the insur-

gent group Islamic Army in
Iraq, were caught in a town
south of the capital before
they could set off explosives
be.Jts they were wearing. In
the last days of Saddarfl
Hussein's re gime, just before
the April 2003 fall ltf
Baghdad, two women detonated their car near the city of
Haditha,
killing
three
American soldiers.
Gen. Ahmed Mohammed
Khalaf, the regional police
chiet', said insurgents were
exp loit ing -the fac t thai
women are not searched al
checkpoin ts "because of reli- ·
gious and social traditions ."
Women and children will
now be searc hed at Tal Afar
checkpoints, he said .
Still, the auack raised the
prospect of more women
bombers being used by .the
insurgency, a tactic difficjilt
to defend against, especially
during the referendum. Men
and women turned out in
·large numbers 10 vole in parts
of Iraq during January parliamentary
elections,
and
images of veiled women
flashing their ink-stained fin·
gers after voting became an
iconic symbol of hopes for
democracy.
Maj. Gen. Hus se in Ali
Kamal , intelligence head at
the Iraqi Interior Ministry,
said the Tal Afar attack "rings
dunger alarms" and requires
new techniques, including
increased searches of W(')men
al sensitive locations.
"Bullhi s will be a problem,
because women are taking
part in our new political life
and finding large numbers of
female security officers to .
search them is not an easy
process," he told AP.
In the pasl, women have
played only a supportive role
in the insurgency, helping
smuggle equipment or feed,
shelter and give medical
treatment to fighters, said
Nora Bensahel, an insurgency
expert wilh Rand Corp., a
nonprofit research group
based in Santa Monica, Calif.
"This could be a sign that
the insurgency is gelling
greater support among a larger segment of the population,
that women are getting more
militant and willing to take on
a greater role," Bensahel said.
"It could also be a sign that
the insurgents are having trouble tinding male recruits."

r-··-..- . _. _. _. _. . . _. _. -.. - . - . __..·-..- . - . -··-...- .

l

.

~_

.

~1

Reaeh 3·Counties

I
•

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-C9unty Mark~tplace!

trading on th ~ New York
'Stock Exchange.
The Mercedes division was
vnce
the
pride
of
DaimleJ{:hrysler, and industry
watchers are keen to see if
Zetsche can invigorate it the
way he did Chrys ler, which
posted its eighth straight quarterl y operating profit in July.
The gro up. which includes
the flagship Mercedes-Benz
models. as well as the Smart
muu-car
and
luxury
Maybach , employs some
I06.300 workers, 94.000 of ·
them in Germany.
The Mercedes group h ~s
strugg led thi s year, facing a
1.3-million . car recall amid
quality problems and owner
dissatisfaction. The company
had already said it was look- ••
ing at some 1.2. billion euros
($\.4 bi llion) in restructuring
costs th is year.
•
In July, the. Mercedes group
pus led a scant operating profit of 12 million euros ($14
million) 't't&gt;r th e ·second quar- ••
ter, a 98 percent drop from
703 million euros in the same
quarter last year. Revenue fell ••
4 percent to 12.4 billion euros
($ 14.93 billion).
The colnpany said the unil •
•
,sold 308. I00 cars, a 4 percent
drop from lasl year thai it
blamed on fewer ,sales by •
•
compact car business Smart.
In April, Daim\c!{:hrysler
ann ounce&lt;.! it 1.2 billion euro
($\.44 billion) restructuring
or Smart tlmt led to nearly
600 job cuts .

I

Valley Artist Series tickets now·available
RIO GRANDE - With
the tirst program · in the 2005- 06 Valley Artist Series scheduled for three performances,
Oct. 14, 15 and 16, now is
the time 10 reserve or purchase season tickets al a savings over the single ticket
admission 'price , accord ing
to Gary Stewart, chairman of
the board of the Valley Artist
Series.
As Stewart points out,
"This year's Valley Arti st
Serie
. s will feature four·.
umque programs, two . in

2005. and two in 2006. The
first one will be the production of 'The Odd Couple,' the
famous Neil Simon comedy,
procjuced and directed by J.J.
Cobb, adjunct professor of
theatre al the University of
Rio Grande.
"In addition to the theatre
students and community
members in the cast, a professional
actor,
James
Bocock, will be featured ·in a
lead ·role. With three performan~. es of this delightful
comedy booked in mid-

Ariel Jr. Theatre presents '~airy Tale Courtroom'
•

GALLIPOLIS- The ArielDater Hall and The Ariel · Jr.
Theatre will open ils 2005-06
performance series with the
"Fairy
Tale
production
Courtroom," Saturday, Oct. I
and Sunday, Oct. 2.
. "Fairy Tale Courtroom" follows lhe hilarious courtroom
trials ofThe Big Bad Wolf and
The Wicked Witch .
The two villains will be tried
for their terrible deeds with the
audience serving as the jury.
Audience members will listen
to the testimonies from many
popular characters, such as the
Little Red Riding Hood, the
Three Pigs, Sleeping Beauty,
Dorothy, Snow White and the
bwarfs. Prince Charming,
Hansel and Gretel, and many
others.
When the ' testimonies are
complete, the audience will
determine the guilt or inno,
cence of the accused.
"I am very pleased with our
talemed cast of 32 local youth
actors," said Joseph Wright,
director of The Ariel-Dater
Hall and production director.
"They have worked very hard
to bring the wonderfully
unique characters lo life.
"The scrip! is written much
like the old-fashioned carloon s, complete with .slapstick-style humor, sight gags
and over-the-top characters.
This will be a great production
for familie s because the adults
will find the show as enjoyable
as the kids. "
The cast and crew have been

.

Performing Arts-center \II the
University of Rio Grande, the
location for all the Valley
Artist
Series
program s,
include "Luma" on Nov. 10,
·a most unusual show of light,
music and magic.
Coming in 2006 will be
"Amercord." a five-member
internationall y rec og nized
si nging
gro up
fro m
Germany, appearing Feb .
28, and to conclude the season, on March 26th, the fan tastic musical, "Marne," featuring a 38-member cast,

direct from Broadway.
,
The entire season is out•
standing. Slewart urges botli
past su bscribers to the series,
as wen as those who have
never had the opportunity ro
enjoy such uni que productions, to call lhe representative in the ir area to order
their season tickels now. Feel
free to contact the University
o( Rio Grande at (740) 245;
7364, or ·toll free , (800) 282·7201, exten sion 7364, and
· talk to Co.nnic McNerlin tor
more information.

Carson &amp; Barnes
Circus slates 2 shows

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Carson and Barne s FiveRing Circus will perform two
shows at Lunon Horse Park
across from Harmon Park in
Point Pleasani, with performances taking place at 2 and
7:30p.m. Saturday, Oct. I.
Adull tickets purchased in
advance will be $12, while ly child ren, needs to see .
tickets for children age 2-1 1
"This is a lirst-class circus,
will be $6. If purchased the bigger than· (other circuses),"
day of the show, ad ult tickets Bell amy said. "Every kid
will be $16 and children's will needs to see a circus. And this
be $8.
is their opportunity."
Tickets may be purchased al
According lo the circus'
the Mason County CVB. · Web site, ir is the world's
Sider;~ Jewelers in Point largest
self-co ntained
Pleasant and Gallipolis, Harris nomadic city with approxiSteakhouse, Point Pleasant mately 70 vehides, 'a "power
Hardware, Point Pleasant plant" to serv.~ electric ity, a
River Mu se um and the cook hou se that serves approxGallipolis CVB. Both Siders imalely 500 meals each day lo
Jewelers locations and the approximately 200 personnel.
river mu seum accept credit living quarters and other
ian McNemar/photo cards.
essential daily needs. Over the
Some of the 32 cast members of "Fairy Tale Courtroom" are seen at work during rehearsal for
Denny Bellamy, tourism past 80 years, the circu s has
the production at the Ariel-Dater Hall, 426 Second Ave. , Gallipolis. Performance times are 3 and director, said ·the circus is performed for more than. 50
7 p.m. on Saturday
and 3. p.m. Sunday.
'
.
something.everyone, espec ial, million people in 43 states . :.
working on the production for tions ar~ "The Velveteen at 3 p.m . Sunday.
nearly six weeks, and are look- Rabbit ," set to perform in
The Ariel-Dater Hall is
ing forward to hearing laughter December, and " Aladdin,'' located at 426 2nd Ave .,
fill the Ariel. Thirty;twoyoung scheduled for April.
Gallipoli s. Box office hours
MARIETTA - The 17tl1 a powerful rhythm section
Tickets for "Fairy Tale are Monday through Friday Annual
actors from Gallia, Meigs and
Zydeco
Swamp thai is close to tlwt of an
Mason counties play the many Courtroom" are currently on from II a.m.lo 2 p.m. Evening Stomp with Leroy Thomas R&amp;B band overlaid with the
memorable roles.
sale. Prices are $10 for special
hours are from 5 to 8 _p.m . and The Zydeco Road syncopated sou nd of the
"Fairy Tale Courtroom" is VIP sealing, or $i' for adults
Runners is Saturday at 9 rubboard (fro itt oir) and a
the first of three production s a~d $5 for students e nd senior Tuesdays and Thursdays.
p.m.
at ,!he Hotel Lafayette, funky bluesy accordion.
Tickets may also be purfor The Ariel
.J&gt;unior Clttzens.
Performers borrowed many
Performances are scheduled chased by calling (740) 446- 101 Fronl SL, Mariella.
· Theatre's 2005-06 series.
of
Zydeco\ defi ning eleTickets
are
$
\0
for
memAdditional planned produc- for 3 and 7 p.m. Saturday and ARTS (27R7 ).
bers of the Blue s, Jazz and ments · .from Cajun music.
Folk Music Society, and $15 Zydeco has allracted a loyal
for non-members . Ti ckets worldwide following outside
are available at 1he door, Louisiana, as demonstrat~d
by the large numbers of
which opens al 8 p.m .
"We're very excited ahout New City Singers. .
For information, ca ll John "zydeco dan cers" on the east
GALLIPOLIS - A suc- cerl series held most Friday
this," Barcus said. "We want
The conc~rt wlll be held at (740) 373-6640.
cessful summer gasp~! con- night s during the summer.
and west coasts. Despite its
Barcus said much more to help out the downtown as ram .or sh1ne because a lent
The Hotel Lafayellc has a commercialization. Zydec(l
cert series in the Gallipoli s
City Park will have one last than music is planned for the much as we can and get peo- wdl be __set up m the park, large dance fl oo r. cash bar remains a rcle\'ilnt means of
Barcus s,ud. Dunng the sum- and the bal lroo m and lobby cullu~a l . expre"ion for the
shot at entertaining the public Fall Finale, which is sGhed- pie downtown."
in
pm:tnership
with
the
"Whal
I
really
want
to
say
mer,
concerts were moved to
.
.,
uled
as fall opens.
Creoles of Acadiana.
Retail
Merchants
is
that
if
~ou're
interested
in
the
Ariel
Theatre
when
are
smoke
free.
.
.
Gallipolis
The event, the 2005 Gospel
Leroy Thomas· ·tal ent on
1
participalmg, th en comact inclement weather loomed . .
What IS Zydeco&gt; Zyd~o . ~
in the Park Concert Series Fall Association.
the
accordion is impressive.
Among
the
activities me," he added. Barcu s can be
Barcus noted that. October a sy ncopated dance musiC ol
Finale, is set for Saturday,
. is also Pastor Appreciation the Creole French speakmg Leroy staYs true to the m&lt;ire
Oci. I from 10 a.m. until 5 planned are an area church - reached at 367-7063.
Gospel groups set to pertbnn . Month , an activity he hopes po~ulatton. hmlmg from lhe lradiiionai styb foregoing
p.m. in the City Park, said the bake sale. public information
the hip hop played by his
·Rev. Rick Barcus of Addison display s, , farm implement during the Fall Finale are to tie in with .the Fall Finale . . prames at south-central and
co
n'temporaries.
This
Res ponse to the summer so uthw~st Lomstana and as
dealer di splays, new car deal- Forgiven Four, White Oak Trio.
Freewill Baptist Church.
Barcus, along with the Rev. er displays, a 4-H food booth Mercy, New Southern Hannony, series was so gratifying Barcus such tl h&lt;~s very strong Creole's' repertoire spans
Randy Parsons and the Rev. and a sidewalk sale spon sored Freed by Christ Quane!, God's. believes another gospel-themed mfluences tram Blu~s and from Zydeco and Cajun to
Ambassadors. Randy Shatenmd event will be jusl as successful. Canbbean mus1c. II features R&amp;B ano blues.
Carl Ward , organized the con-_ by the retail merchants.

Zydeco artist coming to Manetta

Fall Finale is Saturday in City Park

ATHENS - ." Mountain
Stage," a production of West
Virginia Public Broadcasting,
will · appear
al
Ohio
University 's
Templeton
Blackburn
Memorial
Auditorium for a live taping
on Sunday, Oct. 2, at 7 p.m .
The WOUB Radio Network
and the Ohio University
Performing Arts Series are
sponsoring the show, which
. :will feature Son Volt, Charlie
·Sexton, Eric Bibb, Over the

Rhine, and Adrienne Young
and Little ·Sadie.
Son Volt ·plays m1 eclectic
mix of mu sic with J,ay Farrar
leading the five-member
band. The band will be playing songs from their recently
released CD, "Okemah and
the Melody of Riot." ·
Charlie Sexton, who is only
in his early 20s, has already had
several phases Ia his career.
Sexton, raised in Austin, Texas,
made his debut with "Pictures

ForPieasure" in l%5atage 16.
Word of his reputation as a
prodigy guitar player spread
and he f(mnd himself an indemand se&gt;Sion pl&lt;tyer while
still in his late teens.
Eric Bibb grew up surroundt;d by musicians and fell
in love wilh the blues.
Although his travels took him
all over the world and he had
a brief stint writing pop songs,
he returned to his love of the
blues .

i

"

.
include Gallia County contacts:
Jan Thaler at 4464425, Saundra Koby at 4469356 or Connie McNerlin at
the University of Ri o Grande,
24~-7364. In Jackson, the
cootact is Robin ·Fowler,
phene (740) 286-9809; Carl
Daft! berg in Wellston al (740)
384-2498; Lee LCJ: in Meig s
Co'unty, phone (740) 9492454; in Mason County,
W.Va. , Terry Casto is Ihe
contact at (304) 675-3491.
Other performances ·scheduled at th e Fine and

October, now is the time to
order season tickets," Stewart
added.
Season tickets, covering all
four concerts, are $55 for
adults, $50 for senior citizens,
and $25 for students up to age
18. Representatives of the
Valley Artist Series committee
are located in Gallia, Meigs,
Jackson and Mason counties.
Residents'of the area are urged
·to contact their local representative to purchase their season
tickets.
These
representatives

"Perfect to plant or set on
your porch or deck"

.

Thursday, Septembel." 29, 2005

'

HARDY FALL MUMS

I

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

.I
i
i
!®allipohslailp mribune The Daily Sentinel ~oint ~leasant l\egi~ter
l.~.-.~~~.~~.~~.~. - . ~. -~J~.~:.~,_. _,_,~-~~. ~:~~·-·_j .

I

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

'Mountain Stage' ·coming to Athens

..

i
i

-·

Wide Selection to 'choose.from!

114 mile north of
~400 Eaalern Avenue
Pomeroy ·Mason Bridge
· Gallipolis, Ohio
Mason, West Virginia
Phone (7401 448-1711
Phane(3041773-5721
OPEN 7 DA~S A WEEK .OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

· .Over the Rhine borrowed
· their name from one of
Cincinnati's most colorful and
controversial neighborhoods.
For
their new album.
"DJ']Jnkard's Prayer," Over the
Rhine· made a relaxed, emotionally vulnerable record in
their living room . The alb~m
showcases the ba nd ,~. talent
and love of so ngwriling.
Adrienne Young and Little
Sadie performs "urbane bluegrass." Adrienne Young and

&amp;,. M ewe~ lo

B(JB'$...
I.

/o'z- aiJ. ~ IJ.aiJ.
p~~ :
~~·

HeeJJJ

Little Sadie have a sublle aura ahead, In addition 10 showcasof social commentary induct- in g both establi shed and
ed in their music !hat speaks emergin g artists from the
to audiences about issues in United States. "Mountain
society .today.
Stage" ha s fealurgcl artists
· "Mountain Stage" is a series fr om all over the world .
of two-hour specials thai pre"Mountain Stage'.' can be
sents acts ranging from tradi- heard every Sat urday al 8 p.m.
tiona\ tool s and country music on WOUB-FM . ·
10 avant-garde rock and jazz.
Tickets are aYa ilable at the
"Mountain Stage" producers Temp I e Ion - B I a k b ~ ~ n
respect th e mu sicians who Memorial Auditoaiu m bo~
keep lraditi&lt;;ms alive as well as oftice by cal ling (740 ) 593,
the innova tors who forge · 1780.

c

FALL DECORATING
· Pumpkins · Gourds
Baled Straw· ·fodder Shocks
· Indian Corn · Fall Wreaths
· Seasonal Crafts

'

I

�•
'

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel.

~ursday,

September 29,

State unveils new memorial to 1993 Lucasville riot Local Weather
Ieday's fwecasl

Area league standings, Page B2
The Extra Point, Ptlge 83
OVP leaders, Page 83
OHSAA computer ratings, Page B3

2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT '

Foreeut forTh...-,, s.pt. 2t

COLUMBUS - Darrold
Clark still werks as a guard at
the southern Ohio prison
wher~ he could have died 12
years ~go.
: "I still think about goi ng to
work at ano.ther facility,
maybe move up or relocate,
but Lucasville's in my blood,"
said Clark, now a captain at
the prison. "I'U either die here
or retire from here, one of the

Clty.ttiG(on
High I Low lll'npa

Thursday, September 29, 2005

~~~~~·~,.,~~~R~r~e:p~~:ootball- Week 6

MI CH

0

Younaetown•
59"152'

u.nd.ld. ~~

~

60'151'

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAtLYTRIBUNE.COM

t:wo."
· The state on Thursday
planned to unveil a new .
memorial to the 1993 riot ·at
the
'Southern
Ohio
Correctional Facility. The
uprising left 10 dead, cost .the
· state millions in compensation and put 6ve in mates on
death row.
The state already has a
small memorial in fro nt of the
Lucasv i_lle pri son, about 90
miles south of Columbus.
The new memorial will be
in a small employee&lt;recognition park at the Orient
Correctional Complex south
ot Columbus, and honors the
riot's impact on the entire
Department. of Rehabilitation
liJl.d CP,rrectton.
"Everything changed after
Lucasville for this agency,"
said department director
Reginald Wilkinson.
"Despite the tragedy that
happened there, it actually was
a spark to a new era in Ohio
corrections. and this memorial
was ·partly a tribute to what is
now the future. " he said.
The agency has become
more professional, its policies
and procedures have . been
improved and its security
measures are more advanced,
Wilkinson said.
Eight new prisons opened
after the riot. helping ease
overcrowding, though the
state has since closed two
facilitie'sto save money.
Lawmakers banned some
weightlifting equipment in
prisons after it was found that
tnmates used weights to
smash through stairwell walls.
The state also moved death
row from Lucasville to the
· Mansfield
Correctional
Institution, and transferred its
most dangerous inmates to the
sllper:maximum·
sec urity
prison in Youngstown.
.
Ohio spent $42 million on

' mrto

COLUMBUS
John
Glenn is riding to the rescu"
of Gov. Bob Taft's administration - again.
The . former astronaut and
four-term U.S. senator has
assumed the role of chairman
of the campaign for passage
of state Issue I on Nov. 8. The
$2 billion jobs and highway
construction bonds issue is
one of five voters will decide.
Glenn, a Democrat, also
helped to secure passage in
2000 of the Clean Ohio program that provides money for
communities to acquire green
space and clean up abandoned industrial sites.
Issue I is crucial to Ohio
cities, villages and townships
because $ 1.35 billion of it
will go toward bridge an~
road repairs in a program
started in 1987 by then-Gov.
Richard Celeste, a Democrat.
and renewed by former Gov.
George . Voinovich ,
a
'Republkan, Glenn said. More
than I0,000 projects have
been completed with the bond
· money in 18 years. he said.

1.

Academy

2··

W.VA.

(4)

3

52

2

51 -

1 , 49

4
6

38
·26

5

26

6

NR
NR

22
14
14

NR
NR

8
8

Portsmouth west 9

8

~lgs

APPhoto

.
W~LL~TOt:J Me~gs
sttll ftnds ttselfon the outs~de
lookmg m, as far as the playoff ptctu;e tt concerned.
If that s gomg to change,
the Marauders will need to do
something they haven 't done
· since 1998 _ beat Wellston.

Friday marks the ' beginknocked off
ning of the · Tri- Valley
·t
b
e
Conference portion of the
Marauders at
schedule, but more imporhome
last
tantly. it's the first of two
season. Kick' pivotal weeks . for a Meigs
off is slated
team trying to earn its firstfor 7:30 p.m
· ·
at
C.
H.
Jones
Field.
ever playoff ~enh .
Meigs, currently IOth in a
· It stans With a Wellston
loaded
Division IV, Reg ion
Gol~en Rocket team that

15. enters ·with a 4-1 record
but is in need . of victories
over teams wtth stronger
records. Thus tar, the
Marauders -own wms over
Athens (2-3), as well as
F~trland, R_tver Valley and
Warren - all, wtth JUSt one
wm aptece.
Wellston, which rode last

State unveiling new memorial
to 1993 prison riot ""
BY

THE

AsSOCIATED· PRESS

A look at some of the facts and figures surrounding
the 1993 Lucasville prison riot and the new memorial
honoring its impact on the state prison system:
• Length ot April 1993 uprising: II days.
• Number of people killed: nine inmates, one guard. '
• Cost to state: $42 million in renovations to
·
Lucasville, about $2.4 million in settlements
to families of slain inmates.
• Number of inmates on death row as the result of the
killing of guard Robert Vallandingham: five.
• Cost of new memorial at the Orient prison·
complex south of Columbus: about $60,000.
renovations and upgrades . to
Lucasville, about $9 million
more than it cost to build the
facility in 1972.
A 1997 settlement provided
about $2.4 million to the
estates of the nine inmates
who died in tlie riot.
Plans were ·made for the
new memorial at the riot's I 0year anniversary and donations raised from employe'es
to co'ver the $60,000 cost. The
memorial consists of a pair of
walls intersecting. at an angle,
topped with a prism and. cen-

tered on a brick walk.
Clark, 35, had worked for
the prison system just less
than a year wnen he was
seized by inmates at the
beginning of the 11 -day riot.
There was tension inside the
prison in the days leading up
to the riot because some
Muslim inmates claimed
planned tuberculosis inoculalions went against their religious beliefs.
The only guard killed.
Robert Vallandingham, was
. strangled on April 15. 1993.

by two inmates under orders
from Carlos Sanders, now on
death row for the crime,
according to court records.
Clark was released on the
fifth day of the siege in
exchange for a radio broadcast of prisoners' demam;ls.
Clark returned to Lucasville
in 1994 to ensure he had
insurance for his daughter,
Olivia, who had cerebral
palsy. She has since died. He
also ·underwent two heart
surgeries caused by the stress
of his ordeal.
Clark grew up in · New
Boston where his father was a
police officer anil is now
police chief. He said he ~tay s
at the. Lucasville prison
because he knows and trusts
his fellow guards,' many of
whorn were there during the
riot. ·
He hopes the memorial will
make people think about
what it means to be a ·prison
guard.
"It pays the bills. You 've
got a great foundation for
your family. but you've got to
reali ze the seriousness of the
business," Clark said. "The
best facility in the state can
erupt at any given time."

accepting fre~ golf and other
·
gifts.
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
It has also uncovered
investment losses of more
COLUMBUS-· State and than $300 million at the
federal prosecutors investi- bureau, led to the ouster of
gating Ohio's government the bureau's top official in
scandal on Wednesday asked spring and forced numerous
. lawmakers not to conduct changes to .the agency and its
their own hearings out of $ 14 billion investment portconcern the questioning folio.
could hurt the criminal invesThe prosecutors cited probtigation.
lems obtaining convictions
In a letter to top legislative from the federal Iran/Contra
leaders, the prosecutors and scandal and a corruption
the Ohio Inspector General scandal 'during the tenure of
say they're worried about a former Ohio Gov. Richard
state law that gives witnesses Celeste.
at legislative hearings immuLegislative hearings during
nity in exchange for testimo- a criminal investigation "is a
ny.
recipe for the creation of
The prosecutors say the legal issues and problems
hearings "could allow certain that could ultimately impai r
suspects to escape prosecu- the" crimiiUII proceedings.'·
tion entirely."
the Jetter said.
Democrats have pushed for
In
response,
Senate
weeks to convene a commit- President Bill Harris scolded
tee to look into risky invest- Democrats Wednesday,' sayments at the state 'insurance ing the investment scandal
· needs "well-reasoned solu fund for injured workers.
Investigations into a $50 tions" and not "sound bites''
million investment in rare
"I want bad actors who
coins by the Ohio Bureau· of · have violated the public trust
Workers' Compensation bal- to be prosecuted to the fullest
looned into -a scandal that led extent of the law," Harris said
to the · convtct1on
of in a statement. ''What I will
Republican Gov. Bob Taft for 'not do is cave into political

pressure and start thi s process
until I have a .complete picture of what the problem is."
Democrats said lawmakers
could easily repeal the Jaw
that provides the immunity.
"There are simple. con-'
structive ways to structure
these committee hearings that
would protect both the prosecutions and the state of
Ohio," said Sen. Marc Dann
of Youngstown, a leading
critic of the workers' comp
bureau. "Give me an hour
with the leadership of the
Legislature and the prosecutors and I' ll come out with a
way to conduct these hearings."
.
Prosecutors said in the letter their investigation could
last six months.
The letter was signed by
Franklin County Prosecutor
Ron O'Brien, Lucas County
Prosecutor Julia Bate.s,
Inspestor ·General Tom
Charles and · U.S. attorneys
Greg White of Cleveland and
Greg Lockhart of Columbus.
O'Brienc is a Republican,
Bates a Democrat. Charles is
a Taft' appointee; White and
Lockhart are both appointees
of Republican President
Bush.

winds around 5 mph.
Friday · night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 40s.
Southeast winds around 5 ·
mph.
·
Saturday and Saturday
night. .. Mostly clear. Highs in
the mid 70s. Lows in the
lower 50s.
Sunday
through
Wednesday... Panly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 70s. Lows
in the lower 50s.

Thursday...Showers likely.
with a chance of thunderstorms in the morning. Much
cooler with highs in the lower
60s. Northwest winds around
10 mph. Chance of rain 60
pereent.
·Thursday night... Mostly
clear and much cooler with
lows in the upper 30s. Nonh
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s. South

FARMERS BANK CD SPECIALS
'·

Winless ·Eagles head to unbeaten Trimble
BY BRYAN WALTERS •
BWALTERS@MVOAI LYTRIBUNE.COM

Sports Briefs

Southern-Fed
Hock preview
unavailable

I

l

FIK- (740) 446·3008

Fourteen Month Special

E-mail - sports Omydailysentloel .com

4 12% (4.20% APY)

Soorts Staff

8r8d Sherman, Sporte Edllor
(740) 446·2342. ext 33

Twenty-Nine Month Special
·

(4.34'i~

GALLIPOLIS - Due to
technical difficulties, the
Southern versus Federal
Hocking football preview, as
well as the
Southern
volleyball
ma t c h
against
Wellston
were not
available.
We will attempt .to have
both stories in Friday's edition of the Daily Sentinel.

Contact Information

bshermanOmydailytribune.com

APY)

Bryon Waltero, Sporio Wrltor
(740) 440-2342, ext. 23

bwalters OmydaUytribune.com *

~ Farmers Bank
Always A Great
Rate.
'

I

Pomeroy
992.2136

1'!::1!1"

Brad Sherman/OVP lila

Eastern running back Terry Durst (31) runs the ball during the first half against Franklin Furnace Green In Tuppers Plains.
Durst ran .for more than 200 yards last week in a 55-14 .loss to Belpre. Durst and ~he Eagles will look for their first win
Friday when they travel to Glouster to take on.Trim~le in the Tri-Valley Conference H_ocking Division opener.

Seven Month Special
3.78% (3.85% APY)

.4V• • • .

Thomas

BY GARY CLARK

Kroger- 20.29
Ltd.- 20.07
NSC -'- 40.05
Oak Hill Financial 29.93
OVB-25
B8T- 38.83
Peoples - 27.19
Pepsico - 55.06
Premier- 13.10
Rockwell- 52.52
Rocky Boots - 28.78
RD Shell ~ 63.83
SBC- 23.90
Sears -120.69
Wai-Mart - 43.13
Wendy's - 44.58
Worthington - 20.81
Dally stock reports
are the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
· day's transactions,
provided by Smith
Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis;

Rake Up
"These Rates.

Gallipolis
446.2265

Please see Melp;B:S ·

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Local Stocks.
ACI-67.16
AEP- 39.19 ·
Akzo- 42.81
Ashland Inc. - 54.40
AT&amp;T -19.73
BLI-10.75
Bob Evans - 22.89
BorgWarner - 56.55
. CENX - 22.57
Champion - 4.16
Charming Shops 10.86
City Holding - 35.70
Col- 47.95
DG -18.21
DuPont - 38.04
Federal Mogul - .43
USB- 28.30
Gannett- 67;96
General Electric 33.49
GKNLY- 4.90
Harley Davidson 47.57
JPM- 33.92

year 's win over Meigs to its ·
first-ever postseason trip, ,is
, slightly down and enters the
fray with a 2-3 mark . The
Golden Rockets do own a
,mental edge , however, having won the last six meetings
including a 31-28 thiller a

-Wahama
·looks for.
win at
Calhoun

Corrections Lt. Darrold Clark Jr. poses in front e&gt;f the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility's tower
three in Lucasville -April 2, 2003. Darrold Clark stilt works as a guard at the southern Ohio
prison where he was held hostage for five days by rioting inmates. The state plans on Thursday
to unveil a new memorial to the 1993 riot in which 10 people were killed and five inmates
ended up on death ro'w.
·

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Prev.~

,....

~

Elm (2)

Glenn heads ·Prosecutors ask lawlnakers not to
jobs is~ue hold investment scandal hearings
camprugn·
BY JOHN McCARTHY

,paienlllesls)

*Col...... h-..
61"151"

Key stretch dawns for Marauders at Wellston

lArry Crum, Sporto Wrltor
.(304) 675· 1333, a..1 . 19
k:rumGmydaityregister.corn

GLOUSTER - There is
good news and bad news for
Eastern concerning its Week
6 road football contest.
The good news is that an 0. 5 start to non-league games is
officially over as Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking

Division begins this Friday.
The bad news is that undefeated Trimble, who returns
14 starters from 2004, will be
waiting to welcome them to
TYC Hocking play.
The Tom.cats, two-time
defending Hocking champions, picked up a lot of confidence at home la~t week to!lowing a 27-21 overtime vic-

tory against Nelsonville'
York.
In that ovenime thriller,
THS (5-0) racked up 229
yards on 52 rushing attempts
and accumulated a total of
266 offensive yards.
Senior Trent Nott (6-foot-2,
230 pounds) led that tri. umphant rushing attack with
26 totes for 12-5 yards and

added three touchdown runs,
including the 15 yard clincher
in overtime.
Senior
quarterback
Anthony Dixon (5-11, 155)
also poses as a severe threat
in Trimble's explosive
offense, accumulating 85
·yards on I? tries last week
.I

.

GRANTSVILLE, W.Va.Uncharacteristic
back-tohack grid losses have the
Wah am~
White Falcofu;
hungry
til
return to thefr
wmmng way~
of the past
· the
when
Bend
Area
team contin•
ues its 2005 murderer's row
schedule with a journey to
once beaten and I Oth rate(t
Calhoun County at 7:30 p.m.
Friday.
:
The White Falcons have
dropped successive decision!;
on the gridiron to unbeatetl
Trimble and Buffalo to carrelude the first half of the regular season with a 2-3 record.
The Mason County squad
also finds itself in unfamiliar
territory in the latest Class A
ratings by slumping into the
bottom tier of the rankings at
the 26th position.
WHS, although giving up
nearly 450 yards in total
offense during an 18-13 los~
to Buffalo last week, rallied
during the second half to put
itself in a position to come
away with a win against the
· fifth rated Bisons but the
locals ' fell just ~hort of the

; Please see E.lstem, Bl

Pluse see Wah•IIIJI• Bl

Men's College
Soccer
I

' ..

Redmen down ODU in AMC opener
BY MARK WtU.tAMS
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - NAJA
No. 2 Rio Grande closed " Ut
a three game homestand on
Wednesday afiernoon against
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
foe Ohio Dominican. It was
the AMC South 'opener for
the Redmen. Rio won the
game 3- 1.
Rio Grande (8-0, 1-0
AMCS) entered the contest
riding a 41-game unbeaten
streak in the AMC. a 47game unbeaten · streak at
. Evan Davis Field and a regular season unbeaten·streak of
97 games (93-0-4). With the.
win all three streaks were
able to continue.
Freshman torward Miian
Partenijevic staned the scor· Bryan Walters/photo ing for the Redmen with a
Rio Grande's Wayne Maden ·(5) dribbles past ~n Ohio goal in the 13th minute.
Dominican defender during Thursday's ·American Mideast Junior mid-fielder Paul
Fiddler was credited with' the
Conference opener at Evan Davis Field in Rio Grande.

assist.
Rio put a second shot in
the net in the 28th minute to
push the score to 2-0. Juriior
mid-fielder Conar Dawson
scored the goal with' the
assist going to sophomore
forward Guy Heywood
(Preston, England).
Rio took the 2-0 advantage
to halftime. ·
Sophomore mid-fielder
Ryan ·Baxter scored his third
goal in the last two games in
52nd minute after Dawson
and senior mid-fielder John
Carroll teamed up to assist
him on the goal.
Ohio Dominican (5-4- 1, 02 AMCS) picked up a gift in
the 62nd minute when Rio
actually knocked the ball in
the net for the Panthers. Rene
Marois was the ODU player
who had the touch.
ODU had three players '
spend time in the net and the
trio collected eight saves.
Rio out-shot t he Panther~

22-0.
Sophomore
goalkeeper
Andy Moore · recorded his
second shutout of the season.
Rio Grande head coach
Scott Morrissey was pleased
to start the conference wilh a
win. but also sees room for
improvement. "That's (the
conference win} probably the
one positive thing out of it,"
Morrissey said. "We do very
well. I don't think we gave
them any shots on goal, but
yet we had a lapse after the
third goal. everybody quit.
"It was just one· of those
deals where I just think these
guys size up the opponent up
and with a three goal lead
they quit playing," Morrissey
added. ''And the own goal,
whatever you want to call it,
it's new a 3-1 game and you
give the other team little bit
of life and momentum.
"That's the only disap-

a

Please see Opener, 8]

r
HOLZER CLINIC

Tuppers Plains
667.3161
Mason

773.6400

Do It Center

Member FDIC

$S,OC() min,mum dePQSII teQu fed to open ond obtain the 1\P'i. Penalty lor eort~ withdrowol.
Annual Per~.: e ntage Yield (AP'i) t. accvrate mol s,plember 3(), 2005.

..

... Local Caring.

�'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thlll'!lday, September 29,

'

·. www.mydailysentinel.com

Unbeaten Wayne comes to Poirit Pleasant
BY

back at 6-4, 230 pounds and
LCRUM@MYOAILYREGoSTER COM
has verbally COmmitted tO
Marshall University.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
What makes Wayne so dan- . The task seems simple - gerous is their depth, which
put behind three straight loss- allows them to attack from all
es and try to get the season side;; and bnng in fresh playb~ck on track with a win at ers when others get tired.
h!Jme. Sound easy? ·
· To be successful against the
: Not when you are playing Cardinal Conference favorite,
the number two team in the the . Big Blacks will need to
state in Wayne (5-0), which is control the football and the
exactly what Point Pleasant clock, hopefully forcing the
(1-4) faces Friday night at Pioneers to make a mistake.
Sanders Field. in their fourth
"For us to be successful, we
consecutive home game.
need to be able to sustmn
·"We are certainly looking to some offense and shorten the
improve on our performance game. We need to be able to
from a _week ago, th~t was a eat the clock up, move the
team that we c~.uld ~ave been football and if we can exe(ute
able to beat, satd Pomt a couple of long drives I
Pleasant head coach Steve
· k· ·
h
'
· t
II · thtn tt gtves us a c ance to
Safford. "Wayne ·ts JUS
a we b ·
h
"
·d
oiled machme and they JUst S~ff~~d. t e contest. . sat
come at you and have sb
.
.
many different v.ays to attack
Poml Pleasant wtU also
y ,
need to work on the kJCkmg
0
~fter struggling with game: something that has hurt
Cardinal Conference oppo- the Btg Blacks so far thts seanent Winfield last week, the son . Numerous botched
Big Blacks will be playing snaps, lo~ ktcks and unconhost to a team that is outscor- trolled kickoffs have hurt
ing its opposition on average Potnt Pleasant and gtven tts
45- J2 so far thts season.
opponenta short field to work
The reason for the success wtth whtle the B1g Blacks
of the Pioneers this ·season 1s remamed .trapped m the shadthe tremendous amount of tal- ow ot thetr own goal post.
ent on all sides of the ball.
"We spend a lot of time on
Although Wayne replaced a the ktcking game .and it has
large number of starters frQm been a real,, thor~ m our stde
last years 13-l squad, they t)us year,
satd Safford.
have been able to get ·the most "Usually we pride ourselves
out of the returnees and have with having a great kicking
been successful at developing game and outside our return
the new faces.
team, its just not been what
Third-year starters Nick we need it to be and its got to
Newell and Trevor Marcum get better."
lead the Pioneers with Newell
The biggest problem so far
takmg command of the thts season for Point Pleasant
.- · ·offense at quarterback and has been the running game,
Marcum grabbing running wtth a handful of speedy, talduties. Marcum is a powerful ented backs who have failed
LARRY CRUM

l'oll

0

West Virginia Edition
A took at the top football teams ln.
Western ~est Virginia as \/Oted by
the Oh1o Valley PubliShing s00 rts
staff. (Arst place votes In paren-

thesis)

Pm.Votea
Teem
'1 59
1. Wf!IYOe (51
2. Nitro 11)
2 53
3. Williamstown
3 47
4. Buffalo
5 37
4 37
(tie) Parkersburg
6. ·scott
7 28
7. Herbert Hoover
9 18
8. Hamlin
NR 12
NR 10
9. St. Albans
10. Cabell Midland
5
7
Others receMne vot-.; Calhoun
6. Hurricane 6. Ripley 4, Capital
2, Parkersburg Catholic 2.
arkersburg South 2
I

to break out and take control
of the season.
"We have some people who
are capable of doing that, they
just haven't shown it yet,"
said Safford. "We are used to
having backs who can break
tackles and get four or five
yards in critical-situations and
so tar .this year we haven't
been able to do that."
'
Safford ulso added that
when a team lacks depth .and
has ' only a few kids running
'the offense, it allows other
teams to focus on those few
players and shut them down,
thus eliminating the offense.
"A lot of people are critical
if you have a kid that has a lot
of speed then you need to utilize him .more, but with all the
notoriety he has received, he
has a big target on him now,"
said Safford. "Everybody

knows what we can do with
him, what we need is some
other people to step up and
take some of that burden off
of him."
The player Safford is referring to is the · very fast Travis
Riffle .. who plays multiple
roles on the team, running for
289 yards and catching for
176 yards with five total
touchdowns. He is joined in
the backfield by Brandon
Warner, .who has 252 rushing
yards and can also provide at
quarterback.
James Casto will get the
nod at quarterback this week
after trading the spot with
Warner throughout the season
due to injuries. ·He ha~ 91
yards and two touchdowns
through the air so far this year.
As the offense continues to
struggle, the defense is com- ·
ing together and will really
need to come together to stop
the big play capabilities of the
Pioneers. Despite the talent
of Wayne coming into the
game, Safford says he will
approach this like any other
game.
''They are capable of making mistakes just like everyone else and hopefully w~
can capitalize on .that and get
the football ourselves," said
Safford. "It is a tough challenge for us, but we are
approaching the game like we
would any other, you know
they put their pants on the
same way we do."
·
All Point needs to do now
is avoid tripping over their
own mistakes and contain the
powerful Wayne attack.
Friday's game is slated for a
7:30 kickoff at Sanders
Stadium.

Blue Devils not looking past Athens
Bv BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDA1LYTR1BUNE.COM

THE PLAINS - It's not
good-bye, its more 'like see
you later.
But exactly when. or how
often. who knows?
Before they go thetr separate ways , Gallia Academy
and Athens will meet one last
time on the gridiron as members
of
the
current
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League this Friday. Kick-off
is slatep for 7:30 p.m. at
Rutter Field.
When the league splits into
two divisions of five teams
each next season. the game
will not be played annually.
Gallia Academy will part of
the new-look South Division,
which will contain only two
current members-. The Blue
Devils. along with rival
Jackson, will . be joined by
Ironton, Portsmouth and
Chillicothe.
Athens, meanwhtle, will be
in a more famthar-looking
North, where only Zanesville
will be a new face. .
The Devils · and Bulldogs
could meet in back-to-back
years, but will mostly play on
an every-other-year basis.
."Everything will be different next year," said Gallia
Academy
coach
Matt
Bokovitz. "When we don't

Wahama
. from Page Bl

4

mark. The second half
progress by the Bend Area
t~am against Buffalo ha ~ veteran coach Ed Cromley and
hts Falcon gndders encouraged about returning to its
customary winning ways
when they take on a 4-l Red
Devil team this week.
The local s' defenstvc
scheme was susceptible to
the big play against the
Putna'm County team with
Buffalo gaining 257 of its
total offenstvc production
coming in just five plays.
The Btsons recorded scrimmage runs of 62, 51 and 66
yards m addition to completing a pass play for 78 yards
on the ·evenmg . yet ' the
Wahama defense held the
Bisons scoreless dunng the
games final 24 minutes.
Justin
Be!l.
Nathan
Stafford and Brent Jones led
the WHS defensive charge
with Bell recovering a fumble and totaling 10 tackles on
the night in what would be
considered hi s best outing of
the fall sea.son. Stafford was

play them in a year, its going '
to be kind of a strange thing
not to have Athens on the
schedule."
Gallia Academy, a heavy
favorite in Friday's tilt, leads
a close all-time series 38-333, but has taken 15 of the last
16 meelings.
Athens last won in 2002, a
loss that still irks Bokovitz
"Thts is my 17th year
involved with varsity .football,
in that time we"ve lost to them
one time, and it was three
years ago when we ' really
needed to get them to win the
league outright -It's kind of
a sore spot with me," he said.
"We're never going to take
them for granted ever again."
Which means, despite an
ob&gt;~ious advantage on paper, a
focused group of Blue Devils
will head to The Plains in
hopes of continuing what so
tar has been a stellar campaign.
Gallia Academy, currently
rated second in Di'lsion lll,
Region 12, brings a 4-1
record with impressive wins
over Meigs, Wheelersburg,
Point
Pleasant
and
Chillicothe.
During the past two weeh.
the team has begun to put it
all together since a sluggish
start over the first three
weeks. Bokovitz is looking
for his club to continue that
steady improvement.
credited wtth eigHt defensive
stops while Jones recovered a
Bison fumble in addttion to
picking off a Buffalo pass
and returning it 79 yards for
the Falcons first touchdown .
Cody Herdman. Clay Ro~sh.
Rudy Ward and Chase Ord
also had big second half performances for WHS . •
Offensively, Brenton Clark
and Kris Gibbs led Wahama
on the ground after totaling
63 and 60 yards respectively.
Clark also tossed a four-yard
TD pass to Chase Ord ·in
addition to connecting on a
pair of crucial third down
conversion
passes
to
Brandon Fowler.
Calho~n County will bring
an impressive 4-l record and
a IOth place ranking among
Class A playoff hopefuls. The
Red Devils of Coa(h Bryan
Stems are genuinely entertaining thoughts of a playoff
berth in 2005 after narrowly
. missing out on the post season party last year.
Calhoun , County captured
three one-sided demions and
a narrow one-point contest to
open the curre nt season,
before bemg knocked from
the unbeaten rank&gt; last week
against
'econd
rated
~illi~mstown . The ·
Red

"We' ve had a very intense
week of practice," he said ...
''we want to go play our best
football game of the year."
Bokovitz pointed to physicahty, perimeter blocking and
cutting down on penalties as
areas that need work.
Athens, on the other hand,
sports a 2-3 record - but
those have come at the
expense of Alexander (2-3)
and a banged-up River Valley
squad ( 1-4).
What the Bulldogs do have
is experience. though. Sixteen
letter winners and a seniorladen offensive line is back
from a club that suffered
through the growing pains of
a 1-9 season in 2004.
Mitch Spires (5-foot-11,
205 pounds) and Chris Staiger
(5-8, 155) are the keys to
Athens' running game, the
team ·s preferred method of
attack.
, Last week in a win over
River Valley, Spires rushed
for four touchdowns and 132
yards. Staiger, a faster back,
added 109 more. Athens is
averaging 28 points per game.
Chns Carpinelli starts at
quarterback, and unlike most
of the signal callers the Blue
De~ ils have faced this year, is
primarily a pocket passer, and
rarely runs the option.
Spires and company will be
facing a Gallia Academy
defense that has come on at

late, pitching a shutout '
against Chillicothe last Friday
and holding rival Point
Pleasant to I 5 points the·week
before.
The Devils' explosive
offense, meanwhile, will be a
task for Athens to contain. '
Gallia Academy athlete
Jayme Haggerty has amassed
641 ~ yards from scrimmage
and is the team's leading rusher and receiver.
Quarterback Jeff Golden
has thrown for 750 yards and
six touchdowns. He has found
Haggerty for just over 350
yards and two scores w)lile
Shaphen Robinson has hauled
in 265 yards and three touch.
downs.
Dustin Winters has 252
yards rushing and Seth Haner
has 194.
When the new league format commences next season,
Gallia Academy will play
SEOAL games Weeks 4
through I0. That, coupled
with losing non-league games
with
. Meigs
and
Wheelesrburg, means the
Blue Devils will have a newlook schedule across the
board. ·
Gallia Academy will open
the 2006 schedule on the road
at Sheridan, then go to Vinton
County in Week 2. The Battle
of the Bridge · against Point
Pleasant remains, but will be
Week 3 in Gallipolis.

Devils utihzed a high pow- · m the Red Devils fast start to
ered offense and a stingy the delight of Stems.
defense to defeat GilrHer
Houchin's passing targets
County (56-0), Ritchie will be seniors Tyler
County (65-0) and Clay Schartiger (6-2 145) and
County (27-26) before nar- Steve Cunningham (6-1 170)
rowly escaping with a victory at the receiver positions with
over Doddridge County (27- senior college prospect Justin
26). In a battle of unbeatens Whipkey (6-4 255) anchorlast week the Red Devils suc- ing the line. &lt; Juniors Steven
cumbed to . Williamstown by
Wagoner (5-11 160) and Matt
a 42-18 score,
Six starters return to a Whipkey (5-7 200) and
Calhoun County lineup that returning sophomore regulars
includes five .~eniors, three Caleb Hart (5-8 160) and Zac
juniors and three sophomores · Yeager (6-0 200) also figure
with returning all-state senior to get a start on the interior
Paul Goodrich (6-1 190) as for the ·Red Devils.
Wahama leads the brief
the Red Devils go to guy.
Goodrich. a first team all- series with Calhoun. County
state defensive sp;:cialist in by a 2-0 margin. The White
2004, ha~ already topped the Falcons dealt the Red Devils
1000 yard rushing mark on a 32-0 setback back in 1976
the season and has scqred before winning by a 36-8
over I00 points for a Red score last year. "We weren't
Devil offense that is averag- as competttive as we
should've been last ye:u
ing ·B points per game.
Goodrich is expectep to be against Wahama and I take
jomed m 'the backfield by full blame for that," said
sophomore quarterback Malt Stems earlier in the season.
Houchin (5-9 155 ). sen ior "Wahama had a great game
fullback Chad Conley ,(6-0 against us," and with those
175) and junior running hack statements all indications
Eddie Burrows (5-9 135 ). point tp. Calhoun County
Houchtn . although only a being fully prepared for the
sophomore. has thrown for White Falcons during Friday
over 500 yards on the year night's 7:30p.m. Class A grid
and has been a major player encounter in Grantsville.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

ThUI'!lday, September 29, 2005
'

Expanded Glance
Southeaatern Ohio Athletic League
SEOAL
W-1.
o-o
o-o
o-o
Q..D
o-o

Gallla Academy
Jackson
Logan
Athens
Warren
Mar:ietta
~thens47,

o-o

ALL

PF PA
000 000
000 000
000 000
000 000
000 000
000 000

W·L
4-1
4·1
3·2
2·3
1-4
0-5

PF
147
103
76
140
71
35

PA

•

88
44
119
171
136
146

0 I R •EXPERTS' BREAI D0·w N·THI S Vi EEK' S HI GH ·SCH0 0 t' F0 0 TBAll GAMES

Fridlly'o ga!MO

LAIIIRiver Valley 12

Galla Academy at Alhens
Logan 01 Jacl&lt;son
Marietta at Warren

GaUia. Academy 17, Ch11icothe 0
Jackson 4.2 Franldln He~ghts 14
Gahanna Llnooln 48, logan 0
Dublin Jerome 12, Marietta 6
Chesapeake '40, Warren 15

Ohio Valley Conference
W.L
Coal Grove
Rock Hill
South Point
Chesapeake
Fairland
A1verValley

Q.()

OYC
PF PA
000 000

W-L
4·1

4-,

o-o ooo ooo
000
0.() 000
0.() 000
0.() - 000

000
000
000
000

Q.()

3·2
2·3
1·4
1-4

ALL
PF PA
152
166

107
74

116

149

111
95

125
154
187

64

Frldlly'I-

LAIIICoal Grow 3;!. Vinton COmly 13
Meigs 34, Fairland 30
Athens47, RtYBI'Valley 12
Rod&lt; Holl 29. Wellston 6
Northwest 35, South Point 32
Chesapeake 40, warren 15

Chesapea.ke al Fairland
Coal Grove al River Valley
South Flotnl at Rock Hill

PA

W·L PF

000 000

4·1
3-2
2·3
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2-3
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o-o ooo ooo
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000 000
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&lt; o-o
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Hocking Division
W·L PF PA

Wellston

Vinton &lt;:ounty

&lt;

W·L

o-o ooo ooo

Trtmble
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Souii'1Eirn
Eastern
M1Uer

0·0

o-o

().()
().()

R.ecord· 39-1 1
Last Week: 7-3
(wmneFS m hgL;l)

Record· 45-5
Last Week: 8-2
(winners m ludd)

Larry Cratn
Spurts Wnter

Re coni: 37-1 3

Last Week: 9-1
(wmners m bsllil)

c~lha

000
000
000
000

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000
000
000
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3-2
2·3
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o-o ooo ooo

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151
153
97
131
101
40

PA
100
69
67
103
106
127

PF
161
97
71
61
68
16

at A them

at Arhem

Coal Groye at

Coal Grove at
Rwcr Valley

LAIIIAlexander at Belpre
Federal Hocking 20. Alexander 6
, Metgs at Wellston
Belpre 55, Eastem 14 .
Meigs 34, Fal~S!ld 30
V1nston Counly at Nelsonville· York
Eastern at Trimble
Trimble 27, Nelsomille 21 , OT

South Gallu

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l'l&gt;iD1.l'luwn

~
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Coal Groye

Record Jt'-12
Llst Week ~-:::!'
(w 111 Jlt'rl

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Stacey Brewer

JetTLanham

Pag m.u or

R1 o Gr.llld, AD

R t:Lo rd.41 -9
last Week H-2
(wt llll L'r~ Ill QQlg)

Record 3(~- 1-1Last Week. 9 - 1

Re( ord 28-22
last Week 7 -J
(..... mn e rs m .b.2ld)

(WIIltlt'f&gt; 11 1 .QQ!.d)

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,It

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at

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Pmnt Pleas.uu

Cual Grove at

Coal Grove

Rtvl r V.1 lle\

Rtv e rV&lt;~lky

F,1stn n lt

Ea~tl' rl1 at

Trimble

Trimbl v

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Coal Grove

o~l

,&gt;\tlic:m

Coal Gro\'c

II..Jvcr Vallq

!&lt;.. 1\, r V,111t·v

Eastt'rn ,It
Trimble

E l'kTII .It
Trunble

Jt

E.tstern

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E,J&lt;;IL'rn .H

Trjmble

Trjmble

Trimble

Southern at
ftderal HockinK

Southnn ,11
Federal l }ockjng

Southern at
Federal HockinK

Southem .lt
hderal Hockin~

Southern 11

Southern ,tl

Federal Hockm\:"

Federal Hockjng

Wabama

Wabama
at C:,dhmm

Wabama
at C lll10tlll

11 C,rllw u n

Mriln
·"
Wdfsto n

Mrip .It
Wcll~toll

~ .It
\\lcll~tUII

Hannan &lt;H

Hannan at

H.mn,lll .lt

H.mn,m .tt

Wirt County

H.um.l!l u
Wirt County

Hmmn .n

Wm Cmml)

Wirt Counry

Wirr County

Wirt Coumy

Wahama

C.1lhoun

"'-'&lt;1hama

at Calhoun

dt

Calhoun

Wellston

Mriln
"'
WellSton

M&lt;iJu
·"
WCIISton

Hanna11 at
Wjrt Councv

Hann.m at
Wjrr Counrv

H ,um.m ,1 t
Witt County

Southern at Federal Hock1ng
Miller at Waterford

Coal G""" 32, Vinton County 13
Rod&lt; HHI 29, W~l ston 6
Soult1 Galloa 8, Miller 0 '
Southern 43, Hannan 16
Walello.U 01 Park. Calhol&lt; (sat)

Rt'cord 29-21
L~st Week: 6-·4
(wmners 111 hWd)

Dave• Harris
Ad ll.eprl'scnatlve

Trimble

Mti&amp;J at

Friday's games

Pa!!:tn.tror

Smcrn ar

Wahama
at

Charlie Shepherd

SufTW mer
R ecord· 42-8
Last Week . 8-2
(v. mners 111 h2W)

Eastern at
nimble

PA
Southern at
federal Hockin~

Jan McNemar

.wnn..•t

Rwer Valle)'

46
79
71
75
255 '
137

Brian Billings
Gem:ral Manage r

South Gallta
"t

Wal.ta
"'
Point
Ple~am

ALL

TVC

' W•L PF

Nelsonville-York

Sports Wnter

" ll.uilil.2

Ohio Division ·

0·0

Bryan Walters

South

Tri-Valtey Conference

Me1gs
Belpre
Alexander

Brad Sherman ·
OV P Sports Edltor

.11

Calhoun

Mri&amp;l at
Wellston

Logan .1t

l&amp;pnat
Jackson

at

Jackson

'

Su uthern .tt

Federal

Logan

&lt;It

Calhm1n

Jl

' Lr,g.m .1t
Jackson

1t

I.HhotJ

Sm 1th ~·Jn

H

federal Hockmg

Wahama

Wahama

l 'og:ll1 Jt
Jackson

Southt rll

HOl: kin~;

.n

Federal Hqckjni:'
1JhiJAII],I

'W'.ib:mJJ
Calhoun

.tt Calhoun

~ .Jl

~ J(

Wdlston

Wellston

l&amp;2iU1

at

--~~11

}..o~.lll

11

lackson

' '

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

Cardinal Conference
CARDINAL
W-1. PF PA
Wayne
Poca
Winfield
Herbert Hoover
Pt Pteasant
Logan
Sissonville

3.()

2.()

2·1
1·1
1·1

o-2
D-4

152
35
65
49
26
13
32

52
19
75
37
27
47
115

W·L
5-0
3·2
3·2
4·1
1-4
2-3
0-4

ALL
PF
PA
223 58
90
71
99
99
165
71
107
32

)•II'S FUM EGUIPMEN,, INC.
1110 lllternlnn•

76
130
132
115

'

ellalllpolll, Ohio

It,

Catch all the results
in your local
newspapers

-,Br1n1nT

448-2484

.

SHENNIU

NINJ--·

Non-League
Ullwoolc

•
Friday's games

OVP Leaders (thru Week 5) - - - -

W~

Winfield 27,-Point Pleasant 7
Herbert Hoover 61, Clay Co. 1A
Logan 42. Chapma!MIIe 6
Wayne 53, Slssonvllla 20
Magnolia 28, Poca 7

at Polnl Pleasant
Herbert Hoover at Poca
·Scott at Logan
SiSSOI'MIIe at.Aoane COunty

GALLIPOLIS - OVP Leaders IS a list of the top offensive high schoOl football performers 1n the In-county area. Players' stattshcs are compiled by Ohio valley P.ubhsh1ng
sports writers and may not match numbers comptled by tlleir resp~l tve teams

ALL
· W·L PF
South Gallra
Wahama
Hannan

4·1
2·3
0-5

132
105
46

Leii-

Southem 43, Hanna1 16
Buffalo 16, Wahama 1J
South Gallia B. M1ler 0

1

Rushing

PA
96
90
227

Player

'

Jared Cosey (MI
Bernie Fulks (SG)
Dave Poole (M)
Alan Dye (H)

Friday's games
Hannan at W1n COunty

Wahama at Calhoun
South Galloa Buffalo

at

Rebels hunt for win
at unbeaten Buffalo
down pass of 78 yards and a
BWALTERS@~YDAI LYTRIBUNE.COM
16-yard reception.
·
Nick Harris (6-1, 206)
BUFFALO, W.Va. -Two brings a dual-threat to the
teams with a combined 9"I ' quarterback position, pasrecord square off Friday sessing ·both running and
when South Gallia travels to passing ab1lity. Harris threw
unl)eaten Buffalo for a piv- for 81 yards and ran for
otal Week 6 gridiron contest another 26 in the Wahama
The Rebels (4-1) currently victory.
sit fifth in Ohio's Division
The top wideout ~ David
VI, Region 23 playoff hunt Robinson (6-2, 169), who last
after last week's 8-0 victory week amassed 126 yards on
over Miller, while the Bison three catches. One of those
(5-0) are tied with·Greenbrier ~rabs was the 78-yard scarWest for fifth in West mg pass from Chapman.
Vrrginia's Class A poll after a
Guard John Young (5-9.
hard-fought 18-13 win versus 194) is the only returning
Wahama last Friday.
hneman from a year ago, but
The similarities don't stop a blend of newcomers up
at the playoff chase.
front have worked out nicely
Both teams feature a in Buffalo's open field
plethora
of
offensive scheme.
weapons .and stingy defenses
Keeping those play-makers
that have led each to a sue- out of the open field will be a
cessful 2005 start.
.
main concern for South
"They are S-0 for a reason,' Gallia.
they do&lt;\ lot of things right,"
"Hopefully we can match
SGHS coach Justy Burleson up in all the right areas and
commented. 'They swarm to nullify their passmg game,"
the ball defensively and they said Burleson. "If we don't
like to mix up on offense. stop their passin!) game, we
They do everything pretty are going to have problems."
Defensively for Buffalo,
·well."
SeriiQr tailback Travis Dill Harris, ' Young, Daniel
(5-foot-10, 174 pounds) has Lupardas (5-9, -249) and Jeff
been the go-to guy for BHS, Coleman (6-1, 191) will
as was the ca-;e last week ver- make up the front four, while
sus Wahama.
Chapman, Corey Legg (5-9,
Dill rushed 13 times for 178) and Chad Stotts (5-I 0.
200 yards against the White 205) all return to .the lineFalcons, including a 62 yard backing corps.
TD scamper, and also hauled
Robinson and Kevin
in one catch for 12 yards.
~cCoy (5-6, 164) ·rerum to
Kyle Chapman (5-8, 177) the secondary, a backfield
brings ail added dimension to that produced four intercepthe fullback spot. His ve~a- tion against Wahama passers.
tthty produced 67 rushmg
Buffalo allowed just 196
yards and a touchdown on 16 yards of total offense against
attempts against Wahama, the White Falcons, including
and he also added a touch- 02 on the ground.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Ope~er .

thing lO do with how the
game was played. "All
" credit to Ohio Dominican,
they worked really hard and
fromPageBl
they battle\! and they didn''t .
quit and I think part of it
pointment for me, the fact was they made us play that
that we didn't finish the way based on the effort they
game off the way we should put out," he said.
Rio will hit the road this •
finish a game off."
Morrissey said. "That's weekend for a match with
something we need to learn NAJA No. 20 Walsh (7-0-1)
from."'
on Saturday. Game time is
Morrissey also said that set for 2 p.m. in North
Ohfo pominican had some- Canton.
· 1. &lt;
"

Butch MarP'lhoul (S)
Terry Durst (E)
Cun Wsugh (SG)
Krls Gtbbs {W)
Trav1s Riffle (PP)
Jayme Haggerty (GA)
Chris Edwards (AV)
Dustin Winters (GA)
Brandon Warner (PP')
Bryca Honal&lt;er (E)
5oth Haner (GA)
Weston Counts (S)
Jordan Pierce {E)
Jostl Buzzard (M)
Brenton Clark (W)
Aaron Story (M)

Yards

AH.

507
490
466
483
471
427
347
289
284.
255
252
252
211
194

71
54
70
79
64
60
39
39

eeo

TO
6
7
3

wo'

3

3
4
3

3
4
'3

51
51
51
37
39
35
46
14
29
22

190
1B7
181
173
154

5
2
2

Casey

3
3

0
5
2
2

Passing
~r

'

Yards
750
Brenton Clark (W)
623
Jorclan P.1erce (E)
348
Seth Wllltamson (SG) 318
Bryan Morrow~RV) .. 269
Aaron Story (M)
221
Brandon Warner (PP) 206
Josh Pape (S)
157
Cory Shaffer (Ei
121
James Casto (PP)
91

Jeff Golden tGA)

Camp. Att. TO Int.
47
87 6
2

:re

9455

22

45
52
44
29
44
12
18
29

19
21
18
12

9
8
10

3

5'

5
0
2
2

6
0
2
1

4

0

1

0

2

0

Golden

Receiving
Player
Jayme Haggerty

Chase Oro (W)

(GAl

Shaphen Robinson (GA)
Michael Con:IOII' (RV)

Dustin -McCombs {SG)
Travos Riffle (PP)

Tatry llutSI (E)
Bryce Honaker (E)
Brandon Fowler (W)
Ryan Henry (RV)
Buddy Young (S)
Derrick Beaver iSGi
Jared Casey (M)
Kris Gibbs (W)
Ccdy Gerlach tEl
Josh Buuard (M)
Enc VanMeter (M)
Zak Dee! (RV)
Jordan Pierce (E)
Will Slone (PP)

Yarde

Rec-

357
350
265
232
191
176
165
141
129
119
73

16
17
12
14
7
8
12

66
67
67
63
53
49
46
46
46

3
1

6
7
10

1
0

3
7
7

1
2

5
3
4
5

&lt;!

TD
2
3
3
2
0
2

3
3
4

0
0
1

3

Haggerty

2

.

DIVISION IV

Winless Hannan heads to Wirt County
BY

Eastem

,

Region 1~-1. Young Mooney (5-0) 9 6870 2, Akron St Vincent-St Mary (4-1)
7 8860 3 (lie). Akron Manchester (50), Orrv1lle (3-2) 7 2500 5 Zoarvtlle Tus c
Valley (4-1) 6 6310 6 Garrettsville Garhe1d (4-1) 6 3500 7 Cant Cent Cath (3DIVISION I
2) 6 0500 8, Young Ursuline (3·2) 5 9500 9 , Tnntty (3-2) s 6740 10 BrooKlyn (32) 5 5500
'
Region 1-1 , Cle Glenville (5· 0) 11 .6500 2, Lakewo.od St Edward (4-0)
Region 14-1, Ottawa-G landorf (5·0) 121500 2. Coldwater (5-0) 9 7000 3,:
111080 3, Solon (5·0) 11 0500 4, Lyndhurst Brush (4-1) 10 9500 5, North Elyna Catholic {5-0) 6500 4, Rossford (4-1) 8.4940 5 Huron (5-0) 8 4000 6 0 imsted (4-1) 8 6500 6, Euclid (3-2) 7 6410 7 , Cleve , St lgnahus (4-1) 7 5780 8
Manon Elgin (4-1) 7 8500 7, Bellville Clear Fork 14 1) 7 3500 e W Millon Mtllon·
Cleve Ken nedy (4·1) 6 6730 9, Eastlake North (3-2) 6 4500 10, Middleburg Hts
umon (5·0) 7 1500 9. Tontogany Otsego (5-0) 6 8000 10, Wellmgton (4-t),
Mtdpark (2·3) 5.2500
.
6 6500
•
Region 2-1, Tol. St. .:John's (6·0) 13 6500. 2, Mass. Washmgton (5·0) 11.4500 3,
Region 15--1, Bella1re (s-O) 12 4350 2. rronton (4-1) 10 1000 3 Heath (5·0)
Frndlay (4-1) 10 5000 4, Elyna (4-1) 9.9500 5, Mass. Jackson (4- 1) 8 7000 6 , 6.9500 4, Piketon (5-0) 8 4930 5, Portsmouth West (4·1) 7 2500 6 Byesvrlle
Amherst Sleele {4·1) 8 6500 7, Canl McKrnley 15-0) 8.5770. 8, Hudson {3-2) Meadowbrook (5·0) 71000 7. Cols Hartley (4·1) 6 0750 8 (tte) New Lexmgton
8 5500 9, Green (4-1) 8 3500 10, Sylvama Northvrew (4-1) 8 1000
(3 -2 ), Zanes w Muskmgum (4-1) 6 0000 10, Pomeroy Meigs (4·1) 5.9000.
'
Region 3-1, Gahanna Lmcoln (5·0) 12 9000 2, Hlllrard Da't'ldson (5-0) 11 8000
· Region 16-1, Monroe Lemon -Monroe (5 -0) 9 3500 2. Germanlown Valley Vrew·
3, Lancaster (4·1) 10.3000 4, Westerville South (4-1) 8 8500 5, Groveport- (5-0) B 6000 3, Clarksville Clrnton-Masste (4-1) 8 0000 4. C1n Madetra (4-1)
Mad1son (3-2) 7.4500 6, Newark (4-1) 73500 7 (tte), Dubhn Coffman (2-3). 72000 5 Blanchester (41) 67000 6 Dayton Oakwood (4 1) 61000 7 Crn'
Htlherd Darby (4-1) 7 0000 9, Cols Brookhaven (4-1) 6 8000 10, Reynoldsburg (3- Wyommg (3-2) 5 7500 B, Ham Badtn {3-2) 5 3500 9, Cm Martemont (3-2)
2) 6.4000.
5 2500 10, Spring Greenan (3-2) 5 0500
Region 4-1, C1n. St Xavter (5-0) 14 7500 2. Centervrlle (5·0) 12 6000.3, em
DIVISION V
.
Moeller {4-1) 11 9000 4, Crn. Glen Este (50) 10 9000 5 , Huber Hts Wayne (4-1)
Region 17-1 , W Salem NW {5·0) 6 1000 2, SmrthvJIIe (5-0) 8 0500 3 N. Lima.
10 4500 6, Ctn LaSalle (4-1) 10 1000 7, Clayton Northmonl (4·1) 9 9500 8, C1n
S Range (5-0) 7 6500 4 L1sbon Dav1d Ander'son (5-0) 6 7500 5 Warren
Cole ram (4-1) 9 7010 9 {tie), Fa1rf1eld (3·2), liberty Twp Lakota E (3-2 ) 8 1500
Kennedy (4 -1) 6 6500 6 , Apple Creek Waynedale {4-1) 6 2500 1 A1ttma n (4-1)
6.0000 B, Loursvrlle Aqumas {4·1) 5.5670 9 , Burton Berkshtre (4·1) 51500 10,
DIVISION II
New
Mtddlatown Spnngfreld {4-1) 4 9000.
Region 5-1, Tallmadge (5·0) 12 4500 2, Olmsted Falls (5-0) 11 3500 3, Maple
Region 18-1, Hamler Patrrck_Henry (5-0) 8 7500 2, Buc yrus Wynlord (5~0).
Hts {5·0) 11 2000 4, PC!rma Normandy (5-0) 10 6000 5, Wtlloughby South ' {S·O) 7 2000. 3. Ftndtay L1berty-Benton (5·0) 7 0500 4 Gates M1lls G1!mour Acad (5-0)
9 0000 6, Copley (4-1) 8 7500. 7. Akron Hoban (4·1) 8 7000 B. Twtnsburg {4-1 ) 6 8500 5, Collrns Western Rese rve (4-1) 6 4500 6 Convoy Crestv1ew (5-0)
8 5500 9 (tie) lakestde (3 -2). Chagrrn Falls Kenston (3·2) 8 0500
6 1000 7, Bloomdale Elmwood (3-2) 5 8810 B. Sherwood Fatrvrew (4· 1) 5 7260.
Region 6-1, Avon Lake (5-0) 13 8000 2, Lod1 Cloverleaf {5-0) 12 1000 3 (he). 9, Della (3-2) 5 7000 10, Rocky A1ver Lulh W (3-2) 5 3000
,
Tol. Cent Cath (4-1), lawts Center Olentangy (4-1)9 2000.5, Mans Mac::ltson (4Region 19--1 , Cols Ready (5-0) 9 8500 -2 Howard E Kno~ (5-0) 8 7000. 3.
1) 8 9000 6, Olentangy l 1berty (5-0) 8 3500 7 Tol Rogers (3·2) 8 0000 8. Whee lersburg (3 2) 7 6000 4, Grandvtew Hts (4-1) 7 1400 5 Lucasville Valley
Green&lt;Jtlle (4-1) 7 7500 9, Ashland (3-2 ) 7 3000 10 Sylvama Soulhv1ew (4- 1) (4 -1) 7 1370 6. Frankfort Adena (4-1) 6.9000 7, Gloust~r lrrmble (5-0) 6 6740 S.
6.8500
Stewart Federal Hockmg (3-2) 5 9200 9 (he), Frederrcklown (3-2) Joh nstown·'
Region 7-1, loutsvdle {5·0) 14 0500. 2. Canfteld (5.0) 11 7320 3, Ptckertngton Monroe (4-1) 5 4500
· ~
Htgh School C (4-1) 9 6500 4, Cols Watterson (4-1) 8 6750 5. New Phtl adelphla
Region 2Q-1 , Crn Hrlls Chnsttan Acad (5-0) 10 1690 2 Anna (5-0) 8 7000 3,
Versa1lles (5 -0) B 3000 4, Harmony Commumty School (5 -0) 7 9500 5 Lees
(5·0) 8 5500 6, Dublm Sc1oto (3-2) 8 3500 7 Cols Beechcrott (4 -1) 7 5500 8
Cols Marton Franklm (4-1) 7 108o 9, Alliance (3·2) 6 9500 10, Young Aayen (3- Creek E Clmtcrn (4-1) 7 6500 6, Ltma Cent Cath (4 -1) 6 9500 7 Arcanurn (5-0Y
6.8500 8, Manon Pleasant {3 -215 7000 9, Readrng (3-2) 5 0000 10 Blulfton (4-.
2)6 0000
.
1)49000
Region 8-1 , Springboro (5-0) 13 4000 2, Ctn Mt Healltty (5-0) 9 9000 3
Tren1on Edgewood (5-0) 8 8000 4, Wtlmmg ton {4- 1) 8 7500 5, Kmgs M11ls Krngs
DIVISION VI
(4·1) 7 4500 6, Bellbrook (4-1) 7 2000 7, Cln Wrnton Woods (4· 1) 7 0500 8,
Region 21-1 , Steub Cath Cent (5·0) 9 4500 2 Colt:Jmb1ana (50) 8 5500 3,
Wash CH Mtam1 Trace (3-2) 7.0340. 9, Mt Orab Western Brown (3-2) 5.8500 10,
Cleve CJya Hts (4-1) 6 7000 4 , M1neral A1dge (4-1) 6 5000 5 Leeton1a (4- l)
Day Meadowdale (3-2) 6 6720
5 6000 6, Wellsville {3-2) 5 1500 7, McDonald (4-1) 4 6500 8 Lowellvil le (2-3),
4.2000 9. East Canton (3-2) 4.0500 10, V1enna Mathews (~·2 ) 3 5000
'
, DIVISION Ill
Region 22-1. Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (5-0) 8 2500 2 Liberty Ctr (4-1)
Region 9-1, Mentor Lake Cath .15 O) 12 6770 2, Aurora (4-1) 9.4000. 3, Parma 6 7000 3. Monroeville (3-2) 5 9500 4. Sycamore Mohawk (4- 1) 5 8500 5 (Ir e),
Hts Holy Name (4·1) 8 8950 4, Young Liberty (5-0) 7 4270 5, Ravenna SE {4- 1) Cresthne (4-1) StMary Central Calho!ic: {4·1) 5 8000 7(1re), N Ball1more (4-1),'
6.4500 6, Cortland Lakev1ew (4-1) 6.2000 7, Ntles McKrnley (3·2) 6 1810 8 Akron Tol Ottawa H1lls (4-1) 5 1500. 9, EdgertOn (4-1) 5 1000 10 Colu mbus Grove {4·
Buchtel (3-2) 5.7000 9, Cleve BenediCtine (2·3) 5 3290 10, Mantua Crestwood (3- 1)50500
2)51500
Region 23--..1. Lane F1sher Cath (4-1) 7 1000 2. Newark Cath. J4- 1) 6 5500 :3,
Region 1D-1, Napoleon (5-0) 10 6500 2, Clyde (4- t) 91500 3, Archbishop Hanmbal R1ver (4 1) 6 1290 4, Shadystde (4- 1) 6 0260 5, Crown City S. Gallra
Aller (4-1) 8.8500 4, Spnng Shawnee (4-118,5000 5, St Marys Memorial (4·1) (4·1} 4.5500. 6 W1llow Wood Symmes Valley (3-2) 4 3000 7 Beallsville (3-2)
8.4000 6, Sheffield Brook;;ilde (4-1)''e 9000. 7, Eaton (4-115.5500 B, Bryan (3-2} 4 2930 8 Strasburg-Franklin (3-2) 4)- 000 9, Bellaire St John {3 21 3 9680 10
Old Wash Buckeye Tra1t (3-2) 3 615~ .
5 4270 9, Urbana (3 - 1) 5 4070 10, Kenton (3-2) 5 3500
'
Reg1on 24-1 , Mec:hamcsburg (5-0} 10 3550 2 Spnng Catn Cent (4 -l.)
Region 11-1, Steubenvrlle (5-0) 12
2 Newark L1ckmg Valley ( 5~0 )
12.6000. 3, New Concord John Glenn (5·0) 102000 4, Canal Fulton N W {4-1) 7 2500 3. Dola Hardm Northern {5-0) 6.7500 4, Delphos St Jot'ln s (4·1) 5 3500
100000. 5, Cambndge (5-0) 8 8360. 6 Medma Buckeye (5-0) 8 2890 7, Belort 5 Mana S1em Manon Local (4 -1) 5 5000 6, Covrngton {4-1 J 4 6000 7 Cm_
West Branch (3-2) 7 0400 8. Salem (4-1) 6 7280. 9. Alhance Marlmgton {4-1) Country Day (4-1) 4 2500 8 Waynesfreld- Goshen (4-1) 4 2140 9 Fo1t Loramte
(3-2) 3 8000 10, DeGraff A1versrde (3-2) 3 1600
6.0000 1O, Shelby (3·21 5 2500

eyooo

0
0
0

Ann. Coaches- In order to he~ ma~e our leaders hst as accurate as possible you
are enc:ouraged to aubmi1 your learn's cumulatrve statrsties each week. Deadline IS 11
p.m Tuesday of each week. You can ematl. sports@ mydallytribune.c:om; or tax to ?f\0-

Wi-3008

COLUMBUS (AP)- Here are tile second weekly football computer r:f.ngs from the
Oh1o H1gh School Alhlellc Association Ra\tngs are by diVISIOn and reg1on wtth record
and average b1-level potnts per game (top e1ght teams m eacll reg1on advance to
regional quarter1 mals)·

(l

a

3

38

OHSAA computer ratings

Region ~2 - 1 C1n lndiall H1ll (5-0) 10 3000 2, GalL Gallla Acad. (4-1) 8.5001.
3 Clrclevtlle Logan Elm (5·0) 8 2500 4, Jackson (4-1) B 2000 5, Cols De Sales
2) 7 8500 6 Thornville Sheridan (3·2) 7 6000 7, Cm Tat! (4-1) 7 4780 B, New
Albany (5-0) 7 4500 9 Hillsboro (4-1) 6 3500 10, St Bernard Aoger..Bacon (3 2)
6 0500

time at guard, and both Nick
Giffin (6-2, 285) and Randy
Waldeck (6-2, 310) will split
from Page B1
time at the other tackle.
·
Senior Matt Christman (6-5,
230) also gives Trimble a big
against NYHS. Dixon also 'target at tight end.
went 4-of-5 passing for 37
Trimbl~ did not have a
yards and threw one touch- turnover in ta~t week's win'and
down and was not picked off. also forced three Buckeye misSenior Kevin Simons (5-10, cues:
180) should also see signif1Cl111t
De' · 1 THS
50
action out of the backfield.
,enstve y,
runs a ·
base that is anchored by ·nose
Simons had 19 yards last week guard Warren Smith. Smith (5on seven carries.
Senior Chaz MOhler (5. 10, 9, 160) is joined up front by
1SO) was the main receiving tar- · Rowers and Nott at guard, and
' get last week, collecting two Wllideck, Nagucki and Malt
catches for 17 yards. Nou Christman will see time at t)te
hauled in one catch for II yards ends.
and senior Robert Barrett (6-1,
Mark Christman and Scott
!55) had a touchdown grab of Bycofski (5-9, 175) will tackle
seven yards.
the linebacker duties, while
Up front, three-year starter Dixon and Blake Fouts (6-0,
Tont Troiano (6-1, 330) returns 160) will handle the safety
to tackle, while center Tony spots. Mohler and Barrett
Miller (6-0, 230) also returns. round out the defense at corRyan Nagucki (5-10, 210), Bren nerback.
.
Rowers (6-0, 225) and Mark
Kick-off is slated for Friday
Christman (6-2, 185) will all see .. at 7:30p.m. .

night armed with a continual- ed by the program. then the

LARRY CRUM

' ly improving offense and a team can. focus on putting

--=========:.__
ELIZABETH, W.Va. LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER coM

Although a Wildcat lacks the
size to compete against a
Tiger. when backed into a
comer a Wildcat can become
uncontrollable and can sometimes pull off something
even the Tiger can't b~lieve .
Hopefully that can ring
true Friday night.
Hannan (0-5) brings a
nothing to lose attitude to
Wirt County (3-2) Friday

defense that has shown signs
of tmprovement throughout
the year.
All they need to do now is
control the tootball and the
Wtldcats could be a trip to
Wirt County away from
snapptng a losing streak
which has become a slingmg
black eye on the program.
The good news for Hannan
is that all black eyes heal.
and tf the Wildcats can get
the win so desperalely need-

Ewing (6-foot. 190 pbunds I
ts the leading Wellston rusher on the season with 273
yards and three touchdowns.
fromPageBl
Backfield mate. halfback
"
Jake Walburn. is a change·
year ago.
of-pace back that has gamed
Gone from that Rocket 125 yards on 25 totes.
club is standout linebacker
Quarterback
Zane
Lanee Phillips. but many Holzapfel. who has 1hrown
of the familiar name.s for 473 ) ards wtth lour
return at the skill positions . . touchdowns and three mlcr·
Senior (ullback Josh ceptto~s. leads a capable

Meigs

•

After startin~ 0-1 wtth two .
bi g losses 10 Parkersburg
Catholic and St. M.tr) ·s by a
combmed score ot X2-l-l. the
Tigers have rebounded with
three straight win s. blowmg
out Gilmer Count) and
Doddridge Count) and edgtng Madonna 20- 16 last
weekend.
Friday's game is slated for
a 7:30" k1cko ff at Win
Countv. \\ htle the Wtldcats
rerum ~home next \\cek ~atne
for a btg homcc'oming game

togelher its first winning
streak in three years.
To pu II out a win. Hannan
wtll need to go lhrough a
tough opponent in Wirt
County, who last year at 0-5
beat the Wildcats 52-0 at
home . But that was last year
, and both are new teams thts
season -· the problet~l for
Hannan is that Win County is
new in a good way. bringmg
a much dttferent record from
against Ha11s.
las1 season.

.

pa"mg game. Hi s favorite
targets have been Jake
W.ilburn and Josh Osborne.
who· ha\'e hauled a 'tinle
more than 200 yards each.
Wells1on will try to slow
down a potent Marauder
rushing .mack that features
Jared Casey '(660 vards. 8
touchdow ns l and. Dave
Poole (490 1 ards ). Jesh
Buuard has · added I R'l
yards rushing. 53 recei1 mg

and scored eight ·touchdowns .
· Story. from the quarter{back posi11on: has throw-n
for 221 yard' and tv, o lollchdowns and ran for 15-1 ore
and a pair of scores.
Metgs aymded dtsaster a1
Fairland last "eek as lin
Aaron Storv touchdown run
inside the final second gave
ht' team a 34-30 comf"
from-behi nd win.

�Thursday, September 29, 2005

www.mydai!ysentinel.com

Thursday, September 29, 2005

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

ijtrlbune-- Sentinel CLASSIFIED
6
.._r::;ro~MONEY~LoAN=~r..__.-.."&lt;llll!li•SALE-..._..1

p

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

Word Ads

28x50 barn, w/all new fence
Approximate income of
$10 000 per month on a
51 AI , $463,000 (740)645·
0670

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p.nl.
Monday- Friday for Insertion

All Dl11play: :12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

In Next Day 's Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

* All ads must be prepaid*

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Shoukt Run 7 Days

r; PFRo;(lNAI.~

YARD SALE

1

Smgle
whtte
Chrtsttan
female looking for smgle
whtte Chrrsltan male !or
some compantonshtp Ages
betw~en 45-55 Please ca ll
740 446-6743 afte r 6 rn

ANNOUNCF~\IFNTS

r~==::=::==~ r
r
I
~--•GiiiiAliiLII'OiiliiiiiiJSil'.....
~

1 day only 4 family yard sale/
bake sale Saturday 10/1/05,
8am-4pm
Apartments

Ga~ta

138

ho

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

l.

1

YARD SALE-

Manor
Buhl

LPNISTNA

3 famtly yard sale 1206
Orchard Htll Ad 3 mtles
south on At 7, turn nght at
esponstblhtas
mclud
ecru1ttng and tramlng o
amers, cus1omer 'ervtc
nd meettng sales goals I
u have a pos1t1ve ath
ude, are a self-starter
nd a team player, w
uld hke to talk to you
ust be dependable an
ave re liable transport&amp;
ion PoSition offer s al
ompany beneftts lnclud
ng health , dental, vrs ton
ndllfe msurance, 401k,
aid vacation, and person
days Please sen
esume to
Paul Barker
Clrculallon Manager
Ohio Valley Publishing
825 Third Ave
Ga111pollo, Ohio 451131
Or email to

Clipper Mtlls, tallow stgns
Pollee scanner, mens, wornen s c htldren, Jl.mtor name
Orand cloth1ng, toys storm
door, tots of mce mtsc Sept
30- Oct 1 8 to ?

Morton Rd

1011 10/2
Mens/womens
plus stze clo thing , col·
S'eneftt Golt Outmg
For 1 e c t 1 b 1 e s ,
Chuck A1tch1e 1o help pay Chnstma ~Halloween t1ems
mQdt C81 a)(penses
Sept lots of everythmg g..? 410
24th at 9 00 AM Ptne Hilts Hedgewood Dr
G611 Course Trophtes for
191 2nd and 3rd place and 2 lam1ly yard sale Fnday·
other
pn zes
awarded Saturday, 271
Georges
Refresl1 ments
ser\led Creek, 1St left after railroad
Cot;ne out and Help
crosstng, 9am·5pm

--=--------

365 Ann Or- off Raccoon
Ad Salurday Oc1 1 8 30·
5 00 K1tchen 1tems, yard
tools X-mas/ mtsc decora·
11ons, electromcs
mise
ttems

0
0
0
f)

•

5-famlly garage/yard sale
446
Fr1-Sat 9/30- 10/0t
Spruce Street E11tens1on
Baby,
children
men,
women, plus s1ze clothes,
11ousewares tovs lurntture,
tools

2 1 Edgemont Dr Friday
I Matthew V Halley will not Sept 30 and Sat Oct 1
Oe held responsible for any 8 30am·? Chtld rens clothes
ct ebts or habtltltes ot Sprtng baby
ttems
household
Mem ii-Halley
Ad
Items men &amp; womens cloth- 555 Netghbor'hood
Frtday and Saturday 8 30Ing etc
4pm Mens, womens and
GIH:.\WAY
3 fam1ly sale Candles. g1rls clothes household
Italian cha rms , women Items lV s toyS and much
~ tolottwetler puppies, male &amp; clothmg s1ze 8·1 8, mrsc Fn mora
Sat
1011/05
fema le to good home Good 9/30/05
watch dog Call (740)388· Su nhaven Tannmg Salon 9523 SR160 (next to Korner)
At 35 besrde Foodland
Fnday-Saturday K1ds winter
0343 or (740)59 1·91 16
clot1'11ng, plus s1zes mens &amp;
- - - - - - - - - ~ 3 tam1ly sale Frl &amp; Sat 9·5
4 montl1 old Cahco K1tten Clay Townl1ouse Lovers women, lots ol household
beauttful markings, to good Lane Gtrls womens &amp; btg tlems. toys

1

r

Home only (304)675 7585

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

mens clothing lmens, toys

Fn·Sat 289 Green Terrace
baskets, home decor, com·
tn
Centenary,
9am-1
puter monitor 6-1 game
Women s stze 3 5, plus
table much more
s1zes, boys 6·10. Otshes
Yard sale Sept 29th-Oct
230 Ltnwood Dr Garage sale Baby cldthes &amp;
1s1
Ch1ldrens clothtng ant1ques etc Friday/Saturday, 9 ? ,
91130-10/1 180 pasl hosp
watcl1 for Stgns

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale .......... ................,.............. 725
Announcement ........................................... 030

Antiques ............................................... , ....... 530
Apartments lor Rent... .............................. 440
Auction and Flea Markel.. .......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair,.................................................
Autos lor Sale ........................................... 710
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale .. . ........................ 750
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings .. ........................... 340
Business Opportunity ....................... .... 210
Business Training ................................. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes •.•....•.. ..•....•...•..•• 790
Camping Equipment................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ......................................"' 010
Child/Elderly Care .............. .. ................... 190
ElaclrlcaliRefrigaratiDn...... .............•........ 840
Equipment lor Rent ................ "' .................. 480
Excavat1 ng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ...................................610
Farms for Rent ...................... ..... ............430
Farms lor Sale .............., .............................. 33D
For Lease ................................................ 490
For Sale ... .. .............. .............................. 585
For Sale or Trade ...... .............................. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fu rnlshed Room o........................................ 450
General Hauling ... .............. ..................850
Giveaway ... .... ...................................... 040
Happy Ads........ ................................. - ........ D50
Hay &amp; Grain .................... ,.............................640
Help Wanted ...., .......... ... . ......................... 110
Home Improvements.. .. .............. .............810
Homes for Sale ................................... ...... 310
Household Goods ..........................."' ......... 51 o
Houses lor Rent. .... . ..............................41 0
In Memoriam . ......•
.................... 020
Insurance ........................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equ1pment ........................ 660
livestock .... .... .. ................................. 630
Lost and Found ..... .... .... ... .... .....••. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ...................................... 350
Mlscellaneo us .............................................. 17D
Miscellaneous Merehandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair .................... ..........860

no

Mob1le Homes for Rent...... .. • ..•

••.• .•. 420

Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
Money to Loan .. . .. .. .. . .... .. ...................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......... ...........740
Musical Instruments ........ .•.... . ..•....... 570
P.ersonals ............................... ... ................... oos
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ......... ,...................... 820
Professional Servtces ..... ........•.. ........... 230
~adio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schools Instruction ...••.........•.....••.....••... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
650
Situations Wanted .•••...•...•••.............•....•... 120

················tr····-·-...

Space tor Rent.. ...........................................460
Sporting (:oods ..... ........ ..................... 520
SUV's lor Sale... ..... .... ... .. ................. 720
i"rucks for Sale ...... ..... ..... ... .•. ... .. .... 715
Upholstery ................................................. 870
Vans For Sale ...........................................730
Wantea to Buy ......................................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ......... ..... 620
Wanled To Do .............................................. 180
Wanled to Rent ........................................... 470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Mlddle ........................ 074
:Vard Sale· Pl. Pleasant.. .............................. 076

Garage sale Fn only Sept
30th 9-? 1-t /4 rmle out
Georges Creek Ad off At 7
Warm morn1ng gas stove
40,000-60 OOOBTU, Storm
door 32m mterror door
chm\ dolls cloth~s.all sizes
Home lntenor mtsc

pbarkerOmydallyl~·

bune.com
Dnve

r

YARDSALE-

Pn'AEROY/Mmou:

2
Fam1ly
8'1ow
Out l
Everything 1n Yard Sa le must
gal Wto table and chans
Days and gtrts clothmg . computer, too much to mentoo
Oct 1 and 2 9am to 5pm
47975 Tornado Road(formerly
State
Route
124)Aaclne ~..k.Jst past Htgh
School on rtghl. look for the"
stgn

liD

I
.

Hugl1 Yard Sa le 4-Famlly Fn
Sept 30 Sat Oct 1 Sandhill
Ad Letart, f1rst house on the
lett oH of At 33 watch for
stgn s Clothes Glassware,
Mtrcowave Stand, Engtne
Stand much much More
·,.,...--.,,.,.,.-----,

806 Willow lane Aac1 ne.
Fr1day Saturday, lots ot
boys
clotl1mg
small
women 's g mens cloth ing
toys, btkes &amp; more everything tn great shape &amp; some
new, ( husband go1ng to
race need money to get r1d
of h1m for a week)

r

Basement Sale· Wed 28th,
Thurs 29th, Frt 30th, 8 30·
5 30 some cloth1ng tools
cookware small appliances
qudttng books, decorating
Items &amp; much more, 365 t0
Sktnner Ad , Pomeroy off
Flatwood Ad

•40 cpm ALL MILES

ffwoWANil.D
BURGER KING
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES

•No forced NVC
•95% No touch freight
•Paid vacaUon after year
•Hospitalization 6 401k
available
Interested part1es with 2 yrs
OTR·experience
8()().652·2362

10102

Oct 1 and 2 Fnday and
Saturday, 9 to 5
Across
from
Racrne
Methodtsl
Church
Garage Sale
Tools
crafts
exCellent

=n~a~~r;es~~~~d

much

,
Saturday October 1 9 00
a m ·4 OOp m
at 43742
State Route 124 (across
from
W aters
Edge
Apartments)
Syracuse
Aatn Cancels ·

roBuv

;;:;=======;;;;
~~=~=~:~=
LEARN

TO

DRIVE

Full Time

STNAs
Full and Part llme
Proper ltcense/certlflcauon
reqUired We offer an e11cel·
tent work env1ronment. shtft
differential,
competlttve
wage s, great ben efits perfect attendance mcentlves
and much morel
Please apply to
AHn: Dianna Thompaon,

HR
Scenic Hills Nursing
Center
311 Buckrtdge Rold
Bidwell, OH 45814
Ph 74111oWI-711!0
Fax 7401446-2438
Email: admln.ahnO

1-800-334· 1203

HELP WANrnD,

The Gallla County Board of
MR/00 1s cu rrently acceptIng applications tor the followtng full ttme position m
the
Galfco
W orkshop
Hab11ttal1on Specialist II
Minimum
qualifications
Bachelor Degrea (SpeCial
Educat1on preferred)
Dut1es Include Enrollee In·
take, evatuat+ons/assessments, de~loplng Ell1d supporting tndl\lldual programs
In behavtor management,
vocatronal, self-help, soclal·
tzatlon, etc while monitoring
and documenting progress
CoorOin ate services with
other agenCies
App lications
can
be
obtained at the Gallra
County Board of MRIDO
located at 8323 North State
Route 7 Cheshtre. Oh10
45620
Deadline
for
applying
OCIOber 12,2005
The Gallla COunty Board of
MR/DD
Is Bn
Equal
Opportumty Employer

tandamhaalthcarw.com

SF/OFIEOE
HAOtandomhHitrn....r;:om

•

--+--------

Are Y9U looktng for a change
tn your nursing? Full-time
AN neectect for growmg
home
health
agency
Flelttble scheduling, competlllve wages wtlh benehts
Call toll free 1 866 368
1100

Pr.

LPNs

We see k career onented
EXTRA! EXTRA!
1ndtv1dua1s who will striVe to
Look1ng fo{ a part·time JOb.
achle\le the best tn cu1ifomer
but havtng no luck?? We
sattsfachon and team work
may have JUS! whal you are
If you ha\le a des~re to be
look1ng fori The Pomt
successlul with a goal drtven
Pleasant Aeg1ster 1s seek·
and grow tn g company we
lng a dependable hardoff health dental life Insurwo rkmg md1v1duallor a
ance
prescrtp ltOn ca rd
MOTOR ROUTE
bonus program pa1d vacaAvatlable In the Ga tltpol1s
ttons 401K and manage·
Ferry, Henderson Area
ment apparel Advancement
Pays around S800 per
from withtn If you are Inte rmonth, workm~;~ 3 hours a
ested tn Gal lipolis Oh1o or
day, 6 days a week off on
Charleston. WV area apply
litO
Sundays Please Contact
tn perso n the Burger Ktng
.
Sean Cullen
restauran t located at the
Potnt Pleasant Aegtster
Ohto RIVer Plaza, Gal ltpohs
r
Olst Sales Mgr
or marl resurpe to Burger
(304)675 · 13339Jd 20
Klng 65 Upper Atver Ad
Gall1pohs, OH 45631 or fax For a hmrted time make 500k
304·529·0055
sellong Avon Call (740)446·
3358
Child Care needed 1n Apple
Grove area
Prefer Non· Fuel Drl\ler, COL &amp; Hazard
Smoking lndtlltdual to come Matenal Send Resume to
• NO EIIPERIENCE NECESSAR'I
to my Res1dence
Days C1ty Ice &amp; FI.Jel PO Boll 27
' FlJi..~ TIME CLASSES
hoy~s wrll
vary
Call Pt Pleasant WV 25550
• CD\. TRAIMING
RN SUPERVISOR
• FINAMCINO AVAILABlE
(304)576·29 15 or (304]688·
Fullnme
Home Health Care of SE
• JOe PLACEMENT
5955 ask for Raven
' ENROLUNG NOW
Ohro IS currently hrnn y
Proper liCense requr;ed We
~C~N~A~·S~ii:"'lk&amp;iru.~R;e~s~td~e~o~t Home Health A10es
Call offer an excellent work erM~stSiams
tnt
erv
ews
Are
Compet1trve
wages
1
ALLIANCE
ronmen1, sh1H IJ1fferent1al,
Now Be 1ng Conducted For 740-662-1222
TRACTOR TRAILER
competitiVe wages, great
CNA
&amp;
Aestdent
ASSIStant
TRAINING CENTEF\S
Postttons
If You Are A Is there anyone m ttl ~ benefits, perfect attendaoca
WYTHEVILLE VA
Pomeroy/Middleport area 1ncent1ws and much morel
lookmg for full time work? Please apply to
We Want You To Jom Our Are you looking for bener
than
mtmmum
Attn : Dianna Thompaon,
Team
Come On Over &amp;
100 WORKERS NEEDED Check Us Outl You II Be wages?Pnmary schedule IS
HR
Monday-Fnday 8am-5pm
Asse mt»e crafts ,
Scenic Hills Nu,.ing
Glad You Drdl Competlttve Mus! ha\le valtd driVers
wood ttems
Centtw
CNA
Wages ,
Pard license and dependable
To $400/wk
311
Buckrfctge
flood
Pa rd
Vacal 1o ns
Meals vehiCle Must be famJ\tar wtth
Matenals prOVIded
• Bidwell, OH 45014
Many
Other
Beoef1ts Metgs County
Free mformatton pkg 24Hr
Ph7-..7150
Ravenswood Care Center
Send resumes tncludtng
BO 1-428-4649
Fax 74W448-2438
1113 Washmgton Street,
references to CLA Boll 2
Emili. admln.'stmo
Ravenswood , WV (Across do Pomeroy Da1ly Sentinel,
tanclemheatlhcara com
A.n Excellent way to earn
~ Bridge Rt 2 North
p 0 So)( 729 .
money The New Avon
Pomeroy OH 45769
l ast Busrness On Atght)
Call Martlyn 304-882 -2645
References Requ1red

2 tamtly, At 143 tools Home
InteriOr, lots of stuff new &amp;
Yard sale- 1 Day Only Sat
used Fn-Sat Sun
~1st 9am 500 Grant Sl
3 fam1ly, Sat Oct 1st 9-3 Mtddleporl. mlant QlriS Jr
Dave Spencer's, 605 Ma1n gt~S &amp; materntty clothmg ,
St , Rac1ne adult clothes , shoes purses. m1scella AVON ' Alt Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Sl1tr1ey Spears 304·
AE AF Aero teen clothes , neous
675 1429
Q-6, basketball qoat scootY!\RDSAI.Eer tovs &amp; household 1tems ·
Help Wanted
FULLTJME
PLFA'&gt;ANf
4-famlly yard sale Hobson
~ Overbrook Center
Road, next to M01gs Carpet B1g Garage Sale
126 ts currently aCceptmg applt·
Fn -Sat 9130 1011, 9am·? Engltsh Road Fn 30th &amp; Sal caltons for full time STNA's
Womens, mens, and chll!f you ere Interes ted please
' " (8·7)
crafts ,
come tn and hit out an applt·
drens , clothmg
household Items cust6n'l Yard Sate 3 m1tes South ot catton at 333 Page Street
drapes Home InteriOr lots R&amp;L Truckmg lad~&amp;s Plus Mtddteport OH 4S760 No
of vanetyl
Phone Calls Please EOE
S1ze Thur, Frt &amp; Sal

r

Scemc H tl ls Nurs1ng Center,
a Tandem Heallh Care
Faclltty, Is seeking a _select
few to JOin our outstanding
team as

-"P•P'•I

Med1 Home Heatth Agency,
Inc seektng a full-ttme AN
Patient Care Coordinator for
Galhpohs, OhiO and surarea
Dulles
roundmg
rnclude establishtng and
malnta1mng open ltnes of
communtcahon wtlh area
phys~etans and health care
facllitles tn the delivery of
Home Health ServiCes We
offer a competittve salary
anct benefit package tor full
t1me E 0 E Please senli
resume to Audrey Farley,
Clmtcal
Manager
352
Second Avenue, Galhpohs, Concealed P1stol Class
October 8, 9 00 am VFW
O H 45631
Mason WV Ph (740)843·
5555 Cell(740)416-3329
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson Pt~e Gallipolis
Galllpollo CarMr Colllgo
(Careers Close To Home)
AN SUPERVISOR
Call Todayl 74D-446-&lt;1367,
HlOQ.214-Q452
SceniC H1lls Nurstng Center.
wwwoaf!lpoli~ oam
a Tandem Health Care
Aecoe&lt;Med M•mber A.cCr&amp;d1ti11Q
FaCility, 1s seekmg a select Council for !nOepeud&amp;ul Coltegea
tow to JOin our outstanding •nd Sc:hoots 127~8
team as

\VANlTD

Absolute Top Dollar' U s
Stiver and Gold Co tns
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs, Pre·
1935
US
Currency
Solifa1re Oaamonds- M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue, GallipoliS 740-446Garage·MO\Itng sale· turn t· 2842
ture Home lntenor thmgs
buy
Junk
Cafs
baby' clothes toys , etc . Wtll
Saturday Oct 1 9 ooam·? (304)773·5004
Don A Htll , 49585 SA 124,
I \11' 1 f l\ \1 1 \ I
(letart Falls)
.., I 1&lt;\ It I ..,

G1ant yard sale Fn &amp;
Saturday 122 Thtrd Ave Lots
ol ladtes clolhtng hand
made coffee table wl match·
tng end tables so4id oak w/
t1 le lops m1sc household
tfems kerosene heater lots large garage sale mm or ;
shrne, 3202 Syracuse for
more To much to ment1on
mer\y Jo's G1ft Shop Thurs
Mo\ll ng -Garage Sale 1117
29th Fn 30th, Sat Oct 1st,
Teodora Ave
Thursday, baby clothes all klnds 3T 4T,
Frtday and Saturday, 10am- 5T. talkmg toys lots of what
5pm
nots lamp ta ble coats
sweaters dresses J8ans, &amp;
Vard sale Oct 1st·3rd 9 00- soon&amp;soon
5 00 Last one thts year Lots
of big &amp; small ttems. lots of last chance ya rd sale
furniture (w1ll not be out call Everythmg must go ( wtll
for more mfOrmatK&gt;n) 2894 negotiate) 32217 Lasher
Rutland follow the
Centerpoint Ad/State Route Ad
stgns watch tor detour
279 Call (740)582·7163
Friday &amp; Saturday
Yard sate , Friday-Saturday
9am-5pm
across
l rom M1d dlepo rt --1 nctudes-O id
Mercervtlle
Conv1enent Oak Desk gun cabmet ,
clothmg, household items eKerctse walktng mach1ne
couch and chatr
1284
Home lntenor
Powell Street Fnday Sat &amp;
Yard sale, Friday-Saturday Sun
clolhtng, toys glassware
MillS ' Mutlt FamtlyYard Sale
and much more At 160
GeneratiOns ol Goodtes
across from Foodlalld 1
494
lmcoln
Street
M1cldleport Oh1o 10101 ana

e~v~l

$500 SIGN ON BONUS

g::~dable P;~~~~~~~~~~

Cook (leaded Apply tn person at the Holtday Inn
GallipoliS No phone calls
please
Gazelle 1 day Delivery
Sunday onty Route covermg GalhP9IIS Ferry Apple
Gro\le
Glenwood
Crab
Creek &amp; Jerrys Run Call
(800)982 6397 ext t787
llfave Message

=..----.

LPN .needed
full-lime
Monday-Fnday day shift, no
weekends, no holidays
Apply at 936 St At t60
Gallipolis (740)446-9620

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn l
1·888·582·3345
10\ 1 1 ... 1\11

1r

1r

owner

2000 Clayton 16x80, 3BA
vmyVshrngle, $17,500 Quail
Crellk Park Call (304)372·
2179 or 1~39-:il 179
All rMI "tate 8Ctomttslng
lnthlsnu 1 ruts
aubf-1 to tM Fedenll
F81r Housing Acl of 1 •

2000
f6)(80 Oakwood
Many extras, 3BR 28A,
$26,000 (740)448·2570

which ....... h I I , . to

2002 3BA, 2 bath Oakwood
mobie home Good condl·
lion ,
$28 ,500
OBO
Aef1nanang awulab*e Call
1?40J24!Hl131

.c~vertt• ... ny
....... tee. limitation ot

dl..:rlmlnrion beNd on
ntee, coJor, r.tlgion, • •

nltlon.i

.......

....,.. . . . . . . . . Of

WANil'D

To Do

Mer Lite--LapTop Sales &amp;
ServiCe PC &amp; Mac Repai r &amp;
serviCe 740-992-1525

Computer ' Repa1r
and
Troubleshoot Web Destgn,
Networking Programmmg.
Build New System s, Restore
W1ndows Virus Removal
Certified Phenelf740-9922395

.-.
,. .....sw. llmltdon or
diiiCrtmlndon ...

Thi* ,..,wtpJillr wrdtl not
..-ng~yoccopt

~~forrtllll

~~·which II In'
vlo&amp;atfOn ot the lllw Our
rNdera .N Mnby
lnbmed that 111
dweUingtt ld'lllrUMdln
thlt fi&gt;IW illll•lrt
•v•lable an ., equ81

-11y-··

5 Homes under 510,000
Will d&lt;lhver (740)385-7671

C548

on

SAVINGS

Shop
Classlfledsl

o~OTICE•
HIO VA~LEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends the
1J do buSineSS 'Mlh
le you know and NOT t
nd money through th
all until you have rnve sll
ated 1he otrenn

home at 402 Polecat Ad
$4251month $425/ depostt,
reference
req uired
(740)446·4107
Mobile

m For Lease Off1ce or re tail
spaces rn very good condt·
Co i.J ntry Homes, Shade t1on Downtown Gall 1po l1s
$130 mo (740 ) 385 -40 19
Approx 1600 sq tt each 1

r

home

sll es

APARTMENTS

or 2 baths Lease pr1ce
negotiable to encourage
--new
busmess
Ca ll
(740)446·4425 or (740)446·
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
3936
ments, furnished and unfur·
nlshed, security depo sll Galhpohs RetatVOfftce bwldrequired, no pets 740-992· lng , beautllul country set2218
ttng, 4 000 sq ft (hmshed),
Ileal and water mcluded $
1 bedroom apartment by negottable, (740)367 -7435
Wai-Mart
1n
Gallipolis
Olftce /Apartment-· 3 Story '
$425/montll u!lltt1es tnc lud
ed, $150/deposlt (7 40)245· Building With garage local5555
ed tn downtown Pomeroy
740-992·
Call tor Details
2 Bedroom House, Newly 1 bedroom apt Vtne St , 7651
OH
Call
Remodeled Klneon Ave GalliPOliS
\ lllH II\ \DI '-11
(740)446-7398
or
1740)367
Gallipolis
$550/mo
7886
(740)441·1184, (740 )44T0194
1BR W/ D hookup, electric or
~
--------gas, no pets $290 plus
3 bedroom house for rent, 3
deposit
(740)441-1184
acres on nver. nice house
(740)44 1-0194 dock for boats $1,000
month, $1 000 depos tt 2 bedroom, 1 bath , water
Appliance
(740)367· 7762 (740)446 pa1d, $3M month, $350
4060,(740)367-1272
deposit
secunty
Call
~

RENT

VN Now accepttng applrca
For rent 1 bedroom. 1 bath,
fully renovated, all appli- trons for Hu d·SlJbSidiZ&amp;d
one Bedroom Apts Ut1i1hes
ances,
$500/monlh,
$500/deposol Call (740)446· Included Based on 30,. of
adJUSted Income
Call
34lll
(304)882-3 121 available for
Homes
from
$7,000 Senior and Disabled People
Foreck&gt;Sures, VA HUD For EHO
listings 800·391 5228 ext
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
1709
IIENT~
AT
BUDGET
House for Rent Pt Pleasant PRICES AT JACKSON
$375 (304 )675·5540 or ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(304)675 ·4024, ask lor Dnve fro m $344 to $442
Nancy Home stead Realty Wa l~ tp shop &amp; movres Call
740-446·2568
Equal
Brokar
Hpusrng Opportunity
House's tor Rent
Rent
$25(), Aenl $400 No Pats. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Deposit,
References ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
GaiUpolls
Ferry,
WV Townhou se ' apartments
and/or smell houses FOR
(304)675-4874
RENT Call (740)441-1111
large 3br House 1n Pomt for applw:afiOn &amp; 1nlormalton
Plsasant
1yr Lease No
Pets Securtt)'·Depos1t &amp; For rent 2 bedroom apt In
References
requtred Kanauga $425 pe:r mo $425
$4160/monlh (304)675-4030 deposit reference requtred
(740)446 4107
9-5
Three Bed Aooni House for
Rent
Wilt accept HUD
$475 00
Call--740·388·
0435

Rutland American
Legion Bingo
We Aro Opening

Racine Gun Club

Oct. 2nd 2005
at 1:00PM
Public Invited

IS

2002 Yellow Honda 300
4 Wheeler Like NeN Green
CondttiOn
Low Hours-:
(milage)
740 992 75:&gt;;2
$2 700 00

TRUCKS
HlRSAI E

01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr
auto 2wd 5 4l V8 bedcov 2004 H D Superghde ft.n!l
er 6CD player, sunroof, InJeCted only 2300 mtlis
good condltton
69 900 $12 000 Oayttme (740 )44 6:
miles
$14 500
080 9&lt;116 eve ntng (740) 44 1·
1724
(304)288·3335

$1500 Lucky Ball
Computer Special

$20
All packa you can
play $20 ,
Monday&amp;
Wednesday

Qoors Open 4:30
Bingo Starta 6:3~
SO people pay $80
99 peoQie pay $99
Everyone
Welcome!

HOUSEIIOLD

Warehouse

DAVIDSON METAL
ROOFING
•t a Colors
"30yr warranty 1n writing
·professlonallnsta llatton
• Free Estrmates
740·596·2909

r

opttons leather new ttres
maroon
$5 000
hrm
(740)645-0626
1994 Jeep Wrangl er 4114
automatiC hard top excel·
lent condttton (740)446·
6808 ah:er 4 OOpm

PElS
FOR SALE

$200 each (304)576·2222
AKC
Registered
Labs ,
Ye llow &amp; Black (304)6757652
AKC Shth Tzu pupptes 7
weeks old F1rst sl1ots 1
female, 3 males (740)4419047
CKC Jack Russell Terner
pupp1es 2 male, 2 female,
$125 (740)256·1652
CKC Re g1st ered Golden
Retne\ler pupptes for sale
Have had ftrst shots and
wormed All lemale $250
(740)366· 8965

r

F'Rurrs'&amp;

General Electnc Stde by
S1de Freezer &amp; Aefngator,
Genera l Electr ic Range a
Maytag Heavy Duty Dryer
and Kenmore Washer 740992·3354

,\1 1\ I .., H Hh

1996 N1ssan Sentra 135 000
mtles 2 owners good cond1
110 n $2,800 ftrm (740)388·
8!28
--------1997 Camara
Metalltc
green, town er/adult owned
less than 64 OOOmtles V6
automalt c atr CD excellent
and
sharp
$~.800
(740)446-0369

2000 K1a Seph1a 4 door
automatic 27mpg 72 000
m tles, good cond tlton $800
tn brakes filters, ttres, belts
etc tuneup Wi ll take trade
A Skmg
$3,600
OBO
(740)441·9378

FARM

91 S 10 2 8, 5 speed excel
lent cond1110n (3040675
235tt or {304)674-3994

r

1998 E)(plorer Eddte Bauer
loaded runs &amp; looks great
Bo oks $6 200 wtll sell
$4 000/0BO (304)576-2607

v

2 Bucket Seats 10 It t S· I O
mcallen!
cond1t1on
(304)67 5-2359 or (304)674-

3994
Reds Hydraulics 2 pumps,
4 battenes 10 swttcl1es 8
10" cylinders $900 080
Ca ll (740)367 7872

CMII~]l~ &amp;
Mallll! Hom:-;
1995 Starcrafl llgntwelgft
truck camper Used 4 ttmes
$4 500 (740)245 9109 o r
(740 )4 41 -7632

S•LE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

or older?

.

•

.

If so, you qualify for a

Whtte Kenmore refngerator
WJth ICe maker Very good
condtt1on, 25 cubtc fee t
Pl1one (740)446·2724

r~l

&amp;

ActH&gt;'iORIE'

Are you 65

Tl1ompsons App li ance &amp;
Aepatr 675 7388 For sale
re-condttloned
aulomatlc
washers &amp; drye rs, relrtgerators , gas and electnc
ranges a1r condthoners and
wnnger washers W11i do
repairs on maJor brands tn
shop or at your home

Middleport North Fourth.
Avenue 2 room eHte1ency,
no pels Depos it &amp; previOUS
rental references, utthhes 1• used natural gas furnace·
90+ effte1ency so ooo BTU
paid 740.992.()165
He1l ~ used natural gas
New 2BA apts m town All water heater Used lumber &amp;
electnc, water/sewer/trash skhng for sale Cell phone
1ncluded, CI A, 5525 rent (740)441·2667
plus depoSit
No pets
(740)441·1184 (740)441 · 10'K 16 x7 Green House
whtle plastic sides. clear on
0194
roof exhaust fan ' &amp; some
New btg 2 bedroom apt electric, $1 BOO. (740)742
Pr~va te locatton close to 401 1
Water/sewer
hospital
tncluded No pets Deposit Electnc Aecltnerlllft Chatr,
large
Sears
requ1red
$595/month $150
Good
(740)441·1184 (740)441· Mtcrowave , 525 •
Condition
(304)675-7442
0194

3994
50 Atml PARTS

89 Pa ce Arrow 32 454
Chevy engtne fully loaded
basement model, mtnl co1:1· '
speed manual hansmls- dttton 43k miles $16 900
s1on, regul&amp;r cab, loaded (7 40)446 1977
With all op!IOns gooseneck
Sl U\ H I ~
11ttch reese 11itch alum
rtms alum toolbox eKhaust
10
Hoo\1~
brakes on motor to many
IJIU'IIO\HIENTS
ext ras to hst 100 000 mile s
eKcellent shape $t7 000
.
(740)591 8975
BASEMENT
r~io;i;:;;;;.;.;;;,:~----,
WATERPROOFING
VANS
Unconditional ltfettme guar
FoR
antee Local refere nces fur
ntsl1ed EslaOitsMed 1975
1997
Plymoutl1
Grand Call
24 Hrs (740) 446
Voyager Whtte 2 sl drs 0870 Roge rs Ba semen t
good cond
runs good Waterproofing
S3 sao OBO Call (740)441
0712

2001 Cavalier 2 dr Z-24
Cold a1r, auto full powe r
78 000 mtles , $2 500 OBO
Ford tractor 3600 356 93 Chevy S-20 Conversion
Mov1ng sale Washers $95 hours, eKcellent cond1110n van T NCR , auto, looks
runs
perfect
dryers $95 GE etectrrc F1n1sh mower boom blade perfec t1
range $ 125 Frtgtdatre refr tg mark. plow old horse tratler 107,000 miles $2 500 OBO 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
erator almond m color $150 Call {740 )446·7693 alter (740)446·0171 .
ES Whtte Tan leather quad
Kenmore upnght freezer 6:00pm
200 1 Chevy Impala
AC seats rear AIC NeW hres
$175 chesl freeze r $ 175 Galfre $1 ado, 4FT Drum Auto GC $4800 740 992 loaded
$5 500
OBO
couch $75, 1able &amp; chatrs Mower (304)674-0007
(740)44, -0 135
0309
$100, table &amp; chatrs $40
Skaggs Appliances
as of Oct 1
'
1216 Eastern Ave
(740)446·7398

EQvii'MENT

6200

FOR SAlE

2002 Chewo lel Tra1l Blazer
41&lt;4 52 000 mtles PW PD L
crutse/ltlt, AM1FM/COI cas·
sette power sunroof exc
1997
Grand
M erc ury
condtl1o n
$15 900
Marqws eKcellent con dttton
(740)446·6157 after 6pm
one owner walker for sale
Local celt pl1one (304)962· 99 Foret F-350 XLT 4x4 7 3
6911
ltter power stroke diesel 6
1998 Burck Century (wh 1te)
$51 ,000 m1tes, good condt·
liOn $5 eoo call (304)675·
2490

650 Yamaha V Star Custom
6 300 mtles S3 200 080.
(740)256·1618 or (740)256-

~~l&lt;~l-A-fS~&amp;~M~OTO--RS-,
1998 Chevy Z71 extended
Cab w/t htrd door fully
loaded Tahoe cover ano
spray m ltner $1 1,500 cal l
95 ~awasakt Jet
S~t
(304) 751-7378
{304)675· 2359 or (304)6721.-

1996 Chevy Beretta, V6
automattc AJC runs, look s
93 Ntssan Truck 4X4 5
AKC
Reg1stered
lab
good good gas mileage speed Atr 150K runs exce l
Puppies
Chocolate &amp;
$2,200 OBO
(740)441 !2900 00 740 742 2662
Black.
Ft rst
Shot s
&amp;
0914
Wormed Parents on S1te

tn Henderson, WV
Pre·
owned apphcanes starttng at
VEGErABI£'&gt;
$75 &amp; up all und er warranty
we do servtce work on all
Home Grown Tomatoes,
Make and Models (304) 675·
F1eld Run, you p1ck $5 per
7999
bek
1 \Jn l ...,, J'l 'l 11 ....
For Sale- Tabl e &amp; 4 Chatrs

Anttq ues 1Oth Annual West
Vngtnra Ant1que &amp; Bottle
Sate Oct 1 at the West
V1rg1nta State Farm Museum
Furmshed upsta1rs. 3 rooms
Fall Festi\lal Pomt Pleasant
&amp; bath Clean, ref &amp; dep
9 to 3PM FREE admiSSion
requtred No pets (740)446·
and
appra1sats, Dealer
15 19
space avat lable INFO 740Gractous ltvtng 1 and 2 bed- 992·5068
room apartments at VIllage
BI.Jy or
sell
Alvenne
and
A lverstde
Man or
Anttques 1124 East Matn
Apartments m M1dOieport
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
From $295-$444 Call 740992-2526
Russ Moore
992-5064 Equal Housing
owner
Opportuntttes

NEW ELLM VIEW
APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING!
2 &amp;3 BEDROOM
'BLINDS
'AC
'WID HOOK- UP
'STOVE REF
'DISHWASHER
·wATER SEWAGE &amp;
•GARBAGE INCL
(304]862·3017

1991 Chevy Truck VB Good
Condtlton
Runs
Great
$1 BOO (304)675·5043

Senior Discount*

.

on your home delivered
subs·c ription!

.

'

'

Here's all you
need to do ...
'F ill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail
it with a
'
copy of your photo ID.
~allipoli~ Datlp tltrtbune

.

~otnt ~lea~ant B.egt~ter

The .D aily Sentinel
&amp;unbll!' uti mess - ~enttnel

I

----------- ----- ------ -- ------- -•
Subscriber's Name

.

.

Address

•
•

.

•·

'
'

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebutll In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1800-537-9528

.

City/State/Zip

---,'
.

Kenmore dryer new (white)
$200 Whnlpool washe r·
Heavy duty (almond) $110
White Westtng House natu·
ral gas stove $50 Electnc hfl
chatr blu9 clo th. $200
Reese fltth wheel httch, like
new $300 After 5 OOpm
(740)245 5946

Phone
.oc•
Mall or drop oft this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O Box 469 , Gallipolis . OH 45631

.

--------- - ---------- -- --------c

I

~ Man&gt;RCYu£,.t
4 WHEJ-~.tX'

For rent 2 bedroom mobt le

HOIH'S

Announcements

RIMFIRE
Rifle Shoot

.

I{ I '\ I \I "'

Starburst
Make FREE Phone Calls to
any phone and make big
money grvmg away Free
Long
Distance
Phone
Service' VIsit
www MyA.dCalls com/2 1550
and
WWW AdCalls COm/21550

(740)367

E"

4518
$500' Pohce Impounds
cars/trucks
from
$500
L1shng 800-391-5227 Ext

Great Used 1994 14x70, 3
Totally rematltled
Bedroom, 2 Bath Includes
lnterto&lt;l
heat pump Call (7'10)3853 bedroom house, central
2434
heat &amp; a1r, washer/dryer
New 3 BR Home Only hook-up, fenced yard stor$ 189Jmo Includes ale, deliv- age bldg $475 per month
ery and set up (740)385- rent (740)441-1111 ,
4367
•
1Wo- 2 bedroom hOuses 52
N~ee,
Used
14x64
2 Mill' Cr and 480 Paxton
Bedroom Qnly $4995 Catl $375 mo plus uttlitles and
(740)385-0698
depostt Accepttng HUO
massages
at
Leave
(740)440-2515

SFIOFIEOE

sa 500

7435 (740)339·3955

95 Camero Z 28 350 auto
T Tops leather great shape
2001 Gnzzly 600, auto :
Sunday (740)446-7300
Oonktes· male &amp; female also $ 5 500 92 Corstca V- 6 green less than 300 m tles
auto 4dr, lots of new pans
Pavmg Bncks 3•6 brown
$4 500 0401742 4011
ntce car Sl 600 (740)742
appro)( 1200 $250 ltrm call
after Spm ~304 )675·51 1 5
mlr;;;;~;;;;;;;;~ 4011
2002 Honda Rec on ES
AIJTOS
9---P-on-,-,.-c-G_r_a_nd_P_ro_x_S_E_
, - 250cc ATV excellent condt
5
2
Pro-Form power mcltne
FOR SALE
door 51 000 Call ( 304 )593 !ton 52200 ~304)675- 1444 •
treadmtll Good condtt ton,

remodeled , $425 month,
$425 deposit (740)367·
7762,
(740)446 4060,
(740)367·7272

Three Rental Properties for
Sale. Ouple.l(, each with 3
BIR UR, DIR, Kitchen, balh
&amp; porch , House- 3 8/R , UR,
Kitchen, Bath Cottage·BIA,
Kitchen , Bath
Rental
4 year old Colomal on 3 Income fol all three-Approx
acres. Approx 1,900 sq n 3 $1 OOOfper month Pnce for
bedroom 2 baths, 2 car all lhree--$70,000 Locale·
garage Master bedroom Is
104· 106 7th S1ree1 Po1n1
28x24 with a jacuut tub
Flleasant
(304 )675-2495 3BR, 2BA House on Taylo r (740)446·3461
$120,000 (740)446-7029
after 7 00 pm
Ad
1n Potnt Pleasant
3 &amp; 2 BR apts Close to
304
895
Two House's One wllh full (
1 •3129
Holzer
hospital
WID
stze basement &amp; 3 car 5 rooms &amp; bath stove &amp; hookup s
water/sewer
garage Garage has 1 stalll refrigerator, no pets 50 mcluded
Starting
at
with mechamc pll
other Ohve St
depoSit
$350 month $450fmonth
house Rental house with (740)440·3945
required No pets (740)441large declc All natural gas,
1184,(740)441·0194
Attontlonl
central atr. Approx. 5 acres
Attention!
Local company otferklg •No All cleared with white pine &amp; Local company otfenng "NO 3 rooms and bath All uttltl1es
DOWN PAYMENr pro- blue spnx:e pines ·ptus 2 out DOWN PAYMENT" pro- pa1d Oownsta1rs no pets
46 Olive St
grams for you to buy your butldtngs
All $135,000 grams for you 10 buy your $450/mo
(740)446·3945
home mstead or renting
740-376-6325
home mst.;.ad ot renting
• 100% financing
• 1CIO% financrng
663 Third, GallipoliS 2 bed
• less than perfect credit
• Less than perfect credit
room unfurntsl1ed no pets
accepted
accaplad
Oepostt &amp; rent $325 Leave
* Payment could be the
• Payment could be t he
message (740)245-9595
1971 , 12x65 Redman, 3BR , &amp;arne as rent
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators 1 balh S2.ooo (7401388· Mort_gage
Locators Apartment ava tlabl e now
(740)367-DOOO
8449
(740)367-oooa
Atverbend Apts New Haven
Beautiful. new 4 bedroom, 1996 doltllewide 24x52 on
prrvate loCatiOn, walk In clos- 112 acre, 38R, 2 bath, large
ets, master bath, garden tub, LR new carpet/linoleum.
skyl1ght, fireplace, pantry, tilt new 50 yr oK:I roof, 3 large
thermal wmctows, 2x6 walls, • storage buHdlng Too many
fancy woodwork, 2 34 miles amen~tles to list. Must see to
from Holzer (740)388-8228. appreciate
Located
tn
(740~1·1424
Fairland or GaHia Co school
d1stricl 597,500 (740)256' BI-Ievel house 4bdrm. 3blh. 1426
LA. FA. kitchen, DR, with 9
acres, large patio &amp; deck In 2000 14X70 OakwoOd, 3bd.
country
$125,000 2ba. CIA, can rent tot or
move (740)386·8513(days)
(740)742·3142.
(740)388-8017(evenongs)

FoR SALt

88 white Sundance 65 000
mtles
runs good
AJC
$1,000 (740)256 1652

$75 Call(740)388·9362

New' loghome 3Br. 2Ba,
wl 16x32 lnground pool,
1 bedroom house, 11
112 Pleasant Street 3 24x40 garage on approx 1 5
Garfield
Ave , Gallipolis
Bedroom, 1 1/2 Baths, acres , $269,000 (740 )645·
$3001mo (740)441-0194
0670
Famtly Room, Dlntng Room,
(740)441-1184
Full Ba sement, Storage
No
Down Payment Less
Bldg, Garage, New· Central
th an pertect credit 0 K Five 1 mile down 7south beautiAir Cond New Windows.
mrnu!es
fro m
Holzer ful nverfront Newly remod
(304)675·4034
Hospi~l Three Bedrooms- eled, 2BA, 1bath home
-On e Bath Level tot Newly screen po rch overtook1ng
1995 Doublewlde 3br 2ba remodeled 740-416·3130
river, separate two-story
wtanached
Garage
garage w1 th workbench
Breezeway, &amp; Ba rn, 1 56
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
large
yard
pnvate
acres, Sandhill Ad $72,000
NITRO,WV
References $650/month +
(304 )895·3068
SUPERSlORE
deposrt
(740)446 -4922
OFFERING CLAYTON,
evemngs
3BR double garage block FLEETWOOD. GILES, MHE
utility
bldg
71
acre
2
Bedroom
Home
AND OAKWOOD
Syracuse new root $85 000
LtiWEST PRICES • BEST $375/month, References &amp;
(740 )992·6317 or (740)416·
Deposit requrred (304)675SERVICE GUARANTEED
2788
DRIVE A LITTLE • SAVE A 5578
LOT
304·755·5885

VANS

A liiOS
tURS~u.

88 whtte Sundance 65.000 1999 Chevrolet Venture
mtles
runs good, AJC , Extended Van blue 82 000
$1100 (740)256 1652
m11es ']reat cond1t1on one

r

4358

FORRENf

origin, or . .y ln..nUon to
ShotoKan Karate Starting.
new class Sept 26 2005 at
Carleton
School
every
Monday and Thursday 6 00
PM to 7 00 PM 740-9853994 or 740-667-3039

NEW BANK REPOS
0NLY3LEFT
ASSUME LOO MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
OWNER FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304·755-556e

HRe~.c:om

Aecept1omst needed for
Dental
OHrce
Send
Resume to PO Box 45 Po1nt
Pleasant WV 25550
Now H rrrng Safe Onvers
Apply In Person at your local
Domtno's Must be over 18

house, full basement, all ufliHtes. Small barn hatler lot ,
small pasture, $85 000
Located In Mason Co
Smiles from PI Pleasant on
Charleston R oad (304)675-

October 3rd

Oh10 Valley Homo Health,
Inc h'1nng Full and Part Ttme
AN s Compettttve wages
mtleage and benefits tnclud
tng health Insurance Apply
at 1480 Jackson P 1ke ,
Galhpohs or phone toll free
1-866-441 ·1 393

FORRmf

New all brt&lt;* 2BR, 2BA:, 2
car garage ln Rio Grande
Call
(740)446·2927
or
(740)339·0365

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reeervaa the right to edit, re~t. or ca ncel any ld 11 any time Errore mual._ repor111d on tM
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regleter will be reeponelblelor no mOI'e than the eott of the·~ occupt&amp;d b!t the ..,.Of' and only the flret lnMnlon
any loea or axpenHihat reeutta from the publkatlon ot' oml ..ton of an adv.rtleement CorrecUon wilt bt medaln lhe nret l¥111able edition. • Bo1
are alway a confident ..! .. Current r•t• card applle• • All real uhlte advM'IIMment• •re
to ttM F..,..l F•lr Houling Act of 1H8 • Thla

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Items

NEW 3 BRDM $1299
DOWN
$229 00 MONTH
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES
NITRO, WV 304·755-5885

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your closslfted ads
_{.~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

1r

'10

FAAA1
EQuii'M!Nf

Pleasant Valley Apartment NEW AND USED STEEL
PO~E BUILDINGS
Are now taking Appllcal•ons Steel Beams, Ptpe Rebar 'Any Style
'Any Stze
lor 2BR 3BR &amp; 4BR
For
Concrete,
AQgle
'Custom Bwlt lo fit your
Appll caiiOns are taken Channel Flat Bar, Steel
needs
Monday thru Fnday, from Gratrng
For
Drains,
'FREE EsttiT!ates
900 AM ·4 P.M Othce ts Dnveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L
740-596 2909
located at 1151 Evergreen Scrap Metals Open Monday
16x32 rnground pool, 24x40 (740)441-7333
58 11
Onve Potnt Pleasant WV Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
garage 156x66 horse barn,
Phone No rs (304)675· Friday. Sam-4 30pm Closed
42x80 barn, w/40x 100 shed, 5 acres large two story 4bd 14x70, new carpet. JUst 5806 E H 0
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

,'

Offree 1/tJ(q-cS'

Aau:AGE

MOBILE HOMFS

Foreclosure 7BA. SBA, only 2 65 acres 3,100 sq ft 1 Bedroom house Newly
$18 000 For listings call barn, city water, electric, remodeled InSide &amp; out All
800-391-5228 ext F254
septk:, city school$ 2 m!les utilities pa id $450 00 per
south of Gallipolis on At month Also Newer 2 bed
Horae
lovers paradise 218 Prime location won'1 room trailer w1th electric
approximately 70 acres last
Aeduced·$48 000, cenlral heat &amp; a1r $425 00
w/ntwt tog home 3br, 2ba, serious
lnqumes only per month Call 740·243·

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
ijtribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) ::;::~-____,~or~F~ax~l~o~~99~2-~21~57~Oeq_clt;;,~

r

Lars&amp;

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

.

• Public Notice

Thursday, September 29, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Public Notice

'

• Thursday, September 29, 2005
ALLEYOOP

Public Notice

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

.NO TRESPASSING
U n au t h o r i z e d
persons
apprehended on . 'the AEP
:Appalachian Power Company
property, located on both sides of
State Route 62, at the Mountaineer
Power Generating Facility near
·: New Haven, WV, and includes the
coal ·ash .landfill area adjacen't
County Route 9, will be prosecuted
for trespassing.
Anyone apprehended damaging
any equipment, buildings, orland
·on the above listed property will be
prosec uted to the fullest extent of
·the.law.
'

'

ADVERTISE YOUR

Hometown

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Catering

and Financ.ial Services

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.00 fach

Catering Selections

~ed ~ose

405 Pearl Street • Middleport, OH
l'hone (740) 992-3471 ·
Fax (740) 992-5976

Breenlw.u.se

To Many 50447 Tornado' Rd.

Colnrs

Racine,

To Lbt~

O.H .

"~"'hert

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE
Designed to. Heat Your Home
and Your Hot Water'

CJJI F.Se~r

C&gt;&lt;io1!1

C.O...

rootm..;.[~'i'

uH...ri." ""'

•.\ilil Prltm
C.O..r
odSo:may

l.rllO.I. H.-.1 Jr.

nieJ Ulm•

Ltlu HIIIl!il

llmMI Fum
kkf

&amp;'AN"-iiuRKE 740-698·6809
OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC,
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
OCT. 8, 2005
9:00AM- 12:00

Qualtty,Compossion t1.11d ln t~grity CtJm'

lOot L. 1'11101ooll

lma F...ri ·
Din

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

For more Into. call

•

BUSINESS

451 Sc-t:ond !\venue

'A"
~..unr

ON THIS PAGE fOR -·
AS LOW AS

P.O. Bnx 351J

;:;;::;:::

Gallipolis. Of-1 456~ I -OJ.:IY ..._ ..
Ph: ROO-JQ2-1209 u r 74U-4-l-6-Jb4J

.26.00 PER MONTH!
•

Phone

'

'

The Daily S~ntin_el
.

'·

'

992·2155 '
' •• l

,.

,

FIND AJOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
Help Wanted

Help Wanled

;\IE\\SP\PER (;l{{)l 'P
S.\LES REP
~:

Help Wanted

740-992-6971
Insured

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS
Help Wanted

Local company seeks full
time .employee,
must
have COL with Hazmat
· Endorsement. Must be
willing to perform a variety .of tasks, many hours
of overtime in winter,
excellent benefits.
Send resumes to:
The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729-23
·
'
Pomeroy, OH 45769

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

!
!

moves
to~l profit agency will be condu~ting
t4~l commtsston
· ·
,
t4 interviews for various positions in
as sa1es mcrease.::
benefits,
mileage :: various homes. These positions vary in
:: Full
' theimbursement and potentialtl hour.1 and the starting rale of pay is
!l for career growth if you're lhe~l $7.25 an hour. All persons in terested
ll fit we are looking for.
:: are invited to co me to The Work
ll
tl Station and apply. Open i'nterviews are
••~Apply . by sending letter oC:l•• being conducted at .The Work Station
tl introduction . and resume to:: in The Plains on October 4, 2004 from
H ,
.
H
~~ ctther
~l 9am to 3pm'. For que stions please fee l
Jim Freeland at
:: free lo call 740-797-4166 and ask for
::
ll jwfreeland @heartlundpublicalions.com ll ·
t4
or •·ia fax 1 t-740-44t-OS78t:
, 4 Kim or'Kristy. All interested applicants
tl
Orct.·rrort~ mus t possess a h.tg h sc hoo I d. egree or
••
r
• . .1•1
,
.,
dorrest @heartlandpublicalions.rom :: GED. Yal id driver's license and good
tl
or via rax I 1-740-JSJ-7280! .
::
~ to schedule interview. All inquiries held
driving record. Pre-employment d~ug
14
in s!rict confidence.
· .. :: testing. Equal Opportunity Employer.

:l

'j

•~ ·~~xy:z:y••••xxx••••xx·······~·~•
_....
A&amp;&amp;&amp;
&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;.&amp;&amp;~

All pa ss

.

(Commercial and Residenti&amp;l)
Mowin~. Trim ming, Tree Trim ming, Aeration, Fertilization,
· Spray1ng of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting 11nd mulching.

.

:=n:.. ..
...

.. .

......

•

•

..

.

I SHORE AM

•

Available• Free Estimates

Main Street
Pt. Pleasant., WV

• References

JoAnne Siders
(304) 675-3400

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742·2293
• Leave a message ·

1 Kirk's :·
helmsman
2 Penlo, today
annuals
3 Glamour
23 PCB
4 A Bobbsey
rogulolo1
twin
26 oner
· 5 Wratched
27 Wind- 6 Matlemo~
30 Halrpleca
sella's date
32 FourtiCore
7 Back
34 Fragrant
muscles
trees
8 Electrical
35 Minerva,
units
In Greece
9 Wild tale
36 Short skirt 10 Maude
37 Gollen' 019portrayer
3a Drawing
11 Heavy
39 Strongeltbloaaoma
tasting
12 Himalayan
42 E~plorer
· lagend
. - Helen
17 German
Johnson
articla
45 Above,
20 Spain and
lo pools
Portugal

Hill's Self
Storage

YEP, CAN'T WAIT TO SHOW OFF
THAT NEW MAT OF MINE "

BLESS YA, ELVINEY,

LOOKIN' Fm~W-~Ril\
TO TH' PRAYER
MEETIN',
PARSON ! 1

BODACIOUS
GOOD TO

29670 Bashan Road
, Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217

'

•Weekly Tm~h Scn·kc
4 yrs t•f Rcl inblc: Service

strong hand: at least a good 12points. (II
North bids a suit at a minimum level, he
promises 0-8 points; if he jumps in a suit,
he has 9-11 points.) Then. North's three·
spade cue-bid asks his partner to corwert
Here, South canQot bid no-trump, so the
partnership pulls up in five clubs.

West leads the spade ace. How should
South plan the play?

CELEBRITY CIPHER

II WesJ starts with his three top spades,

by Luis Campos

declarer ruff s the last low, cashes the

CeleMty Cipher cryptograms are tr!a1ed trom oJIOI!IOOnS by l~mous ~pi! . pu1 and presenl
EadlleUer 10 the Cloher stands lor ano1her

'cl ub king; and runs the club jack through

""'

'
1-\E\-\,1-\U\,
t )f\OULD
1\t'I'L'{- I\ )OU!-&lt;b)

USTt.t-HO T\-1\~ ­

Wfl.t-\Tf_\&gt;: 1&gt;-~\Si f&gt;..t-1\
r'\P-.Nf&gt;..GER,Tl'.P-. COZ'&lt;
SI\LE":&gt; !
\"'-&lt;:::::,;;;;;-'

HOT UJ(f_ 1-\'{ J05

t&gt;ESCR. II'·
\10~!

II

-·-

,..

West, making the contract. (For his opening bid, West is m'arked with ·the club
queen.) A more resourceful West spots
one chance for the defense- if East can

" W

produce the club live. After cashing two

SWEKX

spade ·tricks, West should lead

Todafs clu8: J oqr.JBts C

( Ket~p Your Mone)

(;&amp;R

l..tll.:a l )

So\NITAl'ION

.B5fll Bailey Run Rd ..

Potncm , OH

. Stzia a•lijir:~, Cornerstone
;. :to
.... 10'x30V
..... . L_.
Electrical

25 Years local Ex rlence

. Service

• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH .

~top

&amp;

Compare

• ~IOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

THAT MEAN5.

WE LIVE IN
INTERESTING

TIMES ..

511&lt;.7

WK RV XP J X ' N

ed of him. And when East does ruff with

H X

11·17·11- $275 ton (bulk only)
12% Triumph 12% sweet horse feed

'

$5.50150 lb. bag
·
48% Soybean Mealt13.25/100 lb
Cob Meal wHh T.M. Salt
$6.501100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)
35537 St Rt 7 N

Ohio 45769

¥

• ~ion tlk hourtd
•Yellow kibs &amp;retriever

Rox OffiL&gt;t! Hn 11 ~ 2 M ~F Also'S·8 '1\J~ &amp; 11tun
426 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

(llld make afrrendJ&lt;&gt;r.lrfe.

'

GARFIELD

• Walker coon hound

· Sea&lt;!~ mixes

MANY Cl!rE MIESI

&lt;.:all B.D. Const.
for a ll your home
repair needs, moflng.
!iiiding, udd-ons,

remodeling elc.,
free estimates

(7401 992·2979
leave me10sa •e

' Middleport's only
Self-Stor•s•·

0

MAl W'TE.WAWCE.

'ADVERTISE
• IN THIS SPACE

FOR $52 PER ""ONTH

BAlJl\1 Ll:\JBER
Scorpion Tradors

COIIPiete Home Repairs
&amp; Remodeling
• Chuck wone
Owner

(740) 992-0167

"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!''

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

0

•

StANDING 15

WHICH I"ROVE5
MY POINT

'fHA1" CEIL..INGr L..OOK5
l.IKE A WAL..L..

0

Now Available At

HOMf

WPT L F

AXLXG

XG

NFTKER

.E V P X

T I

YTG 0 • "·

BXPPVPUN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'II you've had a good lime playing the game. you're
a winner even 11 you lose.n - Malcolm S. Forbes
·
[c\ 2005 by NEA, Inc. 9-29
·
·

II'OU

Reorratlpt · •"•• o'
0 four
KtOmbltd words

I

the
be.

kM PO form 10\lt IIMPit worda.

I

LACORU

I I I II I
S I J T0

vour
at the
door
today because
if youwillfulness
buclc the will
of the
majority,
you wi ll
be responsible lor dissenlion erupting
wllhln the ranks. Bite t he bullet, smile and
1orn '"·

SAGITTARIUS '(No,. 23-Dec. 211- rn

competitive Involvements loday. chances .
are you are more apt 1o be tripped up by
your own carelessness than by your oppo·
silion. Be sure lo lie your shoestrings and
unleash your ski ll s

r.....,r.:L....:;I_o~v~E~~. ..·~·....=:

I" I I I

One golfer' to another'. The
(
~==~===:... bigges disappointment I ever
•

I I I I I I I()
r·

.

wy E L E
f.,,...,,..;..~.;_,;~;...::....-!
K

S

•

·

•

hadwaswhenlhilaholeinone.

and no one •••. -r·

-

C.omr&gt;ltle the chvdde quoted
by I.Uing II\ l ht m•uing WOfdJ
~OIJ dev~lop .fro m l tep No . .3 below. :

SCitAM,lETS ANSWERS

Gunman -Lucid - Twang -Immune - WINNING

.

As a kid I wasn't ~ery athletic and never won at any •·
sport My dad said that wanting to win has more merit - :·

than WINNING .
ARLO &amp; JANIS

:

9!29 /~

r---.-------.,-----, .

.

· Genoon slttpard &amp;collie
mixes

035087
35928

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc

7-40-992 -3779

Pleas. adapt from the
Meigs Co\Jlty Dog P01J1d

VP

E T M W-E L M

•
Check

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)- lfs best
not to prematurely talk about something
you are hoping to do Ieday o r brag about
your abilities to do 11. You will end up feelIng a bit foolish i1 you can't pull it otf for
some reason
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) .....:.... Analyze
your present budbet to determine If 11 is
elastic enough to takEi on any addil ional
eJCpendit ur t~ you 'd like 10 make today. Put a
hold on 'your spendirig: you'll find you'll
have to be 1n1gaL
PISCES
(Feb . 20,-March 20) .. Respectfully lls1en to the suggest1ons
made by others loday. but don'! thin~ you
hiwe to abdicate your own good judgment.
Their 1deas could take you tar a 11eld lrorn
where you wantlo go.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - You'll be
better off in tn e long ru n today if you do
th•ngs. yourse lf rather tnsn depend on cowalkers whose minds are on the weekend
or who are tired . They'll be a hindrance.
not a help
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Just
because you may have bt~en lucky yesterday doesn't nocessarlly mean you will be
again · 1odaV. wnen it comes to games of
chance, don't depend on anything but
your own sl ills.
GEMINI (Pll,ay 21 -June 26) - 11 would De
a majo~ mistaKe today to. make a decision
that would affect your !am1 ty w1thou1 consullmg wi1h everyone first. The1e may be a
long ~sl of reasons !or disapproving or

IOlTOU

e-u.9~:
Fain Tale Courtroom. Oct. 1 &amp; 2
Three: Terrirying One-Acts Oct. IS &amp; 16
Dwjgbt Icenhower. Oct. 23
Jhe Haunted Ariel Theatre, Oct. :Z7·31

WOLFE.

Sen ior Citizen Discount
30 'Yrs. Experience

Wl-lAT DO
'I'OU HIINK

The Ariel· Dater Hall

740-367-0544
740-367;0536

991-3194
or 992·6635

lnswed

AND 1 GOT A ''D-M INUS ''
IN O~R SPANISH TEST..

J89S

OHIO lJCENSE # 38244

10xl0xl0x20

'Free Eshrnates

I GOT A ''D- MINUS "IN OUR
SPELLING TEST.. 1 GOT A · ·
~~~·IN~OUR MATH TEST...

.~~A.8USHEO
- ~eru£L

• CARPENTRY

• RooF • P!\I NT

mixts

·, MifUm
SElF STORAGE

(;allipolis, OH
Da•·ld Siders
Gemologist
(7401 446-3283
•

140-992-lm

LF. X

a low

w ith each duty as it arises. Once you fall
behind, frustration will derail your eVening

PEANUTS

Wai-Marllllala

Remodeling

RXXAEM-

spade. East knows South IS out ol
spades, so should realize what is expect-

Friday, Sepl. 30, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol
Desi res to be more independen t could be
much stronge r in you in the year ahead.
This can be very good for you in many
Ways, p·r avided you don't diSsolve
alliances that have proven to b e quite
beneficial for yo u in the past
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- YOur workload
could turn out to be far heavier than usual
today, soil is impor tant that you keep pace

TH\.S

S.EEN!

• Garages
• Complete

-

RTXNP'L

UMr
1""•4 ~y t\AT I . 'OlLAH - - - - -

ATE LAD HAD
WORST CASE O F POI:50N
IV'( I 'IIE EVER

• New Homes

YFT

BTKGPWEYNL

'::!~~' SCCttQ{)l!A-~£~s·
~ t-\ar.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUmiN

41 Strong cord
42 Gila bills
43 Laundry
need
44 In addnion
47 Before ,
In combos
48 Readies
champagne .
49 Danson or ~
Kennedy
51 Old sotdter
52 Metro RRs
54 Really
relaK,
slangily

to th ree no-lrump with a spade stopper.

Gene Arms/Owner·

Operator 740-992-3174

· 21 Japanese
poochea
22 Relieved
sound
23 Lislender
24 Sonnet
25 Volkswagen
. kin
28 Old movie
about giant
ants
2!1 Long-acltve
volcano
31 Twinge
32 More
gung-ho
·33 Shrill bark
37 Deep-dish
dessert
40 Velvety
plant

North's two-spade cue-bid only shows a

the club live, it enacts an uppercut West
will get a trump trick to defeat the con- •
tract.

..

•••

DOWN

A relllive
Loophole
9-dlgn no.
Colorful

In answer to South's takeout double,

BARNEY

SCORPIO (Oct 2 4·Nov. 22) -

• Affordable Rates

740.882·2621
7413-416-4902

ERst

Pass
Pase;
Pass

plans.

·

HELP WANTED

slot

(Commercial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
SidewalkS, Gas Station Awpings,:Degreasing of
Equipment, ~oats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening .
Special rates to Tru ckiny nd DunJP Trucking Companies.

DILES HEARI\G CE\TER

-======:..:=~===:;

:l Salaried

:o-.lnrth
Pass
2•
3•
54

53 Make plain
55 Alp-chort
otando
56 Let property
57 Leopard
INiurt
58 MHd
tKplttiVH

llaHer

15
16
18
19

.

•n~ltors

editor and publisher ol The Bridge Wqrld

STANLEY TREE

\'~'
If you have been successful in~:
Hours
newspa_p~r and/or . broadcast ~l
7:00 AM · 8:00 PM
l Adverhsmg sales we have an ~l
111411 mo. pd
l opportunity for you,
:1
4
t4
YOUNG'S .
t4
t4
CARPENTER
t4
''
~l Regional sales territory for~
SERVICE
t4
.
"t4
4four dally Newspapers int4
• Room Addition&amp; &amp;
4
t4
Remodeling
• New ,Gartgtl
l Southern and Southeastern:: =======-======~ • El«:lrlc•tl Plumbing
• Rooting I Guttere
tl Ohio is being created. Existing:: Help wanted
Help Wanted
• VInyl Skiii'IQ &amp; P•lnting
4
4
• Patla and Poreh Dicks
::
c
tents
an
,
arge
potentia
for::
r•
I'
d I
. I
'
We do It all except
fumtce work
~l new clients will be your basic::
V.C.
YOUNG Ill
::sales iist.
:: ·
. "2-6215 WI/ 0361'25
~l
.
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Owner: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) s11·6813
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To show you the trouble we can get into,
this auction contains two cue-bids, each
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K&amp;K EXCAVATING

Storage

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In bridge bidding, we have too many cuebids. The term is used in several' different
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•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PUBLIC NOTICE

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

i

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re1ecting

OVERRA'fEI7

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CANCE R (June .2 1: July 22) - You 've
heard it many tiffies, "Think bE!tore yoJ
speak .... If you don 't, you could unintent1on·
ally offend someone today who is very
Important 19 You . Make sure your mmd 1s
in the nght ~eat.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Knocj( yourself
out to be prudent and practical today
regarding your financial at1a1rs. II you base
your eKp&amp;ndlturt~s upon funds you are
hopmg to acquire. you'll lind yoursell in big
,
' trouble
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - ImprOVISing
last minute changes '" your plans wilhout
thinking through tho consequences could
put you at a diSadvanta-ge today Proceed
w1th your anginal blueprm1, m1nus sf1 ortcuts

..

SOUP TO NUTZ
soME!r1~ S I. LiKe To
i'N SNilekS ...IT

NO~

SoRTa ADDS To THE:
[NJ'Ci-/MeNT OF THEMHELLO Mt&lt; Moo::Jurce ~

HEY f . WHaT Hai'FleNeD
To ' CAkt:'T'"i" _ _,.,.

01-\ ... He Ha D &lt;JN
af'fbiNiMeNT WITr-1
"DR Gi1Sll&lt;orNTesTrN8L

mac T.'.'

�•

Thursday, September 29, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BB

•

Fall Car Care edition
inside today's Sentinel

'Does open Hocking
play at Fed Hock, Bt
"

~

11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR T11is Week. C/o The Gaston Gazette. RO. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

Nt: X. t t L

..

C\.J ... SEtUES

BUSCH SERIES

year's winner: Dale

Earnhardt Jr.
Quillfylng record: Bill Elliott.
Ford, 212.809 mph, Apnl 30.
1987.

top 10 posit ions cnanged

Last

year's

winner :

;;o &lt; I· :\i 'l S • \ ol. :;:;. ~o . :n

Joe Last year's winner: Jam ie

hands. Kyle Busch finished
second, giving . Jo hnson's .
rookie teammate three nnishes of fourth or better 1n his

Nemechek
· McMurray
Qualifying record: Michael Wal-QuallfylnC record: Mike
trip, Chevrolet. 178.365 mph, Bliss, Ford, 94.275 mph,
Oct. 4, 2003.
April16.1999.
Race record : Mark Martin, past four races. Veterans Race Record: Jeff Green. Ford, Race Record: Jon Wood,
Ford, 188.354 mph, May 10, Rusty Wallace and Mark Mar- 129.125 mph, Sept. 29,2001. Ford, 72.069 mph·, Oct. 18,
1997.
tin enhanced their title hopes Last week: Dodge driver Ryan 2003.
'
Lasl week: Jimm re Johnson ,with fin ishes of third and Newman ran his winning streak Last week: Todd Bodine
drove a Chevrolet to VICtory at

fourth, respectively. It was · to four race s, winning the Dover drove a Toyota to victory at

Dover International Speed -

Johnson 's first victory since

way. which marked hiS th ird the Coca-Cola 600 at Lowe's

'

• Southern stuns Lady
Eagles. See Page 81

200 by 1.343 seconds over Las Vegas Motor Speedway,
Clint Bowyer. who narrowed Mar· holding off Ted Musgrave , in

Motor Speedway in May, and
it was career victory No . 17 .

18th , meaning that a strin·g of · Marvin Panch and Curtis Turn·

13 stra ight top-10 finishes

er for 37th place all-time.

IN THE- SPOTLIGHT

ELLIOTI SADLER

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

·

No.

I·

FEUD OF THE WEE I\

v

38 M&amp;M 's FORD

E

R

s

had qne race to
Stew.lt' didn't figon was having' such a bad
at Ociver, where his average
entering the race had
~..
. , 5.08. Eighteenth place
~· was actually better than Stewart
, . probably deserved.
,
•1&gt; A footnote from beyond the
;.,. .Chise's borders: The reunion of
· Dale ~mhaM Jr. and Tony Eury
&gt;i:. Jr•.-has brought immediate re~- suitS. A1freak mistake cost Earn: , hard) a decent finish at Dover,
"' but he drove one of the fa ster
Ccars on t11e track. Only his brake
;. probiem prevented him from
· having a shot at a victory.
'- ~&gt;In the first two race-offs . Kyle
~ Busch has positioned himself to
· be the ' have-not' most likely to
win a race in a format des1gned
to highlight the ' haves:
1&gt; Four drivers who won races in
-\ · 2004- Rusty Wallace. Mark
· Martin, Elliott Sadler and Joe
:•·'· Nemechek- still haven 't won
~- ttils }'ear.
~··
.;:!&gt; Never say never. Reigning
" champion Kurt Busch finds him' sell trailing Johnson bi 170
points, but his hale is no deeper
:.:. than the one Johnson dug for
,. himself In the opening weeks of
... the 2004 Chase. Johnson ralWJI~Ite ..wn.at

.Driver believes unified teams strengthened with more knowledge
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
The year has been a downer for Elliott Sadler, the 30-year-old Ford driver who stood third in the Nextel Cup
points standings as recently as late
June.
Sadler faile\1 to make the Chase,
which left him philosophical as well
as, at the conclusion of the most 're·
cent race in Dover, Del. , racing for
11th in the season rankings.
"We (Sadler and teammate Dale Jarrett) are two of 30-something teams
that are very fru strated after Richmond of not making the chase, and
we're all team players, and we all want.
to run well;' said Sadler. "We feel that
we should run well. To drive for
Robert Yates is a great honor, and he's
been a winner and a champion, and we
, all think we need to do that each and
every year or have a shot at it."
So, predictably, Yates : the owner, is
making changes and trying to improve
the chemistry at a team that won a
championship with Jarrett in 1999.
Todd Parrott, Sadler's c.rew chief, is
moving back to Jarr~tt's operation.
Kevin Buskirk is handling crew-chief
duties for Sadler for the time being.
"We have nine races to see if this is
getting .us in the right direction," said
Sadler. "We're coming up to some
good tracks for us, and, hopefully, we
can put what we've learned into play,
and we'll just see how it all plays out."
Sadler, from Emporia, Va. , is · a
three-time winner in NASCAR's premier series. His first victory occurred
at Bristol on March 25 , .2001 , while
driving for the Wood Brothers. The
most recent victory was at California
Speedway on Sept. 5, 2004.
.
"I actually am pretty pumped up for
the rest of the season," Sadler concluded. "I can't wait becau se I think
Todd (Parrott) is definitely going to
get the (No.) 88 (Jarrett) running better than its run this summer. I think
we're going to continue on the pace
that we' re running on, and I think
that, with them being that much better, we can kind of 'leapfrog'
.
. each oth·
.

,,. lied to win four times and

'·

.: mlssed 'out on the title by only
·• elgrrt points.
·' I&gt; Only two drivers in the Chase
•: failed to Change positions in the
' ranking&amp; In week two. Ryan Newt..' malnemains third, and Busch
t1: remains 10th.
·
·&lt;1&gt; NeWman has won the last four
: Busch Series races he's en' tered·; but he hasn't technically
~- ~n ,/Oyr In a row. He didn't en.,. ter two of t11em.
;; 1&gt; Newman Is also the only driver
; ·wlth top-five flnlshes in both the
,: 'Chase race~ So far.

!. ·; ~. . '\

\!~'H.._-,

S IHOf

&amp;.\ t"'tL" V'r~'ll

s

i"ttiO

r

second race of
subpar
cl\amJfl&lt;llrt
I~

u

Jeff
Gordon

th'e

drivers

&amp; Supply

Co.

s

Jamie
McMurray

Jeff Gordon
vs. Jamie McMurray
Gordon blamed McMurray for the
crash on lap 292 that relegated him
to 37th place at Dover. ' I th ink that
maybe his (McMurray's) spotter told
h1mlle was clear, and he just turned
left going-into turn three and wreckec
himself. unfortunately, and a bunch of
us other guys." McMurray. said Gordon, "just Oat took everybody out."
NASC~R Thli Week'a Monte
Dutton gives his take: ' McMurray
was the culprit in the latest of

Gordon's misadVentures. 'We defi·

nitely weren't too good at t~e beginning of the race ; Gordon admitted,'
and track position has played a role
in his recurring problems. He often
seems to be caught 1n heavy traffic
when crashes occur."

FAN "1'1 • ..,.5
Geoffrey Bodine to host

Jan. bobsled extriiY8CIIIWI
Geoffrey Bodine, who has been instrumenta l in the design of bobsleds
used by U.S. Olympic, athletes, is
hosting a Bobsled Challenge on Jan.
5-9 in Lake Placid, N.Y., at the Verizon
Sports Comp lex. The event will r,aise

funds to Improve sled technology for
the American team.
I EGENOS ANO lOIIE

Indy ~ did not have as
muc~ NASCAR auccen
The great Johnny Rutherford won
th ree Indianapolis 500s but visited
victory lane only once in just a hand- .

ful of NASCAR appearances. Rutherford. driving a Dodge, won one of the
two 100-mile qualifyi ng races precedIng the 1963 D~ytana 500. That
wouldn't be considered an official vic·

tory by present standards, but at that
time, drivers were awarded points for

thetr showing In those eveots.
YOUR
LFTftPS

TtJJ~N

FROM OcR

RE40€PS

NBC, how -

John Clark/NASCAR Th is week.

Elliott Sadler hopas to benefit !rom Robert Yates Racing's moves to Improve chemistry.
The team recently moved crew chief Todd Parrott back with Dale Jarrett's crew, and
Kevin Buskirk will handle Sadler's crew-chief duUes on a temporary basis.

er and kind of make our teams better.
"Instead of just kind of one team going in a direction and the other following, I think now we can go our separate ways, learn some things, put it to-

gether and make both teams stronger.
l r_ea1ly oelieve that."
·Contact Monte Dutton
ilt hmduttonSO@aol.com.

min you
hy doesn't NBC broadcast the
races? I have only seen one
(and) that was the Indy race. I
have 51!_~ one since FoK stopped.

W

Tom Chappell

Kokomo, Ind.
During the ffrst half of the
season, not all the rc;ces

~;·ere

on Fv;.;

either. Some were on FX, its cable
partner, and now some are.on TNT,
NBC's cable partner. The ffnal eight
races, beginning ·with Talladega on
Ocr. 2, are all on NBC.

I' RII&gt;.\Y, SEJYrEMRER :~o. :.!11115

"""·m)d:.il"''"ti•wl.•·um

Revitalization group focusing on visible results
BY

BRIAN J.

REEO

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

MIDDLE PORT - A committee working on revitalizaiipn of
downtown Middleport. after
spending months-prioritizing the
objective s of .the project, will
now beg in to focus on visibl e
signs of progress.
Meeting Thursday morning,
the group, made up of
Middleport merchants, resident s,
and offi cia ls, broke out int o
small groups to address objectives set forth by the co mmittee
in past meetings. Those objeclives were developed based on
discussion al public mee tin gs,
commitlee gatherin gs and a market-based retail survey completed earlier this year.
Amon, !hose ob ·ectives are
g_
j .
d
encouragmg
an
mcrease
·mvo 1vemen t among· v1-11 age o 1-1-1cials , beautification efforts -

lin Truex Jr.'s pornts lead to 26. a Dodge, by .297 of a second. Chevy driver David Starr
Chase. Tony Stewart finished tying him with Jeff Burton. ·
finished third.
victory of the season and
gave him the lead in the

·n e

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

· CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

Race: UAW'Ford 500
ended. Ste.:art relinquished Race: United Way 300
Race: Kroger 200
Where: Talladega (AI_a.) Su· the points lead after a seven· Where: Kansa s (C1ty. Kan .) Where : Martmsville (Va .)
perspeedway (2.Q66 miles). race run. He is now tied with Speedway (1.5 mrlesl . 200 Speedway (.526 mile). 200
188 laps/ 501.208 miles .
Biffle for fifth place in the · laps/ 300 miles .
•
laps/105.2 miles .
When: Sunday. Oct. 2
points standings. Eight of the When: Saturday, Oct. 8
When: Saturday, Oct. 22
L~st

\..

such as cleaner streets and sidewalks and the creation of murals '
and other decoraliv.e elements and the development of the down tow n di strict as a destination.
A group who chose 10 work
downtown beautification wil l
seck volunteer groups to sweep
streets, create communi ty tlags,
and plant seasonal llowers in
new planters along North Second
Avenue, to show the commu nity
that the et'fo~.ts to improve the
downtown shopping district have
tangible resu lts.
Karl Runser of the Institute for
Local Government and Rural
Developmelll,. Wh&lt;l , has bee n
h1red as a fac ilitator tor the pro· JCCt, e mph!t s1 z:~ the Importa nce
ol s how111? the eo m~umty some
VIS ible s 1 ~~s of progress. Do~ng
so. he sa1d . wil l help. spark
enthusiasm for the rev11ahza110n
·
d h
1 t110se who
proJect an s ow 11at
Please see Results, AS

This group representing
the leadership committee addressing revitalization of downtown .
Middleport toured the
downtown shopping
district to identify ways
of beautifying it. Susan
Baker, owner of Ohio
River Bear Co .. Brenda
Phalin and Donna
Hartson of the
University of Rio
Grande Crossroads
program. and Erin
Rou sh, Coordinator of
the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce ,
will see to the placement of seasonal flowers and oversee other
street beautifi cation
efforts.
Brian J. Reed/ photo

'
•

;~£

Author turns trauma into a book
BY BETH

Shelly sole
bidder on
paving project

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILY SENT IN E'L.COM

OBITUARIES

POMEROY - For most~people. some of
BY BRIAN J. REED
life's traumas stay with them no matter how
BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Page AS
old they gel.
For author Michele Zirkle Starcher, now
• Hazel Burton, 95
POMEROY -The Shelly
36, the trauma of her parent's divorce, which
Co.
was lhe sole bidder on a
• Iva Cremeans, 97
happened when she was '14, has remained
one-mile pavj ng project in
• Freda Durham, 81
with her, inspiring her to write the book "The
Letart Township.
Ornery Angel."
.
• Tammy Hutton, 35
Meigs County
Starcher, who will be signing copies of her
Commiss ioners, - meetmg
book from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday a[ the
Thursday. afternoon, opened
Pomeroy Library. said that her story reflects
the bid of the Thor and
the struggles she dealt with as a teenager
referred
i1 to Grants
growing up with divorced parent s.
·
· Administrater Jean Trussell
''The Ornery Angel" is non -fiction with
• A Hunger For More.
for review. The bid , of
spiritual undertones due to the fact that it
$35
,036.50, was just below .
See Page A2
centers around what she de.scribes as a
th e engineer 's estimate,
• Blessed are the meek. · "church going famil y."
Trusse
ll. said .
The tirst sentence of her book's back cover
See Page A2
'
Tiie
project.
which ca ll s for
both describes and sets up the s~ ory's conflict
the paving of John son Road ·
• Local Briefs.
with "One youn g woman's world is changed
(T-316)
will be financed
drastically when her Pentecostal preacher
See Page AS
through
lhe
coumy"s allocahas an alTair with her mom, causing both 10
• For the Record.
tion through the Community
. divorce ."·
Deve lopment 'Block Grant
See Page AS
Starcher has changed some of lhe names
formula
program . A l;lid
and places to protect her own privacy as well
award is ex pected next week.
as her family 's which also allowed her 'to
write the personal story.
Please ~ee Bidder, AS
WEATIIER
However. the book does speak candidl y
about Starcher's experie nces with the breakup of a family, running away, drinking. stealinjun~d
ing and trying to fit in with other teens,
Throughout her experiences as a teenager,
Starcher injects humor in pl ace of self-pity
when explaining her journey with self-esteem
and find ing her way back to the church.
StAFF REPORT
Starcher said she wrote the book to encourNEWS@MYDAILYSENT INEL.COM
age teenagers, espec ially those with divorced
parents. "When peo ple are dealing wilh life
MIDDLEPORT . - Aaltering .circumstances, th ey often fee l
Belh Sergent/ photo Middleport boy · seri ously
alone," she said. " I want them 10 know thai Meigs County native and Cl ifton, W.Va. resident Michele Zirkle Starc her poses . injured Wedq_esday evening
Details on Page AS
they aren't alone and that there is hope."
with her first book "The Ornery Angel. " The book is part spiritual non-fiction , pa-rt ·· whe_n he was strnck b y a car
Starcher is also a language ans teacher al teenage self-help and centers around a young girl coping with her parent's was reported 111 cnuca l conWahama Junior and· Senior High Sc hool. " I
1011ddonl ThutrsdpaY:
divorce. Starcher. who is also a teacher at Wahama, will have ·a book signing dnM
Ch. f
·
·
s
d
h
p
L'b
1
cpor
o 1tee
te s
Please see Author, AS
from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. thi S atu r ay at t e omeroy 1 rary.
Bruce Sw ifl said Charle
Fitchpatrick. 13. was riding
2 SEC110NS - 12 PAGES
east on his bicycle on
Calendars
A6
General Hartinge r Park at
.
:
'
.
8:20-p.m. when he was strnck ·
Classifieds
B2-4
whtcb oper- .Ohio .DeparltllCill of Health money we have left now by a vehicle d1iven by David
BY CHARLENE HoEFliCH
ates the cl inic. and · we 're getting ready to we ' II be able to continue to
ComiCs
Bs HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
said this week apply for a dental sa fely rie.t operate throu gh spring," said B. McClure. age and address
.
Dear Abby
A6
thai "there is grant , but we reall y w(Ht' t Marshall adding 'Tm doing . unreported.
MIDDL EPORT . Th e
· Fitchpatrick was transportno plan to know abo ut that until some talking and crunching ed lo Cabe ii -Hun ti ngton
hian Dental Clinic in
Editorials
A4 Appalac
numbers. We wa nI 10 ·. do Hosp ita l in Huntin gton,
·close down January.
Middleport for uninsured and
Faith • Values
A2-3 underinsured residents cont11e cl in ic ·•
everything
we can to keep the W.Va. by Med Flight heliFor the past year the c'linic
cli
nic
open."
We
are
tinues to operate while federhas hecn npcrat ing on a
copter from the Middleport
Movies
As al'
He said the cl inic has to Hi gti' School football field .
looking
at $~00 ,000
fund s dwindle and the
Appalachian
Larry
Obituaries
As search for new funding conreor ga n i za - Regional Commi ssion (ARC) break even to have sustain- · Swi ft . sa id the matter
Marshall
tional stral€- . non-rcncwahlc gran l and a ability "break even. not make remams under in ves tigation . .
,
B Section tinues.
Sports
Larry ~arshall , . health gies to ·obtai n sustainability $50.000 gra nt from the a profit. just break eve n. but said he does not expect
That's what we ' re trying · to charges to be filed against the
Weather
As commi ssioner of the Me igs in the future . We 're mulling Ostcupathi l·
Hcrilage
driver.
Colinly Heal-th Department over some th ings with the Foundatio1.1. "Wi th whal
Please see Clinic, AS
© 2005 Ohio Valle)· Publishing Co.

•INSIDE

Boy
in
accident remains in
critical condition

INDEX

Dental clinic funding dwindles as search for more continues

..

· GAlliPDLiS
LOCATiON ONLY
I

WI'WIOIIAIIJ-JIIL

106 North Second Ave, • Middleport, OH

"MARK YOUR CALENDAR'S NOW
FOR BOB'S

Two Convenient Locations :
1/4 Mile North
Po~J~eroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone !304\ 773-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
,(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631_

1ST ANNUAL PANSY FESTIVAL"
SATURDAY,OCTOBERSTH
·HOURLY DRAWINGS ·lOCAl APPLE SAMPLING
• lOCAl ·ENTERTAINMENT • AND SO MUCH MORE!
,..
r

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17630">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17629">
              <text>September 29, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="419">
      <name>hutton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3733">
      <name>windon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
