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GARDENING
Waiting for the throne,
Prince Charles bullds a
kingdom of his own
BY BRIAN CHURCH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

1
'

,.'

I

HIGHGROVE HOUSE,
England - The head gardener to Prince Charles here
has gotten used to unusual
requests from the heir to the
Bntish throne.
Like the time David
Howard was asked if he
could cut yew bushes into
various shapes to rer,resent
the "Platoruc Solids ' from
ancient Greece.
"I said, 'Yes sir; of course
I could,' then worried about
it later," Howard said.
Charles has other unusual but important requests,
too: No chemicals, no pesticides artd no ugly plant
labels. He wants a beautiful garden, but also a natural
one,
something
Howard said is quite possible, contraTY. to what many
would believe.
No pesticides are used on
the 15 acres of gardens at
Highgrove, Charles' country estate in western
England where .birds, slow
worms, grass snakes and
hedgehogs ambush passing
slugs and snails.
"I challen~e you to find
any r,estictdes on the
estate, ' Howard said. "I
don't have a pesticides cupboard."
·
The 49-year-old gardener
recently led a media tour of
Highgrove, . a two-hour
drive from · London, ahead
of publication in the U.S. of
Charles' new book, "The
Elements
of · Organic
Gardening" (Kales Press).
After armed policemen
politely stop coaches at a.
disguised
single-lane
countryside entrance even fast drivers will slow
down here - visitors are
greeted by a large sign:
"Beware! You are now
entering an old fashioned
establishment."
The winding estate full of separate gardens,
beautiful stone walls and
endless tree trunks - can
seem less visually slick
than most traditional gardens. For good or bad,
nature is in charge and there
is no unifying theme to link
the disparate parts.
· "(Or!;!:anic gardening) is
an holistic system, which
attends to the health of the
entire ecosystem and not
just the plant's needs," coauthor
Stephapie
Donaldson writes in the
book. She offers tips on
conversion, such as collecting rainwater, making
your own compost and

startin~ with easy vegetables hke courgettes and
runner beans.
At Highgrove, they aim
for containment, not extermination.
"Like all of our pests in
the garden, we n~ver try to
get rid of them completely,"
Howard said, addmg that
squirrels are push'10g the
luck at the moment.
But one can't have everything· The 70-&amp; t d 0 f
·
.ee ce ar
Lebanon tree - a~ old as
the late 1790s .Georgianstyle house it stands beside
_ has bracket and honey
fungus and will be "partially dismantled" this October.
Could a non-organic
aPR,roach have saved it?
Nothing lives forever,"
. Howard said. "What you
have to do is have something waiting around the
comer to fill that space."
Another cedar was planted in the early 1990s and is
now 30 feet high.
Charles, the eldest son of
Queen
Elizabeth
·II,
became heir to the throne
in 1952, when Harry
Truman was still president.
He bought Highgrove near
Tetbury in Gloucestershire
in 1980, a year before he
married the then-Lady
Diana Spencer. His second
wife is Camilla, Duchess
of Cornwall
A tree house, now relocated; is a sign of past times
when young Princess Diana
helped bring· up sons
William and Harry, before
her death in a 1997 car crash
in Paris.
Charles turns 60 next
year and, with his mother
in reported. good health at
81, it's possible that
Highgrove could be his
biggest legacy.
"I get the sense this garden excites the prince and I
think that's great," said veteran gardening author
Donaldson, during the tour.
"I'd say it's his major garden for a lifetime."
Make that lots of gardens,
including the Cottage
Garden, Terrace Garden,
Sundial
Garden,
the
Islamic-inspired
Carpet
Garden, Walled Garden,
Model
Fruit · Garden,
Cutting
Garden
and
Southern
Hemisphere
Garden.
There's also the nearby
Home Farm, which provides organic products for
Charles' Duchy Originals, a
food company founded in
199~ .with profit~ going to
chanties supported by the
pnnce.
11'.

CLINIC

Thursday,
SeptemberS
4:30 pm to 7:30 pm
Sponsored by:
Mason County Health
Department Dr. S. Valdya
&amp; Pleasant Valley
Hospital Laboratory and
Outpatient Services
Call 304-675-3050
for an appointment.

LAST CHANCE.
PRE ORDER
YOUR GALLIOPOLY
GAMES '
$35.00 on or before Sept. 1oth
$40.00 after Sept. 10th

Call441-7589
for more info.
Supports GAHS Choir

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

When
he's
around,
Charles ·helps out on the
estate.
"He mt'ght clt'p half the
hedge and say, 'I've started
the hedge for you. Perhaps
you can go finish it off?'
Howard said.
It's also the place where
Charles can relax. Black
honey bees in 10 hives produce 250 pounds of honey
each year, perhaps hel~ed
by outside paintings deptct- ·
ing Slovenian folk tales.
Sweet peas trained. over
hazel and willow arches
offer a blaze of colors. Walk
through the arches and ·
you're lost within a walled
garden inside a small part of
a large estate on the outskirts of a sleepy part of
England. Trafalgar Square
this ain't.
Previou$1Y ridiculed by
British tabloids for his
once
unfashionable
approach to medicine,
..architecture and the environment - the last one
may or may not include
talking to plants- Charles
also has an oak and sweet
chestnut timber house. The
Sanctuary, a small oddshaped forest retreat where
Snow White would happily
live, was specially built for
the new millennium. Its
handleless door has four
knobs which mu_st be
turned "in a special way."
"It's the one place he can
escape from the rest of us,"
Howard sail;!. And, no, he
won't reveal the secret combination.
But what about those
curious Platonic Solids?
Howard, who leads a ·
team of nine full-time gardeners, does his best. The
yew bushes are topiarized
with equal individual sides
~nd angles, representing
fire, earth, air, water and the
universe.
Charles so liked the result
. he asked Howard if he
could do the " Archi medean
Solids" as well.
His answer? "I said, 'No
sir'."
·
•••

.) o t'I:NTS • \ ol. ,-,-. No . :!X

writing to The Clarence
House
Press Office,
London SWJA lBA,
England. There is at least a
two-year waiting list.
"The Elements of Organic
Gardening" by HRH The
Prince of Wales with
Stephanie Donaldson, with
photos by Andrew Lawson
(Kales Press), $39.95,
scheduled to be released in
the U.S. Sept. 25.

THANK YOU

JUSTIN FALLON
GALL lA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
FOR BUYING MY 1007

\J()"Jil ' ' .

""" -" " 'l."h "'"'""'t '"'"

SII'TJ:I\IHER :1 . :!oo-

MIDDLEPORT ABLE CEN'I'ER TO CLOSE

SPORTS
• WarriorS overpower
Southam. See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

J. REED

: BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MARKETHOGI

_A cut 1.n
POMEROY
funding will force the closing of one of three Adult
Basic Literacy Education
centers in t~e county, but
two others will. remain open.
Last week, Meigs County
Commissioners vofed to dis-

Travis Roush
River
Allstars

continue a contract between
the Department of Job and
Family Services and the
A*e?s-Meigs Educational
Serv1ce Center for the
ABLE program. ABLE
Coordinator Carol Brewer
said, as a result, the ABLE
center at the Middleport
· Library will close sometime
in late October.
The center employs two

'part-time emvloyees, a
teacher and an mstructional
aide, and both wili lose their
positions as a result of the
funding cut, Brewer said.
Services will continue to
be offered through the
Bradbury Learning Center
just outside of Middleport
and . at the Eastern Local
administrative building in
the old Tuppers Plains

Elementary School. Brewer
estimates that the ABLE
program serves about 50
adults.
The county's ·Contract
with the ESC was one of
two discontinued last week
in light of a projected
$849,000 cut in state and
federal funding. Doing so
is expected to save the
county
approximately

$24,000.
Commissioners also dis-'
continued a contract with
the University of Rio
Grande Crossroads program, for an estimated savings of $90,000, and
reduced a contract with the
county economic development office for a projected
savings of $16,700.

Arrest pending
in Lincoln
Hill accident

End of Summer

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Several
charges await a Nevada man
who allegedly struck a
parked ve):licle on Lincoln
.
Hill last week.
to
the
According
Pomeroy
Police
Department, David A.
Jones, 38, who is currently
staying in the Lincoln Hill
area of Pomeroy, was driving a Jeep Wagoneer
which struck a vehicle also
parked on Lincoln Hill and
owned by Sharon Pratt.
After allegedly striking the
vehicle police say Jones
then left the scene -and
ended up parked outside his
home where Patrolman
Ronnie Spaun found him
"unresponsive" inside his
vehicle.
Jones was transported to
Holze r Medical Center
which performed a blood
test allegedly showing a
blood alcohol content of
.456.1n Ohio, a BAC of.08
is considered
"legally
The Pomeroy
drunk."
Police Department said
after his transport, Jones
was listed in critical condition at the hospital. Jones
faces charges of operating a
vehicle while intoxicated,
leaving the scene of an accident, open container and
failure to control. Spaun
said heavy damage was
done to Pratt's vehicle.
Also assisting in this case
was Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark E. Proffitt and
Patrolman Adam Holcomb.

0BITUARIFS

·. :0,0 pm
·
.

The Labor Day
weekend traditionally heralds
the end 6f'summer fun, but visItors to Forked
Run State Park
at Reedsville
were sti II basking In the sun
_on Sunday.
Visitors from all
over Ohio, as
well as West
Virginia and
Virginia were
splashing in the
water or ·enjoy,
ing the beach
for the final
summer ho liday.

Page AS
• Emest 'Emie'·
McKinney

INSIDE
• Felix becomes
.' ,.
Cat~P!Y.5 hurricane,
··affeilashiflQ Aruba.
See ,Page A2 ·
• Dachowsk1 receives
. national award.
~

See Page A3

B~an

J, Reed/photo

The Highgrove estate is
openfromAprilto October,
iJ Prince CluJrles is not in
residence. To visit, apply in

Labor Day Weekend Sale
Sept. 1 st - Sept. 3rd
Lignetics Hardwood Pellets
Reg. $235.00 per ton
Sale $211 .50 per ton
3 Days Only
Autumn Plot Deer
Seed Mix
$2.00 per pound
Contractor's Mix
Gmss seed $1.00 per pound
Driveway Sealer 5 gal.
$15.99
Tractor HydmuHc Fluid
5 ga. $24.99

BIDWELL
HARDWARE
ST. AT. 160

big farms, despite
power switch, As

AP photo

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
SCREENING

EPA helps oversee

bitter dispute over
safety in the skies, A2

Kales Press
provided this "'
photo of the
Thyme Walk at
Highgrove in
western England,
as seen on the
back cover of
"The Elements
of Organic
Gardening."

BULLETIN BOARD
PROSTATE CANCER

· Air traffic controllers
and the PAA have a

-Sunday, September 2, 2007

446-8828

Chicken and Rib
BBQ
Chester Volunteer Fire

Mollohan Carpet
Summer Sale
Commercial Starting at $5.50 yd
Berber starting at $5.95 yd.
See what the carpet man can do for you.

Show Your
School Spirit
New Clay
Viva Beads
in your School Colors!

Bracelets
Key Chains
Earrings ·
Available at the

Purple Turtle
300 Second Ave. Gallipolis

.

Prostate Exam &amp;
PSA Blood Test
September 6, 2007
4:30 p.m. IQ 7:30p.m.

Mason County .
Health Dept.
Men 45 Years &amp; Older in
Mason County and
surrounding counties
By appointment only
Please call

Labor Day
Monday, September 3rd
Homemade Ice Cream

Used Furniture Store
130 Bulaville Pike
Couches, chests, dinettes,
Appliances- much more.
Mon-Fri 11-3
446·4782

Vinton

Sponsored by
Shrikant Vaidya, MD,
PVH Laboratory and
Mason County Health
Department.
THE TREASURE COVE
We're Moving!
To a bigger, more convenient
location with ofl·street parking
to better serve our customers.
Our new location will be just
2 doors down at 750 First Avenue
740·446·9600
Mon· Sat 10:00 , 6:00

WEATIIER

,

LECTA, Ohio
Lecta.Church of Christ
in Christian Union
Homecoming Services
Sunday. Sept. 2, 2007
Dinner at"12:00 noon
Afternoon Service @ 1:00 p.m.
Preaching Rev. Warren Bass
Special Sing1ng by William Wray
Bring a lawn chair lor lunch
Seating is at a minimum
Everyone Welcome

Detalis on Page AS

INDEX
12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

B5

Annie's Mailbox

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Car show to benefit scholarship funds
Bv BETH SERGENT

~

2 SECTIONS -

Please see Arrest. AS

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

388-8692

(304) 675-3050

Department

11:30 a.m.

5 Family Yard Sale
8/31 - 9/4
8:00am - 7:00 pm
Clothes, glassware,
outdoor toys, hunting
items, 55 gal. aquarium
w/stand, 30 gal. aquarium
w/stand, 150+ VHS
movies, new berber carpet
12 x 70', Large computer
desk, tools, TV stand,
Playstation 1 &amp; 2 games
2928 Keystone Road,

FREE

• Trooper kills Jackson
County man who
previously attempted
suicide. See Page A3
• Holy zucchini,
Batman!. See Page A3

B Section

Weather
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE - The "Third
Annual Cruisin' Saturday
Night" car show will roll
into Racine this Saturday to ,
benefit graduating seniors at
Southern High School.
The hosts for this year are
Hill's Automotive Classic
Car Restorations, Home
National Bank and Gatling,
0hio. The show will take
place on Third Street in
downtown Racine.
Registration is from 1-4
p.m. with judging to take
place between 4-6 p.m.
Awards will be given out at
6 p.m. and there is a $10
entry fee.
Melody McKay of Hill's
Automotive Classic Car
Restorations is once again
helping to organizs:s the
event and says this year
promises to be bigger and
better than ever with 55 trophies
being
awarded,
including a new trophy for
best motorcycle and first
runner-up motorcycle and
best tractor which is open to
antique tractors for the first
time.

,,

In addition to'•. cars and
tractors, McKay .,added there
will be a "crafter's village"
where crafters and artisans
who normally set up at the
Racine Fall Festival are weicome to set up at the car
show since there is no fall
festival this year. Those
crafters interested in a spot,
or those with any other
questions
should
call
McKay at 949-2144 or 9492217 or call Rusty at 9924072.
Last year the car show
raised $1,800 which benefits the Racine Area
Community Organization's
scholarship fund. Last. year
three students were awarded
the scholarship money and
McKay said students selected are judged not necessarily on grades but their willingness to promote local
business and services in
Meigs County.
Last year 70 cars participated in the show with 64
being judged. This year there
will be dash plaques presented to the first 50 who'enter.
The major award caregories
include:
Bes t
Original, Best Ford, Best

.

.

Betn Sorgent;pnoto

Last year 70 cars participated in the ··cruisin' Saturday Night" in Racine wh ich benefits the
RACO scholarship fund .
Chevy, Best Mopar. Best
Truck, Best Project, Best
Euro Car, Best Motorcycle,
Runner-up Motorcycle. Best
Interior, Mayor' s Choice,
People's Choice, Fireman's
Choice, Top 40 Cars,
Runner-up and finally. Best

•

of Show.
As in year's past, the
Rac ine Post Office is also
participating in .the show by
unveiling a new stamp col"Paci fie
lection
Lighthouses."
The post
office will also offer a spe·

ciu l cancellation stamp
denming the car s how for
one day only.
There wi ll also bein g
door prizes, cash drawings
and conce ssions. There is
no alcohol , bic yc les or
skateboards permitted.
---

·'-'

�0

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • ·woRLD

Page.A2
Monday, September 3, 2007

AIR 'I'RAFF'IC CONIROLLERS AND 'I'HE FAA HAVE A
BI'fl'ER DISPUTE OVER SAFElY IN 'I'HE SKIES
BY MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

r

'

~

I

I
f

··~

"'

WASHINGTON - The
next time you board an airliner and buckle yo ur seat
belt, you are about to fly
through a bitter labor dispute between some of the
people most responsible for
your safety in the skies.
The nation 's air traffic
~ontrollers and the Federal
Aviation Admini stration.
that employs them cannot
agree whether enough qualified people are guiding air
traffic or how safe the air
space is today.
With
airline
travel
rebounding almost to the
volume before the Sept. II,
200 I, terrorist attacks,
delays on scheduled U.S.
flights have reached a
record high. Nearly onethird of domestic flights on
major carriers were late in
June. And ait traffic is
growmg.
At the same time, the
FAA and the National Air
Traffic
Controllers
Association been unable to
agree on a new contract. A
year ago, the FAA declared
an impasse and imposed a
contract. Since then, the
retirement of experienced
controllers has soared
beyond the agency's forecasts.
"In several places, it has
created a safety problem
where controllers are working I0-hour days , 6-day
weeks and working combined positions because
they don't have enough
fully trained bodies," union
President Patrick Forrey
said.
FAA figures show the
number of fully certified
controllers dropped to
' 11,467 in May - the lowest
in a decade the union says.
Beside them in control centers are 3,300 so-called
"developmental controllers·:
who are being trained on the
job by other controllers. The
trainees are not yet qualified
for all work assignments
required of fully certified
controllers.
"They are pushing the
envelope and somebody is
going to snap," Forrey
warned. "Unless the agency
slows down the traffic,
someone may make a mistake and then are they going
to blame it on the controller?"
By contrast, FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said;

AP photo

One Comair plane takes off while another Comair plane taxis to the terminal at the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport in Hebron, Ky.. in this July 26, 2006 file photo. As air traffic increases, the nation's air traffic controllers and the Federal Aviation Administration that employs them cannot agree whether enough qualified people are guiding aircraft traffic or how safe air space Is today.
"This is the safest period in
aviation history." She said
the contract allowed the
agency to more easily move
staff to meet the needs of a
changing airline industry.
FAA
Administrator
Marion Blakey says the
imposed contract "is saving
taxpayers $1.9 billion over
five years ... to invest in
21st Century air traffic systems."
The three-year average of
fatal accidents on commercial flights has dropped to a
record low .017 per 100,000
departures. Fatal accidents
on private planes dropped
from 354 in 2005 to a record
low of 299 in 2006, and
Brown says this year is
below last year's pace.
The umon says these
national figures conceal
risky situations in towers,
terminal approach and at
regional control centers
where its members scan
glowing radar screens with
blips representing planes
loaded with passengers they
need to keep moving- and
keep apart.
Some of the union's
examples:
• At the Cleveland en
route 'center, the nation 's
fourth busiest facility, 29
fully certified controllers
have retired since the con-

Felix becomes Category 5
hurricane, after la$hing Aruba
BY MARGARET WEVER

tract was imposed. Nineteen
others have been promoted
to management and 7 have
transferred, leaving 366 certified
. controllers.
Operational errors - in
which planes fly closer than
they ~e supposed to soared to 34 this fiscal year,
with a month left, compared
to 16 in fiscal 2006. ·
• The Chicago en route
center, the fifth busiest
facility, has lost 40 certified
controllers by retirement
and other reasons, leaving
360. So far, the center has
recorded 21 operation errors
for the fiscal year, compared to 12 the previous
year.
• In New York, southern
California and Charlotte,
N.C., on-the-job training of
controllers was temporarily
suspendei:l this summer to
evaluate a rash of errors.
• At New York's
LaGuardia airport on July 5,
a trainee mistakenly cleared
a 50-seat Comair jet to cross
a runway on which a Delta
737 was landing at . 150
mph. They missed each
other by a lew hundred feet.
The trmoe~. supervised by a
trainer, was handling m.ore
than 24 planes on the
ground. A previous controller had complained the

heavy load should be divided into two separate positions.
The
National
Transportation ·
Safety
Board rs investigating the
LaGuardia incident and five
other near-misses at airports
this year - two in Denver,
and one each in San
Francisco, Ft. Lauderdale,
Ha. , and Los Angeles. Socalled runway incursions
were so frequent that
Blakey called a daylong ·
industry brainstorming session at the FAA this month.
"These errors are the callin~ cards of mental fatigue,"
sa1d Chicago Center controller Bryan Zilonis, a
union vice president. "The
FAA is slowly t&gt;urning out
their most experienced controllers due to their inability
to properly staff positions at
many facilities." 'At the FAA, Brown paints
a ros,ier · picture of operational errors - those cases
where planes en route come
within 1,000 feet of each
other vertically or within 5
miles laterally, or within 3
miles near airports. The 12
months ending last Oct. I
saw the first drop in operational errors in seven years,
she said. "We're on target to
continue the reduction in

operational errors this year."
And she denies that
trainees compromise safety.
"The raw number doesn't
tell you their skill level,"
Brown said. A trainee is
qualified separately for each
work position and can safely work qualified positions
long before beinf' full_y certified to work a! positions,
she said.
Trainees include novices
from the FAA's academy
but also experienced controllers hired from the military or transferred from an
FAA facility where they
were certified. Brown said
experienced trainees can be
certified in weeks at some
less complicated facilities
while novices may need up
to three yellrs on-the-job
training at complex facilities.
Union ·spokesman Doug
Church responded that a
-transferred controller, during training for his new
locqtion, was involved. iri
the near-miss at LaGuardia
where he said on-the-job
training can take more than
two years.
Church said FAA changed
the definitions of operational errors this summer in
a . way that reduces their
number. An FAA power-

, point description of the new
definitions says planes can
come l 0 percent closer to
each other before it's
labeled an operational error.
Using the revised criteria,
there would have been 298
of the more serious errors in
2006, instead of .the 627
under the old definition,
according to the document.
Forrey predicted retirements wiH climb unless the
contract is reopened for a
negotiated settlement. A
pending House bill to reauthorize FAA would do that,
but the Bush administration
is opposed.
·
The FAA-imposed contract cut starting pay by 30
percent, eliminated ineentive pay fpr experienced
controllers and gave managers more authority over
staffing.
Since
last
September, contr\)Uers have
filed 220,000 grievailces.
The FAA. expects 800
retirements this fiscal year,
• Brown said. The figure has
~n revised upward twice
from 643. .
Brown satd the agency
has long kn'!wn that 72 percent of ·Its controllers
become eligible to retire in
Ule next decade. Most controllers were hired after
President Ronald Reagan in
1981 fired more than ll ,000
members of a predecessor
union, the Professional Air
Controllers
Traffic
after it
Organization,
refused to end an illegal
strike.
Acknowledging flawed
retirement estimates, Brown
said, "It doesn't matter if we
are · off as long as we can
increase the number we hire
to compensate." Last year,
hiring was boosted frotp
937 to more than 1,100;
more than I ,500 have· been
hired this year.
Blakey says the key to
improving safety is FAA's
multi-bill ion -dollar
Ne:Jt:tGen plan to replace
radar control with more precise satellite tracking so
planes can fly closer. FAA
awarded the first $1.8 billion contract Thursday, but
the new system won't begin
to operate until 2013.
"You still have to land
them one at a time,"
responds
union
chief
Forrey, who says more runways and controllers are
needed. "Nex1Gen is going
to take years. They need to
do something ... now."

Meigs County Fair

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ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
must be paid for in advance.

ORANJESTAD, Aruba - Hurricane Felix strengthened
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads
into a dangerous Category 5 storm Sunday and churned its
way into the open waters of the Caribbean Sea after toppling trees and flooding some homes on a cluster of Dutch
Islands.
·
The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Felix was
2 Col. X 5"
packing maximum sustained winds of 165 mph as it
Weekday
plowed westward toward Central America, where it was
1 Col. X 2" ...
expected to skirt Honduras' coastline Tuesday before slamming into Belize on Wednesday as a hurricane capable of
Weekday
massive destruction.
Sunday
On Sunday, Felix lashed Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire
with rains and winds, causing scattered power outages and
forcing thousands of tourists to take refuge in hotels. But
Sunday
residents expressed relief it did far less damage than feared
as the storm's outer bands just grazed the tiny islands.
"Thankfully we didn't get a very bad storm. My dog slept
peacefully through the night," said Bonaire medical admin. 1strator Swmara Albertus, who wmted out the storm m her
home.
.
The storm forced tens of thousands of tourists and residents on the three islands to remain in their homes and
hotels, stocked with water, flashlights and emergency pro- ·
visions.
In Curacao, about a· dozen homes in a low-lying area
were flooded . In Aruba. there was little visible damage,
although at least one catamaran snapped oil its mooring
and a house was damaged by a downed tree. A northern ·settlement had' a temporary power outage.
Many Bonaire residents had prepared for the worst,
$59.22
installing storm shutters and hauling their boats ashore, but
the storm 's winds left little damage.
Felix became the second Atlantic hurricane of the season
on Saturday evening, following Hurricane Dean, which left
at least 20 dead in the Caribbean and carved out a destructive swath that stretched from St. Lucia to Mexico.
At 8 p.m. EDT, the storm was centered about 390 miles
southeast of Jamaica and was moving west-northwest at
about 18 mph. the hurrica ne center said .
On Saturday. Felix brought heavy rains and strong winds
to Grenada as a tropical storm, ripping roofs off at least two
homes and demoying a popular concert venue. No injuries
were reported and the Grenadian government was still
Borders and Artwork
assessing the damage Sunday.

$64.50

$12.90

$98.70

$19.74-

2 Col. x 4"
Weekday
1 Col. x 3" ...
Weekday

$19.35

$51.60
Sunday.

$78.96

Sunday

$29.61

2 Col. x 3"
Weekday $38.70
Sunday

•

•

2 Col. x 2"
Weekday
$25.80
Sunday

The Daily Sentinel

LOCAL • STATE

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 3
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
office building.
Tuesday Sept. 4
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. Pageville town hall.
Orange
ALFRED
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at the home of the fiscal officer, Osie Follrod.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees meet at
5 p.m. at Rutland Firehouse.
Thursday, Sept. 6
. ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
6:30 p.m., at the townhall.

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Sept. 4
MIDDLEPORT
Scheduled monthly meeting of Middleport Masonic
Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7:30

p.m. Work in Master Mason
degree. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - "Let Go and Let
God" Nar-Anon Family
Group meeting, 7 p.m.,
Krodel Park recreation building. Group helps families and
friends of addicts and users to
attain serenity, regardless of
whether he/she has stopped
using. Anonymity "'speer~.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7:30 p.m Masonic
Hall in Chestc;_r. Charter to be
draped for Bette Biggs. mem;
bers to wear white. Balloting
to take place for candidate.
Everett and Charlotte Grant
and Julie Flemming, hosts.
Wednesday, Sept. 5
CHESTER - Chester
Garden Club open meeting,
7:30 p.m. , Chester United
Methodist
Church.
Everyone welcome. Wanda
Gilmore will talk on "Trees
for the . Landscape ." .Club
members take door ·prizes
and finger foods.
Friday, Sept. 7
SALEM CENTER

PageA3
Monday, September 3,

2007

Holy zucchini, Batman!
Mei gs County Pomona
Grange, 7:30 p,.m., Star
Grange Hall . All contest
items will be judged.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 9
RACINE - KerwoodHill reunion at Start Mill
Park in Racine. Covered
dish dinner at I p.m. Family
and friends welcome

Measuring twofeet long, these
zucch ini 's
grown by
Michael Dill of
Beech Grove
Road in Rutland
are nearly as
Sunday, Sept. 9
tall
as his niece
POMEROY - Harvest
Paige Atkins,
Festival at the St. John .
pictured here .
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
When asked
Church. Worship II a.m.
with Pastor Robert Gibson
how he got
speaker. Potluck 12: 15 p.m.
them to grow.
so big, Dill
joked his secret
was talking
Wednesday, Sept. 5
nicely to them.
POMEROY - Mildred
Submitted photo
Shuler who is in her 90s and
a resident of Rocksprin~s
Rehabilitation Center Will
observe her birthday on
Sept 5. Cards may be sent
to her there. ·

Church events

Birthdays

Dachowski receives national award
GALLIPOLIS - In an
announcement from the
Commission on Cancer (CoC),
Alice A. Dacliowski, MD,
General Surgeon at Holzer
Medical Center and Holzer
Clinic, was named a recipient
of the Commission on Cancer
Liaison Physician Outstanding
Performance Award for 2006.
This distinguished award is
presented to only three percent
of Cancer Liaison Physicians
in the country. Dr. Dachowski
was one of 57 other physicians
in the US, representing 23
states, to be chosen for this
impressive honor.
The CoC Liaison Physician
Outstanding. Performance
Award recognizes individuals
who go above and beyond the
regular scope of their duties.
Dr. Dachowski was nominated
. for the award by Holzer
Medical Center, where she has
. served as its Cancer Liaison
Physician since 1993, Spending
countless hours at the national,
state and local level to prevent
and detect cancer in an effort to
improve the quality of patient
care.
.
As written in her nomination letter, Dr. Dachowski is

Allee A. Dachowskl, MD

very active in Gallia County's
American Cancer Society
(ACS) Relay for Life and
serves as Chairman of the
Gallia Relay for Life Survivor
Committee. She has been
extremely instrumental in collaborating with the ACS to
implement Holzer Medical
Center's monthly Cancer
S~pport Group, which has,rroVIded many cancer patients
and/or survivors a connection
with others in an effort to form
a much needed support system.
Dr. Dachowski also provides support doing free skin
screenings, breast screenings,
and health and cancer related
presentations to churches,
organizations and groups

through the tri-county area.
She is also an advocate for The
Ohio Breast and Cervical
Cancer Project and is a member ofThe American Society of
·Breast Surgeons.
At Holzer Medical Center,
Dr. Dachowski is instrumental
in the facility 's approval status
of the cancer program by continually preparing for quarterly
Cancer Committee meetings,
presenting cases at the
Hospital's Cancer Care
Conference, reviewing charts,
possessing leadership qualities,
and her strong support to the
Hospital's Cancer Registrar,
HMC Community Health and
Wellness Department, and the
American Cancer Society.
Dr. D'.tehowski received her
undergraduate degree in
Biology from Chestnut Hill
College in Pennsylvania. and
graduated from medical school
at the Washington University ·
School of Medicine. She completed her internship and residency in general surgery at the
University of Cincinnati
Medical Center and has been
associated with Holzer Clinic
and Holzer Medical Center
since 1986.

Trooper kills Jackson County man
who previously attempted suicide
RIPLEY (AP) A
Jackson .County man was
shot and killed by a state
trooper late Saturday night
for refusing to drop his
weapon - the same man
who attempted suicide days
after his kids were killed in a
boating accident.
Michael Fisher, 35, was
discovered brandishing a
weapon around 11 p.m.,
when a state trooper
responding to an unrelated
call heard shots fired at
Fisher's home, according to
Sergeant S.E., Wolfe of the
Ripley detachment for the
West Virginia State Police.
Fisher then "refused to
drop . his weapon at the

Trooper's lawful commands. dren, Samantha and Jesse
Subsequently, (Fisher) suf- Fisher, and sister-in-law,
fered fatal wounds as a Jennifer Posten, 33. He, his
result of the altercation,", wife Jill Fisher, and brotheraccording to a state police in-law Roger Posten Jr. surnews release.
vived.
. Fisher was pronounced
On June 25, Michael
dead on the scene, Wolfe Fisher leapt from the
said.
WilliamS. Ritchie Jr. Bridge
Wolfe confirmed that in Jackson County after
Fisher tried to commit sui- about 45 minutes of negotiacide earlier this summer by tions with police, and surjumping into the same river. vived the fall of between 75
his 4-year-old girl and 16- an(j l 00 feet unharmed.
The bridge he jumped ·
month-old boy drowned in.
On June 23, Fisher was from was 5~miles upstream
steering a small boat that from the location of the
collided with a barge in boating ·
accident.
heavy fog near Ravenswood Afterwards, Fisher was
around 2:10 a.m. Killed in . taken to a mental-health
the accident were his chi!- facility for evaluation.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Is reputation niore important than marriage?
•

'BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I've been
married over 25 years and
have three terrific children.
Three years ago, my wife
found out she has cancer.
She went through all the
treatments, and although the
doctors say her original cancer is ~one, she still needs to
come m for more tests to see
if cancer has since developed elsewhere. She won' t
go.
She seems better mentally
and physically, but I'm at
my wits' end. There is no
sex drive from her whatsoever, and if l mention it or
try to initiate sex, she's
cooperative, but there is no
emotion or sel)suality. It's
like a chore· to her.
I'm a well -known citizen
in my town, but it's getting
harder to stay married. I'm
afraid it will look bad to
leave her, and l' m not sure
my children will understand .
I've met other women and
enjoyed the attention. I
know l can find someone to
satisfy me emotionally and
physically. .
Our house is clean, there
is food on the table, bills are
paid, but I'm not happy.
There is no time for counseling, plus we're long past
talking about her lack of
libido. How can I walk away
on good terms'' - Dilemma
In the Midwest
Dear Dilemma: Your
wife of 25 years develops
cancer. is probably going
through menopause , and
although you are intimate.
she isn't as gung-ho about it
as you 'd like . You decide to
leave because you can ' t
make time for counseling.
You're right - it will look
bad, and your children will

never forgive you.
ing her to "show her teeth."
If you really wanted to
How that woman smiles
save your marriage, you'd . is nobody 's business, and
make time for counseling, her family is wrong to try
but it 's obviou.s you are only and force a change. It would
looking for a way out that be nice if everyone had a
will not wreck your stellar great smile, but spending
reputation. So you need to several thousand dollars on
give the impression that one 's appearance isn ' t
you're making an effort. Go always a viable option.
Please rethink this one,
for counseling. Allow your
wife the opportunity to work Annie. _ Lisa in Tennessee
on this. Marriage is not all
Dear Lisa: we agree that
no one should be forced to
about you.
Dear Annie: My mother, smile. It looks unnaturaL
74, lives in another city and However, we also know that
delights in criticizing family if you are embarrassed by
members, friends and everyone
except
strangers. yo ur smile, it can affect
Yesterday, while chatting on everything in your life the phone, she told me my including your relationships,
nephew's
girlfriend your work, your attitude and
answered questions with your emotional health . For
"Naw," instead &lt;Jf the proper those who are content with
"No," so she rudely and sar- .their smile, it's fine with us.
castically corrected her. Bu1 for those who spend a
Mom said this while laugh- good portion of their lives
ing and expected me to wishing it were otherwise,
they should know there are ·
laugh along.
· She has always been like options.
this. No one measures up.
Annie's Snippet for Labor
We were raised to nevercrit- Day (credit Bill Dodds):
icize her, since the conse- "Labor Day is a glorious
quence is day s of sulking holiday because your child
and revenge. Even my long- will be going back to school
suffering, spineless fath er the next day. It would have
follows this policy. How do been called Independen ce
we
handle
her?
Day, but that name was
Disgusted
already taken."
Dear Disgusted: People
Ar~nie 's Mailbox is writ·
like your mother need to ten by Kathy Mitchell and
constantly prove their su pe- Marcy Sugar, longtime ediriority because they are tors of the Ann Landers colsecretly afraid they don 't umn. Please e-mail your
measure up . .It' s probably
too late to change her, but at questions to anniesmailthe very least, when she box@comcast.net, or write
behave&amp; rudel y, you can to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
express your disagreement. Box l/8190, Chicago, JL
If she sulks for a week. so be 60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, and
I't .
Dear Annie: I usually read features by other
love your advice, but the . Creator.~ Syndicate writers
response to "S hutter Shy" and cartoonists, visit the
was out of line. She said her Creators Syndicate Web
parents were always pester- page at www.creators.com.

.

.

It may get you afew bucks, but stealing wire from electrical
lines, substations or other electrical equipment is not only
illega I, it can kill you.
Don't do it. Don't let people you care about do it
If you know anything about theft of electrical equipment, call
AEP's toll-free security hotline: 1-866-747-5845.
Asafety message from AEP Ohio.

QJOHIO'

Aunit of American Electric Power

�0

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • ·woRLD

Page.A2
Monday, September 3, 2007

AIR 'I'RAFF'IC CONIROLLERS AND 'I'HE FAA HAVE A
BI'fl'ER DISPUTE OVER SAFElY IN 'I'HE SKIES
BY MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

r

'

~

I

I
f

··~

"'

WASHINGTON - The
next time you board an airliner and buckle yo ur seat
belt, you are about to fly
through a bitter labor dispute between some of the
people most responsible for
your safety in the skies.
The nation 's air traffic
~ontrollers and the Federal
Aviation Admini stration.
that employs them cannot
agree whether enough qualified people are guiding air
traffic or how safe the air
space is today.
With
airline
travel
rebounding almost to the
volume before the Sept. II,
200 I, terrorist attacks,
delays on scheduled U.S.
flights have reached a
record high. Nearly onethird of domestic flights on
major carriers were late in
June. And ait traffic is
growmg.
At the same time, the
FAA and the National Air
Traffic
Controllers
Association been unable to
agree on a new contract. A
year ago, the FAA declared
an impasse and imposed a
contract. Since then, the
retirement of experienced
controllers has soared
beyond the agency's forecasts.
"In several places, it has
created a safety problem
where controllers are working I0-hour days , 6-day
weeks and working combined positions because
they don't have enough
fully trained bodies," union
President Patrick Forrey
said.
FAA figures show the
number of fully certified
controllers dropped to
' 11,467 in May - the lowest
in a decade the union says.
Beside them in control centers are 3,300 so-called
"developmental controllers·:
who are being trained on the
job by other controllers. The
trainees are not yet qualified
for all work assignments
required of fully certified
controllers.
"They are pushing the
envelope and somebody is
going to snap," Forrey
warned. "Unless the agency
slows down the traffic,
someone may make a mistake and then are they going
to blame it on the controller?"
By contrast, FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said;

AP photo

One Comair plane takes off while another Comair plane taxis to the terminal at the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport in Hebron, Ky.. in this July 26, 2006 file photo. As air traffic increases, the nation's air traffic controllers and the Federal Aviation Administration that employs them cannot agree whether enough qualified people are guiding aircraft traffic or how safe air space Is today.
"This is the safest period in
aviation history." She said
the contract allowed the
agency to more easily move
staff to meet the needs of a
changing airline industry.
FAA
Administrator
Marion Blakey says the
imposed contract "is saving
taxpayers $1.9 billion over
five years ... to invest in
21st Century air traffic systems."
The three-year average of
fatal accidents on commercial flights has dropped to a
record low .017 per 100,000
departures. Fatal accidents
on private planes dropped
from 354 in 2005 to a record
low of 299 in 2006, and
Brown says this year is
below last year's pace.
The umon says these
national figures conceal
risky situations in towers,
terminal approach and at
regional control centers
where its members scan
glowing radar screens with
blips representing planes
loaded with passengers they
need to keep moving- and
keep apart.
Some of the union's
examples:
• At the Cleveland en
route 'center, the nation 's
fourth busiest facility, 29
fully certified controllers
have retired since the con-

Felix becomes Category 5
hurricane, after la$hing Aruba
BY MARGARET WEVER

tract was imposed. Nineteen
others have been promoted
to management and 7 have
transferred, leaving 366 certified
. controllers.
Operational errors - in
which planes fly closer than
they ~e supposed to soared to 34 this fiscal year,
with a month left, compared
to 16 in fiscal 2006. ·
• The Chicago en route
center, the fifth busiest
facility, has lost 40 certified
controllers by retirement
and other reasons, leaving
360. So far, the center has
recorded 21 operation errors
for the fiscal year, compared to 12 the previous
year.
• In New York, southern
California and Charlotte,
N.C., on-the-job training of
controllers was temporarily
suspendei:l this summer to
evaluate a rash of errors.
• At New York's
LaGuardia airport on July 5,
a trainee mistakenly cleared
a 50-seat Comair jet to cross
a runway on which a Delta
737 was landing at . 150
mph. They missed each
other by a lew hundred feet.
The trmoe~. supervised by a
trainer, was handling m.ore
than 24 planes on the
ground. A previous controller had complained the

heavy load should be divided into two separate positions.
The
National
Transportation ·
Safety
Board rs investigating the
LaGuardia incident and five
other near-misses at airports
this year - two in Denver,
and one each in San
Francisco, Ft. Lauderdale,
Ha. , and Los Angeles. Socalled runway incursions
were so frequent that
Blakey called a daylong ·
industry brainstorming session at the FAA this month.
"These errors are the callin~ cards of mental fatigue,"
sa1d Chicago Center controller Bryan Zilonis, a
union vice president. "The
FAA is slowly t&gt;urning out
their most experienced controllers due to their inability
to properly staff positions at
many facilities." 'At the FAA, Brown paints
a ros,ier · picture of operational errors - those cases
where planes en route come
within 1,000 feet of each
other vertically or within 5
miles laterally, or within 3
miles near airports. The 12
months ending last Oct. I
saw the first drop in operational errors in seven years,
she said. "We're on target to
continue the reduction in

operational errors this year."
And she denies that
trainees compromise safety.
"The raw number doesn't
tell you their skill level,"
Brown said. A trainee is
qualified separately for each
work position and can safely work qualified positions
long before beinf' full_y certified to work a! positions,
she said.
Trainees include novices
from the FAA's academy
but also experienced controllers hired from the military or transferred from an
FAA facility where they
were certified. Brown said
experienced trainees can be
certified in weeks at some
less complicated facilities
while novices may need up
to three yellrs on-the-job
training at complex facilities.
Union ·spokesman Doug
Church responded that a
-transferred controller, during training for his new
locqtion, was involved. iri
the near-miss at LaGuardia
where he said on-the-job
training can take more than
two years.
Church said FAA changed
the definitions of operational errors this summer in
a . way that reduces their
number. An FAA power-

, point description of the new
definitions says planes can
come l 0 percent closer to
each other before it's
labeled an operational error.
Using the revised criteria,
there would have been 298
of the more serious errors in
2006, instead of .the 627
under the old definition,
according to the document.
Forrey predicted retirements wiH climb unless the
contract is reopened for a
negotiated settlement. A
pending House bill to reauthorize FAA would do that,
but the Bush administration
is opposed.
·
The FAA-imposed contract cut starting pay by 30
percent, eliminated ineentive pay fpr experienced
controllers and gave managers more authority over
staffing.
Since
last
September, contr\)Uers have
filed 220,000 grievailces.
The FAA. expects 800
retirements this fiscal year,
• Brown said. The figure has
~n revised upward twice
from 643. .
Brown satd the agency
has long kn'!wn that 72 percent of ·Its controllers
become eligible to retire in
Ule next decade. Most controllers were hired after
President Ronald Reagan in
1981 fired more than ll ,000
members of a predecessor
union, the Professional Air
Controllers
Traffic
after it
Organization,
refused to end an illegal
strike.
Acknowledging flawed
retirement estimates, Brown
said, "It doesn't matter if we
are · off as long as we can
increase the number we hire
to compensate." Last year,
hiring was boosted frotp
937 to more than 1,100;
more than I ,500 have· been
hired this year.
Blakey says the key to
improving safety is FAA's
multi-bill ion -dollar
Ne:Jt:tGen plan to replace
radar control with more precise satellite tracking so
planes can fly closer. FAA
awarded the first $1.8 billion contract Thursday, but
the new system won't begin
to operate until 2013.
"You still have to land
them one at a time,"
responds
union
chief
Forrey, who says more runways and controllers are
needed. "Nex1Gen is going
to take years. They need to
do something ... now."

Meigs County Fair

~vrhank You" 1\ds
SHOW APPRECIATION Tu YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
must be paid for in advance.

ORANJESTAD, Aruba - Hurricane Felix strengthened
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads
into a dangerous Category 5 storm Sunday and churned its
way into the open waters of the Caribbean Sea after toppling trees and flooding some homes on a cluster of Dutch
Islands.
·
The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Felix was
2 Col. X 5"
packing maximum sustained winds of 165 mph as it
Weekday
plowed westward toward Central America, where it was
1 Col. X 2" ...
expected to skirt Honduras' coastline Tuesday before slamming into Belize on Wednesday as a hurricane capable of
Weekday
massive destruction.
Sunday
On Sunday, Felix lashed Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire
with rains and winds, causing scattered power outages and
forcing thousands of tourists to take refuge in hotels. But
Sunday
residents expressed relief it did far less damage than feared
as the storm's outer bands just grazed the tiny islands.
"Thankfully we didn't get a very bad storm. My dog slept
peacefully through the night," said Bonaire medical admin. 1strator Swmara Albertus, who wmted out the storm m her
home.
.
The storm forced tens of thousands of tourists and residents on the three islands to remain in their homes and
hotels, stocked with water, flashlights and emergency pro- ·
visions.
In Curacao, about a· dozen homes in a low-lying area
were flooded . In Aruba. there was little visible damage,
although at least one catamaran snapped oil its mooring
and a house was damaged by a downed tree. A northern ·settlement had' a temporary power outage.
Many Bonaire residents had prepared for the worst,
$59.22
installing storm shutters and hauling their boats ashore, but
the storm 's winds left little damage.
Felix became the second Atlantic hurricane of the season
on Saturday evening, following Hurricane Dean, which left
at least 20 dead in the Caribbean and carved out a destructive swath that stretched from St. Lucia to Mexico.
At 8 p.m. EDT, the storm was centered about 390 miles
southeast of Jamaica and was moving west-northwest at
about 18 mph. the hurrica ne center said .
On Saturday. Felix brought heavy rains and strong winds
to Grenada as a tropical storm, ripping roofs off at least two
homes and demoying a popular concert venue. No injuries
were reported and the Grenadian government was still
Borders and Artwork
assessing the damage Sunday.

$64.50

$12.90

$98.70

$19.74-

2 Col. x 4"
Weekday
1 Col. x 3" ...
Weekday

$19.35

$51.60
Sunday.

$78.96

Sunday

$29.61

2 Col. x 3"
Weekday $38.70
Sunday

•

•

2 Col. x 2"
Weekday
$25.80
Sunday

The Daily Sentinel

LOCAL • STATE

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 3
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
office building.
Tuesday Sept. 4
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. Pageville town hall.
Orange
ALFRED
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at the home of the fiscal officer, Osie Follrod.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees meet at
5 p.m. at Rutland Firehouse.
Thursday, Sept. 6
. ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
6:30 p.m., at the townhall.

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Sept. 4
MIDDLEPORT
Scheduled monthly meeting of Middleport Masonic
Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7:30

p.m. Work in Master Mason
degree. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - "Let Go and Let
God" Nar-Anon Family
Group meeting, 7 p.m.,
Krodel Park recreation building. Group helps families and
friends of addicts and users to
attain serenity, regardless of
whether he/she has stopped
using. Anonymity "'speer~.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7:30 p.m Masonic
Hall in Chestc;_r. Charter to be
draped for Bette Biggs. mem;
bers to wear white. Balloting
to take place for candidate.
Everett and Charlotte Grant
and Julie Flemming, hosts.
Wednesday, Sept. 5
CHESTER - Chester
Garden Club open meeting,
7:30 p.m. , Chester United
Methodist
Church.
Everyone welcome. Wanda
Gilmore will talk on "Trees
for the . Landscape ." .Club
members take door ·prizes
and finger foods.
Friday, Sept. 7
SALEM CENTER

PageA3
Monday, September 3,

2007

Holy zucchini, Batman!
Mei gs County Pomona
Grange, 7:30 p,.m., Star
Grange Hall . All contest
items will be judged.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 9
RACINE - KerwoodHill reunion at Start Mill
Park in Racine. Covered
dish dinner at I p.m. Family
and friends welcome

Measuring twofeet long, these
zucch ini 's
grown by
Michael Dill of
Beech Grove
Road in Rutland
are nearly as
Sunday, Sept. 9
tall
as his niece
POMEROY - Harvest
Paige Atkins,
Festival at the St. John .
pictured here .
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
When asked
Church. Worship II a.m.
with Pastor Robert Gibson
how he got
speaker. Potluck 12: 15 p.m.
them to grow.
so big, Dill
joked his secret
was talking
Wednesday, Sept. 5
nicely to them.
POMEROY - Mildred
Submitted photo
Shuler who is in her 90s and
a resident of Rocksprin~s
Rehabilitation Center Will
observe her birthday on
Sept 5. Cards may be sent
to her there. ·

Church events

Birthdays

Dachowski receives national award
GALLIPOLIS - In an
announcement from the
Commission on Cancer (CoC),
Alice A. Dacliowski, MD,
General Surgeon at Holzer
Medical Center and Holzer
Clinic, was named a recipient
of the Commission on Cancer
Liaison Physician Outstanding
Performance Award for 2006.
This distinguished award is
presented to only three percent
of Cancer Liaison Physicians
in the country. Dr. Dachowski
was one of 57 other physicians
in the US, representing 23
states, to be chosen for this
impressive honor.
The CoC Liaison Physician
Outstanding. Performance
Award recognizes individuals
who go above and beyond the
regular scope of their duties.
Dr. Dachowski was nominated
. for the award by Holzer
Medical Center, where she has
. served as its Cancer Liaison
Physician since 1993, Spending
countless hours at the national,
state and local level to prevent
and detect cancer in an effort to
improve the quality of patient
care.
.
As written in her nomination letter, Dr. Dachowski is

Allee A. Dachowskl, MD

very active in Gallia County's
American Cancer Society
(ACS) Relay for Life and
serves as Chairman of the
Gallia Relay for Life Survivor
Committee. She has been
extremely instrumental in collaborating with the ACS to
implement Holzer Medical
Center's monthly Cancer
S~pport Group, which has,rroVIded many cancer patients
and/or survivors a connection
with others in an effort to form
a much needed support system.
Dr. Dachowski also provides support doing free skin
screenings, breast screenings,
and health and cancer related
presentations to churches,
organizations and groups

through the tri-county area.
She is also an advocate for The
Ohio Breast and Cervical
Cancer Project and is a member ofThe American Society of
·Breast Surgeons.
At Holzer Medical Center,
Dr. Dachowski is instrumental
in the facility 's approval status
of the cancer program by continually preparing for quarterly
Cancer Committee meetings,
presenting cases at the
Hospital's Cancer Care
Conference, reviewing charts,
possessing leadership qualities,
and her strong support to the
Hospital's Cancer Registrar,
HMC Community Health and
Wellness Department, and the
American Cancer Society.
Dr. D'.tehowski received her
undergraduate degree in
Biology from Chestnut Hill
College in Pennsylvania. and
graduated from medical school
at the Washington University ·
School of Medicine. She completed her internship and residency in general surgery at the
University of Cincinnati
Medical Center and has been
associated with Holzer Clinic
and Holzer Medical Center
since 1986.

Trooper kills Jackson County man
who previously attempted suicide
RIPLEY (AP) A
Jackson .County man was
shot and killed by a state
trooper late Saturday night
for refusing to drop his
weapon - the same man
who attempted suicide days
after his kids were killed in a
boating accident.
Michael Fisher, 35, was
discovered brandishing a
weapon around 11 p.m.,
when a state trooper
responding to an unrelated
call heard shots fired at
Fisher's home, according to
Sergeant S.E., Wolfe of the
Ripley detachment for the
West Virginia State Police.
Fisher then "refused to
drop . his weapon at the

Trooper's lawful commands. dren, Samantha and Jesse
Subsequently, (Fisher) suf- Fisher, and sister-in-law,
fered fatal wounds as a Jennifer Posten, 33. He, his
result of the altercation,", wife Jill Fisher, and brotheraccording to a state police in-law Roger Posten Jr. surnews release.
vived.
. Fisher was pronounced
On June 25, Michael
dead on the scene, Wolfe Fisher leapt from the
said.
WilliamS. Ritchie Jr. Bridge
Wolfe confirmed that in Jackson County after
Fisher tried to commit sui- about 45 minutes of negotiacide earlier this summer by tions with police, and surjumping into the same river. vived the fall of between 75
his 4-year-old girl and 16- an(j l 00 feet unharmed.
The bridge he jumped ·
month-old boy drowned in.
On June 23, Fisher was from was 5~miles upstream
steering a small boat that from the location of the
collided with a barge in boating ·
accident.
heavy fog near Ravenswood Afterwards, Fisher was
around 2:10 a.m. Killed in . taken to a mental-health
the accident were his chi!- facility for evaluation.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Is reputation niore important than marriage?
•

'BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I've been
married over 25 years and
have three terrific children.
Three years ago, my wife
found out she has cancer.
She went through all the
treatments, and although the
doctors say her original cancer is ~one, she still needs to
come m for more tests to see
if cancer has since developed elsewhere. She won' t
go.
She seems better mentally
and physically, but I'm at
my wits' end. There is no
sex drive from her whatsoever, and if l mention it or
try to initiate sex, she's
cooperative, but there is no
emotion or sel)suality. It's
like a chore· to her.
I'm a well -known citizen
in my town, but it's getting
harder to stay married. I'm
afraid it will look bad to
leave her, and l' m not sure
my children will understand .
I've met other women and
enjoyed the attention. I
know l can find someone to
satisfy me emotionally and
physically. .
Our house is clean, there
is food on the table, bills are
paid, but I'm not happy.
There is no time for counseling, plus we're long past
talking about her lack of
libido. How can I walk away
on good terms'' - Dilemma
In the Midwest
Dear Dilemma: Your
wife of 25 years develops
cancer. is probably going
through menopause , and
although you are intimate.
she isn't as gung-ho about it
as you 'd like . You decide to
leave because you can ' t
make time for counseling.
You're right - it will look
bad, and your children will

never forgive you.
ing her to "show her teeth."
If you really wanted to
How that woman smiles
save your marriage, you'd . is nobody 's business, and
make time for counseling, her family is wrong to try
but it 's obviou.s you are only and force a change. It would
looking for a way out that be nice if everyone had a
will not wreck your stellar great smile, but spending
reputation. So you need to several thousand dollars on
give the impression that one 's appearance isn ' t
you're making an effort. Go always a viable option.
Please rethink this one,
for counseling. Allow your
wife the opportunity to work Annie. _ Lisa in Tennessee
on this. Marriage is not all
Dear Lisa: we agree that
no one should be forced to
about you.
Dear Annie: My mother, smile. It looks unnaturaL
74, lives in another city and However, we also know that
delights in criticizing family if you are embarrassed by
members, friends and everyone
except
strangers. yo ur smile, it can affect
Yesterday, while chatting on everything in your life the phone, she told me my including your relationships,
nephew's
girlfriend your work, your attitude and
answered questions with your emotional health . For
"Naw," instead &lt;Jf the proper those who are content with
"No," so she rudely and sar- .their smile, it's fine with us.
castically corrected her. Bu1 for those who spend a
Mom said this while laugh- good portion of their lives
ing and expected me to wishing it were otherwise,
they should know there are ·
laugh along.
· She has always been like options.
this. No one measures up.
Annie's Snippet for Labor
We were raised to nevercrit- Day (credit Bill Dodds):
icize her, since the conse- "Labor Day is a glorious
quence is day s of sulking holiday because your child
and revenge. Even my long- will be going back to school
suffering, spineless fath er the next day. It would have
follows this policy. How do been called Independen ce
we
handle
her?
Day, but that name was
Disgusted
already taken."
Dear Disgusted: People
Ar~nie 's Mailbox is writ·
like your mother need to ten by Kathy Mitchell and
constantly prove their su pe- Marcy Sugar, longtime ediriority because they are tors of the Ann Landers colsecretly afraid they don 't umn. Please e-mail your
measure up . .It' s probably
too late to change her, but at questions to anniesmailthe very least, when she box@comcast.net, or write
behave&amp; rudel y, you can to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
express your disagreement. Box l/8190, Chicago, JL
If she sulks for a week. so be 60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, and
I't .
Dear Annie: I usually read features by other
love your advice, but the . Creator.~ Syndicate writers
response to "S hutter Shy" and cartoonists, visit the
was out of line. She said her Creators Syndicate Web
parents were always pester- page at www.creators.com.

.

.

It may get you afew bucks, but stealing wire from electrical
lines, substations or other electrical equipment is not only
illega I, it can kill you.
Don't do it. Don't let people you care about do it
If you know anything about theft of electrical equipment, call
AEP's toll-free security hotline: 1-866-747-5845.
Asafety message from AEP Ohio.

QJOHIO'

Aunit of American Electric Power

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
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www.mydallysentlnel.co"'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
tJf speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and ttJ petititJn
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 3, the 246th day of 2007 · There
are 119 days left in the year. This is Labor Day.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Sept. 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris between the United
States and Great Britain officially ended the Revolutionary
War.
On this date:
In 1189, En.giand's King Richard I (the Lionhearted) was
crowned in Westminster.
In 1658, Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the English
Commonwealth, died.
In 1939, Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand
declared war on Germany, two days after the Nazi invasion
of Poland.
In 1943, the British 8th Army invaded Italy during World
War II, the same day Italy signed a secret armistice with the
Allies.
.
In 1978, Pope John Paull was installed as the 264th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church.
In 2004, the three-day ho9tage siege at a school in
Beslan, Russia, ended in bloody chaos after Chechen militants set off bombs as Russian commandos stormed the
building; 334 people were killed.
·
Ten years ago: Arizona Gov. Fife Symington was con~~~lyi~m-milli~in~mm~~~his~

lapsing real estate empire. (Symington's conviction was
overturned in 1999; he was pardoned by President Clinton
in January 200 l as prosecutors were pursuing the case
anew.) The U.S. Senate voted to ban most federal financing
for abortions provided by the managed-care industry.
Five years ago: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
said the Bush administration had secret information supporting its .claims that Saddam Hussein was close to developing nuclear weapons. The Senate opened debate on legislation creating a new Homeland Security Department.
One year ago: Authorities announced the capture of aiQaida in Iraq's No. 21eader, Hamed Jumaa Farid al-Saeedi,
accusing him of "brutal and merciless" terror operations.
An apartment fire in Chicago killed six children ages 3 to
14. Andre Agassi retired after losing the third-round match
at the U.S. Open.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Helen Wagner ("As the World
Turns") is 89. "Beetle Bailey" cartoonist Mort Walker is
84. Country singer Hank Thompson is 82. Actress Anne
Jackson is 81. Country singer Tompall Glaser is 74. Actress
Pauline Collins is 67. Rock singer-musician AI Jardine is
65. Actress Valerie Perrine is 64. Rock· musician Donald
Brewer (Grand Funk Railroad) is 59. Rock guitarist Steve
Jones (The Sex Pistols) is 52. Rock singer-musician Todd
Lewis is 42. Actor Costas Mandylor is 42. Actor Charlie
Sheen is 42. Singer Jennifer Paige is 34. Actor Nick
Wechsler is 29.
Thought for Today: "NothiQg is so useless as a general
maxim." - Thomjs Macaulay, English historian (18001859).

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•

.J

••

Obituaries
Emest •Emie' ~nney

'

Nouri al-Maliki seems to do ians killed in air raids -- was
History, as Marx famousevery week with junkets to such that when Gen.
lY' said (by way of paraIran and Syria. Where next, Douglas
phrasing Hegel), repeats
MacArthur
North Korea?
1tself -- "the first time as
instructed Japanese military ·
This glossed-over distinc- commanders to order their
tragedy, the second as
tion accounts for my uneasy men to disarm, 250,000 .,
farce ...
Diana
reaction to the president's Japanese soldiers complied, ' '
A catchy conceP.t, to say
West
to "stand with right down to their Samurai ''
exhortation
the least. And while there's
the Iraqis at this difficult swords. This has nothing to '
definitely something to it,
hour." Which "Ira~is"?
it's also true that sometimes
Sunnis and Shiites eradicat- do with the American ex,pe- '· '
history does not repeat
rience in Iraq, which, of
itself.
.
. - was culpable in the humani- ing Iraq's remnant Christian course, remains plagued by "
Take Amencan wars m tarian disaster visited on population? Sunni bombers armed militias.
Japan, the Kore.as, Vietqam anti-communists
in whose liatred of Shiites
. Another result of total
(fleetingly?)
transcends
and ~q. President Bush, Southeast Asia.
a~ssmg the Veterans of
This is the point at which, their hatred of Americans? victory was that the
Foreign Wars, recently as a good conservative, 1. Agents of Iran? Agents of Japanese Emperor admitted
made a c!'se --a flawed ~ase should declare that this AI Qaeda? Proponents of to his people that he wasn't'
-- for a kind of core contmu- assessment of Vietnam is Hezbollah? Forgive me if I divine. This would be akin
ity linking these disparate long overdue. And it is fail to be stirred by the pres- to Shiite leader Ali aiSistani declaring Allah wasc?nflict.s. It's not that he did- (although why the White ident's call.
This isn't to suggest there n't divine. After all that, litn t adnut there are many d1f- House
speechwriters
ferences among th,em brought in a quotation from aren't strategic imperatives tle wonder MacArthur
("There are• many differ- Graham Greene -- a in the Mesopotamian the- could write up a decent con- ..
ences" among them, he Reagan-hating,
Castro- ater, but they have less to do stitution for Japan -- as :,;
sa~d). But .he m~stly argued admiring, Kim Phil by- with "the Iraqi peoph:," than opposed to the sharia- ·.
that Amencan mvolvemenl defending leftist -- I'll never with suppressing Iran's supreme constitution we . ,.
capabilities,
over time across .the Far know). But that doesn't offensive
Syria's
expansionist
aims, sponsored in Iraq.
East had ushered m post- mean the Southeast Asian
A more frank,. compre- ,.
war peace and prosperity, analogy -- basically, we Saudi Arabian support for
and· that th1s demonstrated can't let the Iraqi people creeping sharia and other hensive --more grown-up -- "·
"a precedent for the hard. down as we did the South jihadist threats unaddressed assessment of the historical
record would offer very dif- -~
and necessary work we're Vietnamese -- is right.
by our efforts in Iraq.
doing" in Iraq.
Why? Well, for starters,
Could it be that our mili- ferent lessons from the ones ·.·
Sheesh. How do you South Vietnamese didn't kill tary has other, more vital President Bush is teaching. ':
equate total victory in Japan American troops, didn't missions ahead? No, our It comes down to this: As •n
with bloody stalemate in booby-trap buildings and strategic thinkers say, better World War II ended, we ,.,
Korea with congressionally towns, didn't turn temples to gloss such things over. stopped being total warmandated defeat in Vietnam into armed camps, didn't Just · like the president did riors. In the 60-plus years ':·
d
? Of
·
hr
... an Iraq·
course, It teach their young to t 9w when he blithely equated since, we have become lim- .'.'
was the invocation of rocks at Gls. To my knowi- our limited war effort to ited warriors. Our leader- :;
V'
h
·d
d
h
· · s h transform post-Saddam Iraq
ship, political and military,
•etnam -- 1 e pres• ent e ge, w en trammg out
offered a cautionary tale Vietnamese army . and with the total war effort that Left and Right, should rec- ,
against withdrawal from police, American advisers democratized
Imperial ognize the difference.
-;
Iraq by pointing to the didn't require body armor Japan after World War· II.
(Dia1Ul West. is a colum- "
ghastly fate of millions of (not to mention armed U.S. There are few similarities,
nist
for The . Washington ·•'
South Vietnamese and other guards) to ensure their sur- because there is no correlaU.S. allies on our abandon- viva!.
And
South tion between limited war Times. She is the author of
"The Death of the Grown- ,;,
ment of them in 1975 __ that Vietnamese leaders weren't and total war.
·
up:
How America's Arrested .::
How can there ·be? The
triggered media distress, -- while Amencans were
Development Is Bringing :. :
with the liberal-elite-com- fighting on South Vietnam's utter devastation of Japan -plex goin~ dyspeptic over behalf -- eagerly courting 1.27 million Japanese sol- Down Western Civilization." '··
the implication that its American enenues, as •. for diers killed in battle, anoth- She can be contacted via
"
beloved antiwar moveme.nt example, Pnme Mm1ster er 670,000 Japanese civil- dianawest@verizonnet.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ,,
~

BU5" OO[J;M'T WANT UUN6S

AP STATEHOUSE
CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
,....
Environm¢ntal regulators
are playinB as strong a role
as ever fighting pollution by
Obio's .giant livestock farms
five years after the state
handed its agriculture
experts the job.
State data show that the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency has
fielded more agriculturerelated complaints on average since the power transfer, and EPA fmes against
megafarm operators since
August 2002 have dwarfed
those levied by the Ohio
Department
of Agriculture.
BY JOHN McCARTHY
One reason for the shared
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
authority: The U.S. EPA has
COLUMBUS - Sunita Clark is like many a working yet to agree that the regulamom. She rushes home from her job as a health claims tory program run by
AP photo
processor to spend time with her 10-year-old daughter,Ruby. Agriculture is meeting all
Too little time, she says, before it's off to her second job as the environmental standards Hogs are shown In a pen at a 4,80()-head swine farm, July 18 In Amanda.
necessary to govern as Ohio
a cashier at Home Depot.
"A typical day is I work, I have time to pick her up after EPA did. In an April letter, ping 4,000 swine, 9,000 cat"A fine of $700, $200? the environment on these
Jo
Water
Division
Chief
school, get her something to eat and walk out the door," she
. tie and more than 1.4 mil- That's not a· disincentive," permitted farms than what's
Lynn Traub raised seven lion laying chickens said.
Dou~herty said. "That's a been done in the small famClark, 36, said she's had to hold two jobs since her.hus- pages of concerns over ·pointing to the near dou- line 1tem in a yearlx budget ily farms over the years," ..
band, Mark, was laid off from his truck-driving job: He now Ohio's rules for megafarms, bling of the operations since for these operators.'
Boggs said.
works as a groundskeeper at a golf course, but it's not mostly related to the way the agency's takeover.
Water pollution remains
At the 4,800-head swine
pnmary
concern farm that state inspector Jim
enough to pay the mortgage, car loan and o'!le~ ~ousehold megafarms handle the
Farmers, meanwhile, say the
bills that total about $2,250 a month. The family s mcome IS manure their operations they are simply employing because the federal EPA Young visited one recent
about $32,000 a year, she said.
·
generate.
the technology necessary to concedes it knows virtually summer afternoon, manure
She is one of a growing number of Ohio women who are
Agriculture receives most meet the needs of an ever nothing about how much air was falling tidily through
the primary family breadwinner. A study releasedjust in time of the tax money spent on more demanding public, pollution is caused by con- slats into a holding pit
for Labor Day says that in 2006, more Ohio women over age overseeing big farms: More which wants blemish-free centrated livestock and beneath the barn floor.
16 than ever - 61 percent - were working, up from less than $9 million between meat and inexpensive eggs poultry operations. It has Industrial sized fans blew
started a $14.6 million, two- most of the smell and flies
than half in 1979;
200 I and last year, and $3 365 days a year.
The study by Policy Matters Ohio, a labor-backed advoca- million budgeted now.
Agriculture has grandfa- year study of 20 farms in off the pigs and piglets,
cy group based in Cleveland, said the male work force
State lawmakers in 2002 thered in 86 megafarrns that nine states, including Ohio, which appeared pink and
declined over the same period from nearly 80 percent to 73 moved oversight of the had been pending under to measure the level of perky in their pens. A field
percent, and two-parent families increased their working farms to the A:griculture EPA's watch, and approved hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, where stored manure had
Department, an agency they 82 permits to develop or dust and other chemicals been injected at a rate of
hours by 17 percent.
.
.
Men still earn more than women dom~ the same ,JObs. but viewed as more expert in expand, records ~how . they emit.
.
Ohio Agriculture officials 8,000 gallons an acre j\ISt
the gap is narrowing and women in Ohio are earmng more dealing with farmers and Seventeen more ~nruts than ever, the study found. The median wage for men was farm issues.
including · Ohio s largest say their program is a two days earlier was nearly
$16.15 an hour in 2006, while the median women's wage
Most of the enforcement swine, cattle and dairy oper- resounding success: There odor free.
Boggs said he intends to
against polluting farms was ations yet - are in the have been no repeats of the
was $13.16.
make
adjustments to the
Buckeye Egg crisis, mega''We definitely are seeing more women in the .labor force being handled by the Ohio works.
and more families where ~th parents are working and the Division of Wildlife, which
The pace of manure com- farms are required to meet permitting program, which
hours are increasing," Policy Matters Ohio diroctor Amy watches out for the health of plaints to Wildlife has . stringent pollution contain- may include a tracking sysstreams and tributaries slowed since t)le change, ment standards, and inspec- tem for megafarrn manure
Hanauer said.
Women - and men ~ felt the sting of the recession ear- where most of the runoff with the division investigat- tors are making more fre- that's going to smaller
farms, larger agricultural
lier this decade, but employment for women is on the rise, drains, state reports say. But ing Ill complaints of quent and thorough visits.
State
Agriculture
Director
from streams, and
setbacks
Hanauer said.
·
'
improper
manure
.
discharge,
farmers complained loudest
Bob Boggs, appointed in a tougher than 95-percent
"It turns out now that the recession is over, that women's about EPA, which carries according to state data.
participation is back up over its ·pre-recession leve!s," the strongest legal hammer
At EPA's spill hotline, January, said the strength of standard for collection of
Hanauer said.
·over them in the federal agriculture'related com- the department's livestock farm sediment and pollution
Clark's day begins at the claims office, where she works Clean Water Act.
plaints have increased, aver.- environmental permitting runoff.
about 20 hours a week at a job she's held for nine years. She
a~ing
44 a year compared program is not as much in
"It (the shift of authority)
Still, he said there will
clocks 25 hours a week at Home Depot. That makes it diffi- has done what it was meant w1th 38 a year during the 1ts ability to punish viola- always be tradeoff~ to agricult oil her family, she said. In between jobs, she also finds to do: It's given comfort to five years before. Orders for tors as in preventing viola- culture.
time to work with her daughter's Girl Scout troop and help the regulated community environmental fixes by state tions in the wake of
"What the opposition
coach her soccer team.
that they don't have to deal Soil &amp; Water Division Chief Buckeye Egg.
doesn't want to talk about is
The massive layin'g farm why do we need large fahns.
Her husband was laid off 18 months ago from the truck- with EPA as much and now David Hanselmann are also
driving job he held for 33 years, she said. .
.
they deal with their friends on the rise, with five issued had a history of clean-water in the first place, why is
law violations and com- Ohio supporting them?"
"Part of the biggest chall~nge we have w1th ~e w~rking at ODA," said Trent since the power transfer.
three or four nights a week 1s my husb~d helpmg w1th ~y Dougherty, staff attorney
The state EPA also has plaints from neighbors Boggs said. "The reason is
daughter," Clark said. "I obviously can t .contmue wofki!tg for the Ohio Environmental levied more fmes. The com- about fly and rodent infesta- we need the production.
two part-time jobs because its verj weanng on my family Council. •• And we are left bined $379,250 it fined the tions associated with hen
"We are waging a war
and it's very tiring."
with the same concerns former Buckeye Egg Farm, manure. Though EPA had with the western part of the
Clark hopes her experience in insurance can lead to a about water quality that we · now Ohio Fresh· Eggs, for the role of) evying the fines
career where she works just one job. But right now, her fam- had before.y
environmental-violations in on the farm, Boggs ·noted U.S. that has huge farms,
much larger than ours, and
ily neoos her, she said.
Critics contend that 2005. and earlier this year is that it was the Agriculture if you want to lose that busi"I've been with my husband for 11 112 years. Every mar- Agriculture has been pow- 22 times more than the Department that revoked its
riage has its ups and downs, for richer, for poorer. Now it's erless to stop development $17,660 the Agriculture permits to operate in 2003. ness to the West the way to
"I will maintain we do a do it is to not support at
my tum," she said.
·
of concentrated animal Department has fined all
lot better job in . protecting least some of these farms ."
operations that are now top- megafarrn violators .

Study fmds more
women in work force

..'

.

•("!

,. ,'

'·

/W

BY JULIE CARR SMYTH.

Ernest "Ernie" McKinney, 77, Galli1,10lis, died Sunday,
Sept. 2, 2007 . He is survived by s1ster Hazel (Dale)
Worlmtan of Galli polis
~e!-"'ices will be I p.m. Wednesday Sept. 5, 2007 , at
Willis Funeral Home with Pastors Isaac Shu~. Gene
Harmon, and Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will follow
in the Pine Street Cemetery. Frien~ may call from 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday and from 11:30 a.m. until the time of the service
on Wednesday at the funeral home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences. ·

~"
08

TO GND Uta; VtgNAM,,.

EPA

... ,
"'
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"

Hotline for parents
Heat affects school schedules, as districts use up 'snow' days
gives advice, sympathy · BY
· planned calendar changes
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
anytime soon.
"We're not saying that it
CINCINNATI (AP) - couldn't be an additional
Snow, ice and extreme cold faCtor that we could look at,
are the osual culprits when but our last calendar adopschools are forced to cancel tion .was for three years,"
classes. This year some Cincinnati Public Schools
Ohio schools already have spokeswoman Janet Walsh
lost some of their "snow" said. "Parents especially
days due to temperatures like to have advance notice
that hovered around I 00 for their planning.:•
degrees.
The Cincinnati district
Both the Darton and missed two days, but won't
Cincinnati pubhc school have to add any makeup
districts lost whole days last days yet. The state allows
month due to the high heat schools to miss five out of
and humidity, and at least the 182 days required for
three other southwest Ohio the regular school calendar,
public school systems let although those days are usuclasses out earlier than ally taken in winter months.
usual as temperatures
Cincinnati only lost two
soared.
days
last month due to the
With many schools havheat,
but Dayton Public
ing no air conditioning and
starting fall sessions earlier, Schools canceled six days
more districts may find of classes.
"You certainly don't welthemselves canceling classcome
these kinds of disrupes due to sweltering summer weather in the future. tions, but we have to look at
School officials, however, how the extreme heat and
don't expect the threat of humidity could affect the
hot weather to result in pre- well-being of students and

LISA CORNWELL

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published.. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- ·
ed for publication.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
· '214.21

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.c:Om

Monday, September 3, 2007

Monday, September 3, 2007 -

Total victory means total warriors, which we are not

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'Reader Services

PageA4

'.

AP Business Highlights
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke vowed
Friday to do all that is necessary to protect the national economy from the ill
effects of a global credit
crunch but not to bail out
investors and lenders "from
the consequences of their
financial decisions."
President Bush confidently predicted the country
would safely weather the
financial storm.
Friday's comments _
made in separate appearances _ by Bemanke here
and the president in
Washington, sought to send
a reassuring but tough love
message: Fed policymakers
and the Bush administration
are on top of the situation
that has unnerved investors
on Wall Street and around
the world and raised anxiety
on Main Street. But they:tl
act in the best interests of
the economy.

ed steps Bush outlined will
be expanded in coming
weeks by a Democrat-controlled Congress intent on
responding to growing votey
anxiety as up to 2 million
homeowners worry about
losing their homes.
Officials in the troubled
housing industry said the
important thing was that the
administration had finally
offered a proposal, a step
they said should help calm
global financial markets
that have been on a rollercoaster ride in recent weeks
as investors worried about a
serious credit crunch.

•••

NEW YORK (AP) _ Wall
Street closed out another
erratic week with a big gain
Friday after investors look
comments from President
Bush and Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke as
reassuring signs Wall Street
won't be left to deal with
problems in the mortgage
•••
and credit markets on its
WASHINGTON (AP) _ own.
President Bush on Friday
Investors balked early in
announced a set of modest Friday's session when comproposals to deal with an ments from Bernanke didn't
alarming rise in mortgage indicate a cut in the benchdefaults that have con- mark federal funds rate was
tributed to turbulent finan- imminent. However, they
cial markets over recent moved past some of their
weeks.
initial disappointment and
Housing analysts said it appeared to concentrate on
was highly likely the limit- comments that the Fed

would step in if needed.
Bemanke, speaking at the
Fed's annual conference in
Jackson Hole, W~o., said
the central bank w1ll "act as
needed" to prevent the credit crisis from hurting the
national economy.
The major indexes fluctuated but by midday extended their gains after
President Bush spoke about
details of a plan to help borrowers facing trouble paying their mortgages.

,,'
recent weakness in con- :.
sumer confidence caused by ;,..
a prolonged slump in hous- ::
ing and the past several ...
weeks of financial market ···
turbulence.
In another strong report, :. •
th~ Commerce Department
said that orders to factories ,.
jumped by 3. 7 percent in
July, even better than the , ,
3 .3 percent increase that "
had been expected.

•••

..

GENEVA (AP) _ The
World Trade Organization ·
opened a formal investiga- ' '
WASHINGTON (AP) _ tion Friday into allegations .·
Consumers returned to the by the U.S. and Mexico that : ·
malls in July after taking a Cliina is providing illegal ·..
breather in Jun~ . although su bsidies for a range of
worries about the future
could make the rebound industries.
The two countries accuse .~
short-lived.
Beijing
of using. WTO-pro- ·•
Commerce
The
hibited
tax breaks to
Department reported Fri~ay
thai consumer spendmg encourage Chinese comparose by 0.4 percent in July, nies to boost exports, while
double the June increase. imposing tax and tariff .
The spending was support- penalties to limit purchases ·
ed by a solid 0.5 percent rise of foreign products in ·
in incomes, the best show- China.
Beijing blocked a sepaing in thi s area in four
rate
probe of its ·rules for
months.
· The gain in spending was protecting intellectual propright in line with expecta- erty rights. But the \ move
tions, while the in crease in will probably only delay the
incomes was doubl e what creation of a panel until the
analysts had expected. next meeting of the WTO's
However. economists cau- dispute body in September,
tioned that the Jul y increas- when Washington can bring
es could be temporary given up the issue again.
•••

I
'

COLUMBUS . (AP) Going back to school can be
scary for students. II can be
even scarier for their parents,
according to Prevent Child
Abuse Ohio, which runs a
special phone line designed
t(l offer advice and sympathy
to nervous, overwhelmed
parents.
The Parent Resource hot
line, staffed by licensed
social workers 24 hours a
day, seven days a week, gets
a spike in calls at the end of
August from parents who are
stressed by the frustrations of
helping their children begin a
new school year, said Pat
Lyons, executive director of
Prevent Child Abuse Ohio.
Lyons said callers want to
know how to wake a child in
time for the school bus, when
kids can begin staying home
alone, or help fmding inexpensive school supplies and

uniforms. Others struggle
with paying increased food
bills and child care costs. .
Some, isolated from family
and friends, simply want a
sympathetic ear.
"I let parents know that
they do not have to go
through this all alone," said
Dianna Crockett, who takes
calls for the help line.
Crockett is trained to dispense all kinds of advice,
'from discipline tips to advice
about how to find a doctor to
sign school health care
forms. When a frantic
woman called every night at
2 a.m., she helped the mother
find mental-health care.
In 2004, after a baby was
shaken to death by a baby sitter. Franklin County commissioners upgraded the old
parental help hot line from au
aJlj!wering machine.

,Local weather
Monday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. · Northwest winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday .. .Sunny. Highs
in the upper 80s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday
through
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Hot. Highs around 90.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Friday and
Friday

'

night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 80s. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Saturday ...Partly ·sunny.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday nlght ... Partly
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening. Lows in the mid
60s . Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday .. .Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s . .

staff," Dayton schools
spokeswoman Jill Moberley
said.
Dayton schools started
Aug. 6, but classes were
canceled the rest of that
week due to the high heat
and humidity. The district
had to cancel two more days
of classes two weeks later
- bringing the total to six
and leaving the district with
one day to make up so far
this year.
If the winter proves harsh
and classes are canceled
again, the district would
find itself looking at more
makeup days.
Both Cincinmiti and
Dayton are counting on
school constructionJrojects
·to help them avoi future
"heat days." By 2010,
Dayton students should all
be
in
air-conditioned
schools, and Cincinnati
schools should all have air
conditioning in four years.
Fairfield City Schools in
-~~N c~.f's.

~hot
(;.
c;l
' \
&gt;

~

Arrest
from PageA1
Proffitt said the rumor
that there was a methamphetamine lab bust at the
Colonial Apartments on
Mulberry Avenue last week
is just that; a rumor. Proffitt
sa1d two days before his
department and the Ohio
Fire Marshal's Office was
called to the scene, occupants in one of the apartments had attempted to melt

several candles . together
when the wax combusted.
Proffitt said the fire created a strong, smoky smell
and did some damage to the
apartment. He added several
suspects were interviewed
and no "meth lab" was
found . Proffitt was assisted
on the case by Spaun.
Also last week, a hit-skip
was reported at Powell's
Food Fair when a vehicle
owned by Eula A. Jeffers
was damaged in the parking
lot. Holcomb is investigating the accident.

..a::

uJ

! .

~

'"-'i

$ ,.:---·· .. 1:}
(

--··-·····

---------··

nearby Butler County dido 't
miss any days but let classes out two hours early las!
Wednesday.
"Of our 10 buildings, only
four are fully air-conditioned, and safety and
health factors have to be our
first priority," Fairfield
spokesman
Randy
Oppenheimer said.
Oppenheimer said one of
the btggest problems in canceling classes or closing
early involves transporta. lion.
"ln our district we have
I0 schools, but we bus students to 30 schools,"
Oppenheimer
said.
"Schools run on fairly long
established routines and it's
not easy when you break
that routine."
Scott Ebright, spokesman
for the Ohio School Boards
Association, said there isn •t
much school s can do to
avoid weather closings,
even in the summer.

~RIVERVIEW

'~c.-

Dr. Gregory L. Piersol De
Chiropractic Physician

pfkrQAMISI;AIITStf.NUtr

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740J 992·21$7
www.mydallysentlnel.co"'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
tJf speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and ttJ petititJn
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 3, the 246th day of 2007 · There
are 119 days left in the year. This is Labor Day.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Sept. 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris between the United
States and Great Britain officially ended the Revolutionary
War.
On this date:
In 1189, En.giand's King Richard I (the Lionhearted) was
crowned in Westminster.
In 1658, Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the English
Commonwealth, died.
In 1939, Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand
declared war on Germany, two days after the Nazi invasion
of Poland.
In 1943, the British 8th Army invaded Italy during World
War II, the same day Italy signed a secret armistice with the
Allies.
.
In 1978, Pope John Paull was installed as the 264th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church.
In 2004, the three-day ho9tage siege at a school in
Beslan, Russia, ended in bloody chaos after Chechen militants set off bombs as Russian commandos stormed the
building; 334 people were killed.
·
Ten years ago: Arizona Gov. Fife Symington was con~~~lyi~m-milli~in~mm~~~his~

lapsing real estate empire. (Symington's conviction was
overturned in 1999; he was pardoned by President Clinton
in January 200 l as prosecutors were pursuing the case
anew.) The U.S. Senate voted to ban most federal financing
for abortions provided by the managed-care industry.
Five years ago: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
said the Bush administration had secret information supporting its .claims that Saddam Hussein was close to developing nuclear weapons. The Senate opened debate on legislation creating a new Homeland Security Department.
One year ago: Authorities announced the capture of aiQaida in Iraq's No. 21eader, Hamed Jumaa Farid al-Saeedi,
accusing him of "brutal and merciless" terror operations.
An apartment fire in Chicago killed six children ages 3 to
14. Andre Agassi retired after losing the third-round match
at the U.S. Open.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Helen Wagner ("As the World
Turns") is 89. "Beetle Bailey" cartoonist Mort Walker is
84. Country singer Hank Thompson is 82. Actress Anne
Jackson is 81. Country singer Tompall Glaser is 74. Actress
Pauline Collins is 67. Rock singer-musician AI Jardine is
65. Actress Valerie Perrine is 64. Rock· musician Donald
Brewer (Grand Funk Railroad) is 59. Rock guitarist Steve
Jones (The Sex Pistols) is 52. Rock singer-musician Todd
Lewis is 42. Actor Costas Mandylor is 42. Actor Charlie
Sheen is 42. Singer Jennifer Paige is 34. Actor Nick
Wechsler is 29.
Thought for Today: "NothiQg is so useless as a general
maxim." - Thomjs Macaulay, English historian (18001859).

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

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through Friday, 111 Court Stre&amp;t,
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•

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••

Obituaries
Emest •Emie' ~nney

'

Nouri al-Maliki seems to do ians killed in air raids -- was
History, as Marx famousevery week with junkets to such that when Gen.
lY' said (by way of paraIran and Syria. Where next, Douglas
phrasing Hegel), repeats
MacArthur
North Korea?
1tself -- "the first time as
instructed Japanese military ·
This glossed-over distinc- commanders to order their
tragedy, the second as
tion accounts for my uneasy men to disarm, 250,000 .,
farce ...
Diana
reaction to the president's Japanese soldiers complied, ' '
A catchy conceP.t, to say
West
to "stand with right down to their Samurai ''
exhortation
the least. And while there's
the Iraqis at this difficult swords. This has nothing to '
definitely something to it,
hour." Which "Ira~is"?
it's also true that sometimes
Sunnis and Shiites eradicat- do with the American ex,pe- '· '
history does not repeat
rience in Iraq, which, of
itself.
.
. - was culpable in the humani- ing Iraq's remnant Christian course, remains plagued by "
Take Amencan wars m tarian disaster visited on population? Sunni bombers armed militias.
Japan, the Kore.as, Vietqam anti-communists
in whose liatred of Shiites
. Another result of total
(fleetingly?)
transcends
and ~q. President Bush, Southeast Asia.
a~ssmg the Veterans of
This is the point at which, their hatred of Americans? victory was that the
Foreign Wars, recently as a good conservative, 1. Agents of Iran? Agents of Japanese Emperor admitted
made a c!'se --a flawed ~ase should declare that this AI Qaeda? Proponents of to his people that he wasn't'
-- for a kind of core contmu- assessment of Vietnam is Hezbollah? Forgive me if I divine. This would be akin
ity linking these disparate long overdue. And it is fail to be stirred by the pres- to Shiite leader Ali aiSistani declaring Allah wasc?nflict.s. It's not that he did- (although why the White ident's call.
This isn't to suggest there n't divine. After all that, litn t adnut there are many d1f- House
speechwriters
ferences among th,em brought in a quotation from aren't strategic imperatives tle wonder MacArthur
("There are• many differ- Graham Greene -- a in the Mesopotamian the- could write up a decent con- ..
ences" among them, he Reagan-hating,
Castro- ater, but they have less to do stitution for Japan -- as :,;
sa~d). But .he m~stly argued admiring, Kim Phil by- with "the Iraqi peoph:," than opposed to the sharia- ·.
that Amencan mvolvemenl defending leftist -- I'll never with suppressing Iran's supreme constitution we . ,.
capabilities,
over time across .the Far know). But that doesn't offensive
Syria's
expansionist
aims, sponsored in Iraq.
East had ushered m post- mean the Southeast Asian
A more frank,. compre- ,.
war peace and prosperity, analogy -- basically, we Saudi Arabian support for
and· that th1s demonstrated can't let the Iraqi people creeping sharia and other hensive --more grown-up -- "·
"a precedent for the hard. down as we did the South jihadist threats unaddressed assessment of the historical
record would offer very dif- -~
and necessary work we're Vietnamese -- is right.
by our efforts in Iraq.
doing" in Iraq.
Why? Well, for starters,
Could it be that our mili- ferent lessons from the ones ·.·
Sheesh. How do you South Vietnamese didn't kill tary has other, more vital President Bush is teaching. ':
equate total victory in Japan American troops, didn't missions ahead? No, our It comes down to this: As •n
with bloody stalemate in booby-trap buildings and strategic thinkers say, better World War II ended, we ,.,
Korea with congressionally towns, didn't turn temples to gloss such things over. stopped being total warmandated defeat in Vietnam into armed camps, didn't Just · like the president did riors. In the 60-plus years ':·
d
? Of
·
hr
... an Iraq·
course, It teach their young to t 9w when he blithely equated since, we have become lim- .'.'
was the invocation of rocks at Gls. To my knowi- our limited war effort to ited warriors. Our leader- :;
V'
h
·d
d
h
· · s h transform post-Saddam Iraq
ship, political and military,
•etnam -- 1 e pres• ent e ge, w en trammg out
offered a cautionary tale Vietnamese army . and with the total war effort that Left and Right, should rec- ,
against withdrawal from police, American advisers democratized
Imperial ognize the difference.
-;
Iraq by pointing to the didn't require body armor Japan after World War· II.
(Dia1Ul West. is a colum- "
ghastly fate of millions of (not to mention armed U.S. There are few similarities,
nist
for The . Washington ·•'
South Vietnamese and other guards) to ensure their sur- because there is no correlaU.S. allies on our abandon- viva!.
And
South tion between limited war Times. She is the author of
"The Death of the Grown- ,;,
ment of them in 1975 __ that Vietnamese leaders weren't and total war.
·
up:
How America's Arrested .::
How can there ·be? The
triggered media distress, -- while Amencans were
Development Is Bringing :. :
with the liberal-elite-com- fighting on South Vietnam's utter devastation of Japan -plex goin~ dyspeptic over behalf -- eagerly courting 1.27 million Japanese sol- Down Western Civilization." '··
the implication that its American enenues, as •. for diers killed in battle, anoth- She can be contacted via
"
beloved antiwar moveme.nt example, Pnme Mm1ster er 670,000 Japanese civil- dianawest@verizonnet.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ,,
~

BU5" OO[J;M'T WANT UUN6S

AP STATEHOUSE
CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
,....
Environm¢ntal regulators
are playinB as strong a role
as ever fighting pollution by
Obio's .giant livestock farms
five years after the state
handed its agriculture
experts the job.
State data show that the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency has
fielded more agriculturerelated complaints on average since the power transfer, and EPA fmes against
megafarm operators since
August 2002 have dwarfed
those levied by the Ohio
Department
of Agriculture.
BY JOHN McCARTHY
One reason for the shared
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
authority: The U.S. EPA has
COLUMBUS - Sunita Clark is like many a working yet to agree that the regulamom. She rushes home from her job as a health claims tory program run by
AP photo
processor to spend time with her 10-year-old daughter,Ruby. Agriculture is meeting all
Too little time, she says, before it's off to her second job as the environmental standards Hogs are shown In a pen at a 4,80()-head swine farm, July 18 In Amanda.
necessary to govern as Ohio
a cashier at Home Depot.
"A typical day is I work, I have time to pick her up after EPA did. In an April letter, ping 4,000 swine, 9,000 cat"A fine of $700, $200? the environment on these
Jo
Water
Division
Chief
school, get her something to eat and walk out the door," she
. tie and more than 1.4 mil- That's not a· disincentive," permitted farms than what's
Lynn Traub raised seven lion laying chickens said.
Dou~herty said. "That's a been done in the small famClark, 36, said she's had to hold two jobs since her.hus- pages of concerns over ·pointing to the near dou- line 1tem in a yearlx budget ily farms over the years," ..
band, Mark, was laid off from his truck-driving job: He now Ohio's rules for megafarms, bling of the operations since for these operators.'
Boggs said.
works as a groundskeeper at a golf course, but it's not mostly related to the way the agency's takeover.
Water pollution remains
At the 4,800-head swine
pnmary
concern farm that state inspector Jim
enough to pay the mortgage, car loan and o'!le~ ~ousehold megafarms handle the
Farmers, meanwhile, say the
bills that total about $2,250 a month. The family s mcome IS manure their operations they are simply employing because the federal EPA Young visited one recent
about $32,000 a year, she said.
·
generate.
the technology necessary to concedes it knows virtually summer afternoon, manure
She is one of a growing number of Ohio women who are
Agriculture receives most meet the needs of an ever nothing about how much air was falling tidily through
the primary family breadwinner. A study releasedjust in time of the tax money spent on more demanding public, pollution is caused by con- slats into a holding pit
for Labor Day says that in 2006, more Ohio women over age overseeing big farms: More which wants blemish-free centrated livestock and beneath the barn floor.
16 than ever - 61 percent - were working, up from less than $9 million between meat and inexpensive eggs poultry operations. It has Industrial sized fans blew
started a $14.6 million, two- most of the smell and flies
than half in 1979;
200 I and last year, and $3 365 days a year.
The study by Policy Matters Ohio, a labor-backed advoca- million budgeted now.
Agriculture has grandfa- year study of 20 farms in off the pigs and piglets,
cy group based in Cleveland, said the male work force
State lawmakers in 2002 thered in 86 megafarrns that nine states, including Ohio, which appeared pink and
declined over the same period from nearly 80 percent to 73 moved oversight of the had been pending under to measure the level of perky in their pens. A field
percent, and two-parent families increased their working farms to the A:griculture EPA's watch, and approved hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, where stored manure had
Department, an agency they 82 permits to develop or dust and other chemicals been injected at a rate of
hours by 17 percent.
.
.
Men still earn more than women dom~ the same ,JObs. but viewed as more expert in expand, records ~how . they emit.
.
Ohio Agriculture officials 8,000 gallons an acre j\ISt
the gap is narrowing and women in Ohio are earmng more dealing with farmers and Seventeen more ~nruts than ever, the study found. The median wage for men was farm issues.
including · Ohio s largest say their program is a two days earlier was nearly
$16.15 an hour in 2006, while the median women's wage
Most of the enforcement swine, cattle and dairy oper- resounding success: There odor free.
Boggs said he intends to
against polluting farms was ations yet - are in the have been no repeats of the
was $13.16.
make
adjustments to the
Buckeye Egg crisis, mega''We definitely are seeing more women in the .labor force being handled by the Ohio works.
and more families where ~th parents are working and the Division of Wildlife, which
The pace of manure com- farms are required to meet permitting program, which
hours are increasing," Policy Matters Ohio diroctor Amy watches out for the health of plaints to Wildlife has . stringent pollution contain- may include a tracking sysstreams and tributaries slowed since t)le change, ment standards, and inspec- tem for megafarrn manure
Hanauer said.
Women - and men ~ felt the sting of the recession ear- where most of the runoff with the division investigat- tors are making more fre- that's going to smaller
farms, larger agricultural
lier this decade, but employment for women is on the rise, drains, state reports say. But ing Ill complaints of quent and thorough visits.
State
Agriculture
Director
from streams, and
setbacks
Hanauer said.
·
'
improper
manure
.
discharge,
farmers complained loudest
Bob Boggs, appointed in a tougher than 95-percent
"It turns out now that the recession is over, that women's about EPA, which carries according to state data.
participation is back up over its ·pre-recession leve!s," the strongest legal hammer
At EPA's spill hotline, January, said the strength of standard for collection of
Hanauer said.
·over them in the federal agriculture'related com- the department's livestock farm sediment and pollution
Clark's day begins at the claims office, where she works Clean Water Act.
plaints have increased, aver.- environmental permitting runoff.
about 20 hours a week at a job she's held for nine years. She
a~ing
44 a year compared program is not as much in
"It (the shift of authority)
Still, he said there will
clocks 25 hours a week at Home Depot. That makes it diffi- has done what it was meant w1th 38 a year during the 1ts ability to punish viola- always be tradeoff~ to agricult oil her family, she said. In between jobs, she also finds to do: It's given comfort to five years before. Orders for tors as in preventing viola- culture.
time to work with her daughter's Girl Scout troop and help the regulated community environmental fixes by state tions in the wake of
"What the opposition
coach her soccer team.
that they don't have to deal Soil &amp; Water Division Chief Buckeye Egg.
doesn't want to talk about is
The massive layin'g farm why do we need large fahns.
Her husband was laid off 18 months ago from the truck- with EPA as much and now David Hanselmann are also
driving job he held for 33 years, she said. .
.
they deal with their friends on the rise, with five issued had a history of clean-water in the first place, why is
law violations and com- Ohio supporting them?"
"Part of the biggest chall~nge we have w1th ~e w~rking at ODA," said Trent since the power transfer.
three or four nights a week 1s my husb~d helpmg w1th ~y Dougherty, staff attorney
The state EPA also has plaints from neighbors Boggs said. "The reason is
daughter," Clark said. "I obviously can t .contmue wofki!tg for the Ohio Environmental levied more fmes. The com- about fly and rodent infesta- we need the production.
two part-time jobs because its verj weanng on my family Council. •• And we are left bined $379,250 it fined the tions associated with hen
"We are waging a war
and it's very tiring."
with the same concerns former Buckeye Egg Farm, manure. Though EPA had with the western part of the
Clark hopes her experience in insurance can lead to a about water quality that we · now Ohio Fresh· Eggs, for the role of) evying the fines
career where she works just one job. But right now, her fam- had before.y
environmental-violations in on the farm, Boggs ·noted U.S. that has huge farms,
much larger than ours, and
ily neoos her, she said.
Critics contend that 2005. and earlier this year is that it was the Agriculture if you want to lose that busi"I've been with my husband for 11 112 years. Every mar- Agriculture has been pow- 22 times more than the Department that revoked its
riage has its ups and downs, for richer, for poorer. Now it's erless to stop development $17,660 the Agriculture permits to operate in 2003. ness to the West the way to
"I will maintain we do a do it is to not support at
my tum," she said.
·
of concentrated animal Department has fined all
lot better job in . protecting least some of these farms ."
operations that are now top- megafarrn violators .

Study fmds more
women in work force

..'

.

•("!

,. ,'

'·

/W

BY JULIE CARR SMYTH.

Ernest "Ernie" McKinney, 77, Galli1,10lis, died Sunday,
Sept. 2, 2007 . He is survived by s1ster Hazel (Dale)
Worlmtan of Galli polis
~e!-"'ices will be I p.m. Wednesday Sept. 5, 2007 , at
Willis Funeral Home with Pastors Isaac Shu~. Gene
Harmon, and Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will follow
in the Pine Street Cemetery. Frien~ may call from 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday and from 11:30 a.m. until the time of the service
on Wednesday at the funeral home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences. ·

~"
08

TO GND Uta; VtgNAM,,.

EPA

... ,
"'
'

'"

...'·
_.

"

Hotline for parents
Heat affects school schedules, as districts use up 'snow' days
gives advice, sympathy · BY
· planned calendar changes
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
anytime soon.
"We're not saying that it
CINCINNATI (AP) - couldn't be an additional
Snow, ice and extreme cold faCtor that we could look at,
are the osual culprits when but our last calendar adopschools are forced to cancel tion .was for three years,"
classes. This year some Cincinnati Public Schools
Ohio schools already have spokeswoman Janet Walsh
lost some of their "snow" said. "Parents especially
days due to temperatures like to have advance notice
that hovered around I 00 for their planning.:•
degrees.
The Cincinnati district
Both the Darton and missed two days, but won't
Cincinnati pubhc school have to add any makeup
districts lost whole days last days yet. The state allows
month due to the high heat schools to miss five out of
and humidity, and at least the 182 days required for
three other southwest Ohio the regular school calendar,
public school systems let although those days are usuclasses out earlier than ally taken in winter months.
usual as temperatures
Cincinnati only lost two
soared.
days
last month due to the
With many schools havheat,
but Dayton Public
ing no air conditioning and
starting fall sessions earlier, Schools canceled six days
more districts may find of classes.
"You certainly don't welthemselves canceling classcome
these kinds of disrupes due to sweltering summer weather in the future. tions, but we have to look at
School officials, however, how the extreme heat and
don't expect the threat of humidity could affect the
hot weather to result in pre- well-being of students and

LISA CORNWELL

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published.. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- ·
ed for publication.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
· '214.21

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.c:Om

Monday, September 3, 2007

Monday, September 3, 2007 -

Total victory means total warriors, which we are not

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'Reader Services

PageA4

'.

AP Business Highlights
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke vowed
Friday to do all that is necessary to protect the national economy from the ill
effects of a global credit
crunch but not to bail out
investors and lenders "from
the consequences of their
financial decisions."
President Bush confidently predicted the country
would safely weather the
financial storm.
Friday's comments _
made in separate appearances _ by Bemanke here
and the president in
Washington, sought to send
a reassuring but tough love
message: Fed policymakers
and the Bush administration
are on top of the situation
that has unnerved investors
on Wall Street and around
the world and raised anxiety
on Main Street. But they:tl
act in the best interests of
the economy.

ed steps Bush outlined will
be expanded in coming
weeks by a Democrat-controlled Congress intent on
responding to growing votey
anxiety as up to 2 million
homeowners worry about
losing their homes.
Officials in the troubled
housing industry said the
important thing was that the
administration had finally
offered a proposal, a step
they said should help calm
global financial markets
that have been on a rollercoaster ride in recent weeks
as investors worried about a
serious credit crunch.

•••

NEW YORK (AP) _ Wall
Street closed out another
erratic week with a big gain
Friday after investors look
comments from President
Bush and Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke as
reassuring signs Wall Street
won't be left to deal with
problems in the mortgage
•••
and credit markets on its
WASHINGTON (AP) _ own.
President Bush on Friday
Investors balked early in
announced a set of modest Friday's session when comproposals to deal with an ments from Bernanke didn't
alarming rise in mortgage indicate a cut in the benchdefaults that have con- mark federal funds rate was
tributed to turbulent finan- imminent. However, they
cial markets over recent moved past some of their
weeks.
initial disappointment and
Housing analysts said it appeared to concentrate on
was highly likely the limit- comments that the Fed

would step in if needed.
Bemanke, speaking at the
Fed's annual conference in
Jackson Hole, W~o., said
the central bank w1ll "act as
needed" to prevent the credit crisis from hurting the
national economy.
The major indexes fluctuated but by midday extended their gains after
President Bush spoke about
details of a plan to help borrowers facing trouble paying their mortgages.

,,'
recent weakness in con- :.
sumer confidence caused by ;,..
a prolonged slump in hous- ::
ing and the past several ...
weeks of financial market ···
turbulence.
In another strong report, :. •
th~ Commerce Department
said that orders to factories ,.
jumped by 3. 7 percent in
July, even better than the , ,
3 .3 percent increase that "
had been expected.

•••

..

GENEVA (AP) _ The
World Trade Organization ·
opened a formal investiga- ' '
WASHINGTON (AP) _ tion Friday into allegations .·
Consumers returned to the by the U.S. and Mexico that : ·
malls in July after taking a Cliina is providing illegal ·..
breather in Jun~ . although su bsidies for a range of
worries about the future
could make the rebound industries.
The two countries accuse .~
short-lived.
Beijing
of using. WTO-pro- ·•
Commerce
The
hibited
tax breaks to
Department reported Fri~ay
thai consumer spendmg encourage Chinese comparose by 0.4 percent in July, nies to boost exports, while
double the June increase. imposing tax and tariff .
The spending was support- penalties to limit purchases ·
ed by a solid 0.5 percent rise of foreign products in ·
in incomes, the best show- China.
Beijing blocked a sepaing in thi s area in four
rate
probe of its ·rules for
months.
· The gain in spending was protecting intellectual propright in line with expecta- erty rights. But the \ move
tions, while the in crease in will probably only delay the
incomes was doubl e what creation of a panel until the
analysts had expected. next meeting of the WTO's
However. economists cau- dispute body in September,
tioned that the Jul y increas- when Washington can bring
es could be temporary given up the issue again.
•••

I
'

COLUMBUS . (AP) Going back to school can be
scary for students. II can be
even scarier for their parents,
according to Prevent Child
Abuse Ohio, which runs a
special phone line designed
t(l offer advice and sympathy
to nervous, overwhelmed
parents.
The Parent Resource hot
line, staffed by licensed
social workers 24 hours a
day, seven days a week, gets
a spike in calls at the end of
August from parents who are
stressed by the frustrations of
helping their children begin a
new school year, said Pat
Lyons, executive director of
Prevent Child Abuse Ohio.
Lyons said callers want to
know how to wake a child in
time for the school bus, when
kids can begin staying home
alone, or help fmding inexpensive school supplies and

uniforms. Others struggle
with paying increased food
bills and child care costs. .
Some, isolated from family
and friends, simply want a
sympathetic ear.
"I let parents know that
they do not have to go
through this all alone," said
Dianna Crockett, who takes
calls for the help line.
Crockett is trained to dispense all kinds of advice,
'from discipline tips to advice
about how to find a doctor to
sign school health care
forms. When a frantic
woman called every night at
2 a.m., she helped the mother
find mental-health care.
In 2004, after a baby was
shaken to death by a baby sitter. Franklin County commissioners upgraded the old
parental help hot line from au
aJlj!wering machine.

,Local weather
Monday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. · Northwest winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday .. .Sunny. Highs
in the upper 80s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday
through
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Hot. Highs around 90.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Friday and
Friday

'

night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 80s. Lows in
the mid 60s.
Saturday ...Partly ·sunny.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday nlght ... Partly
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening. Lows in the mid
60s . Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday .. .Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s . .

staff," Dayton schools
spokeswoman Jill Moberley
said.
Dayton schools started
Aug. 6, but classes were
canceled the rest of that
week due to the high heat
and humidity. The district
had to cancel two more days
of classes two weeks later
- bringing the total to six
and leaving the district with
one day to make up so far
this year.
If the winter proves harsh
and classes are canceled
again, the district would
find itself looking at more
makeup days.
Both Cincinmiti and
Dayton are counting on
school constructionJrojects
·to help them avoi future
"heat days." By 2010,
Dayton students should all
be
in
air-conditioned
schools, and Cincinnati
schools should all have air
conditioning in four years.
Fairfield City Schools in
-~~N c~.f's.

~hot
(;.
c;l
' \
&gt;

~

Arrest
from PageA1
Proffitt said the rumor
that there was a methamphetamine lab bust at the
Colonial Apartments on
Mulberry Avenue last week
is just that; a rumor. Proffitt
sa1d two days before his
department and the Ohio
Fire Marshal's Office was
called to the scene, occupants in one of the apartments had attempted to melt

several candles . together
when the wax combusted.
Proffitt said the fire created a strong, smoky smell
and did some damage to the
apartment. He added several
suspects were interviewed
and no "meth lab" was
found . Proffitt was assisted
on the case by Spaun.
Also last week, a hit-skip
was reported at Powell's
Food Fair when a vehicle
owned by Eula A. Jeffers
was damaged in the parking
lot. Holcomb is investigating the accident.

..a::

uJ

! .

~

'"-'i

$ ,.:---·· .. 1:}
(

--··-·····

---------··

nearby Butler County dido 't
miss any days but let classes out two hours early las!
Wednesday.
"Of our 10 buildings, only
four are fully air-conditioned, and safety and
health factors have to be our
first priority," Fairfield
spokesman
Randy
Oppenheimer said.
Oppenheimer said one of
the btggest problems in canceling classes or closing
early involves transporta. lion.
"ln our district we have
I0 schools, but we bus students to 30 schools,"
Oppenheimer
said.
"Schools run on fairly long
established routines and it's
not easy when you break
that routine."
Scott Ebright, spokesman
for the Ohio School Boards
Association, said there isn •t
much school s can do to
avoid weather closings,
even in the summer.

~RIVERVIEW

'~c.-

Dr. Gregory L. Piersol De
Chiropractic Physician

pfkrQAMISI;AIITStf.NUtr

Ducktona Sept. 8
There's still time to adopt
your ducks!
Win Great Prizes!
Fall Performing
Arts Classes
Beginning Sept. 10
Register Now
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllpolla, OH (740) 446-ARTS

• Insurance

• Auto Accidents
• Workers Comp

. ' Medicaid (WV &amp; OH)
'MediCitre

Back &amp; Neck Pain
Headaches
Personal &amp; Sports Injury

236 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

741).992-1000

••

..••

,,

'

�...
Page A6 ~The Daily Sentinel

www .mydhilysentinel .com

Monday, September 3, 2007

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
U.S. wins FIBA title, Page 82
Sroreboard, Page 86

Monday, September 3, 2007
locAL ScHEDULE
POMEfUf' - A ~~~~ of upcoming colege
and hV'l 8Ctlool varsity Br.Ortlng eYenl$ lnYolvirY;;I
tsllmf:llrom Gallia and hAeigB cot.nties.

Tutttday'a gam11
Volleyball
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Water1ord, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

IF ·~ mlllt.tM, cell~

Owtftkc-,..,ceRIII'RIIf

or vw:dltn I) drtv. ~ lo IChoal.

•••&gt;aattaalf unefu,.u' Atra Mlf

•or•

ltl1d::lltlo Alfi}DAIIIffqoiUr (0

NI'Jwllk

Ingels Carpet
992-7028

OH

.......
. Lawson

Mar

The

IX

The Fabric Shop
tiOW. Main St., Pomeroy, OH

.

_. .,
TNT Pit Stop

l'ltl....,llwhll ......

!Ill II •• . ,

~• !Twrnllulre
106 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH
740-992-3671

Convenience Stores
St Rt.7 &amp;.. N. 2nd Street

CROSS In fnn.ofb bul,
andru.ta ...
. . dlh--you .....

LOOSE dluet~'UI lnd _ . thcMd be
IIGI.nd.IOthlydon'tSJII._on
. . ._ldlllordoord . . bua.

' ...:.

Clark's jewelry Store

..... .....

Brogan Wamer Insurance
992-6687
Pomeroy, Ohio

. 113 Court Street~ Pomeroy, OH
740-99.L-2054

1';

fll•naarara.

Gravely Tractor Sales .&amp; Service
204 Condor St., Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2975

.

ENTER and

Tbuflday'• gam11
Volleyball

Eastern at AleMander, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Miller, B p.m.

Wellston at Southern, 6 p.m.
' Gall
Meigs at Belpre (OKbow C.C.), 4:30
p.m.
Miller at Eastern (Pine Hills G.C.), 4:30

196 t:asl Second St
l'oml'to)', 011
740-992·.1311 1

p.m.

800-454· t096

Federal Hocking at Southern (Riverside
G.C.), 4:30p.m.

. fr!dly'a

......

V

BAUM

on

host Warr~n rounded out the
top-five with 137 team
markers.
Meigs , which finished
ninth out of II teams, posted
a team tally of 180 points
and was led by junior Kimi
Swisher with a ninth-place
effort. Swisher ran a time of
22: II in breaking into the
top-10, while classmate
Devan Soulsby was close
behind in 12th with a time of
22:25.
Other team scorers for the
Lady Marauders were junior
Morgan Lentes in 49th with
a 25:07, junior Jessica
Holliday in 69th with a
26:47, and freshman Olivia

Plun ... Invite, 82

Wahama (WV) at Eastern

•war
740-985-3301

Eastern at Athens
9 a.m.
Croea Country
Southern, Meigs, Eastern at Athens
Invite, 10 a.m.

46384 St. Rt ~48
Chester, OH 45760

USE 8I'JIII'88fiOY ub only In
andmllkea&amp;nnotto
block them.

INSIDE

1tr ._..,.,

CROW'S
228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

WAIT fc!t a aiQnll from the'tius driver
blfcn you CI'QI&amp; the .......

.

Johnson
wins at
California
'

.tr-·,

at Law
. IIN11a

Attorneys

• Appalachian State stuns
Michigan i1 huge upset.
See Page 82

................
•••

SPORTS BRIEFS

Jewelry &amp; PletuN Gallery

Meigs basketball
program to hold
golf scramble
POMEROY
The
Meigs boys basketball program will be holding a golf
scramble at Pine Hills Golf
Course
on
Saturday,
September 22, at 8:30a.m.
The 18-hole scramble will
consist of four-person teams
and no handicaps, and the
field is limited to the first20
teams that sign-up.
The entry fee is $50 for
each player and $200 per
. team . Food and beverages
are included in the entry fee.
Not included in the entry
fee are $5 mulligans and the
$5 skins game.
There is a cash payout for
the top three teams and a
$10,000 hole-in-one opportunity from the front tee box
on the 18th hole. You may
also sponsor a hole for $75 .
All other proceeds will go
towards the Meigs basketball program for new uniforms, warm -ups, equipment and other needs. For
more information or to register, contact MHS coach
Ben Ewing at740-416-0824
or Pine Hills owner Mike
White at740-992-6312 .

.

CREEK ENTERPRISES
Pomeroy, OH
740-991-7953

HOLD oNo ._. Mndlal wMn

Racine: (740) 949-2210

Syracuse: (740) 992-6333

,

Baker in
27th with a
23 :2 0,
junior
Aarika
Stanley in
35th with a
23:56. and
junior
Martindale L a u r e n
Godwin in
38th with a 24:14. Sara
Elberfeld
(27:23) and
Jessica Willett (29:44) also
placed 75th and 96th,
respectively, for the Blue
Angels.
Marietta, with a team
score of 72 points, edged out
Parkersburg by three points
for the girls team title .
GAHS
was
third ,

Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant (WV)

ltffll'n tOitld

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6121

was

._,,,. ..,..,
CROW&amp;CROW

1-304-273-1033

636 E. Nlain St.

South

461 S 3rd Ave., MICidleDort, OH 45760
740-992-1998

606 Washington Street, Ravenswood, WV

I

sophomore Parkersburg

G e n n a fourth with 120 points and

River Vall9)1 at Meigs
Southern at South Gallla

dl8bact or annoy the driYer.
11

9'""'

VINCENT - A total of
258 varsity cross country
runners - 117 girls and 141
boys - participated in the
Scenic Hills Lions Meet
held . Saturday at Warren
High School.
By the day's end, it was a
clean sweep for the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League as the Warren boys
and Marietta. girls came
away with the team titles,
while Gallia Academy's
Lauren Adkins and Warren's
Tyler Cantley posted top
individual honors in the'
respective girls and boys
events.
Adkins, a junior for the
Blue Angels, won her sec-

ond - con'
secuti ve
Warren
In vile title
by posting a
time
of
19 : 54.6 .
Adkins won
easily over
the field of
ll7, beatSwlaher
ing runnerup Emily
Skidmore of Alexander by
more than 13 seconds.
GAHS, which finished
with a girls' score of 93, also
received a third-place effort
from junior Lee Ann
Townsend. Townsend completed the race with a time of
21 :06.4.
Other team scorers for
Gallia Academy were

,~,
' C:':!:'
Bing's Automotive

River Valley Health'&amp;Wellness Center

Q

.

BY BRYAN WALJERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MAKE uelo kelp WQUfhlnda lo
~Itt II till til while liciiG

NEVER

. FACE

Vollo~ball

Meigs a1 Trimble , 6 p.m.
River Va lle~. Ravenswood at Southern
(lrl) , 5:30p.m.

Sltii'DIId.O,

740-992-2284

you ............. 1!1£ llliiCI for
ltoiiOp.

..... you. Awld WIIR'G

\!l

Mi~~2fhio

w.Jntldey'• P'Dll'

KEEP a lllfl dlclaiCt betMI1n

BE assn of 1M*' ut •••~

~

Croll Country
Meigs, Eastern at Gellis Academy
(UAG), 4:45p.m.

STAY on the sidewalk
at 1eaet 10 feet from the road
whli walling for the bus.

Sltillll.......

.

Eastern at Southern (TBA), 4:30p.m.

North 2nd Avenue

Shoe Place

JAYWALKING Is dwlglrout.
Crolt h stltlt lit CICIIIbbllb.

ALWAYS U1e hlkllull: when
....... lo end tom sd'tool .....
.4~ lsno .. 'IJJII~;..-fldngbdlc.

4:30p.m.

1\C IIIOIN .0,

tiUDM ...

••• ,.. . . . . . . llt'IMf.
........ fiSt llll _ _ __
UfttDDIIW"

'~

•••tglli

Golf
Wellston at Meigs {R i'o'erslde G.C.),

REMEMBER ID look lo the ~ before you
--.!Rill al the bla. Clre1311 dri*S In I hurry
lilly IOIIlllklles try to pas on the llgtt.

Local runners fare well at Warren Invitational

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern sophomore running back Greg Jenkins, with bali, is hit for a toss during Saturday's week two gridiron contest
against Pocahontas County at Robert Lee Adams Field in Racine.

Warriors overpower Southern, 49-8
BY

Scon WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - They came
with War paint and appropriate battle attire. They left
with no prisoners and a win
over .
the
Southern
Tornadoes. The Pocahontas
County Warriors (2-0) went
on the warpath early and
often as the tribe raced to a
49-8 non-league win over
the host Tornadoes Saturday
afternoon at Ro~er Lee
Adams Memorial Fteld.
Kendall Beverage and
Cyrus Bennett each had
three-touchdowns apiece to
lead the charge for the win-

In the first couple minutes
of the game, it was evident
that Pocahontas County's
athleticism would be the difference in the game. The
Warriors juked and jived,
jumped and dived and stuttered-stepped
around
defenders with a graceful
swan-song, choreographed
to a methodical cadence.
The Warriors meant business and made their work
look effort -fre~.
Southern felt the hit of the
injury bug. Some young
players were learning new
positions and having to grow
up quickly. The Warriors
sensed the youth. Southern's

yoang kids did, however,
show a lot of enthusiasm and
its last couple offensive possessions showed signs that
Southern's youth plays with
an abundance of heart.
Pocahontas County took
four plays and I :26 to put
the first core on the board.
Cyrus Bennett broke three
plays for two first downs,
then Kendal Beverage
romped the last 15 yards to
cap the 70-yard drive .
Mtchael Callison booted
through the kick for the 7-0
PC lead .
Justin
Porter,
Sean
Please SH Southern. B:Z

Boeckman plays well in
Ohio State's 38-6 win
over Youngstown State
Bv RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - No . II
Ohio State took its first step
toward forgetting the end of
last season.
Todd Boeckman pl ayed
CoNTACT US
well in his first start replacOVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
ing Heisman Trophy-winnin g quarterback Troy
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Smith and the Buckeyes
Fax - 1-740-446·3008
made just about all the big
E--mail - sports@ mydailysen tinel.com
plays
in
beating
$g.or1t Slo.tl
Youngstown State 38-6 on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor Saturday.
The Buckeyes welcomed
(740) 446·2342. eKI. 33
bsherm an @ mydai lyt ribune .com
the game as a way to put
some di stance between
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
themselves and the painful
(740) 446-2342. ext. 23
memories of a humiliating
ICrum @mydailyregister.com
41 -14 defeat to Florida in
Bryan Waiters, Sports Writer
the BCS national champi(740) 446·2342. ext 33
onship
game Jan. 8.
bwalte rs @ mydailyt ribune .com

'

n e r s .
Beverage ,
the bulky
fullback ,
blasted for
54
yards
and seven
carries,
w h i I e
Bennett's
athleticism
Buzzard
led him to a
15-173yard
game.
Michael
Callison,
who
booted
through seven extra point
attempts, had 44 yards on a
couple carries, had a touchdown reception and also had
a 42-yard punt return.

FONTANA, Calif. (AP)
- Jimmie Johnson grabbed
a victory Sunday night at
California Speedway, clinching a spot in NASCAR's
Chase for the Nextel Cup
championship and guaranteeing he will be no worse
than a tie for the top seed in
the I0-race playoff.
The reigning cup champion dominated the second half
of the Sharp Aquos 500, a
race that began in bright sunshine with temperatures over
100 degrees and finished
under the lights with the
night not much cooler. It was
his series-high fifth victory
of the season, but hi s first
since May 6 at Richmond.
This one was just as important, though, with NASCAR
awarding a 10-point bonus
for each win th1s season in
seeding the 12 drivers who
will compete in the f hase. If
the Chase began next week,
Johnson would be the top
seed, with 10 more points
than Hendrick Motorsports
teammate and series points.
leader Jeff Gordon, who has
four wins.
·
There was some shuffling
at the bottom of the Chase
contenders, with Martin
Truex Jr. and Kutt Busch
each moving up one spot to
lOth and lith, respectively,
while Daytona 500 winner
Kevin Harvick slipped from
lOth to 12th.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., began
and ended the race in 13th,
despite a solid fifth-place finish. But he did cut his margin
from 158 behind Busch coming in to 128 behind Harvick
heading into next ·saturday
night's race at Richmond, the
final event before the start of
•the stock car playoff.
Johnson. who took the lead
for good after a series of
green flag pit stops 22 laps
from the end of the 250-lap
event, easily held off runnerup Carl Edwards in the waning laps. Kyle Busch finished
third, folluw~d by Jeff
,Burton, Earnhardt , Matt
Kenseth, Truex, Brian
Vickers and Kurt Busch.
Harvick fini shed 13th.

It was the first time th~
schools
met,
with
Youngstown State now
playing in the new Football
Championship Subdivision,
formerly 1-AA.
Ohio State's Jim Tressel
was
the
coach
at
Youngstown State for 15
years and led the Penguins
to four 1-AA championships
before taking over th e ·
Buckeyes in 200 I.
Boeckman, a tall, r angy
junior, directed the first four
touchdown drive s as the
Buckeyes steadily pulled
away. He completed 17-of23 passes for 225 yards and
two 1-yard TDs.
Dane Sanzenbacher and
Taurian Washington, a pair
Please see Bucks, Bl

AP photo

Ohio State's Taurlan Washington (19) runs for a touchdown as Youngstown State's Lenny
Wicks chases him during the fourth quar ter of their NCAA football game Saturday in Columbus.

�...
Page A6 ~The Daily Sentinel

www .mydhilysentinel .com

Monday, September 3, 2007

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
U.S. wins FIBA title, Page 82
Sroreboard, Page 86

Monday, September 3, 2007
locAL ScHEDULE
POMEfUf' - A ~~~~ of upcoming colege
and hV'l 8Ctlool varsity Br.Ortlng eYenl$ lnYolvirY;;I
tsllmf:llrom Gallia and hAeigB cot.nties.

Tutttday'a gam11
Volleyball
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Water1ord, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

IF ·~ mlllt.tM, cell~

Owtftkc-,..,ceRIII'RIIf

or vw:dltn I) drtv. ~ lo IChoal.

•••&gt;aattaalf unefu,.u' Atra Mlf

•or•

ltl1d::lltlo Alfi}DAIIIffqoiUr (0

NI'Jwllk

Ingels Carpet
992-7028

OH

.......
. Lawson

Mar

The

IX

The Fabric Shop
tiOW. Main St., Pomeroy, OH

.

_. .,
TNT Pit Stop

l'ltl....,llwhll ......

!Ill II •• . ,

~• !Twrnllulre
106 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH
740-992-3671

Convenience Stores
St Rt.7 &amp;.. N. 2nd Street

CROSS In fnn.ofb bul,
andru.ta ...
. . dlh--you .....

LOOSE dluet~'UI lnd _ . thcMd be
IIGI.nd.IOthlydon'tSJII._on
. . ._ldlllordoord . . bua.

' ...:.

Clark's jewelry Store

..... .....

Brogan Wamer Insurance
992-6687
Pomeroy, Ohio

. 113 Court Street~ Pomeroy, OH
740-99.L-2054

1';

fll•naarara.

Gravely Tractor Sales .&amp; Service
204 Condor St., Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2975

.

ENTER and

Tbuflday'• gam11
Volleyball

Eastern at AleMander, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Miller, B p.m.

Wellston at Southern, 6 p.m.
' Gall
Meigs at Belpre (OKbow C.C.), 4:30
p.m.
Miller at Eastern (Pine Hills G.C.), 4:30

196 t:asl Second St
l'oml'to)', 011
740-992·.1311 1

p.m.

800-454· t096

Federal Hocking at Southern (Riverside
G.C.), 4:30p.m.

. fr!dly'a

......

V

BAUM

on

host Warr~n rounded out the
top-five with 137 team
markers.
Meigs , which finished
ninth out of II teams, posted
a team tally of 180 points
and was led by junior Kimi
Swisher with a ninth-place
effort. Swisher ran a time of
22: II in breaking into the
top-10, while classmate
Devan Soulsby was close
behind in 12th with a time of
22:25.
Other team scorers for the
Lady Marauders were junior
Morgan Lentes in 49th with
a 25:07, junior Jessica
Holliday in 69th with a
26:47, and freshman Olivia

Plun ... Invite, 82

Wahama (WV) at Eastern

•war
740-985-3301

Eastern at Athens
9 a.m.
Croea Country
Southern, Meigs, Eastern at Athens
Invite, 10 a.m.

46384 St. Rt ~48
Chester, OH 45760

USE 8I'JIII'88fiOY ub only In
andmllkea&amp;nnotto
block them.

INSIDE

1tr ._..,.,

CROW'S
228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

WAIT fc!t a aiQnll from the'tius driver
blfcn you CI'QI&amp; the .......

.

Johnson
wins at
California
'

.tr-·,

at Law
. IIN11a

Attorneys

• Appalachian State stuns
Michigan i1 huge upset.
See Page 82

................
•••

SPORTS BRIEFS

Jewelry &amp; PletuN Gallery

Meigs basketball
program to hold
golf scramble
POMEROY
The
Meigs boys basketball program will be holding a golf
scramble at Pine Hills Golf
Course
on
Saturday,
September 22, at 8:30a.m.
The 18-hole scramble will
consist of four-person teams
and no handicaps, and the
field is limited to the first20
teams that sign-up.
The entry fee is $50 for
each player and $200 per
. team . Food and beverages
are included in the entry fee.
Not included in the entry
fee are $5 mulligans and the
$5 skins game.
There is a cash payout for
the top three teams and a
$10,000 hole-in-one opportunity from the front tee box
on the 18th hole. You may
also sponsor a hole for $75 .
All other proceeds will go
towards the Meigs basketball program for new uniforms, warm -ups, equipment and other needs. For
more information or to register, contact MHS coach
Ben Ewing at740-416-0824
or Pine Hills owner Mike
White at740-992-6312 .

.

CREEK ENTERPRISES
Pomeroy, OH
740-991-7953

HOLD oNo ._. Mndlal wMn

Racine: (740) 949-2210

Syracuse: (740) 992-6333

,

Baker in
27th with a
23 :2 0,
junior
Aarika
Stanley in
35th with a
23:56. and
junior
Martindale L a u r e n
Godwin in
38th with a 24:14. Sara
Elberfeld
(27:23) and
Jessica Willett (29:44) also
placed 75th and 96th,
respectively, for the Blue
Angels.
Marietta, with a team
score of 72 points, edged out
Parkersburg by three points
for the girls team title .
GAHS
was
third ,

Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant (WV)

ltffll'n tOitld

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6121

was

._,,,. ..,..,
CROW&amp;CROW

1-304-273-1033

636 E. Nlain St.

South

461 S 3rd Ave., MICidleDort, OH 45760
740-992-1998

606 Washington Street, Ravenswood, WV

I

sophomore Parkersburg

G e n n a fourth with 120 points and

River Vall9)1 at Meigs
Southern at South Gallla

dl8bact or annoy the driYer.
11

9'""'

VINCENT - A total of
258 varsity cross country
runners - 117 girls and 141
boys - participated in the
Scenic Hills Lions Meet
held . Saturday at Warren
High School.
By the day's end, it was a
clean sweep for the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League as the Warren boys
and Marietta. girls came
away with the team titles,
while Gallia Academy's
Lauren Adkins and Warren's
Tyler Cantley posted top
individual honors in the'
respective girls and boys
events.
Adkins, a junior for the
Blue Angels, won her sec-

ond - con'
secuti ve
Warren
In vile title
by posting a
time
of
19 : 54.6 .
Adkins won
easily over
the field of
ll7, beatSwlaher
ing runnerup Emily
Skidmore of Alexander by
more than 13 seconds.
GAHS, which finished
with a girls' score of 93, also
received a third-place effort
from junior Lee Ann
Townsend. Townsend completed the race with a time of
21 :06.4.
Other team scorers for
Gallia Academy were

,~,
' C:':!:'
Bing's Automotive

River Valley Health'&amp;Wellness Center

Q

.

BY BRYAN WALJERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MAKE uelo kelp WQUfhlnda lo
~Itt II till til while liciiG

NEVER

. FACE

Vollo~ball

Meigs a1 Trimble , 6 p.m.
River Va lle~. Ravenswood at Southern
(lrl) , 5:30p.m.

Sltii'DIId.O,

740-992-2284

you ............. 1!1£ llliiCI for
ltoiiOp.

..... you. Awld WIIR'G

\!l

Mi~~2fhio

w.Jntldey'• P'Dll'

KEEP a lllfl dlclaiCt betMI1n

BE assn of 1M*' ut •••~

~

Croll Country
Meigs, Eastern at Gellis Academy
(UAG), 4:45p.m.

STAY on the sidewalk
at 1eaet 10 feet from the road
whli walling for the bus.

Sltillll.......

.

Eastern at Southern (TBA), 4:30p.m.

North 2nd Avenue

Shoe Place

JAYWALKING Is dwlglrout.
Crolt h stltlt lit CICIIIbbllb.

ALWAYS U1e hlkllull: when
....... lo end tom sd'tool .....
.4~ lsno .. 'IJJII~;..-fldngbdlc.

4:30p.m.

1\C IIIOIN .0,

tiUDM ...

••• ,.. . . . . . . llt'IMf.
........ fiSt llll _ _ __
UfttDDIIW"

'~

•••tglli

Golf
Wellston at Meigs {R i'o'erslde G.C.),

REMEMBER ID look lo the ~ before you
--.!Rill al the bla. Clre1311 dri*S In I hurry
lilly IOIIlllklles try to pas on the llgtt.

Local runners fare well at Warren Invitational

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern sophomore running back Greg Jenkins, with bali, is hit for a toss during Saturday's week two gridiron contest
against Pocahontas County at Robert Lee Adams Field in Racine.

Warriors overpower Southern, 49-8
BY

Scon WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - They came
with War paint and appropriate battle attire. They left
with no prisoners and a win
over .
the
Southern
Tornadoes. The Pocahontas
County Warriors (2-0) went
on the warpath early and
often as the tribe raced to a
49-8 non-league win over
the host Tornadoes Saturday
afternoon at Ro~er Lee
Adams Memorial Fteld.
Kendall Beverage and
Cyrus Bennett each had
three-touchdowns apiece to
lead the charge for the win-

In the first couple minutes
of the game, it was evident
that Pocahontas County's
athleticism would be the difference in the game. The
Warriors juked and jived,
jumped and dived and stuttered-stepped
around
defenders with a graceful
swan-song, choreographed
to a methodical cadence.
The Warriors meant business and made their work
look effort -fre~.
Southern felt the hit of the
injury bug. Some young
players were learning new
positions and having to grow
up quickly. The Warriors
sensed the youth. Southern's

yoang kids did, however,
show a lot of enthusiasm and
its last couple offensive possessions showed signs that
Southern's youth plays with
an abundance of heart.
Pocahontas County took
four plays and I :26 to put
the first core on the board.
Cyrus Bennett broke three
plays for two first downs,
then Kendal Beverage
romped the last 15 yards to
cap the 70-yard drive .
Mtchael Callison booted
through the kick for the 7-0
PC lead .
Justin
Porter,
Sean
Please SH Southern. B:Z

Boeckman plays well in
Ohio State's 38-6 win
over Youngstown State
Bv RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - No . II
Ohio State took its first step
toward forgetting the end of
last season.
Todd Boeckman pl ayed
CoNTACT US
well in his first start replacOVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
ing Heisman Trophy-winnin g quarterback Troy
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Smith and the Buckeyes
Fax - 1-740-446·3008
made just about all the big
E--mail - sports@ mydailysen tinel.com
plays
in
beating
$g.or1t Slo.tl
Youngstown State 38-6 on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor Saturday.
The Buckeyes welcomed
(740) 446·2342. eKI. 33
bsherm an @ mydai lyt ribune .com
the game as a way to put
some di stance between
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
themselves and the painful
(740) 446-2342. ext. 23
memories of a humiliating
ICrum @mydailyregister.com
41 -14 defeat to Florida in
Bryan Waiters, Sports Writer
the BCS national champi(740) 446·2342. ext 33
onship
game Jan. 8.
bwalte rs @ mydailyt ribune .com

'

n e r s .
Beverage ,
the bulky
fullback ,
blasted for
54
yards
and seven
carries,
w h i I e
Bennett's
athleticism
Buzzard
led him to a
15-173yard
game.
Michael
Callison,
who
booted
through seven extra point
attempts, had 44 yards on a
couple carries, had a touchdown reception and also had
a 42-yard punt return.

FONTANA, Calif. (AP)
- Jimmie Johnson grabbed
a victory Sunday night at
California Speedway, clinching a spot in NASCAR's
Chase for the Nextel Cup
championship and guaranteeing he will be no worse
than a tie for the top seed in
the I0-race playoff.
The reigning cup champion dominated the second half
of the Sharp Aquos 500, a
race that began in bright sunshine with temperatures over
100 degrees and finished
under the lights with the
night not much cooler. It was
his series-high fifth victory
of the season, but hi s first
since May 6 at Richmond.
This one was just as important, though, with NASCAR
awarding a 10-point bonus
for each win th1s season in
seeding the 12 drivers who
will compete in the f hase. If
the Chase began next week,
Johnson would be the top
seed, with 10 more points
than Hendrick Motorsports
teammate and series points.
leader Jeff Gordon, who has
four wins.
·
There was some shuffling
at the bottom of the Chase
contenders, with Martin
Truex Jr. and Kutt Busch
each moving up one spot to
lOth and lith, respectively,
while Daytona 500 winner
Kevin Harvick slipped from
lOth to 12th.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., began
and ended the race in 13th,
despite a solid fifth-place finish. But he did cut his margin
from 158 behind Busch coming in to 128 behind Harvick
heading into next ·saturday
night's race at Richmond, the
final event before the start of
•the stock car playoff.
Johnson. who took the lead
for good after a series of
green flag pit stops 22 laps
from the end of the 250-lap
event, easily held off runnerup Carl Edwards in the waning laps. Kyle Busch finished
third, folluw~d by Jeff
,Burton, Earnhardt , Matt
Kenseth, Truex, Brian
Vickers and Kurt Busch.
Harvick fini shed 13th.

It was the first time th~
schools
met,
with
Youngstown State now
playing in the new Football
Championship Subdivision,
formerly 1-AA.
Ohio State's Jim Tressel
was
the
coach
at
Youngstown State for 15
years and led the Penguins
to four 1-AA championships
before taking over th e ·
Buckeyes in 200 I.
Boeckman, a tall, r angy
junior, directed the first four
touchdown drive s as the
Buckeyes steadily pulled
away. He completed 17-of23 passes for 225 yards and
two 1-yard TDs.
Dane Sanzenbacher and
Taurian Washington, a pair
Please see Bucks, Bl

AP photo

Ohio State's Taurlan Washington (19) runs for a touchdown as Youngstown State's Lenny
Wicks chases him during the fourth quar ter of their NCAA football game Saturday in Columbus.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 3, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

34-32

5
BY WRY

I.AGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANN ARBOR, Mich.
Dexter Jackson sprinted
through the secondary early
in the tlrst quarter, taunting
nearly lJO,OOO Michigan
fan s by putting a finger over
his lips en route to the end
zone.
Nearl y 3 hours later he got
the desired result and the
Big House was silent:
Appalachian State 34, No. 5
Michigan 32.
Julian Rauch kicked a 24yard field goal with 26 sec·onds left to put the
Mountaineers ahead of the
Wolverines and Corey
Lynch blocked a field goal
in the final seconds to seal a
jaw-dropping upset that may
have no equal.
''I told them to be quiet we' re going to be out here
all day," Jackson said,
explaining the gesture he
used after scoring 68-yard
touchdown . "We' re playmakers. They were talking
trash on us, now we've gotten them back.
"It was David versus
Goliath."
Mike Hart, Chad Henne
and J)lke Long, Michigan's
trio of offensive stars who
put off the NFL and returned
for their senior season to
chase a national championship, never saw this coming.
Coach Lloyd Carr didn't,
either, after tweaking his
contract to f'OSsibly pave the
way for thts to be his last
season on the sideline. Carr
looked ashen as the upset
unfolded, and didn' t sound

APphoto

Appalachtan State wide rece1ver Dexter Jackson (2) celebrates his 20-yard touchdown
reception with teammate Hans Battchon (3) as Michtgan safety Jamar Adams, left, looks
on during the second quarter of a college football game Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Jackson scored two touchdowns in a 34-32 win over No. 5 M1ch1gan.
much better when he finally ond quarter, before their sto- timeout in 1:11 to set up the
arrived at his postgame news rybook afternoon seemed to go-ahead field goal.
conference.
unrav~l late in the fourth
"I've been dreaming about
"I've never Seen part of a quarter.
that kick every day," Rauch
loss that wasn't miserable,"
Hart's 54-yard run with said.
he s'aid.
4:36 left put the Wolverines · Still, it wasn't over.
It didn't take long to ahead for the first time since · Henne threw a 46-yard
notice the second-tier power early in the second quarter. pass to Mario Manningham,
belonged oh the same field
One snap after the go- giving Michigan the ball ,at
because it made up for a ahead
touchdown, Appl;liachian State's 20 ,with
slight size disadvantage with Michigan's
Branden! 6 seconds left and putting
superior s~ed and, perhaps, Engleman intercepted an the Wolverines in posttion to
more passwn.
errant pass, but the win it with a field goal.
The two-time defending Wolverines couldn't capitalLynch blocked the kick
champions from former · ize and had their first of two and almost returned 52 yards
Diviswn 1-AAwere ahead of field goals blocked.
to the 18 as the final seconds
the nation's winningest proThen Appalachian State ticked off. His teammates
gram 28-14 late in the sec· drove 69 yards without a rushed across the field to

pile on as the coaching staff
and cheerleaders jumped
with joy.
"'We ' re still !\Prt of
shocked," coach Jerry
Moon: said after being carried off the field by his players.
Appalachian State has
won 15 straight games, the
longest streak in the nation.
The Mountaineers are
favored to win the Football
Championship Subdivision,
but they weren' t expected to
put up much of a fight
against a team picked to win
the Big Ten and contend for
the national title.
That's the beauty of college football .
No Division 1-AA team
had beaten a team ranked in
The Associated Press poll
from 1989-2006, and it's
unlikely that it happened
after Division-! subdivisions
were created in 197 8.
"'It is one of the biggest
losses ever, but give all the
credit to Appalachian State,"
Hart said.
The Mountaineers are not
eligible to receive votes in
the AP Top 25 poll because
they're not in the Football
Bowl •Subdivision.
Appalachian State's win
does seem to trump the
game second·tier programs
used to regard as their
crowning .11chievement The Citadel's season-opening win in 1992 over
Arkansas that led to the firing of Razorbacks coach
Jack Crowe following the
game.
Carr will not get frred after
.this upset, but he might be
wishing he had retired after

James leads U:S. over Argentina for FIBA title
LAS VEGAS (AP) LeBron James and Carmelo
Anthony finally earned the
reward that used to await
U.S. players.
James scored 31 points,
most by an American player
in an Olympic qualifier, and
the United States capped its
dominance in the desert by
beating Argentina 118-81 on
Sunday to win the FIBA
Americas championship.
l)Jen James and Anthony
climbed the podium and wen:
given gold medals - a first
for the two players whose
international careers had consisted of nothing but bronze.
"I'm tired of bronze,"
Anthony said. "I'm speechless right nbw. This is my
first time ever winnmg the
gold medal."
Dwight Howard made all
seven of his shots and scored
20 points, and Anthony
added 16 points for the
Americans, who wen: never
challenged while winning 10
games in 12 days and will
head to Beijing next summer
as one of the favorites.
The Americans averaged

Bucks
fromPageBl
of prized freshmen wideouts. each scored on their
fiJst career receptions,
Sanzenbacher's coming on
a 3-yard loss from
Boeckman
and
Washington's covering 37
yards from Antonio Henton.
Another
freshman,
Brandon Saine, the reigning
Mr. Football in Ohio, also
was part of the coming-out
party with 42 yards rushtng
on 10 carries including a 1yard touchdown plunge. He
jitterbugged in and out of
traffic on a 16-yard TD run
late ill the third quarter that
was called back by a hold-

Southern

record - and also Jed the
tournament in that category,
hitting 62 percent.
The game was close for 6
minutes before the United
States blew it open with an
18-.0 run. The Americans
scored the final 15 points of
the first quarter, then
Chauncey Billups o,rened the
second with a 3-pomter for a
38-14 lead.
At one point in the second,
the Americans scored five
consecutive baskets on dunks
- three by Howard and two
by James, with each having
one 'set up by Kobe Bryant,
whc:1 had aqUiet scoring night
but had eight assists. When
Howard dunked with 4:58
remaining to push the lead to
51 -21, the United States had
16 assists on 18 field goals.
The Americans led 59-34
at halftime after shooting 57
percent. They averaged 59.7
points in the first half during
the tournament, and their
closest lead at the break was
14 points.
James then hit four 3pointers in the third on his
way to passing Anthony and

Allen Iverson, who had· bOth
scored 28 points in an
Olympic qualifying game.
Tournament MVP Luis
Scola had 23 points for
Argentina (8·2); which lost
twice to the Ari'lericans. He
led a team lacking its normal
frrepower to a 'Spot in the
Olympics, and now turns his
attentton to making his NBA
debut next month for the
·
Houston Rockets.
Without Manu Ginobili,
Fabricio Oberto, Andres
Nocioni
and
Walter
Herrmann, the defending
Olympic champions didn't
have nearly enough to keep
up with the Americans here.
The United S!ates won 91-76
on Thursday in a secondround game that was never
close after the opening minute's,
But the Argentina players
didn't seem to disappointed,
smiling and waving to their
fans who sang and danced
throughout the awards ceremony.
Puerto Rico beat Brazil
Ill: I07 earlier Sunday in the
third-place game.

ing call.
ing l4-3late in the first half
Trever Robinson, a sel- and appeared to have
dom used fullback, waited stopped a third-and-long
five years to see much play- pass play by Boeckman, but
ing time on offense. But he strong safety Bob Perez was
caught his first career pass called for pass intetference .
and it also went for a TO in Back tn business, the
the fourth quarter.
Buckeyes ran three more
Youngstown State, com- plays with Saine burrowing
ing off a final-four appear- in from a yard out for a 21ance in the 1-AA playoffs 3 lead.
last season, didn't wilt
Not everything was rosy
before a crowd of 105,038 for the Buckeyes.
Starting end Lawrence
at Ohio Stadium - the
largest ever to see the Wilson, expected to be a
cornerstone on defense ,
Penguins play.
Tom Zetts htt 10-of-18 broke his right leg midway
passes for 86 y~rds for the through the second quarter.
Penguins. Louis Irizarry, a
Chris "Beanie" Wells, the
former Ohio Stale player heir apparent to Antonio
up
at Pittman at tailback, never
who
ended
Youngstown State after get- got untracked. Listed as a
ting into legal trouble, had Hei sman contender by the
four catches for 19 yards.
Columbus
newspaper,
The Penguins were trail- Pittman gained 2 yards on

eight carries inside the 6yard line in the opening
half. He finished with 16
attempts for 46 yards, but
20 of those came on one
carry.
The Penguins' points
came on field goals of 41
yards by Stephen Blose and
21 yards by Brian Palmer.
The game was televised
by the fledgling Big Ten
Network, but few viewers in
Central· Ohio were able to
watch it. Time Warner IS the
biggest cable provider in the
area, and it does not have an
agreement with the Big Ten
Network. As a result, fans
who wanted to see the game
on TV had to buy a satellite
TV system from DirecTV,
which does have a contract
with the new network, or go
to a bar or restaurant.

116.7 points' in the tournament.
The game was largely
meaningless, be1=ause both
teams had already. clinche~
spots in the Beijing field by
winning semifinal games
Saturday. But the Americans
didn't let up, remaining perfect in four Olympic qualifiers, including 7-0 against
Argentina.
James and Anthony played
on teams that ·finished third
in the 2004 Olympics and '06
world championships. The
latter disappointment forced
the Americans to play in the
qualifying tournament this
summer, but it proved to be
just a minor roadblock.
"I learned that players can
throw their egos and personal
accolades out the window,"
James said. "We came here
for one reason and thai was
to get the gold medal."
J anies finished the tournament shooting 76 percent
from the field - his perce.ntage actually dropped from
76.5 after he made 11 of 15
shots. He was 8-of-11 from
3-point range- another U.S.

and out, PC scored on an
eleven yard pass play from
Lucas Faulknier to Mike
Callison,
then Callison
fromPageBl
booted through the kick for
tall~ at the 2:52
the
Coppick and J.R. Grady mark.21-0
The dnve was set up
combined for a great stot? to by a 39 yard punt return
stop the second PC dnve, from Aaron Totten.
after an SHS drive stalled.
Early in th~ second quarOn Southern's first play
ter
Cyrus Bennett broke an
from scrimmage on the next 18 yard
reverse-out around
series,
Rex
Skidmore
the
right
side with Callison
picked up an SHS fumble
on the sixteen yard line. adding the kick for a '28-0
Three plays later Beverage tally at the 11: 15 mark.
Southern's next drive
llit the end zone again on a
Sean Coppick had a
stalled.
three-yard burst, followed
by a Callison ktck and the near sack and knocked
score stood 14-0 at the 5:47 down a pass on the next PC
possession, then one play
mark.
After Southern went three later had an interception and
I

30-yard interception return .
On the next possession,
Southern gained its first
first-down, but their drive
ended at the PC 9-yard line
where the Warriors took
over first and ten. PC completed a 9-yard drive when
Beverage hit ·the end zone
from one yard out at the
3:09 mark of the second
quarter. Callison booted the
kick and the score stood 350.
After a Southern fumble,
Calli son ran 35 yards
around the left end and then
booted the kick for a 42-0
tally at the 1:25 mark before
the half.
At the half Bennett had 10

Invite
fromPageBl
Bevan in 99th with a 30:26.
Freshman Hope Hajivandi
also competed for MHS,
placing I OOth with a time of
30:26.
Eastern, River Valley and
Southern also participated in
the event, but none of those
three programs had enough
runners to accumulate a
team score.
Sophomore Audrianna
Pu1lins led the Lady Eagles
with a time of 25:18, good
enough for 51 st. Senior
teammate Jule Draehn also
finished 81 st with a time of
27 :46.
The Lady Raiders were
paced by junior Ashley
Fitch with a 23:03, placing
23rd overall. Freshman
Kelsey Sands· (28:'13) was
85th and senior Kathy
Brumfield (41:27) was
!15th as well for RVHS.
Southern senior Chelsea
Freeman Jed the Lady
Tornadoes with a time of
30:25, good enough for 97th
place. Sophomore Lindsey
Teaford (31 :48) also placed
103rd.
On the boys side of things,
Eastern
senior Aaron
Martindale provided the top
'time from the area by running an 18:27 - good
enough for 13th overall.
Junior teammate Keith
Aeiker also posted a time of
19:39 for the Eagles, placing
40th overall. EHS did not
have enough participants for
a team score.
River Valley was the top
team from the area, placing
eighth out of 13 teams with
a score of 208. Junior Jacob
Watson was the top Raider,
finishing 27th overall while
posting a time of 19:06.
Vince
Weatherstein
( 19: 17) was next in 33rd,
followed
by
David
Householder (19:27) in 37th
and Sean Sands (21:10) in
81 st. Kody Johnson rounded
out the team score with a

carries for 130 yards, second interception of the
Beverage had four for 28, day and had a 15-yard
and Callison was two for return. Southern could not
44, while the team was 17 · get its offense going once
202 yards. Faulknier was 5- again .
for-7 passing for 78 yards. · PC took over and began
In the receiving department, · its next drive. The drive cuiTotten had one catch for 42 minated when Bennett
yards, Callison three for 28, plunged in once ag~in from
and Kiner one for 12.
two yards out to push the
Jenkins was 8-26 at the score to 49-0 following a
half for Southern, while Callison kick at the 3:04 of
Jerry Justis was 1-4 as the the third quarter.
only other positive yard
Late in the fourth quarter,
gainer at the half. Southern sophomore Dustin Salser
was 1-for-6 passing .
lined up in the shot-gun and
PC special teams had 89 rolled left, but found a stone
wall of defense. He scramspecial teams yards.
Sean Coppick stopped the bled right out of the pocket
first P.C drive of the second and found Eric Buzzard in
half. Coppick grabbed his . the end zone for an 18-yard
I

last season ~hen the
Wolverines won II games
before closing with losses to
Ohio State and USC.
When it was over, he didn' t second-guess decisions
to ~o for 2-point conversions
twtce in the final 15-plus
minutes, but did lament
many mistakes, penalties
and missed opportunities.
"'We were not a well-prepared football team," Carr
said. "That is
job, and I
take full responstbility."
The
Mountaineers
improved to 7-36-1 against
top-tier teams since 1978,
the previous six victories all
over Wake Forest.
Armanti Edwards threw
for 227 yards, three scores
and two interceptions, and
kept Michigan guessing with
his mobility. He also ran for
62 yards. Jackson caught
three passes for 92 yards,
and scored twice, including
his 68-yard reception that
tied the game early and provided a glimpse of ~hat was
to come.
Hart, who went almost
two quarters without a carry
because of a thigh injury, ran
for 11!~ yards and three
touchdowns. Henne was 19,
of-37 for 233 yards in a Jackluster game that included a
TO and an interception in
Mountaineer territory.
Ordinarily those numbers
should've been good enough
for a win over a small
school. Not on this day and
not against Appalachian
State.
"Someone said it mi(!ht be
one of the big victones in
college football," Moore
said. "'It may be the biggest."

mr.

time of 21:45, good enough
for 92nd place.
Tyler Noble (22:08) and
John Porter (24: 19) also
competed for the Silver and
Black, finishing 100th and
123rd respectively.
Southern, with a team
tally of 356, edged out
Me1gs by five points for
lllh. Senior Kraig Kleski
led the 'Does by !lacing
55th with a time o 20:17,
while Colby Roseberry
(22:57) was next with a
106th-place finish.
Drew Hoover (23:40},
Kris Kleski (26:29) and
Joh.n Holsinger (26:54)
rounded out the Purple and
Gold scoring with respective finishes of 115, ·132 and
134. Chris Burkhamer also
placed !39th with a 'time of
30:08.
The Marauders, with a
team tally of 361 , were 12th
and were also Jed by junior
Andrew 0' Bryant with a
20:50 - good enough for
73rd. Nathan Cook (22:38)
followed in 103rd, while
teammates Jacob Riffle
(24:04)
and
Morgan
Kennedy (24:27) placed
!19th and !25th respectively.
Ian Bullington rounded
out the team scoring by
placing !28th with a time of
25:36. ·Darby Gilmore
(27:02) and Keith Williams
(28:08) also finished a
respective !35th and !37th.
Gallia Academy had just
two male partictpants and
did not record a team score.
Dallas Craft ran a time of
21:12 and placed 83rd,
while Jacob Wheeler was
!30th with a time of 25:44.
Warren won the boys
competition with a tally of
· 49, edging out Marietta by
five points. Ravenswood
was third with 56 points,
Parkersburg placed fourth
with I00 and Athens rounded out the top-five with !50
markers. Tyler Cantley's
winning time in the boys
race was 16:42.
Complete results are
available on the web at
www.baumspage.com
passing touchdown. The
play was impressive. Salser
ran wide for the two-point
conversion at the 3:42 mark.
Eric Buzzard then recovered the on-side kick and
Southern once again had the
ball. This time Southern
stalled out, but avoided the
shut out.
Some big plays of the day
saw PC's Dalton Curry with
2 fumble recoveries and
Rex Skidmore had a sack.
Southern's Brad Coppick
had a sack and J .R. Grady
had a sack.
Southern (0-2) visits
undefeated South Gallia (2Pl in Mercerville next
Friday.

•

'

. Monday, September 3, 2007

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

io

r

YAKVSALE

~~o

Found Female, btk/wht
Border Collie puppy on SA
141 Pleasecall441 -1100

FOUND. Male Beagle d09
wtth collar. ·can 740-446-

0183
-------Kids are sadl lost kittens; 1
~ack and 1 calioo. 112 mtle
out Bula11111 e Pk 740 441 7171
- - - - -- - Lost- black &amp; gray spotted
male cat, neutered, Rutland
area, (740)742-0003
,...,--- - , . . - - -LOST In Patr•ot area,
Blonde , blue eyed , bob
tatted (M) 6 month old
'::=JII Husky No questions asked,
1 hom.
we JUSI wan I hm
Large reward for info leading
to hiS reco\/Bry or for him
Ple~se call 740·379-2175

~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'o For Sale .............................................. 725
Announc8111ent ............................................ 030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440

Auction and Flea Market .............................080
Auto Parta &amp; Accessorlea .. ..... ................... 760 ,

Auto Repair .....,,,, .................................. ,......770
Autoalor Sale ..............................................710
Bolita &amp; Motors for Sale ........ ..................... 750
Building Supplies .............................. .......... 550
Bualneu and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualnooa Opportunlly ................................. 2t0
Buetnooo Tralntng ....................................... 140
Compere &amp; Motor Homoo ........................... 790
camping Equlpmont ................................... 780
Canto of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Chlld/Eidertr Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
ExcavaUng ................................................... 830

Farm Equlpment .......................................... S10
Farm• for Rent-........ .................................... 430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ............................................ ..... .... 490
For Sale ............................................. .. .. ....... 585

For Sale or Trade......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .................... ................. 580
Furnished Rooms .........,............................. 450
General Haullng ... ....................... ... ........... ... 850
Giveaway ... ···----·· ...................... ,................ ... 040
Happy Ada ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Grain ............................... .. .... ........... 640
Help Wanted ............................ .................... t10
Home lmprovements ................ ................... S'IO
Homes for Sale .... ... .................................... . 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent ....... .. ........................... ...... 410
In Memoriam ........... ...................... . ............. 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment............ .. ......., .. 860
Llvealock ............................... ...................... .830
Lost and Found ... ....................... ................. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ...........,........... .. ............... 350
Mlscetlaneous .......................... ............... .....170

Miscellaneous Merchandlse ..................... ..540
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............ ............... .. .. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ......... .......................320
Money to Loan ..................... .................. ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ................ .... ... 740
Muslcallnslrumenls ............... ..... ............. 570
Personals ....... ... .................. ....................... .. 005
Pets for Sale ..... ......................... ................ .. 560
Plumbing &amp; HaaHng ................................. .. .820
Professional Services ... ........................ .... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr ............................... 160

Real Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schoolalnatructlon ... ........................... ....... 150

Seed, Plant&amp;. Fertlllzer ...... .. ...................... 650
SHuatfons Wanted ................................... .... 120
Space for Ront ............. ... ............................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
'SUV'olor Sale ............ .................................. 720
Trucks tor Sale .................... ...................... .. 715

Upholatary .................................................. 870
Vans For Sale........ ........................ .. ... . ..... 730

Wanted to Buy ............... .. .......................... 090

Wanted to Buy ~ Farm Supplles ............ ...... 620
Wanted To Do ................. .. .... .. ................ ..... 1BO

Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls .. ..................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy!Middle .............. ........... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ...... ..................... ..... 076

----

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R&amp;J Trudung Leading The
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Hlrtng at our New Haven,
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Hauls·Dump Dlv 1 year
OTA verifiable eMp. Call 1800-462-Q385 ask for Kent

roBIN

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POST OFFICE NOW
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Free Female Engltsh Pomter •-•GijiiALUFOUSiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l
pup and Pretty Female •
I
English Pointer 6 years old Sept 1&amp;3 Sat &amp; Mon 6a-4p
Cal! 740-441-0405 •
366e Neighborhood Rd.
Boys clothes size £ 12
- - - - - - -Som e womens and mens
Free to good home, 7 week All clothes S.25, d1shes,
old ffil~t:ed female pupptes books, toys
740 -367-0624
Sept 4&amp;5 from 9-5 at 6309
ST Rt 5S8, boys school
To · A Good Home
clothes stze 6 and gtrls
3 Black female Lab pupptes clothes size 5&amp;6.
9 weeks old 304-743-5753 ·
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Start doing work you can be
Absolute Top Dollar: U S
proud ot. Start dOing work
Borrow Smart. Contact
Silver and Gold Cotns,
The
Athens~Mel that makes a differerteo.
the Ohto Division oi
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre Educational Serv1ce
Start your new career
Fmancial
lnstttutton's
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has ANTICIPATED '
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Solitaire Diamonds- M T S
openings for Part-nme Pre- ~
Affa1rs BEFORE you refiCotn Shop, 15 1 Second
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School Educational Atdes tn
nance your home or
Avenu·e. Galhpo~s 740-446t-877-4e3-f247
Athens County for the 2007obtatn e loan BEWARE
284 2
Ext. 230t
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Year.
These
'f·'&gt;
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- - - - - - -positions do not have beneBuytng Gmseng Fresh Root
lit~
advance paymeqts of
fits Applicants must be willfees or insurance Call the
alter Sept 1··Dry Root alter
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mg to be fingerprinted to
Off1ce of Consumer
Sept. 15. Call for pnces &amp;
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@ 2007 by NEA, Inc.
have a crlmmal backgroood
detatls 740-274-0326
L..--------------...;;;..;;;;;,;;,;,..;.:;,.;,;.:o;.;'-"'~
Affairs toM bee at 1-866check, hold a valid educa278-0003 to learn tf the
Property to bUild home tn
Help 'l:'&amp;nted-Part time
tional atde license from the
mortgage
broker or
Ohio
Department
of
GaiNs County Prefer 5-iO 10 HELPWANIED
admlntstratlve asststant, to
lender
is
properly
EducatiOn, passed the
acres, htgh and dry Call
work Wlth Offtce manager,
licensed (Thts Is a publ1c
ParaprofesSional lest tor
Marty collect @ 321 -453 - ' " " ' - - - - - - · average 15-25 hours per
servtce announcement
1351 evenings
Educaltonal Aides or hawe
Correcttonal medtcal servtc- week Job descnpt10n to
from the Ohio Valley
tl1e proper degree or course·
Pubhshtng Company)
Wanted- one wood sto11e, es has excellent employ- mclude but not 11m1ted to
work needed to meet State
MANAGEMENT
(740)949·2780
ment opportumties for PF!:N answering the phone, work·
Work Part Time while
requirements, eblltcy to work
poslltons, wrth potential for mg will1 customers, scheduiyour Children ora In
Wanted 50- 100 acres ot full 11me empl oyment, at ing and or11aniztng concrete OPPORTUNmES
well With staff, students and
We seek career oriented
School
the public, and must provide
land, prefer old farm with Lakin Correctional Canter and stone orders, dispatchmdivlduals who will strive to
own transportation Salary
hmber 740·379-2615
CMS Is seeking appltcants 1ng trucks, operatlnljl digital
achteve the "Best" tn
We offer schedules that
lor LPN"s and AN's, For wetght scales, batching con· Customer Satisfaction and will be based on qualil•calVRNED DOWN ON
WE BUY USED
ttons
and
experience allow you to be home to get SOCIAL SECURITY 11181?
more 1nformat1on contact crete wtth automated comteam work If you ha'lle a
MOBILE HOMES Rebecc a Moore. Nurse puler batch program and desire to succeed with a Submit letter ot Interest to your chNdren off the busl
No Fee Unless We W1n!
D.
Costanzo.
1-888-582·3345
_a_a,;,ry,;,(7•4,;0)•828-·2.7•50- Manager or Chnstl Hendrix, general cleaning of office goal driven, team oriented John
1
Athens- • Part Time Oay Shift
AA
at
1-674-2440 area.
Famtllarily with and growing company, we Superintendent.
IU \ 1 1 , 1\ 11
Metgs €ducat1onat Serv1ce
EOE!DTRIMP
OutckBooks (accounting,
(Bam · 1 30pm)
offer.
I \ 11'1 ~I\ \II \ I
Center,
507
Richland
tnvok:tng, Inventory, etc),
Health, dental and hie
•
Part
Time Evening
HOMtS
... 1 1{\111 \
A~~enue Su1te 11106, Athens
DIR ECTOR OF SOCIAL Word and Excel programs a
msurance. prescnpt1on
lOR
SALE
Shift
''
rrfito~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~ SERVICES Overbrook .s bonus Pay based on eMpe- card , bonus program, patd Oh 45701 Applicahon must
(5 15 - 10 45pm)
be
received
by
Frtday,
HELP W~
now accepting resumes for rtence and sk tll le\lel
\lOcatiOn, management
104 Tatum
01. New
September 7, 2007 , 4 30
the posltton of Dtrector of Prtmary work ass~gnment at apparel, advancement from pm. The AMESC is an Equal
H3'.'9n WI/ 3bdl2ba Rench,
$300
Hiring
---.
Social Services. The quali- Aobertsburg Plant, but must
wtthtn
lg sunroom, 2 car gar g1eat
Opportunitv
Bonusll
1 full t1me pos1t10n &amp; 1 part fied candtdate must possess have flexlblltty to report to
Apply In person at the
area D; 304-675-3637 E;
Employer/Provider
•
time posttion available for strong verbal and wntte n Millwood or Laktn Plants
Burger Ktng Restaurant
304·882·2334
sk1ils,
communication
new reteu l tool store in
requtred
Contact Valley
65 Upper Atve r Road or
You wtll take
Gafhpohs Please call to Medtcaid Medtcare and Brook Concrete Corporate
matl resume to.
tnbounci'Customer Servtce ~ 3 br , 2 full blh , 20x38 greatThe
Atl1ens-Metgs
schedule
tnte r\/tew MDS knowledge. Long te rm Offtce at Laktn, WV calf
Burger King
calls tor a vartety of
room , cia, blacktop drtve, tg.
EducatiOnal Servtce Center
(740)446·220 1 or (740)35 7- care e~&lt;perlence preferred (304)773-5519 to schedule
PO Box 2407
Chnsltan mtntstnes. Also parktng area, aU new Winhas
ANTICIPATED
postlion
but no! required Quellfted 1ntervtew
7549
Huntington, WV 25725
openings for Part -Tim e make Outbound cal ls for dows/doors/roof &amp; septic.
-----,-=-:-:c:- candidates mav send - - - - - - - or fax resum~ to
vanous non-profit
lamtnated hardwood floors
Preschool Teachers 1n
100 WORKERS NEEDED 'resumes to Charla Brown- Help Wanted: Window
74()-4.46-3400 or
organtzalions.
throughe~ut.
24' ab o11e
Athens County lor the 2007Assemble crafts, wood McGutre,
AN ,
LNHA, Installer
Needed.
304-529-0055
~ound
pool,
addlltonal
spot
2008
School
Year
applicants
11ems.To $4SO/wk Mate1tals Admlntstrator, 333 Page Construction e)lpenence
EOE
Calf not to ac::ttdule your tor mobtle home. on 1 acre,
must hOld a valid Pre·K -3
provided Fre e tnlormat•on Street, Middleport, OH helpfui·WII! tram Apply tn
lnlervtew:
tor only $115,000 near St
pkg 24Hr. 801-426·4649
45760 E 0 E
Ltcense; Certthcate wtth a
person on Wednesdays.
1-888-IMC.PAYU
Rt 143 &amp; St. At 7,
-Pre-Kindergarten
vahdallOn,
t o·oo-Noon To· Quality
Acceptmg applicatiOns tor
(1 ·888·462-7298)
·Pomeroy, Oh . (740)696Drt 11ers needed
COL Windows, 37700 Kmg Htll Manpower 1s now hiring lor or be ehgtble to oblatn a
full &amp; part lime paramedics
Job ext.1911
1227
Dnvers 'MII1ng to drtve for Road, Pomeroy No phone the fotlow mg positions Supplemental
License
We have a benefits package
www
infoos1on.com
local ready -mtx company calls please
Salary
wtll
be
based
on
'
Automobtfe
Produ!IOn
avatl able ApphcaiiOns can
r:l5Q!li""--:Sc:-·-~---- . , 3 or 4 Bed, 2 112 bath, Bnck
One' postlton open at two (2)
0
Workers tn the Buffalo, WV experience and certtfl cabe oblatned from Mason
•~
Ranc h, 2 Kttchens Fu ll
piBnts E~&lt;pon e nce ts pre- HOME HEALTH AIDES. Area Benehls a11atlable Call ttorv'llcensure according to
County
EMS
911
..__.INmlliiiiucniiiiiiiONiiii_.l
Basement, 9+ Acres 2 Car
ferred but not necessary SIGN ON BONUS Home
salary
schedule
St.tlmtt
letToday 304· 757·3338
Emergency Onve. Pomt
Garage, Pool. CIA, 16~&lt;30
Ortver must be wlllmg to do Health Care of SE Ohio ts
te r of Interest to John D •
Pleasant WI/ 25550, or you
pre-matntenar.ce on trucks currently h~rtng home health
Costanzo , Supertntendent, Gallipolis Career College Detached Garage, 3 Types
ca n call304·675·61 34
and equtpment , yard/plant aides -com petiliv~ wages - - -- -- - - Alhens ·Metgs Educattonal (Careers Close To Home) of Healing, 20 mm S ol
and other mt scell aneous Caii 740-662-1222
Center,
507 Call Todayt 740-446--4367, Galhpoli s. 30 to WV on Rt 7,
McCiures Restaurant ( Serv1ce
1-800·214-0452
$165.000 (740)256·£546
SUite
Gaillpohs Only) now htrmg Rich land Avenue
- - - - -- -cl1ores Expertence opemt-118Hipoli&amp;caftto:tre0118Q!!
com
Live-In
houseke9per/sttter.
part
&amp;
lull
t1me
.
dayshilt
11108 , Athens, Oh 45701
An E~&lt;callent Wlrf to earn tng equtpment and eMtra
Acl:: racilled Member Aw edihng 5bd
2ba GALLIPOLIS
sktfls such as welding a plus. free room &amp; board pl us ava11able Apply between 10 appltcahon must be recetved
mon ey The New A110n
CO\IrlC;~ tor !ndepltrWnt Col~ s Fore~;:losure i
Buy lor
weekends
off, and t 1AM Monday · by Fflday, September 7, and Sct11Xjja 12748.
Starttng pay based on e)lpe- salary,
Call Mantyn 304-882·2645
$&amp; 4,9001
S•,i,dn,
Saturday
rience and drivtng record. (7 40)742-2719
2007. 4 30 pm tl1e AMESC
AVON! All Ar east To Buy or Beneftls tncludt ng health
WANml
20yrs®8%. More local
Is an Equal Opportunity iO
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304 · tnsurance. avatlable alter Looking f=or Opportuntty?
_
To Do
. home• lrom S199/mo1 For
EmployerfProvicler
local listings call 8D0-559Fteld
675-1429
meeting
employment ProfesSIOnal
•F254
Representative wanted lor
reqwement
s
Call
Valley
-~-----All
type
s
of
Home
BENNIGAN'S ts Now Htrtng
Pomt Pleasant, Galhpolls
Tudors
Btscutt
Wo
rld
Mason
Repatrs&amp;tmpro\/emenls:
-:-:--::----c--:-:--:-:--::-Broo
k
Concrete
corporate
Servers Apply tn person at
86 Pme. Ga lhpolts, New
location IS now ht rin g tor Quality work,fat r rates Cell
office at ~ 3 04)77 3-55 19 to surrounding areas. Pro11en
Point Pleasant Locatton
roof heat pump electncal. 2
sales
tree!&lt;,
broad
product
managers, baKers, cooks Rick 740-274-2338
schedule an tnter111ew
BR , Double Lot, $72 000
portfolio,
management
Certified Bus Driver
and cashters Apphcat tons
(740 )441 _0720
urtvers:
opportuntttes,
e~t:celle n t
Appllcattons ere bemg
ere ava1lable at the Point
BONUSES!!
tncome potential an d ben e·
accepted tor a Certthed Bus
Pleasant and Galhpotis loca· - - - - - - - Attention!
ltls tor those who quaf1ly
Dnver for a fuU-hme pos1t10n
!tons or send a resu me to
Care for elderly tn thetr Local company offe rt ng "NO
Plus great pay home-tune. Woodmen of the World Ltfe
and substttute positiOn s
232 2 Jackson Ave Pomt
home, Gallipolis and Potnt DOWN PAYMENT" proInsurance Society, Omaha
w1 th the Gallla County
benefttS 100% PAID
Pleasant. wv 255 50
grams for you to buy your
Pleasant area 44 6- 7165
Nebraska. Resumes to 2
Board of MAIDD transport
heallhlltfe 1ns Aeg10nal
tnsteacl of renttng
home
Runs, 1 yr Tractor Trl EMp Players Club Drwe Swte
tng enrollees wh o attend
• 100% f 1 na ne~ng
101
Charleston
WV
2531
t
Req
866293-7435
Gu1d1ng Hands School and
Wanted truck drtver 6 ada
• Less tnan perfect cred tl
or call 304 -342-5021
Gallco WorkshOp
dump
truck
near . , - - - - - - - - accepted
Foster
Parents
Needed.
-Oualfficahons Current bus
Mounlatneer plant. Must Lawn mow1ng. Rates by the • Payment could be the
homes flaeded 111 Me1gs &amp; Overbrook Center IS cu rrent·
dnver physiCal abstract,
have CD L a good drtvtng jOb. not the hou r Free same as rent
CDL wtth Class B endorse - Ga111a Cou nty for youth 0 ly accephng appltcattons lor
reco rd Job pays $9 00 hr• Est1ma1es Can Paul @ Mortgage
Locators
e
full
time,
7pm-7am
LPN
thru 18, Ohto provtdes the
ment, bacKground check
bonus,
to last approx 100 (304)675·2940
(740 )3&lt;17·0000
tull
ltme,
3pm-3am
and
7am
tra
tnmg
you
rece
tve
ree
mand school bus ce rttf1cahon
days call
304-882-4098
bursmenl of $30 to $40 a 7pm STNA poSitions Also
dleek Ap p ltca~ tons are
weekdays fpr detatls
For sale/land contract. 3 SA
avatl
able,
part
ltme
STNA
day
pa
td
resp
tte,
arid
sup·
ava1lable at the Gu1d1ng
house 1n Gall tpol!s W/D
Hands School, 8323 North port for youth placed 1n your pOSJhons Interested appll·
conn ectton $1 500 down
ca
nts
can
ptck
up
an
apph·
Profe
sstonal
ly
Clean,
hOme
Tratntng
begtn
s
SR 7, Chesh1re OhtO
We
are
now
taking
apphca·
Oflt ce / Hou sec lean 1ng $400/mo or rent $47 5/mo
September 9th at Al bany, ca tton or contact HOIIJe
45620 The Galha County
t1oos for energetiC, self driv- Reasonable
Bumgarner,
LPN,
Staff
call
Oasts
Fostercare
toll
Rates. Also 1 BR 1n Galbpobs $750
Board of MA/DD ts an
en
peopl
e
to
servtce
and
dowfl S200/mo or rent
Development Coord,nator @
References 740-446-2262
free , 1-877-325· 1558
Equal Opportun1ty
tnstall Dish Network Satellite
$250/mo Call Wayne 404(740)992-6
472
M
F
9A
5P
Employer
systems Tratrnng ava tla ~e
456-3802 tor tnfo
- '--'-- - - - - - Handyman needed tor at 333 Page St , Mtddleport,
FfT w/benelt\s, Drwe Col
Job opemng Part lime lo Rental Prapor ty 740 64'5· Oh EOE &amp; a partt cipan t of
truck or get more- $ fo1 drtv· ___,___,___,___,-___,-- HUO HOMES! 3bd only
Fun ltme Haatmg/ Cool1ng 5953, t -800-798 46U6 614- the Drug Free Work place
tng your truck Orwmg, Wtll do bush hogging tn and $13,2501
More 1-•bd
Helper and an Installer 595-7773. ·
Pr ogram
felony background check arou nd Metgs County, teed· home• IVIII•blel From
E ~t: per t e nce helpful Send
5%dn ,
and drug screening wtll be er ptgs lor sale, ca ll Rtck @ $199/mol
res ume to CLA Bo~&lt; 103, cia Help wa nted , Darst Adult New Haven, t br furnt shed
requtred Call 800-893-1991 (740)992- 401 1 leave mas - 20yra®8%. For tt1tlng1
Galltpolts Trtbune, PO BOle Group Home, weekends a apt. has w/d, no pets dep &amp;
option 8 M-F 8-5pm
800-559-4100 ~:F1.W
sage tf no answer
ref (740)992·0165
must (740)992-5023
469 , Galltpobs, OH 45631

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- - - --·

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\

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 3, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

34-32

5
BY WRY

I.AGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANN ARBOR, Mich.
Dexter Jackson sprinted
through the secondary early
in the tlrst quarter, taunting
nearly lJO,OOO Michigan
fan s by putting a finger over
his lips en route to the end
zone.
Nearl y 3 hours later he got
the desired result and the
Big House was silent:
Appalachian State 34, No. 5
Michigan 32.
Julian Rauch kicked a 24yard field goal with 26 sec·onds left to put the
Mountaineers ahead of the
Wolverines and Corey
Lynch blocked a field goal
in the final seconds to seal a
jaw-dropping upset that may
have no equal.
''I told them to be quiet we' re going to be out here
all day," Jackson said,
explaining the gesture he
used after scoring 68-yard
touchdown . "We' re playmakers. They were talking
trash on us, now we've gotten them back.
"It was David versus
Goliath."
Mike Hart, Chad Henne
and J)lke Long, Michigan's
trio of offensive stars who
put off the NFL and returned
for their senior season to
chase a national championship, never saw this coming.
Coach Lloyd Carr didn't,
either, after tweaking his
contract to f'OSsibly pave the
way for thts to be his last
season on the sideline. Carr
looked ashen as the upset
unfolded, and didn' t sound

APphoto

Appalachtan State wide rece1ver Dexter Jackson (2) celebrates his 20-yard touchdown
reception with teammate Hans Battchon (3) as Michtgan safety Jamar Adams, left, looks
on during the second quarter of a college football game Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Jackson scored two touchdowns in a 34-32 win over No. 5 M1ch1gan.
much better when he finally ond quarter, before their sto- timeout in 1:11 to set up the
arrived at his postgame news rybook afternoon seemed to go-ahead field goal.
conference.
unrav~l late in the fourth
"I've been dreaming about
"I've never Seen part of a quarter.
that kick every day," Rauch
loss that wasn't miserable,"
Hart's 54-yard run with said.
he s'aid.
4:36 left put the Wolverines · Still, it wasn't over.
It didn't take long to ahead for the first time since · Henne threw a 46-yard
notice the second-tier power early in the second quarter. pass to Mario Manningham,
belonged oh the same field
One snap after the go- giving Michigan the ball ,at
because it made up for a ahead
touchdown, Appl;liachian State's 20 ,with
slight size disadvantage with Michigan's
Branden! 6 seconds left and putting
superior s~ed and, perhaps, Engleman intercepted an the Wolverines in posttion to
more passwn.
errant pass, but the win it with a field goal.
The two-time defending Wolverines couldn't capitalLynch blocked the kick
champions from former · ize and had their first of two and almost returned 52 yards
Diviswn 1-AAwere ahead of field goals blocked.
to the 18 as the final seconds
the nation's winningest proThen Appalachian State ticked off. His teammates
gram 28-14 late in the sec· drove 69 yards without a rushed across the field to

pile on as the coaching staff
and cheerleaders jumped
with joy.
"'We ' re still !\Prt of
shocked," coach Jerry
Moon: said after being carried off the field by his players.
Appalachian State has
won 15 straight games, the
longest streak in the nation.
The Mountaineers are
favored to win the Football
Championship Subdivision,
but they weren' t expected to
put up much of a fight
against a team picked to win
the Big Ten and contend for
the national title.
That's the beauty of college football .
No Division 1-AA team
had beaten a team ranked in
The Associated Press poll
from 1989-2006, and it's
unlikely that it happened
after Division-! subdivisions
were created in 197 8.
"'It is one of the biggest
losses ever, but give all the
credit to Appalachian State,"
Hart said.
The Mountaineers are not
eligible to receive votes in
the AP Top 25 poll because
they're not in the Football
Bowl •Subdivision.
Appalachian State's win
does seem to trump the
game second·tier programs
used to regard as their
crowning .11chievement The Citadel's season-opening win in 1992 over
Arkansas that led to the firing of Razorbacks coach
Jack Crowe following the
game.
Carr will not get frred after
.this upset, but he might be
wishing he had retired after

James leads U:S. over Argentina for FIBA title
LAS VEGAS (AP) LeBron James and Carmelo
Anthony finally earned the
reward that used to await
U.S. players.
James scored 31 points,
most by an American player
in an Olympic qualifier, and
the United States capped its
dominance in the desert by
beating Argentina 118-81 on
Sunday to win the FIBA
Americas championship.
l)Jen James and Anthony
climbed the podium and wen:
given gold medals - a first
for the two players whose
international careers had consisted of nothing but bronze.
"I'm tired of bronze,"
Anthony said. "I'm speechless right nbw. This is my
first time ever winnmg the
gold medal."
Dwight Howard made all
seven of his shots and scored
20 points, and Anthony
added 16 points for the
Americans, who wen: never
challenged while winning 10
games in 12 days and will
head to Beijing next summer
as one of the favorites.
The Americans averaged

Bucks
fromPageBl
of prized freshmen wideouts. each scored on their
fiJst career receptions,
Sanzenbacher's coming on
a 3-yard loss from
Boeckman
and
Washington's covering 37
yards from Antonio Henton.
Another
freshman,
Brandon Saine, the reigning
Mr. Football in Ohio, also
was part of the coming-out
party with 42 yards rushtng
on 10 carries including a 1yard touchdown plunge. He
jitterbugged in and out of
traffic on a 16-yard TD run
late ill the third quarter that
was called back by a hold-

Southern

record - and also Jed the
tournament in that category,
hitting 62 percent.
The game was close for 6
minutes before the United
States blew it open with an
18-.0 run. The Americans
scored the final 15 points of
the first quarter, then
Chauncey Billups o,rened the
second with a 3-pomter for a
38-14 lead.
At one point in the second,
the Americans scored five
consecutive baskets on dunks
- three by Howard and two
by James, with each having
one 'set up by Kobe Bryant,
whc:1 had aqUiet scoring night
but had eight assists. When
Howard dunked with 4:58
remaining to push the lead to
51 -21, the United States had
16 assists on 18 field goals.
The Americans led 59-34
at halftime after shooting 57
percent. They averaged 59.7
points in the first half during
the tournament, and their
closest lead at the break was
14 points.
James then hit four 3pointers in the third on his
way to passing Anthony and

Allen Iverson, who had· bOth
scored 28 points in an
Olympic qualifying game.
Tournament MVP Luis
Scola had 23 points for
Argentina (8·2); which lost
twice to the Ari'lericans. He
led a team lacking its normal
frrepower to a 'Spot in the
Olympics, and now turns his
attentton to making his NBA
debut next month for the
·
Houston Rockets.
Without Manu Ginobili,
Fabricio Oberto, Andres
Nocioni
and
Walter
Herrmann, the defending
Olympic champions didn't
have nearly enough to keep
up with the Americans here.
The United S!ates won 91-76
on Thursday in a secondround game that was never
close after the opening minute's,
But the Argentina players
didn't seem to disappointed,
smiling and waving to their
fans who sang and danced
throughout the awards ceremony.
Puerto Rico beat Brazil
Ill: I07 earlier Sunday in the
third-place game.

ing call.
ing l4-3late in the first half
Trever Robinson, a sel- and appeared to have
dom used fullback, waited stopped a third-and-long
five years to see much play- pass play by Boeckman, but
ing time on offense. But he strong safety Bob Perez was
caught his first career pass called for pass intetference .
and it also went for a TO in Back tn business, the
the fourth quarter.
Buckeyes ran three more
Youngstown State, com- plays with Saine burrowing
ing off a final-four appear- in from a yard out for a 21ance in the 1-AA playoffs 3 lead.
last season, didn't wilt
Not everything was rosy
before a crowd of 105,038 for the Buckeyes.
Starting end Lawrence
at Ohio Stadium - the
largest ever to see the Wilson, expected to be a
cornerstone on defense ,
Penguins play.
Tom Zetts htt 10-of-18 broke his right leg midway
passes for 86 y~rds for the through the second quarter.
Penguins. Louis Irizarry, a
Chris "Beanie" Wells, the
former Ohio Stale player heir apparent to Antonio
up
at Pittman at tailback, never
who
ended
Youngstown State after get- got untracked. Listed as a
ting into legal trouble, had Hei sman contender by the
four catches for 19 yards.
Columbus
newspaper,
The Penguins were trail- Pittman gained 2 yards on

eight carries inside the 6yard line in the opening
half. He finished with 16
attempts for 46 yards, but
20 of those came on one
carry.
The Penguins' points
came on field goals of 41
yards by Stephen Blose and
21 yards by Brian Palmer.
The game was televised
by the fledgling Big Ten
Network, but few viewers in
Central· Ohio were able to
watch it. Time Warner IS the
biggest cable provider in the
area, and it does not have an
agreement with the Big Ten
Network. As a result, fans
who wanted to see the game
on TV had to buy a satellite
TV system from DirecTV,
which does have a contract
with the new network, or go
to a bar or restaurant.

116.7 points' in the tournament.
The game was largely
meaningless, be1=ause both
teams had already. clinche~
spots in the Beijing field by
winning semifinal games
Saturday. But the Americans
didn't let up, remaining perfect in four Olympic qualifiers, including 7-0 against
Argentina.
James and Anthony played
on teams that ·finished third
in the 2004 Olympics and '06
world championships. The
latter disappointment forced
the Americans to play in the
qualifying tournament this
summer, but it proved to be
just a minor roadblock.
"I learned that players can
throw their egos and personal
accolades out the window,"
James said. "We came here
for one reason and thai was
to get the gold medal."
J anies finished the tournament shooting 76 percent
from the field - his perce.ntage actually dropped from
76.5 after he made 11 of 15
shots. He was 8-of-11 from
3-point range- another U.S.

and out, PC scored on an
eleven yard pass play from
Lucas Faulknier to Mike
Callison,
then Callison
fromPageBl
booted through the kick for
tall~ at the 2:52
the
Coppick and J.R. Grady mark.21-0
The dnve was set up
combined for a great stot? to by a 39 yard punt return
stop the second PC dnve, from Aaron Totten.
after an SHS drive stalled.
Early in th~ second quarOn Southern's first play
ter
Cyrus Bennett broke an
from scrimmage on the next 18 yard
reverse-out around
series,
Rex
Skidmore
the
right
side with Callison
picked up an SHS fumble
on the sixteen yard line. adding the kick for a '28-0
Three plays later Beverage tally at the 11: 15 mark.
Southern's next drive
llit the end zone again on a
Sean Coppick had a
stalled.
three-yard burst, followed
by a Callison ktck and the near sack and knocked
score stood 14-0 at the 5:47 down a pass on the next PC
possession, then one play
mark.
After Southern went three later had an interception and
I

30-yard interception return .
On the next possession,
Southern gained its first
first-down, but their drive
ended at the PC 9-yard line
where the Warriors took
over first and ten. PC completed a 9-yard drive when
Beverage hit ·the end zone
from one yard out at the
3:09 mark of the second
quarter. Callison booted the
kick and the score stood 350.
After a Southern fumble,
Calli son ran 35 yards
around the left end and then
booted the kick for a 42-0
tally at the 1:25 mark before
the half.
At the half Bennett had 10

Invite
fromPageBl
Bevan in 99th with a 30:26.
Freshman Hope Hajivandi
also competed for MHS,
placing I OOth with a time of
30:26.
Eastern, River Valley and
Southern also participated in
the event, but none of those
three programs had enough
runners to accumulate a
team score.
Sophomore Audrianna
Pu1lins led the Lady Eagles
with a time of 25:18, good
enough for 51 st. Senior
teammate Jule Draehn also
finished 81 st with a time of
27 :46.
The Lady Raiders were
paced by junior Ashley
Fitch with a 23:03, placing
23rd overall. Freshman
Kelsey Sands· (28:'13) was
85th and senior Kathy
Brumfield (41:27) was
!15th as well for RVHS.
Southern senior Chelsea
Freeman Jed the Lady
Tornadoes with a time of
30:25, good enough for 97th
place. Sophomore Lindsey
Teaford (31 :48) also placed
103rd.
On the boys side of things,
Eastern
senior Aaron
Martindale provided the top
'time from the area by running an 18:27 - good
enough for 13th overall.
Junior teammate Keith
Aeiker also posted a time of
19:39 for the Eagles, placing
40th overall. EHS did not
have enough participants for
a team score.
River Valley was the top
team from the area, placing
eighth out of 13 teams with
a score of 208. Junior Jacob
Watson was the top Raider,
finishing 27th overall while
posting a time of 19:06.
Vince
Weatherstein
( 19: 17) was next in 33rd,
followed
by
David
Householder (19:27) in 37th
and Sean Sands (21:10) in
81 st. Kody Johnson rounded
out the team score with a

carries for 130 yards, second interception of the
Beverage had four for 28, day and had a 15-yard
and Callison was two for return. Southern could not
44, while the team was 17 · get its offense going once
202 yards. Faulknier was 5- again .
for-7 passing for 78 yards. · PC took over and began
In the receiving department, · its next drive. The drive cuiTotten had one catch for 42 minated when Bennett
yards, Callison three for 28, plunged in once ag~in from
and Kiner one for 12.
two yards out to push the
Jenkins was 8-26 at the score to 49-0 following a
half for Southern, while Callison kick at the 3:04 of
Jerry Justis was 1-4 as the the third quarter.
only other positive yard
Late in the fourth quarter,
gainer at the half. Southern sophomore Dustin Salser
was 1-for-6 passing .
lined up in the shot-gun and
PC special teams had 89 rolled left, but found a stone
wall of defense. He scramspecial teams yards.
Sean Coppick stopped the bled right out of the pocket
first P.C drive of the second and found Eric Buzzard in
half. Coppick grabbed his . the end zone for an 18-yard
I

last season ~hen the
Wolverines won II games
before closing with losses to
Ohio State and USC.
When it was over, he didn' t second-guess decisions
to ~o for 2-point conversions
twtce in the final 15-plus
minutes, but did lament
many mistakes, penalties
and missed opportunities.
"'We were not a well-prepared football team," Carr
said. "That is
job, and I
take full responstbility."
The
Mountaineers
improved to 7-36-1 against
top-tier teams since 1978,
the previous six victories all
over Wake Forest.
Armanti Edwards threw
for 227 yards, three scores
and two interceptions, and
kept Michigan guessing with
his mobility. He also ran for
62 yards. Jackson caught
three passes for 92 yards,
and scored twice, including
his 68-yard reception that
tied the game early and provided a glimpse of ~hat was
to come.
Hart, who went almost
two quarters without a carry
because of a thigh injury, ran
for 11!~ yards and three
touchdowns. Henne was 19,
of-37 for 233 yards in a Jackluster game that included a
TO and an interception in
Mountaineer territory.
Ordinarily those numbers
should've been good enough
for a win over a small
school. Not on this day and
not against Appalachian
State.
"Someone said it mi(!ht be
one of the big victones in
college football," Moore
said. "'It may be the biggest."

mr.

time of 21:45, good enough
for 92nd place.
Tyler Noble (22:08) and
John Porter (24: 19) also
competed for the Silver and
Black, finishing 100th and
123rd respectively.
Southern, with a team
tally of 356, edged out
Me1gs by five points for
lllh. Senior Kraig Kleski
led the 'Does by !lacing
55th with a time o 20:17,
while Colby Roseberry
(22:57) was next with a
106th-place finish.
Drew Hoover (23:40},
Kris Kleski (26:29) and
Joh.n Holsinger (26:54)
rounded out the Purple and
Gold scoring with respective finishes of 115, ·132 and
134. Chris Burkhamer also
placed !39th with a 'time of
30:08.
The Marauders, with a
team tally of 361 , were 12th
and were also Jed by junior
Andrew 0' Bryant with a
20:50 - good enough for
73rd. Nathan Cook (22:38)
followed in 103rd, while
teammates Jacob Riffle
(24:04)
and
Morgan
Kennedy (24:27) placed
!19th and !25th respectively.
Ian Bullington rounded
out the team scoring by
placing !28th with a time of
25:36. ·Darby Gilmore
(27:02) and Keith Williams
(28:08) also finished a
respective !35th and !37th.
Gallia Academy had just
two male partictpants and
did not record a team score.
Dallas Craft ran a time of
21:12 and placed 83rd,
while Jacob Wheeler was
!30th with a time of 25:44.
Warren won the boys
competition with a tally of
· 49, edging out Marietta by
five points. Ravenswood
was third with 56 points,
Parkersburg placed fourth
with I00 and Athens rounded out the top-five with !50
markers. Tyler Cantley's
winning time in the boys
race was 16:42.
Complete results are
available on the web at
www.baumspage.com
passing touchdown. The
play was impressive. Salser
ran wide for the two-point
conversion at the 3:42 mark.
Eric Buzzard then recovered the on-side kick and
Southern once again had the
ball. This time Southern
stalled out, but avoided the
shut out.
Some big plays of the day
saw PC's Dalton Curry with
2 fumble recoveries and
Rex Skidmore had a sack.
Southern's Brad Coppick
had a sack and J .R. Grady
had a sack.
Southern (0-2) visits
undefeated South Gallia (2Pl in Mercerville next
Friday.

•

'

. Monday, September 3, 2007

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POUCIES: Ohio Vllll&gt;t Publllhlng l't..VII the rlghtlo tcltt, , . . Of Clnctl any ld It 1ny dmt. Errorl mutt be r.portN
Trlbun.Sentlnei-Fie;lst•r wll be l'llponllbfll fof no~ thin the coat of tM tpace oecupled by tM errQf and only tM nrat lnlel'tlon.
any loss or ••pen•thtl rftUtll !rom the pobiiCIIHon or omltllon of an advertt.......m. Correction wl\1 be tMdt In the flrat avtlleble MIIUon. · Box ""=::.~=·
are alwaya confidential. ·Current r111 ard appll11. ·All rBII 11111te adviii'IIN~Nnll 1111 ·~ to II• F«Yral Fair HoUIInQ Act ol11168. · Thta n
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

io

r

YAKVSALE

~~o

Found Female, btk/wht
Border Collie puppy on SA
141 Pleasecall441 -1100

FOUND. Male Beagle d09
wtth collar. ·can 740-446-

0183
-------Kids are sadl lost kittens; 1
~ack and 1 calioo. 112 mtle
out Bula11111 e Pk 740 441 7171
- - - - -- - Lost- black &amp; gray spotted
male cat, neutered, Rutland
area, (740)742-0003
,...,--- - , . . - - -LOST In Patr•ot area,
Blonde , blue eyed , bob
tatted (M) 6 month old
'::=JII Husky No questions asked,
1 hom.
we JUSI wan I hm
Large reward for info leading
to hiS reco\/Bry or for him
Ple~se call 740·379-2175

~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'o For Sale .............................................. 725
Announc8111ent ............................................ 030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440

Auction and Flea Market .............................080
Auto Parta &amp; Accessorlea .. ..... ................... 760 ,

Auto Repair .....,,,, .................................. ,......770
Autoalor Sale ..............................................710
Bolita &amp; Motors for Sale ........ ..................... 750
Building Supplies .............................. .......... 550
Bualneu and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualnooa Opportunlly ................................. 2t0
Buetnooo Tralntng ....................................... 140
Compere &amp; Motor Homoo ........................... 790
camping Equlpmont ................................... 780
Canto of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Chlld/Eidertr Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
ExcavaUng ................................................... 830

Farm Equlpment .......................................... S10
Farm• for Rent-........ .................................... 430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ............................................ ..... .... 490
For Sale ............................................. .. .. ....... 585

For Sale or Trade......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .................... ................. 580
Furnished Rooms .........,............................. 450
General Haullng ... ....................... ... ........... ... 850
Giveaway ... ···----·· ...................... ,................ ... 040
Happy Ada ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Grain ............................... .. .... ........... 640
Help Wanted ............................ .................... t10
Home lmprovements ................ ................... S'IO
Homes for Sale .... ... .................................... . 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent ....... .. ........................... ...... 410
In Memoriam ........... ...................... . ............. 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment............ .. ......., .. 860
Llvealock ............................... ...................... .830
Lost and Found ... ....................... ................. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ...........,........... .. ............... 350
Mlscetlaneous .......................... ............... .....170

Miscellaneous Merchandlse ..................... ..540
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............ ............... .. .. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ......... .......................320
Money to Loan ..................... .................. ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ................ .... ... 740
Muslcallnslrumenls ............... ..... ............. 570
Personals ....... ... .................. ....................... .. 005
Pets for Sale ..... ......................... ................ .. 560
Plumbing &amp; HaaHng ................................. .. .820
Professional Services ... ........................ .... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr ............................... 160

Real Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schoolalnatructlon ... ........................... ....... 150

Seed, Plant&amp;. Fertlllzer ...... .. ...................... 650
SHuatfons Wanted ................................... .... 120
Space for Ront ............. ... ............................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
'SUV'olor Sale ............ .................................. 720
Trucks tor Sale .................... ...................... .. 715

Upholatary .................................................. 870
Vans For Sale........ ........................ .. ... . ..... 730

Wanted to Buy ............... .. .......................... 090

Wanted to Buy ~ Farm Supplles ............ ...... 620
Wanted To Do ................. .. .... .. ................ ..... 1BO

Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls .. ..................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy!Middle .............. ........... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ...... ..................... ..... 076

----

- ·-

--·-

-- --

Iro

reodyrr"'::OiroRruNrrv~~~=~
•NOTICE•

wa need YOU!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOJ to send money
through tl1e mall until you
have tnvesttgated the
offering.

Help us make calls on
behalf ol conservative
PolitiCal organlzatsons,
candidates and causes.

R&amp;J Trudung Leading The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
Hlrtng at our New Haven,
WV Terminal. For Regtonal
Hauls·Dump Dlv 1 year
OTA verifiable eMp. Call 1800-462-Q385 ask for Kent

roBIN

I-.0-~BISNE\li---...,
11\\\11\1

flru&gt;WArmD

We
... gottlng
for lha alocllona and

t

i

I~

flru&gt; '\YArmD

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
S5 7K annually
Including Federal Benelils
and OT,Pa1d Tra~mng ,
Vacations-FTIPT
1-866-542-1531
USWA

y .RD SAt£·

Free Female Engltsh Pomter •-•GijiiALUFOUSiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l
pup and Pretty Female •
I
English Pointer 6 years old Sept 1&amp;3 Sat &amp; Mon 6a-4p
Cal! 740-441-0405 •
366e Neighborhood Rd.
Boys clothes size £ 12
- - - - - - -Som e womens and mens
Free to good home, 7 week All clothes S.25, d1shes,
old ffil~t:ed female pupptes books, toys
740 -367-0624
Sept 4&amp;5 from 9-5 at 6309
ST Rt 5S8, boys school
To · A Good Home
clothes stze 6 and gtrls
3 Black female Lab pupptes clothes size 5&amp;6.
9 weeks old 304-743-5753 ·
WArmD

l

•

Thurllday tor sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

• start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A. Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Should Include These Items

·

sunday Display: 1 : 00

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

1

Earn up to $8.50111our
• $300 Hlrjng Bonuo

t

Full benefits pacl&lt;age

+Full and pert time
t

schedules
Paid holidays

r

MoNtY
, ro LoAN

uNOTICEu

Start doing work you can be
Absolute Top Dollar: U S
proud ot. Start dOing work
Borrow Smart. Contact
Silver and Gold Cotns,
The
Athens~Mel that makes a differerteo.
the Ohto Division oi
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre Educational Serv1ce
Start your new career
Fmancial
lnstttutton's
1935
US
Currency
has ANTICIPATED '
n \.
todayl
'
OHtce of Consumer
Solitaire Diamonds- M T S
openings for Part-nme Pre- ~
Affa1rs BEFORE you refiCotn Shop, 15 1 Second
C.lltodayl
School Educational Atdes tn
nance your home or
Avenu·e. Galhpo~s 740-446t-877-4e3-f247
Athens County for the 2007obtatn e loan BEWARE
284 2
Ext. 230t
2006
School
Year.
These
'f·'&gt;
ol requests tor any large
- - - - - - -positions do not have beneBuytng Gmseng Fresh Root
lit~
advance paymeqts of
fits Applicants must be willfees or insurance Call the
alter Sept 1··Dry Root alter
{.,A.)/4
mg to be fingerprinted to
Off1ce of Consumer
Sept. 15. Call for pnces &amp;
www.Comles.com
@ 2007 by NEA, Inc.
have a crlmmal backgroood
detatls 740-274-0326
L..--------------...;;;..;;;;;,;;,;,..;.:;,.;,;.:o;.;'-"'~
Affairs toM bee at 1-866check, hold a valid educa278-0003 to learn tf the
Property to bUild home tn
Help 'l:'&amp;nted-Part time
tional atde license from the
mortgage
broker or
Ohio
Department
of
GaiNs County Prefer 5-iO 10 HELPWANIED
admlntstratlve asststant, to
lender
is
properly
EducatiOn, passed the
acres, htgh and dry Call
work Wlth Offtce manager,
licensed (Thts Is a publ1c
ParaprofesSional lest tor
Marty collect @ 321 -453 - ' " " ' - - - - - - · average 15-25 hours per
servtce announcement
1351 evenings
Educaltonal Aides or hawe
Correcttonal medtcal servtc- week Job descnpt10n to
from the Ohio Valley
tl1e proper degree or course·
Pubhshtng Company)
Wanted- one wood sto11e, es has excellent employ- mclude but not 11m1ted to
work needed to meet State
MANAGEMENT
(740)949·2780
ment opportumties for PF!:N answering the phone, work·
Work Part Time while
requirements, eblltcy to work
poslltons, wrth potential for mg will1 customers, scheduiyour Children ora In
Wanted 50- 100 acres ot full 11me empl oyment, at ing and or11aniztng concrete OPPORTUNmES
well With staff, students and
We seek career oriented
School
the public, and must provide
land, prefer old farm with Lakin Correctional Canter and stone orders, dispatchmdivlduals who will strive to
own transportation Salary
hmber 740·379-2615
CMS Is seeking appltcants 1ng trucks, operatlnljl digital
achteve the "Best" tn
We offer schedules that
lor LPN"s and AN's, For wetght scales, batching con· Customer Satisfaction and will be based on qualil•calVRNED DOWN ON
WE BUY USED
ttons
and
experience allow you to be home to get SOCIAL SECURITY 11181?
more 1nformat1on contact crete wtth automated comteam work If you ha'lle a
MOBILE HOMES Rebecc a Moore. Nurse puler batch program and desire to succeed with a Submit letter ot Interest to your chNdren off the busl
No Fee Unless We W1n!
D.
Costanzo.
1-888-582·3345
_a_a,;,ry,;,(7•4,;0)•828-·2.7•50- Manager or Chnstl Hendrix, general cleaning of office goal driven, team oriented John
1
Athens- • Part Time Oay Shift
AA
at
1-674-2440 area.
Famtllarily with and growing company, we Superintendent.
IU \ 1 1 , 1\ 11
Metgs €ducat1onat Serv1ce
EOE!DTRIMP
OutckBooks (accounting,
(Bam · 1 30pm)
offer.
I \ 11'1 ~I\ \II \ I
Center,
507
Richland
tnvok:tng, Inventory, etc),
Health, dental and hie
•
Part
Time Evening
HOMtS
... 1 1{\111 \
A~~enue Su1te 11106, Athens
DIR ECTOR OF SOCIAL Word and Excel programs a
msurance. prescnpt1on
lOR
SALE
Shift
''
rrfito~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~ SERVICES Overbrook .s bonus Pay based on eMpe- card , bonus program, patd Oh 45701 Applicahon must
(5 15 - 10 45pm)
be
received
by
Frtday,
HELP W~
now accepting resumes for rtence and sk tll le\lel
\lOcatiOn, management
104 Tatum
01. New
September 7, 2007 , 4 30
the posltton of Dtrector of Prtmary work ass~gnment at apparel, advancement from pm. The AMESC is an Equal
H3'.'9n WI/ 3bdl2ba Rench,
$300
Hiring
---.
Social Services. The quali- Aobertsburg Plant, but must
wtthtn
lg sunroom, 2 car gar g1eat
Opportunitv
Bonusll
1 full t1me pos1t10n &amp; 1 part fied candtdate must possess have flexlblltty to report to
Apply In person at the
area D; 304-675-3637 E;
Employer/Provider
•
time posttion available for strong verbal and wntte n Millwood or Laktn Plants
Burger Ktng Restaurant
304·882·2334
sk1ils,
communication
new reteu l tool store in
requtred
Contact Valley
65 Upper Atve r Road or
You wtll take
Gafhpohs Please call to Medtcaid Medtcare and Brook Concrete Corporate
matl resume to.
tnbounci'Customer Servtce ~ 3 br , 2 full blh , 20x38 greatThe
Atl1ens-Metgs
schedule
tnte r\/tew MDS knowledge. Long te rm Offtce at Laktn, WV calf
Burger King
calls tor a vartety of
room , cia, blacktop drtve, tg.
EducatiOnal Servtce Center
(740)446·220 1 or (740)35 7- care e~&lt;perlence preferred (304)773-5519 to schedule
PO Box 2407
Chnsltan mtntstnes. Also parktng area, aU new Winhas
ANTICIPATED
postlion
but no! required Quellfted 1ntervtew
7549
Huntington, WV 25725
openings for Part -Tim e make Outbound cal ls for dows/doors/roof &amp; septic.
-----,-=-:-:c:- candidates mav send - - - - - - - or fax resum~ to
vanous non-profit
lamtnated hardwood floors
Preschool Teachers 1n
100 WORKERS NEEDED 'resumes to Charla Brown- Help Wanted: Window
74()-4.46-3400 or
organtzalions.
throughe~ut.
24' ab o11e
Athens County lor the 2007Assemble crafts, wood McGutre,
AN ,
LNHA, Installer
Needed.
304-529-0055
~ound
pool,
addlltonal
spot
2008
School
Year
applicants
11ems.To $4SO/wk Mate1tals Admlntstrator, 333 Page Construction e)lpenence
EOE
Calf not to ac::ttdule your tor mobtle home. on 1 acre,
must hOld a valid Pre·K -3
provided Fre e tnlormat•on Street, Middleport, OH helpfui·WII! tram Apply tn
lnlervtew:
tor only $115,000 near St
pkg 24Hr. 801-426·4649
45760 E 0 E
Ltcense; Certthcate wtth a
person on Wednesdays.
1-888-IMC.PAYU
Rt 143 &amp; St. At 7,
-Pre-Kindergarten
vahdallOn,
t o·oo-Noon To· Quality
Acceptmg applicatiOns tor
(1 ·888·462-7298)
·Pomeroy, Oh . (740)696Drt 11ers needed
COL Windows, 37700 Kmg Htll Manpower 1s now hiring lor or be ehgtble to oblatn a
full &amp; part lime paramedics
Job ext.1911
1227
Dnvers 'MII1ng to drtve for Road, Pomeroy No phone the fotlow mg positions Supplemental
License
We have a benefits package
www
infoos1on.com
local ready -mtx company calls please
Salary
wtll
be
based
on
'
Automobtfe
Produ!IOn
avatl able ApphcaiiOns can
r:l5Q!li""--:Sc:-·-~---- . , 3 or 4 Bed, 2 112 bath, Bnck
One' postlton open at two (2)
0
Workers tn the Buffalo, WV experience and certtfl cabe oblatned from Mason
•~
Ranc h, 2 Kttchens Fu ll
piBnts E~&lt;pon e nce ts pre- HOME HEALTH AIDES. Area Benehls a11atlable Call ttorv'llcensure according to
County
EMS
911
..__.INmlliiiiucniiiiiiiONiiii_.l
Basement, 9+ Acres 2 Car
ferred but not necessary SIGN ON BONUS Home
salary
schedule
St.tlmtt
letToday 304· 757·3338
Emergency Onve. Pomt
Garage, Pool. CIA, 16~&lt;30
Ortver must be wlllmg to do Health Care of SE Ohio ts
te r of Interest to John D •
Pleasant WI/ 25550, or you
pre-matntenar.ce on trucks currently h~rtng home health
Costanzo , Supertntendent, Gallipolis Career College Detached Garage, 3 Types
ca n call304·675·61 34
and equtpment , yard/plant aides -com petiliv~ wages - - -- -- - - Alhens ·Metgs Educattonal (Careers Close To Home) of Healing, 20 mm S ol
and other mt scell aneous Caii 740-662-1222
Center,
507 Call Todayt 740-446--4367, Galhpoli s. 30 to WV on Rt 7,
McCiures Restaurant ( Serv1ce
1-800·214-0452
$165.000 (740)256·£546
SUite
Gaillpohs Only) now htrmg Rich land Avenue
- - - - -- -cl1ores Expertence opemt-118Hipoli&amp;caftto:tre0118Q!!
com
Live-In
houseke9per/sttter.
part
&amp;
lull
t1me
.
dayshilt
11108 , Athens, Oh 45701
An E~&lt;callent Wlrf to earn tng equtpment and eMtra
Acl:: racilled Member Aw edihng 5bd
2ba GALLIPOLIS
sktfls such as welding a plus. free room &amp; board pl us ava11able Apply between 10 appltcahon must be recetved
mon ey The New A110n
CO\IrlC;~ tor !ndepltrWnt Col~ s Fore~;:losure i
Buy lor
weekends
off, and t 1AM Monday · by Fflday, September 7, and Sct11Xjja 12748.
Starttng pay based on e)lpe- salary,
Call Mantyn 304-882·2645
$&amp; 4,9001
S•,i,dn,
Saturday
rience and drivtng record. (7 40)742-2719
2007. 4 30 pm tl1e AMESC
AVON! All Ar east To Buy or Beneftls tncludt ng health
WANml
20yrs®8%. More local
Is an Equal Opportunity iO
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304 · tnsurance. avatlable alter Looking f=or Opportuntty?
_
To Do
. home• lrom S199/mo1 For
EmployerfProvicler
local listings call 8D0-559Fteld
675-1429
meeting
employment ProfesSIOnal
•F254
Representative wanted lor
reqwement
s
Call
Valley
-~-----All
type
s
of
Home
BENNIGAN'S ts Now Htrtng
Pomt Pleasant, Galhpolls
Tudors
Btscutt
Wo
rld
Mason
Repatrs&amp;tmpro\/emenls:
-:-:--::----c--:-:--:-:--::-Broo
k
Concrete
corporate
Servers Apply tn person at
86 Pme. Ga lhpolts, New
location IS now ht rin g tor Quality work,fat r rates Cell
office at ~ 3 04)77 3-55 19 to surrounding areas. Pro11en
Point Pleasant Locatton
roof heat pump electncal. 2
sales
tree!&lt;,
broad
product
managers, baKers, cooks Rick 740-274-2338
schedule an tnter111ew
BR , Double Lot, $72 000
portfolio,
management
Certified Bus Driver
and cashters Apphcat tons
(740 )441 _0720
urtvers:
opportuntttes,
e~t:celle n t
Appllcattons ere bemg
ere ava1lable at the Point
BONUSES!!
tncome potential an d ben e·
accepted tor a Certthed Bus
Pleasant and Galhpotis loca· - - - - - - - Attention!
ltls tor those who quaf1ly
Dnver for a fuU-hme pos1t10n
!tons or send a resu me to
Care for elderly tn thetr Local company offe rt ng "NO
Plus great pay home-tune. Woodmen of the World Ltfe
and substttute positiOn s
232 2 Jackson Ave Pomt
home, Gallipolis and Potnt DOWN PAYMENT" proInsurance Society, Omaha
w1 th the Gallla County
benefttS 100% PAID
Pleasant. wv 255 50
grams for you to buy your
Pleasant area 44 6- 7165
Nebraska. Resumes to 2
Board of MAIDD transport
heallhlltfe 1ns Aeg10nal
tnsteacl of renttng
home
Runs, 1 yr Tractor Trl EMp Players Club Drwe Swte
tng enrollees wh o attend
• 100% f 1 na ne~ng
101
Charleston
WV
2531
t
Req
866293-7435
Gu1d1ng Hands School and
Wanted truck drtver 6 ada
• Less tnan perfect cred tl
or call 304 -342-5021
Gallco WorkshOp
dump
truck
near . , - - - - - - - - accepted
Foster
Parents
Needed.
-Oualfficahons Current bus
Mounlatneer plant. Must Lawn mow1ng. Rates by the • Payment could be the
homes flaeded 111 Me1gs &amp; Overbrook Center IS cu rrent·
dnver physiCal abstract,
have CD L a good drtvtng jOb. not the hou r Free same as rent
CDL wtth Class B endorse - Ga111a Cou nty for youth 0 ly accephng appltcattons lor
reco rd Job pays $9 00 hr• Est1ma1es Can Paul @ Mortgage
Locators
e
full
time,
7pm-7am
LPN
thru 18, Ohto provtdes the
ment, bacKground check
bonus,
to last approx 100 (304)675·2940
(740 )3&lt;17·0000
tull
ltme,
3pm-3am
and
7am
tra
tnmg
you
rece
tve
ree
mand school bus ce rttf1cahon
days call
304-882-4098
bursmenl of $30 to $40 a 7pm STNA poSitions Also
dleek Ap p ltca~ tons are
weekdays fpr detatls
For sale/land contract. 3 SA
avatl
able,
part
ltme
STNA
day
pa
td
resp
tte,
arid
sup·
ava1lable at the Gu1d1ng
house 1n Gall tpol!s W/D
Hands School, 8323 North port for youth placed 1n your pOSJhons Interested appll·
conn ectton $1 500 down
ca
nts
can
ptck
up
an
apph·
Profe
sstonal
ly
Clean,
hOme
Tratntng
begtn
s
SR 7, Chesh1re OhtO
We
are
now
taking
apphca·
Oflt ce / Hou sec lean 1ng $400/mo or rent $47 5/mo
September 9th at Al bany, ca tton or contact HOIIJe
45620 The Galha County
t1oos for energetiC, self driv- Reasonable
Bumgarner,
LPN,
Staff
call
Oasts
Fostercare
toll
Rates. Also 1 BR 1n Galbpobs $750
Board of MA/DD ts an
en
peopl
e
to
servtce
and
dowfl S200/mo or rent
Development Coord,nator @
References 740-446-2262
free , 1-877-325· 1558
Equal Opportun1ty
tnstall Dish Network Satellite
$250/mo Call Wayne 404(740)992-6
472
M
F
9A
5P
Employer
systems Tratrnng ava tla ~e
456-3802 tor tnfo
- '--'-- - - - - - Handyman needed tor at 333 Page St , Mtddleport,
FfT w/benelt\s, Drwe Col
Job opemng Part lime lo Rental Prapor ty 740 64'5· Oh EOE &amp; a partt cipan t of
truck or get more- $ fo1 drtv· ___,___,___,___,-___,-- HUO HOMES! 3bd only
Fun ltme Haatmg/ Cool1ng 5953, t -800-798 46U6 614- the Drug Free Work place
tng your truck Orwmg, Wtll do bush hogging tn and $13,2501
More 1-•bd
Helper and an Installer 595-7773. ·
Pr ogram
felony background check arou nd Metgs County, teed· home• IVIII•blel From
E ~t: per t e nce helpful Send
5%dn ,
and drug screening wtll be er ptgs lor sale, ca ll Rtck @ $199/mol
res ume to CLA Bo~&lt; 103, cia Help wa nted , Darst Adult New Haven, t br furnt shed
requtred Call 800-893-1991 (740)992- 401 1 leave mas - 20yra®8%. For tt1tlng1
Galltpolts Trtbune, PO BOle Group Home, weekends a apt. has w/d, no pets dep &amp;
option 8 M-F 8-5pm
800-559-4100 ~:F1.W
sage tf no answer
ref (740)992·0165
must (740)992-5023
469 , Galltpobs, OH 45631

ot1f

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- -- - -

-

- - -- · _ _ _ _ _ ..,! _ _ - - -

- - - --·

•

-

-

--· -

\

�Monday, September 3, 2007
ALLEYOOP

;::=;~=~

_
.

...

All r o l l i - - n g
lntNIN• FI;JUI II

......... ,.

..... lfouoingllclol1111
--MNIOpiiO

· -·ony
......... Nrnltltlon

Of

---on
- . - .• .-IGIOft,oox
-llall1alul or no1lonll
origin, or
lnllnllon to
make anw- 1uch

1998 14x72 mobile homo, 2
br., 2 M balt1, lcl1chln appl·
ance•a loouded. dilhWUIIor, gortlon lub, c:enlral air,
front &amp;bact&lt; dacks ·
clean, very gOOd cond ..
$13,000, (740)949·3002

2000 Clayloo 24X56, 3 BR,
28A, 314 acre In Green
Townsh ip. $79.900. Call
740-645-7113
78 Skyline. 1&lt;4K56, good
Cond, oow cabinets/hoal
furnace . $3200 OBO Call

ony

pill...., a, limitation or

dlacrtmln.tlon."
Tbla new ,...,_will not
knowingly....,.
.av.rtiMIMnll tor real
.nate which lain
vtoa.tlon of the IIW. Our
- . ... "-by
Informed thlt Ill
dwelll,... Mfvert~Md In

2·3 br. S.ldotle Add. . - t.,Taldng-•IW!oiilcaiilionoii lor 38R
corPtt &amp; point, part fur· houoo. No poll. $425/mo.
nllhld. $425.00 a mon +dip $300/do!&gt;- -446-3617
&amp; rot. 304'875-79011
Taking appiiCitlone: 3BR,
·3 bedroom ' house In Green Twp, cfty weler, no
PcmefOI', IIruol""'J&lt;*n, pots.~ month, dopooll
I 112 - · 8/C. hen!Woocl Call740 448 111190 OYOnlngo
floofa, ,.. •"''Toni w12 car
garage, omall back yard, Vwy nlca homo/1lpal1mtnt
$835,(740)949-2303
lor rent In Pornerov. groat
- - ' - - - - - - - - nolgllborhood. qulol. Newly
3 Bedroom Hooao in ro.-led. New llfl!lllancet,
Syraruae. $500/month + 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. C811
dopooii _No Pots. (304)675- 740·992·978-4 for more
5332 weel&lt;ondS 740·591· do1alta.

,_--'---:--=:-

3 BR: Clean and ready now.
JiW lb.Nr
•smiles from.Centenary. Dep
&amp; Ref. Patnot area. 740- 2 Br , A/C, Very nice with
379-2540
porch In Gallipolis. No pols.
740·446·2003 or 446·1409
3 br., don , 2 blh., lull basemen~ ref. and dop. required, 2 br mobil hom 0 I Racl
Chaster·EasiOm Soh. Dlst.,
·
e
n
ne,
"80.00 month, Call for $325 a mooth, $325 dopoel1,
years lease,. no pets, no
app1., (740)992-4025
calls after 9pm, 17401992.

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

_..nliy_

ava4&amp;1btt on an eqUII

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 sjnglewldes
From $1 .800 down
paymenl
Gary (740) 826-2750

House for sale in Radno
area. Approx. 4 acres, all
profesolonally landscaped.
Ranch styte house with 4 ~;=;::=;::=~
bedrooms, living room, din- rl!l
Lcm &amp;
ing room. kitchen, large tam·
ACRFAGE
ily room, central air, gas heat
and I fireplace. Addition ot e
large Florida room "'com- 10 acres tor sale located on
Plotoly cedar opens onto Broad Run Road, In New
WV
$34,500
pa~o &amp; pool area. Healed in Haven,

4 BDRM. HOUSE, 2 BTH .. 5039
FULL BASEMENT IN
CHESTER TWF' , FLAT· 2BR. 1BA, LR. FR.
WOODS RD., $480 MO., $385/monlh + $36&amp;d0p0Sil· •
REF. AND DEP. REQUIRED. Ploaso call 740·992·5389
for any inquiri.os.
17401992-4025
- - -- - - - 69 Garfield • 2BR, 18A Mobile Horns lor .rent, 5 min·
$460/month • sec. dep.
utes from Kyger Creek and
Cedar . 3BR. I 112BA . Gavin • Big Yard. 446-4234
$57&amp;month + sec. dep. You or 208·7681
pay all utii~IOB. Call 446· _ _; _ _ _ _ _ _
3644
Mobile home for rent, no
- - - - - - - - pets. Apartment fOf rent, no
'" 1740)992•
AHontlonl
poIS' utili •vos pa~.
5658
Local comperiy offering "NO _ _· - - - - - DOWN PAYMENr pro- Radno area, 2 br., electric
grams for you to buy your heal, w/d hookup, living
home instead of renting.
room, dinning room, kitchen,
' 100% financing
1 lull bath, carport &amp; porch,
• Less than perlect credit In lown, nice neighborhood,
accepted
dose 10 high school, $400
' Paymonl could bo tho
$
1 1 de
rent
~!t~r, ::a~~· ~~age~
Mortgage
Localors. available
Sept.
81 h,
'-17_40_138_7-_oooo_-'---- 17401949_2217
HOUO&lt;J In Clition, 4br, Bath , _ - - - - - - : : - : TwoMH'sforrontBoth2BA.
Kitchen ' LMng Room $400 $4SO/rent+dep
and
month plus ulilitles or $200
every~ weeks, plu&amp; Utiltties $550/rent+dep. · Addison
"""""·Call 367·0854 or 645·
$250 Security deposit •""'
Avallabte 9-1·07 304·593· 3592
8187
APAKll\lfNfS
-:---:--:-....,---FORibNr
HUD HOMESI 3bd only t.,--iiii.iiiiiit;.._.l
S13,2SGf More 1-4bd
homn avtllablel From 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartrrients
$1N/mol
5%dn, for Rent, Meigs County, In
20yro4tll%. For llatlngo lown, No Pats, Deposit
8CJG.5511-4109 xF144
Required, (740)992·5174 or
-------11_o._ ___
_17_40_l44_1-0_
Nice 3br on' SA 160, 1 mile
from Holzer . . $650/m~ + · 1 and 2 bedroom apart~
d
0 44 5062
sac. ep. 74 • 1·
or ments, furnished and unrur•
9
2
74v-37 • 923
nlshed, and houses in
-------Oft SR 141 , 3BR, 2BA, Pom~roy and_ Mid~ledport,
appliances, basement, 1 car security deposit rf(JJ re • no
garage, $SOO/mo pll.tS pets, 740·992·2218.
d""""o~t 161 1226 0859
...,..."""'". 4
•
1 BR trl·l.evel, close to hospi·
Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt. or tal, B miles to. Rio Grande
house, partially fumished, Ref + Dep reqUired, no pets.
HUD approved., near park, 740·446•2957
no pets, {740)992-6886
2 Bdrm, downtown, renovated, lamlnalo floors, $S75 mo
Prelly, 3BR, I
Bath.
Downtown Gallipolis. Very includes water &amp; trash No
close lo Washington Elom. Pals, (740)709·1690
and GAHS. $695. No 2BR apts, 6 miles from
pets/smoking. Utilities not Holzer. $400+dep. Water,
Included. 645·6378 ask lor sewer, trash paid. 740·988·
Kelly
6130 or 740-682·9243

I

groond poolendosed by privacy fencing and land·
seeped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unaHached.
Excellent condmoo ready to
move ln. $255,000.00, can:
(740)949·2217

(304)n3-5B81
-------9 acres Baker Ad .. St7,500
080. (740)843-1047
Mobile Home lot for rent in
Point
Pleasant,
WV.
$125/mooltl + $IOO/deposl1.
Catl740-388-at28

Looking for a good pre- MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
owned home? Many to RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
choose from at The Home Rd, 441·1111
Show • Barboursville. 1·
li I \I \I "
888-736·3332

ro~

;;=::;;===:,

I

I

Trailer for Sa!e, $2,000,
1740)992·5658
-------Nice used 3 bedroom home
vinyl/Shingle. Will help with
delivery. 740·385-4387

2 BR Duplex · 644 2nd Ave

$425/mo plus deposit&amp; utili·
ties. Stove &amp; fridge, WID
hookup, No pets. Lease.
446-0332 Bam to :ipm Mon-

sat. .

same as

I

Old er frame hom e. 3BR
1BA,. LR, OR, Galley
HOl.ISIS
kitchen,
baeamonl,
FOR lbNr
.25acres, CA/hoa~ nice river
view, cily schools, asking $IN/mol Buy 3bd HUD
$54000. Call . 446-6271
ltomtl 5%dn. 20yro@8%.
• ·~ ••• '109
F.r Ulll REDUCEOI Brand ,_w xt709
·~ ~~
home in Gallipolis. 2BA,
2BA wJ3 acres rru1. $82500.
1br, House In Now Haven.
Call 740-446-7029
everything in walking d~lance, no pols, $300 month,
Save
Thousands!
Cloa•ance on lol moclels. all $300 dopos~ 304-882·3652
- - - - --1·868·736·3332. Tho~mo -2 ·bedroom executive house,
Show Barbours~llo,
R1
GO.
new construction, fully furnished, new refrigerator,
XTREME SAVINGS! Over stove, dishwasher, washer &amp;
2,000 square foot home ror dryer, large wrap around
less than $40/sq. ft. Call The porch, full basement. 1 car
Home Show • BarboursYille garage, total . electric with
at 1-888-736·3332
central air, very spaci()lls,
private drive with parking,
MORD...ESH{)PriDl $975 peJ month, setious
fOR AU
, calls only (740)949·2303

n

r

so, you

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
hoine delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

elalltpoli' lBaitp Gtrtbune
~obit tllea,ant Jlegt•ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' ottme• -6enthrel
r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __
Address _ _ __ _ __ _ __
City/State/Zip - - - - - ' - -----,--

Phone _______~-------~
Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohlci Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

••·•·••·•···•··•···•··••·····•••

olftco-

Commercial building , 'For
Rent' 11100 oquoro foot, olf
portdng. Great loca·
IIDnl ] 49 Thlnl AWiriuo .In
Gallipolis. Rent $300/IIUICal W-(404)4e6-3802
.
Prime commordol opaco tor
rent a1 SprlngvaltOy PlaZa.
CaU 645-2192.

-,
Now sola &amp; lo\/0 seat, $400,
Now Kltch&lt;ln talllo· and 4
chair $179.95. 202 Clark

'
·-ttiiiiiiii iii-,1
·
11195 GMC eo.-.lon van

llelutlful Apll. II J Eitates. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opporlunily Pro~dor and

wl-

·--

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

2001 Hartey Davison 883
Sportator, 6200 mHos,
Asking $5000. (740)245·
5984 or (740)845-4833

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit Decks

u-'-o.

··-~

"~

MaroRs
FOR S.\LE

JET
equipment. $900 · 740-446AERATION MOTORS
7318
Repaired. New &amp; Robuill In --'-c'-::---:-:--:--:--:c
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 19~9 Regal Medallion 181/2
800·537·9528.
ft, open bow $2500.00
304-n3-5070

r

...,

"':!F~.;.--~

NEW AND USED STEEL
Ste~ Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Drlveways &amp; walkway~ L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mooday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300
-------Outbuilding T111 outSide,
1 1
f 10 12 $750
sOBO
ng e (740)386
roo , 8126
1: ,
•
•
-----~-Pole Barns
30x50x10
$6,495
Free
Delivery
(937)718 1471

·

,.

MCAMPERSH &amp;

.,

I}'Wa1
r,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

7 367 544

L i!;C,t~1 c on..()tra ctor
.'IV"

740-992-5929

740-416-1698

';;;;;D-;S;S:3-:9S5;;;;~

I \ J, \1 .. , 1'1 '1 I I '
,\ I I I I .... I I II ,,

ir.j;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

Foedor Pigs tor 5alo. Call
740-441·5460

r

•oAeplaceinent
Windows
·Roofing

NOMA
26 Years Experience
IUUft

David Lewis

STYlE. ..

Free

YOUNG'S

for
S60 per

Kee... II

)II, b,1 l 71
'

'

,,, L

1\
I

&gt;I

( 1

f

!

•I

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{ &gt;I

'

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VI'IUf/
IV

Stanley Tree·
TriAimlng
&amp; Removal
'Prompt

WHAT A DEAL!!

and Qualily

Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
1 Helios System ·

I

1!!1:-"""":::"'...,.. . . ..,
5
TRUCKS
..__ _fORiiiiitliiSiiAU:iiiiollltli"ol
,
2003 F-250 Super duty,
4WO, Ext Cab, 34000 miles
$16,000. 304-$75-4110

''·

"

·~

BIG NATE

•"

'.,

1111 Moncloy
ll..,..b

-·lhll--01
-·llli!M"""'
. . lhl .-.

-·..-Dolt
llillk»n;

· A-IOihoolbloof
~-_....

" ... 111011 ... J

-

pen overnight, but thlrigt will be achieved
In a relatively 8hor1 period of time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se ... 22) - Even If
9001eone yolire working with le trying to
use soma devious tactics, don't follow hie
or her lead. Continue to operate within
the high standard~ you have established
and IUCCOI8 willlollow you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Don't let
your ego getln the way and cause you to
pretend to be knowtedgeabla about
eometh~ng vou are not. You'll tMJ more

·•'
.,

..
PEANUTS
A VAPOR TRAIL GOT

SO Wf.IAT' 5 't'OllR

SORR.'t' I MISSED TI-!AT
6ALL, MANAGER.

EXCUSE Ti-115 TIME~ .

IN M'( ElfES ..

SUNSHINE CLUB

Buckle down.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20 -Feb. 19) •
Uncomfortable feelings whHe partlclpal ·
lng in a large group activtty are manufac·
lured by your own mind and not by thoas
~u're with. Get your m~nd off yourself

,,

l

BOBERT

BISSELL :
COIISTRUmll :"

11---~~~

'

Stop &amp; Compare

Mason County
Health Dept.
Men 45 Years &amp; Older in
Mason County and
surrounding counties
By appointment only
Please call

(304) 675-3050
Sponsored by
Shrikant Vaidya, MD,
PVH Laboratory and
Mason County Health
Department.

0 20:15 Hcw11 ~ Dill. by NEA. IM.

::::;::;==-~~ "'
Manlay'a ~
Racycl•na

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

GARFIELD
1'\IE OO'M"A
AIJMIT•••

Jaft2-3114
~~

THAT MOOSEHEAP TOWEL.
RACK 1..001&lt;5 CMU!AT IN
THE aATHROOM

1'----P-~

a•la·•-n.•a~~~

. . . . . . . .11:11 ..

23 W=•ooxer 27 Paue hair
4 Cone udlng
otyle
5 Jacket
28 Get the

feature

6 Kind of

ayatem

worltpiece

12 wdt.)
34 Shipping

44

Like

· 7 Skunk'a
Unden
delenae
32 Noctumal
8 Ylrll piM!Ing
predator
9 Ch•m
33 Tlllckneu

bin

10 Keato or

38 Oooategg

Byron

39 UolleeoJy
41 Becomt
f,.cl

13 Selected

35

e.g.

Movie

36 "Mup~t
Show' hoot

21 PhyelquH

24

48 Pop-top
bever"'l"
51 YlctDNin,

mogul

19 Put down

43 Wlnecnk

~field

menace
plctura
45 Fown'e
30 'thole filler
parent
31 Actor47 AG...t

53 Fix the

table

39 Karate level

Engineer'•

4D Soyo aloud

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

Ctllb1ly Oj:tw ~s n ata~t:ll!'om ~·by famOus people, pas1 and p-8111'11.
Each 1eaer mthe cipher stands 101" anolher

Tadofs clvo: Lsqus!s P

" ... SX WNPBM XYFJ,
FNWUYZ

BEE

KTY

WBXDJTBMYIYX

LSYMJ

KBZNA:

MYJOCY BLYMNKSBXJ NMY
OBXKSXCSXO."- DYBMDY ONMWSX

PREViOUS SOLUTION - "Unfonunately', we believe lhai we'VB been created
to domlnata lhe ~anet 1o donjnate nawre. Ainl ~ue .' ·Ted Danson

wm

lAM I
r::~:.' S~\\Jllv\-/&amp;~~s·
ltlla4 •r ClAY L rllllo\N . , . . - - - - -

0 f011r
hoi'rangt IItten ol tht
Krambltd wards boo
low to loim four llmplt words.

GRUSAY

ME NI C
T E BI F

·'

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PIYIIIGTOPIIICES. ,,.

CIIIIIUclw:allli·-111'

.

_. ... Cirnll Mill!

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"Iso'l il silly to eall money
s
~ dough," lhe not so smlllt fellow
.._..._....._-~.,-J.-J ... remarlced, "when it doesn't stick lo

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sA B HI N

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CDnlplote lilt ellvdclo quotod
by lilling In tho mfalng worda

dO'Ie/op lrom lltp No. 3 below".

P~INT NUMBERED LUTERS I

IN THESE SQUARES

6 ~~F:~~!\~ lfTTERS TO I

REAU..V GOES WEU.. WITH THE
SNAKESKIN SHOWER CURTAIN

ARLO &amp;JANIS

PISCES (Feb. 20-Man::h 20) - Unless
an· objective ls well-defined, there Ia a
strong poseibllity that you might go to a
lot oltrouble achieving something only to
diaco\lllr It i!ln't what you want. Set wor·
thy goals.
ARIES
(March
21-Aprll 19) Unfortunately, you may have to deal with
someone who has a surly disposition.
Don't let this person start 10 push you
around. By the same token, however,
don't make ltle situatiOn 8\len WOt'le .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)- II might be
quite constructive tor you to take 801Tle
time and analyze your financial position,
especially if it's been a bit shaky lately.
You msy figure out something that will
help.
GEMINI (May 2HJune 20) Guard
against inclinations to place too much
Importance ·on your self.lntereeta while
ignoring those of others. You muat be
cooperative and supportive to wort! well
with associates.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Allow
your comp88sionate Instincts to lnflu·
ence your treatment of co-workers eo
that you don't become unduly frustrated
by an inconvenience they may lmpoN
upon you .
LEO (July :i!3-Aug. 2:i!) - Tact and diplomacy w111 achieve that which
dellre
In wwya that tleJ&lt;ing your mutclel or rala·
tng your vok:e won'l. Nice guy. and gala
always get what they wsni and nlll\'8r fin·
ilh 1111.

eci, CAl-l 'iolli/MtSI~E AI\ A~JIUT

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~~'ll~ A 11\ll~\1,
~~
~LA$1"~

r.

~Ha No CRiMiNaL
IS UNF!IMILiaR Wt"f\.1 T&gt;le
SouND Of o3 ltiMP s~ .

oFF!

.r

'

e-u-o7

Oppole- After- Naill- Helftln- A11! it UP
Olio llOilelpo to IIIOCber, •After 011' aew boa got a tute of
llllhority be llllly ATB it UP.w

vou

GRIZZWELLS

IIIIIII

SCUMUTS ANSWIIS.

and onto what they're saying.

740-992·11111

4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

respected by colleague• tr you are hon·
est with them.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - That
need for instant gratification could rear
Its ugly head again and Induce you to
buy something vour common aense aaya
you can't afford. It would be wise to Osten
SAGITIAAIUS (NoY. 23-0ec. 21) Although you don't mean 10 be, othera
oould find you too domineering and
a888rtive. If you notice them backing
away, stop and be conscious ot how you
are d&amp;aling wi1h flem.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Your
earning potential Ia actually quite go6d,
but unless you are fully prepared to worll:
for what you hope to attain, nothing will
be hal'lded to you on a ailver platter.

.

• New Homes
• Garages

query

1 SUbject lor
Kim
421nched
Keate
25 lncan treaforward
43 Shoe upover
aure

choice

to it.

• Complete
Remodeling

Prostate Exam &amp;
PSA Blood Test
September 6, 2007

Pass

41 Stranger'e

place
25llapper-

year ahead. or course, nothing will hap-

·~

45771

FREE

3•

Pu8

DOWN

material poeltlon ae well ae your pereonal affairs look q\.lfta encouraging In the

I

740-949-2217

'S7 IAother
punch

Pass

59 ncket Info

30 Nonunion

The po88lbilitles br strengthening your

'Insured

29670 Bashan Road

AllpaS8

Palls

Elll

Talee tho

but
57 Wk. day
58 Vapor

rrtOI1 of

4•

Nonh

protector
56

18 AV8111DC1Ht
20 Vigorous
22 Nothing II
Ill
23 Crlea
24 Stopa up
27 Miele the

· llot&gt;l
••• 20117
av Bernloe
8ede
Oeol

,
'Yolllfq jabo_ond_
w..__

*Reasonable Rates

Hill's Sel f
Storage

14 Clnemu
rtval
15 Techle
16 Piglet' I
friend
17 Doll loll

Dbl.

West

Aphrodhe'o

oon

12 HNYY-motal 54 Mine yield
band
55 Field

,.

S..tb

........ lhdott:

446-0007

• 740-742,2293
Please leave messa e

,_

29Travel

AstroGraph

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

'Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

Q" 8
8 5

.
e

.'

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1966 Dodge Coronet, 4 dr.,

r

.,·

r'1amihJ- c~e&gt;lf':P.Jf'l'"'lri~4':":..•

03 Chevy Cavalier $4500,
call740·256·6169.

COOK MOTORS
2006 Coball 24k $6900
2002 Cavalier 49k $4300
2002 Grand Prix 44&gt; $4900
20 others In stodl: starting at
$1400 to $7900. 3 month.
3000 mile warranty. Stop or
call Cook Motors 740-4460103

F~'I'OU!

Pomeroy, OH

1

Work

---,---til--, .ro_...!-·ur'-AIE....

Tara
Townhouse
Aparttnents, Very Spadous.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $42M.4o.
No Pets, Lease Plus
SEq.trtty Deposit Required,
(740)446-3481 .
------Twin Rivers Tower Is accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
apartment,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
Opportunily

~-I.
I".ULII"\'P61C..\~

i·

.'
•'

"N-TE.IZ. f&gt;..i.L, 'I'OU ~I\CULl&gt;~

..

Racine, Ohio

97 Camaro RS, wht wlblk
racing stripes/racing spoiler.
LooksJruns good. Priced to
sell $2800! 304-634·6523

&amp;. ~ U~l f&gt;..WUi ""''

1'\'i LliTLE.E~,
C.I-\IEF ...

month

We Deliver To You!

V.C YO UNG Ill
)Ill( I

P'"00\o\'\

740-985·385 1

• ~yl Siding I Painting
• Ptdo and Porch Dec:kl
WV038725

p

...•

Shade River AI· Service

·New Oantge~
• Eltctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Aooftng 6 GuHers

\" 1'1 111 1 \I II 1\

Nice 1 br. appliances turn.,
$350.00 + dep.nesr PPHS
304-675-3100 or 304-$75·
5509.

•

Advertise "'. .
"
in this
'"'''
•
•
space

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

• Room AddHIOn1 &amp;
Remodeling

IIAY&amp;
GRAIN

318, 85,000 org. miles, very
good cond. $1200. 304-773·
5070
Middleport, Beech Sl., 2 br.
furnished apt, ulllllies pd.,
dep. &amp; ref., no pets, 1992 Cadillac DeVille ·
Excellent Condition, $2700 ·
(740)992·0165
740-446-7318
Middleport, North 41h Ave., 2
br. furnished apt., dep. &amp; 1996 Monte Carlo 1 owner
ref., no pots, (740)992.0165 Silver, loaded runs good
304-n:J-5244
New 2BR apartments. - - - - - - - Washer/dryer
hookup, 2002 Ford Taurus, 3 liter,
stove/refrigerator included. auto, air, 140.000 miles.
Also, urlls on SR 180. Pals runs good $2,600 304·882·
Welcomel (740)441 ·0194.
3652

...'

Why drive anywhere else

CARPENTER
SERVICE

r:'(J'D
rl 1\

'.

..'

'Iliumph 12% Horse Feed ......$5.99/50 lb •.
Sportsmlx Dog Food ll-8 ........... $~.99/50
S.UltEA ....................$199/lon Bulk Only
Prlerert Powder Coated Gales '
10ft. $53.00
14ft. $75.00
12ft. $$65.00
16 II $83.00 .

740-992-6971

Round bales for sale. $25 a
bale, Caii74D-992·3639
I I ~\

Groclouo Uvlng I and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
S592. 740·992·5084. Equal
Housing Opportunily.

• Vinyl Siding

7 ••

~

going to ""' these weapons, you must
have eome way to doland yourself lhls week's topic.
Tha first key point islhat Wyou comolnlo
the auctloo, you assume your partner
has six or seven hiQtl-card points and
base your actions on lhal. Hha is weak·
er, n Is his laun N you get too hlghl
sm-.rly, wyour partner enlers 1!10 aucllon, ~nco he will uaume you have ~x
or seven polnls, you must not leap
around like lhe lambs In springtime"
unless you have a Irick rnorelhan lhat10 or 11 points.
Tho primary weapon is a takeout dooble.
If an opponent . opens at the 1w0- or
thrao-lovol, double oayslhat you have at
leasl opening-bid strength, lhat you are
short In tho opane~s slit, and thai you
have length (usually alleast throe cardo)
In alllhree unbid suit&amp; Panrtef picks one
of those suns, or bids no-trump Nho has
stoppers in lha opane~s sun end a
desire to play in lhal strain, or passes
with .....,ral decent t~.
In ltis deal, after East's threHiub open·
lng and IWo passes, North make&amp; a take·
out double, Soutl1 adVances with three
spades, and North raises to game
bacausa 1t1a11s where ha wlshas to play
opposite six or seven points and lour·
plusapados.
West leads lho club two to East's ace.
Whal shoold East do .nf."NII
Since East must try tor three last hean
tricks, he should load his heart 10, hoping his pa~ner hss tha A.Q.J. Hera,
Easl's fuel&lt; Is oul, bul he has tho sal"·
lactlon of ha~ng made a good play.

-··
'.

J&amp;L
Construction

•
•

783

~

11 Coloeeaum,

Last week, we looked at opening pre·

'
v•

.

10

K J

thing

50 - . article

""1'!ive bida. But ~ your opponenls are

.,·,

742·2332

Vtvtr I nttJI1

.

'

. •'

!

•

•

J 10

How to Labor (Day)
against pre-empts

..•

• Garage•
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
Owner:

Sj'IIHrTLJ.'/1.11'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.,

Ja11181

9t 2

Opening lead: • 2

-·...

·Decks

AS
ntt

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.

Dealer: East

.."

H..tfonest

Australian Shepherd pupplos, Black &amp; Whne and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)24&amp;-5964 .or (740)646·
4833

A K

2

Vulnerable: Both

•'

MurraJ,

wv

•

~

•

-

Crtiflsm4n,
MTD,Brlgg&amp;
.&amp;StNiton

M""" Golf c...,.
Haf\'ey R&lt;*t

5
10 3 2
7 .4

...••
•

3414-773-5861
JI4..882.3Z94
Sel'l'lcing
lAwn 7'nldon,
Mown, nurrr.,l

.I.so Rood on 1&lt;11- ·

•
•
•

~

MOWER

AKC Sholllo Collie pups,
$300, AKC Peklngosa $350,
1101 chocked. 740·256-1664

AQ 8 t

••

•

to Years

•

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•

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Eul

• 3 2

•

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BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnlshod. Established 1975.
Coil 24 Hrs. (740) 446'
0870 , Rogers Basemonl

West
•

••

N

·---·~iii'"""ij'·iiiio"".,J

Selmer
AS210
Allo
Saxophone with case.
Excollonl condffioo. $2100
new sell tor $900 339-2237

MONTY

"' .
""

Roofing, Siding, Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
74
7

HOME

·-~~
""''"~"~"·

•

..

g 1.
A K J 10 3

.Q

•
"
"

Seamless Gutters

Waterproofing ..

r

-•

H&amp;H

IMPRO...........,...

WHAT

'

••

All types of conctete
Owner· Rick Wise

Ylfllo

8 Fall guy

• A KQJ
•
•

44 Trlnktta

46 Feecle the
kitty

5 Sign 1111ore 48 t..wver'•

N- . .,. .,

Wise Concrete

G
I
Utter ng

m:---~------.,

Miniature Pincher Pups, 2
BlacluTan females, $300
each. 8 weeks old.
(740)388-6124

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

':=::;;:;;;::::~
r

'1 1n 1r 1-...

CKC Miniature Pinschers
Puppies, Shots, Wormed,
$300. Mother &amp; Father also
for sale. (740)368·8786

rJ=amihJ
•·m·mu•,
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Free Estimates

740.367..0536

OIUR OMPS
I
I
95 30ft Fleetwood Terry,
excellent cond, Sleeps 6-8,
Call 740·266-8729 or 740577·7829

jo

'

D

I

14'JohnBoat,lrolllngmotor,
trailer. Call740-256·1962
16' Boat motor trailer W/

MolcHANolsE

'

Doers, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

t.,_______i1frl.

=======-

(304)882·3017

..__ ......

~..:::---

.

•
hookup, stove, fridge furnished. 740·441·3702 or 763 Bobcal Skid loader,
740-286-5789
Kubota Diesel Engine,
$9,000- will consider pa~ial
. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT-. lrade. 740 2-4202
ED &amp; o\FFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small hOuoos FOR ..__ _ _ _ _ _tpl
RENT. Call (740)441·11 11
for applicalion &amp; lni9rmallon. Black Show Pigs, Sows,
Gilts ~ Boars for sale .
(740)441·1013

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer·hookup
•Tenant pays electric

,..._

Coinplole n.o C..

M&lt;m:JtCYcusf
4 WllliiiDIS

BoATS &amp;

•RENfALS •SALF.S
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

SiniiCi

2500 ~
wfloet.
ch8lr 1ft 88,000 mlloo, 5.7
Iller-engine, • coplaln cl1alnl
new tires to mal1'j extra's Ia
1181 7500.~75-7302

I
i.

E~loyor.
r·o -~
Closs lo college, 2BR WID ,

Ellm VIew
Apartments

J.ObO!QD1'Tr!t

1 lmpulu

.

rT-~~~~~~

Chapel Rd. Bidwell, OH 2005 H.O.Fal Boy custom
1 740 1~ 173 Mon-Fri 9• · maroon
wlomboseed
r5al9a·ap.
!tam I of 200
de 1100
es,
ma '
•~~
miles since
now,prlco
~·""'~
$19,000 OBO call for
..__ _ _ _ _ _... dotails-740- 949.2217 .
Anllqu&amp; barber chairs, bar·
bor polo, coke, scales, signs
and misc. 40 992-4197 ·

Phillip
Alder

..

I

llol&amp;mul
'"--•'iGoomiiiiii-_.1

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

Miniature Pinscher CKC
Reg. Black Jrust, 1 F $300 3
M
$250. 6wks old.
Wormed,shots, tails docked.
740-367..0210 if no ·answer
2br. Apt on 51h Street Pl. leave message.
Pleasant $375 ask for Con
(304)612-4350
Puppies for SaloiiFull blOOd·
- -- - - - - - ed GcMden Retrievers. No
Apartment for rent, 1-2 papers . .~ $ 1 50. 740 _992 _
Bdrm., remodeled, new car. pet, stove &amp; frlg ., water, ~ 55 ·
sower, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pels. Rot.
required. 740-843-5264.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85
B_
RIDGE

1100 Squale fMt
for rent. Eutern Avenue,
Galllpolla_. 74G-446-! 178.

Moa.u ~ Ir•o

0265

thla ••• paper are

i

i

740·388-7447
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
1exeo with vinyt/shlngle.
Must .,.1, Only $25,99S with
delivery. Caii(740)3B5·4367
- -- - - - - New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month , Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
sel-up. (740)385·2434

www.mydallysentlnel.com

"

�Monday, September 3, 2007
ALLEYOOP

;::=;~=~

_
.

...

All r o l l i - - n g
lntNIN• FI;JUI II

......... ,.

..... lfouoingllclol1111
--MNIOpiiO

· -·ony
......... Nrnltltlon

Of

---on
- . - .• .-IGIOft,oox
-llall1alul or no1lonll
origin, or
lnllnllon to
make anw- 1uch

1998 14x72 mobile homo, 2
br., 2 M balt1, lcl1chln appl·
ance•a loouded. dilhWUIIor, gortlon lub, c:enlral air,
front &amp;bact&lt; dacks ·
clean, very gOOd cond ..
$13,000, (740)949·3002

2000 Clayloo 24X56, 3 BR,
28A, 314 acre In Green
Townsh ip. $79.900. Call
740-645-7113
78 Skyline. 1&lt;4K56, good
Cond, oow cabinets/hoal
furnace . $3200 OBO Call

ony

pill...., a, limitation or

dlacrtmln.tlon."
Tbla new ,...,_will not
knowingly....,.
.av.rtiMIMnll tor real
.nate which lain
vtoa.tlon of the IIW. Our
- . ... "-by
Informed thlt Ill
dwelll,... Mfvert~Md In

2·3 br. S.ldotle Add. . - t.,Taldng-•IW!oiilcaiilionoii lor 38R
corPtt &amp; point, part fur· houoo. No poll. $425/mo.
nllhld. $425.00 a mon +dip $300/do!&gt;- -446-3617
&amp; rot. 304'875-79011
Taking appiiCitlone: 3BR,
·3 bedroom ' house In Green Twp, cfty weler, no
PcmefOI', IIruol""'J&lt;*n, pots.~ month, dopooll
I 112 - · 8/C. hen!Woocl Call740 448 111190 OYOnlngo
floofa, ,.. •"''Toni w12 car
garage, omall back yard, Vwy nlca homo/1lpal1mtnt
$835,(740)949-2303
lor rent In Pornerov. groat
- - ' - - - - - - - - nolgllborhood. qulol. Newly
3 Bedroom Hooao in ro.-led. New llfl!lllancet,
Syraruae. $500/month + 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. C811
dopooii _No Pots. (304)675- 740·992·978-4 for more
5332 weel&lt;ondS 740·591· do1alta.

,_--'---:--=:-

3 BR: Clean and ready now.
JiW lb.Nr
•smiles from.Centenary. Dep
&amp; Ref. Patnot area. 740- 2 Br , A/C, Very nice with
379-2540
porch In Gallipolis. No pols.
740·446·2003 or 446·1409
3 br., don , 2 blh., lull basemen~ ref. and dop. required, 2 br mobil hom 0 I Racl
Chaster·EasiOm Soh. Dlst.,
·
e
n
ne,
"80.00 month, Call for $325 a mooth, $325 dopoel1,
years lease,. no pets, no
app1., (740)992-4025
calls after 9pm, 17401992.

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

_..nliy_

ava4&amp;1btt on an eqUII

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 sjnglewldes
From $1 .800 down
paymenl
Gary (740) 826-2750

House for sale in Radno
area. Approx. 4 acres, all
profesolonally landscaped.
Ranch styte house with 4 ~;=;::=;::=~
bedrooms, living room, din- rl!l
Lcm &amp;
ing room. kitchen, large tam·
ACRFAGE
ily room, central air, gas heat
and I fireplace. Addition ot e
large Florida room "'com- 10 acres tor sale located on
Plotoly cedar opens onto Broad Run Road, In New
WV
$34,500
pa~o &amp; pool area. Healed in Haven,

4 BDRM. HOUSE, 2 BTH .. 5039
FULL BASEMENT IN
CHESTER TWF' , FLAT· 2BR. 1BA, LR. FR.
WOODS RD., $480 MO., $385/monlh + $36&amp;d0p0Sil· •
REF. AND DEP. REQUIRED. Ploaso call 740·992·5389
for any inquiri.os.
17401992-4025
- - -- - - - 69 Garfield • 2BR, 18A Mobile Horns lor .rent, 5 min·
$460/month • sec. dep.
utes from Kyger Creek and
Cedar . 3BR. I 112BA . Gavin • Big Yard. 446-4234
$57&amp;month + sec. dep. You or 208·7681
pay all utii~IOB. Call 446· _ _; _ _ _ _ _ _
3644
Mobile home for rent, no
- - - - - - - - pets. Apartment fOf rent, no
'" 1740)992•
AHontlonl
poIS' utili •vos pa~.
5658
Local comperiy offering "NO _ _· - - - - - DOWN PAYMENr pro- Radno area, 2 br., electric
grams for you to buy your heal, w/d hookup, living
home instead of renting.
room, dinning room, kitchen,
' 100% financing
1 lull bath, carport &amp; porch,
• Less than perlect credit In lown, nice neighborhood,
accepted
dose 10 high school, $400
' Paymonl could bo tho
$
1 1 de
rent
~!t~r, ::a~~· ~~age~
Mortgage
Localors. available
Sept.
81 h,
'-17_40_138_7-_oooo_-'---- 17401949_2217
HOUO&lt;J In Clition, 4br, Bath , _ - - - - - - : : - : TwoMH'sforrontBoth2BA.
Kitchen ' LMng Room $400 $4SO/rent+dep
and
month plus ulilitles or $200
every~ weeks, plu&amp; Utiltties $550/rent+dep. · Addison
"""""·Call 367·0854 or 645·
$250 Security deposit •""'
Avallabte 9-1·07 304·593· 3592
8187
APAKll\lfNfS
-:---:--:-....,---FORibNr
HUD HOMESI 3bd only t.,--iiii.iiiiiit;.._.l
S13,2SGf More 1-4bd
homn avtllablel From 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartrrients
$1N/mol
5%dn, for Rent, Meigs County, In
20yro4tll%. For llatlngo lown, No Pats, Deposit
8CJG.5511-4109 xF144
Required, (740)992·5174 or
-------11_o._ ___
_17_40_l44_1-0_
Nice 3br on' SA 160, 1 mile
from Holzer . . $650/m~ + · 1 and 2 bedroom apart~
d
0 44 5062
sac. ep. 74 • 1·
or ments, furnished and unrur•
9
2
74v-37 • 923
nlshed, and houses in
-------Oft SR 141 , 3BR, 2BA, Pom~roy and_ Mid~ledport,
appliances, basement, 1 car security deposit rf(JJ re • no
garage, $SOO/mo pll.tS pets, 740·992·2218.
d""""o~t 161 1226 0859
...,..."""'". 4
•
1 BR trl·l.evel, close to hospi·
Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt. or tal, B miles to. Rio Grande
house, partially fumished, Ref + Dep reqUired, no pets.
HUD approved., near park, 740·446•2957
no pets, {740)992-6886
2 Bdrm, downtown, renovated, lamlnalo floors, $S75 mo
Prelly, 3BR, I
Bath.
Downtown Gallipolis. Very includes water &amp; trash No
close lo Washington Elom. Pals, (740)709·1690
and GAHS. $695. No 2BR apts, 6 miles from
pets/smoking. Utilities not Holzer. $400+dep. Water,
Included. 645·6378 ask lor sewer, trash paid. 740·988·
Kelly
6130 or 740-682·9243

I

groond poolendosed by privacy fencing and land·
seeped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unaHached.
Excellent condmoo ready to
move ln. $255,000.00, can:
(740)949·2217

(304)n3-5B81
-------9 acres Baker Ad .. St7,500
080. (740)843-1047
Mobile Home lot for rent in
Point
Pleasant,
WV.
$125/mooltl + $IOO/deposl1.
Catl740-388-at28

Looking for a good pre- MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
owned home? Many to RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
choose from at The Home Rd, 441·1111
Show • Barboursville. 1·
li I \I \I "
888-736·3332

ro~

;;=::;;===:,

I

I

Trailer for Sa!e, $2,000,
1740)992·5658
-------Nice used 3 bedroom home
vinyl/Shingle. Will help with
delivery. 740·385-4387

2 BR Duplex · 644 2nd Ave

$425/mo plus deposit&amp; utili·
ties. Stove &amp; fridge, WID
hookup, No pets. Lease.
446-0332 Bam to :ipm Mon-

sat. .

same as

I

Old er frame hom e. 3BR
1BA,. LR, OR, Galley
HOl.ISIS
kitchen,
baeamonl,
FOR lbNr
.25acres, CA/hoa~ nice river
view, cily schools, asking $IN/mol Buy 3bd HUD
$54000. Call . 446-6271
ltomtl 5%dn. 20yro@8%.
• ·~ ••• '109
F.r Ulll REDUCEOI Brand ,_w xt709
·~ ~~
home in Gallipolis. 2BA,
2BA wJ3 acres rru1. $82500.
1br, House In Now Haven.
Call 740-446-7029
everything in walking d~lance, no pols, $300 month,
Save
Thousands!
Cloa•ance on lol moclels. all $300 dopos~ 304-882·3652
- - - - --1·868·736·3332. Tho~mo -2 ·bedroom executive house,
Show Barbours~llo,
R1
GO.
new construction, fully furnished, new refrigerator,
XTREME SAVINGS! Over stove, dishwasher, washer &amp;
2,000 square foot home ror dryer, large wrap around
less than $40/sq. ft. Call The porch, full basement. 1 car
Home Show • BarboursYille garage, total . electric with
at 1-888-736·3332
central air, very spaci()lls,
private drive with parking,
MORD...ESH{)PriDl $975 peJ month, setious
fOR AU
, calls only (740)949·2303

n

r

so, you

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
hoine delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

elalltpoli' lBaitp Gtrtbune
~obit tllea,ant Jlegt•ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' ottme• -6enthrel
r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __
Address _ _ __ _ __ _ __
City/State/Zip - - - - - ' - -----,--

Phone _______~-------~
Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohlci Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

••·•·••·•···•··•···•··••·····•••

olftco-

Commercial building , 'For
Rent' 11100 oquoro foot, olf
portdng. Great loca·
IIDnl ] 49 Thlnl AWiriuo .In
Gallipolis. Rent $300/IIUICal W-(404)4e6-3802
.
Prime commordol opaco tor
rent a1 SprlngvaltOy PlaZa.
CaU 645-2192.

-,
Now sola &amp; lo\/0 seat, $400,
Now Kltch&lt;ln talllo· and 4
chair $179.95. 202 Clark

'
·-ttiiiiiiii iii-,1
·
11195 GMC eo.-.lon van

llelutlful Apll. II J Eitates. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opporlunily Pro~dor and

wl-

·--

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

2001 Hartey Davison 883
Sportator, 6200 mHos,
Asking $5000. (740)245·
5984 or (740)845-4833

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit Decks

u-'-o.

··-~

"~

MaroRs
FOR S.\LE

JET
equipment. $900 · 740-446AERATION MOTORS
7318
Repaired. New &amp; Robuill In --'-c'-::---:-:--:--:--:c
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 19~9 Regal Medallion 181/2
800·537·9528.
ft, open bow $2500.00
304-n3-5070

r

...,

"':!F~.;.--~

NEW AND USED STEEL
Ste~ Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Drlveways &amp; walkway~ L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mooday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300
-------Outbuilding T111 outSide,
1 1
f 10 12 $750
sOBO
ng e (740)386
roo , 8126
1: ,
•
•
-----~-Pole Barns
30x50x10
$6,495
Free
Delivery
(937)718 1471

·

,.

MCAMPERSH &amp;

.,

I}'Wa1
r,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

7 367 544

L i!;C,t~1 c on..()tra ctor
.'IV"

740-992-5929

740-416-1698

';;;;;D-;S;S:3-:9S5;;;;~

I \ J, \1 .. , 1'1 '1 I I '
,\ I I I I .... I I II ,,

ir.j;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

Foedor Pigs tor 5alo. Call
740-441·5460

r

•oAeplaceinent
Windows
·Roofing

NOMA
26 Years Experience
IUUft

David Lewis

STYlE. ..

Free

YOUNG'S

for
S60 per

Kee... II

)II, b,1 l 71
'

'

,,, L

1\
I

&gt;I

( 1

f

!

•I

I '

{ &gt;I

'

U

VI'IUf/
IV

Stanley Tree·
TriAimlng
&amp; Removal
'Prompt

WHAT A DEAL!!

and Qualily

Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
1 Helios System ·

I

1!!1:-"""":::"'...,.. . . ..,
5
TRUCKS
..__ _fORiiiiitliiSiiAU:iiiiollltli"ol
,
2003 F-250 Super duty,
4WO, Ext Cab, 34000 miles
$16,000. 304-$75-4110

''·

"

·~

BIG NATE

•"

'.,

1111 Moncloy
ll..,..b

-·lhll--01
-·llli!M"""'
. . lhl .-.

-·..-Dolt
llillk»n;

· A-IOihoolbloof
~-_....

" ... 111011 ... J

-

pen overnight, but thlrigt will be achieved
In a relatively 8hor1 period of time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se ... 22) - Even If
9001eone yolire working with le trying to
use soma devious tactics, don't follow hie
or her lead. Continue to operate within
the high standard~ you have established
and IUCCOI8 willlollow you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Don't let
your ego getln the way and cause you to
pretend to be knowtedgeabla about
eometh~ng vou are not. You'll tMJ more

·•'
.,

..
PEANUTS
A VAPOR TRAIL GOT

SO Wf.IAT' 5 't'OllR

SORR.'t' I MISSED TI-!AT
6ALL, MANAGER.

EXCUSE Ti-115 TIME~ .

IN M'( ElfES ..

SUNSHINE CLUB

Buckle down.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20 -Feb. 19) •
Uncomfortable feelings whHe partlclpal ·
lng in a large group activtty are manufac·
lured by your own mind and not by thoas
~u're with. Get your m~nd off yourself

,,

l

BOBERT

BISSELL :
COIISTRUmll :"

11---~~~

'

Stop &amp; Compare

Mason County
Health Dept.
Men 45 Years &amp; Older in
Mason County and
surrounding counties
By appointment only
Please call

(304) 675-3050
Sponsored by
Shrikant Vaidya, MD,
PVH Laboratory and
Mason County Health
Department.

0 20:15 Hcw11 ~ Dill. by NEA. IM.

::::;::;==-~~ "'
Manlay'a ~
Racycl•na

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

GARFIELD
1'\IE OO'M"A
AIJMIT•••

Jaft2-3114
~~

THAT MOOSEHEAP TOWEL.
RACK 1..001&lt;5 CMU!AT IN
THE aATHROOM

1'----P-~

a•la·•-n.•a~~~

. . . . . . . .11:11 ..

23 W=•ooxer 27 Paue hair
4 Cone udlng
otyle
5 Jacket
28 Get the

feature

6 Kind of

ayatem

worltpiece

12 wdt.)
34 Shipping

44

Like

· 7 Skunk'a
Unden
delenae
32 Noctumal
8 Ylrll piM!Ing
predator
9 Ch•m
33 Tlllckneu

bin

10 Keato or

38 Oooategg

Byron

39 UolleeoJy
41 Becomt
f,.cl

13 Selected

35

e.g.

Movie

36 "Mup~t
Show' hoot

21 PhyelquH

24

48 Pop-top
bever"'l"
51 YlctDNin,

mogul

19 Put down

43 Wlnecnk

~field

menace
plctura
45 Fown'e
30 'thole filler
parent
31 Actor47 AG...t

53 Fix the

table

39 Karate level

Engineer'•

4D Soyo aloud

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

Ctllb1ly Oj:tw ~s n ata~t:ll!'om ~·by famOus people, pas1 and p-8111'11.
Each 1eaer mthe cipher stands 101" anolher

Tadofs clvo: Lsqus!s P

" ... SX WNPBM XYFJ,
FNWUYZ

BEE

KTY

WBXDJTBMYIYX

LSYMJ

KBZNA:

MYJOCY BLYMNKSBXJ NMY
OBXKSXCSXO."- DYBMDY ONMWSX

PREViOUS SOLUTION - "Unfonunately', we believe lhai we'VB been created
to domlnata lhe ~anet 1o donjnate nawre. Ainl ~ue .' ·Ted Danson

wm

lAM I
r::~:.' S~\\Jllv\-/&amp;~~s·
ltlla4 •r ClAY L rllllo\N . , . . - - - - -

0 f011r
hoi'rangt IItten ol tht
Krambltd wards boo
low to loim four llmplt words.

GRUSAY

ME NI C
T E BI F

·'

·-···----..1.......... :
PIYIIIGTOPIIICES. ,,.

CIIIIIUclw:allli·-111'

.

_. ... Cirnll Mill!

'

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

..

~

"Iso'l il silly to eall money
s
~ dough," lhe not so smlllt fellow
.._..._....._-~.,-J.-J ... remarlced, "when it doesn't stick lo

I I I I

I
t-"T,-r.,6,....,.,-,r:7""."TI_, e
sA B HI N

•

•

•

•

•

j'OUI··-?" ·

..._....__.,_.._.._.,...,___, .y001

•

CDnlplote lilt ellvdclo quotod
by lilling In tho mfalng worda

dO'Ie/op lrom lltp No. 3 below".

P~INT NUMBERED LUTERS I

IN THESE SQUARES

6 ~~F:~~!\~ lfTTERS TO I

REAU..V GOES WEU.. WITH THE
SNAKESKIN SHOWER CURTAIN

ARLO &amp;JANIS

PISCES (Feb. 20-Man::h 20) - Unless
an· objective ls well-defined, there Ia a
strong poseibllity that you might go to a
lot oltrouble achieving something only to
diaco\lllr It i!ln't what you want. Set wor·
thy goals.
ARIES
(March
21-Aprll 19) Unfortunately, you may have to deal with
someone who has a surly disposition.
Don't let this person start 10 push you
around. By the same token, however,
don't make ltle situatiOn 8\len WOt'le .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)- II might be
quite constructive tor you to take 801Tle
time and analyze your financial position,
especially if it's been a bit shaky lately.
You msy figure out something that will
help.
GEMINI (May 2HJune 20) Guard
against inclinations to place too much
Importance ·on your self.lntereeta while
ignoring those of others. You muat be
cooperative and supportive to wort! well
with associates.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Allow
your comp88sionate Instincts to lnflu·
ence your treatment of co-workers eo
that you don't become unduly frustrated
by an inconvenience they may lmpoN
upon you .
LEO (July :i!3-Aug. 2:i!) - Tact and diplomacy w111 achieve that which
dellre
In wwya that tleJ&lt;ing your mutclel or rala·
tng your vok:e won'l. Nice guy. and gala
always get what they wsni and nlll\'8r fin·
ilh 1111.

eci, CAl-l 'iolli/MtSI~E AI\ A~JIUT

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~~'ll~ A 11\ll~\1,
~~
~LA$1"~

r.

~Ha No CRiMiNaL
IS UNF!IMILiaR Wt"f\.1 T&gt;le
SouND Of o3 ltiMP s~ .

oFF!

.r

'

e-u-o7

Oppole- After- Naill- Helftln- A11! it UP
Olio llOilelpo to IIIOCber, •After 011' aew boa got a tute of
llllhority be llllly ATB it UP.w

vou

GRIZZWELLS

IIIIIII

SCUMUTS ANSWIIS.

and onto what they're saying.

740-992·11111

4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

respected by colleague• tr you are hon·
est with them.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - That
need for instant gratification could rear
Its ugly head again and Induce you to
buy something vour common aense aaya
you can't afford. It would be wise to Osten
SAGITIAAIUS (NoY. 23-0ec. 21) Although you don't mean 10 be, othera
oould find you too domineering and
a888rtive. If you notice them backing
away, stop and be conscious ot how you
are d&amp;aling wi1h flem.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Your
earning potential Ia actually quite go6d,
but unless you are fully prepared to worll:
for what you hope to attain, nothing will
be hal'lded to you on a ailver platter.

.

• New Homes
• Garages

query

1 SUbject lor
Kim
421nched
Keate
25 lncan treaforward
43 Shoe upover
aure

choice

to it.

• Complete
Remodeling

Prostate Exam &amp;
PSA Blood Test
September 6, 2007

Pass

41 Stranger'e

place
25llapper-

year ahead. or course, nothing will hap-

·~

45771

FREE

3•

Pu8

DOWN

material poeltlon ae well ae your pereonal affairs look q\.lfta encouraging In the

I

740-949-2217

'S7 IAother
punch

Pass

59 ncket Info

30 Nonunion

The po88lbilitles br strengthening your

'Insured

29670 Bashan Road

AllpaS8

Palls

Elll

Talee tho

but
57 Wk. day
58 Vapor

rrtOI1 of

4•

Nonh

protector
56

18 AV8111DC1Ht
20 Vigorous
22 Nothing II
Ill
23 Crlea
24 Stopa up
27 Miele the

· llot&gt;l
••• 20117
av Bernloe
8ede
Oeol

,
'Yolllfq jabo_ond_
w..__

*Reasonable Rates

Hill's Sel f
Storage

14 Clnemu
rtval
15 Techle
16 Piglet' I
friend
17 Doll loll

Dbl.

West

Aphrodhe'o

oon

12 HNYY-motal 54 Mine yield
band
55 Field

,.

S..tb

........ lhdott:

446-0007

• 740-742,2293
Please leave messa e

,_

29Travel

AstroGraph

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

'Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

Q" 8
8 5

.
e

.'

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1966 Dodge Coronet, 4 dr.,

r

.,·

r'1amihJ- c~e&gt;lf':P.Jf'l'"'lri~4':":..•

03 Chevy Cavalier $4500,
call740·256·6169.

COOK MOTORS
2006 Coball 24k $6900
2002 Cavalier 49k $4300
2002 Grand Prix 44&gt; $4900
20 others In stodl: starting at
$1400 to $7900. 3 month.
3000 mile warranty. Stop or
call Cook Motors 740-4460103

F~'I'OU!

Pomeroy, OH

1

Work

---,---til--, .ro_...!-·ur'-AIE....

Tara
Townhouse
Aparttnents, Very Spadous.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $42M.4o.
No Pets, Lease Plus
SEq.trtty Deposit Required,
(740)446-3481 .
------Twin Rivers Tower Is accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
apartment,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
Opportunily

~-I.
I".ULII"\'P61C..\~

i·

.'
•'

"N-TE.IZ. f&gt;..i.L, 'I'OU ~I\CULl&gt;~

..

Racine, Ohio

97 Camaro RS, wht wlblk
racing stripes/racing spoiler.
LooksJruns good. Priced to
sell $2800! 304-634·6523

&amp;. ~ U~l f&gt;..WUi ""''

1'\'i LliTLE.E~,
C.I-\IEF ...

month

We Deliver To You!

V.C YO UNG Ill
)Ill( I

P'"00\o\'\

740-985·385 1

• ~yl Siding I Painting
• Ptdo and Porch Dec:kl
WV038725

p

...•

Shade River AI· Service

·New Oantge~
• Eltctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Aooftng 6 GuHers

\" 1'1 111 1 \I II 1\

Nice 1 br. appliances turn.,
$350.00 + dep.nesr PPHS
304-675-3100 or 304-$75·
5509.

•

Advertise "'. .
"
in this
'"'''
•
•
space

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

• Room AddHIOn1 &amp;
Remodeling

IIAY&amp;
GRAIN

318, 85,000 org. miles, very
good cond. $1200. 304-773·
5070
Middleport, Beech Sl., 2 br.
furnished apt, ulllllies pd.,
dep. &amp; ref., no pets, 1992 Cadillac DeVille ·
Excellent Condition, $2700 ·
(740)992·0165
740-446-7318
Middleport, North 41h Ave., 2
br. furnished apt., dep. &amp; 1996 Monte Carlo 1 owner
ref., no pots, (740)992.0165 Silver, loaded runs good
304-n:J-5244
New 2BR apartments. - - - - - - - Washer/dryer
hookup, 2002 Ford Taurus, 3 liter,
stove/refrigerator included. auto, air, 140.000 miles.
Also, urlls on SR 180. Pals runs good $2,600 304·882·
Welcomel (740)441 ·0194.
3652

...'

Why drive anywhere else

CARPENTER
SERVICE

r:'(J'D
rl 1\

'.

..'

'Iliumph 12% Horse Feed ......$5.99/50 lb •.
Sportsmlx Dog Food ll-8 ........... $~.99/50
S.UltEA ....................$199/lon Bulk Only
Prlerert Powder Coated Gales '
10ft. $53.00
14ft. $75.00
12ft. $$65.00
16 II $83.00 .

740-992-6971

Round bales for sale. $25 a
bale, Caii74D-992·3639
I I ~\

Groclouo Uvlng I and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
S592. 740·992·5084. Equal
Housing Opportunily.

• Vinyl Siding

7 ••

~

going to ""' these weapons, you must
have eome way to doland yourself lhls week's topic.
Tha first key point islhat Wyou comolnlo
the auctloo, you assume your partner
has six or seven hiQtl-card points and
base your actions on lhal. Hha is weak·
er, n Is his laun N you get too hlghl
sm-.rly, wyour partner enlers 1!10 aucllon, ~nco he will uaume you have ~x
or seven polnls, you must not leap
around like lhe lambs In springtime"
unless you have a Irick rnorelhan lhat10 or 11 points.
Tho primary weapon is a takeout dooble.
If an opponent . opens at the 1w0- or
thrao-lovol, double oayslhat you have at
leasl opening-bid strength, lhat you are
short In tho opane~s slit, and thai you
have length (usually alleast throe cardo)
In alllhree unbid suit&amp; Panrtef picks one
of those suns, or bids no-trump Nho has
stoppers in lha opane~s sun end a
desire to play in lhal strain, or passes
with .....,ral decent t~.
In ltis deal, after East's threHiub open·
lng and IWo passes, North make&amp; a take·
out double, Soutl1 adVances with three
spades, and North raises to game
bacausa 1t1a11s where ha wlshas to play
opposite six or seven points and lour·
plusapados.
West leads lho club two to East's ace.
Whal shoold East do .nf."NII
Since East must try tor three last hean
tricks, he should load his heart 10, hoping his pa~ner hss tha A.Q.J. Hera,
Easl's fuel&lt; Is oul, bul he has tho sal"·
lactlon of ha~ng made a good play.

-··
'.

J&amp;L
Construction

•
•

783

~

11 Coloeeaum,

Last week, we looked at opening pre·

'
v•

.

10

K J

thing

50 - . article

""1'!ive bida. But ~ your opponenls are

.,·,

742·2332

Vtvtr I nttJI1

.

'

. •'

!

•

•

J 10

How to Labor (Day)
against pre-empts

..•

• Garage•
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
Owner:

Sj'IIHrTLJ.'/1.11'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.,

Ja11181

9t 2

Opening lead: • 2

-·...

·Decks

AS
ntt

..' ..
'

~=~!z:==~~~~~~~~~

.

Dealer: East

.."

H..tfonest

Australian Shepherd pupplos, Black &amp; Whne and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)24&amp;-5964 .or (740)646·
4833

A K

2

Vulnerable: Both

•'

MurraJ,

wv

•

~

•

-

Crtiflsm4n,
MTD,Brlgg&amp;
.&amp;StNiton

M""" Golf c...,.
Haf\'ey R&lt;*t

5
10 3 2
7 .4

...••
•

3414-773-5861
JI4..882.3Z94
Sel'l'lcing
lAwn 7'nldon,
Mown, nurrr.,l

.I.so Rood on 1&lt;11- ·

•
•
•

~

MOWER

AKC Sholllo Collie pups,
$300, AKC Peklngosa $350,
1101 chocked. 740·256-1664

AQ 8 t

••

•

to Years

•

S..l~

•

~~ty

Eul

• 3 2

•

'\

""',

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnlshod. Established 1975.
Coil 24 Hrs. (740) 446'
0870 , Rogers Basemonl

West
•

••

N

·---·~iii'"""ij'·iiiio"".,J

Selmer
AS210
Allo
Saxophone with case.
Excollonl condffioo. $2100
new sell tor $900 339-2237

MONTY

"' .
""

Roofing, Siding, Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
74
7

HOME

·-~~
""''"~"~"·

•

..

g 1.
A K J 10 3

.Q

•
"
"

Seamless Gutters

Waterproofing ..

r

-•

H&amp;H

IMPRO...........,...

WHAT

'

••

All types of conctete
Owner· Rick Wise

Ylfllo

8 Fall guy

• A KQJ
•
•

44 Trlnktta

46 Feecle the
kitty

5 Sign 1111ore 48 t..wver'•

N- . .,. .,

Wise Concrete

G
I
Utter ng

m:---~------.,

Miniature Pincher Pups, 2
BlacluTan females, $300
each. 8 weeks old.
(740)388-6124

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

':=::;;:;;;::::~
r

'1 1n 1r 1-...

CKC Miniature Pinschers
Puppies, Shots, Wormed,
$300. Mother &amp; Father also
for sale. (740)368·8786

rJ=amihJ
•·m·mu•,
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Free Estimates

740.367..0536

OIUR OMPS
I
I
95 30ft Fleetwood Terry,
excellent cond, Sleeps 6-8,
Call 740·266-8729 or 740577·7829

jo

'

D

I

14'JohnBoat,lrolllngmotor,
trailer. Call740-256·1962
16' Boat motor trailer W/

MolcHANolsE

'

Doers, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

t.,_______i1frl.

=======-

(304)882·3017

..__ ......

~..:::---

.

•
hookup, stove, fridge furnished. 740·441·3702 or 763 Bobcal Skid loader,
740-286-5789
Kubota Diesel Engine,
$9,000- will consider pa~ial
. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT-. lrade. 740 2-4202
ED &amp; o\FFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small hOuoos FOR ..__ _ _ _ _ _tpl
RENT. Call (740)441·11 11
for applicalion &amp; lni9rmallon. Black Show Pigs, Sows,
Gilts ~ Boars for sale .
(740)441·1013

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer·hookup
•Tenant pays electric

,..._

Coinplole n.o C..

M&lt;m:JtCYcusf
4 WllliiiDIS

BoATS &amp;

•RENfALS •SALF.S
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

SiniiCi

2500 ~
wfloet.
ch8lr 1ft 88,000 mlloo, 5.7
Iller-engine, • coplaln cl1alnl
new tires to mal1'j extra's Ia
1181 7500.~75-7302

I
i.

E~loyor.
r·o -~
Closs lo college, 2BR WID ,

Ellm VIew
Apartments

J.ObO!QD1'Tr!t

1 lmpulu

.

rT-~~~~~~

Chapel Rd. Bidwell, OH 2005 H.O.Fal Boy custom
1 740 1~ 173 Mon-Fri 9• · maroon
wlomboseed
r5al9a·ap.
!tam I of 200
de 1100
es,
ma '
•~~
miles since
now,prlco
~·""'~
$19,000 OBO call for
..__ _ _ _ _ _... dotails-740- 949.2217 .
Anllqu&amp; barber chairs, bar·
bor polo, coke, scales, signs
and misc. 40 992-4197 ·

Phillip
Alder

..

I

llol&amp;mul
'"--•'iGoomiiiiii-_.1

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

Miniature Pinscher CKC
Reg. Black Jrust, 1 F $300 3
M
$250. 6wks old.
Wormed,shots, tails docked.
740-367..0210 if no ·answer
2br. Apt on 51h Street Pl. leave message.
Pleasant $375 ask for Con
(304)612-4350
Puppies for SaloiiFull blOOd·
- -- - - - - - ed GcMden Retrievers. No
Apartment for rent, 1-2 papers . .~ $ 1 50. 740 _992 _
Bdrm., remodeled, new car. pet, stove &amp; frlg ., water, ~ 55 ·
sower, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pels. Rot.
required. 740-843-5264.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85
B_
RIDGE

1100 Squale fMt
for rent. Eutern Avenue,
Galllpolla_. 74G-446-! 178.

Moa.u ~ Ir•o

0265

thla ••• paper are

i

i

740·388-7447
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
1exeo with vinyt/shlngle.
Must .,.1, Only $25,99S with
delivery. Caii(740)3B5·4367
- -- - - - - New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month , Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
sel-up. (740)385·2434

www.mydallysentlnel.com

"

�..

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Long Beach Poly Tech,. CalK. 21 ,
Florida at Washington. 7:05p.m.
PREP FOOTBALL
Cle. Glenville 13
N.Y. Mala at ClnclnnaU, 7:to p.m.
Saturday's Boxacore I Matewa,n. W.Va. 36, Willow Wood ::~:~atf~~= ;:g: g~
\
I Symmes Valley 34 .
.
L.A. Dodgoro at Chtalio c;...s, 8:05
Poclh91ltas County 49
Mlsston VteJO, Caltl. 26, Ctn . l p.m.
Southern 8 I
'
Moeller 22
. .
Pittsbu.gh at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
1

Poe. County 21 21
Southern
0 0

7 0 _
0 8 _

49

8

"

Norwalk St. Paul 34, Tifton Calve~
21
,
Pocahontas County, W.Va . 49,
Racone Soutltem 8
Roci&lt;y River 24, Gartield Hls. Trinity
10
.
Shaker Hts. 34, Cle. Colltnwood 7
Steubenville Cath . .C..nt. 27, Akr.
East 20
Sugar Grove Berne Union 42 ,
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 6
'T'hornville Sheridan 48 Zanesville
Maysville 0
'
U . . Okl 01 C
M K' 1 0
mon,
a. 0 • an. C on ey
Youngs. Mooney 27, Gataway, Pa.

1

,
I

Scoring oummory

Firat Quatter
PC--I&lt;el&gt;daJI Beverage 15 run
(Michael Callison kid&lt;) 10:36
PC Beverage 3 run (Callison
kick) 5 43
;
PC-&lt;:aHison 11 pass from
Faulknier (Callison kick) 2:52
Second Quarter
PC-&lt;:yrus Bennett t8 run
(CBIIIson kick) 11 :14
PC-8ennett 9 run (Callison kick)
3:09
PC-&lt;: Ill
(C II'
k' k)
a son 35 run
a !Son tc
1:25

Third Quarter
PC-8ennett 2 run (Callison kid&lt;)
3:04
Fourth Quarter
PC-Eric Buzzard 18 pe~s from

;
1

I
,

6

•

PC
15

300

92
392
6·12·3
3·3
Pana~les·yards . 3·25

6
50

41
91
5·18· 1

1-1
5·53

Individual Statistics
Ruohlng: PC-Cyrus Bennett 15·
173, Kendall Beverage 7·54,
Michael Callison 2-44.
s-Greg Jenkins 12·32, Eric
Buzzard 4-22.
P&amp;Hing: PC-Faulknier 6-12-3
92.
$-Dustin Salsar 5·7·0 18, Ryan
Chapman 1·6-110, Jordan Tayloro-

5-o 0 .
R-Iving: PC-Cyrus Bennett 5·
42, Totten 1-40.
$-Eric Buzzard 3·31 , Sean
Coopld&lt; 1-1

o.

I

PREP FOOTBALL
· Beachwood 20, Cle. East 12
Bowerston Conotton Valley 38,
Bellaire St. John 13
Cln. Colerain 20, Hoover. Ala: 17
Gin.
Elder
41,
Charlotte
Independence, N.C. 34, OT
Cin. Finneytown 31, Cln. Shroder
12
Cin. Withrow 47, Mount Vernon, Ill.
21
'Cin. Woodward 20, Day. Belmont
16
Cle. St. Ignatius 36, Cle. JFK 0
Cuyahoga Hts. 27, Cle. Rhodes
Dey. Northridge 46, Day. Jefferson
22
Grove City Christian 24, Marion
Cath. 18
Hunting Valley University 21 , Cle.
VASJ 17
.
lndpls Cathedral, Ind. 7, Cin. La
Salle6

a

~buBLES-Holllday.

Colorado, 44:
Uggla, Florida, 43: Utley, Philadelphia.
42; HaRamlrez, Florida, oiO: AdClonzatez.
San Diego, 39; FSanchez, Pittsburgh,
38; CaLH, Houston, 38.
TRIPLE5-Rolllns, Philadelphia, t6;
JBAeyes, New York, 11; Johnson,
Atlanta, tO; Amezaga, Florida, 9;
OHudson, Arizona, 8; Harris, Atlanta, 8.
HOME RUN8-Fielder, Milwaukee, 40;
Howard, Philadelphia, 36; Dunn,
Cincinnati, 36; MICebrera, Florida, 3t;
Pulols, St. Louis, 30; Griffey Jr.,
Cincinnati, 29; CBYoung, Arizona, 28;
Uggla, Florida, 26.
,
STOLEN BASEs-JBReyes, New York,
74; Pierre, Los Angeles, 53; HaRamirez,
Florida, 43; Byrnes, Arizona, 39;
Victorino, Philadelphia. 34; Wright, Naw
Yolk, 30; Taveras, Colorado, 30.
PITCHING (14 Declelons)--Harang,

7~

16:&gt;
16~

GB
1h
2
9
10
11 ~

GB
4
5

13~

saturday's Gamet

Cincinnati. 14-3, .824, 3.51; Penny. Los

Angeles. 14-4, .776, 2.88; Peavy, San
Diego, 16-5, .762, 2.10; Hamels.
Philadelphia, 14·5, .737, 3.50; BSheets,
Milwaukee, 11·4, .733, 3.30; Billingsley,

Chicago Cubs 4, Houston 3
N.Y. Mets 5, Adanta 1
Florida 12, Philadelphia 8
Milwaukee 12, Pittsburgh 3
Washington 4, San Francisco 1
S1. Louis 11, Cincinnati 3
Arizona 13, Colorado 7

Los Angeles, 10.4, .714, 3.30; CVargas,
Milwaukee, 1().4, .714, 5.13.

STRIKEOUT5-Poavy, San Diogo,
206; Webb, Arizona, 177; Harang,
Cincinnati, 174; RHIII, Chicago, 159;
Smoltz,
Atlanta,
159;
~amel s,

Sunday'• G1mes
N.Y. Mets 3, Atlanta 2 ·
Florida 7, Philadelph ia~?
Washington 2, San Francisco 1
Milwaukee 7, Pittsburgh 4
St. Louis 3, Cinclnn"atl 2
Chicago Cubs 6. Houston 5
L.A. Dodgers 5. San Diego o
Colorado 4, Arizona 3
Monday'• Gamea

Philadelphia, 156; Snell, Pittsburgh, 151 .
SAVE5-Vatverde,

Arizona,

41 ;

FCordero, Milwaukee, 39; Saito, los
Angeles, 36; Hoffman, San otego, 36;
8Wagner, New York, 30; CCordero,

Washington, 29: Weathars, Cincinnati,
29.

Philadelphia (Moyer 12-10) at Atlanta
(Cormier 1-4), 1:05 p.m.
{VandenHur·k
4·4)
at
Florida
Washington (Bergmann 2-5), 1;05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Martinez ().()) at Cincinnati

(Harang 14-3), 1:15 p.m.

American League
Eoll Dlvlolon
W L Pet
Boston
82 55 .599
NowYork
76 61 .555
Toronto

Houston {Oswalt 14-6) at Milwaukee

(Sheets 11-4), 2:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Snell 8·11) at St. louis

(K.Wells 6·15), 2:15p.m.
San Francisco (Cain 7-13) at Colorado
(Francis 14-6), 3:05p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Loaiza H)) at C~loago

Cubs !Zambrano 14-11), 4:05 p.m.
San Diego (Maddwc 10-9) at Arizona

(Owings 6·7), 4:40p.m.
·
'IUeaday's Game•

Dunn , Cincinnati, 93.

1

GB
4

San Diego 7, LA Dodgers 0

Saturday's scores

95; MiCabrera, Florida. 94;

HIT5-Hollklay,
Colorado,
182;
HaRamirez, Florida, 179; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 178; JBReyes, New York,
169: FSanchez, PlttsbUrg/1 , 164; Pie••·
Los Angeles, 164; Francoeur, Aflanta.

Notional L.Hgua
Eoll Dlvlalon

s

TOOAV'SNIIA~.~.'!.,EULEADEE
RS
"~ ~

I

•

PRO BASEBALL
New York
~ ~ ~~9
Philadelphia 72 64 .529
Atlanta
69 88 .504
Florida
so 77 .438
Washington so 77 .438
Contnol Dlvlolon
W L Pet
Chicago
70 65 .519
Milwaukee
69 67 .507
St. Louis
67 66 .504
Cincinnati
62 75 .453
Houston
61 76 .445
Plt1sburgh
59 77 .434
Wn1 Dlvtolon
W L Pc1
Arizona
76 62 .551
San Diego
75 61 .551
Los Angeles 71 65 .522
Colorado
70 66 .515
San Francisco62 75 .453

San Franct.co at eotor,do, 8:35p.m.
S!lll Otego at Arizona, 9:ol0 p.m.

I Colorado,

1

Dustin Seiser (Salser run) 3:42
Firat Downs
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att·int
Fumbles-lost

Rosecrans

I Portsmouth Notre Dame 0
·

i

BATTING-Ifolllday, Colorado, .337;
Utley, Philadelphia, .336; Renteria,
AUanta, .336: HaAamtrez, Florida. .333;
DYoung, washington, .333; CJones,
Atlanta, .326; MICabrera, Florida, .318;
ARamirez, Chk:ago, .318.
.
RUNs-Rollins, Phlladelphoa, 1t9;
HaRamlrez, Flonda, 105; JBReyes, Naw
York, ,102; Uggla, Florida, 94; Wright,
New York, 93; Holliday, Colorado, 92;
BPhillips, Cincinnati, 92.
RBI-Howard, Philadelphia, 111 ;
Holliday, Colorado, 108; CaLee, Houston,
36, ' 104; Foetder, t.Uwaukee, 99; Atl&lt;lns,

.

, Zanesvolle

.
PageB~

70

66 .515

ClB

6

11 ',;,
22

Baltimore
59 76 .437
Tampa Bay 56 61 .409 26
Central Dhrlolon
W
L Pet
CJB
Cleveland
76 58 .574
Oetmlt
73 64 .533 5 ~
Minnesota
69 68 .504 9~
Ka1168s City 61 75 .449 17
Chloago
58 79 .423 20'/,
W.ot Dlvlolon
W
L
Pet
GB

Loa Angeles. so
Saante
73

56 .593
62 .541

Detroit, 15·5, .750, .3.87; Byrd.
Clevel!llld, 14-5, .737, 4.19: Wang. New
York, 16-8, .727, 3.79; Boeketl, Boator1,
16-8, .727, 3.29; Bedard , Baltimore, 135, .722, 3.t6; Marcum. Toronto, 12-5,
.705, 3.75; Haren, Oekland, 14-6,-.700,
2.87; Hal-y, Toronto, 14-6, .700, 3.87.
STRIKEOIJTs-Badard, Baltimore,

7

·Oakland

68

70 .493

13 ~

'Toocaa

62

73 .,59

16

hturdoy'o Gamet
Minnesota 6, Kan&amp;ao City ~
N.Y. Yankseo 9, Tampa Bay 6
Toronto 2. S..111e 1
Detroit 6, Ooktand 1
Texaa 7; L.A. Angels 6
Boston 10, Baltimore 0

Oakl!llldB, Datrolt 7, 10 Innings
T011as at L.A Angats, 8:05p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 10-7) at N.Y.
Yankees (Clemens 6-5), 1:05 p.m.

Cleveland (Sabathla 15-7) at Mimesota
(J.Santana 14-10), 2:10p.m.
5·6)

at

Boston

(Matsuzaka 13·11), 7:05p.m.
Ba~l mo re (Birklna H ) at Tampa Bay
(Shlelda10-8), 7:10p.m.
Kansas City (Greinke 5·5) at Texas (Loa
6·10), 8:05p.m.
Oakland (Gaudin 10.9) at L.A. Angola
(Santana 5-12), 9:05p.m.
TUaadoy'a Clameo
Toronto at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Seanta at N.Y. Yankaea, 7:05 p.m.
Chk:ago While SOx at De1roit, 7:05p.m.
BaKimore ~~ Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Texaa, 8:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Minnesota, 8:10p.m.
Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
TODAV'S MAJOR LEAGUE LI!ADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-MOrdonez , Detroit, .355;
!Suzuki, Seattle, .350; Polanco, Detro11,
.343; Figgins, Loa Angelos, .335; Lowell,
Boston, .329; VCluerrero, Los AngeH!s,
.329; Pcsada, New York, .329.
RUN5-ARodrlguez, New York, 123;

••

York, 7; Teahan, Kansas City, 7; Crisp,
Boston, 7; MByrd, Texas, 7; !Suzuki,

Delaware St. 23, Coastal Carolina 18!
Delta St. 27, Jackson St. 15

,.,.,..

1 Florida 49, W. Kentucky 3
·r
1
Florida Atlantic 27, Middle Tennessee 14

Top 25 F1Nid
No. 1 Southern Cal (1 -0) beat Idaho 38·
10. Next: at No. 20 Nebraska, Sept. 15. I

Furman 40, Presbyterian 16
Georgia 35, Oklahoma St 14

No. 2 LSU (1.0) boat Mississippi State. I Grambling S).31 , Alcorn St. 10
Kentucky 50, E. Kentucky 10
Tech, Saturday.
Uberty 38. Tusculum 14
No. 3 West Virginia (1..()) beat Western 1 Louisiana Tech 28, Cent. Arkansas 7
45-0, Thursday. Next: vs. No. 9 Virginia

Michigan 62·24. Next: at Marshall,
1
Saturday.
·
No. 4 Texas (1.0) beat Arkansas State I
21·13. Next: vs. No. 22 TCU, Saturday. I

No. 5 Michigan (0.1) loot Appalachian

I

MVSU 16, .A.rk.-Pine BILJff 9
Maryfand 31, VIllanova 14
"
McNeese st. 35, Portland St. 12
Miami 31 . Marshall 3

SPORTS
.

$1 million Southern grant to benefit Meigs, Eastern

• Rivalry Week: River
Valley at Meigs. ·
SeePage 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

Mississippi 23, Memphis 21
.
State 34--32. Next: vs. Oregon, Saturday. · NorfOlk St. 33, VIrginia St. 7
No. 6 Florida (1-0) beat Western
North Carolina 37, James Madison 14
Kentucky 49-3. Next: vs. Troy, Saturday.
Northwestern St. 41, Henderson St. 8
No. 7 Wisconsin (1.0) beat Washington
South carolina 28. Loolelana·L.afayett&amp; 14
State ~2-21 . Next: a1 UNLV. Saturday.
South Florida 28, Elon 13
No. a Oklahoma (1-0) beat North Texas
Southern Miss. 35, Tsnn.·Mar!n 13
79-10. Next: ve. Miami; Saturday.
Southern u. 33, Florida A&amp;M 27
No. 9 Virginia Tech 11-01 boat East
The Citadel 35, Charleston Southern 14
Carolina 17-7. Next: at No. 2 LSU,
UCF 25, N.C. State 23
•
Saturday.
VMI 20, Lock Haven 0
No. 10 Louisville {1 -0) beat Murray
Vanderbiit41, Richmond 17
State 73·10, Thursday. Next: vs. Middle
Virginia Tech 17, East Carolina 7
...,.
Tenns88ee, Thuraday.
Winston-Salem 28, N. Carolina A&amp;T 7•.
• No. 11 Ohio State (t-O) boat
Wofford 38, Georgetown, Ky. 21
Youngstown State 38-6. Noxt vs. Akron,
MIDWEST
Saturday.
Akron 22, Army 14

RACINE - The Southern
Local School District is one
of 16 grantees across the
nation to be awarded a $1
million Grant to Reduce
Alcohol Abuse (GRAA)
which will benefit not only
students at Southern but students in the Meigs and
Eastern · Local. School
Districts.
Southern will place a prevention specialist in each
district, al)d administer the
grant to provide services for
all siudepts in Meigs
County. The grant is for
three years 'and the administrative team at Southern
wants to be very clear that
this grant is not just an alcohol prevention grant but
includes curriculum on

..

No. 12 California {1-Q) beat No. 15
Granderson, Detroit, 104; Sizemore, Tennessee 45·31. ·Next: at Colorado
Cleveland, 102; MOrdonaz, Detroit, _102; State, Saturday.
BAbreu, New York, 101; Ak:ls, Toronto, · No. 13 Georgia (1.0) beat Oklahoma
State 35-14. Next: vs. South Carolina,
98; OOrtlz, Boston, 98.
RBI- ARodrlguez, New York, 129; Saturday.
No. 14 UCLA (1 -0) beat Stanford 45-17.
MOrdonez. Detroit, 120; VGuerrero, Los
Angeles, 109; Lowell, Boston, 97: Next: vs. BYU, Saturday.
No. 15 Tennessee (0-1) lost to No. 12
Morneau, Minnesota, 96; VMartinez,
Cleveland, 96; CPena, Tampa Bey, 96: California 45·31 . Next: vs. Southe rn
Miss., Saturday.
THunter, Minnesota, 96.
No. 16 Rutgera (Hl) boat Bullalo 38-3,
HITS-ISuzukl,
Seattle,
196;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 182; Jeter, NewYo~k, Thursday. Next: vs. Navy, Friday.
No. 17 Penn State (1 ·0) beat Florida
175; Polanco, Detroit, 169; CraWford,
Tampa Bay, 168; Alas, Toronto, 167; International 59..0. Next vs. Notre Dame,
OCabrera, los Angeles, 167.
Saturday.
No. ,a Auburn (1-Q) best Kansas Slate
OOUBLE5-VCluemaro, Los ·Angelos,
45; MOrdonez, Detroit, 44·; OOrtlz, 23-13. Next: vs. SOuth Florida, Saturday.
No. 19 Florida State (0.0) did not play.
Boston, 41 ; THunter, Minnesota, 39;
BRoberts, Baltimore, 38; Markalds, Next: at Clemson, Monday.
Baltimore, 37; AHill, Toronto, 37.
No. 20 Nebraska (1-Q) beat Nevada 52*
TAIPLEs-Grandereon, Cetroll, 21; 10. Next: at Wake Forest. Saturday.
Crawford, Tampa Bay, 9; CGuillen,
No. 21 A'rkansas (1.0) boat Troy 46·26.
Detroit, 9; lwamura, Tampa Bay, 8; . Next: at Alabama, Sept. 15.
No. 22 TCU (t.Q) beat Baylor 27.0.
MeCabrera, New York, 6; Cano. New
Seattle, 7.

Next: at No.4 Texas, Saturday.
· No. 23 Hawaii (1-0) be.at Northern
Colorado 63-6. Next: at louislan Tech,

HOME RUN5-ARodrlguez, New York,
45; CPena, Tampa Bay, 34; Morneau,
Minnesota, 29; Konerko, Chicago, 27;
THunter, Minnesota, 27; DOrtlz, Boston,
26; MOrdonez, Detroit, 26; Dye, Chk:ago,
26.
STOLEN BASES-Craw1ord, Tampa

Saturday.
No. 24 Boise State (1..Q) beat Weber
State 56·7, ' Thursday. Next: at
Wash;!ngton, Salurday.
NO. 25 Texas A&amp;M ('1 ·0) beat Montana
State 38·1. Ne)(t: vs. Fresno State,
Saturday.

Bay, 46;

I

COLLEGE FOOTBALL I

Mond.Y'• Games

(lltsch

1

Deyton 23, RObert Morris 12
Fordham 27, Rhode Island 23
tona 14, Delaware Valley 12
Latayene 49, Marlst 10
Malne21 , Monmouth, N.J. 14 ,
Massachusetts 40, Holy Cross 30
Penn St. 59, Fla. lntornatiooal 0
Pittsb&lt;J.gh 27, E. Michigan 3

B\Ish.envisions posSibl~
troop cutbacks but
gives no timetable, A2

BRoberts, Baltimore, 39;

!Suzuki, Seattle, 37; CPatterson,
Baltimore, 36; Figgins, Los Angeles, 34;

Sizemore, Cleveland, 29; Jlugo, Elo!!IOn,
28.
PITCHING (14 Der:lsions)-Verlander,

i Appalachian St. 34, Michigan 32
Bowling Green 32, Minnesota 31 , OT •'
Butler 42, Albion 14
..,.
Georgia Tech 33, Notre Dame 3
Indiana 55, lndiaM St. 7
1
Iowa 16, N.lllinois 3
1 Kansas 52, Cent. Michigan 7

Michigan St. 55, UAB 18
, Missourl40, Illinois 34
I Nebraska 52, Nevada 10
Northwestern 27, Northeastern
1

I

Ohio 36, Gardner-Webb 14
Ohio St. 3B, Youngstown St. '6
Purdue 52, Toledo 24

o

i . ValparaiSo 28, St. Francis, Ill. 21

I

Wisconsin 42, Washington St. 21
SOUTHWEST
. Arkansas 46, Troy 26

·".

..

Nicholls St. 16, Aloe 14
TCU 27, Baylor 0
Tarleton Sl.27, Stephen F.Austln 24, OT
Texas 21, Arkansas St. 13
· Texas A&amp;M 38, Montana St. 7
I Texas St. 38, Cal Poly 35
UTEP 10. New Mexico 6
FAR WEST
Air Force 34, S. Carolina St. 3
Arizona St. 45, San Jose St. 3
BYU 20, Arizona 3
California 45. Tennessee 31
Colorado 31, ColoJado St. 28, OT
Fresno St. 24, Sacramento St. 3
Hawaii 63, N. Coiorftdo 6
Montana 37, S. Utah 17
Oregon 48, Houston 27
S!!n Diego 42, Azusa Pacific 32
Southern Cal 38, Idaho 10

UCLA 45, Stanford 17
Wyoming 23, Virginia 3

INSIDE

Girl Power!·

• Tourists flee as
Hurricane Felix nears
Honduras' Misktto Coast
with category-4 winds.
See Page A2
• Favoritism leaves
children upset.
See P.age A3
o Unusual tomato.
See Page A3
lristitute
has too few
'
Stl.idents to remain open.
See Page A3
o Fire officials: Explosion
destroys plant's
warehouse; no injuries.
See Page A3
• PERSPECTIVE:
Appalachi!m governor
remembers his coal roots.
See Page A5
• Newly released
courts-martial documents
show pattern of disregard
by troops for rules of war.
See Page A5
o Records: Death
sentence chances slim in
slain pregnant woman
case. See Page AS
o Ohio State to spend $2
million to remodel
prEbident's house.
Page A6

Sf

WEATHER

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MS 180C-BE
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MS 270STitL
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STIHL Easy2Start"syS1em makes
starting almoSl effortlau

AdYanced anti-vibration svstom
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Eltcluslve toolleu Quiett Chain Adjuster
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Slda access c~ain tensloner and
lntaiiiC.rb" compensating carburetor

GET GEARED UP ••. with tffordablt STIHL protective wear!

Fully Assembled and Serviced.

INDEX
2 SEcrtONS ~ 12 PAGFS

stihlusa.com

drug-use prevention, character education and three
GRPA standards for which
the district wiU be judged.
"I am anxious to start programming drug and alcohol
abuse preventions in our student population, and I excited to see us providing outreach to the community
through the Communities
Mobilizing for Change on
Alcohol (CMCA) in all of
our districts in Meigs
Co\lnty,"
Superintendent
Tony Deem said. "The grant
gave us the resources to help
all students in Meigs
County. I felt expanding
CMCA to the other schools
was important and was
money that was better spent.
If it helps the county, it also
helps Southern. Mr. Buckley
and Mr. Edwlu'ds were very
receptive of the idea, and I

appreciate their efforts to
work together in serving all
students of the county."
The grant is administered
from
the
Federal
Department of Education
and this summer Deem and
Southern
Administrative
Assistant Scott Wolfe traveled to Washington, DC for
four days to attend an orientation meeting on the grant
which is formally known as
the
Southern Alcohol
Prevention Initiative (SAPI).
One teacher and three prevention specialists will also
be hired through the grant.
Raberta Hill has been hired
as
the Project SAPI
Coordinator, while Wolfe
serves as grant administrator
and project director.
"I am honored this opportunity arose for me," Hill
said. "It is always great for a

person to be able to go back
to his alma-matre and serve
its youth. This will be a personal challenge for me , and
a great opportunity for our
students."
Southern ·will also initiate
the "Reconnecting Youth"
(RY) program which will
begin in January for youth in
grades nine-12 who are atrisk or exhibit multiple
behavior challenges. It uses
a partnership model in volving peers, school personnel,
and parents to deliver interventions · that
address
decreased drug and alcohol
involvement,
increased
school performance. and
decreased· emotional distress. The class will be given
for credit and will be by
invitation only.
The
third
program
Southern will imtiate is

"Class Action" which will
combine li fe-skills, alcohol
and drug prevention, and
social studtes. The course
will present accounts of the .
legal system. and actually
engage students in mock·
trial activities.
Project director Wolfe
noted, "This may be one of
the biggest opportunities
that our school district has
ever seen. It provides a time
for all types of "life's little
lessons" that often don't get
taught today, either at school
because we are teaching
solely to the standards or at
home because of our fast
paced life styles."
· Wolfe added the grant is
significant not only in monetary terms but its ability to
provide five new jobs and to

Pl1ase see Grant. AS

Oklahoma 79, North Texas 10 '
Prairie Viaw 34, Texas Southern 14

~-~n ~chit:liAg

One of our most popular

A new twist to.
highway sound
walls: they're going
see-through, A6

221 ; JoSantana, M•nnesota, 200; l(azmtr,
Stony Brook 35, Georgetown; D.C. 28•
Tampa Bay, 194; S,bathia, Clevelard, . West Virginia 62, W. Michigan 24 •
176; Matsuzaka, Boston, 174; Shields, 1
SOUTH
Tampa Bey, 188; JVazquez, Chloago. 1 Alabama 52, W. Carolina 6
h
163.
.
1 A laba'tna A&amp;M 49, Tennessee St 23
SAVES- Borowskl, Clevel ~n d , 39; , Alabama St. 24, 'JacksonVille St. 19
Putz, Seattle, 37; Jenks, ChiCago, 36;
Auburn 23. Kansas St. 13
_:.:
FrRodriguaz, los Angeles, 33; TJones, 1 Austin Peay 43, Bethel, Tenn. 19
,
Detroit, 33; Papelbon, Boston, 31 : I Bethune-Cookman 31 , JacksorWIIIe 1~
Nathan, Minnesota , 29.
j ConnectiCut 45, Duke 14
·
• ,.,
Davidson 31 , UNC-Pembroke 21
•

Clewtland 7, Chicago White SOx 0
Sundoy'IGIIIIOI
Tampa Bay 8, N.Y. Yankees 2
Chloago While SOx 8, Cleveland o
Toronto 6, Seattle 4
Boston 3, Baltimore 2
Kansas City 8, Minnesota 1

Toronto

In surprise visit to Iraq,

Monday, September 3, 200?•

Chester

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a week

Are you readyforaSTIHL®?

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publis hing Co.

Slamming your knees Into a hard
gym floor Is where the weak get
separated from the strong when
discussing power volleyball. Girls
across the county are moving In
for the "kill" in a sport that
takes no prisoners as their season gets underway. Recently the
seventh and eighth grade Meigs
and Eastern volleyball teams
. met-on ~::harc!)VoodTto sett~e, ~
the score. Atbc:ittorn;· Meigs seventh graders huddle up for the
neKt set while below, Eastern
eighth graders (from left) As hley
Putnam, Jamie Boyles, Courtney
Thomas and Brenna Holter cheer
on teammates from the Eagles'
seventh grade squad.
Meanwhile, at right, three-year
old Jennifer Parker of Tuppers
Plains waits for her chance to
battle the net someday.
Beth SerCOnt/photoa

God's NET to honor
first responders
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -On Sept. II, a day which is now associated with the memory of first responders who gave their
lives in 2001, God's NET is honorin~ local emergency, fire
and law enforcement who serve Me1gs County with a free
meal.
The dinner begins at 6f.m. at the Mulberry Community
Ce.~~ter · and will consist o barbecue chicken, baked beans,
cole slaw with drinks and desert. The responders are also
permitted to brin~ a guest for the free meal.
The dinner will also include a short program which
includes an opening prayer, a time of silence for those who
have given their lives for others in the line of duty and a
story from each department of a person or team of people
who have shown commitment beyond the call of duty, fol lowed by a closing prayer.
Rev. Keith Rader is asking that each department have
someone available to tell a "dramatic story" m two to three
minutes that describes how an event went beyond the call
of duty to help the need of the community. The presentations of the two to three minute stories are to take up
around a half hour total and be heard while the meal is
being served. Rader al so asks that each department respood
as soon as possible with the name or names of their team so
that certificates of appreciation can be made.
God's NET is asking departments to respond to the invitation by Friday so that the proper amount of volunteers
will be available to prepare and serve the food . ., ·
In regards to the event, Rader said, "It is our hope to give
thanks and honor to each of you and your important services to community."

Eastern board approves
personnel·action
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved substitute teachers and other staff
at last week's regularm eetmg.
After meeting ih executive
session , the board approved
the following substitute
teachers, pending proper
certification: Carrie Abbott,
Jamie N. Atha , Lisa
Averion, Patrece Beegle,
Patricia Bell,. Amanda J.
Brooks. Eric M. Brown, lise
Burris, Beth Cappone-Roell,
Melinda Chancey, Amy E.
Clark, Gary Cunningham,
Leslie
Dunfee,
Jan
Eldridge, James D. Essick,
Marge Fetty, Randal l Fulks,
Vicki L. Griffin, Mary E.
Hill ,
Heather
Knapl?,
Loraine Kombudo, Willi s
Korb, Ron Logan.
Jennifer
McBride .
Jennifer Orion. Cmdy
Parker, Gay Perrin , Rena
Ransom. Carissa Reppert,
Nathan Robinette. Rya n
Sleight. Angelia Smith,
Tonya R. Smith, Tom
Thorne, William R. Tipton,
Randy Wachter, Alden
Waitt, Maxine Whitehead.
and Roxanne Williams.
The board approved
Jennifer Seers as full-time

cook on a one year contract
and Judy Bunger and
Malena Stone as part-time
cooks at six hours per
day on a one year contract
for the 2007-08 ,school year
pending proper
certtficatJon.
Robin ·
Hawk
was
approved as a business education teacher on a one year
contract, pending proper
certification.
Gwen Hall was awarded a
supplemental contract . as
junior high ~heerleader
advi sor. The board approved
Patricia Ann Mcintyre, as
substitute cook and custodi·
an: Mary Coy. as substitute
secretarv.
The foll owing substitute
teac her aides for the 200708 school year were
appro ved pending proper
ce rtitication: Beverl y Allen,
Lisa Causey. Kol leta
Fridley,
Roni
Dea
. Howery, Tammi Lavender.
Billie Jo Marcinko, Lindsay
Moore,
Trudy Stewart, Jo Ann
Willford , and Julie A.
Zirkle.
The
following
open
enrollment students were
approved: Jaymie Basham,
Jeffrey Dolan, Wyatt Fox,
Addie McDaniel, Theodore
Please see Eastern. A5

- - - - -- - - --

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