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ALONG THE RIVER
A single call brings

Behind the wheel:

help when needed, Cl

2005 Porsche 911 Carrera S, 01

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Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
I lhiu \ alk~ l'uhlishing Co.

l'ollll'l'o~ • :\liddll'pm·t • (;allipolis • Octoh&lt;•J' 2-f, :mo4

hi 1.:.!:; • \ 'ol. :JX , ;\;o, X I

ODOT ope~ new US 331inking Meigs; Athens Counties

SPORTS
• Blue Devils see
playoff hopes end in
loss to Logan.

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MTOAILYSENTINEL.COM

DARWIN
- Forty
years after Meigs County
business leader s led a
wagon
train
from
Rocksprings to Columbus
to emphasize the need for
a new highway between
Pomeroy and Athens. the
Ohio
Dep~rtment
of
Transportation Friday cut
the ribbon opening 13
miles of new highway .
The new section of U.S.
33 from Darwin to Athens
has been under construction
since late 200 I, and cost
$73 million . Smith and
Johnson Construction was
the contractor on the "supertwo" project, which has
been in the works since
1963. when local leaders
began to push the state for
the new road . A seclion of
four-lane from Pomeroy to
Darwin was completed in
1969, but no further construction was completed for
over 30 years; and then, it
was only after ODOT was
challen ged by an Alhensbased environmental group
that the bid for construction

See Page 81 .

Joan Cottrill. far left, cut the ribbon in 1969 to open the four·lane highway between Pomeroy
and Darwin. Friday, she joined State Rep. Jimmy Stewart, Federal Highway Administration
Counsel D.J. Gribbins, Earl Mathews, State Senator Joy Padgett, Judge Steven l. Story, ODOT
Deputy Director George Collins and ODOT Director Gordon Proctor in opening th~ new supertwo highway between Darwin and Athens. (Brian J. Reed/ photo)
was awarded and the · highway completed.

Ohio
Department of
Tran sportation
Director

Gordon Proctor. ODOT
District I 0 Deputy Director

George M. Collin&gt;, and D.J.
Gribbins, chief counsel for
the
Federal
Highway
Administration joined Judge
Steven L. Story, State Rep.
Jimmy Stewart, R-Athens,
and State Senator Joy
Padgett. R-Coshocton in
addressing a crowd of
Athens and Meigs County
residents eager to drive the
new stretch of highway.
, ·· Jt 's a pleasure to come
to a community where people &lt;lpplaud new roads, not
fight them.'' Gribbins said.
Gribbins, who has represented the U.S. Department of
Transportation on a number
of federal lawsu its. said
President George W. Bush has
prioritized the U.S. 33
Corridor between Charleston,
W.Va . and Columbus.
According to Proctor, the
new Darwin/ Athens project
and
the
Rave nswooq
Co nnector. which was
opened to traffic lasi
December. are among sever-.
al hi ghway projects in;
Southeastern Ohio to have
been funded through a spe~
.· cial state bond issue. Th&lt;::
Please see US :n, AS

Hundreds show up at Meigs Senior Center

0BITUARIFS
Page·AS
• Terry Boyce, 55
• David Elkins, 32
• Claude Fulton, 84
• Mary Higgins, 91
• Samuel "Jack" Lee, 82
• Margie Peck, 71
• Virginia Wade, 74
• Delbert Smith, 69

INSIDE
• Parish not distributing
food baskets .
See Page AS

WEATHER

U SHOTS
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The scene at the Meigs Senior Center on
Friday was organized chaos as county residents lined up to
receive !lu shots.
According to Courtney Sim, Assistant Administrator of
the Meigs County Health Department, approximately 800
vaccines were administered on Friday. No eligible person
was turned away because of supplies running out.
Residents that were eligible for the flu shots were children 6 to 23. those 65 and older, those 2 to 64 with chronic illnesses. children 6 months to 18 years on aspirin therapy, women pregnant during flu season, and household contact with those younger than 6 months.
Only residents of Meigs County were eligible. A representative of the Meigs Health Department checked driver's
licensees 'and other proofs of residency to enforce this stipulation.
Dorothy Oliver of Mason. W.Va was told by her doctor
to get a !lu shot because of recent health problem s. and
informed her that the vaccinations were being given in
Pomeroy. Unfortunately, she and her doctor were not aware
that only Meigs County residents were eligible and she was
politely turned away.
Mrs. Oliver, who used to teach in Meigs County, took it
in stride and politely left.
Leanne Cunningham, R.N .. administers one of many flu shots throughout the day on Friday at
the Meigs County Senior Center. (Beth Sergent/ photo)

Please see Flu, AS

Ricky Skaggs slates two shows at Ariel Nov. 7
PH~mM#tERWtEt -·~--~--------eAIIergy
·
' . • Obstetrics 8i Gynecology
• Anesthesiology
• Dentistft1&gt; .;.:,/':: ;•

• Ear, NO&amp;P·~ ; niroat

,. · ',. ·. • Occupatiqnal Me&lt;ti~~ne

·

~J.J,~ ., •• 'QWltlul.)tptol~gy,

'l,~,,,~,i;~· Qftbb~ Clil 1;&lt;.

, , t,
·

,

.,..,

• Emeigency'Mea'!cine .il!ii(l&gt;$ Hlliflti'lt'• 'hm ~!lgeme~t&lt;'~' . ~~.
e Pathology
'
• Famify Medicine
• General Surgery
• Pediatrics ·
• .Hematology &amp; Oncology •
• Podiatry
eRadiology
'
• Internal Medicine
eNeurology
• Urology

!ERWtft

~~~ __ etl#/&amp;1!
• Physical Therapy
· ··
_.Aquatic therapy
•
Private
Duty
Services
• Cardiac Rehabilitation
e Cardio•Pulmonary Services
• Compl.~e ~adi.ology Services
• Rehabthtahon Servtces ·. . ·'
• Community Well ness
(lnpatie'nt &amp; Outpatient)
• Diabetes Education ·
• Skilled Nursing
• Emergency Department
• Sleep Disorders Center
• Horbe Health Services
.• !-Tome Medical Equipment
• Speech Therapy
• Sports Injury Rehabilitation
• Hospice
• Surgical Services
• Laboratory
.
(Inpatient &amp; Outpatient)
• Long-Term Nursing
• Work Conditionmg
• Occupational Therapy
• Outreach Laboratory Services e WeUness Center
f

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INDEX
4 SECilONS- 28 PAGES

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds "
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

· A3
C Section
D Section
insert

A4
As
A2
B Section .
A8

© •oo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GALLIPOLIS
Reinforcing a return to his
roots in bluegrass with the
release of his latest CD,
"Brand New Strings," country sensation Ricky Skaggs
and Kentucky Thunder are
,coming to Gallipoli s ·on
Sunday, Nov. 7 in two shows
at the Ariel Theatre.
Skaggs' special guest will
be rising local entertainer
Dr. Joey Wilcoxon .
The shows are at 4 and 7
p.m. All seats are reserved
for each show, and are $28
in advance and $30 the day

of
the r----.:-::lr"'
show.
Skaggs'
appearance
is another
in a series
of
local
con c e r t s
bring i n g
major talent to the
Skaggs
area which
has already attracted such
names as Merle Haggard
and Trace Adkins.
The artist's latest album,
released S~pt. 28 by his own
· company, Skaggs Family
Records. as well as a busy
concert schedule have

Flu vaccine clinics set
in Gallia Coonty

d r a w n
accolade s
all over the
country .
STAFF REPORT
including
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
I h i s
endorsement from GALLIPOLIS - A ,,chedule'
for the admini .stratiun of the
t
h
e
2004-05 influenta 1 acci nel.L---L....J Cincinnati
ha' been 'et b~ the Gallia
Wilcoxon
Enquirer : Count\' Health Department.
··Mus ic
The
schedule
'tarts
doesn 't have to be electric to Saturday. Oct. 30. at the First
be electrifying. as Mr. Baptist Church. 1100 Fourth
Skaggs and company deci - AYe.. Gal li polis. 9 a.m. until
sively prove in concert ."
2 p.m.
Best known fllf such
The followin~ clinio 11 ill
1980s country hit &gt; as he held ba&gt;ed
the availabilitl nf the tlu 1·accinc. and
Please see Skaggs, AS I there · i' Ill' guarantee of the

on

a1·ailabi lit1 at this time :
· • Wedriesday. No1·. 3
Centen ille Villa~e Hall. 9
unti l 10 30 a.m.: Rio Grande
Villa~e Hall. II a.m. until
I ~:.3tl
p.m.:
Harrison
Tu11rhhip Fire Station. I :30
to.\ p.m .
• Thursday. 1\01 . -l Addm·ille Elementarv. 9 to
10:30 a.m.: Mor!lan· Center
Christian Church. !I a.m. to
12:30 p.m.
• Frida\ . !'lim·. :'i - Vinton
Town Hall. 9 to I0:.\0 a.m.:
Please see Vaccine, AI

October is .National
];"hysical Therapy Month
Holzer Medical Center salutes .o ur physical theraptsu
and phyeical therapy assistants during their special month!
For more Information, &lt;.:all the
Ho.._ Mtldi•ITIMnl')' Center •• (740) 446-1181
·

or the

·

·

HMC la. .1Mn. a.habUI..Iton Unit •t (740)446-80?'0·

-

~-·-- -------

·---

�itnbap lim~ -6mtintl

DoWN oN THE FARM

Windrow grazing lowers feeding costs
BY ROIIRT PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION

GALLIA COUNTY

Most ranchers are interested in lowering production
costs. The largest expense for
producers in the Ohio Valley
is that of winter feeds .
In
the northern United States
and Canada, storing forages
for feeding during the nongrowing season has been a
, practice for over I 00 years.
Swath, or windrow, grazing may be an alternative.
Swath grazing is the process
of cutting hay, leaving it in
windrows and allowing livestock · to graze
these
windrows in the winter.
Regardless of how ranchers are supplying winter feed
to their livestock, unless they
can rely on open grazing,
there might be an opportunity
to supply part of their feed by
grazing swaths. Ranchers
from Nebraska to northern
Alberta are using this method
to cut costs from their winter
feeding operations.
Swath grazing is being
done most extensively with
annual crops such as oats and
barley. Some ranchers are
swathing their perennial hay
crops and leaving them in
windrows for winter grazing
by livestock. Some Canadian
ranchers windrow late-seeded oats or barley hay and successfully graze them through
all types of weather conditions. The practice has been
used during open winters and
in snow depths of over two
feet with no apparent problems.
The costs of swathing. baling, stacking, storing and
feeding baled hay can be
reduced by as much as 60 to
75 percent by allowing the
livestock to graze windrows.
So why isn't every rancher
: making use of this technique?
Swath grazing
does
involve some risk. However,
the perceived risk . may be

higher than the actual risk.
Ranchers often say they
are concerned about their
cows ability to forage
through snow. Cows will not
paw through snow like horses
or elk for standing forage, but
will push snow aside with
their heads and noses once a
feed source is exposed. Only
under extreme conditions,
such as 'hard-crusted snow or
icing, is there a problem .
Under these conditions,
cows' noses can become sore.
and they stop foraging. In situations . where this has
occurred, ranchers have overcome this by driving a tractor
down the side of the
windrow, which breaks the
crust.
Before choosing swath
grazing, ranchers must also
consider the availability of
water, and, if necessary, shelter.
Swath grazing eliminates
baling, hauling, stacking, and
feeding, which reduces costs
by a minimum of $16/acre
plus the cost of feeding.
Additional costs for electric
fence and labor to move it
have to be added back in,
which is estimated to be less
than $2/acre.
Another hidden reduced
cost is machinery longevity.
Balers, tractors and hauling
and feeding equipment will
last longer when handling
less hay per year.
Manure handling is eliminated for the time livestock
are
grazing
swaths.
Concentration of livestock
for any length of time is'minimized. This reduces the
amount of manure that needs
to be hauled or spread in the
spring from concentrated
winter feeding areas.
Crusting snow · and ice
may require breaking with a
tractor to enhance access to
the forage.
Extreme weather can
cause problems, and supplemental feeding may still be

necessary for short periods of
time. Excessive rain and
snow can dilute the nutritional value of the forages.
Deer are a potential problem. They may walk on
ungrazed swaths. which seals
the snow and creates a crust,
thus making cattle grazing
more difficult . High, dense
windrows are preferable. It
may be necessary to rake
more than two windrows
together in hay that is producing less than 1-1/2 tons
per acre . Raking windrows
together increases their density. keeping the majority of
the forage off the ground,
even under heavy snow
loads.
Tall windrows also have
the tops exposed making
them more accessible to livestock. The ex posed areas act
as solar collectors, which
melts snow off a larger portion of the windrows.
Windrows, however, can be
made too big, which encourages animals to bed on them
and waste more forage.
Swath grazing will require
learning how to effectively
manage electric fence. Cross
fencing ith electric fence
c n c ntrol the time and
a ou ts of forage animals
have available·
Swath grazing is a viable
option for many producers. It
offers the potential to add
value to a livestock enterprise
through reducing feed and
feeding costs as well as
manure handling costs. This
does not mean "sell the
baler." It means. as with any
new practice , swath or
windrow grazing takes planning. Topography of grazing
area, water sources, shelter,
fencing and class of livestock
all have to be carefully considered.
Implementing this grazing
practice will require careful
monitoring of livestock to
ensure your livestock enter-.
prise goals are being met.

Manure management seminar set Nov. 17
BY FRANK 'Buz' Mru.s Ill
AGRONOMY TECHNICIAN

GALLIA SWCD

GALLIPOLIS- Applying
manure to farm fields has
come under increasing public
scrutiny the last few years.
This is especially true when
manure is applied to frozen
t~~~dlor snow covered fields.
Careful planning by the
farmer can help to avoid
applying manure under these
circumstances and help protect water quality at the same
time.
For this reason, your Gallia
Soil &amp; Water Conservation
District will be conducting a
special seminar, "Manure
Management
Issues,
Challenges and Solutions" on
Nov. 17, 2004. This will be
held at the C. H. McKenzie
Center, Ill
Agricultural
Jackson Pike at 6 p.m.
A meal will be served
before the start of the seminar. This program is being
made possible as a result of a
the
Ohio
grant from
Livestock
Coalition's
Livestock
Environmental
Assurance Program (LEAP)
and the Ohio Soybean
Council.

By attending this seminar,
total or partial confinement
livestock producers and custom manure applicators will
learn how they can continue
to be profitable and still be
environmentally responsible.
The producer can also learn
how they may improve and
increase profitability, viability and various production
efficiencies.
The goals of this seminar
are to help minimize wintertime application of manure,
develop practical and realistic application plans, promote
the use of cover crops,
explore the possibilities of
utilizing off-site applications,
and to provide information
on some financial incentives
that help address these challenges and issues.
While participating in this
seminar, livestock producers
can become more familiar
with Best Management
Practices (BMPs) and Best
Available
Technologies
(BATs). The producer should
consider adopting these to
better address the issues
related to winter manure
application, practical manure
management planning and
implementation , and protect-

Livestock Report
GALLIPOLIS- United Producers lnc ..market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Oct. 20.
Feeder Cattle
275-415# St. $110-$132 Hf. $100-$122.50 425-525# St.
$100-$125 Hf $90-$108 550-625# St. $95-$108 Hf. $85$102 650-725# St. $88-$96 Hf. $80-$88; 750-850# St. $82$94; Hf $75-$85.
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed $42-$48; Medium/Lean $38-$43;
Thin/Light $20-$35; Bulls $53-$62
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $560-$960; Bred Cows $31 0-$800; Baby
Calves $20-$260; Goats $17-$135; Lambs, $90-$121.
Upcqming specials:
Replacement brood and cow sale Wednesday, Oct. 27.
Thirty lead registered Angus cows, I p.m., Wednesday.
Nov. 3.
For more information, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the website at www.upro·
ducers.com

ing water quality.
By livestock producers
reducing the need of applying
manure to frozen and/or
snow covered soils, hopefully fewer complaints and violations will result from
improper manure application.
Livestock producers need
to understand that by voluntarily complying with BMPs
and BATs they are helping
themselves, their watershed
and their community meet
important water quality protection standards. By doing
this they retain the flexibility
and options of applying
manure during the winter.
If this flexibility is lost
through legislation, many
small and medium sized
farmers who house their livestock for part of the year
could be forced to build
manure storage structures
they mny not be able to
afford .
Reservations are needed to
be made by Nov. 12, 2004, to
attend this seminar for meal
and training manual count.
To make a reservation or to
obt.ain additional information , contact Buz Mills at
your Gallia SWCD office at
(740) 446-1\173.

PageA2

Spreading risk keeps farmers
competitive
BY

ROBERT PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

To survive in the current
economy, farmers must be
insightful, innovative, and
ready to make changes. In
recent years, conventional
wisdom has encouraged
diversification with alternative enterprises and increased
on-farm processing, packag-.
ing, and other means for
adding value to raw products
before they leave the producer's hands.
While this makes good
sense, making diversificatiqn
and value-added strategies
work can be challenging. The
objective of diversitication is
to spread risk, not to increase
it through poorly conceived
undertakings . Success or failure can depend on a number
of factors ; one of these is
good information.
Before plunging into new,
costly ventures, the following
advice is worth consideration:
• Read all you can about
your proposed enterprise.The
popular farm press commonly picks up on new trends and
features
articles.
Furthermore, there are typically a wealth of newsletters
and journals that arise following the introdw.:tion of
new crops and other enterpnses.
The Internet also offers a
new, rapid means of access-

ing information on new topic
areas. If you don ' t own a
computer. the local library
can help.
• Talk to others in the business. If you don ' t know anyone already involved in the
enterprise. locate the state,
regional and national groups
involved and get a list of
local contacts .
• Avoid being swayed by
hype. If possible. also talk to
some folks who've tried and
failed .· We often learn more
from failure than from success.
• Study the markets. Get a
good sense of the market possibilities for any crop or
product you are considering
producing. Identify wholesalers, retailers . brokers ,
direct marketing options, and
other resources that can he
helpful. Ask other producers
how they market.
• Learn the specially market
standards
required.
Evaluate your ability to meet
standards for . ckanlincss.
packagin g: crop quality. etc.
Some requirements arc ruther
unique . For example. synthetic fertilizers and pesli cides may not be used on a
field for three years before a
harvested crop may be sold
as "organically grown ...
• Establish your market
connection before you grow
your crop . This is especially
critical for highly specialized
commodities like edible soybeans. The seeds of edible
soybeans are often colored

differently than conveminnal
beans making then1 difficult
ur impossible to sell through
conventional channels as a
t'allhack option.
• Become techno-smart .
Get comfortable with the tdca
of using the phone and the
computer to market your
products.
• Be flexible. When dealing with niche enterprises, it
is often necessary to move
quickly in response to rapiuly
changing market conditions.
Farmers must constantly be
on the lookout for ways to
· in1prove and innovate .
•
Think . holisticall y.
Consider more than just
immediate, short-term profits
when investigating new crops
and
enterprises.
Diversification may not actu ally i)1crease protlts. What it
can do is make profitability
more reliable by smoothing
out the ride between good
and bad years.
There may be additional
benefits. Perhaps adding a
new crop to the rotation will
reduce problem pests - or
maybe it will build soil fertility. Develop a whole-farm
business plan and study carefully how well a new enterprise can be integrated.
(This is the third in a series
di scussing sustainable farm ing. For more information on
alternative enterprises, contact the Gallia County
· Extension office at 740-4467007)

U.S. urges China to resume beef trade
BEIJING (Drover 's) The United States is pushing
China to lift import bans on
beef and poultry imposed
because of mad cow disease
and bird flu outbreaks, a
senior state department official said last week.
Undersecretary of State
for Economics and Business
Affairs AIan Larson said the
United States has "taken all
the steps necessary io show
we are free of avian influen-

za."
"We would like to see that
trade resume," Larson told
reporters at a news briefing.
China was one of about 25
·countries which banned
imports of all U.S. poultry
products in February, when
avian influenza, commonly
known as bird flu, was disin
Texas,
covered
Pennsylvania, Maryland and

AROUND TOWN -

Sunday, October 24, 2004

New Jersey. In Asia. more the past few years due to the
than 20 people have died imposition of new certiti&lt;:aafter contracting the disease. tion and approval procedure '
An 11-month ban has been in for genetically modified vari place for beef imports eties.
Trade was then further disbecause of mad cow disease
after
U.S
officials rupted this year amid allegaannounced that a cow in tions by Chinese inspection
Washington · State had the officials that some shipments
brain-wasting disease, also were contaminated.
De spite the row over
known as bovine spongiform
genetically modified soyencephalopathy.
Larson was in Beijing as bean imports, Larson said
part of a delegation to discuss China and the U.S. still
agricultural issues, including share an appreciation of the
market access in a bid to need to develop biotech
boost the $6 billion a year in products.
U.S. farm exports to China.
!,..arson said Commerce
Larson said there is con- Minister Bo Xilai also raised
tinued interest in the United the issue of the U.S. granting
States to ensure that impor- ,China market economy statu&gt;
tant soy bean trade with - a. strategy Beijing has
China proceeds on a reliable been pushing among other
basis and isn't upset by new trading partners in a bid to
regulations. Soybean imports reduce its exposure to dumpto China were di srupted in ing claims.

Meigs County calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Saturday, Oct. 23
CHESTER Special
meettng of Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 9 a.m. with work in
the Master Mason degree following a 8 a.m. breakfast.
Sunday, Oct. 24
RACINE - Practice for
the Nov. I installation of oftlcers of Racine Chapter 134.
Order of the Eastern Star, will
be held at 2 p.m. at the hall.

Public meetin2s
Monda)', Oct, 25'
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Library Board will
meet at 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Vet eran s Service
Commission . 9 a.m., 11 7
Memorial Dr.
RACINE - The Southern
Local School Board will
meet at 8 p.m.

Church services

Saturday, Oct. 23
LONG BOTTOM - A
Sunday, Oct. 24
hymn sing featuring the
MIDDLEPORT
Golden Tones of Parkersbu rg.
Homecoming will be held at will be held at 7 p.m. at the Mt.
the Ash Street Church. 398 Olive Church. Long Botrom.
· Ash St., Middleport. The
BIDWELL - Gospel con· schedule includes : 9:30a.m. cert will be held Saturday at
Sunday school; I 0:30 a.m. the Poplar Ridge. S.R. 554
morning worship ; noon, din- near Bidwell. The Builders
ner and fellowship , I :30 Quartet and the Christian
p.m. Earthen Vessels ; 2 p.m. Echoes will be singing. For
Rev. Calvin Minnis speak- more informat ion. cal l 7.J0tog; 3 p.m. Glorybound 593-7390.
Quartet, formerly JoyFM · POMEROY
The
Trw .
Hemlock Grove Christian

Social Events

Gallia County calendar
Community events
Sunday, Oct. 24
GALLIPOLIS - Second
annual "Taste of Grace."
12:30 to 2 p.m. , Grace United
Methodist Church.
Monday, OJl, 25
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Veterans Association
meeting. 7 p.m . Eat at 6 p.m.
at
American
Legion
Lafayette
Post
27.
McCormick Road.
Tuesday, Oct. 26
GALLIPOLIS - Aerobics
at New Life Lutheran Church.
free, II a.m.
RIO GRANDE - Open
Gate Garden Club , 7:30
p.m .. Clara Belle Bradley
residence .
Program :
"Beautiful Bloom s. German
Village."
Wednesday, Oct. 27
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Veterans Service
Commis~ion
special
meeting,
10:30 a.m.,
Veteran s Service Office
on Jackson Pike . for dis-

cussion of legal issues.

Support groups
GALLIPOLIS - Cancer
Support Group me ets.
6 :30 p.m .. on the first
Monday of each month at
Life
Lutheran
New
Church.
GALLIPOLIS - Grieving
Parents Support Group meets
7 p.m. second Monday of each
month at New Life Lutheran
Church , 170 New Life Way
otT Jackson Pike. For information, call 446-4889.

ECT

Church will host a fall festi val at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at
the Hemlock Grove Grange
hall. Prize s will be warded
DEAR ABBY: Please settle
for costumes and games. an argu ment I'm ha1·ing ~~ith
Refreshments. Everyone is my wi fe. Our I X-yc&lt;tr-nld
welcome.
t
dau ghter. "CJ-ysial. " sutlers
DEXTER ~ 'The Old from ADH D. Laq June. Ill)
.~
Dexter Chu rch will host an wife insi.stcd th&lt;tt Crystal ~ct a
old-fashioned wiener roast summer job. Afte r weeks nt
Dear
6:30 p.m. All food provided. searching. the only jnb Crvslal
Abby
say s paqor Bill Blankenship. co uld lind wa~ ...,el lin!.! Ju(;r-tnSunday, Oct. 24
door.
"
POMEROY - A gospel
I wa.s afraid thai thi s Joor-i&lt;l·
mu sic· l'csi will be held at 2 Joor ~aJ.c..., might pu t Ill ~
p.m. at the Pomeroy Seventh daughter 111 dan ger. so l quiclh 11i1h i1 and )liU had peace of
Day Atlvcnti't
Church. approad1ed I he ll\.1 ncr "f ,, mind. You behaved like a conScllcdulcd to parti cipate are small businc" nea rh) and Jlcl td ll'rtll:d and lov ing. father. and
Rec Facemycr. Amanda her to give Cr1 sial &lt;1 joh. that is lmtdablc.
Wears. The Mdntyrcs. Junior Crystii l did IICII. a11d it turnnl
Df:.'\1{ A£l£lY: My husband
and !{i ta Whit e~ Treva out to he a 11ttsitil c' ""'" expe- and I httl e tt problem with the
Cald well. allll several others. rience - he'!' lir't for \OillC\)IlL' litllc ho1 who i11·cs across the
The ehun.:h is locateu at 250 non-fami ly.
,trcct. An) li me we pull into
Mulberry Heights.
My wiiC just found out 11 hal nur dri\1?\\ay. tile youngster
CHESTER - Revi val ser- I did. and she is .ir:tlc. I didn' t 11 ill come rigllt over to greet LI S
vices will be held 6 p.m. tell her bccattsc she is such ,, 11 ilh IIlii yucstions before we
Sunday and 7 p.m. Monday, penn y- pincher - sh,· colll - ,·atJ '" enc'\tt the vehicle.
Tues&lt;.la) and Wednesday. at plainell abou t pi;uJtt h.~...,...,Dil..., fo1
II llc·rc in our fro nt \'ard. he
the Chester church of the Cr)'stul duri n!.! her ...,elliPI' \l.'ar \\llJ L'(lt1\L' ll\'l~r ,.\lld~ \VOil.l
Na1arene. Dale Ward of becau ~c ·\he ~\\'~l"&gt; !.!11i11~ tn.col - k:ct\C. C\C!l tholl!..!h \\1,.' tell him
Fl orida will be the evangeli st. lege any\vay:· · '" ,_
\\t'·n.: hu..,\ Joi n~ \ard work. It
Is what I i.l1d .so lerrihil IHs rc·achcd 1he 1;o·itll where we
wrong'! I think it wa_.., &lt;I !.! nu~l hx&gt;k out tile ll'indtlW before we
thing . IN TH~~ IJC)G- ~o 11uhide. II' he cn m e~ over.
HOUSE IN M I C' III Gi\~
''-l' ~o in,Jde immeliiately. We
DEAR " I\J''· A l ih uu~h IIlli lllluld l1 ke to enjoy all the hard
ATHENS - Survival of did not m ~ 111ion 1hc 11~11 thai · 11·mk 11 c hllw pul into our yard
our patio a0ain
.
Suicide
s upport
group having ADHD has ta&gt;.cn. uti and- enjoy
.
e
you
r
daughter.
r
Ill
'&gt;Ill\.'
it
ha
.
.
rim
llltl\
sound
selfish.
but
meet s 7 p.m..
fou rth
been
"ignilicant.
You
\~crcn'
t
ll'c
jo't
waiu
tu
he
left
alone.
Thursday of each month at
H""' l'llll we il tllldle this
Athen s Church of Christ. wrong to want tu k1·el the
7R5 W. Union St .. Athens. playing tie ld rur you r daugilll'! 11·ithou1 hurting the ch ild's
For in format ion. call 593- and ensure her safety. The hcn- feel ing.., and keep peace with
efil to both of you is thai ,he our neighbors'.' It has plagued
74 1-L
now h i.'~ a ~ummcr of \\uri\ us for Ltr too long. - PRISGALLIPOLIS
Parkin son Support Group experience beh inu her - anJ O~ERS IN OUR OWN
meet s at 2 p.m., second the confidence that goc.., alun ~ 1-IO~,I E. NORWICH. CONN.
Wednesday o f eac h month
at Grace United Methodist
Church. 600 Second Ave.
Shade River: River front camping lot. · NOW ONLY $6,900!
For
information.
call
Crystal Lake: Beautiful wooded 5 acre homesite, 2 miles
Juanita Wood at 441\from Ohio River boat ramp. NOW ONLY $19,900.
0808.

GETAWAY!!

15 acres on 25 acre private lake NOW ONLY 529,900!
Special Financing
No Money Down and Interest only payments for 6
months for qualified buyers.
Call Now! Open 7 Days A Week!
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE!
CALL FOR FREE MAPS!

Commlned to Sene and Protect
Re-Elect

David l. Martin
For

800-213-8365

Gallia co. Sherin

COUNTRYTYMEJ.·~ .• ..

Your suppon Is appreciated!

Meigs
County
informed

2004

DEAR PRISONERS: You
have desoibed a very lonely
little boy. I am sure if he had
other thing' to do. and friends
to play with. he wouldn 't be
depending on yqu for human
contact. However. si nee you
and your husband arc not
chi ld-oriented. I advise you to
speak to the boy's parents and
urge them to get their '&gt;On into
some activities where he can
be entertained and interact
with his peer'&gt;. You wou ld be
doing the boy a favor.
DEAR ABBY: I ha1e know n
"Cassie" for more than a 1 ear.
We both like each olher ~i lot,
but she has askeu me to "give
her a few week'" hccausc ' he
needs to ·regain the tru't she
lost because of her ex. \\'ell. it
has been six weeks . and V:c
bare l} even ialk lUl\ more
because ;he's so bus1: wi th
work and ex tr~c u rriLull;r dLt i v-

ities. What should I do'' MAITHEW IN INDI ANA
DEAR MATTHEW: Get
busy with YO UR work and
extracurricu lar al'livities. That
way you'll have less time to
worry about Cassie. who. trom
my perspecti ve, is nowhere
near ready for another relationship with anyone.
Dear Ab!n· i.1 11-rillen by
Abigail Van Buren, also known
as Jeanne Phillips. and was
fou ndt•d br her 1no1her,
Pauline Phillips. Wrile Dear
Abbr ar ., ..,.11. DnoAhhr.com
ur . P 0. Box 69.J-+U. · Los
Angeles. CA 90069.

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Pd. for by David L. Marttn . 1717 Netghborhood Rd .. Gallipolis. OH 45631

PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

Our State Senator
•

•

Janet

award
ckett

Gallia&amp; .

Sunday, October 24,

Dad forms silent partnership
to give daughter summer job

•

Keeping

PageA3

•
•

Meigs County Commmissioner
34 Year Resident ol' Meigs
County~ prior office 8yrs.
Committed to serve the people or

•
•

Sunday

Lifelong resident
Small business owner
Public school teachers~ 20 years
Small business owner, 27 years
Former State Representative
Current State Senator
Former Director of the Ohio Office of
Appalachia

Times-Sentinel

One of us

Gallia • 446-2342

Meigs • 992-2156

Vietnam Veterans of
America Chapter 709
of Gallia County
wish to thank the following
businesses for supporting the
Annual Labor Day Roadside Rest
Coffee Break on U.S. Route 35.
Domino's Pizza at Spring Valley,

•

Working for

' Six Part Thesday Night Cooking
Series led by dietician Angie Rhodes
·
Tuesday, October 26th
"A~. South Beach, 1hc Zone-Where

·,

doeS the truth lie?"
·Sorting through Carbs vs, Fats·
, . Vs. Calories
Tue~ay, November 9th
·
"Extreme 'Recipe Makeovcrs"
Reducing fat and calories without sacrifictaste,

McDonalds of Rio Grande
McDonalds of Gallipolis

Pepsi Bottling eo.; Cheshire

Paid f6r hv PadaRtt fnr Ohin. MPrvin Dixon.

..

ml TPAS1lr'"'r
~

.

u~

�itunba~

PageJ\4

OPINION

limes -6enttnel

Sunday, October 24, 2004

Assessing the Bush Presidency
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydailytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letter~ to the editor are welcome. They slwt,/d he less than
300 wonis. All letters are suhject to editing and mw;r bt'
sig11ed ami include address tmd telephone numher. No
rmsigned lellers 11'111 be published. Leuers should be in gvvd
taste. addre~ising issues, trot persmwliries.
The opinions expressed i11 I he column belml' are the conSellS/IS 1!{ the Ohio Valier Publishing Co. :1 editorial boanl.
w1fe.\·~; othent·ise noted.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Oct. 24. the 298th day of 20()4. There are
68 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History :
On Oct. 24. i 952. Republican presidential candidate
Dwight D. Eisenhower declared. "! shall go to Korea'' as he
promised to end the conflict. (He made the visit over a month
later. I
On this date:
In 1537, Jane Seymour, the third wife of England's King
Henry VIII. died 12 days after giving birth to Prince Edward.
later King Edward VI.
In 1861. the first transcontinental telegraph message was
sent as Justice Stephen J. Field of California transmitted a
telegram to President Lincoln.
In i90 I. Anna Edson Taylor. a 43-year-oid widow, became
the first person to survive going over Niagara Falls in a barrel.
In 1931. the George Washington Bridge, connecting New
York and New Jersey, opened to traffic.
In 19:i9. nylon stockings were sold publicly for the first
time. in Wilmington, Del.
In 1940. the 40-hour work week went into effect under the
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
In 1945. the United Nations officially came into existence
as its charter took effect.
In 1962. the U.S. blockade of Cuba during the missile crisi s
officially began under a proclamation signed by President
Kennedy.
In 1987. 30 years after it was expelled. the Teamsters union
was welcomed back into the AFL-CIO.
In 2002, authorities arrested Army veteran John Allen
Muhammad and teenager Lee Boyd Malva in connection with
the Washingto n-area sniper attacks.
Ten years ago: The Clinton administration announced that
the U.S. budget deficit had fallen to $203 billion in the justcompleted fiscal year. Actor Raul Julia died in Manhasset.
N.Y.. at age 54.
Five years ago: An Israeli court sentenced American teenager Samuel Sheinbein to 24 years in prison for killing an
acquaintance in \1aryland in 1997. Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I. ,
died at Bethesda Naval Hospital at age 77. The New York
Yankees took game 2 of the World Series, defeating the
Atlanta Braves, 7-2.
One year ago: Three Concordes swooped into London's
Heathrow Airport, joining in a spectacular finale to the era of
luxury supersonic jet travel. International donors pledged
more than $33 billion for Iraq 's reconstruction in the next four
years- nearly two-thirds of it from the United States. Tiger
Woods matched the 55-year-old standard set by Byron Nelson
by making the cut in his II 3th consecutive PGA Tour event.
Se Ri Pak became the first woman to make the two-round cut
in a men's golf tournament since Babe Zaharias in 1945.
Today's Birthdays: Football Hall-of-Famer Y.A. Tittle is 78.
Rock musician Bill Wyman is 68. Actor-producer David
Nelson is 68. Actor F. Murray Abraham is 65. Actor Kevin
Kline is 57. "'AACP President Kweisi Mfume is 56. Country
mu,ician Billy Thomas (Terry McBride and the Ride) is 51.
Actor B.D. Wong is 42. Rock musician Ben Gillies
iSilverchair) is 25. Singer·actress Monica Arnold is 24. R&amp;B
singer Adrienne Bailon (3 1w) is 21.
Thought for Today: "Religion without humanity is a poor
human stuff." - Sojourner Truth, American abolitionist
( 1797- 1883)

$unbap urtmes -$tnttnel
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Correction Polley
Our mam concern m all stories is to be
accurate. IJ you know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms.

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O:nb11nr • Gallipolis. OH

(740) 446-2342
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
(7401 992·2155
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(3041 675-1333
Our websites are:
O:nb11nr • Gallipolis. OH

www.mydaitytribune.com
S&lt; ntinel • Pomeroy, OH
. www.mydallysentlnet.com
l\rg10trr • PI Pleasant, WV
www.mydaityregister.com
Our e-mail addresses are:
[nbunr • Gallipolis, OH
news@mydailytrlbune.com
Sentmel • Pomeroy, OH
news@mydaltysentlnel.com
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news@ mydallyreglster.com

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Hide the plant&gt;! Political
partisan' are 'ucking much
of the air out of the environment with in~ane rant~ , and
it's tough to get oxygen. So I
am going to try something
Bill
new by attempting to evaluO'Reilly
ate the Bush presidency
u'ing simple logic and stone
cold lacts. Please don't hate me .
The President's biggest J'crring to paint an optimistic
problem is bad foreign intel- picture of the future .
But
million .,
of
ligence. The CIA bungled
Americans
me
deeply
trouthe Iraqi weapons of mas'
destruction scenario and bled hy the chaos in Iraq
failed to predict the ·toxic and the President's hopeful
problems that have occurred outlook is not soothing that
in !ray after Saddam's fall. apprehemion. Thus , Mr.
Also.
the
Central Bush is fighting for his
Intellige nce Agenc:y and the political life.
On the home front , thin gs
FBI both failed to detect the
9/i I plot. All of this hap- arc better. Despite democratic hysteria. the economic sky
pened on Bush's watch.
not
falling.
In response to those cata- is strophic intelligence fail, Unemployment is less than it
ures. the President has said was when Bill Clipton won
little. It took him forever to reelection in 1996. and most
remove CIA chief George Americans are living comTenet and Mr. Bush is reluc- fortable lives. The si tuat ion
tant to address the WMD docs vary from state to state.
and Iraqi controver,ie,, pre- however. Florida. for exam-

pie. is booming, while Ohio
i., struggling . That sltuauon
makes the electoral vote outlook a to»up.
Gas prices are way up, but
Americans seem to be takmg
that in stride. Once again,
the President has not said
much about rising fuel
prices, concentrating on the
big pi cture, whtch 1' that the
U.S. economy is much better
th an that in most other
developed countrie,.
On social i"ues. Mr: Bush
has played it smart. He and
his conservative base are
rompatihle ami the President
sincerely believes that gay
marriage. partial birtll abortion and faith based tmtlatives are subjects worth takinn a strom! ~land on·. Bush's
"
support
is much more tervent than Kerry's, accordmg
to ail the poll,. and that's
because of his social outlook.
The presidency of George
W. Bush is hard to evaluate
because of the war on terror,
which has consumed much

-

of his time. The No Child
Left Behind Act ts a vast
unprovement over the
direcuonless
academic
chaos that had been plaguing many American school
districts. The funding issue
is largely bogus: many
states simply can't spend ail
the money that is available
because of poor administration.
Homeland Security ts
debatable, but what is undeniable is that we have not
he en hit again by Al Qaeda.
That's a· big win for Mr.
Bush .
So summing up , the
President's big downside is
the intelligence debacle and
his failure to adequately
explain it. His big plus is
that most Americans like
him, and his conservative
base reveres him . If he
defeats John Kerry, he will
do it on who he is, rather
than what he's done.
Next week in this space
we will analyze the Kerry .
challenge. See you then.

Sunday, October 24.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2004

Obituaries
Terry Boyce

Ewington. with Rev. WilliWll
Roger Blackburn officiating.
Burial will follow at the
Blackburn Family Cemetery
on Covered Bridge Road.
Friends may call from noon
until l p.m. on Monday at the
late restdence.

Margie Peck

David Elkins

Delbert Smith

Trqffic problems are alarming·
Our traffic problems are
getting worse, according to a
recent study by the Institute
of Discovering Things That
Make You Go "Duh."
How bad is our traffic
mess'' Consider these alarming facts:
FACT:,Conunuting by automobile now takes so long that
manv workers have no time to
do imy actual work. When
they reach their place of
employment. they grab a cup
of coffee. spend a few minutes
discussing the previous night's
episode of "The Apprentice"
with their co-workers. and
immediately start the long
commute home. unaware that
their jobs were outsourced to
Asia months ago.
FACT: ln the past year
alone, comm uters whose car
radios were tuned to "classic
rock " 'pent an average of
347 hours- more than two
weeb - just listening to the
song "Takin' Care of
Business." by Bachman
Turner Overdrive. The stati stics are even more ch illing
for "Black Magic Woman."
FACT: Gridlock is so bad
that as many as 15 percent of
"women"

driv~rs

now

pas~

the time by picking their
noses. (The figure for men
remains steady at I00 rer cent.)
FACT: In greater Los
Ang~les . the only documented mstance in the past two
· decade' of anybody' actually
getting anywhere by car i'
O.J . Simpson.
. FACT: Traffic t' nnw a

Dave
Barry

problem even in rural areas
such as North Dakota, where
this year, for what is
believed to be the first time
in' the state's hi story, two
motorists arrived simultaneously at the same intersection (North Dakota has six).
They were st uck there for
several days. each motorist
gesturing ,
in
friendly
Hemtland fasllion. for the
other to go first. Ultimately,
they both had to walk home.
FACT: Bachman Turner
Overdrive was origina lly.
named "Brave Belt."
Clearly, we have a serious
tratfic problem. The question is, what can we do, as a
nation . to get motorists off
the roads'?
One obvious answer is to
allow them to drive on the
sidewalks. This is the system
u'ed in Greece. where the
entire motor vehic le code
con"i"h of a

~ing l e

law: No

stopping . Thi' law require'
Greek motorists to use a
lome interpretation of the
term "legal rig.ht of way,"
wllich in Greece is basically
defined '" "Greece." I.
Jc·arncd this while I was in
r\thc rh ftor the 01) mpics.

and on two occasions a mov- am asking the 'jury to disreing taxi made direct physi cal gard this.)
contact with me "while I was
The problem is that mass
. very expenstve.
.
sitting at a cafe table. " The transtt·' 1s
second time the contact was ·Washington, for example,
pretty linn, so I gestured at would never have been able
the taxi driver to indicate to build its superb subway
"Excuse me. sir, but your system without billions of
taxi has struck me," and the dollars generously provided
driver shouted something by federal taxpayers like
that l assume was Greek for. you. Most cities - probably
"What do you expect?t including yours - don't have
You're SITTING AT A · that option. So what can you
CAFE TABLE!!"
'
do? The answer is surprisBut the point is that, with- ingly simple and affordable:
out a bunch of "red tape" You can steal Washington's
laws requiring motorists to sub~ay!
•
stop or yield or avoid
I don't mean the whole
humans , traffic in Greece thing, of course: That would
moves quite freely every- · be illegal. But if everybody
where. including inside the tn your city were to visit
Parthenon. If we adopted Washington as a tourist, and
such a system here. we could each of you just happened to,
speed up our traffic flow take a Phillips screwdriver.
and, '"a side health benefit, and you each took just a fe'w
really perk up the average mmutes. between visiting
pede,trian pulse rate.
monuments, to unscrew a
Another possible sol ution small piece of the subway
to our trafiic problems is and bring it home, before
"carpooling," which is when you know it, guess what"
a group of people ride That's right: A large sector of
together in one car, saving your city's population ·would
gasolin e, inhaling each be in prison. This would
other's bodily emissions and ease highway overcrowding .
arguing over which radio
Whatever traffic solution
station to li sten to ("Hey, we decide on, we need to do
leave it! i LIKE 'Black it soon, because as a nation
Magic Woman'!" ) So we can we need to get out of gridntle this solut ion out.
lock and start takin' care of
A far better solution is business, every day! Takin'
mass transit, which has been care of business, every way!
proven to. be effective in
Please shoot me.
Boston. Chicago. New York
(Dave Barry is a humor
and Washington. D.C., ali of columnist for the Miami
which have excellent mass Herald. Write to him do The
transit. !They also all have Miami Herald, One Herald
really horrible traffic. but I Plaza. Miami, FL 33 132 . .)

from Page A1
"Highway 40 Blues," "Don't
Cheat in Our Hometown" and
"Country Boy," Skaggs went
back to bluegrass in 1997 and
the resulting album, "Bluegrass
Rules!'' won him the sixth of
his nine Grammy awards.
A child prodigy who got his
stan, along with his friend, the
late Keith Whitley, in 1971 with
Ralph
Stanley's
Clinch
Mountain Boys, Skaggs went
on to work with J.D. Crowe's
New South · and Em my lou
Harris before· embracing the
country scene in 1980.
But the regard he ·and
Kentucky Thunder hold for
bluegmss led to their promoting
the. music again and trying to
educate the listening audience
on itS uniquely American sound.

As

Local Briefs

REEDSVILLE
-Terry
Boyce, 55, Reedsville, pa~sed
away on Oct. 22, 2004, at St.
Joseph 's
Hospital
in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 14, 1949,
in Circleville, son of Wilbur C.
Boyce and the late Betty
Morris Boyce. He was
CHESHIRE _ Margie Rca
employed as a truck driver.
Frye Peck, 71, of Cheshire,
Bestdes his mother, he wa~ passed away on Oct. 22. 21J04,
preceded in death by his sister, at The Ohto State University
Cathy Boyce, and seveml aunts Hospital in Columbus.
and uncl~s.
.
. .
She was born on July 6.
Survtvmg, best des hts father. 1933, in Logan County. W.Va ..
are hts wtfe, Martha Kmght daughter of the late Willard and
Boyce of Reedsvtlle: tour sons: .• Mary Adkins Frye. She .was a
Tom (Robml Lawson of llometmlker.
Portland, Albert Lawson, Jr. ,
Besides her parents. she was
Parkersburg, Robe11 Lawson, preceded in death by her husSr., Columbus, and, Chnstopher band, ){andall Peck. in 1995:
Boyce, Norfolk, \&gt;a.: a daugh- two sisters, Rosie and Dorothy: ·
ter, Jack1e Grnn, Norfolk: live and two brothers, Ora and
grandchtldren; two si~ters, James.
Bchnda Boyce and fnend,
Surviving .are her sons. Pete
Mehnda, of Columbus, and Peck and Gregory Peck. both
Catu:J7 and famtly, Wa.verly:. a of Cheshire; two d~ughtcrs,
spectal brother-m-law and .sts- Debbte (BudroJ B;nsden ol
ter-rn-la~, Bud and Jane Stsco Logan, W.Va. and Deanna
Larktn s
of
of Galltpohs: and a specml (Delmar)
Middleport: two brothers: Otis
caregtver Ang~l From Above.
Servtces wtll be held at 8 (Pam) Frye of Toledo. and
p.m. on Monday, Oct. 25, Deana (Delmar) Lmkins ,,f
2004, at Ftsher Funeml Home Middleport: a sister, kan (.lack
rn Pomeroy . wtt~ . Rev. ) Corns of Darrin, W.Va .; 10
Lawrence Bush ofttctatmg. grandchildren; · eight great
B~nal Will follow at the lamt- grandchildren and several
ly ~ ~onvemence. .
nieces and nephews.
. nends may call from 6 to 8
Services will be held at I
p.m. pnor to th.e servtce on p.m. on Wednesday. Oct. 27.
Monday at the funeml home, 2004, at Fisher Funeral Home
&lt;md may send onhne condo- in Middlero11. Burial will follences to www.fisherluneral- low at Gravel Hill Cemetery
Friemls may call fro m 2 to 4
homes.com.
and 7 to 9/J.m. on Tuesday at
the luncra home. and may
send unl ine condol ences to
EWINGTON
David www.lishert'uner;tihomes.com.
Benjamin .
Elkins.
32.
Ewington, passed away unexpectedly on Thursday. Oct. 21.
2004. He was an employee of
REEDSVILLE - Delbert
Civic Development Group, Smith, 69. of Reedsville, died
Wellston.
·
Friday. Oct. 22. 2004, at
He was born Dec. 22. 1971 , Camden-Clark
Memorial
in Columbus, to David Eugene Hospital in Parkershurg. W.Va.
Elkins of ColumbLts and Fannie
He was born Dec. 6, 1934. in
Kay Blackburn of Ewington.
Reedsville, son of Thelma
Besides his parents, David Barber Smith and the late Ervin
(Amanda) Elkins and Fannie R. Smith. He was a steel workKay (Bill Collins, Jr.) er for Quality Casting.
Blackburn, he is survived by
Besides h1s mother. Thelma
his wife, Lea Anna Cardwell Smith, he is survived by a son.
Elkins, whom he manied on Danny (Lori) Smith; three
Feb. I0. 1990, in Amanda. Also daughters, Brenda (Dale)
surviving are four children: Webster, Karen Ford and
Anna Mae Elkins. David Tammy Bennett; a stepson,
Benjamin Elkins, Jr.. Jessep Mark Frease: two stepdaughBradley Fulford, and Nichole ters, Sherry Frease and Tammy
Lyn Elkins. all at home : three Dalton: six grandchildren:
brothers: James Daniel Elkins Brandy. Jenmfer. Chrissy.
of Ewington, Vernon Curtis Shannon. Travis and Todd: and
Taylor of Wellston, and David five great gra ndchildren.
O'Dell. Lancaster: and two sisBesides his father. Ervin
ters, Tounya Kay Taylor of Smith, he was preceded in
Ewington and Bndget O'Dell death by his brother. Charlie
of Patriot.
Smith, and hi s sister. Ellen
He was preceded in death by Bennett.
a son, Gregory Sabastian
There will be no visitation
Elkins.
and no funeral service.
Services will be held at I
Arrangements are under the
p.m. on Monday, Oct. 25. direction of White Funeral
2004, at David's late residence Home, .Coolville.
on Covered Bridge Road near

Skaggs

i;lunbav lrtmr!i·iilrnttnrl • Page

··we're seeing, l think. a
resurgence in the music."
Skaggs recently told the
Associated Press. "There's a
real cross-pollination of people
who will go see the Dixie
Chicks. then come see us. Go
see Tim McGraw, then come
see us. Go see Ralph Stanley.
then come see us.
"Brand New Strings" is a
departure for Skaggs and
Kentucky Thunder with its
mostly new material in place of
interpretation of older songs.
"With this album l really
wanted to try to lind songs that
could become bluegrass classics in the next I0 or 15. 20
years," Skaggs said.
Ticket' tor the Nov. 7 shows
are now on sale by contacting the
Ariel Theau-e,'426 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, ·phone. (740) 4462787 or www.uieltheau-e.org

Delinquent tax
statements won't
be mailed out
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Treasurer Steve
McGhee announced that
delinquent t&lt;tx statements
will not be mailed this year.
Instead, ail delinquent
taxes will be printed in the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
McGhee advised that if
anyone has not paid their real
estate taxe,, they should contact the treasurer's office as

'oon as ro"iblc to urrangc
payment. Sewer a"l'''mcnh
are on the delin4uent real
estate taxe,. including the
2004 delinquent 'ewer.
The umounts will be.
included in the p~blishcd Ji,t
of delinquent real e'tate
taxes.
Legally. according to the
Ohio Revised Code, any real
estate taxe&gt; with or without
sewer assc"menh that 1- 112
year' delinquent may he fore closed upon and sold on the
courthouse 'tcps.
For more inform&lt;ttion. call
the treasurer's uffice at 446-

Death
Claude Fulton
WELLSTON - · Claude
Fulton. X4. Wellston, died
1-'riday. Oct. 22. 2004. at
Hoi7er Medical Center in
Jackson.
His wife. Pricey Bentley
Fulton. survives.
Service., will be held at i
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 26,
2004, at J.P. Rogers Funeral .
Home in Wellston. with Rev.
Don Fouts officiating. Burial
will follow at Evergreen
Cemetery in Coal Township,
Jackson Cou nty.
Friends may call from 2 to
4 and 6 to X p m. on Monday
at the funeral home.
Military grave&gt;ide service s
"'iII be cond ucted by
Wellston
Post
#371.
American Legion.

Samuei"Jack"
Lee
COOLVILLE - Samuel
John ".lack'' Lee, X2. of
Coolville. died Friday. Oct.
22, 2004. at his re;idnece.
He was born May 9. 1922
in Parkersburg. W.Va., son of
the late Samuel John and
Nancy Ellen Doherty Lee.
His wife. Betty Lee. sur-

4612 between 7:30a.m . and
4 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

VSC plans
special meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Gailia
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet in
special ses1ion at IOJO a. m.
Wednesday. Oct. 27 in the
Veterans Service Office.
Jachon Pike, to di scuss legal
i"ues.

Committee
plans meeting
GALLIPOLIS
The
Personnel Committee of the
Gallia
County
District
Library Board of Trustees
will meet at 4 p.rn . Thursday,
Oct. 2R at Bossard Memorial

Fl U
from Page A1
Her attitude was reflective
of the public's patient mood.

Library to discu" pe"onnelrelated library polic1e' .

Trunk or treat
set in Cheshire
CHESHIRE -. Trunk or
tre&lt;tt night in the village of
Cheshire will he Wcdne ,day,
Oct'. 27 from 5:30 to 6:30p .m.
Trunk or treat activitic' are
for children 12 or .you nger. It
will be a combined block circle from the Cheshire Bapti't
Church to the village hall .
Those wi,hing to participate
in distributing cand) from the
trunk of your vchil'lc'. park
before the beginnin g time of
5:311 to he incluJed tn the
pa"ing out of treats .
Motorish need to he alert
for children wbile drivin g in
the Village during the'e
hour,. Police 'urvedlance
will be enf;,rced.
Middleport Clinic.
To coincide with the llu
shots. a Health Fair wa' taking place at the center where
exhibitors pert·ormed variou&gt;
health screenings important
to 'enior,.
Some of the exhibitors
included Pleasant Valley
Hospital who gave away Tshirts and pertorrncd carpal
tunnel and bone density
scrccmngs.
o· B leness
ll ospi tal performed pulmonary function and pulse
oximetry screenings. The
Area Agency on Aging rerformed a medication mana~e­
ment screening. The Meigs
County Health Department
distributed strc&gt;.~ balls and
water bottles while discussing
heart disease.
Also present at the Health
Fair was Parish 1\'urse,
Lenora Leifhe it and Jan
Perdue
who
discussed
Anodyne therapy.
Diana Coates who helped
organize the Health Fair said
the flu shot clinic was the
busiest she'd ever seen in her
ten years at the center.
The Meigs Count y Heal tli
Department will administer
tv hat remains of the vacci nes
to the general public on a
first-come first-serve basis
staring at 9 a.m. on Monday.
Oct. 25. and if supplies
r~main on Tue ,day. Oct. 26.
You must be a Meigs County
reside nt with proof of our.
residency.
Also
bring
Medicare lir other insurance
cards if applicable. lf you do
not ha ve insurance , there is a
5 10 fee for the shot. Call the
Meigs
County
Health
Department for more information at 992-6626.
According to Sim. as of
Friday afternoon the health
department had onlv 200 \accines for the general public
and 100 vaccines remaining
for persons o\'er C15 with
chronic health problems. and
children 6 to 23 months that
haYe medical conditions that
put them at high risk.

"Nobody's pushed or
Services will be held at I shoved ," said Betty Lieving
p.m. on Tuesday. Oct. 26. of Pomeroy who arrived at
2004, at White Funeral Hnmc 8:30 a.m. that morning to
in Coolville, with Rev. James receive her vaccination. ''I'm
E. Norton officiating. and ve ry imp ressed. This is the
burial follow at Mt. Olivet most organized its eYer
Cemetery in Parkersburg. been."
Pomerov Police Officer.
W.Va .
Aian
Queen. was there to
Friends may call from 2 to
hcip
with
traffic and ended
4 and 6 toR p.m. on Monday
up
helping
a
motorist stuck in
at the fLmeral home .
Memorial contributions the mud because of having to
may be made to Athens park along the road due to
limited space in the parking
County Hospice.
lots. However. for the most
POINT
PLEASANT,
part Queen said things had
W.Va . - Mary E. Higgins,
gone
smoothl y.
\II. of Point Pleasant. W.Va ..
Things
had gone smoothly
died Thursday. Oct. 21 , 2004.
SOUTH
POINT
in
large
part
because of the
at her home.
Virginia Wade. 74. South assembly line of health
Funeral will be held at l
Point
. died on Saturday, Oct. department employees and
r. m. on Monday, Oct. 25,
23,
2004, at St. Mary\ other volunteers.
~00~. at Wilcoxen Funeral
Center
in
The assembly line began
Hom e in Point Pleasant. Medical
outside where Sherry Weese,
with burial to follow at Huntington , W.Va.
Her husband, Robert Wade, R.N., director of nursing, perNew Lone Oak Cemetery in
survives.
formed triage to determine
Point Pleasant. Friends
Arrangements are incom- those in immediate need for
may call from 4 to 7 p.m.
on Sunday at the funeral plete. and will be announced the vaccine. · Weese also
arranged for nurses to go to
by Hail Funeral Home.
home .
vehicles to administer shots
to those with problems standWhile the · highway has ing in the long line.
been seen as important to the
Once inside R.S.V.P. vollocal economy. the empllasis unteers urged everyone to
at yesterday's dedication ccr- re move their coats and roll up
from Page A1
emony wa' increased safety. their slee ves on the arm
state has spent S842 million There have been II death s on where they would be stuck to
on corridor improvements in the old U.S. 33 between hasten the process.
Darwin and Athen' in the last
Re sidents then moved
southeastern Ohio.
''This is the largest series of 10 years, the mo't recent of down the assembly line of
investmeins in Southeastern which was th at of an ODOT volunteers to assist with their
Ohio in the state's history." engineer's dau)'hter. Mariam paperwork until the line
ended at the cafeteria area of
Proctor said. "While this pro- El-Dabaja.
"These unfortun ate deaths the Senior Center where four
ject is important individually,
·combined with the other pro- will forever punctuate 1he nurses were adniinistering
jects to improve U.S. 33 from importance of what we've the vaccines with precision
and speed.
Columbus to the Ohio River. done here.'' Proctor said.
-After receiving vaccines.
According to Collins. the
it is a vital component to
opening economic develop- new highway took 56.000 people were gree ted by Dr.
ment opportunities through- cubic yards of concrete to Timothy P. Metzer. D.O. who
complete. Crews moved 38 will be the new ph ysic ian at
out Southeastern Ohio."
"When all of the improve- million cubic yards of earth i Plea sa nt Valley Hosp ita l's
ments to U.S. 33 are complet0
1
ed. the route will signitlcant- ~a v/~~~·oo~ea~l~d f ~an~ :~ U AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAA;,;,;,;,;, •
ly improve the tran sportation
and special environof manufactured goods and . projects,
mental
consideration&gt;.
~
increase overall travel efti- including lengthening ail culcience:·· Proctor said.
verts in preparation for a
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
·with
the future ·four-lane roadway.
Along
Ravenswo~&gt;d Connector. the
larger bridges
design£d
t,..
.u.S. 33 macro-corridor also protect
Pratt's Fork
Creek.
in cludes
the
Lancaster and the creation of a wetland
bypass, scheduled for 2005 near Rockspring&gt; were taken
completion. and a bypass of because of the "env ircinmenNelsonville now under devel - tali y-sen&gt;itive" nature of the
opment.
project.
vives.

Mary Higgins

Virginia Wade

US33

LVNN ANGELL QUEEN

1:'7 1!

GAlliA (QUNTY (QMMISSION~~

fi\.\\CIAL EXPERIE\CE \'Ol' CA \ COl'\T 0\

(The Associati'li Press con-

tri/Jwed to this storr.)

is hosting a
continental breakfast and seminar on
October 28, 2004 at 9:00A.M.
in Pomeroy at the
~

Bea

cC•• ••• •• • • •• ••

Gallia County

· Recorder

Learn

Rto1&amp;0

GaiUpolls. Ohio
"}imr

Hearing
, Loss affects your quality nf life .

RS\'P REQUIRED BY OCTOBER 25. 2004
at 1-800-451-91106.

135 Pine St.

[1401 446-2532

ho1~

·-

....., I,_

SMITH S GMC
lRUCII CENTER

Karr ,-\ ttdi(&gt;lc&gt;g: &amp; lk.tri ng AiJs
.!99 Richland ..\;c
~ -\then&gt; . OH 4:\701
~ (740) S94-6.l:H

\\'ild Hor.se Cafe
· 251 W. Main Street
Pnmcl'l'l. OH .!~ 7~9

�Page A6 • !&amp;&gt;unbaP l!:unrs -!&amp;&gt;rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

"unbar !rm1rs -"rnllnrl • Page A7

Pomeroy • Ml ddleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, October 24, 2004
Sunday, October 24, 2004

'.

MSND
6;00pm- 9:00pm
!&lt;

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INGELS ELECTRONICS
Ingels Jewelry &amp; Picture Gallery
·
106 No'rth Seco nd Ave • Middleport, OH 45760

740-992-2825

..
I

tlotnt tllea~ant
l\egtgter,
WYVK-FM
K92 IThe Frog'
and
WJOS TV58&amp;
Charter Cable
Channei20

Oo/o·
Off

';;;....;_.;;-';~

WEI\VING STITCHES
GIFT SHOP

The Daily Sentinel,

I&gt;OW1 MJSS 1HIS SPOOKTACULAR
11~10

SAVE!

one Rack Nike
Palo Shirts

Refreshments will be
served by our 'boo'tiful
&amp; friendly staffl

WIDE!·

740~992~1702

$10.00

Ca rolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall

will be open Monday,

Come Enjoy Our

HOLIDAY 0PEN HOUSE 3$

•d

PRESENTING ELOISE'S zoo4 SNOWMEN DESIGNS
. Hourly Door Prizes
·

October 25th from
6:00pm to 9:00pm
. ONLY!

o\\ c;1al\S

~·

Monday, November 1, 2004
9:00a.m. to 9·00 p m

o.:

·:·:..:-:-:·x·:-:-:·&gt;:-:·:&lt;·:-:·:. . . :-:~x-:-:.-:« ::::.:-:-:·:-:·:«..:·:-:·:·:~:·:·:·;-:~:·:-:-:..:·:·:=:

STORE

106 West Main St • Pomeroy, Ohio
-~

on Red Dot ~ ~ On Selected ~
:::
Items
?: :::
Items
:::

ili

(in store only)

'f . .
l'

:::·&gt;:•X•&gt;:·:-:-:-:•&gt;:•:-:•&gt;:·&gt;:·&gt;:·&gt;:•:-:-:•:•

~~ Save 50% :;:~~ Save 30%-SQ%~~

20% OFF Halloween Items
6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. .

-··

'·

. FORGREATSAVINGS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!
~~X·X•X•&gt;:•X•X•X·X•X•X•&gt;:·&gt;:~:

Jointly brought to
you by the

(i)

Come in Monday, October 25th
from 6PM - 9PM

Antiques
.
Retired Baskets ·

All Remaining

Dexter Shoes

, 4Q%0FF

·Riverfront Past and Present

LO(.'&lt;I! _Anl sl Mil'ho:!!c Mu!-.!!Cr will be o ·h· d f
l n~cpe · . 1. ,.
.
n an or
.
rsOII&lt;i Jl.H!on on m·s!Ore items

\ .,

• oclures wrt/r Frosty
..
. th e Snowmanfrom 6:00p.m.
to 9:00p.m.

204 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-7100
MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
STORE

~'fie ?\neapp/e /jtt .

-

~" "" ' 'U I

Where fashions are
always at least ·

20%0FF

BuiJ Dne ilem,
gel secthfd ilem
II lflme "' lesser uatue

omen s plus size clothing!

PLEASE
SUPPORT

BUSIWESSES

GRAND OPENING

CRI\PfER'S LOPr
Light Refreshments • Door p rtzes
.

~reaths, Trees, Candles,
Tms, fireplace Screens
Snowmen &amp;. Much Mor~!

LOCAL

6pm • 9pm Dnltj

afthe

.
.
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:0:

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50% OH!

~e carr~ a large selection of

- Come See Our
Winter Wonderland

~

~ea.t\S ?-.CJ,\OW Canclles &amp;Gifts
\\

93 Mill Street
Middleport, OH

. ·

:Fa[[ qarfands, 1fowe;s

!Mitfnight !Matfness Tvent

DORIWG

Momfa!f, Octo6er 25, 2004
6:00p.m. -9:00p.m.

tMDNESS!

'

~

. f£ve'!jtliing
tn tlie store is

20%0FF

Fall Flag~

,25% Q',..,._!F!F4,,...F

HOLIDAY OPEN Jl

~c.s-+~

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Monday, November 1st
~PM-9PM .

'

VIereR.JA's

HAttfWELL HOUSE
100 East Main Street • Pomeroy Oh '

740-992-7696 '

'

spooKY
~DNrff

anaJfa[foween *

(104)
675-1400

418'/,

wv

SAVINGS

, 40% OFF All In-Store

Jewelry

'&lt;· ·

4l8 Main Street
Point Pleasant

GPJv[ to 9PJvf Monrfa!J

Sc\Vf!

' f ' /I ; /
\ \\,\ \ 11/

675-3400 .

:Jvfianite Maaness

Upstairs at
Si.der's
Main St
Point Pleasant

s~

(740) 992-9513

***~*
- .
. . :,:;~********

JO

· Prom 8 Bridal Boutique

,

321 Viand Street
Point Pleasant , W\ .
{304 ) 675-2786

1

- - - - . . . . . ;_

.,.

'

.-

-... - --·- - -- ______ ---------....._

. -- -

-

·--

-- ·--

_ -.c- -

j

!.......,

.

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'•

�~age AS

OHIO

6unba~ limeiS ·ienttnel

Sunday, October 24,2004

Parish not distributing food baskets
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Emergency
grocery boxes and cleaning
supplies provided by the Ohio
Association of Second Harvest
Foodbanks will not be distributed by the Meigs Cooperative
Parish as
was earlier
announced .
The Rev. Keith Rader.
Parish director, said Friday
!hat no formal arrangements
had been made through Parish

Vaccine
from Page A1
Bidwell-Porter
Trinity
Methodist Church, II a.m.
until 12:30 p.m.; Cheshire
Baptist Church. I:30 to 3 p.m.
• Monday, Nov. 8 Hannan Trace Elementary, 9
to 10:30 a.m .; C r o w n
City/City Building, II a.m.
until 12:30 p.m. ; Mount Zion
Missionary Baptist Church.
I :30 to 3 p.m.
• Tuesday. Nov. 9 -.
Greenfield Township Fire
Station, 9 to I0:30 a.m. :
Cadmus Community Center,
II a.m. until 12:30 p.m.:
Patriot Lodge, I :30 unti I 3
p.m.
• Tuesday, Nov. 9- Galli a
County Health Department. 4
to 6 p.m .
·
• Wednesday, Nov. I 0 Senior Resource Center, 9 to
10:30 a.m.; Centenary Un ited
Methodist Church.
II
a.m. to 12:30 p.m .; Christ
United Methodist Church
I :30 to 3 p.m.
Beginning Monday, Nov.
I, the influenza vaccine will
be available every day at the

Local Stocks
ACI - 34.55
AEP- 32.09
Akzo- 36.90
Ashland Inc. - 56.36
AT&amp;T -15.89
ell ::__ 11.78
Bob Evans - 23.73
BorgWarner- 40.61
Champion - 3.60
Charming Shops- 7.24
City Holding - 33.14
Col- 35.47

officials to handle the distribution.
Presumable other arrangements will be made and an
announcement by Second
Harvest will be forth&lt;:oming as
to where the 21 families who
qualified
through
the
Temporary . Assistance for
Needy Families (TANF)
shoLtld go to pick up the emergency assistance.
The food and supplies were
purchased by Second Harvest
with a portion of the $1 mil-

lion in funding which was
made possible by an executive
order signed by Gov. Bob Taft
for flood victims of the 20 Oho
counties declared in a state of
emergency.
Rader explained that the
parish is already heavily
involved in assisting the flood
victims along with numerous
other projects, and that
because of the paperwork
involved in handling a government agency distribution, it
was decided not to participate.

health department from 8 to
II :30 a.m .. and I to 3:30p.m.
The Ohio Department of
He&lt;tlth (OOH) re4uires that
the vaccine purchased from
them be Llsed only for.the high
risk
population.
This
includes :65 and older: 6-23
months: 2-64 years and have
a chronic medical condition/weakened immune system : pregnant women, 6
months to I~ years on chronic aspirin therapy : household
contacts of children less than
6 months.
As of Oct. 22, 2004, the
Gallia
County
Health
Department does not have
any preservative free vaccine
for the 6· 23 month old population.
Dr. Gerald Vallee , health
commissioner. said that '·in
order to have sufficient vaccine to protect the vulnerable
population of Gallia County,
residents will be carefully
sc reened by health department staff to be sure that they
meet the eligibility.· requirements for the vaccine."
The intluenza vaccine will
be offered to all Gallia
County residents at no out-of-

pocket expense. Clients with
Medicare Part B and/or Ohio
Medicaid will be asked to
present their cards at the time
of service.
The 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine is also available at
the health department and
clinic sites. Current recommendations are that persons
aged 65 and older should
receive one dose of the vaccme.
It is also recommended that
persons less than age 65 with
a chronic disease also receive
one dose of the vaccine.
The ACIP (Advisory
Council on Immunization
Practices) recommends only
two doses of pneumoccocal
vaccine in a life-time. The
vaccine will be provided at no
out-of-pocket expense to
!hose clients who present a
Medicare Part B card. Those
less than age 65 will be
charged a fee to cover the cost
of the vaccine plus an administration fee.
Call 441-2950 for the current pneumococcal price or
for more information on the
influenza or pneumococcal
vaccine.

DG -18.63
DuPont- 42.02
Federal Mogul - .16
USB- 27 .86
Gannett- 80.20
General Electric - 32.95
GKNLY- 4
Harley Davidson - 55.55
Kmart - 89.49
Kroger- 14.97
Ltd. - 23.87
NSC - 32.59
Oak Hill
Financial - 35.87
OVB - 31.25
BBT- 39.51

Peoples - 26.85
Pepsic(! - 48.48
Premier- 9.11
Rockwell- 40.01
Rocky Boots - 19.69
RD Shell- 53.35
SBC- 25.24
Sears- 32.52
Wat·Mart- 51.99
Wendy's - 32.73
Worthington - 19.75
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of" tile
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Inside

&amp;unba!'

VInton County downs Meigs, Page 82
Prep Scoreboard, Page 83
Buckeyes finally win In Big Ten, Page 84
Rio Grande hoops previews, Page 84

Bl.

Qtim~ -6ttttinel

Sunday, October 24, ~

GALLIA CouNTY

Logan 43, Gallia Academy 13
Fairland 34, River Valley 6
Guyan Valley 46, South Gallia 0

High School

Football

MEIGS COUNTY

Eastern 27, Waterford 12
Vinton County 42, Meigs 14
Trimble 66, Southern 0

Eagles overcome slow start to tame Wildcats
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
WATERFORD- Eastern needed
one quarter to figure out what
Waterford was all about.
Then the Eagles unleashed a 27point barrage that tamed the
Wildcats in a 27-12 Tri- Valley
Conference · Hocking Division
match-up. ·
EHS (6-3, 3-1 TVC) battled the

Keep a
check on
local
weatht:r

hosts to a scoreless tie through 12
minutes, then unleashed 180 yards
on the ground and 114 more in the
air en route to taking sole possession
of second place in the division and
keeping its slim playoff hopes alive.
WHS (3-6, 2-2) racked up I 5 I
yards through the air and Ill more
on the ground, but couldn't make the
.visitors pay for three lost fumbles.
Waterford also couldn't stop the
dual rushing efforts of EHS seniors

Phil Pierce and Bryan Minear.
Pierce led the Eastern ground
anack with 71 yards on 14 carries,
while Minear added 62 yards on I0
totes and a touchdown in the Eagles'
third consecutive win.
Minear o.pened the scoring with a
I0-yard jaunt in the second quarter,
giving Eastern the only points of the
half at the I: 12 mark .
Terry Durst made it 15-0 on a 16yard pass from Ken Amsbary at 3:37

Gallia Coun

in the third. and Amsbary added a
12-yard running score early in the
fourth to give the Eagles a comfortable 21-0 advantage. Durst also had
27 rushing yards on four tries.
Amsbary made it 27-0 with a 46·
yard bomb to Chris Myers at 6:33.
then the starters left the field.
Amsbary finished the evening with
114 yards on 7-of-14 passing and
two touchdowns.
Dale Doebereiner and Jericho

Pugh added runs of five and one
yards for scores, respectively, to ·
cpnclude the scoring.
Myers led EHS and all receivers
with five grabs for 81 yards. while
Pierce added 17 yards on one catch.
Yan Paxton paced Waterford with 47
yards on three receptions.
The Eagles conclude their 2004
regular season Saturday at East '
Shade River Stadium when they host
the Southern Tornadoes.

teams struggle

•

5 MPH winds from the west.

Weahther Forecast

Evening
(7:00pm-Midnight)

Morning
(7:00am-Noon)

tt should be a cloudy evening. Temperatures
Expect a cloudy morning. Temperatures will will hover at 56. Winds will be 5 MPH from the
hold steady around 63. Winds wilt be 5 to 10 west turning from the northwest as the
MPH from the southwest turning from the west evening progresses.
as the morning progresses.
Overnight
(1:00am-6:00am)

Afternoon
(1:00pm-6:00pm)

Temperatures will remain around 50 with
Temperatures will linger at 65 with today's today's low of 48 occurring around 6:00am.
high of 66 occurring around 4:00pm. Skies will Skies will be mostly clear to mostly cloudy with
range from mostly sunny to m.gstly cloudy with 5 MPH winds from the west.

. """

.

A
-R eminder
:F rom
:S anta.. ~
'

'.

.

·Beginning
·Nov. 1, 2004
·Your2005
Christmas Club
Accounts Can Be Opened!
WEEKLY DEPOSIT

• A 12 State Calling Area w/
NO ROAMING CHARGES!.

TOTAL

$5.00 .............. $250.00 .
$10.00 .............. $500.00
$20.00 .......... $1,000.00
$50.00 .......... $2,500.00

Gallia Academy's Austin King (7) returns a kick with Kyle Burnett (22) looking for defenders
to block during the Blue Devils ' loss to Logan Friday. (ian McNemar)

River Valley's Justin Halfhill (23) tries to elude a Fairland defender during the Raiders' loss ta
Fairland Friday. (ian McNemar)

Blue Devils see playoff
hopes end in loss to Logan

Fairland pulls away in ·
second half against Rai.ders

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com

• Nationwide Long Distance!

GALLIPOLIS - Another week in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League, another
football shocker felt throughout the region.
This time it was a little too close to home.
Logan galloped into Memorial Field
Friday night and handed the Blue Devils (54) an overwhelming 43-13 loss that spoiled

Only •39.95'mo

__
--·(Per Une)

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

Gallia Academy's first home contest in two
weeks.
The Chieftains (4-5) held the hosts to 125
yards of total offense, including 11 on the
ground, and forced four turnovers en route to
setting up a week I0, three-team showdown
for the SEOAL championship.
LHS managed 395 yards rushing and 500
yards of total offense in also assuring that no

Please see Devils, 83

downs. in a 3-1-6 win over River Valley. ·
While he was picked off three times, Hill
still got the job done for Fairland as he threw
the ball 22 times with I-I completions.
CHESHIRE - The three "P's" can make
Sa1h Huff caught seven passes for 146
for a long night : pa~sing, penalties and yards. including a 65-yard TD in the second
extended pre-game.
,
quarter.
Fairland made it even longer for River
Also for the Dragons &lt;2-7. 1-3 Ohio Valley
Valley.
Conference). Adam Fuller ran the ball 19
Dragons' quarterback Michael Hill had 220
Please see Raiders, 83
yards passing. including a pair of touch·
BY BurcH CooPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

._

-- ~-----

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

High School Cross Country

• Inside Kroger
. . . LOCATION • CHf' I '901'111 •
574-1000
Zane ptaza ,.,.., ro CICI'I/774-4111
• POR IIMOUTH • l,.idl KIDfer
• NIW IOITON • Next to .W11-Mart

456-0000
• WAVIIILY ·liiiJide WBI-Mitf

947.0069
• CHIWCOT'HI·I,.idl W....,llf

n4-2220

Gl
LENDIER

Racine

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740·949·2210

740·992·6333

•

FDii
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355-1111

• JACKION ·lnlide Ktogtr

288 4100
• OALUPOUI· Sliver Blfdgtl Plm

441·1133

River Valley boys squad advances to regional meet ,
The Raider boys cross country team fin·
i'hcd third at the Division II district meet
Saturday to earn a &gt;pot at the regional meet.
whtch will be held at Pickerington North Oct.
30.
.
BY BUTCH COOPER
Many of those boys were part of the 2002
bcooper@ mydailytribu ne.com
squad that advanced to regional s.
The Raiders did it this time with only one
RIO GRANDE - For only the second time runner to finish in the top 10.
in school history, River Valley will send "
Senior Chri s Roush, a member of the 2002
team to regional competition.
team and a state fii1alist last year. finished

Gallia Academy's Carol
Fahmy also moves on

~

t

lOth to lead the Raiders .with a time nf
174"299.
Hillsboro's Jo&gt;h Pierce won the nr~et with a
time of 16:53.33. while Unioto's Neil
Hertenstein ( 17 :10.-10) was seco nd and
Athens' Alex Moody ( 17: 14.54) third.
Hertenstein was one of fotir Umoto runner'
to finish in t he lnp 12 ro help hi.s tedm win the
team championship with 50 point&gt;.
.
Meanwhile . Logan F.lm. with 91 points. fol·
lowed by the Raiders 1107) and Circleville

I II-l i
Jeremy Wolfe "a' the 'ccond runner to
cross the finish line for River Valley as he finished 17th with a time of 17 :52.93.
.
Also fnr the Raiders. Jonathan Casto .
( 18 : 16 l WOJ&gt; 24th. Chris Lester ( lll:24) 27th,
K)lc Hi wl: ! 18..101 2'lth. Allen Pope (18 :46)
.1oth and \'i1K~ We ,uhersrei n 1l8 : ~Hl -II st.
The top boys runners for Gallia Academy

Please see Regional. BJ
l

.

•

�PREP FOOTBALL

iunbap limd ·itntintl

Sunday, October 24,2004

Vinton County 42, Meigs 14

The OVP

PREP 80XSCORES
Fairland 34, River Valley 6

Vinton County
downs Marauders

How They Fared

BY BurcH

· ground on II carries and Michael Barney had
bcooper@mydailytnbune.com
19 carries for 55 yards.
In the first quarter, Curt Moore had a 3-yard
McARTHUR - Jared Casey had an out- TD run and Max Learning recovered a fumble
standing evening on the ground for Meigs, but in the end zone to put the Vikings up 14-0.
M ci~s cut into that lead only seconds followVinton County was just too much to overcome.
The Vikings remained in the hunt for a play- ing Le~ming :s-score when Casey ran the ball 62
off spot with a 42-14 win over the Marauders yards for a TD.
Both of Ousley's TD passes to Bethel.
Friday.
though.
came in the second quarter as Vinton
Casey finished with 12 cames for 143 yards
County
led
at halftime, 28-6.
_
and a touchdown.
Down 42-6 in the &lt;:losing seconds ot the
Vinton County (7-2, 3- 1 TVC Ohio), though.
had six different players to score touchdowns. game, Meigs finally got on the scoreboard again
including Josh Ousley, who caught two TD on a 17-yard TD pass from Aaron Story to
Brandan Fisher.
passes from Chris Bethel.
Bethel finished with 11 7 yards on 6-of-1 0
Meigs returns home .to close out the season
passing. while Curt Moore had 66 yards on the when the Marauders face Belpre thi s Friday.

1. Ironton (~)

DEF. BELFAEY (KY.), 31-10
2. Huntington, W.Va. (7-1)
LOST lOG. WASHINGTON, 21-13
3. Wayne (8.0)
DEF. PocA, 33-o
4. W!Melersburg (8-1)
DEF. PORTSMOUTH WEST, 28-14
5. Williamstown (7.0)

DEF MAGNOLIA, 37-13
6. Frontier (~)
DEF. MONROE CeNT., 14-7
7. Parkersburg South (8-1)
OEF. Ro6ERT C. BYRD, 32-1 6
8. Parkersburg (7-2)
DEF. NITRO, 42-14

(8-1)
DEF. MORGAN, 58-3
9. Trimble (8-1)
DEF. SoUTHERN, 66-0
9. Sheridan

'

CoOPER

Guyan Valley 46, South Gallia 0

STANDINGs/RESULTS

Wildcats claw Rebels

ovc
IHm

0'&amp;

Chesapeake

4-0

All
7-2
6-3

BY BUTCH

Coal Grove
3-1
Rock Hill
2-2 3-6
Fairland
1-3 2-7
RlwrVailey
1-3 2-7
South Point
t-3 2-7
Friillly'1 RBiults
Fair1and 34, River Valley 6
Chesapeake 20, Rock Hill 14, 20T
Coal Grove daf. Sou1h Point, rVa

SEQ

All.

3-1
3-1
3-1
2-2
1-3

5-4

Gallia Academy
Logan

Marietta
Jackson

Warren
Athens

Q-4

BRANCHLAND, W.Va. - Its the same
problems that have haunted the South Gallia
football program all se¥on.
"We just wern't getting the job done up front
and we wern't getting f~rst downs," said South
Gallia head coach Justy Burleson. ''That's what
it boils down to. That has been our story all year
long."
The Rebels lost to Guy an Valley Friday, 46-0.
The Wildcats' Ray Gillman was perhaps
another reason for the South Gallia loss.
Gillman had two rushing touchdowns and ran
for 104 yards. He also caught a TO pass and
returned a punt 85 yards for another one.

4-5
4-5
7-2
2-7
1-8

Trimble marches toward
playoffs, TVC Hocking title

TVC
Ohio Dlvillkln

M

Nelsonville-York
Vinton County
· Wellston
: Meigs
: Belpre

Alexander

4-0
3-1
3-1
1-3
1-3
Q-4

All
6-3.
7-2
7-2

Hocking Division

:IIIm

M

All
8-1
6-3

: Trimble
4-0
: Eastern
3-1
: Weierford
2-2 3-6
Federal Hocking
2-2 3-6
Miller
1-3 2-7
Southern
Q-4
2-7
Friday's Results
; Vinton County 42, Meigs 14
· Eastern 27, Waterford 12
: Trimble 66, Sou1hem 0
Wellston 39, Alexander 8
Nelsonville-York 28, Belpro 0
Federal Hocking 20, Miller 19

Cardinal
111m

Cardi!JIII

All

Wayne
Herbert Hoover
Point Pleasant
Winfield
Sissonville

5-0

8-0

3-1
3-2
2-2
1-4

4-4

Poca

Q-5

4-4
5-3
3-5
2-7

Friday's RBiults
James Monroe 21, P. Pleasant 14
Wayne 33, Poca o
Buffalo 28. Winfield 19
Shady Spnng 37, Sissonville 0
Bluefield 41 , Herbert Hoover 10

Others
IHm

BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

5-4

4-5
3-6

All

Ironton
9-0
•
Symmes Valley
7-1
Wahama
7-2
Oak Hill
3-6
South Gallia
1-7
Hannan
o-a
Friday'a RBiults
· Guyan Valley 46, South Gallia 0
Wahama 42, Tolsia 13
Ironton 31, Belfrey (Ky.) 10
Oak Hill 36. Green 30
Symmes Valley 34; Sciotoville 12
Hannan IS IDLE

That punt return accounted for the only score
.
of the first quarter.
In the second quarter, the Wildcats showed
how sharp their claws were with 27 points,
including a 77-yard TD run by Gillman, as
Guyan Valley led at halftime, 33-0.
Guyan Valley had 333 yards rushing as a team
and 65 in the air.
Also for the Wildcats (7 -I). Tyler Simpkins
had 99-yards on the ground and a touchdown .
The Rebels (1-8) were held to 53 yards rushing, 62 yards total. Leading South Gallia was
Curt Waugh with I0 carries for 30 yards.
Defensively for the Rebels, Josh Lyall had
nine tackles, while David Bayless and Kenny
Wroten each recorded six tackles. .
South Gallia plays host to Sciotoville th'is
Friday in the Rebels' season finale.

Trimble 66,-Southern 0

Friday's RBiults
Logan 43, Gallia Academy 13
Marietta 14, Athens 6
Jackson 49, Warren 12

' !lim

COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytnbune.com

SEOAL
!11m

Falfland
River Valley

0 7 7 20 - 34
0 0 6 0- 6

Scoring summary
SecondOuartor
F-Brad Malone 1 run (MIChael H1ll
kick) 7:31.
Third Quarter
RV-Jason Jones 22 INT retvrn (k1ck
failed) 4·18
F-Sam Huff 65 pass from Hill (Hill
kick) 54.
Fourth Quarter
F-Wes R1pley 25 pass from Hill (Hill
kick) 8:12
F-Hill 34 run (kick blocked) 4:26
F-Adam FuiO.r 27 run (Hill kick) 1:03
F

First Downs

Rushes-yards

Passing yards

Total yards

Comp-att-mt
Fumbles-lost

Penalf1es-yards

Punts-avg.

15
36-163
220
363
14-22-3
1-0
, 1-93
3-35.3

RV
10
40-145
37
182
6-11-0
3-3
8-65
5·36.6

Individual Statistics
Rushing: F-Adam Fuller 19-104,
M~ehaell Hill B-32, Travis Caldwell 4-13,
Brad Malone 5-14
RV---&lt;:hris Edwards 13-65 Charley
N1bert 14-62 Jusf1n Hallhill2-16, Bryan
Morrow 11 -2

Eastern 27, Waterford 12

o 7 8 12 - 27
0 0 0 12 - 12

Eastern
Waterlord

Scoring summary'
Second Quarter •
E-Bryan M1near 10 run (Ross Holler
kick) 1:12.
Third Quarter
E-Terry Durst 16 pass from Ken
Amsbary (Phil P1erce kick) 3.37
Fourth Quarter
E-Amsbary 12 run (pass failed) 8:41
E-Ghns Myers 46 pass from
Amsbary (kick failed) 6:33.
W-Dale Dobere1ner 5 run (run tailed)

4.43.
W-Jericho Pugh 1 run (run failed)
:05.
E

Ftrst Downs
Rushes-yards

PasSing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-tnt
Fumbles-lost

Penalttes-yards
Punts-avg

,

w

15
39-180 36-111
114
151
294
262
7-14,0 9-19-1
4-3
2-0
6-55
6-60
4-30.3 5-24.4

Individual Statistics
Rushing: E-Ken Amsbary 5-7, Bryan
M1near 10-62, Terry Durst 4-27, Chns
Myers 1-0. Cory Shaffer 1-4, Chadd
Whitlatch 1-3 Phil P1erce 14-71
W-Brandon Lang 5-(-12), Dale
Doeberetner 3-5 . Jared Sampson 7-28
Jencho Pugh 4-11, Jason Sampson

Passing: F-Michael Hill 14-22-3-220.
18-85, Gary Tornes 1-(-4).
RV-Bryan Morrow 6-11 -0-37

Prep Football

RACINE
Trimble's
Robby Jenkins ran for two
touchdowns and 135 yards, and
quarterback Terry Holbert ran
for two touchdowns and threw
for two othero as the play-off
bound Trimble Tomcats defeated the Southern Tornadoes 66-0
Friday.
Trimble (9-1, 4-0) also saw
defensive standout and highly
talented lineman Bruce Fouts
grab two fumble recoveries for
touchdowns in the route of the
Tornadoes (2-7, 0-4 ).
The Trimble juggernaut
amassed 295 yards on the
ground among 10 different running backs. led by Jenkins' 8135 effort and Trent Non with a
5-65 effort. Trimble also had
11 2 yards in the air, all which
came from the arm of Holbert
except a 32-yard pass thrown
by Anthony Di)\on and an extra
point pass anempl from
Jenkins. Trimble totaled 317
yards overall.
·.
On the third play from scrimmage Trimble's Robby Jenkins
ran the ball back 51 yards for
the game's first score al the
10:40 mark in the first quarter.
Bruce Fouts added the ktck for
the quick 7-0 tally.
Just 38 seconds later, Trimble
struck pay-dirt again when
Jenkins scored from the defensive
side, ,
intercepting
Southern 's first pl ay from
scrimmage and running it back
62 yards on the interception
return. Fouts added the kick for
a 14-0 score at the I0: 12 mark.
After Southern managed it~
f1rst, first down of the game on
a 16-yard pass from Derek
1eaford to Ryan Chapman.
Trimble took over and scored in
five plays. The set-up play wa~
a 27 yard run by Jenkms and a
31-yard run from Nott. Terry
Holbert scored on a I yard
plunge off the sneak. The PAT
kick was wide and Trimble led
20-0
On the first play from scrimmage on the next Southern possession, Trimblefs Bruce Fouts
intercepted a muffed Southern
snap and ran it back 38 yards
for the second Trimble defensive touchdown, the score 26-0
after a blocked EP kick altempt

'

at the 3:30 mark.
· The flfSt quarter ended at 260 atier Southern ended the first
canto with a good defensive
stand, that included a quarterback sack by Southern's Jonny
McDaniel.
That positive ended when
Southern fumbled the Trimble
·punt on the SHS 23 yard line on
the very next play. After an
incomplete pass; Terry Holbert
loaded his gun for a 23-yard TD
shot to Anthony Dixon at the
II :34 mark of the second period, the score 32-0
At the 6:09 mark of the second period, Holbert ran the
option and found a hole in the
SHS defense, cut against the
grain and rambled 9 yards into
the end zone for the 38-0 score.
Nick Giffin added the extra
point kick for the 39-0 score.
After Southern At the 5:43
mark Bruce Fouts picked up a
fumbled Southern lateml and
rambled 29 yards to · the endzone for his second score of the
night. A Jenkins to Steve
Hartley PAT pass added the
two- point extras. the score now
47-0.
At the 2:29 mark, Southern
held Trimble on downs in a
solid defensive stand before the
end of the half. With 11 .4 seconds lett in the half, Holbert hit
Schust on a 16-yard pass play.
The PAT kick was void after
liolbert, who ran two touchdowns in himself, threw for his
second touchdown of the game,
the score now 53-0.
At the 7:10 mark of the thud
quarter, Ryan Naguck1 plunged
through the line for a 3-yard
touchdown with Giffin adding
the kick for a 60-0 score. The
touchdown play ended a fiveplay drive of 55 yards.
.
Trimble showed a first class
effort by holding out its big
three the entire second half,
playing second and third
stri ngers much .of the time.
Trimble could have named the
score, but pulled off the dogs,
and likewise Southern played
more spirited in the second
half.
.
With 8:08 left in the game,
Bycofski vaulted into the .end
zone from one yard out. The
PAT run fmled and Trimble led
66-0.
Southern's Jesse McKnight
had a 15-y&lt;lfd return and 22
"

I

yard kick-off return, while
Ryan Donaldson had a 15-yard
return and 46 yard return for
Southern. Also, Wes Riffle had
a sack. Scon Bycofski had an
interception for Trimble and
teammate Charles Faires had a
fumble recovery.
Southern goes to Eastern Oct.
30.

Sunday, October 24. 2004

PageB2

Receiving: F-Sam Huff 7-146. Adam
Fuller 4·27, Wes R1pley 1-25, Travis
Caldwell2·22
RV-Michael McGhee 2-21, Justin
Halfhill 2·14. Charley N1bert 2-2.

Passing: E-Ken Amsbary 7-14-0·
114
.
W-Brandon Lang 7-14-0-80, Matt
Schott 1-1-0-42. Jason Sampson 0-1 ·
0-0, Gary Tornes 1-2-1-29.

Logan 43,

Receiving: E-Ghr~s Myers 5-81, Terr)l
Durst 1-16, Phil Pierce 1·7.
W-Caleb Snyder 1-11 , Van Paxton 347, Kyle Kincaid 1-4, Derek Hoge 1-29

Gallia Academy 13
Logan
Gallia Acad.

7 21 0 15- 43
o 6 0 7 - 13

Scoring summary

Firat Quarter
L-Justln Pack 6 run (Nick Pomdexter
kick) 7·07
Second Quarter
L-Pack 10 run (Polndex1er k1ck)
10:33.
L-Kev1n Call 72 run (Po111&lt;1ex1er kick)

Vinton County 42, Meigs 14

MeigS
V1nton Co

6 0 0 8 - 14
14 14 14 0 - 42

Scorlng summary
First Quarter
VC....,.Curt Moore 3 run (kick failed)
B23
VC-Max
Learn1ng fumble recovery 1n
9:08.
L-Pack 2 run (Pc1ndex1er kick) 6:46 endzone (Chris Bethel run) 5:1 5.
GA-Duslin Winters 1 run (run failed) M-Jared Casey 62 run (kick failed)
5 02.
21.8.
· Second Quarter ·
Fourth Quarter
L-Justln Coakley 8 run (Patrick Howe VC-Josh Ousley 3 pass from Bethel
(N1ck Hurne kick) 11 :31
run) 7:44.
GA-Jaymes Haggerty 97 pass from VC-Ousley 23 pass fromBethel
(Hurne kick) 7.42.
Jeff Golden (Tyler Clagg kick) 2:31.
L-Michael Coleman 74 run (Alex
Third Quarter
Hubbard kick) 1·12.
VC-Travis Robson 8 run (Hurne kick)
8.41 .
L
GA
VC-Michael Barney 4 run (Hurne
First Downs
20
4
kick) 1:31.
Rushes-yards
55-395 20-11
Fourth Quarter
Pass1ng yards
105
114·
M-Brandan Fisher 17 pass from
Total yards
125
500
Aaron Story (Story run) 0 45.
Comp-att-int
8-11 -1 3-13-1
Fumbles-lost
6-3
2·0
M
vc
Penal lies-yards 9-64
4-22
F1rst Downs
11
22
Punls-avg.
2-350 5-40.8
Rushes-yards
30-212 53-264
Pass1ng yards
35
11 7
Individual Statistics
Total yards
247
381
Rushing: L-Michael Coleman 7-131. Comp-an-1nt
3-12-1 6-1D-1
Kevin Call 10-130. Justin Pack 19-78. Fumbles-lost
3-2
3-1
Justin Coakley 11-68, Tory Kratzenberg Penalties-yards 4-40
4-37
1·13, Patnck Howe 1-1. Corey Spackey Punts-avg.
3-21 2-36.5
6-(-26)

GA-Dustm Win1ers 9-21. Just1n
Individual Statistics
Saunders 1-7, Austin King 5-(·4). Jeff Rushing: M-Jared Casey 12-143
Golden 3-(-5), Jaymes Haggerty 2-(-8) VC-Gurt Moore 11 -66, M1chael
Barney 19-55
Passing: L-Gorey Spackey 7·10-167, Tory,Kratzenberg 1-1-0-36.
Passing: M- Eric Cullums 2-9418.
GA-Jeff Golden 3-12-0-114, Todd Aaron Story 1-2-Q-17. Jared Gasey 0Saundj!rs 0-1-1-0
1·1-Q.
.
VC-Ghns Bethei6-10-Q·1'17.
Receiving: L- 8 J. Hughes 3:65, Jake
Wolfe 1·24, Tory Kratzenberg 1-17. Receiving: M-E ric VanMeter 2-1 8.
Justin Coakley 1-1, Justin Pack 2-(-2). Brandan FISher 1-17.
GA-Jaymes Haggerty 1-97, Austin VC-Josh Ousley 3-56, Chris Neal 2K1ng 1-10, Shawn Thompson 1-7.
4I, Dan1el Long 1-20.

• GALUA AUTO SALES • GALLIA AUTO SALES • GALLIA AUTO SALES •

-Prep Scoreboard_
Ohio High School Football Score•
Fridey'1 Flesuhs
Akr Coventry 32, Wooster Tnway 20
Akr Hoban 13, Cuyahoga Faits Walsll
Jesuit 7
Akr. Kenmore 3 1, AKr Centrai-Hower 18
Akr. Manchester 14 Navarre Fa1rless 6
Alliance 54. Can T1mken 0
Amanda·Ciearcreek
28 ,
Canal
Wlncllester 14
Amllersi-Steele 35, Bay V1llage Bay 7
Andover PymatunlllQ Valley 28 . Fairport
Harbor Hardtn'g 18
Anna 56, Ullion City M1sStSS1nawa Valley

6
Ansonia 42, New Pans Nat1onal Tratl12
Arcanum 48, W. Ale~~:andna Twin ValleyS

7
Arlington 21, Letps1c 7
~shland 2 1, Bellville Clear Fork 7

PIShland Crestview 34 , Greenwich S

Cenl.6
Ashtabula lakeside 26, Conneaut 20
AHica Seneca E 38. N Baltimore 36
Atwater Waterloo 41. Streetsboro 12
Avon 49, Oberlin 0
Avon Lake 44, Westlake 31
Baltimore Liberty Un1on 30 , Summ1t
StatiOn LICking Hts 0
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 7, Sycamore
Mohawk 0
Batavia 28, Mt Orab Weslern Brown 7
Bell brook 16, Germantown Valley V1ew 3
Bellefon1a1ne 19, Urbana 18
Bellevue 36, Upper Sandusky 29
Beloit W Branch 24, Minerva 20
Berea 21, N Royalton 0
Bluffton 40, Lalayette Allen E . 20
Bradford 14, Covmgton 7
BrunswiCk 31, Parma Valley Forge 20
Bucyru s Wynford 29, New Washington
BucKeye Cenl 6
Burton Berksh~re 17 , Orwell Grand Valley

9
Byesville Meadowbrook 21 , Warsaw

River View 14
Caledoma R1ver Valley 20 Richwood N
Umon 0
Cambndge 41 Uhnchsville Claymont 6
Can. GlenOak 26, Youngs AustintownFitcll6
Can S 41, All iance Marhngton 17
Canfield 35. Poland 15
Carey 21 , Tiffin Calvert 20
Carlisle 34. Wayne .svtll e 0
Carrollton 31 . Canal Fult on NW 28
Casstown M1ami E 26. Spnng NW 19
Centerville 35. Huber Hts Wayne 27
Chagnn Fal ls 42, Aurora 31
Chardon 35, Mad1son 20
Chardon NDCL 49. Elyna Cath 21
Chesapeake 20, Ironton Rock H1ll 14

20T

Chesterland W Geauga 40 W1ck111te 6
Cln A1ken 28 C1n Taft 14
C1n Cotera1 n 56 Cm Oak H1ll s 0
C1n. Elder 48 , Day. Cllam1nade-Juf1enne

NE 7

Clayton Northmon t 41 , Greenville 7
Cle Benedictine 46 Cle Rhodes 0
Cle
C ent
Cath
24, Thompson
Ledgemollt 1o
Cle E Tech 12 Cle John Marshall 6
Cle Glenville 35 Cle JFK 12
Cle Hts 10 . Euclid 0
Cle Lincoln-West20, Cle E 18
Clyde 28 , Castalia Margaretta 25
Coldwater 49, Ft Recovery 6
Cols Beechcrofl 72, Cots E o
Cols Be~~:ley 49 , Hebron lakewood 1B
Cols Briggs 47, Cols Afncentnc 14
Cols. Brookhaven 48, Cots Whetstone 9
Cols. Crusaders 43 . Williamsburg 0
Cols. DeSales 21. Cm McN1cholas 14
Cots. Eastmoor 21 , Cols. W 14
Cots. Grandv1ew 27, Millersport 0
Cols Har tley 35 . New Middletown
Spring 6
Marloll-Frankhn
19
Cols
Cots
Independence 13
Cols. Northl and 2 1, Cols lmd en .D
Cols. Ready 70. Day. Chnst1an 10
Cols. Watterson 49, Cols Sl. Charles 0
Columb iana Crestv1ew 35. E Palesllne

14

Columbus Grove 58 , Pauld1ng 36
Copley 49, Lod1 Cloverleaf 21
Cortland Lakeview 27, Newton Falls 7
Crestline 40, Mt Blanchard Rtve rdal e 7
Crooksville 36, Zanesville Maysville 8
Cuyah oga His 2i, Rocky R• ve r Lutheran

W.7

Day Ca rroll 28. Day Stebbins 7
Day. Jefferson Twp 45, Cm Woodward

$12,900

$20,900

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04 N1ssan Alttma 2.55 Factory Warranty '02 Ford Explorer Sport Leather, Roof.......

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'01 Olds Auro~a Fully Eqwpped.. $11,500 '02 Chevy Blazer 4X4 32,000 Miles ......... .
'04 Chevy Mahbu Factory Warranty ........
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.......................................................... $9,900 '04 GMC Yukon 4X4 LOADED UP! .... .........
'Ol Chrysler Town &amp; Country Van,
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Ol Dodge Grand Caravan ........... $13,900
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........................................................

,

GALLIA AUTO SALES

Massrllon Tus law 28, E. Can 12
Maumee 28. Holland Spnng 7
McArther V1nton Co 42, Pomeroy Me1gs

14

McComb 30 , Cary-Rawson 0
M echamcsburg 40 . S Charleston SE 3
Medma Buckeye 14. Sull1van Stack R1ver

7
Med1na H1ghland 24, Wadsworth 21
Mentor 35, Lor am Admlfal K1ng 6
Middletown Fenw1ck 20, W Carrollton 13
Middletown Mad1son 27 Day Northridge

13

Mi ne ral R1dge 35 McDonald 6
Mogadore F1eld 20, Windllam 13 30T
Monroeville 13 Collins Western Reserve

12

Montpelier 34, Metamora Everg reen 22
N . Collt~ge H1ll 33 Crn Summ11 Country
Day 0
N
Jackson
Jackson-M ilton
40
Lowellville 14
N L1ma S Range 45 . Berlin Cen1er I
Western Reserve 7
N Olmsted 48 Falr'.'tew Park FairVIew 2 1
N A1dgevr lle 2 1. Breijtksvllle 7
Napoleon 21 . Manon Hard1ng 0
Nelsonville-York 28 , Belpre 0
New Albany 24 , Gahanna Cots
Acaderny o
New Bremen 26, Delphos St Jolln 's 0
New Le11mgton 20. Dresden Tn-Valley 7
New Matamoras Frontier 14 . Woodsfield
Monroe Cent 7
New Philade lphta 52, Coshocton 8
New Richmond 3. Betllei-Tate 0
Newark 24, Hilliard Darby 7
Newark L1ckmg Valley 41 Granv1lle 6
N rles McKmley 27, Salem 20
Northwood 42. lakeside Danbury 13
Norwalk 20 Shelby 13
Norwood 36. C1n. Tu rp1n 2 1
Oak Harbo~ 18, Port Clinton 12
Old Washmgton Buckeye Tra1 l 32 .
Beallsville 20
Olentangy L1berty 28. Palaskala WatKins
Memonal 6
Ontano 48 , Bucyrus 6
Oregon Strttch 20. Tol Chr1st1an 1d
Orrville 41 . Mansfield Mad1son 27
Parma Normandy 13 Middlebu rg Hts
Midpark 3
Parma Padua 48, Bedford Chanel 7
Pemberville Ea stwood 55 Genoa 0
Perry 48, Orange 14
P1ckenngton Cenl. 34. Westerville Cenl
P1ckenngton N . 35 , Dublin Jerome 7
P1qua 48. Sidney 27
Plam C1ty Jonathan Alder 47 W
Jefferson 0
Plymouth 48 . Ash land Mapleton 6
Proctorville Fa~rl and 34 , Cheshire R111e r
Valley 6
Ravenna •-4 4, Cuyahoga Falls 7
Reedsville Eastern 27, Waterford 12
Reynoldsburg 44, Galloway Westland 18
R1cllf1eld Revere 39 , Norton 0
Rocky R1ver 43, Olmsted Falls 42 , OT
Rootstown 5 1 Peninsula Woodndge 22
Rossford 24 Sylvama Norlhview 10
Sa'ndusKy 44, L1ma Sr 24
SandusKy Perk1ns 26. Milan Edison 13
Sarahsv rlle Shenandoah 30 Bever ly Fl
Frye 0
Slleff1eld Brookside 20, Wellington 17
Sllerwood Fa1rv1ew 18. Def1ance T1nora

Dublin Sc1oto 33, Grove C1ty t4
E llverpool21 Zanesville 14 , OT
Elmore Woodmere 49 Millbury lake 21
Ety na Sr 48 Parma Sr 20
Fa irborn 39 Miamisburg 32
F.a lrtleld 40, Hamilton 14
Findlay L1lilerty ·Benlon 62, Van Buren 18
Fostona 41 , Gallon 6
Adena
27.
Clldl1cothe
Frankfort
: Huntington 12
• Fremont Ross 30 F1ndlay 14
Gallanna 23, Grove pan 0
Garfield Hts 38. E Cle Sllaw 16

Leather, Roof

1

10

13

4 Door , One Owner, Factory Warranty

n

Day. Meadowdale 37. Day Belmont 14
Day Oal&lt;wood 48 , Eaton 35
Defiance 27. Ottawa·Giandort 23
Delaware Buckeye Val ley 41 , Gallon
Nortllmor 6
Dola Har din No rthern 48. Pandora·
Dover 64 . Gnadenhutten lnd1an Valley 28
Dublin Coffma n 42, Thomas Wo rlhmgton

Devils

Haggerty score '~ ith a 7J,.yard run that concluded the
;coring ill J,.3 - 13 .
Coleman led Logan &lt;tlld all
running back&gt; v. ith 131 yard'
on ;even tote\. 11 hile Call
wa'n 't far behind 11 ith 130
yard' on 10 altempts. Pack
also had 7g vard; on I&lt;) tne'
to go w1th ·hi' three-touchdown effort.
Winte" led the Blue IJev!ls
with 21 yards on nine carries.
while Justin Saunders wa; the
only other GAHS runner with
positive yardage. gmng tor
;even on one attempt.
Corey Spackey !tnished 7of-10 pa"ing for h7 yard\.
while Golden llni'h~d 1\lth
114 yard; on ju\1 3-of-12
attempts B J. Hu ghes led.
Looan with ()5 varus on 1h1ce
grab~. while H~tgge rty ·_., lone
reception accounted l&lt;1 r all
but 2X varu&gt; off Gailia
Academv·; total olfen,e.
The LOgan 'Jcton tlO\\ "t't"
up u ;howuown het\1 c~ n the
Chief\, Blue De\ lis and Ihe
Manetta T1ger-. fur a\\ Ill ·\\ in
situation.
A Logan
win .tgain..,t
Warren Frida\ assures the
Chief; a share of the title With
the
w1nner
of
the
GAHS/Marietta c·c,nte\t this
week at Memorial Field. A
Logan los, ,111 011 s the
GAHS/MHS ' tctor to claim
the crown outright. If the
Tigers and Blue Dellis Iie.
Logan control' th~ o \·cra ll
outcome.
The De,ils look for
redemption and a lhirds t rai~h l
SEOAL championsl1ip .tt 7:30p.m

on

20

Gilboa 0

•

Irom t11ovaru' out.
(ialli" Ac"dcmy c"ught "
hre"k late in ih~ yuancr when
Ja)llll'' llaggcn) intercepted
Garrettsville: Garlreld 36, Mogadore 25
from Page 81
Sparta Htghland 27. Cardmgton-Lmcoln
Gates M1lls Gilmour 35, Brooklyn 0
20
a Core) SpaL·ke) P"" a1ld
Geneva 49, Ashtatx.Jia EdgewOOd 20
Spnng Kenton A1dge 40, Bellelontame
returned the ball deep into
Glouster Trimble 66, Racme Southern 0
Ben1amm Logan 3
teum euue\ unheat~.·n in lca e~ ·uc Logan territory at the 37.
Grafton Midv1ew 69, Oberlin Frrelands a
Spnng N 28, Xen1a 13
action thi~ ~o,t·a~on .
Grove C1ty Cenl Crossing 35, M! Vernon
Spr~ng NE 34 N leWISburg \nad 14
Tlw De\ ils brnke !heir 'cor21
Spnng S 29, Beavercreek 28
GAHS couldn't h,11e '"ked mu druuuhi three play' later
Hamler Patrick Henry' 46 , De lphos
Spring Shawnee 35. New Car11sle
fur u bener 'tan. follo\1 ing
Jefferson 0
a o'ne-yard run from
Tecumseh 0
Kyle Burnell\ ]9-yard return Winters that pulled the halfHanoverton United 42, L1sbon 21
Springboro 33, Lebanon 12
Haviland Wayne Trace 31 , Edgerton 20
St Cla1rsville 17. Barnesv11ie 0
of the opening kick hack to time delldt to 2~-6.
Healh 35, Whlleha ii-Yearhng 10
St Henry 24, Versa1lles 17
midllcld. Three pia ~ ' anJ a
Hilliard Dav idson 48, Westerville N. 0
St. Marys Memonal 35, lima Bath 7
Stati,tically,
Gallia
Howard E. Knox 48 , Fredericktown 14
penalty later. ToJd S"unders Academy managed just · 25
St. Parts Graham 60, Enon Greenan 0
Hubbard 56. G~rard 28
Steubenville 26. Can Cent. Cath 0
blasted u 55 -yard punt Jeep yards on 15 attempt' in the
Hudson 35, Barberton 10
,
Stewart Federal Hock1ng 20, Gormng
LHS territory at the llrst 24 minutes. and quarterinside
Hunting Valley Un1versity 39, Akr SVSM Miller 19
36
Stra¥Jurg-Franklln 17 , W Lafayette
live.
back Jeff Golden was one-ofIndependence 56 , Co lumbta Stat1on .Ridgewood 7
Logan 's re~pnn..,e a t I ~) 16 nine through Ihe wr. including
Columb1a 24
Strongsville 48, Med1na 21
seemed to sct the tone lor the mi\\ing hi s first eight tries.
Ironton 31 , Belfrev (Ky) 10
Sugar Grove Berne Un10n 40, Cols
Jackson 49, V1ncent Warren 12
...
Harvest Prep 6
way thing~ were: going to he
Comersely. Logan manJefferson Area 29. Painesville Harvey 8
Sugarcreek
Garaway
68. the rest or the \1 U) The
Johnstown Norlhridge 20. Danv1lle 0
Newcomerslown 10
aged 195 yards on the ground
Kent Roosevelt t 0. Stow 6
Chiefs went 95 yards tr1 seven and rc~ck ed up
Sunbury B1g Walnut 52, Cols Franklin
yards on 4Kettenng Alter 34, St Bernard Roger His 27
plays and took a 7-0 lead on of-5 pass ing at the-half.
Bacon 28
Sylvama Southv1ew 33, Bowl1ng Green
]u..,tin Pad,.\ '-.IX-v ard ..,L·am Kmgs M1lls Kmgs 23, Ham1lton Ross 21
13
On ~ wo uld have thought
Kirtland 37 Newbury 0
per at 7:07.
·
Tallmadge 31 , Gr eensburg Green 1 2
1h
,11
the Chiel\ . defense
Lancaster Fa rrf 1eld Union 44, BloomThornville Sheridan 58 , McConnelsville
Gallia
Acudcm)
re'P"'"
Ic.l
Carroll 14
wuiJn'i ha ve played a better
Morgan 3
b) fumbling the ball bac·k to hall of loothall One would
leav rttsburg
l aBrae 35. Warren
· Till1n Columb1an 44. Wtllard 18
Champion 0
T1pp C1ty Bet hel 34 . Lew1 sto wn Tr 1·
the gue.-.;t.., on th nex t "'L'ne.... IJ:I\ l! h CL'Il \\I till!:!
Lees Creek E. Clinton 15 Bla ncheste r 7
County N 7
and
Log.at1 took a&lt;..h ctntd g e
Lew1s Center Olentangy 17 Chllllc~the
T1pp C1ty Tippecanoe 27 Lew1stown
Gal w Acadetny had onlv
12
when
Pack ran for his ' CC&lt;H!d nin~ olfen sivc plays in the
lnd1an Lake 6
Le111ngton 41, Millersbu rg W Holmes 16
Tal Cent . Calh 24, Oregon Clay 0
score at IOJ 3. The 'ccond sem nd IMII . and two of those
Uberty 28 . BrooKfield 7
Tal St Franc1s 31 Tol Bowsher 0
CJLial1er
score ga1 c LHS a 1-1 - we re Cioldcn tuking a knee
Liberty iwp Lakota E 38 W Chester
Tal St John 's 40. Tol Waite 0
Lakota W 15
0 lead.
Tol Wh1tmer 27, Tot Rogers 6
Ltt l! to cnJ the ~\ening.
L1ma Shawnee 42, Kenton 7
Ton togany Otsego 35. Bloomdale
Pinned a£!a in at tlll·i r o\\ n
Lisbon Beaver 38. EastlaKe N 6
De1 lis' were also limitElmwood 28
28 wilh 4' 21 sho11 inc. the edTk
L1ttle Miam16. Goshen 3
Trenton Edgewood 40, Frank lin 22
to ne~ativc-stx vards on
Lockland 26, C1n Country Day 14
Chiefs went to Kc1·1n (all on the urouncl and one flrs1 down
Troy 31 , Ke1ter1ng Fa1rmonf 12
Logan 43, GallipOliS Gall1a 13
Twmsburg
A8
Chamberl1n
1d,
an outside ut unt ~ r. The 1n die final 2-1 minutes. That
London 13, Greenfield McCia1n 7, OT
Ba1nbndge Kenston 13
Lora1n
C learv1ew
42. LaGrange
Purple held a 21-p&lt;Hill cush- lirsl down came on a&lt;J7-yard
Umontown Lake 28, Ma ss1llon Per ry 18
Keystone 21
Upper Arlington 34, Lancaster 33 OT
ion
7K yarcb and 1.1 seconds homh from Golden to
LOU ISVIlle 54 , Akr Spnng 0
Van Wert 14. Elida 10
later
Lou iSVIlle Aquinas 35, Vermthon 28
Vandalia Butler 17 Trotwood-Mad1son 14
H agg ert~ for their fimtl _
-,cure
Lucas 17, N Robmson Col. Crawford 14
On tile thi1d pi a) ol Ihe· II C\1 ,11
W L1berty Sa lem 33, Spnng Cath Cent .
tile 2:31 mark of the fourth
Macedo n1a Nordo nla 36, Lyndhurst 7
dnve. GAHS had m"f' 'IIline qu.t rter
Brush 27
Wapakonetn 20 C elina 7
find
them a ~ a1n . ,\ la tc r:d t'l l
Mantua Crestwood 35, Ravenna SE 21
Warren Howland 31 Struthers 6
.l ustm Coakley improved
Maple Hi s 2 1, Warrensville Hts 14
the
outsiJe
:va'
d1
opped
,111d
Warren JFK 32 Campb ell Memona! 20
l.nuan
's lead out ol the mterMarla Stem Mar1on Local 24 S1dney
Wash 1ngton C H 20, Mad1son Pla1ns 0
p;ckeu up by Rob ]{,,,c ci t the mi ~ ... ulll tu .36-(1 at 7.44 in the
Lehman 18
Wash1ngton C H M1a m1 Trace 49 ,
Manetta 14, Athens 6
hosts· IO-va1·d illll' 1 brcc fmu th quarter Wi th an eightH1llsboro 13
Manon Elgm 46. Morral Ridgedale 33
plays later.' the Ch1els ill'ld a ) ard run. and Michael
Wauseon 6, Archbold 0
Manon Pleasant26. Mt G1lead 12
Waynesf1eld-Gosllen 26 , M1lford Cente r
21!-0
lead ~&gt;hen P.1ck sc·tlrcd Col eman
Masstllon
Jackson
14 ,
Youngs
Fairbanks 8
answered
the
Boardman D

14

C1n Fmneytown 35, C1n Made1ra 7
C1n Glen Este 51, Batav1a Ame l1a 7
C1n. Hamson 54, C1n. Walf1ut H ills 20
C1n H1lls Cllnst1an 41 , Ham1lton Bad1n 14
C1n lnd1an H 11127, Cm Wyom1ng 0
Cm LaSalle 69. C1n Puro;ell Manan 0
Cin Reading 39 Cm Deer Park 19
Cin. Sycamore 14 Milford 7
C1n W1 tllrow 48, C1n Hughes 30
Ctrcleville 34, Cols. Ham1lton Twp 15
C1rcleville Logan Elm ~0. Ashville Teay s
Valley 14
Clarksvtlle Cllnton·MassJe 55, Clermont

i;,unbav [:unrs ~rntmrl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

9
Sm1thv111e 49, Jerome svi lle H illsd ale 0
Solon 30. Mayfield 0

Raiders
from Page 81
. times for 104 yards and a score. .
. For River Valley (2-7. 1-J ), Chns E?wards
· had ·13 carries for 65 yards. whtle Charley
: Nibert had 62 yards on 14 carries.
: Fairland onl y led 1-1-6 gomg into the founh
: quarter when th ings began to go badly tor the
· Raiders.
· A bl ocked River Valley punt early 111 the
fourth sel the Drago ns up on the Raider 22.
Four plays later. Hill connected With Wes
Ripley for a 25-yard TD pass with 8: I2 Iell 111
: the game. That pass proved to be the Imal one
· thrown by Hill on the eve nmg as ihe Dragons
; kept tile ball on tile gro und ·lhe remamder of
: the game.
.
.
: On Fairland'•.s loll uwmg dnve began on the
Raider 39 after River Valley was forced to
. punt from its ow n 16 Htll then took 11 on the
: ground and drove the ball m Irom J.f-yards
· out with 4:26 left on the clock to make tt a 27: 6 game and put the game out of reach .
: Fairland's first score came 111 the 'ew nd
: quarter.
·
With the Dragons on Ihe Raider 17. due in ·

Wellston 39 Albany Ale11ander 8
Westerv1lle S 49. Marysv111e 7
Wllltehouse
Antho ny Wayne
18
Perr.ysburg 13
Williamsport Westfall 34 P1keton 28
Willoughby S 34 Pa1nesv1lle R1vers1de

20
W1lm1hQIOn 36, C1n NW 7
Wintersville lnd1an Creek 19 We llsburg
(WVa l Brooke 12
Wooster 35. Mansfield Sr 10
Worth1ngton Kilbou rne 42 Delaware 13
Zanesv1lle Rosec rans t 9 Caldwell 7
Zanesv11le W Musk,ngufTI 26. Philo 6
Zoarv1He
Tus carawas
Valley
20 .
Cuyahoga Fal ls CVCA 14 OT
W.Va . h1gh school scores
Fr iday's Re sults
Allegany. Md . 28 Keyser 23
Beall , Md 38 . Be rkeley Spnngs 25
Bluef1eld 41 Herbert Hoover 10
Braxton County 12, Webster County 6
Bridgeport 39. Philip Barbour 7
Buckhannon-Upshur 28 East Fa~rmont

14

.

Buffalo 28. Wmf 1eld 19
Burch 12 Van 6
Cabell Midland 21 , Spnng Valley 14
Calhoun County 48. Wul County 13
Clay-Battelle 16. Tygarts Valley 14
Elkins 48 Lew1s County 26
Fayetteville 52, Gauley Bndge 0
Frankfort 21, Southern, Md 6
George Wash1ngton 21 , Huntington 13
Graham, va 38 . Pr~nceton 7
Greenbrier west 20. Midland Tra1l 12
Guyan Va lley 45 South Gall1a , Oh 1o 0
Harts 26 . Greater Beckley Cllnstian 20
Iaeger 14. Tug Valley 6
Independence 19 . P1KeV 1ew 0
lnd1an Creek , Oh1o 19 Brooke 12
James Monroe 21 Po1nt Pleasant14
Jefferson 29 Hedges . . die 0
L1berly Hamson 20 Mount Hope 14
L1ncol n 33 A1ICh1e CoLJnty 3
Logan 17. Mount V1ew 14
Madonna 49, Cameron 0
Martinsburg 7, Fort Hill, Md 6
Meadow Bndge 39. Gilmer 21
Moorefield 24, Petersburg 6
Morgantown 63 John Marshall 33
Musselman 19, Hampsllire 12
Parkersburg 42, Nitro 14
Parkersburg Soulll32. Robert C Byrd 16
Ravenswood 21. Clay County 19
R1ver. Oh10 35 , Oak Glen 15
R1verside 12, St Albans 7
Roane County 37. Oak H1il 7
Rockwood , Pa 42 Hvndred 28
ScoU 18, l1berty Rale1gh 0
Shady Spnng 37 , S1ssonv111e 0
Sherman 20, Chapmanv11te 5
South Charleston 48 Ripley 14 South Hamson 25 Notre Dame 21
St Marys 52, Wil li amson 24
Tucker County 13 Doddndge County 0
Twin Valley. Va 33 Montcalm 28
Ty ler Consolidated 28. Graft on 26
UnaKa. Tenn 22. B1g Creek 15
Un1vers1ty 29 . Preston 18
Valley Fayette 22 . Hamhn 12
Valley Wetzel 41 . B1sh0p Donahue 12
Wahama 42, Tols1a 13
Wayne 33, PocA 0
Westside 40, Summers County 7
Wlleel1ng Park 31 North Ma r~ on 13
Williamstown 37, Magnolia 13
Woodrow Wilson 14. Greenbrr er East 3
Wyom1ng East 14 Man t3

part tll a -10-yard pass from Hill to Huff. the
back was sacked by Nathan Mcllluhan
on tlmd down.
On fourth and 15 from the 25. Hill \ pass to
Hull 11 '" completed at the one fur the first
down. Brad Ma lone. a 6-,foot-2. 22 7 pound
offensive lineman. punched it in for the ,,·ore
In the 1h1rd. with River Valley on!) do11 n 70. a strange turn of C\ cnts kd to the Ra1dcrs'
Inne . . core.
·
Dernck Smi th tipped and then picked off a
Hill pass in the backfield ;md returned nto the
Fa1 rl and I X.
On their first play from dm·e. the Rcud,·r,
. fumb led the ball. gl\'lng the b;lil nght b,tck ttl
the D1 c~gnns'. Three play, later. thou gh. another Hi ll pass was intercepted. th1s t111W h&gt;
J;rsnn Jones who re turned 22-yards tor the

Regional

r.1cc Ill limsh 16th with a time
ul' 22 :0h.n r"' tlje finalyuality in g "pol
The (iall1a Ac,rdemy gtrls
from Page 81
rini,hcd sixth ol'erall.
Cirde\ ilk ''on the girls'
were Chns Canada\ 16:\th 1
and Sh.tn c Planlt- l(&gt;flth l. Lhtnct title with -!] points.
wh il e MeiQs was led 11\ \\hill' W:11rcn (X I I was secGrant Arnold (70 th ;. Nclflll:r ond . Also a&lt;h·anc1ng to Ihe
Gallia Acaclenn or ~vk1~s lt:!2ion.tl \\tel\ Fa1rfield Union
'
h,ad enough boys to compete lg~J and Aihens ( 117).
Bnnany Green leu the team
in the team ~ta1uJtng~.
champs
v. nh a top individual
Joining the Ri\cr Valle)
'
'"""i
nc
&lt;h she finished first
boys t ~am at P1c:kcnng1on
"1th a t~mc of 20-44 52.
wi ll be Crrol Fahnw.
Northwest's Melissa White
The Blue Angel r:111 a tough
( 20:.'i 1.22 ) was second and

OOOMEI'l
Tl'lA C T OI'I~

Sltf'

Warren's Sara Fo\ 120::\2.-+8l
third. ·
Gallia Acaden11 \ '~cond
best runner was Aanka
Stanlev. who finished 2:\ th
with a-time of 22 -B. Al,o for
the Blue Angeh 111 the top 50.
Lindsay Ca ldwell '"" :IXth
and Ttthny Sanders 40th .
Meigs· top g1rk ltmner
was Ashley Samar. 11 ho was
45th.
while
Stephanie
Griffith led 1he Raiders 11 ith
a53rd place l!lllsh.
Results from the Di\·,,ion I
and III district meets were
not a\ailable at pre" time.

B O OMEf'l
CO,...F'AC T
,f, wTI L oT'f Tl't ... CTO~S

C\ l ~ ~ .l'l C,..

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.;!1 · ~5

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,1 ~

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!&gt;. TRACTOI'tS

HP

•

G2 ,.T0 HP

~uarte1

0~

FOR 48 MONTHS
OR
CASH BACK
r·o•1t f

1 L,,,,d,l•

ZERO EXCUS ES FINANCING DRIVE
Th ey v e b PC''
1 C'•j a c• y to operate a n d ngh t now they re eq uall~ E&gt;as y,
t o o w ro r 1·t \ ,_ rr f'P, d fu ll . range of rno Cie ls frb m 18 t o 6 2 hp f or a w 1de
r ang e o f It':·-.·· ,. ,~ro w n g to 1oad1ng. hau l, ng s no wpiQ\"V Ing ar'd :•lnr• g
A ll are SU Ol
noictt,1 f le an d ultra - man e u v e rable With ex c lu Sive fr;o , ~T u res
y o u w on t t· '• • '-' t o•np ar ably pr1ced com pet •t ors N o w rs tt,e tlr~"lt&gt; " 0 bl.JY
G e t mor p '. •, ' " I' •,p e clahs ts y o u r New H olland dealer

------,-

I

1\1 (1f'

I , __

E~

tOIIL"hChlWil .

The Raiders diun·t have lon g to cc·lc-br,,tc
as. on Fairland\ next dri1·c. Hill throw !11' 65yartl TD pa" 1&lt;1 Huff tn make 1t a eight -point
1.!lll11l!.

' River Valley\ defense "as led by Kyle
Tipllln w1th 12 tack les. including_fi1e_ snln.
and Josh Murph y and Jusl!n HaHl111i \V !lh s1.x
t c~ckks each. Molloh,m had a p.11r ol sal'ks.
The R'11der' v. ill cln'e out the '"""111 :It
league. ' leackl Chesapc ,tkc thi.s Frida~.

Prep Football Coaches!!!

: Vanity football coaches are remlnclecl to send us their season football sta~ and recom: menclations for OVP 15 and district teams as soon as the regular season IS completed.
: You may e-mail them to sports@mydailytribune.com, fax them to 446-1008 or drop
·
them oft at our Gallipolis office on Third Ave. Deadline is 5 p.m.• Nov. 10.
...
•t

ENT,-INC.

.
2150 Eastern Avenue (St. Rt. 7)·• Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·9777 • (740) 446·2484
www.jimsfarm.cam
I

•

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 24

Sunday, October 24.2004

BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

Indiana's Chris Taylor is tackled by, from left, Ohio 'itate's Ashton Youboty, A. J. Hawk, M1ke Kudla and Anthony Schlegel during the second quarter Saturday in Columbus. Ohio State beat Indiana . 30-7. (AP)
season before sustaining a
slightly separated shoulder
at Iowa.
The Buckeyes had scored

two touchdowns on their Indiana .
Six plays after taking the
last 29 possessions before
scori ng the first four times opening kitkoiT. Smith
they got the ball aga inst threw a pass into the right

[:nm -!S&gt;fltttnrl • Page Bs

look for respect Bengals can't afford to
against Philadelphia
bung1e on Monday night

Bucks snap skid, finally win in the Big Ten

I

!S&gt;un~ll'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~rowns

College Football

COLUMBUS
Troy
Smith threw two touchdown
passes and Tony Pittman ran
for 144 yards-· both seeing
their most substantial playing time of the season - to
lead Ohio Stare to a 30-7
win
over Indiana on
Saturday,
ending
the
Buckeyes' three-game losing skid.
Ohio State '', (4-3, 1-3)
avoided its first 0-4 record
in the Big Ten since 1922.
Pittman, starting at railback in place of the suspended Lydell Ross, carried
20 times for 144 yards and
had a 28-yard touchdown
late in the game. Ross was
held out of the game for
passing counterfeit coupons
at a Columbus strip bar
hours after Ohio State's
third consecutive loss, 31-7
· at Iowa last Saturday.
The Buckeyes had 282
rushing yards, almost as
many as they had in their
four previous games (287).
Indiana (2-5, 0-4) lost its
fifth game in a row overall
and 12th in a row to Ohio
State.
Smith. who didn't play in
three of the last four
Buckeyes games, completed
12 of 24 passes for 161
yards without an interception and ran for 58 yards on
II carries. He had been
stuck on the bench behind
fellow sophomore Justin
Zwick. who struggled all

2004

rlat that cornerback Buster
Larkins could have intercepted and returned 50
yards for a touchdown.

Instead, the ball tipped off
his hands and bounced to
Ted Ginn Jr .. a former high
school teammate of Smith's
in Cleveland. Ginn broke
four tackles in a zigzagging
sprint to the end zone to
complete a 59-yard play.
On the play before the
touchdown, Pittman fumbled the ball away to the
Hoosiers. The officials, after
consulting with Big Ten
video review officials in the
pressbox. - said Pittman
was downed before the ball
popped loose and returned
possession to the Buckeyes.
After a punt by Indiana,
whi'ch managed just 242
yards, Smith led an 85-yard
drive that included runs of
28 and II yards by Pittman.
On third and goal fro111 the
5, Smith hit
Indiana
Santonio Holmes in the corner of the end zone to make
it 14-0.
Mike Nugent kicked field
goals of 29 and 52 yards on
the next two Ohio State possessions and later added a
35-yard field goal.
Indiana drew as . close as
14-7 on a Matt LoVecchio
keeper late in the first quarter. The key play in the drive
was LoVecchio's 42-yard
completion to Courtney
Roby.
a
LoVecchio hit on 14 of 25
passes for 156 yards with
one interception.
Ohio State totaled 443
yards on offense - more
than in their last two games
combined.

Rio Grande Men's and Women's Hoops Previews

\

ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BY

.i

I
I

CLEVELAND - They are
undefeated at home. Their.
new quarterback is making
plays. Their defense hlls been
solid. Their kicker is perfect.
Their running backs are finally both healthy.
But there's still one big
question hovering . over the
Cleveland Browns: Are they
any good?
The Philadelphia Eagles
will let them know on
Sunday.
"You get very few chances
in this league to make a statement," Browns kicker Phil
Dawson said. "But thi s game
is one .of them. I'm glad the
Eagles are undefeated. This is
going to be fun."
The Browns (3-3) will face
their toughest test of 2004 by far - as they host the
unbeaten and as yet unchallenged Eagles (5-0), who
have five double-digit victories in their best start since
1981.
If Cleveland was looking
for a measuring stick to validate its season or to find out if
thi s year will be ditlerent than
the past few disappointments,
well, this may just be it.
"This is one of those opportunities," said Browns quarterback Jeff Garcia. "for us to
really see where we stand in
thi s league and what we're
made of as far as our character, as far as our heart and as
far as our determination.
"The odds are stacked up
against us, but we ' ve been in
that ty~ of situation all season lo~."
Nothmg has been easy
through six games for the
Browns. They've had to overcome season-ending injuries
to Courtney Brown and
Kellen Winslow Jr.. Garcia's
0.00 quarterback rating in a
joss at Dallas, a pitiful performance in Pittsburgh and
coach Butch Davis' sti·ange

comment that Garcia wa'
''ski ttish" in the pocket.
But last week, the Brown s
displayed a trait -of a potential
playoff team as they overcame three turnovers in the
first half to rally for 'I 34-17
win over the Oncinnati
Bengals.
OK, it was the Bungl es . But
was also Cleveland's be st allaround performance this 'cason.
Garci&lt;t had four TO passes
and 310 yards, William Green
rushed for 115 and Lee Suggs
had 100 yards receiving, giving Cleve land ih first 300100-100 game for a quarterback and two running backs
since 1986.
The Browns also held the
lowly Bengals to just 189
total yards.
This week doesn't fi gure to
be so easy, not the way
Philadelphia
quarterback
Donovan McNahh. wide
receiver Terrell Owens and
the rest of the Eagles are playing.
"This is a c-hance to get
some respect for our team,"
said Browns safety Earl
Little.
To earn it, the Browns, 3-0
at home fur the f'irst time
since I 973 . will have to contain McNabb's mobility and
maybe even Owens· mouth.
McNabb f&lt;tiled to throw a
TO pas; in la st week 's 30-8
win over Carolina. a lopsided
rematch of last year· s NFC
title game. But McNabb i' off
to the best' start of his career.
completing 65 .8 percent of
his passes - an increase of
8.3 points from 2003 anJ an
8.8 jump over his ,·umulati ve
pen:entagc in five pro seasons.
Of McNabb's 11 2 completions. 30 ha\'e gone to Owens.
the former San Francisco star
whose verbal assau lt on
Garcia has raiseJ the game's
profile.
.
But Garcia has more tu
worry about th&gt;m what else
Owens might say abouthim.

The Eagles, whose average
margin ol victory is 14 .8
points, are tied for the league
20
sacks.
lead
with
Philadelphia's defense h&lt;ts
been getting better, too,
allowing fewer points each
week.
That's not good news for
Cleveland\ offen,e, which
because of injuries and a trade
i' ·down to its third- and
fourth-string receivers.
The Brown s may also be
without right guard Kelvin
Garmon , who injured a leg
muscle and suffered a concussion last week.
"We are a little short-handed," acknowledged Garcia;
who took the high roud while
responding to Owens' onesided war of words against
· him.
In Cleveland's favor is
Garcia's
pa~t
successes
against the Eagles. Late last
season with the 49ers, he
threw two touchdown passes
at Philadelphia as San
Francisco won 31-28 to snap
the Eagles' nine-game winning streak.
" He made plays. sometimes
when there weren't plays to
be made ," McNabb said. "He
was und~r pressure, moving
around. t hrnwing the football.
Hc'sJUst a good football player. a Pro Bowl player."
·
To defeat the Eagles. the
Browns might need him to
play like one again.
Since returning to th e
leag ue in 1999. C leve land
hasn't hecn ahle to get that
one, , momentum-swinging
victory to pu sh it over the top
and back into the NFL spotlight . An upset of the Eagles
wou ld go a long \Nay toward
bringing the Browns. just 2957 since '99. all the way back.
"It would be huge," center
Jeff Faine . "That\ a team
that's supposed to go to the
Super Bowl. It wou ld be
unbelie\'able. a con fidence
botl,ter. And. it would gi'c us

Bv JoE KAY
Assoc1ated Press
CINCINNATI -- Smile for
the camer~t. Recite your name.
po,ition and alma mater. Do it
in a way that ,ound&gt; really
cool to all the folks back home
and envious huddies around
the league.
Then, back it up b) playing
your be't game in front of a
national audience. Try not to
think about· how o~e bad play
could define you r career.
Hope your team plays well
enough to get in vited back .
This is ~ome gig .
"Yeah , il·s Monliay night."
Denver yuartcrbaek .lake
Plummer said. "Yeah. it\ thi s.
Yeah. it 's that . What are vou
going to do'?''
That's the beq question for
Cincinnati's
first
home
Monday night game in 15
year': What are the Ben gals
( 1-4) going to do'?
Everybody know' what th e
Broncos (5- I) are goin g to do
approach it like just another
game. And ·why not '.' The
Broncos are MLHtday ni ght
regulars .' appearing for 13
straight years, with ·as many as
three games a season. ·
They're so accustomed to
the spot li ght that they don't
even squint.
" I thin k we've got guys on
thi s team that can separate
themselves from the ~randcur
of the game and go-out ami
just play footb,tll like the y
know how." said Plummer.
who will be pl,1ying in his
third. "We ' ve got a few guys
that ha ve played in Super
Bowl s, a lot of guys that have
I played in some big games:·
And the Bengals have ...
I problems.
. Their season is ready to
unravel, just like th e last 13.
. Despite a reso lve to change.

"We don't want 10 llx•k had
they' re back to being lovable
losers - good for a few pral- on national TV." right tackle
falls, a few laugh s and a half- Willie AndcNm 'ummeu up .
AnJe"on ha,n 't played on
dozen wins each season.
"If we 'wi n the game. every - Monday night Jurin ~ his- ninething . is not goi ng to b~ all year career - the pncc lor
positive again ," linchackcr pla y1ng
in
Cincinnati.
Hrian Simmon~ ad..! J0 \\.1 - Sirnmun~ i ~ ge1ti11g hi·" fir~!
edge\l. "You can't comro l Monda:. ni ght game in se\cn
what people "IY and how peo- sea"''"·
pie think about you:·
Most of the Bengal' have
Afl they control i' how the y only
fanta ,iJ.ed
ahout
think ofthem .selves. and that·, moment- like thi'
another problem . They 're not
"Every kid doc-: · quartervery good in the se lf-image hack Car&gt;&lt;m Palmer ,;1 10. "(
remem ber my dad wou ld get
d 1tcgory.
They get skittish whcnc1·cr home from work on Monda)
there's a chance to ; how the nighh - it 'tart' a lot "'"lier
NFL they're not as b"d a' on the We st Coast - anu
everyone thinks. a recurrin g we'd eat dinner and watch the
theme during their 14-year game. That was our Monday
slump. Come Monday night. · night tradition."
will .the country see contident
The Broncos have quite a
new Ben gals or the same old different. Monday night tradiBungle&gt; 0
'
tion. They actually get to play
·That's another step that we on it.
fight all the time with our
"We've been on national TV
guys. but I've got to find a quite a bit," coach Mike
way to get that ou t of them." Shanahan sai d. ·:so. to be hancoach Marvin Lewis said.
est "ith you. I du 11. t e\'en
He won't get many more think about it."
chances. Such opportunitie s
Nor do most of his players.
vi,it these part s about once a who have been through the
decade.
say-yo ur-name routine many
Cincinnati hasn't hosted a times. To them, this is about
Monday night game since seeing how many yards they
Sept. 25. 1989, a 21- 14 win can squeeze out ag ainst a
over the Browns at Riverfront woeful defense .
Stadium. Sam Wyche was the
Denver is rushing for an
head coach, Boomer Esiason averaging of ju;~ under 152
was the quarterback and Ozzie yards per game. best in the
Newsome was catching pass- league . Cincinnati ts giving up
es for Cleveland.
an average of ju't over I nO
The Bengals haven't even per game. wor&gt;t in the league .
played on Monday night since
If they do what they wantOct. 19, 1992. a 20-0 loss at get Reuben Droughns running
Pittsburgh·, Three Rivers free in Cinc innati "s secondar-,
Stadium.
- they'll most likely imp.rove .
Since then, the Broncos to 6- 1. their best start since
have played 33 Monday night their 1998 Super Bo\yl sea.son.
games - nine preseason. 24
"You can be excited about
regular season - while the it:' safety John Lynch said.
Bengals have piled up lone- "It's a heck of a lot better than
some losse' in exile.
the alternative."
If they blow this chance.
No need to remind the home
they may not get another.
team.

a lillie :-i\vagger. too ...

Outdoors

Richwood archer conquers
$
2005
HONDA
0
world with a crossbow
Bv JoHN McCoY
For

2004-05 Rio Grande men's basketball team

2004-05 Rio Grande women's basketball team

Redmen hope experience Redwomen seek return to
~qtJals success this season NAIA national tournament
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
RIO GRANDE - With
five seniors on the roster, the
2004-2005 Redmen will
co unt heavily on experience
and leadership as they prepare
for another difficult non-conference schedule and a typical
AMC
South
balanced
Oivision campaign.
NAJA National Scholar
Athlete s
Cain
Vandall
(Huntington, W.Va.) and Matt
Simpson (Lottridge) return
for their final seasons along
with fellow seniors: Sean
Plummer
(Ponmore,
Jamaica). DaWayne Mcintosh
(Philadelphia) and Jarrod
Haines (Leesburg) in hopes of
finishing their careers with
yet another AMC champi. onship and subsequent trip to
the National Tournament in
Branson, Missouri.
· Assisting the seniors will be
juniors Kris Wilson (Kenova,
W.Va.), Cedric Hornbuckle
(Dunbar, W.Va.), and Reggie
Williamson (Columbus), all
of whom saw major action
last season. Sophomores
Jeromy
Dishman
(Huntington, W.Va.) and
Chris
Dinwiddie
(Proctorvi lie) should also be
counted on heavily and
1hould allow the Redmen to
Ose depth as one of the
~trengths of this year's squad.
In addition , Freshman Travis
Keefer &lt;Huntington, W.Va.) is

expected to see sig nifi c.~n t
time at the point guard position. Roundmg out the roster
will be three freshmen, Fred
Daniels (Huntington, W.Va.),
Danny Frank (Cincinnati) and
Dustin Avery (Springfield )
who will provide a solid base
for the future.
November and December
will see the Redmen on the
road for ten of their first sixteen games. Durin~ that
stretch, Rio Grande Will play
in Tennessee , Pennsylvania,
Indiana,
Kentucky,
and
Hawaii while competing
against some of the top NAIA
pro~rams in · the country.
Dunng the same period. Rio
will have AMC games at
Cedarville and at Mt. Vernon
and will host Urbana and
North Division foe, Notre
Dame. Other home contests
will include the annual Bevo
Francis Tournament on Nov.
12 and 13 and the annual
Newt Oliver Classic on Dec .
29 and 30.
January and February will
be devoted entirely to AMC
play and, as always, will see
the Redmel) competing in the
largest and arguably the most
competitive conference in the
nation.
"There are simply no easy
games on tllllt schedule.,'' says
Redman boos Earl Thorras.
"The conference is just as
good and just as balanced as
always and . the non-conference schedule was set up to
prepare us for those conferI

ence battles. If you are not
tested early and often in nonconference, there is no way
you can be prepared to compete and win in this league .
That is why we have always
tried to play a tough non-conference schedule.
' "I am far Jess concerned
about our won-lost record
against non-conference opponents then 1 am about getting
prepared to face the rigors of
conference play. You don't
win the AMC and qualify for
the nationals by beating weak
·opponents in the early part of
the season."
As to what Rio must do to
be successful this season. the
answer is simple according to
Coach Thomas . . . improve
offensively. "We were suecessful last season because
we were pretty good on
defense (4th in the country).
If we can remain solid on that
end and improve the offensive
o~tput, we have a chance to
be successful. As always.
rebounding. free throw shootiilg and limiting turnovers and
then. just staying healthy are
all vital to having a successfu l
season."
Thomas likes the composition of thi., year's ;quad. "I
really like this group. Our
practices have heen verv
inten se and we have had ~rc;;t
leadership from our \ete;an,.
If that _can continue to
improve. I think we can he in
the race right to the e.nd ."

STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailytribune.com
RIO GRANDE _ The
Univer,ity of Rio Grande
. ·
.
;-vomcn ' team wtll be relytng veteran .leadership and
an lmp re"lve group of
sophomores to guide them
back 1_nto the NA lf\Natlon ~ l
Tournament. That IS the goa l
tor _the 2004-05 Redwomen
squ,ld:
..
.
Sen1or&gt; ~lkta Fountatn
&lt;Columbu s) and Angel .AIIen
(Beckley. W. Ya.), the two
captam s, will be counted on
the mo st to end the four-year
National
Tournament
drought . Fountatn, an AllAMC . and NAJA AllAmencan candtdate will
ltkely leave as the school's
top rebounde,r and one of
only two players to reach the
cove ted. 1.000 plateau tn
~oth po1ms and rebounds.
(Aikla ) ts nne of two
dynamic se niors th.at we
have in the program ," said
R1o Head Coach Dav1d
Smalley. ''She will continue
to set rebound1ng and ;cor.~
tng records at R10 thl' year.
Allen .i' one of the bet·ter
guard' 1n the AMC and 1s
~?ugh on the defens1ve end.
Angel It as the ablitty to
. 'hut do~n .&lt;~ur oppone~Hs
be ., t otknsl\e pl.tycr. 'a1d
Smalley. "She ts a ve ry ath· Jette a~d talented. basketbal l
pl.1yer. Allen, 1s "c.lnLiid.lte
to w1nd up with post-season

honors.
needs. Both have made sigA quartet of juniors will nillcant strides in the offpro~ide Rio Grande with season on their perimeter
solid scori ng and versatility. shooting.
Point
guard
Guard Tana Richey (Maple Carlesha
Chambers .
He1.g ht s) 1s the top three- (Columbus)
is another
· point threat and should give defensive specialist and is
the Redwomen outstanding extremely quick . Smalley is
effort on the defensive end. expecting big things from
Jessica
· Worwell Chambers. "I believe she is
(Warrensville Heights) will a solid candidate for post
help out in ·th e transition AMC awards," 'S malley
defen se and has the ability said. "Chambers will be
to play in the post area. 6-4 given the keys to the
po st player Tiffanie Hager , machine as she will be one
(Bidwell) return s for her of the triggers to the transisecond season in a Rio uni - tion game.
·
form. Hager gives the
Raeshawn
Terry
Redwomen a shot- blocking (Cleveland) and Heather
presence and has the ability Rhoads (Laurelville) are
to score on the low block. athletic and will provide
Guard Marcia Smoot (Grove depth at the guard spots.
City ) gives the women's
Freshman Britney Walker
team quality at both guard (Cleve land) brings plenty of
spots and on the wing .
accolades with her to the
The sophomore class college le vel. Walker will
could ultimately ho)d the challenge for time on the
key
on . whethet
the court.
Reclwomen make the trek
Smalley will again have
back to the · nationals. the luxury of the junior varCandace Ferguson (Ironton) slty program th 1s season,
looks to build on an impres- which he utilizes as a feeder
sive freshman campaign in system to the varsity.
the post and Jam1e King
Another tough schedu le
(Lorain) has shown a awaits the Redwomen as
treincndous
amoun t of they aim to improve on an
Imp rovement and wtll help 18- 13 campaign from a .year
tn the post rotation for the ago. Smalley · and ,Rio .
Redwomen.
· Grande have. missed the
_Brindi .
Kandel AMC Tournament the past
(Frede ncktown) and Lauren two seasons: this season ·the
Fox ·rMorrow J are being plans are to go beyond the
counted o~ to be the sharp- AMC and land once again .
shooters lrom . beyond the among the NAJA's best in
arc that Rio so desperately Sioux City; Iowa in March.

•

the Associated Press

RICHWOOD, W.Va. - Pat
Copley began shooting a crossbow to avoid becoming boreu.
She had no idea it would bring
this much excitement.
Copley, 58. is the spon's
reigning indoor world ch&lt;unpion. Next year, as a member of
the U.S . women's crossbow
team, she will tnrvel to
Australia to try to add the world
outdoor crown to her growing
list of accomplishments.
"This crossbow has allowed
me to see a lot more or the
world than I ever thought I
would see," Copley said during.
a practice session behind her
Richwood home.
Already, she's traveled to
Taiwan, Hungary and New
Zealand for world competitions
- not bad for someone who's
only been shooting for I0
years.
"I took it up in 1994, when I
started accompanying my son,
Jeff, to archery competitions,"
Copley said. "I got bored
watching, so I started wandering over to other fields to see
what was going on.
"At the crossbow field, a lady
asked me if I'd like to shoot.
With my first shot. I almost
Robin-Hooded her arrow."
The startled onlookers
encouraged Copley to take up
the pastime. She did, and
immediately began posting
head-turning results.
"I started off shooting with a
Bullpup bow. a clunky old
thing th at didn't tit me at all,"
she recalled. "But I still shot all
right with it. A year later, I was
ranked fifth nationally."
With a jewelry store to manage and two growing sons to
take care of, Copley struggled
to find the two hours a day she
needed to practice her emerging skills.
She i\1anaged, though. and
her dedication paid dividem.k
In .I 996. she rose to third in the
national rankings and compel-

ed for the world title as a member of the L.S. team .
A 19\IK upgrade in equipment. to the bow she affectionately calls "my hahy." all owed
her to compete at the \'ery highest level&gt;.
"I've hcen preuy ,·onsistently
ranked second or third i·n the
nation si nce then." she said. "I
took second in the 2000 national championships and was second again lhis ycm·:·
If not for the imposing presence of Carol Pelosi. a twotime world champion with 35
years in the sport. Copley
might alreaJy be the' nation's
top-ranked woman.
''I'm getting closer to Carol's
leo;eJ every year." Copley said.
"She tells me I'm nipping at her
ankles .''
Copley got in a particularly
forceful nip earlier this year
when she captured the World
Crossbow
Shooters
Association's indoor championship, bettering Pelosi in the
process.
"That was particularly satisfying because my scores not
only beat all the women, they
also beat all the men," she said.
If any factor has cont1ihutcd
most heavily to Copley's success, it wou ld likely be herdedication to practice. If the weather is bad, she dry-tires her bow
or practices indoors at the nearby Moose Club. When it's fair.
she shoots at a target located
just outside her back yard .
"I shoot every day." she said.
'The amount depends on whm
I'm training for. II canlx as _li ttle as one hour or as much ·as
four or live hours."
Long practice sessions can be
particularly
demanJing .
Copley ha' to hold the 18pound alum inum-and-fihergla" bow rock-steady during
each shot. Since she stands just
5-foot -2 ami weighs 103
poumk that isn't ea,y.
"Cocking the bvw time atier
time is tiring. too." she added .
"The how has a LJ:i -pounu draw
weight. ami )'&lt;HI haw to .:ock it
hare handed. When I' 111 ,h.,ot-'

ing a lot. mv lin2ers get blisters
a tid ca llusc; ... Or worse. When somethmg
sl ips or hreah, Copley has to
cope with even more ~erious
injuries .
"fn Atlantic City one time. I
was cocking the bow and it dry
tired:· she recall ed. "It broke
one of my lingers . Another
time. ;t fellow shooting a regular compound bow brought hi s
how's st&lt;ibi lizer down on one
of my how's limbs. Tite crossbow llippcd up in my face and
broke my nose."
She finished ' the competitions anyway.
"In thi s sport. you've got to
be able to take a little pain." she
said .
At Copley's lc,·el of competition. howe\·er, the re\\·ard s

more than JUStify the discomforts.
''I've been f(JJ1unate." she
said. "I've gotten to know
Walter Hillenbrand, who's like
a guru in the crossbow community. He's even offered to make
me· one of his custom-made
bows. whic-h are the best'in the
world. My son. Jelf, has started
competing, too. He's nulked
fourth in the country right
now...
But can Jeff outshoot his
mom?
"Not yet," Copley said with a
sly smile . " But he's in school
now. studying to be a radiologist. When he's able to practice
more, he' II probably be able to
take me ."
Copky would like to sec
eros-how become an Olympic
sport. but she said it isn't likely
to happc n because too few
companies are available to
sponsor it and -too few spectators would want to see it.
"But I don't do this to compete in the Olympics:· she'
added . "I do itlxcause it keeps
me lit. it keeps my mind alert,
and it teachc, me to work better
unJer pre"ure . Winning only
adds to tlte expcrience ."
(./olt n AkCnr ;,, WI Ourdoors
\\ 'r ifi•r for tltc ·sum/or Ga:etre.1 /nil iii Cltorleston . ill l·r1.)

5
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•

�Page 86 • :IS&gt;unbnv ~ml£li -$$rntmrl

Sunday, October 24.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2004

iJunba:p ~imrl ·itntinel

National·Basketball Association: 2004-05 Schedules
EASTERN CONFERENCE

NASCAR WEEKEND'

NBA 2004-05 -lfS Game TimBIIt's been a long offseason and you've all been pat1ent enough, so here's a look at the upcom1ng NBA team schedules

"ThiS " a race where ll could knock
the top three out and it could be a 10-car
race," he sa1d. "It could go ell her way.
''It's just one of the toughest places we
Ryan
MARTINSVILLE, Va. Newman must be close to perfect the rest go to. You Just have to be good when it
of the way to win the Nextel Cup cham- counts "
But Earnhardt, the only driver with
ptonshtp, and he took a positive step by
grabbmg the pole Friday at Martinsville five consecultve top-hve fmtshes here.
disputes that Martmsvtlle's beating and
Speedway.
"It's a good start to the enttre week- bangmg style makes it particularly dicey
end.'' satd Newman, nmth among 10 dn- for dnvers wtlh champtonshtp asptra·
vers and 271 pomts behmd series leader lions.
"Anything can happen anywhere." he
Kurt Busch hallway through NASCAR\
satd
" Motors break here, they break m
I0-race playoff.
Ne.wman needs outstandmg finishes m Atlanta, they break in Phoemx It's the
the fmal five races. and 4uite a bit of same··
Newman led the w.ty on the newly
good luck The narrow halt -mtle oval at
Martmsville - where bunched f1elds resurfaced ovaL where 17 dnvers broke
frequently leads to crdshes- mtght be a the track qualifymg record. He turned a
good place to find a lmle good fortune. lap at 97 043 mph to wm hts series-high
Like six of the other dmers m the title seventh pole of the seuson. · brcakmg
chase, Newman can't contend without Tony Stewart's four-year-old m~uk of
bad finishes by Busch. Dale Earnhardt 95.371.
Newman's Dodge wtll bqoined on the
Jr. and JetfGordon, who hdve been ttuning the competition 1nto a three-way bat· front row by that of teammate Rusty
tie.
Wallace. who qualtfted tor Sunduy's
"We're looking for places to make up Subway 500 at 96 234
The Chevrolets of Earnhardt and Ward
maJOr ground because we need that
now," Newman sa 1d. "We're not out of Burton make up the second row, folthe champ1onsh1p by any means We' te lowed by Travis Kvap1l 111 a Dodge and
not in the best posttton. but we'll keep Scott Riggs· Chevy.
our nose to the gnndstone."
Busch, who leads Earnhardt by 24
Busch won't dtspute that Martinsville points m the race for the champtonship.
could be one of the keys to the pomts was seventh as the first Ford on the start·
race.
ing gnd:

9 CLE 730
12 @ N 0 8
13 SA 7
16 HOU 7 30
17@1ND7
20 UTAH 7
23 @NV 730
24 MIA 7 30
26 ORL 7 30
27@CHA 7
30 NY 730
03 WAS 7 30
4 @N J , 730
6 PHI , 730
B MEM 730
1000ET8
11 NJ 7
14 IND 7 30
15@ HOU 830
17 POA 7 30
18 0 DAL 830
22 CAL 730
27 @MIA, 7 30
28 CLE 7 30

NJ PHI 730
5 INO 730
6@NY730
10 POA 7
12 GHA 7 30

Associated Press

PHIIADEIPIIIA

BOSTON
.5 @SEA 1030
7@LAL930

N'l WAS 7
6 OAL 7

10@Mil8
12 @80S 730
13 G S 7

NS NJ 830
6 @ IND, 8
9 PHO 830

13 LAC 830
16 @SAC 10

3 INO 7
4 @MIA 8
6 @MIL 830
9 @ATL 730
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13 WAS 1
15 G S 7
1S@CHA7
20 CHA 730
21 CNV 730
24 OET 1
25@80S730
27 CHI 7 30
29@ LAC 10 3Q
01 OPHO 9
2 0 DEN
4 TOR 730
7 N J, 7

N2 HOU 8

NJ @CLE , 7

5 OTOR 7

50805730

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6 CHI , 8

BOLAC1030
11
13
17
19

@DEN,
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MIN 730
IND. 8
21 CHA 6
23 OCHA 7
24@CLE7
26 MIA 6
27@Mil9
30 0 HOU 830
03 0 SA 8
40N0,8
600Al830

9 OMIN 8
10 LAC 7

12 @ PHI 7
16 l..TAH 7
17@GS1030
13 NY , 6
IB' CLE 7
19 @DE N 9
17 ATL 7
20 @CLE 730
21 @ LAL 930
19 @ DET 8
22@PH09
2 it' DET 6
PH .
20 ORL 8
24 @UTAH 9
23 DET 7
23 BOS 7
26 ClE ~,('
26 &amp;~ INO 8
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4 @ WA$, 8
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04 NY , 7
01 0 LAC 1030
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0
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7@SAC1 0
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4
6@'GS1030 10 @ PHO, 9
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7 MIL 7
9@ POR 10 30 12 @ G S 9
11 MIN 830
0
11 @SEA 10
13 DAL 830
11J ATL. 8
14 N 0 7
11 OMEM.6
11 SAC, 8
13 @LAC 1030 16 HOU 7
15 0 NY. B
14 0 ATL, 730
15 DEN 7
21 N J 7
16 MIL 830
17 TOR, 7
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22 @ HOU 830
18lND830
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17 UTAH 7 30
18 0 CHI 830
26 @NV 1
18 POA, 7 30
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22 PHI 7
22 CH1, 7 30
21 @MIA 730
27@WAS7
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18 BOS, 7 30
25 01N0,1230 25 DET1230
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29 IND 7
26CMIL7
21 MIN, 7
27 NO 7
22@NJ,730
27 NJ,730
26@S A ,7
31 SEA , 7
28 NJ,B30
29 @WAS , 7
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26N0 , 7
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29@MEM8
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J DETBJO
J4 Mil 7
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J2 BOS 6
J2 @WAS 12
31 WAS 3
5 MIN 7
3 @CHI 830
6 @SA 930
7 (ii: ORL 7
7 UTAH 830
J3 @ CHA. 7
5 @ CLE 1
J2 ~ DEl 6
S@DAL830
11@CLE 7
5 All 7
6 MEM 7
7 SAC 730
3 N0 7
8 BOS 830
14 MEM 7
7@90S730
9@PH08
11 MIL 730
10 GS830
B NY 1 30
5 GS 7
11 @ MEM 6
15 @Al l 7
11 @NJ 730
14@ BQS 730
7 DEl 7 30
12 PHI 830
11 CHA 7
13@ LAl 1030
12 NO 730
14 PHO 7
15 CHA, 7
8 A: CHI 830
17 MIL 1
15NY330
17@NY1
15 ORL 8
19 PHI 7
15@UTAH9
14 ORL 6
17 N J 2
10 ORL 7
16 @SEA 9
15 PHI 730
18@HOU830
19 @MIA 7 30
12 @TOR 7
21 DAL 7
19 @80S7
19 @ N 0 8
21 @CHI 830
14 ATL 7 30
23 @TOR 1
21 ATL830
19 @ POR 10
17PH0330
18@0Rl, 7
22 @ DET 730
20 @SAC
22 BOS 7
19 CHI 7
25 BOS 7
21~
27 @C HI 830
24 @All 730
22@ GS 1030 21 @M IL 830
22 AS 8
24 CHI 7 30
2 @NJ 730
26@80S7
24 WAS 7
22 CHI 7 30
26@MIN8
22 ~ ATL 7
28 TOR 7
25 DEN 830
24@MIN8
21 DET 7
30@LAL930
'l7 CHA 8 30
26 MEM 7
25 :ill CHA 7
28 MIA 7 30
29 DEN 8
F1 @UTAH 9
28 @NY 7
26 DEN 7 30
29@MEM8
26 IND 7
80S 830
31 @PHI 7
21 @ IND 7
4 @ POA, 10
F1 @NJ,730
30Mil630
310Al730
26 PHD 7 30
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F2 TOR, 7
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FT @WAS 7
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3 @MIA B
4 DAL 7
31 HOU 7
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F2 N J 7
5 ORL, 7:30
7 @WAS,7
13@ MIN 330
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7 LAL, 7 30
4 OAL 730
11 MIA 7
8 TOR 7
6 @MIN 1
13 @NY 6
10 LAl 8
9 CHA, 7
10 @ ORL, 7
15 SAC830
11 DEN 8
16 OTOA,7
12 WAS, 730
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12@ Mil 830
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14 MIL 730
13 MEM B
15 DEN 730
9 LAC 7
16 DEN 7
22 MIA 830
l6 All, 7
23 @ CLE , 7
17 @MIN 8
16@PH17
16 POR, 7
16 @ CLE 7
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22 MIL 7
22 @ ORL, 7
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13 SAC , 6
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25 WA$,830
23 CHI, 7
22 N¥,730
26 @ CHA, 7
25 @ IND 8
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23 OGS 10 30 16 MEM 7
26 CHI 7
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25 CLE 8
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M1 @ POR 10
28 SA 7
M1 @DEN 9
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3 @ PHO
M1 SEA 7
4 @PHI 7
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4 @SEA 1030
2 @UTA H 9
27 @PHO 8
5 WAS 7
4 @ POA 10
8 @ MIN 8
9@POR10
6 MIA 730
8 @SAC 330
5 PHI 7
M2 lAl 7 30
6@LAL930
8@MIL8
11 @PH I 7
11 @SEA 1030
8 OAL 7
9 GS 730
4 CHA 73C
8 @ UTAH 9
13@LAC330
13 IND 7
11 @80S 730
9 @ BOS 7
6 MIN 6
12 LAL 7
11 @TOR 7
14 BOS 7
15 UTAH. 7
13 UTAH 6
1l GS , 7
9 All 7
15 SEA830
13 @ CLE 7
11 DET730
16@ DEN9
16 @NJ 730
16 @ MIL 8
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12 G S 7
18 @S A 830
18 N0 , 830
18 PHI 730
16 SEA 730
16 UTAH 7
14 OET 7 30
13 WAS 6
14 @ CHA 7
19@ DAL830
19@PHI7
20@TOR1
18 TOR 8
18 LAL 730
16WAS730
21 ORL 7
21 ATL 830
22 DET 7
20 SA 330
20 NJ , 330
18 NY 730
16 TOR 7
22@NJ730
18 @ HOU 830
23 PHD 7
23 @TOR 7
24@ HOU 830
22@CLE7
21 @ CHI 8 30
23@PHI8
19 @ N 0 8
24@0RL7
25 @BOS 730
26@ DAL 830
23 SA ,7
22 PHO 7 30
23 @ NY 730
26 MIA 7
26 INO 830
28@ NO B
25 IND 8
25@DETB
25 @SA 830
26 @CHI 830
28 N J 7
28 MEM 830
29 lAC 7
26 80S 7 30
26 rof:l 7
25CHI730
28 @ ORL 1
26 @ OET 730
300CHA7
31 @CHI 830
28 DAL 7 30
28@Mfl8
30 Cl:;ll 7
30 @WAS 7
30 DAL 7
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31 CLE830
A1 SAC 8
30 SAC 7 30
31 MIA 8
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A1 80$730
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2 @CHI 830
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3 DAL, 1
A1 LAC 8
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5 @NY 730
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5 LAC 7
5 0 MIA, 7:30
5 NJ , 7
3 lAC 6
5 @WAS 7
6@ PHI 7
6
5 NO 730
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8@MIL830
0
8 @PHI 7
8 OTOR,7
6 MIL, 7
9 @ NJ 1
10 @ MEM 8
10 NY 1
9 MIN, 7
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9 MIL 730
10 OMIA 1
12 @PHI,7
11 0CHI,830
11 OTOR7
11 CHA 7 30
11 0 ATL. 730
11 OE1'. ~30
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14 N.Y.. 6
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15 MIA, 7 30
16 NY 1
150Rl830
15 MIL, 8
15 PHI 8
16 CHI, 7
17 @TOR 6
17 OWAS, 1
16 @ ATL, 7
17 0 DET 1
17 CLE, 1
17 0 MIA, 1
19 @ CLE, 7
19 0 MIA 730
19 NY , 830
19 BOS, 7
19 0 ATl , 7,30
18 0 OAl , 7
19DET730
20 @ PH1 , 7
20 NJ,7
20 OET, 7
20 0 IN0,8
20 0TOR,7
20 0 CHA, 7
20 CHI, 8
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19 SA 7 30
21 SE4 6
23 f( IND 7

"

15 @MEMB

20 POR, 830

8 @CHI.830
)1 OSA 830
13 OMEM,8
18

8 TOR, 730

MIA 8

26 @NY ,730

.

13 CHA. 7
17iNV,730

6 INO 7

13CWAS7

OAI.. 7
15 @WAS 7

6 WAS,730
8 OORL 7

13 OAI., 730

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13 NJ.e

N3 @MIN , B

6 BOS 730

4 CLE , 8
6@WAS7
9 WAS, 730
11 OAL B

14 @ MIA 6

@SA 8
MIL 6
@MIN 8
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19 UTAH 7 30
21 PHI 6
23 POA 7 30
24 @All 730
26@0ET 8
28 80S 6
30 TOR 730

17
19
21
23
24
27
30

12
14
16
17

3 SAC
OGS 1030 03 @CHI 830
4@DEN9
10 MIL 830 6 0 UTAH, 9

30 SEA,2

600RL7
8 NV ,B

NJ@ NJ 8

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10MEM730
12 0 TOR 1
13 WAS, 7 30
15 @WAS, 7
17 DEN 8
19 ORL 6
21 BOS, 730
23 @SAC 1030
25 @ lAL, 3
27 ATL 7 30
30 @DETB
J1 CHA 730
3 SEA 7:30
5 NY 730
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9 @ SEA,8
11 @PHD 9
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14@ LAC 1030
19 All 7 30
21 IND 8
23 @PHI 6
24 NO 730
26 @TOR 7
28@ All 730
30 HOU 1
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3 CLE, 8
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16 LAC, 7 30

22@ CHI 830

2301ND7
26 ORL 1
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10 MIN 7
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NO ,B
5 CHI, 730
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MIA 9
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4 SA 830
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8 MIA 8
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28 HOU, B
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5 NJ 8
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8 UTAH 8 30
11@ATL730
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14 WAS 830
15@ MEM, 8
17 @ CHA 1
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21 DET B30
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26 PHO 8
28 DEN 830
30 @CLE, 630
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8 BOS 8
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16 @NY 7 30
22 @ CHA. 7

01

23
25
27
M1
4
5
7

8
11
12
14
16
18
20
22
23
25
26
28

BOS 7

NJ ,8
TOR 830
SEA 3

PHI 8
@MIN 8
CHI 830
@CHI830
ATl 8
DAL830
@N0 8
@MIA 7 30
CLE t1
WAS 830
@DEN 9
@SEA 10
@LAC 1030
@GS 10 30
@ UTAH 9
IND 8

30 GS 8

A1 MEM. 830
3 NY 1

6 @BOS.7
8 CHA 830
9 OCLE 730

1&gt;2@

11 0 WAS, 7
13 BOS, B
15@ DET,8
16 ORL , 830
18 @PHI 7
19 TOR 8

15 0 80S 730
17 INO 1
19 CHA, 7 30
2000Rl7

N3
5
6
9

MIL 7
C NO B
OCHA 7
DAl 7

N3 COOS 730
5 PHO 7

6 COET730
9 PHI 730
9 CNY 730
12 LAC 730
10 N J 1
10 @PHI 7
13@1NDB
10@WAS7
12 IND 7
13 DAL 1
16 @SA 830
12 LAL 7
14 ORL 2
14 @PHI 2
15 HOU 730
18 0 HOU 930
16 SEA 7
19@ DAL 830
17 UTAH 7
17 SEA 730
18 SA , 7
2001ND8
20 WAS 8
21 CLE 7 30
21 @MIA 6
24 POR 7
23 1111 DEN 9
23 ATL 7 30
24 BOS 7
26 @ATL,730
25@ LAC 1030 24 @TO R 7
26 WAS 7 30
27 PHI 7
26 @SEA 1030 27 TOR 1
27 @ OAL , 7
30 @ATL 730
29 80S 7
28 @POR6
01 OSA , 830
01 TOR 7
Dl MEM, 7 30
30CHA730
3 OMEM,8
S CNY, 730
01 @WAS 7
30RL730
4 0 HOU 8'30
4 @ CHA 7
4 MEM, 7
&lt;4 ATL 730
8 OATL,730
6 OOEN,9
7 O MEM, 8
6 TOR 730
8 MIN 7
8 @UTAH , 9
8 @N0 , 8
70CLE , 7
10 OGS 1030 10 CCHI,B
10 @WAS, 7
10 N0 , 730
12 MIL, 2
12 @LAL930
11 @All 7
12 DEN 12
14 CEN 7
14@NJ,730
13 OPHO 9
14NY , 730
17 NY 7
15 CSA 830
170MEM8
15 OET 6
18 CMIL.830
17@PHl7
18 DEN 7
19 @TOR 1
21 @CHA 7
19 @MIA 6
19 UTAH 3
22 0 INO, 7
22 CLE 730
21 DAl 7 30
22 SA 7
270POR10
27@ DET 730
22 @80S 7
27 NY 7
0
28 @CHI 8 30
26 CHA I
29 MIL 1
31 OCEN 8
27 @ ORL, 7
Jl @CHI 830
30 INO 7 30
J2 @LAC 330
3 @TOR 7
J1 @NY 730
29 MIN 7 30
3 @GS , 1030
4 @WAS 7
J1 NJ 730
5 SEA 7
5 @UTAH 9
5 @M IL 8
7 CHA 7
4 SAC 730
7 @MIN 8
8 NJ 7
7 GS 730
5 ~ MIA 7 30
10 POR 7
10 @ BOS 7
8 @ ORL 7
8 ~ CLE 1 30
12@CHI830
12 @MIN 8
11 DET730
9 POR 730
14 TOR 7
11 NO 730
14 @ DET 8
13 @ HOU 8
15@ DEl 730
15 @ DAl 830
15 @CHI , 330
15@ 1ND8
17 NO 2
17 @All 2
17 CHI 1
18 DET 7
19 @ CHA 7
19 @TOR 7
20 HOU 8
19 MIL 730
22 @QRl 7
22 PHI 7
21 BOS 730
21 HOU 7 30
23@PH08
24 @ HOU 830
23 MIA 6
23 MIL 3
26 @WAS 7
25@SAC10
25 PHO 7 30
25 @ MEM 8
28@ NO 8
26@GS1030 28 CLE 7
28 WAS , 7
29 @WAS 7
29@ DAL 830
28 @ LAL 1030 29 @DET 730
29 @UTAH 9
31 @LAC 1030 31 @ATL 730
31 IND 7
F1 CHI 7 30
F1 ODEN 9
F1 CLE 7
F2 HOU, 7
4 @SAC 10
4@BOS730
21BOS, 7
4
5 @PHO 9
5 @CLE,730
6 LAC 1
5 DET 1
1 @NJ 730
7 @UTAH 9
7 PHI 730
8 GS 7
9 MEM, 7
9MIA730
10 ATL 7
9 LAL 730
12 @PHI 7
11 CTOR 7
11 SA 730
11@80S730
12 ORL 7
13 CHA 6
13 N 0 6
13 DEN 6
14 NY, 7
15 @MIN 8
14 @PHI 7
15 LAC 7
22 INO 7
16 DET, 7
~30
16 MIL 730
24 liJNY,7
22@ DET 730
26@MIA1
22 TOR 7 30
26 SAC, 7 30
23 @MIL, 8
24 PHI 7
27 MIA 7 30
M1 @MIL 8
M2 SAC 7
25 CHA 7 30
26 IND, 7 30
2 NJ 1
4 NY 7
27 CLE, 1
28 LAL 7 30
4 CLE 7
M2@PHI7
M4 @ORL 7
5 @NJ 730
5@ATL7
8@GLE7
3MIA730
6GS 730
9 @TOR 7
7@MIA730
5 OAL 730
8 WAS 730
8@SA830
11 MIN 7
8 GS 7
13 SEA 6
9 @NO 8
15 MIA 730
13 N J 6
11 CHA 7
12 @MIA I
18@ATL730
15 @SAC 10
13 I TOR 6
13@0RL6
19@MIA730
16@ LAC 1030 15 lAl, 7
18 @SEA 1030 18 @CLE 730
16CHI730
21 SA 730
19 @ POR 10
18 UTAH 7 30
23 BOS 7 30
19 CHI 7
20 ~ IND 330
25 @S EA 1030 21 @ CHA 7
23 DET 8
26 @ POR 10
24 CHA 7
25 TOR 7
22 IND 7 30
24 MEM 7 30
28 @GS 1030 26 PHO 7
27@lAl730
29@LAL1030 28 ATL 7
28 @SAC 10
26 MIN I
30@PH09
28 @ CHA 7
A1 N J 8
30 TOR 7
3 @MIL 1
A1 OAL, 7
30 LAC 7 30
A1 WAS. 7
A1 @NY 8
5 INO 730
0
2 OAL. 730
5CCLE.7
7NY 730
10 0 INC 1
DET
9 0
12 BOS 7
12 TOR 7:30
11 CLE, 7
9
13 C !NO 8
14 OCLE,S
1300ET730
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15 0 TOR 7
16 @CHA 1
15 OCH1,830
15 0 INO 8
17 PHI 6
17 All 7 30
16 0 MIL,830
17 0 NJ 6
19WAS730
19@CHI, 830
18 INO 7
18 MIL 1
20@80S7
20 WAS, 7 30
20 MIA 7
20, ATL, 7

20 UTAH 7
28

SEA, 10

ATL.7

16 SAC

7@NJ,730
8 CHI 8

BOS 1

2 CINJ 730
5 @0AL,830
8 CHI. 7
8 7

3 BOS.6
6 CHA, 7
8 CLE, 7
WAS.7

TORONTO

WAS!llNGTIJN

N3 0 MEM. 8
N3 HOU 7
4 OCHA. 7
5 DET 7
5 MIA 7
7 POR 1
9 OMIA,730
9 @SAC 10
10 ORL 7
10 0 UTAH 9
0
12@ SEA 1030
14 OAL 1
130POA10
16@LAC1030 17 BOS 7
170DEN9
23 TOR, 7
19 SEA 7
26 0 PHI , 730
21 SA 1
28 @TOR, 3
23 @WAS 7
Dl NJ ,7
24 NV 7
30AT~730
27 @NY 1
4 CHI,B
28 WAS 3
8 DEN, 7
30 @MIA, 7 30
10 NY ,7
0
12 N0,1
13 OMIA,730
4 0
15 MIA, 7
ONJ,730
17 0 LAL, 10 30
16 0 PH0,9
10 DEN, 7
12 MIA, 1
21 0 SA.C, 10
15 MIN 7
2&lt;l 0
1701ND7
27 CHA 7
19 N J, 1
20 @HOU 830
0
22 UTAH 7
J2 ATL 12
26 0 PHO, 8
4 NJ 7
28 0 LAL, 10 30
6 SEA 7
290GS,1030
8 MIN 1
J3 OAL 7
12 POR 7
5 SAC 7
14 @MIL 630
7 Mil 7
15 PHO 7
9 GS 1
17 @S A 5
12 BOS 7
18@DAL830
14@PHI7
21 TOR 7
16 NO , 1
22 @IND. 8
17 @MIN 6
24 @CLE 7
19 NY 7
26 PHI 7
21 @WAS 7
28 @ OALA't
23 CHA t
29 ORL , 7
26 MIA 7
28 @C HA 7
F1 DET, 7
4 OTOR,7
30 PHO 330
5 MIL, 7
F2 @I NO, 7
7 !NO, 7
4 WAS, 7
9 SA 7
6 DAL, 1
11 LAC,7
8 OCLE, 7
12 ODET73Cl
9 Mil, 7
14 GNO,S
11 PHI 7
15 0 HOU 8·30
13 LAC,8
23 MEM, 7
16 CHI 7
25 OCHI,8Xl
22 @NJ 730
27 SAC 8
25 0 MIL, 830
M2 HOU 7
27 lAl 1
M2 @SA 830
4 GS 7
5 @ CHA 7
4 @MEM 8
6 @N 0 7
B@NY730
7@0AL830
13 @B0S6
9 ORL 7
14 LAl 7
11 All 7
16 @All 730
18 @MIL 830
13 PHI 6
16 @ BOS 7
19 UTAH 7
22 @DEN 9
18 @ OET B
20 CLE 1
24 @UTAH 9
25 @ LAC 10 3(J
23 CHI 7
25@PHI7 i
27 @ SEA 8
26 @All 7
28 @ POR 10
29@ MIA 730
30 All 7

13

CLE 1

20 ONJ ,B

01 ORL, 7
3 OBOS,730
CLE, 7.30
e
8 OOET,730

20 OGS,1030
MIN 8
29 OET 7
31 BOS. 3

30@0RL7
A1 0 CHA. 7
3 DET. 8
6 MEM, 7
8 ATL, 7

9GCHI,830
11 IND. 7
12 .NY.,730
15NJ,7

17 BOS,6
19 0MIL, 8

20 CLE 7

A1

0

ORL 7

3 IND. 1
5 BOS, 7

OOET,730
8 OlN0,8

6

9 PHI, 7
11 MIL, 7
13 CHI, 7
15 CtE, 7
17 CHA, 1
190NJ,730
20 ONY , 730

WESTERN .CONFERENCE
N2
3
8
8
9
11
13
14
16
19
21
22
24
26
27

SAC 8 30
@N0 8
MEM 830
GS 830
@ORL 7
@MIA B
@ NJ 1
@WAS 1
PHO 8 30
NY 8 30
@DEN 9
MIN 8 30
@SA 630
POR 1
@ MEM 8
30 SA 830
D2 HOU 8
4 UTAH 830

6 DET, 8 30

7 0 MIN 8
9 SEA, 8 30
11 0 HOU 830
13@ CH1 830
14GS 830
18 ATL,830
21 @NY , 730
22 @ATL 730
26 ODEN , 9
2S BOS 8 30
J2 MIL 8 30
5 LAL 8 30
8 IND 830
12 HOU 9
14 @SA 8
15 NJ 830
18 WAS 830
20 LAC 8 30
21 @ CHA 7
23 DEN I
24 @LAC 1030
26 @ POR 10
29 PHI 830
F1 MIA. 8 30
2 0 NO 8
4 OIND 7
6 @TOR 1
8 CH1, 8 30
11 0 SAC
13 OSEA 8
15 @GS 1030
17 0 PHO
23 0 UTAH 9
24 SAC 930
26 PHO, 8 30
28 NO 830
M2 @LAC 1030
4 @ LAL 1030
6@H0U1
7 TOR 830
10 LAL 9 30
11 @MIL 830
13 @MIN 1
15 MIN B 30
17 POA 830
19 CHA 8 30
21 NO 830
23@GS1 030
24 @SAC 10
26 CLE 830
28 @DET 730
30 @ BOS, 7
Al' 0 PHI, 7
3 OCLE 1
5 ORL 830
7 SA , S
9 UTAH 830
11 MEM 8 30
13 OSEA 10
1-4 OPOR 1
11 0 LAL 330

19 SEA, 830

20 OMEM, B

N2@LAL 1030 N3 POR 10 30
N2 @ OET 8
3@TQR7
4 MIN 1030
5 UTAH 1030
5 @ MEM 8
6 UTAH 9
6 LAC 1030
8 @DAL 830
8 ~U TAH 9
6 SAC 830
10 @SA 830
9 SEA 9
9MEM830
11 OET 10 30
12 @ MEM 8
11 MIN830
14 @SAC 9
13@ CHA7
13LAL630
15@CLE7
17 TOR 9
15@N J 730
19 CHI 9
17 CHI 10 30
16@ATl730
21 DAL 9
2C MEM 10 30
18 NY 930
23 N J 9
23 NO 1030
20@ LAC 330
26 SA 9
26 LAC 10 30
21 @ POR , 8
27@ HOU 830
28@ LAC 330
23 @SAC, 10
29 NO 9
01 MIN 10 30
26 @UTAH 9
D2 CLE , 1030
3@LAL1030 27 DEN 8 30
4 MIA, 9
4 INO 1030
30 DET 830
6 OAL 9
6 BOS 1030
D20DAL8
8 @WAS 7
7 @PHO 9
4 PHI, 8:30
10 @TOR 7
10 OAL 1030
12 @ N ¥ 12
12 CHA 9
9 SA,8
14 @ PHI 7
14 0 DAL, 830
11 DAL, 8'30
15 @80S 7
15 0 N 0 8
15ATL830
17 @MIA 8
17 OHOU , 830
17 GS 830
18 @ ORL 7
18 @SA 830
18 @CHA 7
20 PHO 9
20 WAS 10 30
20 TOR 8 30
22@SEA10
22 MEM 10
22 CHA, B 30
2e LAC, 830
26DAL9
1 26@SAC9
27 @GS 1030 27 DEN , 1030
28 0 MIL, 8
31 PHI 8
29 TOR 10 30
29 0 CLE, 7
J2 @ LAL 9 30
J1 i POR 10
31 MIL tO
- 3 LAC 9
3 PHI 1030
J2 UTAH 8 30
8 @SA 1 30
5f:BOS7
5 PHO, 9
9 HOU 9
7@NJ730
7@ LAL 1030
11 @SAC 10
9@T0R1
90DEN9
12 LAL 9
10
CHI 8 30
12@DAL9
14 MIN '0 30
12 MIA 10 30
13 N J , 8
17 @GS 1030 14 ij SEA 10 30 15 SA , 830
18@SEA1 0
15 LAL 10 30
17 @ MEM 8
21 MEM 10 30
17 DEN 10 30
18 IND 830
23@0Al1
1 21 ta: LAL 1030 20 @Q RL8
25 @CHI 830
21 @ NY 730
22 CLE 10 30
26@DET730 1 26NJ 1030
I 24 OAL 8 30
28 @ MIL 830
26@ NO 8
28 SEA 10 30
29 @ lNO 8
29 @LAC
28 SAC 9 30
30@MIA1
F1 NY 9
F2 SAC, 10 30
31 @ BOS 7
2 OPOA, 10
&lt;4 NO 10.30
5@ DEN, 9
F2 OPHI, 7
5 GS,9
8 UTAH 9
7 0 MIA, 730
4 OM IN,930
9 @MIN 8
6 LAL, 330
8 OOAL7
11 0 CLE 8
11 @ N 0 8
9 CHI, 8 30
13@ NJ , B
13 PHO 9
11 0 IND. 7
15 @ATL, 730
15 DAL 10 30
13 POR, 630
16@CHA7
15 WAS, 8.30
16 0 SEA, 10
9
23 ATL, 10 30
25 @ MEM 8
27 DEi 9
23
27 @NO 7
M1 @ MEM 2
27 UTAH 4
M1 ATL 9
2 @ Ml~ 8
M1 @CHI 830
4 @ WAS 7
2 @WAS 1
3 IND 8
5 @LAC 3
B@ N Y730
B DAL 1
8@PHI7
7 POCJ 9
8 0 SEA 10
12@SA830
9 @ 0ET730
11 @PHO 9
13 PHD 9
11 @!NO 7
13@SAC330
16 CHA 9
12 @ATL7
14 @GS 1030
18 LAC 9
14 HOU 10 30
16 POR 930
20 MIL 9
17 SAC 1030
18 BOS 830
18 @ PHD 9
20 @MIN , 7 30
22 WAS 9
22 MIA 930
24 LAL 9
20~SAC9
26 SAC 9
24 CLE 8 30
2~
Al 1030
28@ PH09
25 MIL 1IJ 30
25 @NO 8
27 @SA 1
30 @UTAH 9
28NY 1030
28 @UTAH , 9
A1 SA, 1030
30 @Mil 8
2 0 POA 10
AT 0 UTAH, 9
30 OPOR 10
5 OMEM 8
SEA 6
A1 NO 830
8 @NO 8
5 HOU, 1030
8 OMIN 93(] ~
@
8 PHO 1030
9 SE:A, 9
OPHO
11 G S . 9.
10 S.A ,9 •
11 @SEA, 10
13 NO , 9
11 0 DEN , 9
13 0 MIN 8
13 MEM, 8 30
15 MEM 9
16 @HOU, 7:30
15 POA 1030
16DEN730
18 LAL 10 30
16 LAC ,830
18 OPHO 10
20 UTAH, 10 30
20 SEA, 8 30
19 POR 9

7 N0,830

a

030

23 BOS

22 SEA, 830
OSA,9

3
6 PDR 10

SOURCE NBA

N3 NY 8
N3 DAL B
4@ DEN 1030
5 ORL 8
6 @MIN, 8
6 N0 8
9 IND 8
9 LAL 8
11 @ HOU 830
12 ATL 8
16 MIA 8
13 @ MIL 830
17@ DEl 730
17 PHO 8
20@ NO 8
20 MIN 8
22@ DAL 830
22 @UTAH 9
23@GS1030
23 SEA 8
25@1ND8
26 @ PHO 9
26 MEM 8
28 @ LAL 930
29 @ DEN 9
28@ SAC , 9
D1 @GS,1030 01 SAC 8
4 DET, 8
3 IPHO 9
7@HOU830
4 ~LAC 1030
B NV, 8
7 DAL, 6
10@NJ730
8 0 PHI 7
12 @WAS 1
10 SAC 8
14 G CHA 7
11 @CHI 830
15 G S 8
14 POR 8
150TOA 7
17 SA 8
19 @SAC 9
17 "LAC 8
21 @ CLE 7
21
LAC , 1030
23@SA , 8
22 'iJ LAL 1030
26
CLE, 7
26 WAS B
27 @ IND 7
29 ONY 730
Jl MEM 8
29 PHO 8
J1 !« BOS 7
4 PHO 8
S@CHA7
~ CHI 8
7 PHI B
! a. t1EM ll
B @WAS 7
8 ~AC ll
11 a. N \" 7 30
10LAL8
12 ll DEl 130
12 ORL 8
14 @DEN 1030 14 POR 8
15 POA 8
16 @ TOR 1
17 @ PHI 2
17 TOR 6
19@ LAL 10 30
19 1ND 8
21 @ SEA 10 30 22 LAC 8
22@POR1 0
24@ MIA 730
24 DET 8
26 HOU8 !
26 ATL 8
28 PHI B
28 UTAH 8
29@SA830
30 SAC 3 30
31 MEM 8
F1 @MILS
F2 DAL B
4 @G$ , 1030
5 @ UTAH, 9
4 HOU, 9 30
6 OOS , 1
8 @SEA, 10
9 0808,7
9@POR10
8 CMEM,8
11 OWAS,7
11 G S, 8
9 DEN, 6
13 OTOR, e
11 0 UTAH, 9
13 @ ORL 6
13 CHI, 3 30
14 WAS 8
0
18 0 MIA, 730
15 N J 8
16 SA 9
27
23
17 CLE , 8
24 MINN 1030
24 0 LAC 1030 27 DEN 7
26
27 ATL, 930
M2 liZ BOS 730
28 @ CAL, 8 30
4 DA.L 1030
M1 G S , 2
27@POR8
26 0 UTAH 9
M2 CHA 9
M2 DAL 10 30
6 INO 9 30
4 fOR 8
M2 GS 8
4 UTAH 8
5 DEN 3
8 LAC 1030
7@LAC1030
4 MIL 8
6 TOR 7
1 MEM 10 30
10@ DAL 930
8@SAC10
6 @80S 6
9 NJ 8
8@ LAL 1030
12 @ CHA 7
11 @UTAH 9
8 CHA 8
12 MIL 8
11 @SAC 10
14 @WAS 7
12@POR10
14@SA830
1p =MIA 7
13 CHI 330
15@PHI7
14 POR 8
11 =ORL 7
16 MEM 8
16 ORL 1030
17 @MIA 8
16 @ N 0 8
13 DAL 1
18 @C HI 830
18 @DEN 9
18 @ IND 730
18 MIN 8
15@ DAl 830
19 BOS 8
19 SAC 10 30
20 SEA 9 30
20 PHD 4
16 @SA 9
21 @ DAL 830
21 POR 10 30
22 @UTAH 9
24 @NJ 730
18@MEM8
23 @ MIN 8
23 MIL 10 30
24@0EN9
26 N 0 8
20 HOU 7 30
25 HOU B
25 WAS 10 30
'27 PHI 7 30
28 @CHI 830
25 @ MEM 8
23 NO 8
27 @ MINN 3 30 29 NY 1030
29 SEA 6
26@NJ 1
28 ClE 8
290ClE7
31 MIN 1030
AI 0Mil83C
27 LAC 3 30
A1 @ HOU 830
30 ONJ , 730
A2 OSA 830
3 l.Al, 8
31 @lAL 1030
2 MIA 8
5 @ATL 730
A1 ODET8
3 OMEM 8
5 DEN, 8
A1 OPHO 9
5
6 DEN 8
6
8 MIA,8
8 UTAH 8
6 UTAH 9 30
B 0 SEA 1030 10 CHA 8
10 POR 7
0
9 s~.
11 0 DAL, 830
9 0 ATL 7
12 @ PHO tO
12 Uta~'&gt;, 10 30
11 PHO , 1030
13 ()
8
13 o HOU.e30
13@DEN9
15 0 PHO 10
15 SAC, 10 30
15 0 DEN , 9
15 @UTAH, 9
150SEA 10 30
16 NO , 1030
17 DAL 3 30
16@ SA , 830
17 SEA , 330
16 @ LAC 1030
18 OHOU830
18 0 G S 1030 18 SA, 8
18 0 N 0 8
18 MIN, 8
2() 0
20 0 POA 10
20 DAL 8
20 SA 9
20 LAC, 8

N3 SEA 10 30
5 @ POR, 10
6@GS1030
8DET1030
10 @ IND 7
12 @NY 730
13@ CHI 830
16 TOR 10 30
17 @LAl1030
20 HOU 3 30
21 PHO 330
25 NJ 1030
26 @GS 1030
28 GS 330
29 CLE 10 30
01 IND. 10 30
4 MIN,1030
6 CHA, 10 30
11 LAL, 10.30
13 BOS, 1030
14 0 UTAH 9
17 0 MIN, 8
19 MEM 930
21 NO 1030
26 0 HOU 830
27 0 MEM. 8
29 UTAH, 10 30
31 SA,930
J2 PHIL 3 30
3 @DEN 9
5 POR 10 30
8 PHO 4
11 @SEA 10
12 SEA 10 30
14 M1am1 10 30
15 @SAC 10
17 SAC 330
19 @SA 830
20@ OAL 830
22@N08
24 DAL 10 30
26 LAL 10 30
28 # POR 10
29GS1030
31 NV 1030
F30MEM8
4 til MIL 8.30
6 0 PHIL, 1

15 ORL 7 \
23 0 PH0.9

3 OATI.,6
3 FHO,8.30
5 OG.S, 1030
OCHA.7
7 OLAL,1030 6 OSA 830
9
10
1030

NO ,B·

N2 DEN
N3 WAS 8
3 @UTAH
5 HOU 8
6@0AL830
5SA 1030
7ATL930
9@HOU830
9 @NO 8
10 LAL 8
10 @ MEM 8
12 G S 8
12 @ OAL 1
14 @SEA 8
17@P0R10
13@ HOU 830
19@ SAC 1030
17 LAC 10 30
19 @: PHO 9
20@GS 10 30
21 CHI 9 30
22 SA 8
23 MIL 10 30
24 SEA 8
26 @MIN , 8
26 SAC... 10 30
28 NO 930
27 OAL 8
30 @MIL 8
30 SAC 8
01 @CHI 830
01 G NY , 730
3135 1030
3 PHI 8
8 PH0,1030
4 COAL 7
11 Ol.AC, 1030
7 N¥ , 8
12 ORL 9 30
8 OATL 730
10 @MIA , 730
14 0 SEA 10
18 0 SAC 1030 11 DET 8
17 WAS 1030
13 CLE 8
20 MEM 1030
15 CHI 8
17 N J, 8
22 NO 1030
25 MIA 3
19 0 LAC 930
28 TOR 10 30
20 0 LAL 1030
J2 DEN 9 30
22 OQS,IO
4 @SA 830
23 0 PH0 ,9
5@0AL830
27 LAC 8
7 HOU 1030
29 BOS 8
1Q@MIN8
Jl @MIN B
1200EN9
3 UTAH, 8
6 @DET7
13 CLE 1030
15 @GS 1030
7 NO 8
17 UTAH 1030
11 INC 8
14 @C HA7
19 MIN 1030
15 MIL 8
21 GS 1030
25 SEA 1030
17 HOU 8
26 @LAC 1030 19@PH09
28 NJ 1030
21 @DEN
30 CHA 930
22 C UTAH 9
F1 POA 1030
25 ORL 8
3 SA . 1030
26@CLE7
6 @HOU 330 29 ATL 8
70ATL, 730
31 @N0 , 8
9 ONJ 730
F1 PHO 8
10 0 DET,!!
3 LAC, 8
13 0 CLE 330
8 MIN,$
15 UTAH 10 30
9 OPHI,7
22 90S 1030
11 POR 8
23 0 POR 10
13 0 IND 6
26 DET 10:30
0

0 TOR, 1
28 ONV,730

0 PHO 10
7 HOU 1030
10 SAC, 330

16 BOS, 7
0 WAS, 7
25 OEN 8
@SA,8:30

6 OTOR 7

a
a

I

2 PHO 8

23 SEA 8

25 0 SEA. 10 30

30SAC330
8 DEN,930

s

N3 ALT 9
5 @PHI 7
6 @ NJ 8
9 @CHI 830
10@CLE8
13 SAC 9
16@ DAL 830
17 @ N 0 8
19 LAL 9
21 @LAC 330
22 CHI 9
24 MIL 9
26 N 0 9
30 @UTAH 9
01 CLE 9
3 MIN 9
5 @ POR 9
7 GS 9
8@ LAL lQJO
10 CHA 9
13 ORL 9
15 UTAH 1JJ30
17 @ SEA 10 30
18 WAS 9
20 @DEN 9
23 MEM 9
28 TOR 8
28 SA 830
29@N08
J2 POR 8
4 e, MIN 8
51Q:HOU9
8illllAC4
9 IND 8
11 MIA 9
12 @: UTAH 9
14 @ IND 7
15 @WAS 7
17 @ 0ET330
19 @ MEM 9
21 SA 9
23 NJ 61
25@NY730
26 @MIL8
28@80S730
30@TOR330
FI~MEM6

2@ MIN, 6
5 NY 9
8@ SAC 1000
11 SEA 9
13 @ G S 9
14 UTAH 9
17 -DAL 1030
23 LAC 9
26 @ CAL830
27 BOS 8
MJ@ DET 1030
5 POR 9
6 @S EA 9
9 SA 9
II HOU g
13@DEN9
18 G S 9
20 @ MEM 4
22 @ ATL 7 30
23 @CHA 7
25 @MIA 8
26 @ORL 7
28 DEN 9
30 PHI 9
At MIN 9
3 @HOU 830
5 LAL 1000
8 @GS 1030
9 HOU 10 DO
11 @LAL 10 30
12 NO 1030
15 LAC 10
16 SAC , 10
18 DEN 10 00
20 @SAC 1030

N3 @GS 1030
5 LAC 10
7 @TOR 1
9 @NJ 730
10@BOS7
13 TOR 10
17 MEM 10
19 MIL 10
21 HOU 8
23@MIA730
24 @ OAL 7
26 @ DAL1
28 N J 6
30 SEA 10
D4 C SEA, 10 30
5 PHO 9
9 BOS 1030
10 @UTAH,
12 UTAH, 8
14 @MIN 8
15 OCLE , 7
17 0 All 730
18 ODET.730
20 @CHI 830
22 @MIL. 8
27 PHI 10
30 S.A,1030
J1 G S 10
2 @PHO 6
5@ LAC 1030
7 MIA. 10
9@NY730
10 @PHI 7
12@WAS7
14 @ N 0 8
15 @MIN 8
18 @SAC10
19 CLE 10
22 M1N 10
24 S A 10
26 DAL 10
28 LAC 10
Fl@LAL1030
2 DEN, 10
4 CHA 10
5 SAC 10
9 N 0 , 10
11 @MEMS
13 @HOU,830
14 0 CHA, 7
16 @ INO 7
23 LAL 10
25 ATL 10
27 MIN 8
Ml DEl 10
4 IND 10
5 @ PHO 9
7@DEN9
9 CHI 10
12 MEM 10
14 @ MEM 8
16 @ HOU 8 30
17@DAL8 30
19 OAL 10
21 @LAC 1030
22 @SAC 10
24 SEA 10
26 NV 10
28 WAS 10
30 HOU 10
A1 @SEA 1030
2 DEN , 10
5 0 UTAH 9
8 G S 10
8 SAC 10
.10 @ N 0 7
12 @S A 630
14 DAL 1030
15-@G S 1030
17 UTAH 8
19 @DEN9
20 LAL 10

N2 @DAL 830
3 @SA 830
6 @HOU 830
9 TOR 10
10@SEA1030
13 @PH09
14 DEN 9
16 CHI 10
19 MEM 1030
21 MIL 9
23 HOU 10
26 @lAL 1030
28 MIN 9
30 @ MEM 8
01 ON0 , 8
3 IND 1030
5 BOS 9
7 CHA 10
10 @MIN , 8
11 @ IN0,8
14 0MIL, 8
16 LAL 1030
19 N0,9
21 WAS 10
23 MIA 1030

26 GS

9

31 0 UTAH. 8
J2 SA 9
4 @NY 730
5 @TOR ,7
7 @Al l 730
8 @NO 8
11 DEN 10
13 UTAH 10
15 LAC 10
17@LAC330
18 POR 10
20 CLE , 10 30
23 SA 9
25 N J 10
27@S A930
28@ HOU 930
30@ MIN 330
F1 SEA 10
2@GS 1030
4 NY 10
@
8 PHO, 10
10 @SEA 10 30
11 DAL, 10 30
13 0 BOS , 6
15 C CH I 830
16 CNJ 7•30
22 ATL 10
24 0 DAL 930
26@ PHI 730

5 POR, 10

27 @WAS 6

M1 @ CHA 7
2@0AL 7
4@MIA9
6 DET 3 30
8 MEM 10
11 LAC 10
13 HOU 330
15 OAL 10
11@ GS 1030
19@ LAC 1030
20 GS 9
22 POR 10
24 DAl 10
26@DEN9
28 PHI 10
30@ DET 730
AI 0 CLE , 8
3 MIN, 3 30
5 SEA 10
8 @PQR 10
10 LAL 330
15 @LAL. 10 30
Hl 0 PHO, 10
18 0 UTAH, 9
20 PHO 1030

N3 SAC 830
5 @ LAL 1030
7@SEA8
10 GS 830
12 MIA B
13 @All 7
16NY830
18@PHI7
19 OBOS 730
21 @TOR 1
22 @ MEM B
24 DAL 830
26 @DEN 9
27 UTAH 8 30
30 @OAL 830
D1 PHI, 8 !JO
3 OET. 8
4 @MIL, 630
6 0CHI,830

8 SEA, 830

9 OHOU , 8
11 CLE, 830
15 ORL, 830
17 ONO,S

18 GS,830
OORL 7
23 MIN 8
26 BOS 7
28 PHO. 830
30 0 PQR
22

31 @ LAC, 9 30
J2 @SAC 9
4 LAL 830
6 !NO 930
8DEN130
10 @UTAH 9
12 MIL 830
14 DAL 8
15 @HQU 830
17 WAS 5
19 LAC 830
21 @ PHO 9
23@SAC9
24 @ POA 10
27 SAC 9 30
29 NO 830
31 i SEA 10

F3 0 LAL. 10 30
8 OCHA.7
9 UWA$,7
11 0 NJ , 730
13@ MIA, 1
16 0 N 0 9
23 HOU, 9
26 MEf.4 830

280CLE7

M2 TOR 8 30
4 CHI 830
6 UTAH 7
8 NJ 830
9 @ PHO 9
12 DEN 830
14 NO 830
16 MIN 9
18 CHA 830
20 @DET330
210N'f730
23 @ IND 7
25 All 830
27 HOU 1
30 SEA , 8 30
AI 0 DEN,
2 LAL , 830
6 LAC, B 30
7 0 DAL, B
9@ LAC, 103(1
10 C G S g
12POR830
13 0 UTAH 1
16 MEM, 830
18 0 MEM
20 OM1N , 8

a

N3 0 LAC, 10 30
5ATL 1030
7 SA 8
9@DEN9
10 SAC 10 30
12 TOR 10 30
14 MEM 8
160PH17
17 @NJ 730
19 @TOR7
21 @ BOS 6
23 @MIN 8
24 0 MEM. 8
26 NJ 1030
28 IND. 9
30 0 POR 10
01 UTAH, 10
4 POR 1030
8 OSA , 830
9 0 OAL, 830
11 90S 10
14 lAl 10
17 PHO, 1030
22 DEN, 10
27 OUTAH 9
28 PHI, 10

30 OATL2
31 0 CH"- 1
J3
5
6
9

@MIA 730
OOAL 7
@WAS 7
MIA 8
11 LAC 10
12@ LAC 1030
14GS 1030
16 CLE 9
18 DEN 10
21 MIN , 10 30
23 UTAH 9
25 @ LAL, 10 30
26 @UTAH 9
28 @GS ,1030
31 SA 10
F1 0 SAC 10
5 CHA tO
8 NO 10
10 SAC 1030
11 0 PH0,9
13 D~L. 8

18 GS .10

22 li HOU,830
23 G NO 8
25 MIN, 10 30
27@Mil 3
M1 @ IND 7
2@CLE7
4DET 1030
6 PHO 9
8 HOU 10
11 CHI , 10 30
13 @NV 6
15@ CHI 830
16@ DET 730
18 OAL 1030
20 @ LAL 930
22 MIL 10
24 0 POA TO
25NV 1030
27 WAS 8
29@MEM8
30@SA830
AI POR 1030

3 0 GS .6
5 0 SAC, 10

8 W-. 1030
9 0 DEN,9
11 HOU 10
13 DAL , 10

15 N0 , 1030
17 0 MIN, 330

N3 LAL, 1030
5 @GR , 1030
60DEN9
8 DEN , 9
10 TOR 9
13 DET 9
16 OCHA 7
17 OOAL 7
19@ MIA730
20 @ATL7
22 NO 9
24 CHI 9

26 HOU

9

27 @SA 830
30 PHO 9

01

C SEA,

Busch, Earnhurdt and Newman are the
only drivers Ill contention for the cham·
p10nshtp who wtll start in the top I0
Gordon, 74 pomts behmd Busch. will
start 15th .
Elliott Sadler. lourth among the
chasers, will sta1t 33rd But that doesn "t
mean he can't win. Busch started 3f1th
two years ago : but grabbed the lead w1th
91 laps to go and held ofT ~ohnny Benson
to wm.
Sunday's race, and a . truck r.1ce
Saturday, wtll be the first for the senes
s1nce the track was completely resurf.tced after the spring races.
Gordon. whose btd tor a thtrd consecutive VICtOJy here ended tn the spnng
when a chunk of track came loose Ill d
turn and damaged hts car, struggled to
rega1n that ad&gt;antage even after testmg
last week.
"The new surface is defmilely dtlferent and we·re betng challenged by it
nght now,'· satd the four·ttme senes
chump1on who had won three consecutive poles here. "We're good, but we're
not good enough,"
Reigning series champion M.ttt
Kenseth was seventh-fastest 111 practice.
but qualifted 25 th
" We had a good car I'm JUSt an 1d1ot
ptetty much," said Kenseth , seventh tn
pomts "I was just trying to be mce and
smooth wtth the car and I was ob; tously
smooth going that slow."

Chase for title turning into a three-man race
BY JENNA FRYER

Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N C.
E veryth mg went wrong for
Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon
m the ftfth round ot
NASCAR' s championship
chase. Sttll. ncllher lost
ground m their pursuit of the
Nextel Cup title
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has to be
wondcnng what ll wtll take to
reclaun the top posttton He
dtd everythmg nght at Lowe's
Motor Speedway, fmished
thtrd 111 the race, and sttll trails
Busch by 24 pomts in the
standings wnh Gordon closing 1n behmd hun
How so'? Be..:ause Bus..:h
and Gordon were able to
overcome every obstacle
thrown thetr wdy
From a lap-one acctdcnt
involvmg both to late -r,tc:c
spms and dodgmg spt lled ot l
on the track. they proved to be
true champtonship contenders
BusL·h lu11shetl
fomth, two spots beh1nd
Gordon.
''I've 1ust got to keep tinJSh ·
mg ahead ol them." dn exasperated
Earnhardt
sa1d.
"Kurt·s got h1s A g.une.
We"ve got our A gltme go111g
on nght now. we·ve JUst gut
to keep hav1ng the same kmd
of weekend. Ym1 jUst try to
• wh~tt you c dll get .,
get
The 'ixth round ol the

Chase
ts
Sunday
m
Marttnsvtlle, Va .. and for all
practtcal purposes, tt's a
three- man race.
Unless all three ot the top
dnvers have massiYe problems - and two of them did
in Charlotte but still managed
to overcome them - there's
no way the rest of the contenders can challenge
And tt's unlikely the/11
gain ground at Martinsvtlle,
wilete all three of the lead dnvers have fine records.
Busch
has
two
Martmsville wins, including
one in 2002 from the 36th
s t&lt;~rtm g pos1tton. the Ltrthest
back ,J race wmner has started
there .
- E.trnhardt hus ftve co n·
secut1ve top-live fintshes at
Mal1!1lS\tlle. the longest top·
live stre.tk among any acuve
dnwr.
Gordon
1s
th~
Martmsvtllc master In 23
st,trl~.

he has five victories,

ftve poles. 12 top-f1ves and 17
top- IOs He swept both poles
and races 111 20m. and has led
46 percent of the laps dunng
the past three races
When reminded the scene
was shtltmg to Martmwille.
Gordon shouted with glee.
But a new surface on the
V1rgmia short truck h&lt;ts htm
wonted.
"I wtsil they hatln·t r~paved
MartinS\illc because I thmk

we had a btg edge on the competttton wtth the old condt·
tions," he satd. "The new con·
dtttons are closing the compe·
tilton up on us a little bit."
Busch used one of hts team
testmg sessions to prac11ce on
the new surface, and knows it
wtll present challenges to the
contenders
"The new surface there ts
gomg to provtde for a different type of racmg.'' he said.
"It's goi ng to be smgle-file for
a while and a matter of staymg out of trouble.
" Another element that's
gomg tu be
new to
M.lrtmsvtlle ts the center of
corner speed. There are g01 ng
to be guys th,n gam so U1Uch
speed through the centet ot
the corner on somebody that
you·' e got to pt otect yow
rddiator. sb n\ !!Oing to be a
b.tttle."
All I0 ol the contenders
have proved capable of adapt·
in~. but none are better thdn
Gordon. That's whv several
competitors .tre p1ck1ng the
lour-tune senes champton to
h.tve a Iifth tnle at the end of
the season
G01don ISn't denytng the
lo gic.
~.A lot ol the membeiS ol
thts team were here when we
won the champtonsh1p tn
2001." he sa1tl ·The chemtstr)'. on top ol the expenence
we have. allows us to be a
c

very good team and make
comebacks."
Gordon should excel this
weekend. He should have
earned hts sixth Marttnsvtlle
race m the spring. but a chunk
of concrete broke loose and
damaged hts car after he led
180 of the first 272 laps
It took four p1t stops to tintsh the damage, and Gordon
sttll managed a sixth-place
fmis h.
"We would love to wm thts
thing. but it's hard to ptck
anybody who ts a f,tvorite
nght now," Gordon satd. ''I
know the past expenence
plays a role. but when you
look at the way the c1Mmp1·
onship is this year. I just thtnk
it 's putting the best c.tr and
team out there week tn and
week out"

appeal left him
feeling foolish
BY HANK KURZ, JR.

Nextel Cup

Assoctated Press
MARTINSVILLE. Va
Dale Earnhardt Jr thought
hiS appeal of .1 25-polllt
penalty for \We,mng on
telc vtslon would be overturned '·on the drop nl c~
hat '
When n w.tsn't. he lei!
like he 'd wasted hts lime
"I was reall y fn1s1r.neu b}
the &lt;~ppeal." Earnhanlt s.t1d
Friday ot hts btd to h.t~e the
pomt-docking and $ 10.000
tine overturned
Th e pen.tlty was unposed
tor Ill s use ol vulgaruy during d Victory L111e 1ntet ·
\tew earlier thts month at
Talladega Superspeed\\ay
NASCAR turned down the
appedl thts week
'·I woultln·l have wcllt
down there all the w.ty to
Daytona tf I dtdn 't feell1ke
it v.as worth the tnp."
Earnhardt satd "They made
you feel like they v.ere lis tenmg to you while you
were there. but I thmk the
dectSIOn was already m.tde
before the wheels hll the
ground. you know.''
Earnhardt's penalty. simt·
lw to two others handed
down by NASCAR thi s
year, cost hun the top spot
m the Nextel Cup sene;·
I0-race c1Jamp1onshtp play·
off He trails senes leader
Kurt Busch by JUSt 24
pomts.
"I tried to state mv case
and I thought exactly ·what I
sa1d anybody would h.tve
turned' it over on the drop of
a hat .'" Earnhardt satd after
for
qualifying
third
race
at
Sunday's
Mart1nsvtlle
Speedv.ay

Top 10
Driver Standings

1 Kurt Busch .
5,850
2 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 5 826
3 Jeff Gordon .
5 776 .
4 Elliott Sadler . .. . 5.693
5 Mark Martin
5,664
6 Tony Stewart ..... 5,646
5,635
7 Man Kenseth
8 J1mm1e Johnson . 5,623
9 Ryan Newman
5,579
10. Jeremy Mayf1eld . 5,501
·· Rut I guc-.. . . I felt more

strong l) .1hout 11 th.lll ,tn)'·
nne d . . c ··
Th&lt;' llc.u1ng. he sdltL left
hun kel1n g loolish
"I lelt l1ke I \\d.., gett1ng a
f.ur tn.tl hut 11 \1 ·"not 4u1te
~..,

I

lu11

'illU

i.!Ue:......

t:.arnh.udt wh(he lme bther
\\-U1l

d

1l'c on.l-t'¥lll!.!

"l'\l'll

titles
It \\ou id "be like
1\ASCAR lostng theu
appe.tl that v.e held at DEl
(Dale E.u nhardt Inc 1 ·
In nHktng Its ruhng.
NASC\R s&lt;11d 11 upheld the
penalties because 11 had
tssued tepe.ued "arlllngs to
dnvers .tbout "'canng un
te l e\11\IUil

Th~ N:~uonal Sto'k Car
R.1C1ng: Commh-.JOn th~u
heard the appeal "1s there
tot
d111 er' to
use ...
NASCAR spokc,man J1m
Hunter sa1d "He's certamlv
emnled to h1s tee ltngs about
the COillllli&gt;SIOil and dll\ thmg ebe 111 NASC AR. .
"We respect hiS op1111011
It doesn't change anythtng .
But theie IS ,1 bn~ht side
lor Earnhardt.
•
"II lUst k11lllnf pushed the
team 1\1 1.1cc h:1rdc1 ... he

. . ~ud

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JOHN DEERE

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE '

10

4 0 CAL, 8.30
6 MIA 9

8 ORL 9
10 POR, 1030
12 0POA8
14
15
17
19

LAC,9
OPHO 1030
0 BOS 7·30
ONY. 3
20 OPHt,7

@TOR, 7
27 SEA. 9
29 0 LAC, 10:30

Little track poses bi·g challenge
for championship contenders

22

31 SAC 8
J2 @ HOU, 8 30
3 @MEM 8
5 PHI 9
7 @GH1830
8 :41 MIL 8 30
10 SA 9
12 PHO 9
13 @SAC 10
15 CLE 9
17@ LAL 1030
22 MEM, 9
23@SEA9
26 SEA 9
28 @MIN 8
29 NJ , 9
F1 CHA i

5 N0 , 9
7 NY , 9
SODEN I)
11 MIN,9
14@ PH0,9
@ w.

15
1030
23 OAL, 9
25 BOS. 9
27 U HOU .
28 LAC,9

~

M2 All 9
4 liZ N 0 8
6 @SA 7
8 IND 9
11 MEM 9
13@0ET6
15@CLE7
16@ 1ND7
18 @NJ 730
19 @WAS 7
22 L..Al 9
24 WAS 9
26 MIL 9
28 HOU 9
30 DEN 9
AI GS , 9
6 POR, 9
tl 0 MIN, 9:30

0 NO 6
00AL,830
12 0 LAC. 10'30
6
9

13 SA ,10:30
15 MIN, 9
17 OPOR,&amp;
18 SAC, i

19 0 DAL 830
20 Ci HOU 8,30 20 0 GS , 1030
AP

'

Sunday, October :!4, 2004

Newman wins pole at Martinsville Earnhardt: Failed

I

BY HANK KURZ, JR.

N3@PH09

Page B7 .

BY HANK KURZ, JR.

Assoctated Press
MARTINSVILLE . Va Midwdy through thc1r I().
race playoff, the Nextel Cup
contenders are dt the shortest
and slowest oval on the
NASCAR c1rcun - , a place
four-lime series ch.1mpion
Jeff Gordon inSISts can be as
damaglllg to lttle hopes as
the fastest tracks.
The nearly llat half-mile
Martinsville
Speedway
reminds no one of high ·
banked
and
ultra-fasi
Talladega. but presents its
own set of problems.
"At Talladega, everybody
talks about avotdmg the big
one," said Gordon, third in
the compettllon amon~ the
top 10 racers "There, it s one
big wreck that collects 17
cars . At Martinsvtlle, n's 17
little wrecks that collect several cars.''
Gordon has firsthand
knowledge of the problems a
driver mtght encounter at
Martinsville, where he's won
three consecutive poles and
has five career vtctories
It could also have been
three straight vtctones. but
Gordon was unlucky in
Martinsvtlle's spnng race .
Running second to Dale
Earnhardt Jr, Gurdon's
Chevrolet was damaged by a

chunk of concrete that broke
loose from the tr,tck, ,md he
ltmshed SIXth.
Even worse for Gordon.
now 74 pomts behind .series
leadet Kurt Busch .mtl :\0
back of Earnhardt. w.Js man ·
agement's del:ISJtm to Iesui face since the last race.
"The new racing surface ts
smooth w1th a lot 7,f gri'p,'" he
Satd. "But I WISh the)' had
v.aued to make the changes. I
thought we had a btg edge on
the competttton."
Many dnvers welcomed
the resurfacing, even though
som~
have
wondered
whether a faster surface wtll
make for a one-groove track
with passmg virtually nonexistent.
.
''I'm somewhat fearfu l of
that," satd Tony Stewart,
sixth m the standings. "But
no one wtll truly know unttl
we all get there and start runnmg on it"
Two years ago, Busch surprised even himself by wm·
mng on the .526-mtle o\(al.
In that race,&lt;\3 quick pit stop
with 91 laps to go gave him
the ledtl, and taught htm that
ttmtn g - and luck - are
keys " to succeedmg on the
narrow !tack with extremely
tight turns.
"It's going to have the
intensity like it always does,
but yet the top· I0 guys are
gomg to feel that pressure ol
•

when to p1t .wd what dccl·
stons tu m,lke,' ' he s . .Hd

Unlike l,trget tracks." he1c
the leaders lrequcntly p11
.dmost
111
unison
M.trtlnwille' s slov.er speed
cncour,tgcs some to stay out
longer. to get track pos1t10n
vital to success as the race
wmds down and the best cars
lead the wa}
The condnwns also put a
premtum on team performance
'"It\ one of those tracks
where you c.tn be pretty good
and have a bad pit stop and 11
costs you a lot of track post·
liOJi.'' satd Emnhat dt, a top·
five fmisher in each of the
last five races here wtthout
winmng. "It's hard to gei tt
back, especially wuh the new

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Complicating that effort,
satd Greg Zipadellt, crew
chief for Stewart, ts trying to
battle back against 42 other
cars all try mg to wm
"Martinsville is the type of
place where if something can
happen, then it wtll happen to
somebody,
somehow,"
Ztpadelli satd. "Plus, tempers
and thmgs tend to get stirred
up there: and tt's rc&lt;~lly easy
to get caught up ill someone
else's mess
"Hopefully we ' ll stay fast
and JUSt get through it all lo
get us a good fimsh."

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�WORLD

2004

B

own re

0

SERIES

T

S

0

· N

RED ·s ox
S

L

T

0

U

I

S

NALS

BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press
: BOSTON _ Albert PuJ"ols
delighted in denting the Green
!ylonster, Keith Foulke kidded
'!bout the wall messing with
his mind.
: For a day. at least. the St.
I:.ouis Cardinals and Boston
Red Sox, were just happy to
be at Fenway Park . Roger
Clemens. the New York
Yankees and the other obstailles were out of the way - up
riext, the I OOth World Series.
· They
turned
serious
Saturday night in Game I,
with Boston knuckleballer
lim Wakefield facing Woody
Williams.
· "I think I appreciate where
we are," Boston manager
terry Francona said Friday.
"But as far as that goes. that's
if.·The task at hand is all that's
on our mind. because the task
isn't over. When it's over. we
can sit back and think about a
lot of things. and I'm sure that
willl)ring a smile to my face."
The Series opens in the city
where it all began back in
1903, with Cy Young throwing the first pitch at
Huntington Avenue Grounds.
That was only nine years
before Fenway Park opened.
A big sign outside the stadium
Friday
proclaimed
it
"America's Most Beloved
Ballpark" and it's cenainly a
popular place to visit - every
Red Sox home game this year
was a sellout.
And. it's quirky.
There's the 37 _foot-high
Green Monster looming
beyond left field, just 310 feet
from home plate down the
line. Across the way, there's
Pfesky'sh Pole in f!ghht , 302 feket
rom orne, Wtt a tnc Y
fence that's only 3-to-5 feet
hi~t•s a neat environment.

Tony La Russa said. "A lot of
passion. a lot of knowledge of
the game."
Boston fans cenainly know
the history. too.
The Red Sox are making
their first Series appearance
since 1986 and trying to win
their first title since 1918.
Tl • f ·
t
th t
ley re acmg a earn a
beat them in seven games in
both !967 and 1946.
Now that they' ve pulverized
.
those pmstriped Yankees,
becoming the first major
· f
·
league team to wm our 111 a
row in the postseason after
losing the first 'three games,
the Red Sox will try to roll
over a _Cardinals' team that
won 1OS games, the most in
the majors.
Last year. the Red Sox's
grounds crew painted the
Series logo on the field before
h
h
r h AL
1 e seven! game 0 1 e
championship series in New
York. only to have the
Yankees rally from a four-run
deficit to win on Aaron
Boone's lith-inning homer
off Wakefield.
· ·'No premature logos, 1 can
ass ure you." Red Sox prcsident Larry Lucchino said earlier this week.
On Wednesday, Boston
went ahead early in Game 7
and beat New York 10-3. After
celebrating in front .of Yankee
Stadium 's monuments on
Wednesday night. the Red Sox
took Thursday off, then
worked out at midday Friday
in empty Fen way on a cool

and cloudy day.
The logo was on the field
this time, for real.
There figures to be a boistcrous crowd for the opener,
with dry weather forecast and
the temperature in the low
40 s.
"This is all bonus time,"
said Kevin Millar, who will
play first base for the Red Sox
in Boston but make way for
Pans very close to the ball- ALCS MVP · David Oniz
field," Cardinals manager when the designated hitter

Regular Season
STARTERS

.
AVG

AB

R

H

HR

RBI

.247
.296

385
463

28
67

95
137

5
18

50
73

.331
.297

592
508'•

133

74

196
151

46
18

123
74

.307

~53

.264

523

91
93

170
138

5
17

38
82

Rolen, StL
.314
Mueller, Bas .283
Shortlltop
Renteria, Stl .287
Cal)rera, Bos .294
Outfield
Sanders, StL .260
Ramirez. Bas .308
Edmonds, Stl .301
Damon, Bas
.304
Walker, Stl
.298
Nixon, Bas
.315
Designated Hitter
Mabty, StL
.296
Ortiz, Bas
.301

500
399

109
75

·157
113

34
12

124
57

586
228

64

168
67

10
6

72
31

446
568
498
621
258
149

64

116
175
150
189
77
47

22
43
42
20
17
6

67
130
111
94
47
23

71
175

13
41

40
139

Catcher

Matheny, StL
Varitek, Bos
First Baae
Pujols, StL
Millar, Bas

s.c:onc1

B•••

Womack, StL
Bellhom, Bas

Third Base

Red Sox and Redbirds
in red-hot series

Revisiting World
Series history
How the Red Sox and
Cardinals have fared
against each other in
past fall classics:

240
582 .

33

108
102
123·
51
24
32
94

Sunday, October 24, 2004
r

•

Different strokes

A single call brings
whennee _d

YEAR WINNER RESULT

1967 St Louis
1946 St Louis

4·3

Fenway Park
1912
34,898
Grass

Starting
pitchers,
game time

Sat, at Boston
STL Williams (11-B)
BOS Wakefield (12·10) • 8 p.m.

TV: Fo&lt; All t1mes Eastern

Sun., Oct. 24 at Boston
STL Marquis (1 S. 7)
BOS Schilling (21·6) • 8:10p.m.

Thurs., Oct. 2B at St. Louis' • 8:25 p.m.

Busch Stadium
1966
50,345
Grass

Opened
Capacity

Surface

Tues.. Oct. 26 at St. Louis

80S Martinez (16-9)
STL (TBD) • 8:30p.m.

Wed., Oct 27 at St. Louis
BOS Lowe (14·12)
STL (TBD)• 8:25 p.m.

! Sat, Oct. 30 at Boston' • 7:55p.m. ! Sun., oct. 31 at Boston' • 7:55p.m.
AP

comes out of the lineup at
Busch Stadium.
St. Louis. which beat
Houston 5-2 in Game 7
Thursday night to return to the
World Series for the first time
since 1987, didn't anive until
early evening for its workout.
Reggie Sanders and the
other St. Louis outfieltlers
spent a lot of time practicing
how to field balls hit off the
high wall. Manny Ramirez
and the other Boston hoppers
figure to take aim in that
direction.
"The way these guys are hitting in the ballpark, it's amazing how far they hit the ball
over that wall," Williams said.

"Hopefully. the balls will special assignment instructor
bounce off the wall and our with the team. "I can die
guys will make a good play happy then."
and keep them to a single."
Pesky was blamed by some
Outside the park, fans for Boston's Game 7 loss to
dressed in Boston hats and jer- the Cardinals in · 46. with
seys walked around, looking some saying he held the relay
for a way to get into the too long on Harry Walker's
games.
double.
allowing
Enos
How prized are tickets?
Slaughter to score in his mad
On eBay, '$5, I 00 was bid for dash from first.
four bleacher seats for the
Boston didn't make it back
opener. Want a better view? to the World Series until 1967,
Someone bid $7,700 for four • when it faced .the Cardinals
box seats.
yet again, and Bob Gibson
"I want to see us win one pitched a three-hitter on three
time. b~cause it's been a long days' rest to beat Jim Lonborg.
time coming,'' said 85-yearSt. Louis, which last won
old Johnny Pesky, a former the Series in 1982, features a
Red Sox star who ' now is a powerful lineup that includes

ballpark in the big leagues
and one of baseball 's jewels,
wi II be hosting the Series for
the first time since 1986,
when Boston left home with a
3-2 lead only to watch
Mookie Wilson's grounder
squib through Bill Buckner's
legs in Game 6. With it went
perhaps the best chance for
the Red Sox to break Babe
Ruth\ Curse.
Now that they've pulverized those pinstriped Yankees,
becoming the first major
league team "io win four in a
row in the postseason after
losing the first three games,
the Red Sox will try to roll
over a Cardinals' team that
won I 05 games. the most in
the majors.

"I think I appreciate where
we are ," Boston manager
Terry Francona said. "But as
far as that goes, that's it. The
task at hand is all that's on our
mind, because the task isn't
over. When it's over, we can
sit back and think about a lot
of things, and I'm sure that
will bring a smile to my face.''
Last year. the Red Sox
grounds crew paiiHed the
Series logo on the field before
the seventh game of the AL
championship series in New
York, only to have the
Yankee s rally from a four-run
deficit to win on Aaron
Boone 's II th-inning homer
off Tim Wakefield.
"No premature logos, I can
assure you," Red Sox presi-

dent Larry Lucchino said earlier this week.
On Wednesday, Boston
went ahead early in Game 7
and beat New York I 0-3.
After celebrating in front of
Yankee Stadium's monuments

"

1245 Eastern Avenue

.'f,

Gallipolis

446·1375

on Wednesday night, the Red
Sox took Thursday off, then
worked out at midday Friday
in empty Fenway on a cool
and cloudy day.
There figured to be a boisterous crowd Saturday night,

public safety as a dispatcher for Gallipolis police in October
1978, has been working with 9-1-1 since September 1997.
just prior to the system's start.
He explained that the sole use tax was implemented to
build, operate and maintain 9-1-1. Ohio requires that a sole
use tax for a system such as 9-1-1 go before the voters for
continuation of operations every five years.
The ballot language for this year's election does not call it
a renewal, but proposes the question as the "continuation of
an existing levy for the purpose of the 9-1-1 system for a
period of five years."
Money raised by the tax cannot be used for any purpose
other than 9-1-1 's maintenance and operation , Wilson said.
The system receives no operating money from the county's
general fund.
In addition tll the daily operation, money raised by the tax
goes for maintenance of the center's Computer Aided
Dispatch System. communications tower sites and
generators required to keep all equipment functional
during power outages, and to operate the center.

STORY BY KEVIN KELLY
PHOTOS COURTESY OF GALLIA COUNTY S.H

NLCS MVP Pujols and Scott
Rolen. The Cardinals' bashers,
whose .278 batting avera~e
led the National League, wt_ll
have to deal with Wakefield's
often-baffling .floater before
Cun Schilling. his ailing ankle
held together by sutures,
throws harder stuff at them in
Game 2.
Foulke, the Boston closer,
got a day off in the Game 7
romp and is rested after a busy
ALCS.
St. Louis isn't ready to pick
its Game 2 staner.
"Woody tomorrow, TBD,
TBA," La Russa said. "We
still have some decisions to
make."

Series returns to Boston after close-call last year
· BOSTON (AP) -- The
World Series logo was back
on the field at Fenwav Park.
just like last year.
•
Onlv this time. it's for real.
Tha.t's right, the I OOth
World Series opened Saturday
night in the city where the
Fall Classic began in 1903
with Cy Young pitching a
complete
game
against
Pittsburgh for the Boston
Pilgrims, predecessor to the
Red Sox.
Beleaguered Boston , seeking to win the World Series
for the first since 1918, wi II
be playing the St. Louis
Cardinals, the team that did in
the Red Sox in Game 7 in
1946, then again in 1967.
Fenway Park, the smallest

Cl

Sunday, October 24.2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

with dry weather forecast and
the temperature in the low
40s.
Knuckleballer
Tim
Wakefield staned the opener
for the Red Sox against
Woody Williams.

GALLIPOLIS - For nearly seven years, a single phone
call has brought help when it's needed when that call is
placed through Gallia County's 9-1-1 Center.
Be it police, fire or ambulance assistance, central
dispatching of emergency calls has been accomplished
continuously through enhanced 9-1-1 service since the
system's dedication on Dec. 4, 1997.
Funded by a 0.25 percent "sole use" addition to the
county sales tax, 9-1-1 processes and dispatches calls
for emergency service to the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department, Gallipolis City Police, county EMS and all
volunteer fire departments. Only the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol maintains separate
dispatching, but works closely with 9-1-1.
Gallia County voters approved the sole use tax for
9-1-1 in 1994. It is subject to renewal at the polls
every five years, and was re-approved
· .~·
by voters in_l~99.
. Approval of the tax appears on
the Nov. 2 ballot this year.
From its base off Ohio 160 n~ar Gallipolis,
behind the EMS station and ])eside the couiny' s
Senior Resource Center, 9-1-1 operators processed
27,892 transactions for the sheriff's office in 2003,
in addition to 17,665 for city police and more
than 800 fire calls for the VFDs. For EMS, 91-1 handled more than 3,290 ambulance calls
last year.
Stephen Wilson, who has been 9-1- J's
director since its opening, said the service
has proven itself a valuable tool in emergency response.
"Prior to 9-1-1, most village or township
fire departments had to rely on each member calling another to alert them of a fire
call," Wilson said. "That system c_ost
valuable time in getting fire trucks on
the way to a call.
"Then, there were no di~patchers to
communicate with once they were at
a fire," he added. "City police, county EMS and the sheriff's depart'
ment all operated different systems
without a backup in place in the
·
event of a problem."
Now, once a call is received at
the 9-1-1 center, it's dispatched
directly by 9-1-1 operators to
the respective police or public
safety agency, Wilson said.
Gallia's 9-1-1 operates
with II full-time and five
part-time operators.
Generally, there are three
operators on duty per
shift. The operators
work eight-hour shifts,
24 hours a day, seven
days a week every
day of the year.
During a shift, one
operator handles
calls for the sheriff's office, another for Gallipolis
police and the
fire depanments, and the
third the EMS
and all other
village or
township
fire departments .
q Wilson,
·
who
began
. his
career
in

·
The Gallia County g.1.1 Center, off Oh io 160 near Gallipo lis. is the
base of operations for emergency dispatch ing to local police, fire
departments and EMS. The center was dedicated in December 1997.

Shown at work during a typical shift at the Gallia County 9·1·1 Center
is operator Jodi Martin, who not only handles phone calls and dispatches emergency calls, but logs all calls coming into her station.

Personnel and technicians work on one of the towers for the system
based on Fortification Hill at Gallipolis. Part of the proceeds from
the sole use taK supporting '1!-1-1 pay for the system's maintenance.

�•

YOUR HOMETOWN
Taking a look back at a Get the most from your
few 'odd' local characters 'post-retirement' earnings
iunba~

limtf) ·itntintl

ness. When Sammy died.
Mr&gt;. Viers had all kinus of
company. They came with a
caS&gt;erole in one hand. anu a
shovel in the other. All that
was dug up were blue di;,hcs
and a few silver coins.
Sammy took the myste'ry with
him to the grave. As far as we
know. the treasure is still out
there somewhere waiting lo
be found. assuming Sammy
di dn't take it with him .
In
the
early
I900s.
Gallipolis had a Chinese laundry on State Street run by
Willi e Woo. It see ms that
every so often a ·young
Chi nese boy would show up
in the laundry and then go otT
to other places. As it turns OLil.
Willie Woo was part of a giant
smu ggling ring that was
based · in, of all places.
Catlettsburg. Ky.
Young Chinese boys and
men were smuggled int o the
cou ntry from Canada by thi s
ring. It was ag ains t the law
then for people to immi gra te
to .th e U.S . from China
beca use of th e Chinese
Exclusion Act. The men
being smugg led in were
actually indentured se rvan ts
as they had agreed to work
for so many years in order to
buy their freedo m. or
course. since the y were not
rea ll y cit izens. nor cou lu
they ever hecome ones as
the Chinese Exclusion Act
was the law. they usually
worked for free before being
deported. They were moved
from one ring memher to
another to th row off imm igration authorities . These

BY JAMES SANDS

Over the years we have collected stories about some of the
other "odd" characters in
Gallia County history. aside
from the famous "odd one,"
0.0.
''Odd"
Mcintyre .
Included in that list are hermits, curmudgeons, confidence men and pm~:tical jokers.
My two favorite hermits
were Jean Salgue and Sammy
Viers. Salgue came here from
France a~d was well-known
as a horticulturi st. He lived in
a house of stones in Possum
Hollow. where he grew
grapes to make a li ving. It
was said that he became a hermit when hi s wife left him to
become a prostitute . Some of
Salgue 's grape vines became
the possession of the Ohio
Hospital for Epileptics (GDC) .
and that institute kept the old
vines going until the 1940s.
Sammy Viers was not a
pure hermit. as he was married. He was more in the curmudgeon class. To the ou.tside
world, he was very unusual.
Sammy lived at Wood's Mill
·near Rio Granue. Viers uid
not trust banks. so he kept his
money on him. Also. when he
was paid for work he did or
~hings he sold. he was peculiar as to what legal tender he
·would accept. S~me days he
took only paper money, some
days only gold coins and
some days only silve r coins.
: Every few days, Sammy
:would bury some of his
:money. even though he regularly could be see n with a
· large wad in his pants _pocket. young Chine se men were
Even hi s wife didn't know so ld bas ica lly to establ ishwhere the money was buried. ment s all over Ohio. in launSammy would slip away at dries. restaurant s and sweat
_night to do his hilling busi- shops.

There was quite u stir in
Ma} of 1915 when immigration oflkials showed up in the
Old French City to raid Willie
Woo \ laundry. Arrested was
Woo Tung Kim as an illegal
alien. Willi e Woo himse lf
sudden ly di sa ppeared that
same evening from Gallipolis.
n~ver \o be seen again.
One of the town's great
practical jokers was Frank
Vance. who li ved from 1876
to 1944. Frank was the son of
Col. Joh n L. and Em il y
Vance. The fact that he was
born in Was hingto n D.C.
wh ile his father was in
Congress may explain some
of hi s later be havior. He ran a
cigar mak ing business in
Gallipolis in his younger
years ( 1896- 1908). He then
we nt to work for the railroad.
both here and in Columbus.
He once ran for mayor of
Columbus agaisnt George S.
Marshall . but lost.
In was about ' 1929 that
Frank and his brother Creuzet
circulated all over Gallipolis a
story about seeing fi gures
looking in th e windows of
the1r second-lloor beuroom.
These "ghosts'' were supposedly seen hy other people as
well. Though there was some
question as to wliether these
witnesses were actuall y paid
witnesses. People !locked to
Gallipolis to investigate these
strange ghosts. The story was
even picked up by so me of the
large newspapers in the country. The brothers neve r told if
this was not one of their many
practical jokes.
(James Sands is a special
mrrespol/(lenl for rhe Sundar
Timcs-S( 11linel. He ca rt hlJ
&lt;on/acled hr IITiting to 1070
Militm'\' Road. Zanesrille.
Ohio 43 70 1.)
1

for thei sha\\ be c:a\\ed the a:.hi\dren of
M.1llhr w 7 '/

110
111
114
116

ACROSS
!Emancipated
6 Strikebreaker
10 Inexpensive
15 Rope for a
cowpuocher

22=player
llaVO!ful

24 Pl'!"'
seiMls
. 25 SUI1trlne
2e Wall hinging
27 Stick
28 Ar..1tchlng
29 Purplt fruit
31 U11ered

33 Survey

35 Fmtlhee9

Is George Bush Going to Make Peace?
~u.auae

of tlu C.holt~6 t\~ Mad~:
America is Mo.re Isolated in the World than Ever Before.
We have Lost Friends and Made More Enemies.
Iraq has become a Haven for the Terrorists.
More Terrorists are being Recruited Every Day.
Iran and N. Korea have Advanced their Nuclear Programs.
20,000 Huma1:1 Lives have been Lost to War.
And there is No End in Sight.
4 More Years of a 'President that Lac.~s Wisdom

Wi\\
~tren9th

Ma~e

'Peac.e Less

Li~e\i

and Wisdom are Not Opposin9 Va\ues

Rice

larger benefits . You can continue increasing your benefits
until age 70, at which point
they
may "max out."
However, by delaying taking
Social Security, you will forfeit some years of payments,
so yo'u'll have to base your
deci sion on a combination of
financial need and your family hi story of longevity.
• Working could allow you
to postpone 401 (k) distributions. Your 40l(k) plan provides you with several key
benefits - especially tax
deferral. Because you pay no
taxes on your earnings until
you stan takin!l withdrawals
(or "distributiOns"), your
money will grow faster than it
would. if placed in an investment on which you paid !aXes
each year. So, by working after
you unofficially retire, you
rl)ay be able to afford to wait
before taking 40l (k) distributions, thereby maximizing the
power of tax deferral. Or, you
could uecide to roll over your
40 I (k) to an IRA, which offers
more investment options. In
any case, there's a limit how

He will Mend Broken Alliances .
Create a Real Coalition of Nations to Win Peace in Iraq.
He will Strengthen and Modernize our Military. '
Bring Credibility to our Efforts Against Terror.
He will Wage a More Effective Global War on Terror.
by going after the terrorists where they really are
and by winning the hearts of those who are not corrupted.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. The persistent beeping catches Sunny Speaker 's attention.
She quickly steps around
nurses. incubators and- bulky
machines while balancing a
stack of patient chm1s- and
a guitar.
The beeping is coming
from the monitor on a premature baby boy who is struggling to breathe because of
res piratory uisease. and
whose blood is gelling low
on oxygen.
Speaker settles •tc.xt to him
with her guitar. opens th~
hatch to hi s incubator and
soft ly begins to sing a lull aby.
"This little light of mine,
.J'm gonni1lct it shine, eve n in
a hospital. I'm gonna let it
shi ne." she sings.
After just . IO &gt;econds, the
baby's hca1 ing .:hcst begins
to calm. l1i s breathing gets
deepe r and the oxygen level
returns to normaL
"He res ponds to more varied melodies." Speaker says
softl y as she keeps playing a
repertoire th at includes such
familiar refrains us 'Twi nkle.
Twinkle, Lillie Star."
The 29-year-old is the inhouse music therapist at the
University of AlabamaBirmingham Hospital and the
only medical mu sic therapist
in the state. After five years

long ~ou can wait: Unless you
are sttll working for the same
employer, you must be~m ~aking minimum 40~(k) dlstnl;m!Ions by Apnl I ot the ~ear followmg the year m whtch you
reach age 70-1/2.
By working, you also '!'ay
be able t~ ~elay tappmg mto
your traditiOnal IRA, whtch
.also requtres you to start takmg dtstnbuttons m the ye~r
after you turn 70-1/2 .. Or, 1f
you don't need . ~he mcome
from your traditiOnal IRA,
you coul~ convert ,it to a Roth
IRA . whtch doesn t force you
to take Withdrawals by a certam age. And Roth IRA earnmg s, grow totally tax-free,
provtded you meet certam
co~ditions. Before taking
actton , though, consult. wah
your tax adv!ser; when you
co nvert a tradttlonaiiRA to a
Roth, you will pay taxes at •
your ordinary income tax_ rate
011 any pre~tax contnbutlons,
plus any ga ms.
.
Look at the whole ptcture.
If you _choose to work after
you retire - or even tl ;YOU
need to work - take the t1me
to understand how yo~r earnmgs wtll affect your fmanctal
situation. By.. makmg sure all
the pteces ~1! toge ther. you
can solve the reltrement
income "puzzle."
(April Rice is em invntment
representatil'e with Edward
Jones ln\'estmmts, locared at
990A
Second Ave.
in
Gallipolis.)

36 Win agMIIt

37 Fllh-oallng hl..t

39 Long filii
41 Upward..wernent
" HoiM't gall
45 Atmoeplltre
48 i.Oittlt
53 'ltlt - ol MuiiC"
54 Smllt
55 - and htwed
57 Atllnqullh

58 Sour
59 Twolold
60 Cernt In 11m

DOWN

AaraChop

1

1;ye pan

126

=-'prinCess

-Carlo

127 Word ol par11ng
12e Cluch MC1Ion

129 11tm lonllllblt'
130 Kind ol ftnct
131 ~·
133 Roof ol"' mouth
131 cam.tlon color
137 FNit with 1 hen! rtnd
141 1'111 ol MIT (llbbr.)
144 Hit l bMtbll
145 Lion hllr
145 Tllll g\t(l
148 Dltctirinln1
161

Ettttm

153 F10111 tel._
15&amp; &amp;nfly cllovw flrt
167

Qty In l&lt;na

158 wtlrlWiy
160 Mtnntr of Wllldng
160 l.ulu1aiJt rteldtnc:l
1!1 Trip
162 CcnrU:tad
163
curoot

cmw

63 Sm8l valley
64 Anger

4,t,leltor
5 Goollflt-6 Cub or 111ent
7 Strlnt
8 Bla!relallvt
9 floMI
10 Stet
11 T-*'11 crowd
12 . . . mi11111t
13 Right twty: lbbr.
14 Monty In Mhlco
15YIIIIIgiW
1!YIIm
17 Dli*ll1

18 llry rd whr.cl
18 Riw rnt1«ttlt

23 Atlltn
30 Dtld ilngulgl:
lbbr.
32Liolly

a."'--..........

31 Mtdlcmced
37 Kind ollllfV'O"
31 SWNt pcl1llll
40 91lltUII
41 lllliln wlnt cl1y
42Fly~

43

164 S1M or Woody

61 lndgodyt

LOI1done(S

2
3 Mo&lt;unen1ol

S8pllng
, 6 Chess piece
119 Molt
120 Thck ponldge
121 Stopwath
123 Vtr)'CIIeleu
125 Glowing ember

Almlilr

.... Grletlll&gt;blue ootor
45 Adlwt- Thurman
47 &lt;.ilrnbllng hMn
48 SICK
50 Ct1y In Hawaii
51 Mort lharl

65 Alngtot

66 Cuat~~rd apple
68 Burden
70 Table scn11&gt;

52 HoUIIng
54
BrMk Into'""""'
ond steal

71 Be~ OU18!0011

n Car "" hlra
74 Pleased

58

76Foondallons

59

81 Stepped on
83Joined
87 Not hidden
88 Use • blue peooll
89 Plant pari
91 Went by car
92 Builder ol darnll
94 01111e ear
96 More sage
97 Rose oil

50
62

55

79 King or Hagman

11om
Amertndian
Mllct Into law
Demand payment
11om
Clf1ICOOUS
HIIMinger

65 Val

68
87 No1
_oomplel&amp;
,__

,

_.__....._

Everyone Welcome to come and
Worship with us!

99 Romlln
~ 811111"""'•-··"'~
101

103 Covor
104 Hayworth Of
Cooldgt

'Where? '13ossard Memoria[ £i6ra'J
(7 Spruce Street, (ja{fipofis) """"'""
'When? Saturday, Octo6er 30th
9:30-11:00 am

'Wiio? '!fie qama County Master
(jardel!lr
'13ossard Memoria[
JtrnfYou!

Ballot Language, E•planotlon/Argumenlt and Full TOKt for Amendmont to tho Ohio Conatltutlon, Propo"d by tnltlttlve Pttlllon, 111 be Submitted to the Vottra at the Qentrtl Election on Novtmbtr 2, 2004.

105 Stlllrlin
1011 'La llohtml'
lltrOint

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

101 8Mt:Md

110 ........ cop1lln
111 Big lllect
112
clel -

""*

113 Slwptn
115P..,....
117 Thtdawn

PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMEI\DMENT

118~

120 Al1lcUt
122 AIHI1fl

(Proposed by lnltiath·e Petition)

12-4 Gtlk-.........-..godo
...
121 8rNI houl
128 Rcr!wt godiiNI ol

1

wlllbn
12t Th

130 Bnloc:ll

Be it Resolved by the People of the State of Ohio:

132 Ltb t:un«

ta. Owllna

That the Constitution of the State of Ohio be amended by
adopting a section to be designated as Section II of
Article XV thereof, to read as follows:

I35 En1tctcf
136 Pcllcll orgrizatloll
137 Touchn tl!;i1ly

I36 Coilettt II.CJj.
139 lneeclllllgl
140 Old Httnw unl1
142 MM11ca1e
143 AOIIId danc:t
145 Serml
148 4udttolk.m

Article XV .
Section 11 . Only a union between one man and one
woman may be a marriage ulid in or recognized by this
state and its political subdivisions. This state and its political subdivisions shall not create or recognize a legal
status for relationships of unmarried Individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities, significance
or effect of marria~e.

147 ~rtglon

Golzcr~
ISO~rt

148

.(with 'oot'l

152 Holiday drink

154 Crazt

156 Patroleurn

lootwear

•

71 Function

72 Hacloleyed
73 lnc:roase
75 Needing a clalring

104 Butt

76 Move up and down
77 -Marla
78 Ocean

107 Aeceoa
109 PlllCras11nato(a
motto

82 Female animal
64 ut11eona

A majority y.:s vote is necessary for passage.

YES
NO

eo~

SHALLTH.E
PROPOSED AME~DMEI\T BE
ADOPTED?

ISSUE I
FULL TEXT

OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY OF STATE

OHMEI'iDMENT

OF OHIO

Be 11 ~cso lvcd by the People
ol' lhc State oi'Ohio:
Tlwt the Constil ution of thl'
State of Ohi o be amended by
adopting a sec tion to he de sig nated as S.:ctinn II o f Artkh:

XV thereo f. to n.:ad a~ foll mh :

Artick XV

Sc~o:t1~1l II . Onl y a union be tween o.ne man and one wuman
may be a marria ge \a lid in or
rccogmLcd by this state and it:-.
rol iti.::al subdiYisions. This ~tate
and it s p4.)1itk al ~ubd i v1&lt;:,ion ~
sha ll not create or r~~.:og111~c :t ·
legal status for rclatllHl~h l r:-. ur
unmarried . indi' 1ducJ 1'1· that in tcmls tn Llrprox11natc the Je~tgn.
qualities. significance or ~O'cct
of marriage

Vote for Peace- Vote for Kerry
See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

•

' .... ' - ..

____

'-~----.

Bulb 8 Seed
Ex.ehanse
:Fa{{Pfanting for
Spring 'Bf.ooming

..,.- v--&gt;!'OF THE NAZA~NE

116 N-.u

---· ·-~

·~-- "'"~ .. -

....... ._, ___
, ~----·· __._p.,.,._,-.,._..........

.....

-~

2
get

ABSOL

CHESTERCHURCRI~H

In the Most Important decision of Our Lives

--~--- ~- ---- ·

Buy

Evangelist Dp_le Ward of Florida
as Speaker

65 One olllle Gabor~
86 ·- RooankaValle~
90 Journey
93 Wid &lt;lsMbanca
115 Charley horN

adjust to the everyday sounds
the y' ll encounter when they
go home.
'·If you're a baby and you
hear this noise all day, every
day," he says, referring to the
bee pings and alarms of the
monitors . ."It's nice to hear
somethin g above all the

THE GREAT GIVEAWAY SALE

6:00 p.m. Sunday &amp; 7:00p.m. M, T, W

He Will Help Create More Jobs.
Provide Health Insurance to 27 Million More Americans.
He Will Protect Social Security.
Spend Our Tax Money Wisely and Reduce National Debit.

·-

Speaker's ca&gt;eload carrie'&gt;
opening her eyes and recogmore than 70 patients spread
nizing her face .
Parents of prema1 ure over several ward&gt;, tncluding
babies "don 't get much bond- can~:cr. geriatric and mental
ing," Speaker says. ''The health uniK She says her '
more bonding they have. the dutie&gt; encompas; everything
more progress they make from 'inging lullabie' tn
developmentally. And that infant ' to 'inging at funerals
of patients.
relaxes the mothers ...
craziness.''
She doesn't worry about
Speaker says having live
He recalled a day earlier music is crucial to effective gelling too close to her
this month, when several of music therapy, especiall y for patients - it's what 1he\
the babies were crying and infants. who follow the supposed to do.
the machines sounded off on si nger's facial expressions
"Part of our job is helping
low oxygen le vels. Amid the and hand movements. At the with the emotions, therapy.
chaos. Speaker began to sing: same time. the performer can family members dying."
"All of a sudden, every- observe the infants ' rea~:tions Speaker says.
be. ..
thing kind of stabilized," he and adjust the music.
She says doctor&gt; often
Speaker's "lullaby group" says. "It's rare to get such a
don't
have the time to fulfill
is
not
a
doctor.
Speaker
AP Photo include s
underdeveloped moment.'.:
Before passing a board certi- their patients personal needs.
Un iversity
of
Alabama- babies - often weighing no
Speaker says she's also fication exam to work in the " You can't just treat the kidBirmingham Hospital music more than a coupl e of pounds re ce ived warm reactions hospi tal. she earned a bache- ney, you have to treat the
therapist Sunny Speaker - who suffer from re spirato- from parents. who often lor's degree in music therapy whole person. Luckily mo\1
smiles as she Rlays her gui- ry diseases. She hopes her motion her over to si ng a lul- from the University of doctors realize that. ..
•
tar and sings along with UAB live music helps them breathe laby.
And that's why they ca ll
Alabama. The program comheart trans plant rec ipient more deeply and consistently.
Leandria Burrough. whose bines music with the study of her in .
Harvel Douglas of Atlanta.
She 's found that lullabies daughter Keyli was born two human anatomy. biology,
Speaker croo ned " set.
gent ly stimulate babies to month s prematurely at 3 psychology and other classes wrapping up with the
treating patient ' with cancer. take breaths and smooths out pounds. 6 ounces. says
Alzheimer 's disease and psy- the irritating hackground Speaker's singing helped that focus on the responsibil- Beatie&gt;· " Here Comes the
Sun ...
ities of a therapist.
chiatric disorders. she now is noise. which relaxe s them during a stressful time.
in the hospital's nitical care enough to breathe to a regular
"There's so much going on
nurserv.
rh ythm.
with a premature baby - it
Stiniulating development
Ultimately. she wants the can make you cry," says
in premature · babies is at the babie.s to breathe regularly on Burrough, after cradling
forefront of research in music their own.
Keyli while Speaker sang. "I
Q
pc New I..Mng Room Suite
therapy. a fielu that has tradiDr. Lance Prince. who though they were just going
tionally helped mentall y works with the babies at to pop a CD in. They have a
and 5 pieces offumiture.
or UAB's critical care unit, says live person - that is so speretarded.
psychotic
end tables- 1 coffee
I
dementia patients express music therapy brings peace to cial."
emotions and thoughts.
the stressful environment of
Burrough
says
Keyli
Florida Stale University ' the ward and helps babies responds to the music by
re searcher Jayne Standley
has fo und that music therapy

.,

John Kerry W'ill Make us Stronger .at Home

Paid for by the Voters of Southern Ohio. PO Box 11 6, Jackson, Ohio 45640

may lead to speedier neurological development in premature babies. and those with
consistent music therapy
have shown enough improvements during research studies
to go home up to a week earlier than other preemies .
Speaker says Standley's
work inspired her to persuade
the uoctors and nurses at
UAB's critical care nursery
to give music therapy a try.
"It's the first time I've
worked with infants that are
sick." Speaker says. " I had no
idea how dramatic it would

EXPLANATION AND ARGUME~T IN SUPPORT OF
MARRIAGE PROTECTION AMENDMENT (ISSUE I)
Vote YES on hsue I to preserve in Ohio law the universa l,
historic institution of marriage as the union of one man and one
woman, and to protect marriage against those who wou ld alter
and undermine it.
WHAT ISSUE I DOES:
• Issue I establishes in the Ohio Constitution the historic
defi ni tion of marriage as exclusively between one man and one
woman as husband and wife.
• Issue I excludes from the definition of marriage homosexual relationships and relationships of three or more persons.
• Issue I prohibits judges in Ohio from anti-democratic efforts
to redefine marriage, such as was done by a bare majority of the
judges of the Massachusetts Supreme Court, which ordered that
same-sex ·•marriage" be recognized in that state.

69 Soovnel1ime

98 -the Red
100 Range ol hearing
102 Friendly nation

John Kerry Has ·a Plan to Bring Peace

Br SAMIRA JAFARI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SUNDAY PUZZLER

23 Gr...,

~od.

April

Ht Hlabama-Birmingham Hospital: Therapist's singing helps sick newborns

October 24th - 27th

20 Sl~amx
21 Name

\?\t-f&gt;f&gt;t-d are the Peac,ema\(erf&gt;:

.

Sunday, October 24, 2004
'&lt;.,1

Sunday, October 24, 2004

In earlier generations,
"retirement" meant what it
sounds like - a cessation of
working. Not any longer.
Today, when people "retire"
from one career, they may
we ll launch into another
either as a consultant , a small:
business owner or a parttimer. But if you're going to
do some type of work after
you retire, you'll want to
make su re you're also protecting your other sources of
retirement income.
Toward that goal. keep
these points in mind :
• Earnings won' t endanger
Social' Security .payments.
Until · a few years ago, you
would have lost $1 in Social
Security benefits for every $3
of earnings over an annual
cap, ass umin g you were
between 65 and 69. But, as a
res ult of legislation passed in
2000, you can now earn as
much as you want and still
· receive your complete Social
Security beneifits, provided
you'v e reached "full" retirement age, which is based on
your year of birth. However,
your earnings could contribute
to your Social Security benetits being taxed. Depending
on your income level, as much
as 85 percent of your benefits
could be taxable.
• Working may lead to larger benefits. If' you keep workin g. and you don't really need
to start collecting Social
Security. you can build up

ONTHENEWS

&amp;unbap limtf) ·itntinel

PageC2

PageC3

I.

Kenn eth

J.

Hlacb\cll.

Secretary of State. do hereby certify that the foreg~.Jing is the full text
~,,r

the l'Onstitutional amendment
propl1:-oed by init iati\·c pctifion !iiL'd
in the o!lkc of thL' SccrcHl r) ur
State pur'::!l\:lll\lo Art H.:Ic II. Sect i n n~
Ia nnd lg l'fthc Const ituti11n of the
State of Ohi o. tog.L·tha \\'lth tl1c
b;!llot language CLTIIIkd 1~1 m~ b)

th&lt; Ohio Bal lm no ard and the
explanation'::! argument s J~ ': ! Ubmlltcd to lllL' h~ the proponl:rl l.., &lt;ind \lr-

the .1mcndmcnt. .1~
prt:!lcribcd b) Ia\\ .
1:\ TESTIW):\ Y WIIFIHFORE. ! ha ve hl!rl'ulllo subscriht•d
my mtm L' :tt Cnlumhu .... Ohio tlw.
punLn h

:O:!h

d.t~

1.1r

of Scptt·mbl't. 200-L

J. 1\&lt;nn&lt;lh Blad11 oll
SLcrctar} 01' Slat ~.?

• Issue I restricts governmental bodies in Ohio from using your
tax dollars to give official status, recognition and benefits to
homosex ual and other deviant relationships that seek to imitate
marn agc.

WHAT ISSUE I DOES NOT DO:
• Issue I does not interfere in any way with the individual
choices of citizens as to the private relationships they desire to
enter and maintain .
• Issue I does not interfere in any way with government
benefits granted to persons in non-marital homosexual relationships. su lung as the government does not gran t those benefit s to
such persons specifica ll y for the reason that the relationship is
one tlw t seeks to imi tate marriage.

The" isdom of the ages tell s us that marriage between one man
and one woman is criti cal to the well being of our children and
to th e maintenance of the fundamental social institution of the
family. Please vote to preserve marriage on November 2. 2004.
Please Vote YES on Issue I,
the 1\tarriage Protection Amendment.

The Ohio Marriage Amendment. It's Not What
You Think.
It Hurts Families.
If passed, Issue I will eliminate rights, benefits and protections
for llll unmarried couple&amp; in Ohio. Claims that it mere ly restates
Ohio's long-standing definition of marriage are untrue. Even
Defense of \1arriage Act author State Representative Bill Seitz
said the amendment is poorly written and too ambiguous.
Governor Taft and Attorney General Petro say it goes too far.
While claiming to protect Ohio families, Issue 1 actually
punishes:
• Senior living together to protect pension benefits
• Unmarried couples seeking to jointly own property
• People who rece ive health benefi ts from domestic
partner plans
• Unmarried women seeking materni ty leave
• Adopted children of unmarried couples
If this · amendment passes. even an unmarried person's right to
lea\'e property to a partner could not be recognized by Ohio courts.
Referring to leaders behind the amendment. The Canton
Repository said ...
"They make nfl hone., about wanti11g to make life as
dijfimlt as pos.,ible for all ('()Up/e.•, guy ur straight,
who dmr 't toe their mora/line."

It Hurts Ohio's Economy.
Leading econom ic and legal cxpcns agree that Issue I \\'ould
have a ne gative impact on our stn1ggling economy. The editori-

al page edi tor of the Cleveland Plam Dealer stated in a recent editorial that this amendmem "ould cost the state thou,e~nd, uf
jobs. and help perpetuate Ohio's "long and relcmless dl\c to the
bo11om ." ·
Crain's Cleveland Bustnes, stunmeJ up the economic imra&lt;l h'
staling. "The ability 10 otTer such benelits [domestic partner benefi ts1 is a Critical tool to . many companies-and umn~rsit 1c~ 111
Ohio . The arttcle concluded the editonal by- saymg ..
"Regard/e.&gt;&lt; t1jyour feeling.• about gay marriage .
tlli,, amendment de.,en•e., fll be defeated heca11.&lt;e it i.,.J
anti-bu.-.ine!i.' and anti-t·ompe!itiw!."

Suhmincdtby the Ohio Campaign to,Protect MatTiage:

VOTE NO ON ISSLE: I. PROTECT OHIO FAMILIES
Al\D JOBS.

Rc1 . K.Z. Smith
Lon \ 'iars
Phil llurress

Submitted By: Oh11,ans Protcc1 ing the C'on&gt;rttullon
Alan Melamed. Chair
:-.1ary .lo Hudson. Treasurer

"

•

-- - · - · ~· ··- .__....,......_

....

�PageC4

6unbap Utimes -ientinel

Sunday,~ober24,2004

------TUPES-SMITH WEDDING - - - - - -

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Hagglund

' SETTLES-HAGGLUND

WEDDING

FLATROCK, W.Va. - Kristel Dawn with stephanotis.
Music for the double-ring ceremony was
Tupes and Nicholas Edwin Smith were united in marriage on Saturday, Aug. 14, 2004, provided by Darren Buck of Leon, W.Va.,
at the Good Shepherd United Methodist who also accompanied soloist Eli Wilson of
Church in Flatrock, W.Va., with the Rev. Point Plea~ant in '·Amazed" by Lonestar.
Manhew Dotson of Good Shepherd 'United Registering guests for the event were the
Methodist Church, and the Rev. AI Hartson bride's cousins, Savannah Easter of
of the Middleport Church of God presiding Greenville, S.C., and A.J. Easter of
Washington, W.Va. Wedding dinector was
over the ceremony.
Escorted by her father and given in mar- Martha Easter. aunt of the bride, from
riage by her parents, the bride wore a str.lp- Washington. W.Va.
Photograph·y was provided by
less white satin A-line gown overlaid with
lace. The bodice and lace cathedral train Hedgecock Photography in Huntington,
were adorned with iridescent sequins and and videography was provided by Jeff and
beaded pearls. The bride carried a cascad- Craig Easter. uncles of the bride. and
ing bouquet of calla lilies, steph&lt;motis, Steven Deshuk. friend of the couple.
Following the exchange of vows, a
coral roses and coral hollyhocks.
Kelly Dew, friend of the bride from beach-themed was held at the Trinity
South Charleston, W. Va., served as maid United Methodist Church fellowship hall
of honor and bridesmaids included in Point Pleasant. The reception was decoLindsay Smith of Gallipolis, sister of rated in wisteria. coral lilies. and seashells.
groom, Joanna Blai{ of Beckley, W.Va .. Each table was adorned with vases of live
friend of the bride and Misty Quick of betas. candles, and seashells.
The fi ve-tier cake, designed by Melody
Point Pleasant. W.Va., friend of the bride.
The attendants wore two-piece, tea McKnight of Mamaw's Memories. fealength dresses designed by Gerry Duncan tured clusters of iridescent seashell s neswith white strdpless satin bodices and coral tled in candlelit tulle. Serving cake and
satin ribbon at the waist line. Each carried punch were Patty Pickens and Judy
a cascading bouquet of calla lilies and coral Williams, friends of the groom's mother.
hollyhocks. and wore neck.laces and ear- Catering was provided by the Trinity
United Methodist Women .
rings which were gifts from the bride.
Following a honeymoon to the Atlantis
The groom was dressed in a black tuxedo with a white vest, white shin, and white res011 in the Bahamas, Nick and Kristel are
silk tie. Best man Brian Sang of Point at home at 5480 Shawnee Circle, Apt. 19.
Pleasant, friend of the groom, and grooms- Huntington, W.Va.
Kristel is a 2000 graduate of Point
men Michael Tupes, brother of the brick,
Man Spaulding of Quantico. Va., friend of Pleasant High School and a 2004 graduate
the groom, and Ray Houston of of Marshall University with a major in
Huntington. W.Va., friend of the groom. communication disorders. She is currently
were attired in black tuxedos with silvcr pursuing a master's degree at Marshall
vests, white shirts. and silver silk ties. Each University in speech therapy.
Kristel is the daughter of 1im and Lynn
wore a coral rose boutonniere accented

iunba~ Gr:im~ -ientinel

products on three separate
occasions.
Since vitamin D is a fatBlood tests were taken
soluble vitamin, will my immediately and then two,
body absorb less of it if I four, eight, 12, 48 and 72
drink skim (nonfat) milk'?
hours later to test for blood
That sounds logical, does- concentrations of vitamin D.
n' t it1 But rest assured, The resuft: The scientists
researchers examined exactly determined that no fat is ·
that question and found it's needed in the beverage for
not a problem. ·
vitamin D to be bioavailable·.
In a study published in
However, nutritionists are
June 2003 in the American concerned that some people
Journal of Clinical Nutritioq, don't get enough of this
scientists
at
Boston essential nutrient. The body
University's
School
of can produce its own vitamin
Medicine compared the D just by being exposed to
bioavailability of vitamin D ultraviolet-B radiation from
from whole milk (which 'con- the sun for 5 to 15 minutes a
tains 3.25 percent milkfat, or few times a week. Still, peo8 grams of fat per cup), non- ple over 60 and those with
fat milk, and orange juice, dark skin have a harder time
which also contains no fat. producing vitamin D in this
The study involved 18 adults way.
who consumed one of the
In fact, in recent years there
BY BECKY NESBin

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Smith

Tupes of Letart, W.Va. She is the granddaughter of Alice and the late Harry Easter
of Ravenswood, W.Va., and Jim and Lora
Tupes of Parkersburg, W.Va.
Nick is a 2000 graduate of River Valley
High School and a 2004 graduate of
Marshall University with a major in biology. Nick is currently pursuing a Master's
degree in biology at Marshall University.
Nick is the son of Mark and Jenny Smith
of Gallipolis. Ohio, and is the grandosn of
Evelyn and the late Harold Smith of
Gallipolis, and Dale and Letha Proffitt of
Racine. Ohio.

POMEROY .
Joy Church. Those assisting at the
Jannette Settles and Nicholas reception were Vicki Morrow
James Hagglund were united of Syracuse, Angie Minshall
in marriage on Saturday. Aug. of Middleport , and Ingrid
lund of Jamestown '
7. 2004, ar the First Christian Haoo
~e
N.Y.. sister of the groom. The
Church in Youngstown.
The bride is the daughter of bride's father and Heather
John and Dianna Settles of Polding of New Castle, Pa.
Pomeroy. and the grand- took pictures. The wedding
daughter of Everette and was videotaped by S'teve
Lucille Schwartz of Point Stewan.
Pleasant. W.Va.
The three-tiered white cake
The groom is the son of was surrounded with pastel
Stephen
and
Valerie silk rosebuds and was made
Hagglund of Jamestown. by the groom's mother.
N.Y., and the grandson of Valerie Hagglund. A musical
Janice Hagglund and the late Precious Moment's figurine,
Ture Hagglund of Jame stown. cake topper was displayed on
The double-ring ceremony the top tier and a small glass,
was perfonned by the ReY. crystal castle cake topper was
DENNIS
ANNIVERSARY
Mark Morrow of Syran"~­ di splayed on the middle tier to
and music was provided I" incorporate the fai ry-tale
GALLIPOLIS· Kevin and Sandy (Vallance) Dennis just celCatherine
Carroll
of ;t·eddtng theme.
ebrated their 35th wedding anniversary with a trip to Estes Park.
Diamond. The bride's parents
Mementos and keepsakes
Colo.
sang "The Unseen Hand."
were give n to the guests from
"It was a wonderful trip to just sec God's beautifttl creation. the
Kaye Grimm of Point the bride and groo m. The
couple
said.
Pleasant passed out program' ~room's
brother,
Eric
Kevin and Sandy were there on their anniversaty Sept. 21 and
to guests and assisted them in Hagglund. served as emcee
Matthew Adam Metheney and Heather Michelle Ferrell
it
'ilnwed
for two days. "We saw the snow capped mnulllai ns and
signing the bride and groom\ for the reception. The
majc,tic
elk
in all their glory form our cabin window:· they ,aid.
framed engagement photo. groom's mother presented the
FERRELL-METHENEY
Kevin
and
Sandy were married Sept. 21. 1969. at Fir&gt;~ llaptist
The groom 's brother and ,i,- c·t~up l e with an Irish bell and
Church by the Rev. Joe Chapman. They are the pcu·enh of three
ter-in-law. Eric and Beth explained its sign ificance .
ENGAGE'MENT
childre n. and g randparent~ of ~ i x grandchildren : Sha\\:n and
Hagglund of Jamestown, The paste I rose flowers were
Wendy McNeal. (Trevor. Candy. Tabby J, Rich and Bat ina Cun in.
N.Y.. were the master and made by the bride's mother.
MIDDLEPORT
The
Tenn.
He
is
the
grandson
of
(Tori and Counney). and Keaton and Amher Rice (Jalyn J.
The bride is a 2000 gradumistress of ceremonies.
of
Heather
Michelle
parents
Simon
and
Ellen
Johnson
of
Given in marriage by her &lt;tte uf River Valley ~ High
and Matthew Adam Pomeroy. and Donald &lt;llld
parents and escorted by her S&lt;:hool. ami &lt;t 2004 uraduatc Ferrell
Metheney
are announcing the Shirley Metheney of Vinton.
father. the bride wore a tradi - of
Youn~stown ' State
couple's
approaching
marMatt is a 1998 urauate of
tional white satin and laec L'ni versi ty. ~· ith a bachelor of
Meigs High School. and is
gown. The sweetheart bodice &lt;tl1' degree in journalism. She nagc.
The
bride-elect
is
the
employed
as an installer with
of the gown was enhanced i' currently employed by
of
T.J.
and
Vicki
daughter
McDish
LLC in Point
with scalloped edging and a Ro v, ton Ltboratorics of Ferrell of Middleport. She is
Pleasant.
profusion of pearl be;tding Piti'ihun!h as an a~sistant
the granddaughter of Herman
The open church wedding
and sequined Venice lace fea~ inside "lie, representative.
Grate
of
Rutland
and
the
late
will
be 4:30 p.m. Saturday.
turing short, lace. cap sleeve,.
The groom i&gt; a 1999 gradu- Beulah Grate, and Mary
Oct.
30,
2004, at the Rutland
The full. bell-shaped skirt was ate of Jamestown High
Ferrell
of
Charleston,
W.Va.,
Church of the Nazarene in
complimented by matching. School and a 2003 graduate
and
the
late
Bob
Ferrell.
Rutland. A reception will folsequined Venice lace with ol'
Youngstown
State
is
a
2000
graduate
Heather
low
at the Royal Oak Resort
pearl beading that tlowed into University, with a bachelor\ of Meigs High School and a
in
Pomeroy.
a semi-cathedral train .
degree in chemical engineer·
Her waist-length veil was ing. He has a fellowship with 2002 graduate of Hocking
of white silk illusion with the University of Pittsburgh College with a degree , in
hotel/restaurant management.
pearl beading. made by the and is pursui ng hi ., doctorate She
is employed as a
bride 's mother. which was · in biomedical-chemical engiattached to a sil ve r rhine- neering.
He is currently food/beverage manager at the
stone. heart-shaped pageant employed by the University Athens County Club in
Athens.
tiara. The bride al so wore a of Pittsbumh.
groom is
pearl and rhinestone necklace,
For their honevmoon. the theThesonprospective
of Jim and Mary
and couple went to Riviera Maya,
matching
earrings
Perdue
of
Point Pleasant.
bracelet, which were gifts Mexico and are presently
W.Va
..
and
Terry
and Cathy
from her grandmother and residi ng at their home in Metheney of Seviervi
lie,grandfather.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
The bride carried a bouquet
of silk. pastel-colored ro&gt;e
buds with cascading pastel
Festivities begin_:a:t:_7~:0~0~~-ribbons, made by her mother.
The maid of honor was
Kri stie Preston of Vinton.
Bridesmaids were her \Sister.
Britany Settles of Gallipolis.
and Autumn Murph y of
Gallipolis. They wore strapless, A-Line dresses of satin
with embroidered detai Is at
the waist, with the maid of
honor wearing pastel blue and
the bridesmaids wearing pastel peach and purple. rei pec- .
tively. ·
Flower girl was Kacy ,Fink
of Middleport . who wore a
whife gown, enhanced with
ALL ARE WELCOME
an embroidered bodice and
sprinkled with si lk pastel
AND ENCOURAGED
Don't
'flower petals in yellow illu sion netting and wore white.
ForptYour
TO AnEND!
feather boa. angel wing'' ·
Costume!
Serving as the groom\ be.&gt;t
man was brother. Eric
•
Hagglund ofJame'otown. N.Y.
. Groomsmen were· hi s falhcr.
Stephen Ha·gglund. and hi s
friend, .Thoma&gt; Cornell of
Jamestown , N.Y.
REHABILITATION CENTER
A fairy-tale therned reception and catered dinner imme36759 Rocksprings Road ~. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
diately followed in the fellow(740) 992-6606
ship hall of the First Christian

'S POOD

INVITEJ YOU TO OUR

ITY
HALL
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27th

HOT DOG SALE

Rocksprings

have been reports of breastfed African-American babies
in Texas who were diagnosed
with rickets because they
were vitamin-D deficient.
In addilion, people who
regularly use sunscreen also
screen out the rays that allow
the body to produce vitamin
D. And during winter months
in northern states like Ohio, it
is difficult, if not impossible,
to be exposed to enough sunlight to produce enough vitamin D.
The Recommended Dietary
Allowance is 200 ·1U (international units) for people 50
and younger; 400 IU for people 51 to 70; and 600 IU for
people over 70 - although
some nutritionists believe
that last figure in particular
should be higher. The body
needs vitamin D to be able to

use calcium and keep bones
healthy. Vitamin D is found
naturally in very few food;
- fatty fish, such as mackerel, salmon and sardines and eggs whose hens have
had a vitamin-D-rich diet.
So, several foods, such as
milk, orange juice and many
breakfast cereals, are also
fortified with vitamin D
(although most cheese and
yogurt isn't). Still , most people under age 60 could get
plenty of vitamin D if they
eat a balanced diet. Older
people or others at risk of
deficiency might consider
taking a vitamin supplement.
(Becky Nesbitr ts the
Extension Educator, Family atui
Consumer Scimces/Commwtitv
Development and chait; Ohio
State University Extension
Service. Gallia c;iuttf)'.)
.

.

New York subway's 1OOth
birthday sparks new book
shop, and how 1tation1 are
de;tgned. Besides tales of
trains and tracks, there are
histories of 'ubway tokens,
maps. the ''Mi" Subways''
contest and everv baseball
"Subway · Series'' through
the 2000 Met s- Yankees
World Series.
Sidelights
&gt;cattered
throughout focus on the
disappearance of kiosk\.
the unfinished Second
Avenue line, the stylish but
unsafe R-40 cars de&gt;igned
by Raymond Loewy in the
1970s. and other topics .
Riders reminisce about
their memorable under·
ground adventures, and fellow straphanger Fischler
shares many of his own subway experiences of outings
to the Bronx Zoo, Ebbets
Field. Coney Island and to
the two world's fairs.

BY RON BERTHEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - New
Yorker Stan Fischler. perhaps
better known a&gt; a sportsca.1ter and hockey writer, ha.1
been riding the subway for
more than 60 years.
In "The Subway and the
City:
Celebrating
a
Century"
(frank
Merriwell, Inc., $39.95).
written
with
John
Henderson, Fischler offers
plenty to read about and to
look at in a 547-page book
crammed with text and
more than 375 image s.
including archival photos
of trains, station s. and construction of subway and
elevated lines . .
Topics indude the subway's portrayal in films,
the system's maintenance

AnnuQI Schmidt Symposium set for NoV:' 6
GALLIPOLIS - The Eighd1 Annual of Breast Cancer"; and Rick St. Onge,
Lewis A. Schmidt. M.D., Memorial Cancer M.D., representing Holzer Medical
Symposium will be held on Saturday, Nov. Center and Holzer Clinic' s Department
6, 2004, from 8:30 a.m. until noon in the of Obstetrics and Gynecology, who will
Education and Conference Center at Holzer speak on "Cervical Cancer."
Medical Center.
The annual symposium is held in
The Education and Conference memory of Dr. Lewis A. Schmidt, who
Center is located on the ground floor of joined the staff of Holzer Hospital in
the Charles E. Holzer Jr., M.D. Su.rgery 1967, where he practiced general
Center. located at the rear of Holzer surgery.
He was instrumental in developing
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Speakers for the event will include the Tumor Registry and the Tumor
Patrick Ross, M.D. , of the Ohio State Committee, which he chaired for severU\)iversity Hosr.ital. who will discuss al years. Schmidt was very active with
"Mesothelioma'; Stephen Povoski. the Gallia County Chapter of the
M.D. , of the Ohio State University American Cancer Society and other
Hospital, who will present "Prevention civic organizations.

He also was a member of the Coller
Society, the Gallia County Medical
Society. American Medical Association.
Ohio State Medical Association, and a
fellow of the American College of
Surgeons.
A complimentary continental breakfast will be served at the event at 8:30
a.m., and displays will also be set up for
attendees to review.
The program itself, which is open to
the public , will stan promptly at 9 a.m.
For more information about this
year's symposium. or to register. contact
Joel Jagers in the hospital's Educational
Resource Center at (740) 446-5057.

Life gave Reeve a chance to shed the cape

.

an~!,~.~ su~~~~="!~ e~~?,M~~~~~~~ ~~-~~~ Ha.n.. ..; .~-.r. . .-50t_h_a_n_n_.iv___e.._rsa-'-ry
MARCHIONE

''The biggest hope is in bio- embryonic stem cell research, extend axons and to form new
research to allow the a promising but contentious connections at great distances
spmal cord to heal itself and field of medicine that the to restore function ," said
even regenerate . That's just Bush administration has Kerr. "We're clearly getting
over the horizon but closer severely restricted because it there."
than ever before. Most people involves destroying embryos.
Reeve
"appropriately
feel within the next 10 to 15 Scientists think these early, brought a sense of urgency to
years, somewhere within our all-purpose cells can be this issue," said Perry head of
lifetimes," said Dr. Jack coaxed to form nerves and the research coalition, which
Ziegler, president of th~ specialized tissues to repair a favors stem cell science. "On
American Spinal Injury host of woes.
Capitol Hill he was such a
Association.
Reeve and fellow actor highly regarded figure and
Some even thought it Michael J. Fox, who has was so focused on the meswould come in time for Parkinson's disease, have sage."
Reeve.
helped make stem cells a
A research center on para"! thought it was going to maJor
campaign
issue lytic spinal cord injuries. the
happen," said Dr. Doug Kerr, between President Bush and Reeve-Irvine
Research
a Johns ·Hopkins University Sen. John Kerry. Kerry even Center, was established in
neurologist who works with mentioned Reeve during the Reeve's
name
at
the
stem cells - controversial second presidential debate on University of California,
research that Reeve advocat- . Friday and praised him Irvine.
ed.
Monday in remarks before a
"He was such an immense
"It was Star Wars science speech in Santa ·Fe, N.M.
personali'X, such a force in
fiction, this concept of
"He was an inspiration to the field, ' said Dr. Oswald
rewiring the nervous system," all of us and gave hope to mil· Stewart, the center's director.
but Reeve "thrust thts field lions of Americans who are "He created an enthusiasm for
forward by leaps and counting on lifesaving cures what we do in the lab."
bounds," Kerr said.
that science and research can
Reeve also reached out to
Reeve endured years of provide," Kerry said. "In part people beyond those with
therapy to allow him to because of his work, mil !tons spinal cord injuries.
"He was able to inspire
breathe for longer periods· will one day walk again."
without a respirator while
At Hopkins, research a few hope in patients with diaseeking a cure that . would years ago demonstrated that betes , Alzheimer's , cancer,
allow him to walk again. He stelll cells could allow para· Parkin son's disease, Lou
sparked hope even in many lyzed mice and rats to do just Gehrig's disease ... tragic and
skeptics in 2000, when he that.
life-threatening conditions
was able to move an index
"This is one of the most dif· that face tens of millions of
finger. He thrust himself ficult tasks you can ask a stem Americans," Perry said.
harder into workouts to
strengthen his Jells and arms.
and electrical sumulation of
his muscles allowed him to
sporadically regain sensation
in some other parts of his
body.
As Reeve transformed hi s
body, he also morphed into an
advocate, first for better benetits for people with long-term
di sabilities, and then for science to help the 250,000
Americans who suffer paralysis. The Christopher Reeve .
Paralysis Foundation has
given $40 million to spinal
cord research since he merged
it with the American Paralysis
B:llll JI.M. • J:JID JI.M.
Foundation in 1999.
lo~ical

AP MEDICAL WRITER

Christopher Reeve often
said he wanted to be known
for something other than
playing Superman. But it was
real life- not another movie
role- that gave the actor the
chance to star in his big!lest
drama: as a spinal cord inJury
victim championing research
in hope that people like him
would someday be able to
walk again.
"He put a human face on
the dreams," said Daniel
Perry, president of the
Coalition
for
the
Advancement of Medical
Research. "He used his star
power as a .celebrity for a
great good that transcends
anything that most of us will
ever achieve."
Reeve died Sunday after
developing a serious bloodstream infection from a bedsore, a common problem for
paralyzed people. He went
mto cardiac arrest Saturday at
his home in Pound Ridge,
N.Y., then fell into a coma,
dying the next day at a hospital.
·
As an actor and a man,
Reeve embodied strength and
athleticism and performed his
own movie stunts, including
his 1978 starring role as
Superman. It made him
famous but he longed to, as
he often put it, "escape the
cape" and· take on other char·
acters.
Other movies and plays,
gave him that chance, but
nothing compared to the
horseback riding accident in
1995 that left him with a broken · neck. His passionate
efforts for science, often as he
wheezed from a respirator in
his wheelchair. are his greatest legacy, admirers said.
Reeve never walked again but
his dream of doing so is now
a plausible one for thou sands

Driving Record Bent Out
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GALLIPOLIS - James and Hilda Haner celebrated their
50th anniversary with a surprise dinner given by their daughter Diana, in Barboursville. W.Va.
James and Hilda were married in Gallipolis by Justice of the
Peace James A. Johnson on Sept. 25. 1954.
They have two children: Diana (Lyle) Shillington. and
Dennis (Teresa) Haner of Gallipolis. ·They have four grandchildren: Erin Shillington of Hillsboro, Ky .. and Alan
·Shillington, Cody Haner and Stacy Haner all from Gallipolis.
James is the son of the late Russell and Fannie Haner, and
Hilda is the daughter of Nellie Watson and the late Ira Watson.

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�PageC6

HOBBIES

6unbap lim~ ·itnttntl

Sunday, October 24, 2004

6unba!' Gtimts -6tnttnel

INSIDE
Houle of the week, Page 02

Dl

Many tourist spots spared physical, but not financial, hurricane loss
NEW YORK (AP) - Talk
about an exclusive vacation.
When Ken and Linda
Jordan of Rochester Hills,
Mich., landed their singleengine plane on Cayman
Brae on Oct. 1 for a weeklong trip they ' d planned
months before. they were the
first tourists to visit since
Hurricane Ivan.
As the sole guests at the
Divi Tiara Beach Hotel, they
enjoyed being spoiled by the
staff and having use of a 40foot dive boat all to themselves.
"It's been wonderful, and
the diving is excellent." said
Ken Jordan as he and his wife
sipped cocktails.
Cayman Brae and Little
Cayman - the sister islands

"Orlando, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, the Keys,
Tampa, St. Pete, Clearwater, Amelia Island those are all fine. People can book with confidence."
- Francesca Bonavita, American Express

and Cuba also sustained damage of varying degrees. (Haiti
suffered the worst effects but
is not considered a major
tourism destination.)
Elsewhere
in
the
Caribbean. "the vast majority
of destinations ... are ready
today to welcome and pamper guests," said Karen Ford
Warner of the Caribbean
Tourism Organization.

',.• .-

. •.. '

.:il' ,·

AP Photo

Sea kayaks lie unused on a Key West, Fla .. beach Monday,
Oct. 4, 2004, while a handful of visitors enjoy the subtropical
sun and ocean. Although four hurricanes that came ashore in·
other regions in Florida since Aug. 13 have left the Florida
Keys unscathed, the area's tourism industry has taken a
severe economic blow because of misperceptions the area
was ravaged. Similar image problems are mirrored throughout
other areas of Florida too. Florida Gov. Jeb Bush met with the
Florida Tourism Commission in Miami Monday, Oct. 4, to discuss means to boost to lure visitors back following the storms.
of Grand Cayman -· were
relatively unscathed by the
storms that hit the Caribbean,
Florida and other coastal
areas
in August and
September.
.
But what the tourism
industry throughout the
region fears is that the vacationing public will have a
ha,rd time distinguishing
between places that took
direct hits f.rom the storms like Grand Cayman, where
70 percent of buildings were
damaged, and Pensacola, Fla.
- ·and places that are up and
running, like Cayman Brae or
Miami.
In the Caribbean. Grand
Cayman and Grenada were
hit hardest by the storms, but
Grand Bahama, Jamaica, the
Dominican Republic, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines.
the Turks &amp; Caicos islands

Sunday, October 24, 2004

Even in some p'laces hit by
storms, damage was spotty.
For example, Hurricane Ivan
damaged thousands of homes
on the Jamaica's south coast
but largely spared the northem tourist hubs of Montego
Bay and Ocho Rios. A smattenng of hotels in the resort
towns of Negri! and Treasure
Beach received severe damage but are expected to
reopen in a few months, said
Godfrey Dyer, president of
the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist
Association.
"Jamaica is as beautiful as
ever," Dyer said. "The northern section where most of the
hotels are was spared."
Andy Newman, who handles public relations for the
Florida Keys, says he is fighting "a huge misperception
around the country that the
Florida Keys were devastated

when they are not. We have
absolutely no lingering damage ."
Many TV viewers saw
footage of the Keys being
evacuated, but they may not
realize that the hurricanes
ended up missing Key Largo,
Key West and the rest of the
primary island chain.
"With both the Caribbean
and Florida, the way the news
has reported it, it seems like,
'Stay away from the entire
Caribbean and the entire state
of Florida," said Francese a
Bonavita, vice president for
product and brand development at American Express .
"Orlando, Miami, Fort
Lauderdale ,
the
Keys,.
Tampa, St. Pete, Clearwater.
Amelia Island- those are all
fine. People can book with
confidence," she added.
"Our tourism is the industry that was most damaged,
and not because of structural
damage but because of perceptual damage," said Nicki
Grossman, president of the
Greater Fort Lauderdale
&amp;
Visitors
Convention
Bureau. "No hotels are
closed. No businesses were
lost. We are absolutely
unblemished. The beach had
minimal erosion."
Because
so
many
Americans have friends and
family who have retired to
Florida, some travelers may
be basing their perceptions
on reports from homeowners
struggling to get repairs.
"The reason you're hearing
conflicting reports is that
there were residential areas
that were severely damaged,"
said Danielle Courtenay with
the Orlando-area convention
and visitors bureau. But
while indi victuals may have
to wait for contractors and
insurance money, hotels and
theme parks are "built to
withstand .the winds and they
do have the crews to get
things up and operating,"
Courtenay said.
"The theme parks Disney,
Universal, Sea
World, Discovery - were all
open within a day of every
storm," she added. "Are people still trying to get their
roofs fixed in residential
areas? Yes. But most of the
areas where tourists are
going, you could not tell
there was a storm."

19-lnchers on the •os 9U Carrera S.
.·-, · The ride Is fi~, as you'd expect.
~ i(~i.l.~ S Is a new,~ . Indeed, witb the : sport setting of the
ver)'lpirf:
· · , powetPJant. adlve sus~oo turned on, the ride is
h;o._, -.md 2!!!5 downright
and taut·feeHng- very
ru:~-g:~~ ol\·..,que at 4,600 rpm.
nearly pimlshblg.
·
..
the cyllndirbore
But .~Is when; the beauty of the

atilr

~=~chan!-:~~=~~~~=;·
llutJt

tbougb 'tlie

Ken, left, and Linda Jordan, of
Rochester Hills, Mich., have
drinks at the Tiara Beach
Hotel on Cayman Brae, Oct.
8, 2004. The Jordans were
the first tourists to visit the
country since Hurricane Ivan,
and the only guests at their
hotel.

'
prices compare
with ·the
'~~;;::~ starting MSRP and destlJI!Itlon
~t
for a 2005 Jaguar XK IIOupe
$70,595 starting price fbi' a
BMW645Ct
Note that these competltqrs come
VBs, though, while ' ~e 911
· Cs!,rn~ra continues with Porsche's hori·
;zorttally opposed ~at six~· cylinder.
Known for well-balanced cars
stand9ut handling~ Porsche
lldn't choose to join America's cur·
. horsepower war by adding
· · to the new 911 Carrera wllly·
~my.

c

Indeed, to 110111e drivers, the new base
.C arrera's !·horsepower boost 325 - llil't much of an Increase.
"Our main aim Is towllfd overall persaid
Peter
, president and chief
. or Pq1'11Che,Cars North
''A.rut that's bot · only based
honepoweri It's
cili•the han·

. -- ., ..

as
englneie are a'fllilable with ,a
choke' or new'"tnmBIIllssf.qils that ,.-e
designed for 1he Increased ·power:· A
six-speed .manual and a ftve-ll}leed
Tlptniolc automatic.
·
Sitting low tO·'the ground In the ll!8l"
drive 911 Carrera with an upCbded chassis, I felt the car's movements intiiDateIy.
'
The base car with Tiptronic trans·
mission rushed llftrestilvely forward
when I wanted, passed other cars with
plenty or power to spare (downshifting
on Its own at times to accomptlsh the
power J)8SSi!l) and ripped down hi~h·
ways wUh gq~~to.
;
..
. It wti, adDilttedly, a bit ~tilt to
drivi stowly In residential areas. The
car felt as·,if It was creeping at th~
peds. ~· because of the low ~t
pusjtion, I ciluldn' t see a thing beyond
,'
the vehicle in front of me.
The top.oof'-tbe-Ilne·.s model Is the
more ftagJlllt power machine.
There was a noticeab.le muscle·
bound sef
' even while the S main·
tained the ill's overall sprightly 4!har·
acter.
I got thlf S up to highway speeds so
quickly, 11. discovered I'd only gone
through a; couple of the sb: manUlll
gears. .
·
. ·, 1
I cciuld have easily kell*l~fnc.
didn't feel as elf the au:,"'~tl'ale that faSt.
,, '· ·\
And serenading me .all ~ vtay- in
either model - was th,e lovely purr
and whine of Porsche's six. cyUnder.
Wind no is~ _!lver the carefully
sculpted c•r ~y was negligible at least aliffN'et•legal speeds. There
.was road nolse from · the largestand tires

more

1312 Eastern Avenue • Galllpolis, Ohio ·

Call 446-1 744

Coun

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"HARVEST FESTH:4L
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Friday. October·2&amp;
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"HALWWEEN
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6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Friday tbrou11h ]'Jnmsdey.

Sundu. October 31

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October 22. 23 &amp; 24

October 29 • Noyember 4

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TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

November 2004 Events

OCTOBER 26 &amp; 27 • 9,n·t-4rl\•

Fddav. Satyrday &amp; Suw'ey

CALL 800-634-5265

Noyember 5. 6 &amp; 7

Fort Randolph .
"ENGLISH ·.·
CIVIL WAR"

5:30pm • !1:00pm Nlgltdt.

December 2004 Events
Des:emher10 .. 20
WV State F.rm M~~~eum

FANTASY
UGHTSHOW"
5:30pm· !1:00pm

"CHRIS'PM..tS
l.JGHT SHOW"
6:00pm • !1:00pm
Nightly

Nlgbdy

"Come experience historic Mason County'/"

For further

information, call
'

Now for an appointment

FANTASY
LIGHT SHOW" .

(304)675-6788

.

NG SIGNS OF HEARING LOSS

•lllcpll """ 10 m.~mblt mort frlqUIII1ly.
•'11111 IJA', IIIII hM lrMio unatrllnng
II tht worcllln allOIWII'tltton.
I '11111 llflln • )lopit 10 ,.., IllomiMJ,

II ,.,

• Vcutllmity aampiW tNI ~ play h TV
100 loutlfy,
• You llM biH!n ttjjd lhllt )'Oil llflllll too lcJudiV,
I 'l'O\IIIIjltrlfllOt rlri!II"Q ifl "{CCJJ M

••fNIH••,. ••Y et ,•.,. ,,.,,••, you ,._, • lifE ,_,., ·•••'·

IWiif &amp;011 OllflnJAIWAI1
SEEIIIG IS BEliEVING!

liM IIMIIIII tU II IIWII
HEARING IS BEUEIIINGI

;lloi}Zolntallly opposed six cylinder .·
VarioCam Plus.
IIIU~a~:: 19 mpg (city}, 26 mpg ·

182 mph.
~n.,,
175.6 inches ..
92.5 inches.
WT.: 3,131 pounds.
AT: Gerr:nal)y.
'
!PTIOtiS: Navigation system
Bose surround sound
l: ~~~:~· seats $1,550.
•a
CHARGE: $795.

....

ttL':

P~~
· Acdve,,
(PASM) Clinjes
ln.Management
Baby BoomersSystem
being

die 'prime ~rs, .POI'!Idte ollldals
J"4'88ivtd
not want to be fatigued·
~ jolted .DODStop as they traveL
So PASM. whicltls standard on the S
and 'optional OD the base 911 Carrera,
bas two JDOdes that are activated by a
button on the dashboard.
The comfort :P1ode adjusts dampers
for quite a cortlpUant ride that helps
ease passengers over bumps and pits in
the road.
On mostly ,smOoth roads, I didn't get
tired .at all by fhe ride with the ~uspen­
sion at this setting, which is, by the
way, more compBant than the base
car's standard SjiSpension.
The sport mode,llowever, puts riders
mu~ mote In toUch with even slight
road lniperfectio.ns.
.. •
As a ·pii!IIM!n(!er, .l couldn't keep my
bead from repeatedly banging against
tbe.bjtckrest, for example, even when
·t he ear was going over relatively
smooth pavement. The nonstop vibralions became tiring, too.
But body roll sure is negligible and
the car as a whole handled with palpa·
ble agility in the sport mode.
·
Pursehe also· offers a third "all-out"
sport suspension that can be Installed
on the S Instead of the PASM. It's
about as close as a driver can get to a
91l Carrera version of race car.
The 911 Carrera has a new kind of
tack·aud-Pinicin steerin&amp; system that
for the first time includes a vatiabl,e
steering ratio. That reduces the
amoant of steering wheel turns a dri·
ver has to do on winding roads and In
patklng maneuvers.
·
Porsche's steering system Is mechan·
ical, unlike the electronic adaptive
steering found on BMWs. ·
The 911 Carrera's
Is upcilate&lt;ll!

they_.,.

the car, and there are six airbags In the
car now. Besides the government·

.required
trontai
riders; there
are bags
side ~~rr~~~:::~r~
thorax airbags and door
bead-protection airbags.
A slightly larger, 4.7Z·CUIIIC··fOCJ•t·
trunk at the front of the car, rev1ised
interior with a height-adjustable steer~:
log wheel and a choice of four kinds
front seats round out the
changes.
But some interior elements are
same as In carHer 911s.
For example, the small, almost
less vanity mirrors on the small vlso~ni
and the black, plastic switches to
on and orr the map lights look
same.
The hard-to-detect map
under the door armrests are
too, and storage space inside remains
problem. So do the two rear seats that
look like perches with awkward, tiny
·
seatbacks.
I also wished the navigation system
display screen was larger and more .
colorful.
Note the new-generation 911 Carrera
will be sold alongside the old-genera·
lion 911 Thrbo and the Carrera S AWD
Jl!odels in the 2005 model year. But a
new 911 Cabriolet is expected in caltm·,
dar 2005, with all-wheel-drive models
coming some time after that. ·
Schwarzenhauer said he expects
new 911 Carrera to top the
North American sales level that
previous model set in its six-year run.
He noted there's a growing number
of amuent Baby Boomer hotiSet•ol~ls
that haven't parked a Porsche in
garage in a long time. Some only
owned a used Porsche back in their
'youth. Now that their families are
tvOWD, these people are returning to
Porsche, he satd.
.
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration does not provide crash .
test ratings for this low-volume model&lt;, !
and there has been no safety recall.
Consumer Reports magazine
not
a reliability rating for

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

PageD2

HOUSE OF THE WEEK

:iunba~ Qttme~ -itntintl

m:rlbune - Sentinel - l\e

Sunday, October 24, 2004

CLASSIFIED

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

tiA..~Tfl BEDIOOA.t

:l1'-0" x11'-o•

Mill MHI•I•N

To Place
m:rlbune
~eglster
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992·2157
BEOIOOMNO.
u•-o• x12'-10"

Offtee llo~~

Dally In-Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday-Friday far ln•ertlan
In Next Day•e Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m.

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

I
STliOY

FOlta'

10 1-0' X 10'·0'

. HOW IQ WRITE
OtNINGIOOM
·H'-0" X 10'-0"'-

00

\'\\01 \(I \II \IS

r
(AP Photo/AP.House olthe Week)
APWB 181 A traditional des1gn loaded with form and function, this home offers owners an intriguing mix of abundant
available space and the promise of even more useable square footage when the family needs it.
FoR

AP

APWB 181 The entry foyer is flanked by a large study and formal private (lining room. Just beyond these rooms at the core of the house is
a great room enhanced by a fireplace with French doors to either side.

Design details:

WEEKLY FEATURES

Thi s home offers owners an intriguing mix of abundant
available space and the promise of even more useable square
footage when the family needs it. APWB - 181 ties it all
together in a traditional design loaded with form and function.
The entry foyer is flanked by a large study and formal private dining room. Just beyond these rooms al the core of the
house is a great room enhanced by a fireplace with French
doors to either side - all th e better to reach the huge rectan.
gular screened porch.
The kitchen is a cook's dream. Double wall oven\ and a
walk-in pantry are situated at the corners. A center island
divides ample counter spaces for food preparation.
The master suite dominates the sleeping quarters. This room .
features a bump-out window with sitting area. The bath and
walk-in closet are tucked to the rear. Th e two remaining bedrooms at the opposite side of the house share a common bath.
The second tloor of thi s house i~ shown unfini shed . but
would work well in a variety of uses from extra storage to a
secondary family room or home otlice.

homeowner to make it the floor of their dreams. The
floor plan here ' is inviting and functional. Owners will
like that the master suite and other bedrooms are separated. This is truly a home for an active family."

Architectural style: traditional
Main level: 2.337 sq. ft.
Unfinished upper level: 740 sq. ft.
Width: 53 ft.: depth: 76 ft.
Recommended lot size: .75 ft wide, 120 ft. deep
Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 2
\
Garage: optional
Windows: single or double-hung
Exterior material:. sidi ng and brick
Foundation: raised concrete slab
Exterior walls: 2 x 4 studs
Roof materials: fiberglass shingles

-Debra Purvis

Architectural Glossary:
Double-hung window
A window that operates by means of two sashes that
sli&lt;le vertically past each other.

Ordering information:

Designer comments:
"This hou se is convertible in nature with lots of first
tloor space but with an upper tloor just waiting for the

For a $5 study plan of this house call 1-877-228-2954,
send a check to AP House of ihe Week, P.O. Box 1562.
New York, NY 10116-1562, or order by credit card at
www.APHouseoftheweek.com . Be sure to include the
plan number.

AQ

r

ANNOUN&lt;.:EMEIVTS

1

PERSONAl.~

I

Grave Blankets. Hand craft· 2 atumrnum storm doors
ed. artilic1al. aiJIO.K 3ft. long w' screen &amp; gtass. one 32
w1de.
one
36
w1de.
Call (7401446- 1714
(740)992·3669
3 yr old Female Blade Lab
(304 )895·3492

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ................. .................... .. ..... 030

Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and

Flea Market. ............................ OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
October 30, 2004
Vinton Elementary Fall Carnival
6:00p.m.· 8:00p.m.
Auction - 8:30 -?
Games, prizes, food
Raffle - 5 ft. Amish Glider

COURTSIDE BAR
AND GRILL
Halloween Party
Sat. , .Oct. 30
Costume Contest

Clothing, household
items, misc.
131 Lower Garfield
Mon &amp; Tues

Business Opportunlty ................................. 21 0

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577

Ariel Theatre Presents ·
Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky
Thunder with special guest
Joey Wilcoxon
Sun. , Nov. 7th
4:00 &amp; 7 00 pm
740-446-2787

Vanco Floor Covering

I

•

1378 Jackson Pike
·Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446·0 137

( 2pm • 5 pm only)

Let us do your Halloween
Costume Make-up ·
Call or stop in today for an
appointment.
313 3rdAve. Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-2673

6:30 p.m. at AMVETS
in Kanauga.
Fund raiser for
Andrew and Jolene Carter,
who are adopting a baby
boy from Guatemala.
Tickets are $20 each for
20 games featuring
Longaberger items, plus
special games featuring
new Longaberger purse
and basket.

FASHION BUG
50% OFF
All Regular Priced Items
30% off
All "Pnced Just Aighf' and Markdown Items

Friends &amp; Family Discount Shopp,ng
1 NIGHT ONLY
Sun , Oct . 24, 2004 4 pm - 9 pm
Ohio River Plaza
446·2009

Ariel Theatre Presents

. Jimmy Wayne
with special guest
Paul "Bub" Williams II
Saturday, Oct. 30 6:00 &amp; 9:00 pm
740-446-2787

HANNAN TRACE
ELEMENTARY FALL
FESTIVAL
Sat., Oct. 30
Games and food begin at 1:00
p.m. Auction at4:00 pm
Donations Appreciated

Everyone Welcome

SCUFFY'SRV
r
Special18-30th
$65.00 Winterization
70" Tool Box $195.00
72" Tool Box $220.00
446-0800

Business Training ....................................... t40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .. ......................... 790
Camping Equlpment ................................... 7BO
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrl~eratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent..................................... 4BO
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ......................................... 61 0
Farms lor Rent... .......................................... 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Leue ..................................................... 490 ·
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sala or Trade ....................................... ;1.590

Fruits &amp; Vagatables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
Gonoral Haullng........................................... aso
Glvoaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads .................................................... oso
Hay &amp; Qraln .................................................. 840
Help Wanted .................... .. ................ ........... 110
Homo tmprovomonto ................................... 81D
Homoolor Salo ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 51D
HOUIIIIOr Rent ............................ :............. 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lneurence ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenr ........................ eeo
LlveiiOOk ...................................................... 830
Loat end Pound ........;.................................. oeo
LOti &amp; Acrt1Qt ............................................ 350

Brenda's Kut &amp; Kurl
is pleased to Welcome
Mandy Griffith and
Crystal Mauntel
Mandy specializes in up do's,
long layer &amp; razor cuts. Crystal
specializes In razor cuning ,
color &amp; manicures. The girls
are now accepting old &amp; new
customers by appointment
or walk~n.

Please call

740-441·0583
63 Pine St Gallipolis, Ohio

•

Mlacallanaoue Morchandlae ....................... 54D
Mobile Homo Ropolr .................................... 880
Mobile Homoa lor Ront.. ............................. 420
Mobile Hom•• lor 8ata ................................ 320
Monay to Loon ...:.................................... :.... 220
Motororctee &amp; 4 WhNiere .......................... 7-40
Muelco lnotrumanta ................................... 570
Per1on111 ..................................................... 008

Peta for 8111 ,,., ............................................ eeo

Plumbing &amp; Heetlng .................................... B20

Proloaalonalltrvlcao ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CS Repair ............................... teo
Rill !IIIII Wentod ..................................... 380
8choolelnltructlon ..................................... 150
8ted, Plan1'6 Fertilizer .............................. 850
lltultlon•· Wenttd ....................................... 120

8pacolor Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting oood . ............... ............................

eao

SUV'a lor Sale .............................................. 720
Trucka lor 8olt ............................................ 715
Upholatory ................................................... 870
Vana .For 8ale............................................... 730
Wanted to lluy .................................,........... OliO
Wanted to Buy· Form luppllto .................. 520
Wenttd To Do .............................................. 1 BO
W•nttd to Rent ............................................ 470

.Vard Sale· Galllpolla .................................... 072
Yard Salo·Pomeroy/Middlt ......................... 074
Yard BIII·Pt . Plllllnl.. .............................. 076

All Dlapl•v: 12 Noon 2
Bu••n••• Dav• Prior To
Publication
Sund•y Dlaplay : 1 100
Thurad•v for Sund•v•

POLICIES: Ohio Val..wPubllahlng ruerv" the right to edh, reject, 01 cancel any ad at any time. Errol'$ muat be reported on the fire! day Df
Trlbunt·Stntlnst-Aegltttr will be r"pontlbla for no more than tha coat of the apace occupied by thl error and only the flrttlnunlon. WI atlall not be Ueblt
tny Iota or ellJMn.. thet ruulta from tht publlcallon or omlealon of an ad"Wertl ..mant. Corrac:tlon will be made In lha11rat evallabla edition. • Bo ~~: number
to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thle now''"''"'
are aiWaw• contldtntlal. • Current rite card appu... • All,. ., aetate tdventaamenta are
wtnttd ada
EOE attrndtrda. We Will not
accept any
In violation of the ltw.

I· P\IPI(I,\11 \I
Silo!\ It IS

l"

M'l\lll\6~----....,

3 young cats. Friendly. litter
traiMd .
inside
only
(740)446·3897

.

Htl.P WANTED
SSSHUClE WEEKLY
INCOMES$$
Processrng our mail from
horne.
Genuine opportunily.
FREE supplies. FT/PT.
100% Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Call 1[702)933·4666
(2 4 hours)

Free k1ttens, 8 weeks old,
rndoor,
litter
trarned,
wormed . 3 tabby. 2 white. 1
orange. (740)367-7574.
Free K1ttens- wh1te or gray.
longharred or short hiured.
(740 )992-7285

5250 to $500 a week
Wrlltrarn to work at home
Helpi ng the U.S .
Government file HUD/FHA
mortgage refunds
No elCperience necessary
Call Toll Free
1-866-537·2907

Mommy Cat &amp; k.rllens. mrlCed
w/biUe eyes. pretty cats ask
for Shelly (304)593·1742
between 7-9pm

Buyer
Rockwell Automation provides innovative industrial
automatron solutions to
companies
around
the
world. Solutions that keep
them ahead of the curve and
make us a global leader. We
ea rned our reputation tor
excellence through dedicated people like you. Join our
team and discover how you
can make a difference
Buyer
Gallipolis, OH
Join us in !he exciting production buying position , as
you utilize you r knowledge
ot supplier base conditions
and trends to develop sourc·
rng strategies and negotiate
contracls. Add11ionaUy. you
will rnitiate cost reduction
sourcing strategies ami
negotia te
con tr acts.
Additionall y, you will inrtiate
cost reductron opportunities,
implement inventory pro ·
' grams and resolve procure· men! problem. Our ideal
ca ndidate will have a
Bachelor's
degree
in

Part Lab &amp; Collre, blonde
male, 2 yrs. old. To good
An Excellent way to earn
home only. Call (740)446money.
The New Avon .
2886 Leave message
Call Marilyn 304-882·2645
I A1'CI' -\Nil
AVON 1 All Areas 1 To Buy or
fot.r~IJ
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304675-1429
Lost- black cat , yellow eyes.
bE
A G d
name of MaJIC , family pet. 8 a
vans rn 10 ran e 1 ~
missing srnce Oct. 15, tookrng lor e~~:penenced wart
L1ncoln Hrll a1ea. Reward. staff Apply In person.
call (7.!0!992-3695
Business. 3+ years of pur·
chasing experience in an
•Part· Time•
indusuial
manufacturing
Reward Lost 'in the Mason
environment and excellent
orn the winning team a
area, on Wed Oct 13. 2004 .
communication ski ll s. We
oca-Cota Enterprises,
Lrght·Ye11ow Part Chow.
also ask tor profrcrency rn
he world 's largest bottle
female dog was wearrng
Microsoft applications. the
f nonalcoholic bever
purple coll ar. 1! seen call
ability to lead other and
ges Our Merchandiser
1304)773·5094
proven success in working
re responsible for deliv
with cross-fuctional teams.
ring and stocking Coca
REWARD
ola products at our cus
Visit www. rockwellautoma·
Lost . Reddtsh-brown Beagle
omer locations through
llon .com and click on
mrx wrth purple collar
ut the Gallipolis area.
Careers under Roc~well
Female. small-med1um srze
Candrdate must be a
Automation
Controls
Answers to "Dilo:re" . Very soe ·
east 18 years of age an
Systems,
search
for
c1al larnrly pet. (740\t141·
e able to work any shift.
2550BR and apply online
1269
s well as weekends an
Rockwell Automation rs an
olrdays and have a vall
equal opportunity employer
rrver's
lrcense
an
and supports diversity in the
cceplable MVR.
workplace.

r

Applications are now
accepted online only
at:

AI ·c·noN ANI&gt;
Ft.&gt;JI 1\rhRMT

www.cokecce.
com/careers

RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
BARN Rl. 7 South, 5 m1les
below th'e Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm .
(7401256·8989

r

EDE •MIFIDN•DFW.
·coca-Cola " is a trade·
mark of the Coca-Cola
Company.

WA~1l:D
mRL''I'

Tri-State Coca-Cola
Bolllln~ Company

At:rsolule Top Dollar: U S.
Silver and Gold Coins.
Proofsets. Gold Rmgs. u .s
Currenc~.·M T.S. Com Shop.
151
Second
Aven ue,
Oe.lllpchs . 740·446·2842

Out People, Ou r
Products. Our Pride

I'SYCUOLOOIST

Junk car• with or without We are a well r11pect1d
national practice deallnQ
motora (740)388·0011 .
with garlatrlea , We are In
need ot a llcenaad psycnolo·
Old ml!k bO!IIes from Gallla gilt who Is lntar11t1d In
Co. Dairies. Call (740)446· working part time. We otter a
1714 with prlcet.
go·od atartlf'Q 111ary and thl
IOIIIty to par tlclpll&amp; In our
40, K. can Pay chO iogtll
Wanted 213 Bedroom t10uu .
TriMIItiOnl 81 877·734·2031
w/garaga . Tuppara Plaine or
or tu1 ruuma to 877·734·
CMti!Dr area . Pr&amp;l!opproved
2030 .
financing . (740)949-2, 94

Help Wanted

Halp Wanted

Mltctlleneoue .............................................. 170

formerly of Smart Style.

(formerly Headquarters)

Friday, Oct. 29 &amp;
Saturday, Oct. 30

Basket Games
Saturday, Oct. 30,

MOHAWK
ANNIVERSARY MONTH
Celebrating 126 years
of
Quality Flooring

Oct. 3rd · Nov. 6th
Get FREAKED OUT
with
High Maintenance Beauty
Salon

Autp Repair .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ sso
Business and Buildings ............................. 340

Now you con hove borders and graphics
lLJ
added to your classified ads
(. ~
.rn
Borders $3.00/per od
l;!ii4
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

• All ada must be prepaid'

r

Have you had a recent experience ot help-seeking for a
Single white professional concern about your emoChristian male. 45, 5'-7" I!Onal or mental health within
stocky bwld. non-smoker. no the last year? II so. the re IS
drugs, above average looks1 a research team from WVU
In search of (t) lovely srngle that is very interesled m
White . or Latino Chnstran learning more about what
fema le. non-smoker , no it's like. these days. to seek
drugs. 30 to 45. ~ or 2 chit· help for emo tional or mental
dren ok! Serrous rnqu rres health concerns. and we
only! Please no games ! would very much like to hear
Co ntact me @ Mountain your story Whether you r.
PO
Bp)(
43. SlCpenence was pos!ltrve:
Man
Middleport, Ohro 45760
negatrve : a "mrxed bag: or
completely neutral. we'd strll
love to.tlear from you . If you
are willing to meet wrth a
member of this research
team to describe what your
recent expenence of hefpseekmg was like . please
contact either Betsy Randall
Drd anyone who atlended
(304-347-1385:
the Francrs E Shaufler's
Orandal l@hsc.wvu.edu ) or
Auctron on 9-1 t-04 lrnd an
Manlyn Smith (304)342·
mstruction nook anr:liacces4275 . All replies will be held
sorres tor a Montgomery
rn the strictest confidence
Ward sewrng machine,
Thanks very much for your
Model UHT·J1980 I would
mter9st
rn sharmg your
like to have (need.) rt . Call
story. and we look forwa rd to
Lucy (740)843·5260
hearmg lrom you ~

r

Friday For Sund•v•.P•per

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Comph:tte
Detc::rlption • Include A Price e Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre .. When Needed
e Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get

BUAKFAST
tO'..O' - 10'·0'

{AP Photo/AP House olthe Week)

AN

Oeatl~irM

Word Ads

l"lcuS&lt;trH Valley
Equipment

Hume Medical
iu:~:~:plinil rt:!lllltlll!'!ll for

llo.&lt;~ltul

i~ ~llrrcntly

full "'"''' Drl} ,hi fl. R•oplratory Thenpl•t.
m C•rllft•d R••ph·utury Th•nplot. Musl be
u .,truduutc ut' un uppruved Rc!lpinatory
Tll~·t'ftJ'IiSt
di~ihl~

pt'i.l~rnm.

~hl .lit

fw· lh.·cn...:inil in tht:

.he· lict:nscd
~tuiC!'i

of WV

or

LUH.l

Ohio.
E'lll't.•lk•nt .\UILiry. hnli dup . hl'lilth iiHi urnnce
~iuglc/l'umily 11lu11. LIL'Ittttl plun, ltl'c itl .. unmcc,
Vill.'ntJ&lt;lll, l(n~-r~nn dJ~tlhlltty

und

1'~o•urcmen t .

SL·ml n.:~umr~ to:
l'l••••nt Volley llo•pltal
% Hun1•n Rc•ource•
2!20 Volley llrl&gt;•
l'nlnt Pleu•unl, WV 2!!!11
(.1114 ) 615-43411
AA/EOE

Rockwell Automatkm
www.rockwellautoma·
tlon.com
Domino 's now hiring sale
drivers
all
positions.
Gallipolis, Pom eroy. Pt.
Pleasant, &amp; Eleanor call
store (304)675 -585 8 tor
applications

Help Wanted

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED I
Work From Home ,
800·21Q-4689
$500·$ 1,5001Mon1h
Part-time
$2.000·$8,000/Month
Full·time

DATA ENTRY
Work from home
Flexible Hours!!
$$$Great Pay&lt;SSS
Personal Computer
Required .
1 -81)().913-2823 e.t.

*'

De sk clerk needed. Please
at Bud get In n,
apply
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis . No
phone calls please. •
Diesel Mechanic
Local
Transportatron
Company now hiring experrenced Diesel Mechanics
Must have a minimum ol 3
years experience in !ruck
and trailer repair. Thermo
Krng experience a plus. CDL
required.
$35.000 plus
annual salary and lull com·
pany Oenetits.
Send resume to
Bob Evans Tran sportati on
2860 State Route 850
Bidwell , OH 45614
Driver

$50' 000 . $60' 000
PER YEAR!!
HOME WEEKLY
*gg~o No Touch
"70% Drop &amp; Hook
• Great Miles

·company Start · 38t/mile
·o1Ops Start - 11.00t'mlte
Class A CDL + tyr OTR requ1red

1-800-539-8016

www 1anda1r com
Drivers &amp; mechanic : fo r
Regional Hazmat Tanker
Co.. w/2 yrs. tractor-trailer
exp. Excellent Pay/Benelrts.
MarTin Transport (866)2937435

6

t_,1".-HELP--W·"-Nl'•CD_.JJ'~.,.'_1fu_·..r.w_"'~.~.·m-rl
0

6

HFl.rW,wrrn

LICENSED
PRACTICAL
NURSE

Green Acres

Regional Center, Inc.
Has an Immediate
opening for: Treatment
Instructor
Job Requiremen ts :
High School diploma or
'
GED equivalent
Full-time Positions available
Working with MRJDD adults
in Varied settings
Send resume or
Interest letter to :
Green Acres Regional
Center, Inc.
Attention: Personnel
P.O. Box 240
Lesage, WV 25537
Fax: 304·762·2862
Email:

Scenrc Hrlls Nursrng Center.
a Tandem Health Care
Facility. is seeking a select
few to 10rn our outstanding
team . We currently seek 'ull
time LPNs Proper lrcense or
cert1tacatron req urred We
offer shttt drlfere'ntrat. excel·
len1 beneli\S . perfect atten·
dance rncentrves and rnuch
morer Please apply to.

Mason
County
Ac!IOr
Group. Inc , wilt be taking
applicatrons lor a Part-trme
Cook's Helper
Must De
clean. neat. pol rte and
dependable
Mus t have
e.Kper1ence coo~mg lor large
groups of people Apply by
Wednesday. October 27
2004 by 3·00 p.m at the
Personnel Depanment. 101
Second
Street.
Porf'lt
Pleasant. WV - 8 a rro ;r 4
p m No teleph one earls
EOE ~A M/F

New HOr iZOns Chr ldhood
Enrrchment Center rs tak 1ng
appliCatiOns tor Teach rng
Assrstant and subslrtute
garc @dlrecway.com
positrons New Hclrrzon wrll
EOE
operate
September-May.
Mondays-Thursdays. 9amlnloCision
Manage ment
t 1:30am a no serve chrldren
Corp. is currently accepting
ages 3-5 · Apphca~ts must
applicatrons at our downhave at least a hrgh schOol
town Gallrpolrs local10n.
drploma. experrence 1n early
Qualifiec;l applicants should
childhood oreterred For
be stable, highly motivated
SFIDF/EOE
more rntormat!On or to.
individuals wrth good com- HR@tandemhealthcara.com request an applrcatron tor
munication skills. We are the
employment packet call 740·
professional d1fference m Local company seeking a 9.:19·2381 or 740·992·2712
teleservices and need great dr1ver wrth a Class 8 COL
1eam players lo ioin usl wrth HAZMAT !O haul Nursrng Ass rstanl Classes
Interested
candidates propane and bulk fue s lor begmnmg Ncve l"'ltler 1
please call 1-877-463-6247 home heatrng OIL Two yE!ars 2004 Thru Novemoer 18
ext. 2458 or apply online experience rs · preferred. 2004 If you enJOY elde rl y
www mlocjsjon com
Benefits rnclude health. den· people and want to become
a member ot our health care
SWch Pathologist: Full tat and hie rnsurance. 401K
tea m
please stop by
time position wit h competi· plan and pard vacatiOn .
Rockspnngs Rehab 1lrtat ro n
tive salary and exceptrona! ln!erested
candidates
36769
Center
· at
frrnge benelrt package.
should send the11 resume to
'Road.
,
UEI.
Attn
Terry. PO Box Roc~spr 1ngs
Reqylrements·
Masters
Pomeroy. Ohro 45769 and lr ll
Degree fro m accredited 334, Gattrpolrs. OH 45631
out an appl1cah0n tor the
school of Speech Pathology;
clas ses Extendicare Health
Current Ohio License rn Make 50gb sellrng Av on Serv1ces. Inc. is an equal
Um
1
ted
t1me
ONLY
Speech Pa!hology.
opport uMy emp loyer that
(740)44 6-3358 . F1rst 5 to call
encourages
workpla ce
recerves a grft.
Applicants may apply to
drversrty M F D 'V
Holzer Clinic
Human Relatrons
POSTAL JOBS
AN's NEEOED
Departmen t
$14 62·$20 92Jhr. Now hrr· Have Telernenlry or ICU
90 Jackson Prke
rng . For applrcatrons &amp; free Expenence? At least a Year
Gallrpotis. Ohio 45631·1562
government joo rnlo , call
And wart to earn S35-S42
Fax to : 740-441·3592
Am ancan Assoc of Labor oer hOur Please Call Beck v
1-91 3·599-8042. 24 hrs
Today
1866)880-0600
Equal Opportunity Employer
emp seN
(6 t4)880-6000
Attn : Dianna Thom spon,
HR •
Scenic Hills Nursing
Center
3 t ~ Buckridge Road
Bidwell , OH 45614
Ph: 740144&amp;-7150
Fax: 740/446·2438
Email: admin.shn@
ta nde mhealthca re .com

Help.Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Manager needed lor mobile
home pa rK in Shade. send
resume to: Country Park
Inc .. PO 1033. Logan , Oh

43138

Help Wanted

"Notlee of Position Vacancy"
Posltlon: WIC Dietetic Technician
Type of Poaltlon : Full time. permanent
.employee, 35 hours per week. Monday thru
Friday, 8-4 . Ten paid holidays par year, three
personal days, vacation leave. sick leave,
health/li fe Insurance, Publ ic Employee's
Retirement System .
Minimum '*!uiNmeull: Associate's Degree
In Dietetics Techno logy . Computer
experience, lyplng. good oral and written
communication skills. Must hold a valid Ohio
driver's license.
Rote of Pay and lenefltl: WIC Dietetic
Technician pay rate as per Gallic County
Heallh Deportment salary structure See WIC
Director for slortlng and benefits.

Dote Available: Immediately
Dote of Palttng; October 21, 2004
Deadline for acceptance of applications with
resume: Close of business October 29, 2004.
Submit to'

Sondra Walker
RN/WIC Dlr.ctor
499 Jacklon Pike Su"- D

Galllpolla, OH. 45631
The Gallic Counly Health'&gt;jDepartment Is an
equal opportunity amplbyer and service
provider.

I

GENERAL Ml l.LS
St.·cking mOlivutcd worker~ "ith strong mcchantcal. rlec'lfica l and
trnuhh:~hnot ing .. kills for food manufactunng plant in Wcll!"ton, Ohio.

Thi" w~ll-known frolcn food plunt has a ~trong hi~tory and outlook. for
the futu re. Knowledge und experience in a munufucturing cn\'ironment
i~ a must applicants should be willing to Y.ork an) of our three-shift

operations. The following union hourly pd&lt;itions are immcdialely
available . .
Malntenanu Mechanics
.
Applicants should have a strong mechanicu l buckground: po"ess a
working knowledge of ~ncumatk s and hydraulic.: knowledge of power
circuitry and ability to usc dia(lnoslic cquipmcnl: und huvc the ability 10
perform emergency repaiu, prc~enti'w'c maintenance and "hungeo\'crs.
us well us ability to u:oubleshout on all 1ypc' of equipment. Cundiduic
shnuld possess tw o yea rs Ul'l muintcnam:c mcchunic nr equivalent
education a mechanical field. Pay runge&gt; from $11.511 tn $1 J . ~O I'&lt;'
hour, depending on c~pericncc.
Electricians
Mu•t huvc ubility 10 troubleshoot 2411-480 voli row er di,rrihution
equipn)ent: both At und DC motors. sturter:o!i with II~ \n il nit11ml an&lt;l
dcvit:e~ .~o~uch as photo eye~ unLI pro:w.imit) !lwit,hc!~-. Pl '"'~·,, the uhdit}
t o rend elec tricnl !!Chcmulic!l : u knowledge of&lt;. Pt.C'~ .1 r1d III'LC yrnr
ulacbru l11 desired. Applkunt~ shoulJ ulso po~sc\s I\H1 )'l'UI~ 111Lh1~tnnl
tlcctridun e-. pr:ricn~:c ~,r two y~ur~ cqut~oull.·nt cducatrnn 1n clc~tr1t'lll

licld. P"'ition pny• S.lb.Jil('&lt;r hour.

Rerrlaeratton Openlor
Candh.lute!l shnuld hove u work1n~ knowlcd.lfi.C

ilf

lndu·MH11

nn111HH\11l

refrigcrution : pos!IC!I. .~ u mtnlmurn nf t"" n &gt;· cur~oo t' lc-.·tril'ul ttnd
mc~o:h"nl~:tll ptulntenu.ncr c:\pcncn~o·c, mimmum {)f two ycur~ Cli.JX'ncn ...·c
with ...:teum h1,!1eu : tW&lt;l yeur' rdrrgcruthm tc,hna:ll.tn c.,J,cru~-m:r ,11·

cquivulcnl eouc•lion Is preferred . A hrvh '&lt;hm&gt;l diplnmu or OED
equivalent is required. as well u...: u kno. wled~e of hu~ic mnth .~kill~ .
Priority will he 11iven to ih&lt;i•e ~o,.es&gt;~n~ u ~urrcrH HutMu l Tcchnidnn
Level F.rncr,~~,cncy Rc !ip(ln~e Ccrt i l'icntc. Pn"'h inn puy~oo \ 11\.•'0 per tu1ur.
Ocnerul Mill"' ol'f~r"' u i,:nmpn::hen~l '' " hr:n~o•!'it~ pnrkuje . rm·ludinat
insurun~o't, pret~Crlption
\-'UCution!hCJ!iduys. prnsion plun

cu:ellen1 health

lntcrc:!'ited Cllndidute"' \enU

G~neral

rc\lltnt'\

t.:Urd,

to :

Milia, Inc.

2403 S. Pennaylvanll Avenue
Welleton, OH 45&amp;82
Attention: HR
EEOtAA Employe r

i,U111:oohUt'itlU . plt~d

..

�Page 04 • ilunbap «•mrs ilmttml

1.,17-0•:\•l~•st•E•U•A•l'•i tl•l\•S_.lr
L,-•l'llof..,;;Sii~i~
Oili(iii~-·.1 r\o

I'

l,•lO_H_U•.P•V.A•'ffi
- ])_.1
Overbrook Rehab a on
Coote
s now accep ng
esumes fo he pas on of
D ecto of Soc a Se v cos
Cand da e mus possess
st eng ve ba and w efl
commun cat on

H gh
Schoo
Juno s
Sen a s a d P o Sa v ce
you ca
vacan pas ons
n he Wos V g a A my
Na ana Gua d
you a e
be .... een ne ages o 7 35
0 have p 0 m fa y se v
ce ~a .... an wan o pass
h s up Fa Oppo tun t es n
you a ea ca
304 675
SB3J

Sk s

Med cad Med ca e and
MDS knowledge LSW w n
e,.;pe ence n ong e n ca e
p ele ed but no eq ed
Qual fed cand da es pease
con act
Cha a 8 own
McGu e Adm n st a o a

333
Page
S eet
Mdd epa I Oh 45760 EOE
Pa amed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed App y a
354
Jackson P ke Ga po s
Pa t T me
Comp e
Techn cans needed n
Gall po s a ea Mus have
el abe t anspo a on Pay
based on expe anced Mus
have know edge n a ope
allng systems &amp; ha dwa e
coni gu at ons Appl cants
mus be outgo ng have a
good pe sana y Pease
submit esume o CLA Box
572 co Ga I po s Da y
Tr bune PO Box 469
Gal po s OH 45631

GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REF NANCE
YOUR HOME
FREE APPROVED
HOME LOANS

HI \11...,1\11

Hc~u~
FUR SALE

·---lliooiiDoii i --,.1
nsta FnshPan ng
Ca penten y Ba h ooms
Res den a Com mere a
NSURED
NOTH NG TO SMAL
FaPces
Seve 740 388 873

i\1 ....t•t• 1dvert •lng
newtpt~per

s

eubject to the Fede 11
F81r Houelng Act of ttea
which maQIIt legal to
Nvert H eny
preference limitation or
d scrlmln~~t on bued on
race calor rallg on sax
tamllla •tatus o netlonal
orlg n o any Intention to
m8ke any such
prefe enc:e tlmlte1 on or
d sc lmlnat on
Thll newapape w not

rl\

\~t

I \I

-;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

10

COL cense and
HAZMAT Come o he so e

BL~INESS
~.,
OPPOKJlJNrrr·

esume

••tate wh ch sin
violation of the ew Our
raadere are hereby
Informed that all
dwell ng• advertl ..d In

2 bed oom house Pome oy
$ t 8 000 00 Less fo cash

thll

naw•~ape

are

ava lib e on en ~ua l
opportunity

ba•••

3 bed oom u I basement
ga age app ox 1 ac e of
and 5 m es fom town on
SA 7@ Fve Pons cal
740 416 0768 o 304 882

Abso u e Go dm ne 60
vend ng mach nes exce
en oca ons a I o 510 995 Fam Y
Room
800)234 6982
Basement Gas hea &amp; a
--;:;lilll'!ll!![(;l! A ached Ga age 2 Ca
&lt;.11
Ga age n back w th u nace
PUBL SH
P ce
Reduced PhOne
304)773 956

r

3BR 2BA

5 1'9 ac es

G een Townsh p c ose o

~========

Seen
c H s NuHea
s nghCen
e
a Tandem
Ca e Fac ty s seek ng a se ec
ew to o n au au s and ng
eam We cu en y see~ u
me STNAs Prope ce
ca tn~.Q,. :equ ed We o e
sHtrf dif e en! a exce en
benef ts perfec at1endance
ncent ves and much mo e
P ease app y to

schoo P ced to se Mo e
nfo (740)446 7377
Auct1on

Auction

-;::====:;;;;;;;;;;;;;

AUCTION
2 Story Home on l/4 acre w/2 car garage
Salem Center OH (Me1gs County)
REAL ESTATE Two story country home qu et

Fax 740 446 2438

Emal adm n shn@
tandemhealthcare com

Rt
om

TELEMARKETERS NEED
ED No E~pe ence OK $7
9 Pe Hou Easy Wo k
888 974 JOBS

Job cons sts o ass s ng
Supe n enden w th da y
actvtes genea ceanng
and ma ntenance o equ p
ment App ca ons may oe
pcked up at the Ds c
off ce at 5th and Ma n
St eels n Rae ne a he
Mun clpa Bu d nQ Pease
attach sa a y equ emen
w 11'1
app cat on
App cat ons w be accep
ed untl Th~ sday Novembe
11 2004

ce

located In Patriot, Ohio from Gallipolis
Ohio take Rt 141 west 8 miles to 775
south 3 2miles then take Patriot Rd 2 1/2
miles to Burnette Rd Turn left and follow
signs about one mile field Parlllng mrs
Ross has sold her farm

w th 2 ca detached ga age
located between W lkesv lie and Langsv lie on
a ea on n

124

lot

Mot vated selle

Call for an

appo ntment

DIRECTIONS F om Rt 32 ex 1 on Rt 160
th ough W lkesv lie to Rt 124 before langsv lie
f om Pomeroy Rt 7 take Rt 124 through
Rutland aboul 14 m les to Salem Center bes de
P ck n Shovel Sto e watch for s gns
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR
John Patrock Pal" Sherodan
OhiDReaiEstateAuctoons com
Ema ShamrockAuct on @aol com
WEB

wwvv sham ock

auct

ons com

PH 74059243100 8004199122
Auction

Auction

********************************••••

!•

RUPERT REAL ESTATE AUCTION

*;

:
Truly Incredible Property!
:
27 Acres Offered 1n 2 Tracts
•: Exclus1ve
5 Bedroom 3 Bath Home
Super Shop Garage
Block Barn
: Outdoor R1dlng Arena
Lake

:
:
*:
:
:

!

: Adjoint Llkl Klthlrlnl Stltl Naturw Praurv• :

•••
••
••
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••
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The stunn ng v ews h gh ght the sett ng •
:

•••
•

*•
•*
•

Wlr"'lld

Expt anced 11 eapa aon
nllded lo g ow ng compa
Sa tapa ton w

be

ma 1'111 n cu ren

cuttome aa 11 and 1 at on
I~

PI

Sateaperaon w r&gt;a a(lu ad
to 11tao 11'1 r"'IW eua ome a
n the tr ata a a 11
Ful 1 me

poa on

••
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Good company benef ta and : Ogtlpn It
Commlll on pay cued on • of th s spl!lc ous home perched on 1 wooded kno I
11 11 Vald d ve 1 censed : eve coK ng cl!lttle &amp; estate ferms that surround this
and tran1po ta on equ ed
: Gent eml!ln s Fl!lrm Man Floor cons sts of 3 bedrml
Send 11ume o CLA 8011: • 2 fu baths k tchentd nlng combo v ng m w/
e48
P 0 Box 469 : woOd bu n ng f eplace Mus c Rm w/brlc:k pave
Qa pol I Oh o 4563
: accent floo ng upsta rs hl!ls 2 bedrms &amp; office/

~~ r~a=~~~u R~ck~ ~c::en~kerube:~~

•
:
:

•
:
:

£

Wanted
:
tym
3&amp;
Allilllnl w th ~P• enct o
bay Ql!l I!IQe w/concrete floor overhel!ld Ql!l age doc :
phyl clan off ce A un q1.1e
opene s wate e ect c p us sewer connection to :

!

poalt on

equ ng ~ now
edge of compu e 1 and da a
ant y 1 eo CO and CPT
coding Ae abe t anapo a
ton needed No weekends
or
ho days
equ ed
Benet ta ava ab 1 Sa a y
negotlab a w th t)lper ence
A lex ble amp eye Ma
eaume to Box !S~S co
Oa po Ia Ca y Trloune PO
Box 489 Cla po a OH
45631

!
* sept c

tank 220 we dl!r receptac e f ench tloo •
! d 1 n Cu It n sto age she v ng Cons sts of approx :
: lS ec (subject to survey f sold sepa ate f om Tract :
* J112) Optlpn 12. The lvestock ban w concrete •
: pou ed noo anothe g aiJI! nco equ p shed pus :
: anothe attached un n w;auto heated wete e s bay :
• doo fo campe w/elect c: &amp; sewer connect ens (If •
! sod as a whole) mostly at a I fenc ng w paddocks:
:: &amp; outdoo ld ng a ena cons sts of approx 12 ac es !
: subject to survey T1rm1 Offe ed In 2 t acts &amp; as :
* whoe se s to hghest bdde (Tota P ce) above •
! 1275 000 19 500 down pe t act at t me ol sa e :
: offe ed f ee &amp; c ea of I ens o mortgages prio to !
* cloSing by 12 6/2004 no contln~encles ex st
•
SCHOOlS
!
Wm &amp; Jud th Rupert III Owne s
:
INSTRUCTION
II' Ooen Iut$ 10/19 fwm 56 &amp; Syo. 10/31 from 2 4 *
:
Call far FrH lroch~n•lll
:
Gtlllpolll CarHr College
~"'f&gt; STANLEY. SON, INC 1il !
(Ca ee a C ose To Home)
Ca Today 740 448 4367 : -.~
(740) 77S 3330
:
BOO 2 4 0452
!
WWW STANLEYANDSON COM !
* Henry M 5 a ley I CAl AARE GPPA Auct onee &amp; *'
*
Rei!! Estate S oke
*

•

;

•

•
•

•

··~······················~··········

'

•

BI:Jd om 8 .ck Home 2
ath 3Ca 8 ck
nat ached Ga age 2
o youbuldng Code
2704 o ca (740)446
566

TRACTOR\\ ILL BE SOLIJ \1
12 00 NOON
M F 1 81 tracoo doe el 10 4 10 1
" u I hou ; wdl kept hkc n&lt;w 1954 M
Harr s Pon) v. plows compl ICl) nvcr h
&amp; e t red garage kept
FAR:I-1 EQUIPMENT\\ ILL SF. I LA I
12 (HJ NOON
GEHI 880 Hay Bone lnt 110 M r ore
Spreader N H 268 Bale K ng K Iter E I
Bush Hog I 0 It P ck up d sc Trunspoo
D sc Se1 of Double Ph ws Hay Wag u
Carry All P1g Pole Ferguson Hay Rake 6
ft Blade Herd Broadcas1 Seed Sprcude
FARM MISC ITEMS
5 Tobacco boxes kn fe spuds rolls of wore
push plows 2 dog houses 300+ lobacco
sl cks R R Jack wood &amp; coal onscr1lor I rc
place Furrow pon for hogs 2 kerosene
heaters wheel barrow rakes shovels 2
upplcbutter kettles alum tr tool box s n
amount ot lumber coal 2 burner stove
wood burner heat ng stove
FURNITURE
Secl onal L R Sune lg ch nu cub net uuk
lamp table Voct platlonn rocker oak table
&amp; 4 cha1rs 2 pc cab1net pantry cab10e1 t uk
desk maple table end tables 4 pc Bn&gt;&lt;el
B R Suote ch1lds Jenny Lynn rocker me1al
twm bed oak 3 t er file eubonel Louster
oven Emerson m crowavc Presto Pre&lt;Surc
Cooker G E a1r cond &amp; more
GLASSWARE &amp; MISC
Lg umoun1 of glassware vases mos1crs
ccrnmo&lt; M ckcy Mouse &amp; other I gunncs
stone Jnrs Da scy churn stone p tchcr lg
m1rrnr Sessoon ani que clock western
pictures &amp; others lg area ru~ lamps Imens
Max Tech computer wlpnnlcr &amp; slnnd
Home lntenor cream seperator run pols
Pron1' R 2 Elcclnc wheel chuor I kc new
only used once cost $71164 new lg amount
&lt;I tools Ro10 Z1p saw hokes &amp; more
GUNS
Mode l 200 Ted W1lhams 12 gu pump gun
New Englund 410 songle shot
TRUCK WILL SELL AT ll 00 NOON
W/RESERVE
2002 Toyota Tac&lt; n a 4 Wh Dr fully I
19 000 act m les noce truck
Auctioneers note Great counlr} fur n

aucu

au~;;lton

AUCTION Conducted

b~

RICK PEARSON
Auction Co. #66
Lie. &amp; Bonded In the
State of Ohio
304-173·5785 or 304·173·5447
Terms: cash or check wilD
Owner Judy Ross

Terms Cash or check wilh ED
sold as IS

L lvt:l&gt;1l1L1&lt;

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLBCTIB~ES
AUCTION

Friday, October 29
6:30p.m.
8580 St Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35)
Gallipolis, Ohio
The followong 1!ems are from the former
Wagon Wheel Anllques Mrs Dorothy
Broyles owner

t4x70 wth 7x21 manufac
urad expanoo 3 bed oom
1 5 ba h a appliances
newer tu nace G eat condl
on (740)388 0496
14x70 87 Cayton 3 bedcom 2 bath C A new car
pet ceramiC 1 e washe &amp;
dyer $10 000 (740)388
0401

Bedroom 3 Ba h
Loca ed n Ga po s ove
ookng heOhoRve
ve 3000 sq ft on 3 94
cres Coda 825 o ca I
740)441 0323

Auction

Green House Auction
SatArday October 30 2004 @ I 0 OOam
Located m Me1gs Co at H liTis M u kel on
St Rt I ?4 m Portland Oh10
Green Houses
Three 18 x96 Two 30 x96 1v/ra sed
s1des 20 x96 Stubby one Nexus
56 xl44 w/up out s1cles and all alumnum
frammg one Hot House all allummum
All houses used this yem
MISC
Stand b) Power Plant 465 H P c ummmgs
Engme v./a300 KW 37) KAW M arathon
generator 'W tpower RO 50 PTO alterna
tor 6 xiO walk 111 coole1 w/tv.o 1eta I d1 s
play doors mcludes comp1essor Hobart
scales and shnnk v. rap table S S ltble
w/cutung board electronic scales cash
1eg1ster bushel baskels wooden apple
boxes &amp; bms retml d1splay racks &amp;
tables shoppmg carh ret a I plant shop
pmg carts pots &amp; pans pool suc ks 8 gal
elec hoi v.aler heater 39+ benches g1een
house fans hangmg ba sket waterers dnp
svstem heaters 10lhne benches v./p1pe
grow lights v. 1re lop benches m st con
trollers shade cloth 40 50 tlscd turances
(need repair) pallet Jack &amp; lots more
Owner Hm r s Fanm
A.uctloneer Dun S11 th

WV #5 1)

PosiiJVe I D
Refresh nent s
Not responsible for aCCidents
or loss ot propen y

Auct1on

Globe Wernocke Stack book case 6 slore
showcase mahogany ch1na cab net (full
v1ew rope wood tnm) oak I brary table
Columboa Grafanola (table top) V ctor
talk ng mach1ne Voctrola (1906) 2 round
oak tables wlfancy bases ch Ids hump
back trunk m sc oak cha rs oak parlor
table wlclaw feet other parlor tables an!l
lamp tables early barrel style wooden
washong machone large fancy m1rrors
early oak rocker fancy oak dresser
wlh gh back m rror oak curve front chona
cabonel treadle sewong mach1ne qu It
rack Gone w th the W nd lamp All ad on
lamps 15 o I lamps Galhpo s Items (Dr
Lupton s gn paper otems m k bottles)
Natoonal Mantome adv
s gn
adv
thermometers 2 wood churns stoneware
molk polcher (Green w/grapes) crocks
Jars JUgs 100+ pc Depress on glass
k tchen glassware of depress on era
hand pa nted chona (Lomoge Japan
Nor take France Germany) flow blue
beaded purses Vontage hats flapper hal
1ewelry reverse pa ntong US Cap tal early
rock ng horse WWI yard long photos
hand pa1nted lamps McCoy coca cola
clock Wattware collect on of red ruby
earn val glass
m1ss on oak stand
p ctures and frames 2 gal stone churns
a n ce var ety of country and farm related
an toques cast oron sk llets counlry store
otems 1umbo peanut Jars kotchen terns
German porcelaon clock (Boy Gor) salt
eel ars old toys glass churn s lver plate
flatware gran te ware pressed and
pattern glass Th s sa e has over 400
terns of equal quality and quanloty

Sale preview for Oct 29 sale IS
Thursday, October 28 5 8 pm

Auctioneer

Leslie A Lemley
740-388-8115
Apprentice Auct1oneer
Josh Bodimer
Cash/Approved Check only
No Smoking Please"
Nol responsible for accidents or lost
property

Aucloon

Auctoon

2,087 ACRES

2br house to
rent
$350/moo h wa e and
ash pad no pets Depos t
and ere ence equ red
(740)368 1100

BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes wood
Dr ve f om $344 o $442
- - - - - - - - Walk to shop &amp; moves Cal
3 Bed oom arge yard 1 car 740 446 2568
Equa
ga ago no pets 7 m es om
Ro
tO mes town
:..(7_40::)c:.37..:9..:2:.:54:.:0:;____ Clean 1 bed oom apa I
3 4 Bedroom
House ment stove and rei ge alo
Galt pols Dead End St No pets depos I and efe
$450/month $250 depos 1 ences equ ed (740)992
Stove &amp; F g (740)446 3761 7481
0 304)675 4107
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl
4 bed oom house for en EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Po t and area o a y remod
eled $500 pe
mo
(740)643 5546

1997 28x52 Daub ew de
to rea estate) 3
bedroom 2 bath ea n
kitchen Ba o shed ca po
5+ acres Adamsv lie Road
Pnvate sett ng $77 000 f m
n Sy acuse OH
(740)245 5157
$600/month $600 depos 1&amp;
3b n Sy acuse $475 mon h
2000 &amp; 2001 Doublew de Hud App oved both no Pets
both 3 bedroom 2 bath Cal (304 675 5332
(740)709 1166
Ava lab e Nov 1 2BA 1 5 G ac ous vtng and bed
1
2
ba h centra a gas hea
$450 month + depos room apartments at v age
Mana
and
Rvesde
(740)446 1079
Apa tments n M dd epo t
F om $295 $444 Cal 740
Make 2 payments move o 4
992 5064 Equa Hous ng
Opportun t es
years on note (304)736
3409
4th
New Oakwood mega sto e
fea ur ng
Homes
by Huge Cup ex c ean 3 bed
bath dnng so
Oakwood F eetwood &amp; oom
G les One stop shopp ng age No petslsmok ng $6 0
on y at Oe~wood Homes o Ca Kely (740)446 9961
Barbou sv Ue WV (304)736 La ge farmhouse 3 bed Mode n 1 bedroom. apt
3409
oom
ba1h $450 pe Phone (740)4&lt;16 0390
mor1 h
pus
secu ty
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock mode s at old p cas (740)992 6~44
2005 mode s a v ng Now Nee 1 2 &amp; 3 bedoom
Co e s Mob le Homes Apa !men s eta space
15266US 50Eas A hens a so to ent (740)992 3702
O~Kl4570
740)592 1972
Where You Get You Nce 2 BA house SA 160 4
m N of Haze $400 mo t
Moneys Wo h
sec depos t no pets P easant Va ey Apa tment
(740)446-6865 or (740)379 A e now ak ng App1 cao ons
Lars&amp;
2923
for 2BA 38R &amp; 48R
A&lt;..11EAG~
::N:.:ce:::...h-om_e_o_n_S_R_1-60-1 Appl ca ons a e taken
2 ac es on lnga rs Road m e tom Ho zer $650 pe Monday th u F day 1 om
900 AM 4 PM Ofce s
$ 5 000 740 245 0133
mon h (740)446 6865 o
(
~ g.
Located at 1151 Eve g een
740 37 2923
D ve Po nt P easant WV
2001 mob le home 6x80
Phone No s (304 675 5806
also wo ac es and 1 m e
EHO
from A 7 oea Eu eka
$65 000 Ca (740)256
Ta a
Townhouse
9234
Apartments Ve y Spac ous
- ' - - - - - - - - 2 Bed ooms 2 F oo s CA 1
Bruner Land
Ve y n ce 4 bedroom on 112 Bah Newly Ca peted
(740)441 1492
Garf eld App ances base Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poe
$500 hods you lo
men1 Depos t &amp; f s1 mo Palo Sta t $385 Mo No
Meigs Co Reedsvl e next ent $550 each Ut 1 es Pets Lease pus secu ry
oepos t Aequ ed Davs
to Oh10 A \le + Fo ked Run ext a (740)446 2515
•
Lake 0 acres $ 5 950 o 8
MoFOBILER
o':!?~
-7-40-44_6_3_4_8_1~-Ev_e_n_n_g_•
aces $15950 Tuppes ~
"""'"
• ~·o 367 0502
Pia os off Success Rd 5
ac es aga ns state land
$ 6 950 co wale Chaste 2 bedoom a eec c 4
Ba&amp;han Ad 7 ac e homesite m es no th of Hotze $350
$ 8 500 G ea nves ment man h + sec depos t &amp; er apa lment
5 ac es So of Au and e ences (7 40)446 6865 o EHO
740)379 2923
$8 250
Gal!le Ca Ao G ande 8
Happy Ad
ac es $23 950 V nton
Cod I Ad 5 wooded acres
$ 4 500 co wa er Kyge 6
to 18 ace acts cho ce
$ 7 950
Mo e pa eels eva ab e at
each ocal on We I glad y
send you maps o exp ore
each s te Owne f nanc ng
w 1h s ght ma kup We buy
land
(con~Jerted

Auction

Auct1on

Ph 740/446 7150

n~

Newly remo ded Home
Located n Hartto d 2b 1
bath compute oom a
elecu c heal pump cent a
a $40 000 ca (304)882
2762 ca I day or even ng

Cash

ng

311 Buckrdge Road
Bidwell OH 45614

tltptelld to

wok
2197

Ohio#l344

Center

SF OF EOE
HR @tancternhea he a e

House n Kanauga
Fa mesAd Ga pols
$40 000 2 tra e s K ode
Pa k
on
Nea
Ad
$675 month
n\les ment
Both
a e s $35 ooo
(740 44 5725

Vew photos n o on ne

740 949 ?O:J:l

PUBLIC

HR
Seen c H lis Nurs

Aucloon

Auct1on

Attn 01anna Thompson

House 3 Bed oom
2
h Heat Pump new
Ca pel W ndows 8 Roo
Ave Vewi2SmhS No
Money Down o qual fy ng
Buye $425 man h why
Ren (304)675 2749

Ba

1dvert sements for rea

2299

STATE TESTED
NURSING
ASSISTANTS

ngs
L st you home b~ ca I ng
(740)4&lt;16 3620

know ngly 1ccept

2659

P vate owned Beauty Sa on
needs sys
o wok
Mondays Tuesdays and
Wednesday s w pay 60o/.
and w buy a supp es
C ente e p ete ed Send
esume to CLA Box 555 PO _W_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Box 469 Ga po s OH Reasonab y
P ced
45631
304)675 8635

www orvb com

6unbap llhnn ilmtlntl • Page 05

Auction

Auction
Home List

n th •

NEW PURCHASES/
·--ioiiii.iiiiiiiiiio-,.1
REF1NANCES
$0 DOWN $0 DOWN
2 3 bed com houses or
CASH OUT HOME
sa e 2 baths
ep aces on
MPROVEMENTS NO
ac eage Call (740 709
CRED T BANKRUPTC1ES
Seeking 39 People 1166
WELCOME
v
Locally
0°o Down Payment and
who wan o ea n money f nanc ng ava abe w h
UN1TED SECURITY
wh e os ng we ghl show ng app oved c ed
MORTGAGE
Ave age
o he show
1-8Q0-3711-4965
c edit qua f es you down
740)44 982
CALL TODAY
paymen has kep you f om
FREE SAMPLES
STAFFED BY U S
buy ng th 5 5 you chance
VETERANS
o own you own home f
you l'la\le a down payment
llOO
WAN'Ill&gt;
MB 5263
but wou d ke o conserve t
we otfe ow down payment
(Oh o Loans On y)
p og ams a so G eat nter
0 ve Needs Wo k C ass A est ates Loca company
COL A Endo sements Ca Mo gage
Loca ors
740)367 7899
740)992 7321
DRYW\LI

Homes f om S 0 000
Fo casu e VA Hud lo s
ng aoo 749 8 os e• 709

t\ n l.NTIONI

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Un ess We W n
888 582 3345

r10

CLASSIFIEDS!

ava abe
on
May ta~e t ade to mota gas
Home For Sa e
Sassaf
as/Lev
ng
Ad
(304)
home a t uck (7 40 992
Hand
bu
og home 6 yea s
675 6809 a«e 5 00
2306
od P vate wth 10 aces
S1unong vew 3 8 1 2
2 BR on Sandhi Rd n
bath Open lof1
Lea
vng oom wt e
Financing available wUh
pace k chen has d sh
NO DOWN PAVMENTIII
washe s ove &amp; e dg
Up o$925h wth
(740)368 0 64
- - - - - - - - chan nk fence ca po
qua fed e~pe ence
gassed n back po ch
Excel en pay and bene s
$280001 m(304)882 30 1
Auction
Auction
Ca Now
Bath
1-877-463-6247 ask for
ext

Sunday, October 24, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galhpohs, OH • Pt Pleasant, WV

r

I

i

coun y P va e env on
ment Phone (740)446
3897

Blrlllday
'l'lacl

great
deveopmentpotente Fve 5Ac Bdg S~esovenooldnglake ~OCATED 10m esWestofJacksononthe
Jackeon/Pike County Line on B g Rock Rd (Watch fo signs )
175 AC &lt;;OMMERCIAL PROPERTY In Jackson Corporation nmlt se1 ng In 10 tracts ranging from 18 Ac to
67 3 Ac Fronting on McCerty Lana between Rt 32 and 35 Graa1 fo commercallbuslnesalresdenla deveopmenl .AJ util~as a1 property Zoned B 1
380 AC join ng L berty W dllfe Refl.Jge ~OCATEO on Jackson P k8 County Line 9 ml as Wes1 of Jackson OH
on W ck lne Rd Beeutlfl.JI seen c land fl.JI of wl d lfe and racraat~n opportunltles
105ACRES Woodedbu dlngs~ewno1!1oHrontage LOCATED 10mlesWestofJackson OH 3mlesfrom
Rt 32 on .AJ en Rd
.a ACR!S Asuper tract of wooded land ~OCATEO on Jackson/Scioto County Line on Bear Run Rd
185ACRESsel ngln3tractso187Ac 72Ac 35Ac .AJ properties havepestura woods seduson 87Acre
tract has a pond good Rd access to a properties ~OCATEO 9 m kos West of Jackson on Sickles Rd

ATHENS COUNTY
944 Acres Salling In 2 Tracts of 17:l Ac. and 772 Ac.
Surrounded by Zaleski State Forest
ear commun ty o nera
o
m ea est a
ens
A great opportun ty to c eate you own preserve wl ota of wooda
Some lnlerlor privata road&amp;

VINTON COUNTY
111 Acres Salling In 8 Tracts
Woods • Pasture Land - Nice Bulldln Sites
40 ACRES · Reclaimed pasture land and woods secluded with accon off Ca r Ridge Rd
10 4 ACRES Posture land wlpond beaut fu bul ding site wlnlce v ew on Carr Ridge Rd
38 5 ACRES Scenic wooded property near Radc If OH on Radc If Rd
10 9 ACRES wlsupe sandstone tunnel aral road bod being 60 x791 3 A very unique property good
fo tra rid ng LOCATED 1 m e off Rt 32 and cross ng Rl 32 on Thompsonv le Rd
3SMAU.POTefnALBLOO SITES aoRL32anfll\l) Rd 3ooololl~of341'&lt;:. 231&gt;&lt;: I!Jfll'&lt;:. GNII~I
4 8 ACRES Super bu ding site wlwoods and lo1!1 of frontage on Rt 50 Eaa1 of McArthur OH appro&gt;&lt; 6 m es

BUY ANY INDIVIDUAL TRACT, COMBINATION OF
TRACTS OR WHOLE PROPERTY
PREVIEW MEETING DATES You may cal ou off co lor nfo mal on brochure&amp; and maps and
wa k and a1 you e su a Agent&amp; w be avalab e to apeak w th you by phone or you can at1end a
prev ew meet ng by going 1o 231 E Man St In Jackson Oh o and 1a k one on one wan agen1and
ece ve n o mat on on the fo ow ng dates Wednesdays October 13 20 27 from 2 00 PM to 5
00 PM and Sa1Urday Octobe 23 d f om 9 00 AM to 1 00 PM Other t mas by App""ntment

WILSON . .
-

REAL ESTATE, INC. -

Wilson-Harvey
Auction G
H LLIIOIIO IIPfUNOFIELD COLUMBUS
MARK WILSON• M"RYIN WILli Of. . JEFf H"RVeY

For Terms, Directions,
Brochures, Maps, Info.
Call 1-800-450-3440

Handa son WV P e
owned appl\canes s a ting at
$75 &amp; up al under warranty
we do se vce wof1( on at
Make and MOde s (304 675
7999
In

I( I \I \I ...,

'We li!ve

r

SPORilNG
Goo~

Rem ng on 870 W ngmas e
12 gauge 28 vent b mod
I ed $250
Be e ta BL4 12 gauge eve
and under 30 fu $800
French 48 AL 28 gauge

Vent F ee 3 P aque Gas
Heate (p opaoe or Na ura )
Manua Con ro S143 95
Vent Free 5 Plaque Gas
Hea e
(Automa c
Contra
Thermoslats
iir;;;p;;:;,MlscE:LIANF.ous~-----., $239 95
alum num F be atad Pa n
MERCHAND~
G ea to Mob le Homes~
~
. 5-gal Bucket 529 95
For aale Fire Wood
Paint Plus Hardware
(304)882 2537
67~
In Memory

One year totfay
you ve 6een gone

0 o Down Payment and
f nanc ng ava lab e w h
app oved c edt Ave age
c ed qua I es you t down
payment has kep you f om
buy ng th s s you chance
to own you own home
you have a down paymen
bu wou d ke to conse ve
we offe ow down paymen
pagans aso Gea ne
est ales Lata company
Mo tgage
locato s
(740)992 732

2 bedroom hOuse o
Rutland put of wate &amp; 2
bed oom house n Pome oy
(740 992 7546

- - -- 2 story Colon a 3 bd m 1

3 rooms &amp; bath stove ef g
e ato down stars utI t es
pad $450 month No pets
46 0 ve St (740)4&lt;16 3945

2 story 2 bedroom 1 5 bath
k tchen wth stove &amp; efr ge
ator 233 Second Ave
Conven ent ocat on no
peta $565 month p us rele
ence &amp; depos t 740)446
49i:6

Appl ca ons be ng taken fo
ve y c ean 1 bedroom n
country sen ng yet c ose to
own Washe d ye stove
t idae nc uded Wa e and
garbage nc uded To a e ec
IC wlh AC Tenant pay e ec
k: $300 depos t $375 pe
men h No pets No smok
ng 740 446 2205 o 740
446 9585 aak to V rg n a

Card of Thank•

Card of Thank•

bah Gas heat Cnt

AJC

$800 mo (740 446 3481

We wWi to e;o::prt.&lt;s our fotartjeft apprwattt&gt;n to
our famofy anijritntis at tfot foss of our fous
6ani antffatlier (jeorge '1/wfantf. Spectaf
tfoa~ to tfot ~cCoy ~oore :funtra(:Jlornt
'/WrJ 'l(p.(pfo 'Wor(man for !ii.S li;ttufwortis aruf.
Lt.&lt;a aruf 'J{ancy for tfot comjorto"tl SO"t/S
'!fum~ to a[[ wfw wrtetf. sent earls footf antf
espwaffy tfoanfiJ for your prayers ')our
tfw"!!fltJufness Wa.&lt;, nwtfy app ecoatecf antf
u•f( ne • r b forgot te
7tife 1oyc a d So I a ' r o/a tf

Co n (304

111313"

In Memory

1(nstt
Ju[y 13 1975
'We fost you fijteen
•
years ago
5I sorrow t!iat sto[(
Ojaff tlie teaH ant! emptmess
1fie foss of fovetf ones onngs
Our satfness comes from mfSszng you
51ntf mtSSong you (rom rove
J!ntf fove from a[C tfie /Ove ut you
'11Wt we 6ccame part of

U!vetf ant! Mwetf 'fiery Mudi
Mom '!Jatf
SISter Tracy Scott ana dit[tfren X;erstzn
Sliawna fMollJan ana Mafene
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

Heavy Equipment
Operator
Training For Employment
Bulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders Dump
Trucks, Graders Scrapers Excavators
TrammOh1o

Next Class November 22nd
National Certification
Financial Assistance

800-383-7364
Associated Training Services
2323 Performance Pk wy
Columbus OH 43207
w ww Equopment School com
03 07 1676T

ansm ss on
06K
ask ng
$7 000
740)446·8910

I7JO

\ANS
FnRS~u:

2003 T ack:e 4x4 3 000 995 Chevy Ast o Van 3
m es A e ec c al um seate I onV ea AJC $4 700
200 lb Round whee W I se below book OBO Ca (740 446 7 4
be es of m lied hay Ca at e \Ia ue (740)338 8432
5 OOPM (740)698 82
93 BMW 325
PITs
IJ&lt;\'"I'IHU\1 111\
cove new es &amp; ew a
tURSAU
XLT
whee s P ced o se 1unde
"---ililiilllliiiiioo_.J
44
000
m
es
one
owne
Al!IU'i
b ue
book
$3 500
AKC Beag e pupp es $125
eJ&lt;ce len cond on $6 000
HlRSAU
(740)4&lt;16 9555
can see a 1473 Hannan
060. cal1(740)985·3571
Tace Ad Pa ot o cal $500 Honda s Chevy s
3 3L V6
-«l M&lt;YI"ORlRUN
(740)379 9063 No Sunday Jeeps
Ect
Po ce
4 WHEEl riiS
Sees
Impounds Ca s f om $500 some ansm ss on wo ~
- - - - - - - - fo s ngs 800 391 5227 $450 OBO (740)446 85 6
2002 Honda 400 Ex good
AKC Black fem e Lab pup- EXT 3901
cond on $3 500 080 Ca
Pes Shots wo med &amp; dew
99 Voltswagon Beet e Red
caws
emo~ed
$200
Co 'lla Runs gOod 5 speed CD change (740)256 1526 740 645
(740)44 0130
body needs n e o 62 000 m es $6 500 060 0446
740)446 7910
(740 256 618 0 (740)256
_A_K_C_B_a-ck-L-ab_p_u_p_p-es
6200
Mae &amp; Females must go
$150 each (304 n3 5103
Ha ey
Fa d 87 Mustang 2 3 5 2003 Custom
Speed w ecked $500 OBO Oav dson Spo ts e 3 000
AKC male Sh h Tzu 9
m es
$7 ooo
Ca
ca (304)675 8872
weeks ve &amp; while 5350
(740 645 333
(740 44 602 0 740)44
~ 15
TRUCKS
8842 even ngs
FORSAU
998 Oldsmob le Cu ass
CKC Reg ste ed ~ mae G S V6 Alo PS PB AIC
Jad&lt; Russe I pup 8 weeks Pw Sea s W ndows 0
o d f st shots wo med ve ocks T t C use AM FM
checked Ready to go $ 75 Slereo Tape and CO
each (740)379 2834
Lea the
ne o
Aum
Whee s
Key ess en y
MUSICAL
Exce lent Cond on ns de
INSilUJMEI'l"S
and out 0 000 m es
$4 000 (304 882 2796
XLT VI;
Gu a Show Sunday Oc
automa
c
new
1 es
24th Ho day nn 600 2000 Cadge Dakota Ex Cab
box $595 080
Kanawha 8 vd Cha lesion $5495
m es new t es o s o
99
Me cu y 740)446 1451
10 4 $5 Adm (217)529 Mou n a nee $5295 97 Jeep
ch ome Ask g $ 5 000
6939
OBO . (740)«6·9954 ..
G Che okee $4195 2000
I \1(\1...,11'1'111"
Fo d Range $3695 96 1992ChevyS 0 V6A o
CA\IPER'5 &amp;
.\II\ I ...,IIH h.
Dodge Ex Cab $4595 2000 Low M es $2 000 080 [7&lt;lO
304)593
1200
MO"JUR
HOMR'i
Dodge Ca a~an $3 95 98
td
FARM
Dodge Ca avan $2895
ft 1997 P ow e 24ft S eeps
Lw-..iF.Quiliilllll'tliiillliiVIIiilf'-,..1
2000 Dodge St a us $2595
we de and a 6 M n Cond t on $6000
~
200 G AM $4500 98 G
camp esso $55000BO~
12 HP Graveley wth Sauke AM $2 95 97 Chev S 0 (740 )256 5 2 6 7 4 0 6 4 5 - - 40 mowe 4 snow p ow B aze $4500 96 Dodge 0446
Dakota 4x4 $3500 99 Pont
740)446 7910
Sunl e $2195 95 Fo d F2SO
'10
HOME
- - - - - - - - - w tt gate $3100 96 Dodge 2001 GMC Sonoma Quad
L\IPROIE\tENr.;
2001 John Dee e 790 4x4 wo k van $895 94 Jeep Cab Sho Bed o s o
30 HP I acto wth I ont end w ange 4x4 sha p $3195 ext as aa 000 Hwy mles
BASEMENT
oade 3 pt h tch &amp; PTO 96 Gee 1i acke $1395 99 one
owner
$ 0 500
WATERPROOFING
460
hou s
$12 000 Escort ZX2 5 sp $2795 98 (304 895 3710 a«e 6 pm
Uncond 1ana tel me gua
(740)245 9044
Monte Car o $2495
a ee loca e e ences u
88 Jeep Comanche 2 n shed Es ab shed 975
B 1!.. DAuto S.le5
w d ve standa d cd p aye Ca
24 H s 740 446
Hwy 160 N
sun oof good wo k ucJ.; 0870 Rages Basement
(740)446.6865
$800 OBO 740)992 0829 Wae poo ng
leave message
Auction

Auction

Auction
Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, October 30, 9·00 a.m
New Marshfield, OH
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES Sessoon fancy wall clock cas1

'l(p6ert 'W 11yer

new

m es

675

tron Gothic clock unusual tloor lamp w/clock V1cton m loveseru
rockmg chars wood barrels Dexter sewmg mm.:hme pa 1 ted flat wall
cupboard old wood k1tchen tables yam " nder collect on ot old tms
(I Raggedy Ann &amp; Andv) cveml m lk cans c ea n can copper bo ler
largt: cast ~ron kettle several ca t ron sk1lletsfk ttl (Wagner tea
kettle) 8 roll ng pms granne pans Un \ersal mea gnndcr Mm~
lunch bucket ce 1ongs well baler Model T 1914 logh1 00+ I cen &lt;

'}our fove IS stz{f afzve 111 us
We fee! ot ever ncu
Our mourmng sjtffetf Wttfi liapp1ness
'!Jy memones ofyou

3b Houses for Reo
$350 month $400 depos
No Pe1s 1304)675-6463

Fe Sa e Ea
1506

998 GMC J mmy SLS
g ea cond on pw sea
w ndows ocks StJn oot

r

Sea s pu beh nd dump
ca t Amana B ft el ge a
to mob e home steps
30 x27 740)388 8997

1

r~ ·a ~ztom

2002 Buck Cen u y Spec a
Ed on Co o gh sandd tt
me al~e m leage ust Onde
53000 m es ne 10 coh
seals loaded conce
sound system except on
a ly c ean ca
(740)446
0925

r

REAL ARMY
CAMOUFLAGE

Buy or se I ~ve ne
Ant ques 1 24 Eas Me n
on SR 124 E Pome ey 740
992 2526 Russ Moo e
owne

Angus
Bu s
Top
Perfo mance l nes 40 Yea s
A t h: a nsem~na on Sate
Run Fa m (740 286 5395

L

Whee ed New Batter es
$900 (304)675 542

Re m ng on 11 87 2 gauge
w ll dee ba el S400

Hou~'t.:S

2 bed oom apt 2nd Uoo
458 Second Ave K!chen
appl ances u o shed Wate
sewe &amp; trash pa d by and
o d $285 mon h plus secu
oy
depos t
S200
Relerences equ ed Ca
740 446 2581

JET

AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; Rebu It n
Stock Call Ron E11ans 1
BOO 537 9528

NEW AND USED STEEL
Stee Beams P pe Reba
Fa
Cone ete
Ang e
Chan e Fat Ba See
G a ng
Fo
Dr a ns
0 veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Sc ap Meta s Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Thompsons Appl anee &amp; Fnday Sam 4 30pm C osed
Sa urday &amp;
Repa 675 7388 Fd sa e Thu sday
e cond toned au oma c Sunday (740 446-7300
washe s &amp; drye s ef ge a
as gas and eec c
nc udes Pa n ed
anges a cond t ooe s and
w nge washers W d6 Me a Plans nst uct on
epa s on ma10 b ands n Book S der F ee Del very
(937 559 8385
shop o at your home

Octo6er 24 1989
fUR RENf

ap top compute I ke
new 6 hrs use ant v 1.1s
soltwa a case $700 1 740
508-0060 a«e 5 740 992
0958
De

Good Used App ances
Recond oned
and
Gua an eed
Washe s
C ve s
Ranges
and
Rei ge a o s Some s art at
$95 Skaggs App ances 76
_v_n_e_S_1_1_74_0_)«_6_7_3_98__
-

10/23/QJ

In Memory

3-STEEL BUILDINGS
28x30 was $9 900 se
$5190
38x44 was $15900 sel
57 960
48x 06 was $28 650 se
$16 770
1st come 1st Seve
Tom (800)392 7806

Ga eo telescope new
neve used $350 1 740
008 0060 afte 5 740 992
0958

•.,,,

and 2 bed com apa
ments u n shed and un u
n shed secu ty depos
Want to buy a 3 bedroom 2 equ red no pas 740 992
bath home Ga age base 2218
ment 3 tO aces s des
abe A cash Case n 2
weeks Me gs Ga a or
Athens County (740 992
6300

42 nch C aftsman snow
blade WI h a attach mens
p us wheel we ghts &amp; 2 se s
o chans lke new $125
Phone (7.f0)446 9484
Country Flame wood burn
ng
r ep ace
nse t
Au oma c con o and fan
$400 1740)446 7692

Warehouse

,.,.,.
.....

Commercial Land - 45 Acre Lake
Woodland Surrounded by State Forest
Pasture Land - Building Sites
Recreational Hunting Land
Thursday, November 4th • 6:00 PM
JACKSON COUNTY
1 032 Acres Selling In 22 Tracts
Commercial Land - 45 Ac. Lake • Recreational Land
Building Sites • Pasture Land
217 AC W/.a AC LAKE SE~~INO IN eTRACTS • 192 Ac wlatocl&lt;ed lake 1ots of woods &amp;shoiiiiine

Appliance

ea.,..,

S81111ce flrl

A Very Large LaJid Offering W1th Something For Everyone!

'

llur t.nrlte

Jackson - Athens ·Vinton Counties

AUCTION LOCATION All propert es w II be sold at the Lew s Fa moly Restaurant located
at 966 East Ma n St n Jackson Oh o (Watch for sogns )

·-------,.1

Auction

OHIO UNIVERSITY

SURPLUS AUCTION
Saturday November 6 9 00 a m
Athens OH

u

A publoc au ton" II he he
do per ol the
Ohw Un ver. t) Surplu&gt; lems NOTE Each
urplu
quarter 1s &lt;1 c&lt; n ple1ely ne\\ hmch
tern to be old ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD AS
ISil'O GUARANTEE V
he WEB oe for

lag (191? 1974) 10+ kerosene Imp Raolroact Ia d
anp I)+
lan1em' (Doetz Railroad B &amp; 0/NYI cofl 'hello ha y ko le 1oba co
kn k Wdls Fargo &amp; Redsk n po1 oons bonl cappe" load bonder
mall mv I h w &amp; hand a v c fl grmdt:r Dear ng 11 pit: e lia
old mall famed charcoal pr n1s post card' (Lake BuiT Oak 1~1 1
YMCA Nel Oll\olle 1911 Hock ng Rover \hens &amp; ethers) sc1 ral
Jar ol narbh.:: 5 largt: rounJ matbl c old banks r..:ast ron 11111 aturl:
Javnes Furn Athl:n 3 John Deere mctors hor clhuggv Road rr
l ncle Sam) cveral rm.: tal toy ruck old 1 n ~..:ar oldct Barh c doll
Box of M ckev!Monn e M u e toys from 1970 Howdy Dood) ba 1k
old Tee B rd bull he tr ng peddle car (need e tured wood pt p bo le
~..:~e~ ~..:arh1dc t.:a 1 var ct; of n oto o I can
l;!a\vamzed can p h r
wa h 1Uh h use collar 1 Y.ood
pump pi tfor n c lc bee n k
wag m v. h..:ds K u 1 wag n wht:d 01 vcr 40 mow board plov. broad
ax fo ax RR sprkc.: h 1m n
~ood A 1mo boxes ollccuon ol hecr &amp;
pop advu11scr
pencr kc P d;, ~.:oil td ha 1 cl p &amp; h acclct 19
Royster Alman u.:
GLASS\\ARE 10 ruhy gla cup Fcnt n p ece Carmval Mar g ld
d hes USA p ce old pop boule (Gem Y.ell ton) 50+ m lk bouk
nclud g Bent u I np nal Book Sheffield Molk Cap (H pe
Eu cka Bennett) U 1u ual carl; \800 po terv Urn 5+ crock &amp; JUg:s
o varymg s zc11 1cl dmg 1 hone) p&lt; t ~ ltd &amp; s vera! crock &amp; \.\ 0 xi
buner chums 1 gla s Jar bulll.:r Lhum
I D&lt;tlC\) 15+ ~,:ook1c Ja s
large pottery p g IromS ate Fatr Jat d 19-l.6 I m!e assor1 n n1 of Beam
hnll lt: gla s Jumho peanu huuer Jar green anmng Jaf~ gold plated

I r p e~.;cs Collectm Plates
D n 1 o s I kn ck kn ck
GUNS &amp; KNIVES to be sold at noon G nlocld MO&lt;Jel 0 5 cal 22
Mo shag Mod I I K50 A 20 •a 1 1 4 M b rg Mode l 195 I P ga
1 Sprong Iodd 22
glc ho Irom 1940 Collec1 o 1 f JXXke kn vc
nclod g Rem glo 1 Case (Uncle Henry) Schrade Old Tomer
B lo\\ md more 19 rro v head n \ar u 1z~
tla v..a1c set

om~.:

tcmwarc

one

1Dorothv W1zard of Ol Sno\1. Whn

CAMPAIGN MEMORABILIA
lo1 s of old ongonal can pa gn
b 1 on
logans posocrs etc (Reagan N xon W lke s/ Da
B yun
Ru c cl Gold" a r/M Her Cl n1on/0ooe GoJI gan Trurnan/Barklcy
Roo ve lt!McCarlh) Stcv..-::nson/Sp ukrnan John Glenn Smnh Huhen
Km) IEdwards &amp; 'lher 1 1900 JFK po ter Jack As c garcue
d pen ng machme Bush Go t:: Cl nton Monq
COINS oo he " ld a II 00 1766 r g ul New York p&lt;l v ealed n
box 1865 2 ccn1 1868 1 cent 15 lndoan Head pcnnocs 188 1 1908
12 I J41 S eel \\ar Penn e 80+ whea penn e (1919 19\8) SO+
Loncoln Cenls (1959 98?) 70 V Nockel 11890 1910) 65 Bullalo
Nckcl (1914 1917) 28 Jeffer&lt;on Nockd 11918 1967) 40 D11ne
(1875 1980) 14 Barbel D mes (1 899 19P 184' 1875 1890 seal J
Dmcs w/13 sw 55 Mercury Dnc ( 1918 1947) 1876 eaed
Quarter 1908 Barber Quarte&lt; 1910 slandong Quarte 10 L h&lt;rtl
1
Quarters (1946 1975) 24 Washong on Quancrs (1904 1970
w aden n ckel' 1963 (Ma oe11a Oh o 1751h Anno) Wash nglon sol er
half dollar 30 Kennedy half dollars ( 1964 1982) 17 Frankhn half
dollar ( 1946 1962) 15 Walkong Lberty half dollars 19171945
1978 Eosenho"er 6 Peace Dollars (190 1 1924) 2 L bcrty S
r
Dollars (2002) 17 Eo;enhower Dollars t197 1 1978) 20 An hom
Dollars (1979 1980) 10 S l1er Certoficates 11935 1957) 1953 US
Nooe 2 00 red seal 6 Federal Reserve noes 1953 Unued Slates 2 00
nooe red seal 1963 Unued Sta1es 5 00 note red S&lt;al Proof Sets n
sea ed cases 20th Cen ury cu ns Susan Amho y Dollars
Commemorato e S her Half Dollars (I 1 1 1982) Complete set of
Coons of 20th Cenmry on case (27 poeces) some m htary &amp; fore gn

co m and more
HANDICAP SCOOTERS Tr Rolls scooter Actove Mob fly Pace
Saver T tan Scooler Actoon Power 2000 electnc wheel cha r Bruno
Chaor Lof1 (class 3 h 1ch)
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS ln sulatoon b o" er tra fer h tches
Kerosun heater hand &amp; garden lOols and much more
fER.\IS Cash or check 1 pos to e I D Checks over $1000 must have
bank authonzauon of fund s a\ atlahle Food " 11 be a' a !able No
respu nsoble foo loss race den1 DIRECTIOI\S From Alhens St Rt
682 to Pos1on Road ourn lef on S Rt 691 to Co Rd 1 1Do\\ ler
R dgc Road ) Iolio" • 1 ur From Nelson olle St Rt 691 o Co Rd
1 appr x maocl 2 n I I II
gns
0\\NERS Conrad &amp; Thomas Zommerman &amp; Jom Hudnell
SHAMROCK AUCTION SF.R\ ICE
John Palrock Pal Shendan Auctioneer/Realtor
l-ma1I Shamro(kAuctmn @aol rom \\FR ""'"shamrock

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DIRECTIONS Rt 31 50 10
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Check on Surplus Information Surplus
Jn,rntor' In Stock hems
SHA\IROCK -\l C TIO~ SER\ ICE
John Palrock Pal Sherodan Auctioneer
Chns Prater ~ssistmg Audwneer
Em a a! Shamrock Auction@ aol com
\\ EB " " " !r!hamnKk amttons t:om
PH 740 &lt;~l 4'10 or ~~~1419 9122

�::tunaay, ucto.Der 24, 2004

t'omeroy • M1aa1epon • uampoua, un1o • t'Oint Pteaaant, wv

Bush says full safety
from terror strike 'up in
the air' as race enters
final week, A2

Schillin~ overcomes

pain to lift BoSox, Bt.
'

ne

&lt;.Present
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,ll l l \ l ..... •\11!

-)-l "tl

SPORTS
• Meigs splits at sectional.
See PageB1

''

ber3d
~

\J()'\Jl\', , ()l}());ll{_! ,), ;!(\() . ~

ll

\ \ \ \ \ \ l l l\o/li/1-.,lo'lt l• l l o l lll

Pomeroy begins process toward applying for distress grant
demolition of abandoned stru~tures,
and parks and recreation facilities.
As a part of the preliminary process
POMEROY- The tirst of several a survey titled "What's Your Vision for .
public meetings, a step toward apply- Our Community?" is being taken.
ing for an Ohio Department of Survey forms are currently available at .
Development Community Distress the Pomeroy Water Department, some
Grant of up to $300,000 for revitaliz- business, the Senior Citizens Center,
ing Pomeroy neighborhoods, will be . and the Mulberry Community Center.
held this week.
About I00 were collected during the
Pomeroy Mayor John Musser said Stern wheel Riverfest, Musser said.
that the first meeting will be held at 7
"Input from the public is a key factor
p.m. on Thursday in the Bethany in getting a grant," said Musser who
Building of Trinity Church.
urged residenls to complete the survey.
He urged altendance by anyone
Jean Trussell, grant administrator
interested in seeing improvements in for Meigs County. will be handling
the neighborhoods where they live , the grant application for the village.
including street and sidewalk repair, She said that Thursda~ night's meetlighting, expanded street parking , ing is one of a mimmum of three
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

which are required where the goal
will be to get feedback from residents
on what they feel are the most important needs in their neighborhoods.
She said projects have to be targeted
to nei ghborhoods, not downtown.
The areas in which community distress grant money can be spent must
be where 61 percent of the population
is low to moderate income . Pomeroy,
Trussell said, has 69 percent in that
calegory which means the village
qualities to apply. Earlier this year
Middleport was awarded a community distress grant .
'While the application deadline isn't
until February. it is imponant to start
the process early in order to get enough
meetings in. correlate the information

collecteu to determine what the majority wanh. ami decide on three or four
or five projects:· said Trussell.
She said some mat~hing money is
required but that another project could
very well be a pan of the match. A
point system is used to determine
grant recipients. Trussell explained,
which means that the higher percentage of points. the better prospect for a
grant. That includes input from the
public. what match money is available. and what agencies are involved.
"The driving force," she stressed,
''is selection of the projects by the
re sidents. not the village." . An
emphasi s should be on holding meetings in differen1 IO&lt;:ations in order to
reach more people. she said.

National Forestry honors
a Reedsville resident
of American Foresters (SAF)
and the Canadiiln Institute of
Forestry at il four-day conference held. thi s monlh in
Edmonton. Alberta.
The award recognize~
foresters who have displayed
uncommon talent and innov:
ative methods to achieve a
record of excellence in the
application of forest manage:
ment.
'
"Forester practitioners an!

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

REEDSVILLE - David
A. Schatz of Reedsville has
been honored by the Society
of American Foresters with
its Presidential Field Fore ster
Award.
Schatz along with I0 other
award winners representing
various regions of the country were honored in a special
ceremony held during a joi nt
meeting between the Society

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• James O'Brien
• Denzil Beha
• David Lance Stewart, Sr.

DD£UNCH

Please see Schatz, A5

SPEClA£

¥Sandwich
¥Chips
¥Drink

..,,.,.

D!fference

.Is

INSIDE
• Internet users not as
safe online as they
believe, researchers
report. See Page A2
• Moore presents DAR
program. See Page A3
• Low-income children
may have to wait for
· flu shots. See Page A6

~,.,.,_

about .

~8~ Colonial Drive

lfidwetL Ohlo'll~6.14 •

or call 'tio-446-5001

F B Farmers Bank
V:..JtJJ We're YQur Bank for Cife.,

Sat. &amp;DfliJ Spa

~

·--

Downtown Gallipolis

LENDER

AT GALLIPOLIS
11ursmg &amp; Rehabilitation Cen1er
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446-7112
ExTENDICARE
www.e)\tendicare.com
Provider of

·

Mason, WV 30"4-773·6400
Pomeroy, OH 740-992-2136
Gallipolis, OH 740-446·2265
Tuppers Plains, OH 740.667·3161

Nursing center

2 SECTIONS -

Jll Bwck Rid

t

Rd. • Bidw&lt;/1, OH •

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon
~

.! ' . •

I

•

• • • •

I

•

•

Nutritional Counseling • Personal Injury
Workers Compensation
·
.
Most Insurance Accepted Including United Health

740-441.0200 1 888 451-:2225

I

: ~ II

1

STAFF REPORT
12 PAGES

· A3
B3-4
Bs

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

40 446-7159

lk'

2112 Sl Rl 7 North

Ohio
441-9100

A3
A4
As
B1

. A6

© 2004 Ohio Valle~· Publishing Co.

Courtside Bar&amp;.. Grill

Rocchi's Pool U

• caD for an Appointment

who gave us things to auction
off. We're just so grateful.''
The single item bringing in
the most money was a 1994
Chrysler Town and Country
van donated by Bob Kincaid
of Racine. It sold for $2.100.
Dan Smith donated his
time to auction at the sale,
and his wife, Donna Jean. did
the clerking . Numerous other
volunteers as well as Center
employees were there to help.
Someone even donated
wagons to move the sale items
from the hospital building
where they were being stored
to in front of the senior center
where the auction took place.

TUPPERS PLAINS . The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved supplemental contracts and staff
substitutes
during
Wednesday 's regular meetmg .
Dorothy Faulkner, Noah
Goss, Karlt Houridge, Steve
Little, Wendell Morri son,
Shannon Roth. Kevin Shima,
Megan Whitman and Brian
Zeit were approved as substitute teachers, pending proper
certification.
Belinda Adam s. Beverly
Allen , Lyn·ne Arms, Melissa

Barringer, Tina Brooks,
Dorena Card, Linda Dunlap,
Mary
Freeman,
Shirin
Nuggud, Diana Sue Phillips,
Sandra
Russell.
Aaron
Schaekel,
Cheryl
Six.
Charlisa Slusher. Connie
Soulsby and Cynthia Stanley
were approved as substi tute
aides, pending proper certifi cation.
Harvey Bartimus. Becky
Betz,
Robert
Combs.
Charlene Davis. Howard
Lawrence, Becky Max&gt;on.
Kimberly Sampson, Dennis
Sargent and Shelia Westfall
were approved as substitute
bus drivers, pending proper

certification .
Jame s
Morris
was
approved as a substitute custodian and food service
employee pending proper
certification .
Supplemental
contracts
were awarded as follows:
Chris Lyons. assislant boys
basketball coa~h; Jeremy
Casto, assistant boys basketball coach: Josh Fogle.. seventh-grade boys basketball
coach: Rick Edwards. head
girls basketball coach: David
Weber. assistant girl s basket ·
ball coach: Cathy Edwards.

Please see Bo1rd, AS

Head Janitor Jeff BeaVl;r makes use of the elevator that was
put in at Southern High School. Two handicapped students
use the e levator to travel between classes and the staff uses
it to transport equipment. (Beth Sergent; photo)

Renovations at·Southern
Thi s summer. the roof was
replaced. rcstH&gt;oms were renO\ ated. shower' were made
RACINE - Old school handicar-access ihle as were
buildings often fall into ruin the sidewalk' between the
because of lack of funding or high school and elementary
the consolidation trend. Not &gt;chool.
Another one of the major
so at Southern High School.
project;, wa&gt; the installation
The huiluing that houses of an ek\'ator. Southern High
Southern . High School is 4 1 School is home to two freshyears old and is home to fac - men "'ho are handicapped
ulty. staff. and 240 &gt;tudents
Please see South~m. AS
this year.
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYS'ENTINEL.COM

An Online Well ness Center .

JfAUOWHN YWny
~~turda y.

could be ordered.
She reported $6,655 from
the·auction, more than enough
for the match, and another
$2,500 or so from the sale of
food and other fund-raisers
carried oul during the day.
"With what we made we
not only have enough money
for the match on the van, but
to carry out the Christmas
remembrance program for
homebound seniors."
Shaver said that area residents and businesses were
very generous in contributing
items for the auction. "We
couldn't have done this without the hundreds of people

Eastern board approves subs, coaches

INDEX

• Rehabilitation • Respite

G61Jjpolis Chiropractic
· Center
7?11
··
- ·• Personal
? ..........
Diagnostic:
X-Rays
Rehabilitation

Shaver was talking about
the Make a Difference Day
auction held Saturday at the
Senior Citi~ens Center to
raise money to provide the
required $6,500 needed for a
match before a much-needed
new van to transport seniors

Detallo on Page A6

We Focus On:
TA~DEM • Dementia • Hospice

~ tl•oll.t.l.....

.BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

get a new van."

Scenic·Hills
A.

Auction nets enough for new van
POMEROY - "It's just
wonderful. The staff worked
so hard and we're · all so
pleased," said Beth Shaver,
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging. "Now we
have money for the match to

WEATHER

Member FDIC

Senior citizens will nde in a new vim and the homebound elderly will have a Merry Christmas.
thanks to the successful Make a Difference Day auction Saturday. Here Dim Smith auctions off
a bucket of pa int donated by a Racine business. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photo)

42 Counstreel Downtown

•

At Your Fingertips!

HMC Community Health and Wei/ness
"Dedicated to Promoting Wei/ness "

O'tobcr 3Nb

•

''

Gallipoli s. OH

http://holzer.wellsource.com

1583 ,S t. Rt.l60 • GaiUpolls, OH

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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>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="18740">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18739">
              <text>October 24, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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      <name>boyce</name>
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      <name>elkins</name>
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      <name>frye</name>
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    <tag tagId="1598">
      <name>fulton</name>
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    <tag tagId="78">
      <name>higgins</name>
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    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
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    <tag tagId="3262">
      <name>peck</name>
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    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1177">
      <name>wade</name>
    </tag>
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</item>
