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

Page 06 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 21,2007

12 Turkish troops ·killed in

Chorus plans
stage show
atAriel,A3

rebel ambush near Iraq
bo~er;Turkeyshells

region in response, A2

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o &lt;T:'l: l S • \ 'ol. :; ~ . !'Jo. h:l

l\10N I&gt; A Y, OCTOIH.I&lt;

,·

""" · "'"l ai l"•· •&gt;~i • &gt;&lt;· l. """

:!:! , :!00 7

Six to be charged in latest Story's Run meth raid

SPORTS

'

• Martindale advances to
regionals. See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Cora Lavera Yeager
• Lyle L. Campbell
• Dwight Sherman
Haley Jr.

.

.

BY BRIAN J. REfD
BREED@MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Charges relating to the manufacture or
possession of methamphetamine are expected against six Story's
Run residents following their arrests early Saturday.
· The arrests were made at the same residences near Middleport
where a meth lab was discovered in September, and at least three
of those arrested are charged in that first raid.
Laura Hysell; James Circle, Jesi Johnson, Tina Johnson and
Corbett E. Ratliff were jailed Saturday after two sheriff's
deputies found matches, lighters, and other tools commonly used
to manufactw'e the drug in their possession.
Another man, Paul Van Meter, was not jailed and faces misdemeanor charges for possession of drug paraphernalia. Deputy
Adam Smith said the five will be charged with illegal possession
of chemicals used in the manufactw'e of methamphetamine and
possibly other charges.
Hysell and TmaJohnson were served and are in jail on indict·
ments relating to a September meth bust at the same residences
where tools used to make the drug were found Saturday. Jesi .
Johnson was jailed on a bench warrant from Meigs County
Court. Ratliff wa~ out on bond after appearing on a meth-related
indictment returned earlier this month and was returned to jail.
Deputy Smith said the sheriff's department was contacted by
the Gallia County department after an employee at Wal-Mart
there reported the defendants had allegedly purch!!sed items
commonly used in manufacturing meth. The &amp;tore's computer
system can track such items so authorities can be contacted.
· Smith said the six were already gone by the time the purchases were reported, and were arrested at Story's Run. He said
charges relating to the weekend raid will be filed on Monday. ·

Sho~lf't

Meeting on
AMP~Ohio

plant Thursday

• Ex·POWs struggle
with cJeiJaq! over U.S.
treatment of detainees.
See Page A2
• US says forces kill 49
militants in Sadr City;
Iraqis say 3 children died.
See Page A2
• Physics and
Astronomy open house
planned. See Page A3
• Betty Milhoan honored
for 50 years in DAR.
See Page .A3
• World Bank says
impact of market
turbulence limited on
developing countries.
See Page A3
• Law You Can Use:
Auto accidents: Do
you know your legal
responsibilities?
See Page AS
· • Mountain State honor.
See Page AS

Ra~ked

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~

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INDEX
2

KING'S
DAUGHTERS

MEDICAL CENTER

Taking Medicine Further"'

SEcriONS -

12 PAGI'S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Coq~ics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley PUblishina Co.

·,
'

Deportment photo

Items believed to have been used in the manufacture of methamphetamine at Story's Run
were siezed Saturday. They include 12,000 matches, which are stripped of the red phosphorous found on the tips. Lighters , spoons, insulin syringes and gas line antifreeze were
also discovered.

INSIDE

*
NUMBER ONE in Kentucky for Cardiac Surgery TWO YEARS IN A ROW
* Ranked Among the Top Five Percent IN.THE NATION for Cardiac Surg~ry TWO YEARS IN A·ROW

~

George Wright
on a ride through
downtown
~omeroy on his
restored 1948
Schwinn bicycle
with a Whizzer '
motor takes a
break in front of
Clark's Jewelry
Store.

Now that fall is here,
George hopes that he will be
able to take his wife, Nellie,
out for scenic rides in the
1930 Model A which he 's
had for a little over · two
years. "It's not air conditioned, vou know, so we
don't ge-t out much in the
real hot weather."
However, the two have
been in several parades this
year including those in
Gallipolis, Rutland, 'and
Pome(oy. A week ago
George drove his car in the

RACINE -The Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) will conduct a meeting concerning
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio's (AMP-Ohio)
proposed coal-fired power
plant for Letart Falls at 6:30
p.m. tl\is Thursday inside
Southern
Elementary's
cafetorium.
. Specifically, OEPA will
have both an informational
session and be lakin~ comments on AMP-Ohio s draft
air permit-to-install (PTI)
which must be obtained
from OEPA before an air
pollution source ·may be
constructed in the state of
Ohio. A PTI outlines technical and design requirements, and pollutant limits
necessary for compliance
with air pollution laws and
rules.
The permit would regulate air emissions from the
proposed facility's two
coal-tired utility boilers, a
natural gas-fired combustion auxiliary boiler, a fly
ash landtill, material handling equipment and cooling cells along Ohio 124 in
Letart Falls.
The .draft permit sets
annual emission limits on
the following pollutants:
Carbon mono~ide , 7,009.2
tons; . particular matter,
1,182 tons; nitrogen oxide,
3,194 tons; sulfur dioxide,
6,820 tons; volatile organic
compounds, 166.87 tons ;
sulfuric acid mist, 343 tons;
lead, .44 ton; mercury, .096
ton .
Thursday's meeting will
begin with an informational
session where the purpose
of the PTI will be exr.lained
and questions Will be
answered. The second part
of the meeting will consist
of formal testimony where
residents can speak about
their concerns or support .of
the project though no questions are answered at this
time.
Questions contained in
this testimony will be
answered in writing by the
OEPA to those on the .interested parties mailing list. To
.be placed on this list call Jed
Thorp at &amp;14-644-2 160. .
lf the plant is built, it is
said to employ l 00 (X!Ople,
possibly create 127 JObs in

Please see Wright. AS

Please see Plant. A5

Cha~011e

Hoeftlcbfphotoo

varietvin
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH~MYDAILYSETINEL.COM

POMEROY - The next
time you see .George Wright
tooling around town it might
not be in the family car. He
just might be riding on a
1948 Schwinn bicycle with ·
a Whizzer motor, or driving
along in a 1930 Model A
coupe.
George's mode of transportation changes from time
to time and local residents
are · accustomed to seeing
this almost 80-year-old man
getting where he wants to go
in ways some might consider unconventional for a man
his age. But that's George
and he does it' his way.
The Schwinn was a "real
lind" for George whose
memories of the motorized
bicycle go back to his teen
years. His father bought him
one for hi s 16th birthday for
about $190 and tie rode it on
.and off for about five years.
Not being one to throw any.
thing away George has kept
that bike all these years. It's
parked in his basement
today waiting to be rebuilt
once he can locate the needed parts [rom another bro. ken-down bike from the 40s.
"I . started. to rebuilt it a
while back but h&lt;Jd trouble
finding parts. Then I saw
· someone had advertised one
for sale up near Parkersburg.
and decided I'd just go up
and take a look at it It was
in top condition, so I bought

This shiny black 1930 Model A Coupe is the pride and joy of Pomeroy resident George
Wright. Last weekend he drove it in the Meigs Alumni Association's parade ..
it," he said. That was about
three weeks ago.
He found when he rode it
downtown and parked it in
front of . Clark's Jewelry
Store recently that it attracted quite a crowd of curious
people who hadn't seen a
Whizzer for years, George
explains the economics of
usmg the motorized bike for
getting around .
"It' ll go 90 to 100 mile s
on a gallon of gas, and you
can travel about 40 miles an
hour but you wouldn't want
to because you might have
to stop in a hurry. " He

explained that the brakes are
just like on a regular bicycle.
and getting stopped in ~
hurry when you're going
fast can be a problem."
George,
who · seems
always hustling about doing
volunteer work for the vil-.
lage or some organization,
has only had time to ride his
bicycle about , I0 miles so
far. He's looking forward to
getting around on it more
now that the fe stivals he
helps with are over and it's
not quite time to start helping with getting Pomeroy
decorated for the holidays.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTiiliMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.,

�.

:The Daily Sentinel

NATiON • WORLD

PageA2
Monday, October 22, 2007

12 TuRKISH TROOPS KILLED IN REBEL AMBUSH NFAR
IRAQ BORDER; TuRKEY SHELLS REGION IN RESPONSE
BY VOLKAN SARISAKAL
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SIRNAK. Turkey
Kurdi sh rebels ambushed a
Turkish military convoy on
·Sunday less than three miles
from the Iraqi border, killing
12 soldiers in the face of
growing threats by Turkey to
cross the rugged frontier and
root out the guerrillas.
Turkey shelled the border
region in response to the
attack, and Iraqi President
Jalal Talabani - himself .a
Kurd - ordered the rebels to
lay down their arms or leave
Iraq.· Turkey dismissed his
call, sayipg the time had
come for action:
Despite
the
harsher
rhetoric, Defense Secretary
Robert Gates said Sunday it
appears Turkey's military is
not on the verge of invading
AP photo
Iraq's most stable region in
Turkish
soldiers
in
armored
vehicles
patrol
on
a
road
in
the
province
of
Sirnak,
on the
·_pursuit of the rebels - an
Turkish-Iraqi
border,
southeastern
Turkey,
in
this
Wednesday,
Oct.
17
file
photo.
Turkish
incursion sti"ongly opposed
by the United States and Iraq. · troops on Sunday killed 23 Kurdish rebels in an offensive following a rebel attack that killed
Gates told reporters that in at least 12 soldiers , the military said.
a meeting with Turkish · him.
Eight soldiers were missing between the PKK and the
Defense Minister Vecdi
Turkey's Parliament last according, to private NTV Turkish military.
Gonul, he advised against a week authorized the govern- . television.
According to CNN-Turk,
major cross-border incursion ment to deploy troops across
Cicek refused comment on t(le rebels blew up a bridge as
despite the continuing provo- the border, and the military the report, saying "the clash- a 12-vehicle military convoy
. cations.
confirmed that soldiers were es are still under way."
was crossing. In a· separate
'T m heartened that he chasing the rebels and
''Every kind of attack will attack on Sunday, 17 people
seems to be implying a reluc- pounding 63 suspected posi- be avenged many times were injured when· a bomb
tance on·their part to act uni- tions with artillery. Deputy over," Cicek said,
exploded as a riUnibus laterally, and I think ~t's a Prime Minister Cemil Cicek
The soldiers died when an part of a wedding convoy -·
good thing," Gates said. "! would not say however, estimated 200 guerrillas passed nearby, the local govdido 't have the impression whether some of those posi- the largest single group that ernor's office said.
that anything was immi- tions were on Iraqi soil.
lraq reported Turkish
attacked a Turkish unit in
nent."
"Whatever is necessary in years - reponedly attacked shelling toward Kurdish vilTurkish Prime Minister this stiuggle is being done an infantry company near the lages in the border area in
Recep Tayyip Erdogan said and will be done," Cicek village of Daglica, less than northern- Iraq but no casualties were reponed in the
he told Secretary of State said.
three miles from the border.
Condoleezza Rice in a phone
The troops, backed by heliThe attack occurred just artillery bombardment.
·conversation Sunday night copter gunships, killed 32 after midnight during a mili"Our anger, our hatred is
·
that
Turkey
expected rebels on Sunday, Cicek said. tary offensive against rebels great," Erdogan said,
"speedy steps from U.S." in
The rebel group, Kurdistan iri Hakkari province, where
Sunday's attack raised the
cracking down on Kurdish , Workers Party or PKK, . the borders of Turkey, Iraq death toll of soldiers in PKK
rebels, and that Rice claimed later that its guerril- and Iran meet Hakkari is attacks in the past two weeks
·expressed sympathy and las had also captured a "num- east of Sirnak province, to around 30.
·
·asked "for a few days" from ber" of Turkish soldiers. another area of conflict

•

"A cross-border offensive
must certainly be carried out
and their blood should not be
left on the ~round ," said
Devlet Bahceh, leader of ihe
Nationalist Action Party.
Previous offensives by
Turkey in Iraq have blunted
rebel strength but failed to
eradicate the group.
The remarks by Talabani,
the Iraqi president, were the
strongest indication to date
of his frustration with the
rebels and his wish to distance himself, as well as
Iraq's Kurds, from them.
"If they insist ori the continuation of fighting, they
shOuld leave Kurdistan, Iraq
and not create problems here.
And they should return to .
their countries and do there
want,':
whatever
they
Talabani said.
Later Sunday, Talabani
told Turkey's private Kanal
D television that the PKK
could announce a cease-frre
on Monday. Turkey has
rejected several unilateral
rebel cease-frres in the past
The Turkish government
said it was time for action
against the PKK. ·
"Statements do not satisfy
us. There has been nothing
left to say ; we are expecting
concrete steps from them,"
Cicek said.
Turkey's Foreign Minister
.Ali Babacan, meanwhile,
arrived unexpectedly in
Jiddah, Saudi Arabia - his
third visit to an Arab country
since parliament passed the
motion - in an apparent
effort to muster Arab support
for any Turkish offensive. '
The attacks came as Turks·
on Sunday voted in favor of
electing future presidents by
popular rather than parliamentary vote in a referendum. 1\irkey's leaders cut
short trips to their home-

towns where they cast their
votes to return to the capital,
··
Ankara.
Abdul-Rahman
· alChadrchi, a PKK spokesman
in northern Iraq. denied there
were any rebel casualties but
said the rebels "killed and
injured a number of Turkish
soldiers and captured another
number,"
Journalists heading to the
area were turned away at a
military checkpoint. Much of
the rural area along the border ~as already been declared
off-limits by the Turkish military. .
About 15 Turkish shells hit
Iraqi territory . starting at
about 7 a.m, Sunday, said
Col. Hussein Rashid of the
Iraqi border guard forces.
The bombardment was concentrated in the Mateen
mountain range in the
Amadiyah area, 20 miles
from the border.
Rashid said the villages
were deserted because of the
border tension ,
The Iraqi region of
Amadiyah is roughly opposite the Turkish town of
Cukurca,
in
Hakkari
province. Rebels are active
near Cukurca, about 30 miles
from the location where the
soldiers died Sunday.
The U.S. lists the PKK as a
terrorist organization and has
condemned its attacks in
Turkey.
However,
Washington has called on the
Turkish government to work
with the Iraqis.
''These attacks are unacceptable and must stop now,"
said Gordon Johndroe,
President Bush's national
security
spokesman.
"Attacks from Iraqi territory
need to be dealt wtth swiftly
by the Iraqi government and
Kurdish . regional authorities."

-US says forces kill 49 militants in Sadr City; Iraqis say 3 children died
BY STEVEN R. HURST
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD - The U.S.
·.military said its forces
· killed an estimated 49 militants during a dawn raid to
capture an Iranian-linked
militia chief in Baghdad's
Sadr City enclave, one of
the highest tolls for a single
..operation since President
·Bush declared an end to
active combat in 2003.
Iraqi police and hospital
officials, who often overstate casualties, reported
only IS deaths including
: three children. Iraqi govern: ment spokesman Ali a!: Dabbagh said all the dead
· were civilians.
Al-Dabbagh said on CNN
· that Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki, a Shiite. had met
with the U.S. commander in
Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus.
to protest the action.
Associated P~ess photqs
· showed the bodies of two
:toddlers, one with a gouged
: face, swaddled in blankets
· on a morgue floor. The'i r
shirts were pulled up,
exposing their abdomens,
and a diaper showed above
the waistband of one boy's
shorts. Relati·ves said ·the
· children were killed when
helicopter gunfire hit the"ir
~ouse as they slept.
: One local resident said
:some of the casuallies were
·people sleeping on roofs to
seek relief from the heat and
:lack of electricity. The Iraqi

officials said 52 were · The reinforcements were . pelled grenades from nearwounded in the raid on the ordered into Iraq earlier this ·by buildings as they began
sprawling district .
year by Bush and have raiding structures in the disTh·e U.S. military said it · mflicted a heavy toll on mil- trict, according to a state·
was not aware of any civil- itants on both sides of Iraq's ment It said 33 militants
ian casualties, and the dis- sectarian divide. American wete killed. in the ftrefight.
crepancy in the death tolls commander' credit the Ground forces then called in
and accounts of what hap- troop builr' . · for a s_harp helicopter airstrikes, which
pened could nof be recon- drop in t . ~ number · of killed six more militants.
ciled. American comman- attacks and deaths of U.S.
As American soldiers left
ders reported no U.S. casu- soldiers and Iraqi civilians, the zone, troops were hit by
alties.
pitrticularly in the past two a roadside bomb and continThe raid on the dangerous months.
ued heavy fire, killing I 0
Shiite slum was aimed at
As U.S. forces pounded more combatants,
capturing an alleged rogue Sadr City, the potential
~'All total, coalition forces
militia chief, one of thou- grew for a fresh explosion estimate that 49 criminals
sands of fighters who have of fighting on a new front, were killed in three separate
broken with Muqtada al- Iraq's northern border with engagements during this
Sadr's mainstream Mahdi Turkey.
operation. Ground forces
Army. The military did not
Early Sunday, Kurdish reported they were unaware
say if the man was captured. separatist rebels who take of any innocent civilians
He was also not named.
shelter in the rugged moun- being killed as a result of
The Shiite. cleric has rains on the Iraqi side of the this operation," the military
·
ordered gunmen loyal to frontJer... ambushed a inili- said.
him to put down their arms . tary unit inside Turkey and
A local resident who goes
But thousands of followers killed at least 12 soldiers. by the name Abu Fatmah
dissatisfied with b.e ing Turki ~ h forces responded by said his neighbor's 14-yeartaken out of the fight h_ave lobbing at least 15 artillery old son, Saif Alwan, was
formed a loose confedera- shells toward mainly aban- killed while sleeping on the
tion armed and trained by doned Kurdish villages roof.
inside Iraq . according to
Iran.
" Saif was killed by an
The U.S . operation was Iraqi border guard Col. airstrike and what is his
the latest in · a series that Hussein · Rashid . He said guilt? Is he from the Mahdi
have produced significant there were no casual!ies.
Army? He is a poor studeath tolls, including civilIn the Sadr City raid, the dent," Abu Fatmah said.
ians, as American forces U:S. military said forces
Anuncleof2-year-oldAli
increasin¥1Y take the fight killed ''an estimated 49 Hamid said the boy was
to Sunm in ~ urgents . al·- criminals" in three linked killed and hisJ'arents senQaida militants and Shiite attacks during an intelli- ously wounde when helimilitiamen .
gence-driven raid to capture copter gunfire pierced the
The intensity and fre - the rogue Shiite kidnapper wall and windows of their
quency of American attacks who was partially funded by house as they slept indoors.
and raids have grown since Iran.
Relatives gathered at Sadr
the arrival of the las t of
U.S. troops returned fire City's Imam Ali hospital
30.000 additional soldiers under attack from automatic where the emergency room
onJune 15 .
weapo ns and rocket-pro - was overwhelmed with

. .
~Ex-POWs struggle
BY JOHN O'CONNOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•
•

• SPRINGFIELD, Ill. .: Marion Oltman spent the last
:eight months of World War II
in a . Nazi prisoner-of-war
; can1p. and tears still fill his
: eyes when he recall s those
:desperate days.
: After working all day to fill
craters left from ALlied bombing. eac h prisoner got a
:boiled potato and a slice of
:bread with sawdust used as
: tiller. Oltman was given the
·task of slicing the bread to
feed 12 men.

bloodied casualties. The
dead were placed in caskets
covered by Iraqi flags.
APTN video showed
three bloodied boys sitting
on hospital tables and an
elderly man being treated
for a head wound. Mourners
tied wooden coffins onto
the tops of minivans with a
plume of smoke in the background. Other footage
showed a U.S, helicopter
flying over the area while
black smoke rose.
The sweeps into Sadr City
have sent a strong message
that U.S. forces plan no
letup on suspected Shiite
militia cells despite objections from the Shiite-led
government of al-Maliki,
who is working for closer
cooperation with Shiite
heavyweight Iran.
An
Iraqi
military
spokesman, Brig . Gen.

Qassim al-Moussawi, said
the government would ask
the Americans for an.explanation of Sunday's raid and
stressed the need to avoid
civilian deaths.
The government has
issued mixed reactions to
the raids and airstrikes, particularly those that have targeted S'unni extremists,
U.S. troops backed by
~ttack aircraft killed 19 suspected insurgents and 15
civilians, including nine
children, in an operation
Oct. II targeting al-Qaida in
Iraq leaders northwest of
Baghdad.
Al-Maliki 's government
said those killings were ·a
"sorrowful matter," but
emphasized that ·civilian ·
deaths are unavoidable in
the tight against ill-Qaida in
Iraq.

Show Off Your "Pumpkin"
In The Sentinel

PUMPKIN PATCH
Pictures will run:
Wednesday,
. October 31
Deadline for Entry:
Friday,
October26

with debate over U.S. treatment of detainees ·

"You don't know what it's
like to look · in the eyes of
guys that are that hungry:· the
89-year-old Pekin. IlL resident said, his voice breaking.
The experience gave
Oltman a unique perspective
about the treatment of'prisoners during wartime. As a
national debate continues
about the role of torture to get
information from suspect&gt; in
the war on terror. Oltman and
others attending an ex-POW
conference said th m the
United States shoul d sel an
example for the world in the
hum ane
treatm ent
of

·detainees.
a world where it appears ter''!" don"t believe in torture." rori sts have changed the
Oltman said this past week at rul es.
the 60th annual conference of
Ex-POWs, having faced
the American Ex-Prisoners of life-or-death struggles in
War. "I' ve seen what humans strange lands, ar~ conflicted
can do to humans. I' ve li ved men. They believe in
through some of it. And that's American ideals of justice
not right."
· and mercy, but know .the
BOt
what
constitu tes lonely desperation of facing
. humane treat ment · is less a hostile and armed oppoclear - and even those w.ho nent .
have beeri in the hands of the
Neither Oltman or the
' enemy themselves don·t othe r former POWs interal ways agree. While they say viewed criticized the Bush
they wouldn" t kill or physi- administrat ion di rectl y, say cally harm a detainee. many ing they didn "t know enough
struggle wit h the question in about U.S . tacti cs .

Kylie Billings
"Love Ya!"
&amp; Daddy

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Bv ~ THEBEND

·The Daily Sentinel

CHORUS PLANS STAGE SHOW AT ARIEL
GALLIPOLIS The
French Colony Chorus are
moving forward on plans for
their upcoming show, "Fit as
a Fiddle" to be staged at 8
p.m. Nov. 17 at the Morris
Haskins Theatre of the
.Ariel-Ann Carson arts
Center.
At a recent meeting of the
chorus
officers
were
installed in a candlelight ceremony. They are Maury
Burnette , Point Pleasant,
program adverti sing; Mary
Madsen,
Huntington,
Chapter manager; Linda
"Lane, Gallipolis, treasurer;
. Susan Rus sell, Gallipolis,
chorus musical director;
Stevens,
Point
Nancy
Pleasant, secretary and set
design ; and Nan Heiskell,
Cheshire, show ticket sales,
The show will be a musical
· comedy featuring members
"working out" at the "Classy
Curves Center" as they
punctuate the narration with
a range of songs in four-part
barbershop harmony.
Special guest performers
will be the local men's barbershop group, the French
City Chorus with its quartets. The show will conclude with an All-American
salute to the brave men and
women who currently serve
or are veterans of our mili-

PageA3
Monday, October 22,

2007

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local School District
Board of Education, 6:30 p.m., in elementary library con·
.
ference room.
POMEROY - Meigs County Library Board, 3 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library.
·
RACINE- Southern Local School Board, regular meet·
ing, 8 p.m, high school media room.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Village Council, special
meetirig to discuss t1ood variance, 6 p.m ., village hall. .
rl

Tuesday, Oct. 23
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Board of Public Affairs, special meeting on water improvement projects, 5 p.m., village
halL
Thursday, Oct. 25
RACINE - Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
hearing, accept comments, on American Municipal PowerOhio's Draft Air Pollution Control Permit, 6:30 p.m .,
Southern Ele ~ t&lt;rry School cafetorium,

Clubs and organizations
Submitted photo

French Colony Chorus officers installed in a candlelight ceremony recently are left to right,
Maury Burnette, program advertising; Mary Madsen, Chapter manager; linda Lane, treasurer; Susan Russell, chorus musical director; Nancy Stevens, secretary and set design;
and Nan Heiskell, show ticket sales.
tary services.
'
Tickets are available from
all French Colony Chorus
members, and at the Ariel
office prior to show performance time. An afterglow
party with more musical entertainment will follow at Dave's

American Grill, for wbich a
limited number of ticket~ are
available from French Colony
Chorus members.·
For more information
about the show, about
becoming a member of
French Colony Chorus, O{ to

"'"'x ,

Tuesday, Oct. 23
· RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization, 6:30
p.m., Star Mill Park, regular meeting, potluck dinner.
"
Thursday, Oct. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW Post 9053 meets at 7:30
p.m.

book the chorus for public or
private performances for theupcoming holiday ' season,
Sunday, Oct. 28
call Bev Alberchinski at
RACINE - Pomeroy/Racine Lodge # 164 to host
740-446-2476 in. Gallia Awards/Friendship afternoon at lodge in Racine. Open to
County, or Suzy Parker at Masons, their family and friends, interested public.
740-992-5555 in Meigs Refreshments.
County . .
Tuesday, Oct. 23
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge 45_3 will hold a
sipecial meeting, 7 p.m. to confer the Entered Aipprentice
degree on a candidate. All Masons invited, Refreshments.

Physics and Astronomy open hou~e planned
High school juniors
and seniors invited
ATHENS,- Have you ever wanted
to blow up something in your
microwave? How about shoot a ping
pong ball through a soda can1 Or
make enough noise to shatter glass
without having to sing opera?
You can do all these things and
more at the Physics and Astronomy
Open Hol!se. Sat., Nov, 3, from 10 ·
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Clippinger
Laboratories of Ohio Universuy. It is
open to curious minds of all ages,
with interactive demonstrations,
shows, posters and more.
The faculty and students will entertain guests with an array of physics. themed. shows:
• Fun With Liquid Nitrogen
• What NOT to Do With Your
Microwave
• Levitation: Beating Back Gravity
• The Power of Air: Ping Pong Ball
Cannons and Pencils Through

Plywood
• Waves, Resonance and Shattered
Glass: Breaking A Beaker With Sound
• Relative Reality
• Breaking Apart Light: "Seeing"
Atoms, Quantum Dots and the
University
· .
.
A variety of other activities are on
the agenda. For instance, guests also
can tour the Edwards Accelerator Lab,
the Single Atom Manipulation Lab
and
the
Scanning
Electron
Microscope. Researchers will giv11
talks on The
·
Physics of Musical Instruments, and
Careers in Physics. Kids can try their
hand at moving single atoms using the
university's state-of-the-art Atomic
Manipulation Lab Scanning Tunnel
Microscope.
And the audience will have an
opportunity to try and stump a panel
of scientists in a question and answer
session.
. For those high school juniors and
seniors who are thinking about studying physics in college, the Department
of Physics and Astronomy is a)so

Reunions

hosting a Physics Contest Sat., Nov.
3, at 10: 15 a.m. The top student will
win a scholarship worth $1,500 \O
Saturday, Oct. 27
study physics and astronomy at Ohio
RACINE- The John Dill and Grace Bumgardqer famiUniversity and $300 cash.
. ly will have a reunion at the home of Buddy and Sally
The contest will be approximately Ervin, 29549 Oak Grove Rd, Racine. There will be a carryone hour and test the student's knowl- in dinner at I p.m. All relatives and friends are welcome.
edge at the level of an introductory, For more information, call 949-2136.
algebra-based physics course. The
exam will stress conceptual knowledge of physics and physical sciences.
A
past
exam
is
posted
.
Sunday, Oct. 28
athttp://www.phy.ohiou.edu/contest/c
CARPENTER. Gospel sing 6:30p.m. at the Mt. Union
ontest_ v 1.0. pdf.
·
Cllurch,
Guest
singer,
Jim Edens of Charletson. For more
Any student wishing to participate
information
call
Paul
Anderson,
742-2832.
·
in the contest must register with the
CARPENTER
·
Community
Fellowship,
6-8 p.m ..
department by Oct. 28, For more
Carpenter Baptist Church. Hog roast. Gospel group, "Five
information or to register, contact
Mile Pickers." Open to all in com111unity. Contact Pastor
Mark Lucas (lucasm @ohio.edu).
. Whitt Akers at 591-1236.
When registering, include your
name, mailing address, e-mail
address, telephone number, high
school name, grade lev~ and teacher's
Tuesday, Oct. 23
name,
.
SYRACUSEOra
Bass of Syracuse will be celebrating
Second place wilmer will receive
her
80th
birthday
today,
cards can be sent to PO Box 129,
$200 anti the third place winner will
Syrcuase,
45779,
receive $100.

Church events

Birthdays

ANNIE'S ·MAILBOX

Behavior signals mental disorder
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

Dear Annie: I recently
saw my 88-year-old disabled
mom in the hospital, and she
told me my husband is no
. longer allowed to visit her. I
was surprised, since he'd
always seemed like such a
great son-in-law, It turns out
my 55-year-old husband has
'been exposing himself to her
for much of the las1 .five
years .
My mother had asked him
··to stop years ago, but he
wouldn't, so she had my
brother talk to him . It
. worked briefly, but he's
·started up again . When I
confronted my husband, he
·admitted his behavior. I told
him he needed therapy ·after all, repeatedly exposing yourself to someone
whose di sability prevents
her from moving isn't exactly nonnal behavior. He set
up an appointment the next
.day. .
I told him if he ever did
such a thing again, I would
call everyone he knew,
including his business associates and poker buddie&amp;,
and "ask for their help" deal ing with him. Becapse he's
well respected, I couldn't
think of anything better than
humiliation to keep him in
line ,
What else can I do? I'm
disgusted by his behavior
and the harm he's. done to
my mother. How do I ever
trust him again? - Losing
It on Long Island
Dear Losing It: Your
husband is an exhibitioni st.
Some exhibitioni sm is harmless (flashing one's behind
out the car window), but
because your hu sband is
exposing himself to h"is disabled mother-in-law, it indi -

cates a mental disorder. and
if he also has been exposing
himself to strangers on the
street, he could be arrested
for · indecent exposure .
Exhibitionism is usually
treated with a coiHbination
of psychotherapy and medication. You are right to
insist that your husband see
a professional, and it may be
helpfu I if you go with him.
Dear Annie: I was asked
by a dear friend to spen~ a
week with her at a condo
owned by one of her relatives. We could stay for free
and split all expenses. After
the 15-hour drive, we
opened the door to the condo
and the place reeked of
mildew and years of cigarette smoke. The foldout
couch that "sleeps beautiful'
ly" was 11at as a pancake and
smelled like sqmeone sweated out a three-day drunk on
it.
. .
The next morning, my
friend's 7-year-old daughter
began to show signs of her
satanic heritage, ruining
every outing by screaming
and whining when she didn't
get her way, When I looked
at her sternly, she'd stick out
her tongue . Her mother
ignored this.
I came home exhausted
after being with someone I
considered an intelligent ,
thoughtful person . When she
e-mailed to ask if I'd had a
good time, my husband said
I should tell her the truth, so
I responded, as thoughtfully
as I could, and said it was
horrible. She said she was
sorry and to chalk it up to
lessons learned.
I can't believe she would
even attempt to let anyone
see the deplorable conditions of that condo or tolerate her child's . behavior. Do
'you think I was too · harsh

when she asked my opinion?
- Vacation From Hell
Dear Vacation: Yes. Your
friend was not responsible
for the condo. since it· didn't
belong to her, and you get
what you pay for. As for her
daughter, that was unfortunate, but many parents don't
see their children the way
others do. She did not deliberately show you a bad time.
You should have found
something nice to say, even
if it was only about the
weather, and declined any
future invitations,
Dear Annie: I read the
complaint from "B.H."
about the·car honking when
you lock it with the remote.
It is not necessary· to have
the dealer disable the horn.
One only needs to press the
lock button before closing

the door. - The Villages,
Florida
Dear Florida: If people
were willing to lock and
unlock their doors with their
keys, they wouldn't need a
remote. But thanks for supplying a simple remedy,,

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
(ors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more ·
about Annie's Mailbox, and
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Saturday, Oct. 27
POMEROY- Margaret Andrews, formerly of Pomeroy,
will observe her 90th birthday on Oct. 29. A surprise open
house will be held on Oct. 27 from 2 to 4 p.m. at Carleton
School gymnasium in Syracuse. Cards may be sent to her.
at 370894 New Hope Road, Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

KNOX ENERGY COOPERATIVE
Before you break ground at any construct.ion site or begin a
project around your home, be sure you have taken the
proper·measures to achieve the highest level of safety
possible.
A simple phone call at least two working days before
starting the excavation work to the
Ohio Utility Protection ServiL-e will result in a
representative locating our buri.ed facilities at your
construction site or at your residence. Thi• free service can
help protect you from personal injury or property damage,
and prevents interruption of your Knox Energy
Cooperative and other utility services.
BE SAFE- CALL BEFORE YOU DIG!
OHIO UTILITIES PROTECTION SERVICES
1-800-362-2764
In case of emergency call:
f';nox Energy Cooperative at
l-888-784-61611

Jeff Bossett
Home Loan Specialist
421 Main Street
P.O. Box 37
Point Pleasant, WV
www.peoplesbancorp.com
jbassett@pebo.com

304-674-4406
Toll Free 800-374-6123
Fax 740-373-8874
Cell 304-210-7016
Member FDIC

�. •.,

·-

The Daily·Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4
Monday, October 22,

2007

Earlier this week, I took a
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
trip do\vn memory lane to
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Yale, where I happily attendwww.mydailysentlnel.com
ed college almost 25 years
ago in the second decade of
its co-ed existence. Which
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
meant that I was plenty old
enough
to be the mother of
!;)an Goodrich
the
undergraduates
I was
Publisher
addressing in the traditionally genteel setting of a "masCharlene Hoeflich
ter's tea." The tea, attended
General Manager-News Editor
by about two dozen, was in
beauteous Branford, one of
Yale's 12 residential colleges, all carved stone and
grassy courtyard.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
All power-washed carved
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
stone and weedless grassy
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
courtyard, that is. At least it
felt that way. After a renoof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
vating overhaul, Yale's pati:people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
na of age, of passing time, of
. the Government for a redress of grievances.
history itself no longer quite
imbues this rigorously
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ·· spruced-up campus the way .
it once did, lessening the
more tangible links to Yale's
storied past.
Maybe it was the. disapToday is Monday. Oct. 22, the 295th day of 2007. There pearance of some of the
eclectic book collections
are 70 days left in the year.
from reading-room shelve~
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 22, 1962, President John F. Kennedy announced that was jarring. Or maybe it
a quarantine of all offensive military equipment shipped to was the plentiful new crop of
Cuba, following the discovery of Soviet-built missile bases plaques prominently advertising - I mean, attesting to
on the island.
- alumni generosity that
On this date:
In i 746, Princeton University was tirst chartered as the gave the old place a practically nouveau feel. Or
College of New Jersey.
In 1797, French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin made maybe it was the absence of
t\le first parachute descent, limdiilg safely from a height of rep- tie- and 'blue- blazered
old dears flapping about
about 3,000 feet over Paris.
in 1907, President · Theodore · Roosevelt visited The campus. Clearly, that onceH.ermitage, the Nashville, Tenn .. home of the late President . mighty Ivy ascendancy isn't
Andrew Jackson. (Years later, Maxwell House claimed that just down, it's out like the
Roosevelt had praised a cup of its coffee during this visit by cuckoo. Time flies when the
culture is changing.
saying it was "good to the last drop.")
Still, none of this comIn 1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert
pletely
accounts for the
Hoover sporeof the "American system of rugged individvalism" in a speech at New York's Madison Square Garden.
. In 1934, bank robber Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd was
shot to death by federal agents at a farm in East Liverpool,
Ohio.
..- In 1968, Apollo 7 returned safely, splashing down in the
Atlantic Oce.an.
.. In 1981, the . Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Organization was decertified by the federal government for
it&amp; strike the previous August.
.In 1986, President Rongald Reagan signed into IE~W
sweeping tax-ovcrhaullegislation.
Ten years ago: For the first time, U.S. inspectors discovered E. coli bacteria in imported Canadian beef, halting
shipments of 34,000 pounds. President Clinton presented a
-~odest strategy to combat global warming by gradually
r~ducing greenhouse gases over the next two decades. Jhe
Cleveland Indians tied the World Series at two games
apiece as they beat the Florida Marlins. I0-3, in Game 4.
Five years ago: Bus driver Conrad Johnson was shot to
tleath in Silver Spring. Md., in what would be !he final .
~ttack linked by authorities to the Washington-area sniper
aliacks. Former CIA Director Richard Helms died in
Washington, D.C .. at age 89. The Anaheim Angels defeat•
ed. the San Francisco Giants I0-4 to take a 2-games-to-1
edge in the World Series.
·. One year ago: Senior U.S. diplomat Alberto Fernandez
apologized for saying in an al-Jazeera TV interview that
IJ.S. policy in Iraq had displayed "arrogance" and "stupidi.ty.'' The Detroit Tigers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3- I to
tie up the World Series 1- 1. Actor Arthur Hill died in Los
Angeles at age 84.
.
: Thought for Today: "There is only one real sin, and that
is to persuade oneself that the second-best is anything but
!he second-best." - Doris Lessing, British Nobel Prize!Ninning. author.
_,,

TODAY IN HISTORY

Diana
West

interplanetary gulf between
myself and some of the students when it ca111e to what,
for cuckoo-me, is a bedrock
notion: namely, that Western
culture - for its enshrinement of liberty, freedom of
conscience, equality before
the law and the like - is a
Good Thing.
·
The point of my talk based on my new book,
''The Death of the GrownUp: How Ainerica's Arrested
Development Is Bringing
Down Western Civilization"
- was to explain why perpetual adolescence is not just
a cultural drag, but also dangerous to our way of life. I
argutid that the leveling of
adult authority over the past
half century or so was
accompanied ;by a leveling
of cultural authority. This
brought on the age of multi'
culturalism, a time when
Western Civ (like the adult)
no longer occupies its old
pinnacle atop the hierarchy
of cultures. The multiculti
conception of equally valuable cultures (except for the
West, which is deemed the
pits) depends on a strenuous
non-judgmentalism. This
non-judgmentalism expresses itself in a self-censoring
adherence to political cor-

rectness. Such non-judgmentalism, such PC selfcensorship, is infantilizing
because it requires us to suppress our faculties of analysis and judgment,
Case in point: bur society's refusal to analyze and
judge the anti-Western
teachings of mainstream
.Islam for fear of giving
offense to ~he grandees of
PC, or to Muslims, or both.
This refusal, I maintained, is
a brewing civilizational crisis.
..
Having made , ourselves
into a self-censoring society,
I explained to the students,at
tea, we now find ourselves
confronting an Islamic system that demands such censorship as a point of law.
·Look what happened to
Silvio Berlusconi when, as
prime minister of Italy after
9/11, he mounted a heartfelt
defense of Western ci vilization for having enshrined
liberty, freedom of conscience, equality before the
law and tbe like - which, he
also pointed out, Islam most
certainly did not. .
The voluble Italian was
dumped ·upon by the world,
Western and Islamic. He
swiftly recanted to satisfy
both the censoring dictates
of PC, which outlaws nonWestern critiques, and the.
censoring dictates of Islam,
wliich outlaws criticism of
Islam. Berlusconi's example
shows how easily an adolescent, PC society can slip
under Islamic -Jaw into the
hush of dhimmitude.
·
At this point in the presentation, I expected to hear that

Islam wasn't all bad; that I
oversimplitied.
What
emerged instead was that the
West wasn't all good; that I
oversimplitied. As the Yale
Daily News later put it,
"Some students said West
blamed Americans fnr censoring themseJ ves in thought
but ignored the censorship
she employs in her own
speech by concentrating
only on the positive aspects
of Western civilization."
Sounds like "some students" believe thatthe freedoms existing here - which
don't exist in · Islam - are
somehow voided by "nega.ti ve" Western aspects. Or
maybe that the negatives,
which apparently loom larger than any Islamic threat,
simply invalidate any positive conception of the West,
and maybe any . conception
of the West as an identitiable, defensible culture,
period. Little wonder the
Yale newspaper used quotation marks to set off the West
as "The West." It's good; it's
bad - whatever.
I hope I'm wrong. But all
of sudden the campus renovations that had scrubbed
away Yale's past seemed to
be all too apt a metaphor.
(Diana West is a columnist
for The Washingron Times.
She is tire author of "The
Death ofthe Grown-up: How
Arrested
America 's
Development Is Bringing
.Down Western Civilization."
She can be comacted via
diana west@ t•e riwn.net.)

ALL BUSINESS: The credit .crisis is far
from over, just look at what the new facts show ·
,

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK·- The facts
speak
for themselves:. The
: Lellers to tire editor are welcome. Thev should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to' editing. must be credit crisis is getting even
scarier.
~igned, and include address and teleplwne nwf!ber. No
The first ' vidence was the
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
by the
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of announcement
nation's
biggest
bapks
that
/hanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptthey
are
banding
together
~d for publication.
with the government's
bles~ing to try to bail out
institutional customers and maybe themselves stuck with illiquid asset(USPS 213-960)
backed investments. That's
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
a clear indication that there
Co.
has been little relaxation in
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
the paralysis gripping debt
Our main concern· in all stories is to
th~ough Friday, 11~ Court Street,
markets in recent months.
:be accurate. If ·you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
Then Standard &amp; Poor's
."I) a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
made another sweeping
. 92-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
downgrade
of the credit ratth~ Ohio Newspaper Association .
ings
on
mortgage-backed
Poetmaeter: Send address correcOur main number Ia
securities worth some
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2158.
$23.35 billion - this time
Stree1, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extensions are:
for lo;lns granted since the
Subscription Rates
first of the year, a sign that
liy carrier or motor route
loose lending standards lastNews
One month
' 10.27
ed
far longer than many
1115.84
one year
dltor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
thought.
Dally
so•
eporter: Brian Reed, .Ext. 14
More troubl,e also sur,S antor CHtzen rates
faced
on the housing front,
.Reporter: Belh
. Sergenl, Ext . 13
one month
' 10.27
with
construction
of new
One year
' 103.90
Subscribers should re mit in advance
homes plunging to the lowAdvertising
direct to the DaHy Sentinel. No subest
level in 14 years and
utatde Sales: Dave Ha rris, Ext 15 scription by mail permitted in areas
home
builders' sentiment
: utslde Sales: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 where home earner service is avail·
falling to its lowest on
:c1ass./Cire.: Judy 'Ciar&lt;, Ext 1o
able.
record.
Even the . stock market
· Mall Subscription
I
took
a pause from' its recent
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
bullish run, with investors
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
tempering their buying on
'64.20
26 Weeks
•
52 Weeks
' 127.11
concerns that the credit and
E-mail:
housing mess would lead to
news@mydailysenlinel.com
Outside Meigs County
a contraction _in third-quar13 Weeks
" '53.55
ter earnings for the first time
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
in six years.
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysen linel.com
So much for the worst of

.The Daily Sentinel

this crisis being over. Just a
few weeks back, there was
some optimism building in
the marketplace that the end
·of this bumpy road was near.
Those upbeat views now
look like they were 'just
wishful thinking.
Why else would a·consortium of banks - including
Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase
and Bank of America - be
uniting with a plan to keep
the housing-related debt crisis from worsening. If they
thought . conditions in the
credit market were about to
improve, would they be
gathering for this group
hug?
The banks have proposed
creating a fund that will buy
atound $100 billion in debt
from structured ·invesunent
vehicles, or SIV s, in an
attempt to break the logjam
in the market for short-term
debt instruments that hold
mortgage-related assets.
Banks sponsor the S!Vs,
contributing
longer-tern
as'sets like mortgage-backed
securities to ·the investment
vehicle. The SIV then sells
unsecured
commercial
paper or other forms of
short-term debt at low interest rates to the likes of hedge
funds and money-market
mutual funds hungering for
a few extra basis points of
yield. Those proceeds are
then used to repay the sponsor for its investment.
· Accounting rules don 't
require the SIVs to appear
on · bank balance sheets,
even though they create, run
and · generate fee s from
them. But if debt markets

seize up and the SIV can't
repay or roll over the commercial paper debt when it
comes due. the sponsor then
is expected to come up with .
cash to cover the SIV - or
face a big blow to its reputatio~ . For the banks, helping
the SIV s could lead to big
losses as they are forced to
mark down the value of the
now-shunned asset-backed
securities.
The goal of the . new
bailout fund is to prevent
that from happening. Its
plan is to sell short-term
notes to investors and then
use the proceeds to buy distressed securities from the ·
SIV s that otherwise would
have to be sold at tire-sale
prices. Eventually, they will
try to sell those securities to
investors.
The fund' s backers are
spinning this as a way to
save the market from more
meltdown, but it really is
nothing more than a shell
game to try to rescue them
from the mess they got
themselves into.·
It's not even clear if that
will do the trick. Given the
complexit~ in valuing the
SIV s Illiquid securities,
there are lingering questions
over -what price the blinks
will place on the debt and
whether. investors will be
willing to bite. The fund's
backers also say that they
will only buy highly rated
assets, a promise investors ·
should be warv of since
they ' ve seen massive downgrades of the ratings on
mortgage-related debt that
wasn't supposed to be risky.

Standard &amp; Poor's helped
to stoke investors' fears
about that this week when it
cut the credit rating s on
I, 713 classes of securities
backed by mortgages' issued
in the tirst six months of this
year. S&amp;P placed 646 other
classes- of mortgage-backed
securities ·on negative credit
watch, which mean they
could be downgraded soon.
The securities are backed
by subprime, alt-A and
home-equity loans, three
types of loans have gone
increasing delinquent and
into default in recent
months. Subprime loans
typically carry higher interest rates and were about the
only way people with bad
credit were able to get into
the housing game, while altA loans are for people who
lack the full documentation
that traditiooal borrowers
have.
That massive cut in ratings is raising concerns that
the housing and mortgage
sector problems aren't
improving, which was also
confirmed by new data from
the Commerce Department ·
that construction of new
homes fell I0.2 percent last
month, compared to August.
Thai was the. slowest building pace since March 1993. .
The National Association
of Homebuilders
also
reported that its index of
builder confidence fell for
the eighth consecutive
month in October, pushing
the index to a record-low of
18 from a reading of 20 in
September.

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Obituaries

Making the .Tfest disappear

'The Daily Sentinel

.

Monday, October 22, 2007

LAW You CAN USE

Cora Lavera Yeager

Au~o acCidents:

Cora Lavera Yeager, 77, Mason, W.Va., went to be with
the Lord on Saturday, Oct. 20, 2007, at Pleasant Valley
Q.: "What do Ohio's
Hospital.
motor vehicle laws require
She was born Sep•. 23, )930, in Logan, W.Va., daughter of me if I am involved in an
- to the late Leroy Ptt:rsall and Lavera Dew (Ball) Piersall. auto accident?
Lavera was a devoted Christian and member of the
A.: Ohio law requires that
Mason United Methodist Church. She sang in the church if you are in ;my automobile
ch?ir, held various offices, taught many classes and a accident, you must stop
member of the United Methodist Women . She was a 54 immediately.
year member of the Order of the Eastern Star #23 and 1948
You must also give your
Graduate of Wellsburg High School. She was a retired name, address, and vehicle
postal clerk at the Mason Post Office.
registration number to any
• She is survived by a husband to whom she was married injured person and/or the
56 years, Charles Yeager of Mason.
owner(s) and/or operator(s)
She was the loving mother of Sally (Ralph) Ross and of the other motor ~ehlcle(s)
Marty (Susan) Yeager, both of Mason; the caring and lis- mvol~ed m the ac~tdent.
temng grandmother of Shawn (Cheryl) Ross. of Point
Th1s mformatwn must
p.Jeasant, Amy (To~,) Cremeans &lt;?f Pomeroy, Craig Yeager
be given to the police
of Kansas Cay, Erm (Aaron) Smllh of Kansas City, Heath .also
when they respond. If you
and Haley Yeager of Gallipolis, .Steve (Kandi) Tracy of are driving another person's
Ra_cine, J~ff (Amber) Tracy of Pomeroy, and great grand- automobile, you must also
chtldren, Alyssa Cremeans, Jacob Miller, Caleb Riffle, provide the name a:nd
Hannah Ross, Erica, Nathan, KJ, Baylee and Audrey address of the owner(s). You
Tracy ; ststers, Betty Lish of Mason, Ann (Arnold) should exchange with the
P~rsmger of Mount . Hope, W.Va .. , and several other driver the insurance
meces/nephews
from . your
information
Services will be at I p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2007, at insurance card, including the
Mason United Methodist Church with Rev. Scott Nowlin insurance company name
officiating. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery. Visitation and your policy number. You
will be from 6-9 p.m. Monday at the Foglesong-Tucker also should receive the same
Funeral Home . She will lie in s~te one hour prior to ser- information from the other
vice. Order of Eastern Star will be performed at 7 p.m. on driver.
Monday.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to be
made to: Mason United Methodist Special Fund, P.O. Box
326, Mason, W.Va. 25260.
E-mail
condolences
may
be
sent
to
foglesongtucker@myway.com.
.

Lyle L campbell

Dwight Sheman ·Haley Jr.

from PageA1
Meigs Alumni .Association
parade ' in
downtown
Pomeroy.
For George having severa! projects going on at the
same time and admittedly a
bit slow to get anything
completed seems a way of
life. For a number of years
now he has been working
on restoring another antique
car but acknowledges there
hasn't been a lot of
progress.

Plant
from PageA1
"

other businesses and burn
nearly three million tons of
coal a year. Still. despite the
economic prosperity predicted by some from the
plant, other residents a~e
concerned about the envt·
ronmental impact of another
coal-tired power plant in the
area with American Electnc
Power's Mountaineer and
Philip Sporn plants located
nearby and across the Ohio

•

So when he saw that 1930
Model A already rebuilt,
restored, and ready to roll,
well the temptation was too
much to resist. He read the
ad and took off for Marietta
to take a look. He liked
what he saw - a shiny
black Model A with a
"mother-in-law" rumble
seat ·_ ,and the rest you
· know.
So if you're driving down
the highway and catch a
glimpse of a quite spiffylooking Model A in your
rear view mirror, take a secand look. It could be
George.

Do you know your legal responsibilities?

You must remain at the ·
scene until the police arrive.
If you hgve caused damage,
you must provide the property owner with the required
information
(as
listed
above), and, if it is requested, you must show your driver's license. If the. other car
is unoccupied, you must
attach the requi(ed information (listed above) to a
prominent place on the other
· vehicle, such as under a
wiper blade.
Q.: "What if the police do
not arrive at' the scene of the
accident?
A.: Even if the police do
not respond, you still must
notify the police department
of the accident location
within 24 hours. Then you
must complete a "delayed"
accident report at the police
station.
Q.: Are there other things
I should know about auto

accident proceduJ·e;''
A.: I_ If poss ible. do not
move you r car unlil the
police arrive. However, yo ur
vehicle should not be left
where it is likely to create a
hazard or another accident.
2. Get names and addres.ses of the drivers of the vehicle( s) involved and passengers in the vehicle(sl. Take
down license plate numbers
and. if possible, names and
addresses of witnesses to the
accident .
3. Make notes about the
circumstances of the acci d
· I d'
I
·
ent, me u mg car ocat1ons,
·sk'd
t m·arks• or any observations which may help to
explain the accident.
4. You should ass ist the
responding police officer.
However, unless you are
absolutely certain you know
the cause of the accident. it
is wise f10l to offer an opinion, You are not required to
give an opinion.
5. Help to make any

inj ured person comfortable,
but do not move him or her,
or you may aggravate an
mJury.
6. If you have a camera, or
your cell phone has. a camera, take pi ctures of the damage to both vehicles, but do
so on ly if taking a picture
would put yo u at risk for
being hit by other moving
vehic les at the accident
sce ne.

Law You Can Use is · a
weekly c011.mmer legal
informatiorl column provided by the Ohio State Bar
Association. This article
was prepared by Judge
Kenneth R. Spanagel of the
Parma, Ohio Municipal
Court. Articles appearing in
this column are intended to
provide · broad, general
information about the law.
Before applying this information to a specific legal
problem, readers are urged
to seek advice from an
attomey.

World Bank says impact of market
turbulence limited on developing countries

Bv HARRY DUNPHY
Lyle L. Campbell, · 77, of Pomeroy, formerly of
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Parkersburg, W.Va., went to be with his Heavenly Father
at 6:05 p.m., Friday, Oct. 19,' 2007, at Camden-Clark
WASHINGTON - The
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg.
World Bank said Sunday the
Lyle was born July 30, 1930, in Saint Mary's, W.Va., to impactof recent turbulence in
the late Robert Harrison and Ora Childers Campbell.
financial markets on developHe was a 1948 graduate of Saint Mary's High School. ing countries has been limited
He was a member of the Maple Grove Baptist Church in and global economic growth
Lakeport, Fla., and also attended First Southern Baptist remains strong.
·
Church of Pomeroy.
The bank also called on
.Mr. Campbell. retired from · American Cyanamid donor government&amp; to meet
Company (Cytec) in 1991 after 40 years of employment. their commitinents to boost
He served in the United States Air Force, was an avid aid for development and said
WVU Mountaineer fan, golfer, bowler, and cut tirewood countries with fast-growing
as a hobby. Mr. Campbell especially enjoyed his winter economies and mounting
home in Lakeport, Fla.
·
currency reserves could bring
Surviving ts his wife of 27 ye'ars, ·Edna L. Ruth new resources to this effort.
Campbell; one brother, Orlando Campbell and wife, Lois,
The bank's policy-setting
of Parkersburg; two daughters, Diana Staats and husband,
Mike, of Norfolk, Va., and Angie Smith and husband, Development Committee
Steve, of Parkersburg; two sons, Mark Campbell and wife, "said its members "agreed that
Amy, of Walton, Ky.. and Robert D. Campbell of strengthened support for the
Parkersburg; one step-son, Vaughn Ruth and wife, Wendy, inclusion and empowerment
of Woodleaf, N.Ca.; two step-daughters, Beverly Atkins of the poorest in developand husband, Pill, of West Palm Beach, Fla., and Tammie ment, especially in subLove and husband. Frank, of Belpre, Ohio; eight grand- Saharan Africa, and for
children, nine step-grandchildren, three step-great grand- engagement by the bank
children, several nieces and nephews, and one sister-in- group in fragile and conflictafflicted . states must be key
law, Cloris Strothers and husband, Bill, of Parkersburg.
elements
in the strategic
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
framework.
his , first wife, Beverly McTaggart Campbell; one half
The
Development
brother and his wife, Robert G. and-Eloise Campbell; one
Committee
session
followed
half-sister and her husband, Massey and Blaine Riggs; one
a meeting of the btmk's sister
sister and her husband, Elouise C. and Wiley Hicks.
Funeral services will be conducted at II a.m. Tuesday, · institution the International
Oct. 23, 2007, at the Vaughan Funeral Home, 1010 Monetary Fund.
In a lecture sponsored by
Murdoch Avenue, Parkersburg, with Pastor Lamar
0' Bryant officiating. Services will conclude with burial in the IMF, former Federal
Sunset Memory Gardens. The family will receive friends Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan warned that risfrom 2-4 &amp; 6·8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home .
In lieu of flowers, the family request memorials to the ing protectionism could
Maple Grove Baptist Church, 120·E.State Route 78 N.W., undermine the ability of the
Moore Haven, Fla., 33471 , The First Southern Baptist United States to deal with
Church, 41872 Pomeroy Pike Road, Pomeroy, Ohio, large deticits.
45769, or The American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 4451,
"If the pernicious drift
Parkersburg, W.Va., 26104.
·
toward tiscal instability in
A guestbook is available for sending online condolences the United States and elseto the family at www. vaughanfh.com.
where is not arrested and is
compounded by a protectionist reversal of globalization, the current account
deficit adjustment process
RUTLAND - Dwight Sherman "Pete" Haley, Jr. 59, could be quite painful for the
Rutland, died at his residence Sunday after an extended ill- United States arid our tradness. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced
by the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.

Wright

The. Daily Sentinel • Page As

ing partners," he said.
Zoellick, who took over as -needs more budget discihead
of the bank July I, has pline.
At a news conference the
bank's new president Robert called on the United States
South African Finance'
Zoellick and the tiead ·of the and other developed coun: Minister Trevor Manuel weJ:
IMF, Rodrigo de Rata, said trles to "translate their words corned Zoellick's emphasis
they were exploring ways the from summit declarations on helping to overcome·
fund could start the ball into sei-ious numbers" and poverty and promote sustairrrolling on reducing debt for contribute to the bank branch ;tble growth in poor conn'
that makes low interest loans tries. particularly those . in
Liberia.
"This is a country ·that is to poor countries. He hopes sub-Saharan Atrica.
helping itself and deserves to to raise $33 billion by early
He said the strategic objec;
be helped by the internation- . 2008 .
tives Zocllick has outlined iri
He said South Africa had his lirs't I00 days in office
al community," de Rata said.
In February, the UrJited already set a good standard "suggests a new pragmatism
States for~ave $358 million by pledging a 30 percent at the bank that could be Of
that Libena, a West African . boost in its contribution to real benefit to countries in
our constituency.
country emerging from civil the loan facility.
Zoellick
faces
a
stiff
chalGermany's minister for
war, owed the country and
pushed for further action at lenge because in recent years economic cooperation and
the IMF-World Bank meet- · wealthier countries have pre- development, Heidemarie
ings. Liberia's inherited debt ferred to channel their aid to Wiecwrek-Zeul said it was
to international institutions poor countries directly encouraging, des~ite the ll!r~
throu~h their development bulence in finanCial markets,
1 totals $1.6 b~llion, including
$740 million to the IMF. Its agenc1es or through founda- that most countries in subtotal international debt is tions that specialize on an Saharan Africa "are experiis.,ue such as malaria.
enri ng the highest rates of
$3.7 billion.
·
U.S.
Treasury
Secretary
growth
since their indepenThe World Barik should
Henry
Paulson
said
the
dence
and
a further increase
further strengthen its work as
World
Bank
would
have
to
in
their
growth
rates is pro-'
a knowledge broker on develjected."
become
more
efficient
and
opme.nt policy while continuing its existing lending activ- demand more flexibility ·
ities, its
Development · from its staff.
"Too often the bank -group
Committee said.
has
been slow in redeploying
Countries that are bank
POMEROY ,- Danielle
Its
resources and has
clients, the committee said,
Dugan
of Pomeroy received
deployed
the
wrong
mix
of
should sharpen their focus on
a
Master
of Education
poverty reduction strategies resources at the expense of degree at the University of
"on stronger, shared private- poor execution on high priorat the end of the
sector led growth to link ity projects," he said. Cincinnati
summer
quarter.
Paulson
also
said
the
bank
these strategies better to budgetary frameworks and to
implement them effectively:"
The bank also should help
~ ••' \ .. :, I 0
;::
developing countries deal
u::.... ,' ·-·····--~ !."!-:~
with the causes and impacts
~J
of climate change.
- · ---- -... •··· ... . . ...
.
I'ERfOR \11\G.\Jt F~tl. \llll
The members of the committee welcomed the comRACINE
- Jessica
Haunted Theater
mitment by the bank's new Howell of Racine was
Tour
president, Robert Zoellick to named to the President 's
develop a new strategy for Li st at Mountain State
Oct. 25- 31st
the bank in consultation with College for the summer
$6.00 admission
., ·the banks's 24-member exec- term, earning a grade point
utive board.
average of 3.5 or higl1er.
Paul "Bub" Williams
Concert
November 10, 2007 .~

UC graduate

Mountain
·State honor

Betty Milhoan honored for 50 years in DAR

/it'"

v /\ .

· · ······"··"~

.

-

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
POMEROY
-Betty Achley Bridge. Her interest Hager and group presenting
Gallipolis, OH (V40) 446-ARTS
Milhoan was honored for in genealogy has been fun- a program of gospel music.
fifty years of membership neled i~to assisting other
and service to the Meigs women in completing
Chapter during · a recent ancestral history to qualify
DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
meeting of the group at the for membership in the
DAR .
Milhoan home.
PROPERTY NOTICE
She was presented with a
It was noted that the
floral arrangement and a September DAR meeting
certificate honoring her 50 had been
hosted hy
In compliance with provisions of Section 5721 .03 of
years of membership. Mrs. Wendell and Anna Cleland
the Revised Code of the State of Ohio, there will be
Milhoan is a past regent, at their Meigs County farm
volunteer genealogist, PAR home , At that meeting a
published on November 16th and November 23,
Museum, state page at state potluck dinner was held
2007, in this newspaper, a delinquent land list
conferences in Columbus in with June Ashley winning a
containing the description of the property as it
the 1960, and representative door prize , a painting of a
appears on the tax list, the name of the person in
of DAR schools.
purple iris by Anna Cleland
Some of her ancestors on a 150 year old slate.
whose name the property IS listed. the amount of
helped to build the build ~
The Nov. 10 meeting will
taxes and penalties due and unpaid.
River in New Haven, W.Va. ings at Blennerhasset Island be held at the Chester
Supporters and detractors . and assisted with the Courthouse with Sue Circle
Each person charged with real property taxes and ·
will all have an opportunity
penalties may pay the full amount of taxes at the
to b~ heard at Thursdafs
meetmg.
Meigs County Treasure's Office by 4:00 p.m. on·
For those wishing to give
November'?, 2007, to avoid publication.
testimony in writing rather
than at the meeting, testimony will be taken until the
To avoid addittonal interest charged on December
close of business on Oct. 31
1st, a taxpayer may enter into written agreement
and can be sent to Dean
MIDDLEPORT - American Legion Post 128 will sponwith the County Treasurer to pay one-fifth (1 /5) of
Ponchak, OEPA SE District sor. Sleepy Hollow at the Middleport Mari na. following
the delinquent taxe.s . .
Oftice, 2196 Front Street, trick or treat on Oct. 25 .
Activities will include a hayride, costume judging,
Logan, 43188. Those who
gave oral testimony can add spooky stations, and cash. prizes . Fre~ hot dogs. donuts.
Mary T. Byer-Hill
additional comments b,Y coffee , cider and hot chocolate will be served.
Meigs County Auditor
Those interested in sponsoring a stati on n1ay contac t
mail, in writing, as long as tt
is received before Oct. 31. . . Russ Mozingo at 742-2094.
.

Local Briefs

Sleepy Hollow

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 22,

2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

R. Valley wins sectional title, Page B2
Bengals beat Jets, Page B2

Report: Nursing homes receive funds for housing mentally ill
CLEVELAND (AP) evaluators and ordered to as a rescue," 0 ' Boyle said.
Some northeast Ohio nurs- leave the facilities, the inves- "It's not a proper solution.
i.ng home~ use a Medicaid ti ~ J tion fotllld . The three There's no accountabi li ty.-"
loophole to accept hundreds Cleveland-area
0' Boyle filed a Medicaid
nursing
of mentally ill patients dis- homes at the center of the fruud complaint against
charg~d from hospital psyinquiry. all run by Saber Sa!Jt,r Healthcare. claiming
chiatric wards, spending mil- Healthcare Group. received the company let ineligible
lions of taxpayer dol lars to $59 mi Ilion in Medicaid patients .stay while ·it continhouse patients w~o often do funds from 2005 through ued to draw Medicaid
not qualify for nursing home August 2007. according to stipends. O'Boyle's co mplaint also accused represencare. a state investigation the state.
tatives
of the company of
found .
The state's Department of
visi
ting
homeless she lters
Mentally ill patients are Mental Health estimates that
.
seeking
potential
adm issions
eligib le for nursing home about I ,300 psychiatric
care paid fur by Medicaid if patients a year are admitted to three of the company 's
they need 2-t-hour supervi- to Ohio nursing homes under nursing homes - Cleveland
sion or hanus-on assistance. a Medicaid rule that allows Rehabilitation , Un iversi ty
but an investigation by the . 30-day con vale sce nt stays. Manor and Rudw ick Manor.
The Bedford He ightsOhio Department of Mental The rule allows patients to
based
company denies
Health found that 60 percent get in on a doctor's signaof [he psychiatric patients . ture, bypassing independent.
admi tted into Cuyahoga face-to-face
admissions
County nursing homes don't reviews. Of these patients,
need such intensive care. 40 percent are in Cuyahoga
The [&gt;lain Dealer reported.
County.
The syste m provides a
Medicaid pays about $ 148
a day to house such pati~nts , wi ndfall fur nursi ng homes,
about three times what it at the public 's expense, said
would- cost to care for the William 0' Boyle, a licensed
patient in a group home.
clinical counselor who evalMan y pat ients stay in the uated nursing horne patients
nursing homes for months or for the Department of
years, eve n after being Mental Health.
'The nursing 'homes serve ·
deemed unqualified by state

O'Hoyle's
allegations. people who are discharged guidelines on who is responwhich also claim Saber and fail than who are dis- sible for policing th e system.
Healthcare employees visit- charged and stay out."
. "We know there are peoed homeless shelters seeking
Wcisbe.rg said he was not ple getting into these places
to bo\)sl admissions under aware of any practice within wlio should nut," said Erika
the Medicaid provision.
the nursing homes that
Robbins of the
Ohio
Saber Healthcare does not encouraged recruitment of
have to discharge patients · patients from homeless shel- Department of Job and
Family Services, wh~ch
until they have secured ters.
Housing for the mentally manages M edicaid. "We
housing, and the state's stmidards for determining eligi- ill is scarce in thestate, leav- don't know how many come
bility for nursing care favors ing psychiatric patients with in who never come out."
the e lderly, not mentally ill few options when they are
Medicaid officials estimatpatients who may require discharged from hospi tals, ed that the program spent $1
months of care, said William she lters and mental health
million to $2.5 mill ion on
Weisberg, part owner of agencies.
·
Saber Healthcare.
Medicaid otficials vowed improper placements since
. "The people I see need to to crack do wn on abuses and 2006. O'Boyle said the actube in a controlled environ- said pm1 of the problem was al number is more than $2.5
ment," he said:''] see more bureaucracy that blurs the million.

~onday,Cktober22,2007

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule ot upcoming high
scho ol varsity sporting events invol\'ing
teams from Mejgs C ounty.

Southern v~lleyball falls to Lady Vikings ·in four

Tuetdav October 23

STAFF REPORT

Tourna~ant Volleyball

SPORTS@MVDAILVSENTINEL. COM

River Valley at · Athens High School,
late game
Wadngaday October 24
Taurnamant Volleyball

Eastern at Wellston H1gh School, 6
p.m
Friday, October 20
Football
Gallia Academy al Athens , 7:30p.m.
Symmes Valley at South Gallia , 7:30
p. m .

Coal Gro\le at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.

, WILLOW WOOD
Southern won a much needed battle, but Symmes Valley
eventually won the war.
The Lady Tornadoes fell
behind two-games-to-none
during their Division VI vol leyball · sectional final on
Thursday before rallying for
a much-needed vi ctory in
game three, but the host

Vikings proved to be too
much down the st retch and
advanced to the district po,tseason followin g a fourgame 25-17, 25-20, 20-25,
25- 15 decision at SVHS.
The Purple and Gold
played close in those opening two contests, falling by a
grand total of 13 points. SHS
( 10-13) finally found its
rhyilim in game three, jumping out early and taking con· trot for the 5-point decision.

"In one sense, we lose four
The Red and Gray wasted littie time in sealing the deal players who have condurin g the finale, which tributed a great deal to this ·
ended up being a 10-point program. That will be liard to
margin.
replace," Hunter commentThe loss was difficult for ed. 'Then again, I had the
SHS coac h Tonja Hunter, enjoyment of coaching these
who loses four seniors - . girls in junior high, so we
Ashley · Robie , . Whitney sort of have a bond."
Wolfe-Riffle.
Stephanie · Robie led the Lady ' Does
Cundiff and Sardh Edd~ with 15 service points.
that she has had ilie pri,viiege Emma Hunter and Chelsea
of watching grow up before Pape were next with si)(
her very eyes.
apiece, followed by. Wolfe-

Eastern's Martindale, River Valley's
Fitch also advance to regionals
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MVDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Buckeyes

Local weather

SUrviVe

Monday ... Sunny in th e morning ... Then becoming partly
sunny. Highs in the uppe r 70s. South winds around 5 mph.
Monday night ... C ioudy. A chance of rain in the
evening .. .Then rain after midnight.. Not as cool with lows
around 60. Southeast wi nd s 10 to 15 mph . Chance of rain
80 percent.
.
,
· ·Thesday ... Ra in with a chance of thunderstorms. Cooler
with highs in the mid 60s. So uthwest winds I0 to 15 mph
with gusts up to 25 mph . Chance of rain 80 percent.
Thesday night...Rain likely. Lows in the lower 50s.
North winds I 0 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 per_cent.
. Wednesday .. .Mostly clqudy. A chance of rain in the
morning. Highs in the .Jower 60s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
.
Wednesday night...Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s .
·
;Thursday through Frlday ... Mostly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
·
Friday nlght ... Mostly cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Saturday through Sqnday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 60s. Lows in the lower 40s.

Spartans

t : tilit~·

Facility

This is the second public notice published in regard to this Proposed Major Utility Facility. AMP-Ohio published the first notice in the Daily Sentinel newspaper,
'
Pomeroy, Ohio, on August 24, .2007.
Name and Desl'ription of the
~~-.,.......,.~,.,··....
· ·...;--::., _, ''"\ Meigs County Office of Economic and standards adopted under mit a written reJl9rl to the Board
Proposed Facility
,
and Workforce Development
those chapters and under Sections and to ilie applicant. A copy of
: Mr. Perry Varnadoe, Executive 1501.33, 1501.34, 0md 4561.32 of such report shall be made available
American . Muni cipal Power-Ohio
,.,.......,,.., Driector
the Revised Code. In determining to any person upon request. Such
(AMP-Ohio) propilscs to construct
238 West Main Street
whether ilic facility will comply report shall set forth the nature of
a pulverized coal-fi red electric
l
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
wiili all rules and standards ad- ilie investigation, and shall contain
power generation plant in Letart
~
opted under Section 4561.32 of recommended findings with regard
Township, Meigs County. Ohio,
The Ohio Power Siting Board has the Revised Code. the Board shall to division (A) of section 4906.10
~--Gn..l!px. l,(XXi acres adjacent to the
served ilie following.state agencies consult with the office o f aviation of the Revised Code and s hall beOhio River. This pr~ject is known
with copies of the application':
of ilie division of the rtmlti-'mooal , come part of the record and served
as the American Municipal Power
planning and programs of the De- 1,1pon all parties to the proceeding.
Gencmting Station (AMPGS). The
Public Utilities Commission of partment of Transpo'rtation under
Ohio ,
Section 4561.341 of the Revised' The Board has scheduled the pub'
proposed project will indudc a 960
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio
Ohio Department of Agriculture
Code:
·
he heurmg m t~o parts: .
megawatt net power ge neration
Kent
Carson.
Director
of
CommuOhio
Deparunent
of
Development
•
The
facility
will
serve
ilie
public
J.) A non-adJUdicatory hean ng purplant. a 133 acre landfi ll a nd barge
nications
Ohio Department of Health
interest. convenience., and neces- s~nt to Section 4906.08 (C). Rehandling facilities on the Ohio Ri v2600
Airport
Dri
ve
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resity;
VISed:Cod~, where the Boar~ shtlll
er. The accompany ing map depicts
Columbus.
Ohio
43219
sources
• ,The facility' s impact on the vi- accept wmten o~ _on1l testimony
the proposed site for the AMPGS
(614)
337-6222
Ohio Department of Trdnsporta- ability tl~ agricultural land of any from any person. I he heanng Will
facility. It should be. noted that due
tion
land in an existing agticu ltural di s- take place Nove~ber .1• 2007, at
to reduced scale llllu limited detail
of
the
apAn
electronic
version
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
trict established under Chapter 9~9 6:00 p.m. , at Mclg~ Htgh Sch&lt;X)I,
this map shou ld be used on ly as a
plication
can
be
found
at
the
Ohio
Agency .
ofthc Revised Code that is located 42091 · Pomeroy Pike. Po meroy,
general gui de. More uetailed inforPower
Siting
Boartl'
s
Web
site
at
Ohio Historical Society
wiiliin the site of the proposed rna- Ohio 45769. And,
mation regarding the genernllayout
of the proposed facility is included http://opsb.ohio.gov. To retrieve
jor utility facility ; and
2) An adjudicatnry hearing will
in the appl ication. dcsctibed he low. the appliaction, searc h under "Cur- Criteria Used to Review the Ap· • The facility incorporates maxi- take place November 8, 2007, at
that AMP-Ohio has filed with th e rent Cases" for Case # 06- 135!!- plication
·
mum feasible Wtlter conservation 10:00 a.m .. in Hearing Room II EL-BGN.
Ohio Power Siting Board.
practices as detemnined by the C. at the oflices of the Public Uti! t·
. . ' The following eight criteria are set Board, considering available tech- ies Commission of Oll,io, I 80 East.
Pursuant to Rule 49()(~-5 -06 of ilie forth in Section 4906.10 (A) of the nology tmd the nature and economApplication Now Pending
Broad · Street, Columbus. Ohio
Oh10
Ad1T11~tstrallve Code, ilie lol- Revised Code and will be used, ics of various alternatives.
•
43215-3793 .
An applicatio n for a Certificate of lowm ~' ~ocal gove~11ment offic~als along with additional information ,
Environmen tal Compatibil ity and m_ M:1gs County h~ve .~n ser ed by the Board in the reviewing of Date, Time and Location' of Pub· Opportunity li1r Comment and
the application for a certificate to lie Hearing
Public Need to construct, operate with a copy of the apphcation.
Intervention
·
and maintain the AMPGS facility
construci, operate and maintain ilie
AMPGS faci lity:
Section 4906.07 of the Revised Section 4906.08(C) · of the Reis now pending before the O hio Meigs Counry Commissioners
Mr.
Mi
chael
Davenport,
President
vised Code provides that: The
• The basis of the need for the fa- Code provides that :
Power Siting Board ("Board").
I
00
East
Second
Street
Board
shall accept written or oral
ci lity. In the case of a major utility (A) Upon the receipt of an appliThis application has bee n assigned
Po
meroy.
Ohio
45769
facility described in divi sion (B)( 1) cati rin complying with Section testimony from any person at the
case number 06- 1358-EL-BGN.
of Section 4906.01 of the Revised 4906.06 of ilic Revised Code, the public hearing. but the right to call
Th i~ CllfiC number should he inMeigs
County
Health
Department
Code, the Board shall presume ilie .Power Siting Board shall promptly and exam ine witnesses shall be
cluded in a II communications with
Mr.
Lany
M:irsha
ll,
Health
Comneed for the facility as iliat need is fi x a date for a public hearing there- reserved for parties. However, ilie
respect to this proceeding. Specific
missioner
stated in an application pursuant to on, not less ilian sixty nor more Board may adopt rules to exclude
detai led information on the pro112
East
Memorial
Drive
division (A)(3 ) of Sectimi 4906.06 than niilety days after such receipt. repetitive, immaterial, or in·elevant
posed project i&gt; included in the apPomeroy.
Ohio
45771
of the Re vised Code;
and shall conclude the proceeding testi mony.
plication curre ntly pending before
the Board.
• The nature of the probable envi- as exped itiously as pract.icable.
The deadline for filin g,. petition to
Mr. Robert Morris
of
the
proposed
(B)
On
an
application
for
an
ronmental
impact
intervene in Case No. 06-1358-ELLetart Township Trustee
Copies of the app lication. includfacility;
amendment
of
a
certificate,
the
BG N as established by the Ohio
ing spc,itic dcw i Is of location and 49435 Lighthouse Road
•
Whether
the
l'acility
represents
Board
shall
hold
a
hearing
in
the
Power Siting Board or the admi nisoonstruction are availab le for pub- Raci ne. Ohio 4577 I
the minimum adverse environmen- same manneF as a heari ng is held trative law judge is u p to five days
lic inspecti on at the following loca·tal impact, considering the state of on an application for a cet1ificate prior to the scheduled date for ilie
Meigs County District Library
tions : ·
avai lahlc technology, the natu re if the proposed c han ge in the fa- non-adjudicatory hearing. or later ·
Ms. Kristi Eblin. Director
and
economics of various altcma- cil ity would reswlt in any mate1ial if good caus~ is shown. However,
216 West Main Street
Meigs Count y District Library
tives. and oilier pertinent conside r- increase in any environmental im- the Board strongly encourages inPomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ms. Kri sti Ehlin , Director
ations:
·
· terested persons who wish to interpact oft he fac1lity
or a substan tml
2 16 West Main Streel ·
•
The
facility
is
consistent.
with
h
·
h
1
·
f'
11
Meigs SWCD
c ange Ill t c ocat1 on ·o a or· a vene in the adjudiaalory hearing to
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Mr. Joe Bolin. Chai rman
regional plans for expansion of portion of such a faciilty other than ll le ilieir petitions as e;uly as pos(740) 99~ - 58 1 3
the regional powe' grid of e lectric as provided in the alternates set sible. Petitions·should be addressed
33101 Hiland Road
systems serving this state and inter- forth in the application.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
to the Ohio Power Siti ng Board,
'Ohio Power Siting Board
connected utility systems. and the
180 East Broad Street, Columbus.
'
Public Utilities Commissio n of Tuppers . Plainsfacility will serve the interest\ of (C) The Chairman of the Power Ohio 43215-3793.
Chester Water District
Ohio
electric system economy and reli - Siting Board shall cause each ap. American Municipal
Mr. Donald Poole, Operations a]?ility :.
180 East Broad Street ·
plication fil ed wiili the Board to be
Powe •·-O hio
General Manager .
2600 Airpurt Dri ve
Columbus. Ohio 4.\2 15-3793
• The facility .will .comply with investigated and shall, not less than
Colu'
m bus. Ohi(&gt;43 2 1Y
(1l66) 270-(J 77~
3956 1 Holly Ltlne
Chapters :) 704, 3734. and 6111 fifteen days prior to lhe date of any
( (&gt;14) JJ 7- 6 222
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
of the Re vi sed Code and all ru les application is set fur hearing. subwww .o.unp- ohio.org

I -

,.

•

placed seventh overall wiili
a time Of 20:47.68, While
sophomore Genna Baker
finished 23ed with a time of
22:25.05. Seniors Aarika
Stanley (24:00.67) and Sara
Elberfeld (24: 16.88) rounded out the advancing team
score with respective finishes of 58th and 68th.
Gallia Academy was the
lone advancee, boys or girls,
from ilie area in Division II,
·but a pair of local. jndividuals also advanced to regionals in the Division III brack-

RIO GRANDE - Some
things change; And some
things do not.
Gallia Academy's girls
cross country team is once
again 'headed to the regional
championships following
Saturday's fourth-place finish at the 2007 Division II
BY RUSTY MILLER
Southeast District Meet held
ASSOCIATED PRESS
on the campus of the
University of Rio Grande.
COLUMBUS
The Blue Angels, who
Comfortable was ilot quite
won the D2 -district team e.
1
comfortable enough for No.
crown last year, were the
River Valley junior Ashley
I Ohio State.
·
last qualifying group to Fitch pla~ed ninth overall in
After building
what
advance to ne)(t Saturday's the first of two D-3 qualiseemed like an insumnount\
regional
race
at fiers, running a time of
able cushion. the Buckeyes
Pickerington Central High 21:29.13 to move on.
had a hard time holding on
School.
GAHS
also Eastern
senior
Aaron
for a 24-17 win over
advanced to last season's Martindale also advanced in
Michigan State oiJ Saturday.
state competition as a group. ilie first D-3 boys' race by
Ohio State (8-0, 4-0 Big
The one constant for placing 16th overall with a
Ten) was ahea\1 24-0 late in
Gallia Academy - besides time of 18:21.38. Fitch parthe third qu:irier whe.n in t1Je
advancing as a team - was ticipated in the regional
span of · ·four , . plays, ';
junior .Lauren Adkins, who ineet last _year, w~ile
Michigan Stare maee it a
won the district individual Martmdale will be making
I 0-point game.
·
·
title for ilie third consecutive his first appearance.
" When. your foot is on
year. Adkins was more than
The top-four teams and
that jugular, you have to kill
12 seconds ahead of the top- 16 finishers advanced
that fool," Buckeyes offencompetition, posting a win- from each of the individual .
sive tackle Kirk Barton said.
ning tiine of20:14,03. It was races. There were two boys
" You don't just back off, let
also the first time in three and two girls races in
him stand up and punch you
chances iliis fall that Adkins Division III, as well as one
a couple of times and then
completed
the course at girls and two boys races in
knock him back down."
URG.
Division II.
The comeback . started
Junior Lee Ann Townsend
Iri oilier results throughout
when Todd Boeckman
Bryan Walters/photo . - who has finished as the the area, starting with
!lipped a pass under pressure that Otis Wiley picked Eastern's Aaron Martindale ·runs during the Division II Southeast District Meet held district runner-up over the · Please - Advance, 86
last two postseasons off and returned 54 yards to Saturday in Rio Grande.
put the Spartan~ on the
board.
: On the ne)(t series, a short
tun and two penalties gave
!he Buckeyes a first down at
their own 15. Boeckman
was sacked by Jonal SaintDie and fumbled, with linebacker SirDarean Adams
swooping in to scoop up the
ball and run 25 yards to
·
make it 24-14.
Suddenly, a crowd of
. 105,287 was· so silent you
could hear a national championship trophy drop.
" It's disappointing when
you're going along and your
defense is pitching a shutout
and you give up 14 poi~t~,"
coach J1m Tressel sa1d. 'I m
The
Pleasant Valley Hospital
not happy that those 14
points count against our
146 PiMell Street
2520 Valley Drive· Suite 214
defense, the way it looks."
Ripley,
25271
25550
After the next kickoff, the
Buckeyes took over at their
own 22. On first down,
',,
'·.'.
"'.' -·~
Chris Wells fumbled when
·-""
• .
»' ·.• ' ~:-:i;~· ' .
hit by Jeremiah Antonio and
the ball bounced loose.
Wiley and end Ervin
Baldwin each had a clear
.·· ~ ·
shot at falling on the ball but
AP photo
failed to ~rab it, and Ohio
Boston
Red
Sox's
Dustin
Pedroia,
right.
jumps
into
the
arms
State malntamed posses''
of David Ortiz after Pedrola's two run home off Cleveland
sion.
"I should have fallen on · indians pitcher Rafael Betancourt in the seventh inning of
I(Ui/
it," Wiley said. "The out- Game 7 of the American League Championship baseball
come of the game could series Sunday at Fenway Park in Boston .
have been different."
•
Following an Ohio State
punt midway through the
t
eKaminatlons
fourth · quarter,
Brett
Swenson kicked a 43-yard
• Obltelrioal Care

•

Notice of Proposed !Vlajor

Riffle with fiv e points.
Hunter also led the way with
14 assists.
Rashell Boso led the net
attack with I 0 kills and a
team-high six blocks. Robie
also had three blocks in the
setback. Eddy did not play in
her finale due to a broken
hand.
·
Southern finished the season 5-5 in Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division play.

11/v'ollf~ I Tdae~

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

He_dy J. M-Windsor; MD

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• Point Pleasant omce:

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Point Pleasant. WV

.' 304~75·4839 .
• Ripley Otli~b"~ours: · • Point Ple*nt Office Hours:
·Wednesdays ·
MOnda
·ua.m:
to 1 p.m.
9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
.
lf~~~fl~
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8:30 ,.m. to Sp.m..
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304-372•$156 .

Red Sox

Please see Bucks, B:Z

to

BY

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
E·mell.- sports@ mydailysentinel.com
S.ll!lri.I.Sl~tl

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
· bwalters 0 mydailytrtbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
Ierum 0 mydailyr&amp;gister.com

',I

'

• Ptlvk lntlammatory diseues &amp; pelvic pain ·
JtMMY GOLEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CoNrAcrUs ·

'

'

BOSTON Daisuke
Matsuzaka, Dustin Pedroia
and these Boston Red Sox
are taking a sweet streak
into the World Series, too.
Boston charged to its third
straight wi n, completing yet
another October comeback
by
overpowering
the
Cleveland Indians 11-2
Sunday night in Game 7 of
the AL championship series

behind a new pair of rookie
Sox.
Matsuzaka pitched five
solid innings, Pedroia drove
in five runs and the Red Sox
- helped by a key blunder
by an Indians base coach finished off their rally from
a 3- 1 deficit."
Having ended their 86year title drought in 2004
'after digging out of a 3-0
hole against the Yankee~ in

Please see Series, B:Z

.•.

• ~~. tum~ "f~vlriel,. utwa and femllt OIJIOI

-..,y

· • Pap smear, bnut ~. complete blood~ naJ1..,_ A '
.

t-

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r

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

1'lt fctMt~ " P+t/OI(O.It

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 22, 2007
Monday, October 22, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

River Valley volleyball
team
wins
first
sectional
title
since
1998
.
BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM .

. CHESHIRE
- Six
Straight
Ohio
Valley
Conference championships,
a 58-2 record in OVC play
since 200 l and, finally,
another sectional championship.
. For the first time since
1998 the River Valley volteyball teain is sectional
champs after defeating
Southeastern in straight sets
'26-24, 25-12 and 25-22
Saturday , afternoon
in
Cheshire.
: Saturday's sectional title is
not only the team's first in
nine years. but it is the first
since racking up.half a dozen
OVC titles and nearly 60
wins that haven't meant
·much in recent years come
tournament time.
That is: until Saturday.
"We love OVC titles, that
is for sure, we ellpect to win
that every year," said River
Valley head coach Sharon
Vannoy. "We have fought
nard the past couple of years
in the sectionals and haven't
made it out, hitting two road
blocks in two excellent
teams in the finals and we
were very fortunate this year
to go one and out and we are
glad we accomplished our
goaL
•
"These kids have worked
hard all year and we talked
about it all week that we
thought we could do this.
They did a great job."
But it wasn't easy.
After jumping out to a 7-2

rtbune- Sentinel- l\egtster

'

...,,.....---

off three straight service stepped up and did a really
points to turn a 24-23 good job," Vannoy said. .
Southeastern lead into a 26McFann led her team with
24 River Valley victory.
nine points. while Taylor
Despite going down a added eight points and IS
game, it was the Lady kills, Carter had eight points,
Panthers that got the strong fice aces and II kills and
start in game two.
Corfias had eight points, four
' Southeastern jumped out aces and four kills.
to a ·quick lead but that
Clullton and Simmons
advantage did not last long added six points apiece for
as the Lady Raiders . came the winners.
storming back. River Valley
Lauren Smith had nine
tied the game 7-7 and then points to lead the Lady
outscored the visitors 17-5 Panthers while Dresbach had
from there to take a domina!- . eight points.
ing 25-12 game two victory
Saturday 's win .was tcmg
thanks to strong play from on the cake for a team that
Kari McFann, Mackenzie was used to winn_ing games
Clullton, !Iiana Corfias, and regular season champiKirsten Carter and Taylor.
onships, but postseason titles
With two games in the had avoided River Valley
books and feeling confident during that recent span of
the Lady Raiders played a success
Not any more .
solid game three, jumping
. out to an 18-12 lead - but
And making the win ev~n
Southeastern wasn't done more satisfying is the fact
yet.
that the Lady Raiders will
The Lady Panthers came now be the lone Gallia
storming back tha!lkS to County team representing
strong
serving
from their home at the next round
Dresbach, bringing the game atier Gallia Academy's seaback to within one in a 21-20 son took an unellpected turn
RVHS lead.
when Athens beat the 21-2
But feeling a champi- Lady Angles earlier in the
Larry Crum/photo onship within grasp, ·the week.
"We are happy. We have
River Valley's Brooke Taylor hits the ball while Samantha Simmons (8) and Kirsten Carter Lady Raiders stepped up and
took
care
of
the
final
points
heard
that all year, we have
look on during Saturday's sectional title game against Southeastern in Ches)lire.
to take a 25-22 victory and heard how good Gallipolis
lead early in game one the three straight service points. Panthers to turn what was at claim their first title in nine is, but we feel that we have a
Lady Panthers fought back The Lady Raiders extended one point a seven point game years.
good team also and to be the
with strong play from Kaitlin thei~ lead again to as high as to a 22-22 tie with
"Kirsten Carter did a fan- only team representing us
Duarte, Lauren Smith and 18-11 before another spurt Southeastern carrying all the tastic job hitting for us. now in districts, we are very
Cat Dresbach.
· from Southeastern's Smith momentum.
Brooke Taylor did a fantastic proud to be able to do that,"
Southeastern cut the lead brought the score to two
The two teams then traded job, really the whole lineup, Vannoy said.
to 9-7 before River Valley points.
points until a senior stepped Kair McFann, Samantha
River Valley will now travagain began to pull .away
Dresbach then put up four up and took ·over for the · Simmons, Iliana Corfius, el to Athens Tuesday in diswith Brooke Taylor firing off straight point~ for the Lady home squad as Taylor fired Mackenzie Cluxton all tric play.

Bengals take advantage of Jets'
mistakes to r~lly for 38-31 win .
BY JOE KAY
ASSOC IATED PRESS

CINCINNATI -· Don't
blame it all on Chad
Pennington. This time, he ·
had plenty of help.
The punter shanked one.
The rookie cornerback had
two interference· penalties.
The center snapped one
early. The ·safety took a
swing at a player on the
ground. ·
All in one horrid half.
The Cincinnati Bengals
took advantage of nearly
every mistake by the downand-out New York Jets on
Sunday, rallying for a 38-31
victory behind the best performance of running back
Kenny Watson's career.
The
Bengals
(2-4)
snapped a four-game losing
streak - their longest during coach Marvin Lewis'
five seasons- with Watson
playing like a star instead of
Rudi Johnson's fill-in. The
seventh-year runner with . a
half-dozen career starts had
AP photo
130 yards and three touch- Cincinnati B~ngals quarterback Carson Palmer (9) throws a
d~~~ never know how the pass in t he first half of an NFL football game against the
New York Jets Sunday in Cincinnati.
game is going to go,"
Watson said.
dunk passing and six inter- game. We never thought of
The Jets {l-6) often have ceptions in the last three being 1-5 ."
an inkling.
games.,
Instead, the Jets freaked
They've already matched
Fans have clamored for out.
their loss total from last sea- strong-armed
Kellen
First-round draft pick
· son, when coach Eric Clemens to take over. So far, Darrelle Revis drew a pair of
Mangini was dubbed the Mangini has resisted. He pass interference penalties
"Mangenius" for taking a was noncommittal about his that extended Bengals touchpreviously 4-12 team to the quarterback after the game, down drives . dqring their
playoffs. There's been noth- pointing out there were a lot comeback. Ben Graham's
mg brilliant about their play of mistakes by a lot of play'- shanked, 20-yard punt set up
this year. .
ers.
the Bengals' drive to a 24-23
·'.Jn some ways, this one
"The miture of this busi- lead in the fourth quarter.
was the worst yet.
ness, the quarterback is genThe mistakes kept coming.
"It's just not good enough, erally the fall guy," said · Pennington was calling a
and l'ni tired of giving the Pennington , who was 20-of- play in the shotgun formasame speech each week," 31 for 272 yards with three tion when the ball was
Mangim said .. "We're going touchdowns and a game- snapped, resulting in a fumto find out about every per- sealing interception. "When ble that gave Cincinnati posson in the locker room. ·It a team struggles, the first session at the SO. The
should hurt deeply. It's a person people look at is the Bengals then drove for
matter of it's all got to get quarterback. But I don't Watson's 2-yard touchdown
better."
blink, one way or the other." with the help of a personal
Things haven't been so
Johnathan Joseph's 42- foul on safety Abram Elam,
bad for the Jets since 1999, yard interception return put who threw a left-handed
when they opened tbe sea- c· ·
· h d 38•23 With
·
son 1-6 under Bill Parcells · mcmnau a ea
punch at Watson on the
before recovering 10 an 8_8 37 seconds left. Pennington ground at the end of a run.
finish .
threw a touchdown pass on
"We didn't play very good
. "It's tough for evervbody the game's final play.
football at the beginning, but
'from 'top to bottom:·~ said
In the first half, the it's not how you start but
Laveranues Coles, who had Bengals made the glaring how you finish," Bengals
eight catches for a season- gaffes. They were .. flagged defensive tackle Domata
.high 133 yards, and two for having too many players Peko said. "We got some
touchdowns. "For us 10 in a defensive huddle, and bounces. The ball finally
come this far and continue to Carson Palmer was called bounced out way."
·lose is disheartening .
for grounding on the final
Notes: Pennington threw a
. "You can't point fingers at play before halftime, costing 57-yard touchdown pass to
Chad. You can't blame one them a chance for points.
Coles on the Jets' third "play.
guy. All of us stink, not just , They calmed themselves Pennington hadn't complet.one guy."
and ground it out in the sec- ed a pass of looger than 29
Pennington was the heart ond half.
yards all season. ... Coles
of the Jets' playoff run last
"We stayed patient," said passed Curtis Martin into
season, when he returned Palmer, who was 14-of-21 sixth place on the Jets' career
from his second major for 226 yards with ·a touch- receiving list. He also moved
shoulder operation and won down and an interception. ,ahead of George Sauer into
the Comeback Player of the "We didn 't ever freak out. ninth for career touchdowns .
Year award. This year, .he's We didn 't ever think we ... Cob has six' of the Jets'
. under fire for his .dink-and- weren't going to win the 10 touchdown catches.

Series
from PageBl
the ALCS, the Red Sox now
have a date with Colorado in
the World Series. The
Rockies, who have won 10
in a row and 21 of 22, will
come back from a record
eight days off for Game I at
Fenway Park on Wednesday
ni!lht.
'We started to click at the
right time. When your
.team's back is against the
wall, it shows the type of
ballclub we have. We're
down 3-1 and we believed."
While Manny Ramirez,
David Ortiz and ALCS MVP
Josh Beckett helped the Red
Soll win their 12th pennant,
the Indians only .added more
misery to a city that hasn' t
celebrated a World Series
championship since 1948.
The Indians were a double-play grounder from winning the crown at Florida in
1997. They appeared to take
control of this series with
three consecutive victories,
but aces C.C. Sabathia and
Fausto Carmona failed to
close it out.
Jake Westbrook pitched
valiantly in Game 7, and still
the Indtans came. up short.
They had a chance to tie it at
3 in the seventh inning, but
third-base
coac)l . Joel
Skinner mistakenly held up
speedy Kenny Lofton as he
rounded the bag.
With runners at the corners, Case~ Blake grounded
into an innmg-ending double
play. .
Then, the Red Sox blew it
'open. Pedroia, who homered

Bucks
from PageBl
field goal to tighten it to 2417 with just 3:42 left.
It got -so bad that on the
kickoff that followed,
Tressel instructed returner
Brandon Saine to take a
knee to avoid turning the
ball over with another fum·
ble.
The Buckeyes took no
more·chances. Wells carried
on the final seven plays,
gaining 36 yards as Ohio
State stayed perfect.
"We needed some proof
early in the game to catch us
on fire and we never really
got that," said Michigan
State coach Mark Dantonio,
who was Ohio State's
defensive coordinator when
it won the 2002 national
championship. "We were
always one step late or one
gap short."
Wells, so close to being a
goat, ended up a hero as he
finished with 221 yards &lt;in
31 carries including a 5yard touchdown .
"1 felt so strong I could 've
ru11 the ball 20 more times,"

earlier, hit a three-run double
and Kevin Youkilis launched
a bottle rocket, a two-run
drive off the giant Coke bottle above the Green Monster.
Jonathan Papelbon pitched
two innings for a save and
Boston finished it off in
style. Center . tielder Coco
Crisp racing back into the
center-field triangle to catch
Blake's drive for the final
out before crashing into the
wall.
Boston kept the bases busy
early against Westbrook, but
three double plays in the frrst
· four innings kept the Indians
in the game while their
starter settled down. The
Red Sox scored once in each
of the first three innings, and
Matsuzaka retired the frrst
eight batters he faced.
Cleveland cut the deficit to
3-2 through five, then.had a
chance to tie it in the seventh
when Red Soll shortstop
Julio. Lugo dropped Lofton s
seemingly harmless popup
in shallow left. Lugo drifted
back, tracking the ball with
his glove in the air and holding off incoming left fielder
Ramirez with his right hand.
But the shortstop let the
ball bounce off hts glove,
and Lofton was safe on second.
Franklin Gutierrez hit a
sharp grounder over third
base that bounced off the
photographer's box in frontof the graodstand and into
· shallow left. But Skinner
held up both hands for the
speedy Lofton, and the 40·
year-old outfielder skidded
to a stop.
·
Lofton looked back for the
ball and, seeing · it in no
man's land in shallow left,
snapped his head back to

stare at Skinner.
A star in big games
throughout his career in
Japan, Matsuzaka followed
two sub-par playoff outings
with his first American
postseason victory. He
allowed two runs·on six hits
in five innings, striking out
three and walking none .
Fellow Japanese rookie
Hideki Okajima pitched
two innings of shutout ball.
Papelbon closed, sending
the sold-out Fenway into a
frenzy.
.Westbrook settled down
after spotting Boston a 3-0
lead, retiring seven consecutive batters before Jacoby
Ellsbury - another rookie
bounced a chopper
through third baseman
Blake for an error. After
Lugo's sacrifice bunt,
Pedroia was up.
The diminutive· second
baseman, with eight major
league homers to his credit,
hit an 0-1 pitch.into the first
row of the Monster Seats to
make it 5·2. He also doubled to clear the bases after
Boston loaded them in the
eighth against
Rafael
Betancourt.
Youkilis, who was a
rookie when Boston won it
all in '04, followed with a
two-run homer to make it
11-2.
Cleveland's Game 4
starter, .Paul Byrd, was
forced to defend himself
before the finale when the
San Francisco Chronicle
reported that he bought
nearly $25,000 worth of
human growth hormone
and syringes from 2002-05.
Byrd said he took HGH
under a doctor's prescrip:
tion.

· tquchdowns of 14 yards to
Jake Ballard and 50 yards to
Brian Robiskie.
The Top 25 teams in The Associated
Press college football poll, with first·
The Spartans mu stered
place votes in parentheSes, records
just
nine first downs and
through Oct. 20, total points based on
25 points for a first-place vo1e through
185 yards of total offense
one point for a 25th·place vote, and
against an Ohio State
previous ranking:
defense which came in No.
Toom ·
floc Pill Pvo
I. Ohio St.(57)
8.0 1,612 t
I in the nation in points
2. Boston Gollege(2)7-o 1.494 3
(6.57
per game) and yards
7·1 1,479 6
3. LSU (5)
7-1 1,421 4
4. Oklahoma
allowed (212 per game).
5. Oregon
6-1 1,355 7
"You can't turn it over
6·1 1,226 9
6 Weot .VIrglnla
and give them 14 points
7·0 1,156 12
7. Arizona St. (t)
8.VIrglnlaTech
6·1 1,11111
and have it look like those
9. Florida
5·2 1,107 14
statistics tell the tale,''
9. Southam Cal
6·1 1,107 13
11 . South Florida
6·1 980 2
Tressel said.
12. Kanoao
7-o 980 15
Brian Hoyer, who was
13.MIIIO&lt;Irl
6·1 ~25 1!
14, Kantucky
6·2 71Q 8
• 12-of-23 for 126 yards
15. South Carolina
8·2 ~0 8
with the one interception,
18. Hawaii
7-o 873 17
didn't complete his second
17. Texao
6·2 4&amp;7 tQ
18. Callforn'5-2 4-44 1o
pass until the Spartans'
10. Mlchlga"
8·2 401
2.i"
11
fourth possession, lavon
20. Goorgla
5·2 3~4 2i
21. VIrginia
7-t 315 Ringer: a~eraging 178
22. Alabama
6·2 253 yards
m Btg Ten games,
23. Auburn
5·3 248 18
ran for 49 yards on 18
8·2 209 24. Ponn St.
25 . Rutgoro
5-2 174 attempts.
All those numbers were
Othora rocolvlng 1101oa: UCLA 77 ,
Boise St. 72, Wake Forest ao,
almost dwarfed in one slipConnecticut 26 , Clemson 21,
shod minute by the
Wisconsin H , Air Force 11 , BYU 6,
Buckeyes.
Tu:aa Tech 6, Troy 4, Fresno St. 3,
Oklahoma St . 3, Tennessee 3,
"It's hard ... after a game
Kansas St. 2, Clnclnnatl1 , Purdue 1,
like this, when you're outTexas A&amp;M 1.
classing a team and all o(a
sudden they come back
he said.,
Boeckman struggled in becau~e you give them a
the second half, finishing couple of bunnies ," Barton
15-of-23 for 193 yards and said.

TheAPTop 25

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

,CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County,
OH

In One Week With Us
classitied@!~:~~ribunecam REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
"
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

~.,.....~

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel,. com
www.mydailyregister.com

To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
l\cgtiiter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To ·
992·2157

Oeacllflrec

Word Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday Jn .. Column: 1:00 p.m.
For sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday '

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m . .
Items

OhloVallo1
Publishing raaerves
tho right to odlt,
reject or cancolony
ad at any timo.

LOST
on
10f12
Neighborllood Ad . area .
Male Brindle Boxer, 1 112yrs
old. Red wl blk tiger stripes.
Answers 1o liddel 74o-6450726.

Errors Must B
oported on tho II

ot pubMcatlon an

r·------,.1I

he Trlbuno-Sentlno
oglator
will
ooponalble for

WANrnD

__

n

re than the cost
he apace occuple
the error and onl
ho first lnoortlon. W
all not bt llobla fo

TO BUY

HFJJ' WANllill

~LICIES : Oh!o Valley Pttbllahln" rneN.. ttHi right to edit, reJKt, or Cline.! any ad at any 11me. Errore muat be reported on the flr.t day
Trlbune.SenUnti·Atgltter will be re.pontlble for no more than tha coet or lha apace occupied by the error and only theli rat ln.. rtlon. Wa
not 1
any 1011 or axpanu that re1utta from the pubiiCIIIIon Of on'Maalon of an advertiMrl'lftnt Correction wilt be made in thellrat available edition. • Box
are alwaya conlldtntial. • Currant rate card applt..: • "II reel eatata tldvel1l11manta are aub}ect to the Federal Fair Houalng Act ol 19M!. • Thla ,,.........
lllndardt. We will not knowingly accept 1ny advertlalng In violation of the law.
accepta only help wanted

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I

kitncar1yle@comcast.net

licensed Social Workers:
Family Options Providers is
currently seeking to contract ,
with
Licensed
Social
Workers in Jackson &amp;
Mason Counties .
You
should have a desire to work
with children and families.
reliable t111nsportatlon and
proof of automobUe lnaur·

3BA, 2BA, Ranch Style
house over 2.000 sq h,
Huge kitchen, lots of cabinet
space , LA, DR, Laundry
·Room, on r acre of land,
Gallia Co Schools, Asking
$115,000 060 (740)441·
7842

I

•
'"))

IO-J-1.

~
Inc.

C 2007 by NEA,
.,

11"111:"'""_ _ _ _ _.,

Adam (740)828·2750

This
newopopo
opls only hoi
ontod ado mootln
OE ollndordo.

1110 linJ&gt;WANIDl

l,:i;iiiii;ii;iii;iiiiiiiiii~

Accepting
resume·s for
machine operators and genere l labor. Start $B .OO!hr.
Send resumes to: PO Box
176, Aio Grande, OH 45674
.
AdmInlstratlve
Ass1stant
needed for the Mason
Counly
Deve Iopment
Authority. Must have knowl·
edge · of computers, tax
forms &amp; pay roll &amp; be self
motivated Bring Resume in
at 305 Main Street Pt. PL
wv
8-4pm Mon-Fri
_ _. : _ _ _ _ _ _
Administrative Position available in the Gallipolis area.
S w diE
1
Excellent M
Of
xce
Skill• M F sam &lt;om $7 50

MANAGEMENT

OPPORTUNITIES
We seek career oriented
individuals who will strive to
- ~.
.ohl·~·
"' "Besr In
Customer Satisfaction and
team Work. II You hay..
desire to succeed with a
goal driven, learn oriented
and growing company, we
offer:
Health. dental and life
Insurance, prescription
card, bonus program, paid
, vacation, management
apparel, advancement from
within .
Apply in person at the
Burger King Aeslaurant
65 Upper River Aoad or

1110
HELP
•

• ...

Secu_rity Officers needed in
New Haven. WV, $7.66 hour,
40 hours a week for tempo'
rery job. Must have clean
criminal history. pass drug
screen and background
.check. Ca\1 1•800 _275 _8359,
Tuesday . Frid~y 8 :30 . S:OO.
EEO.MFDV
-------Substitutes nee.ded to work
at carlelon School &amp; Meigs
Industries. Teachers,
class1'
room aides, van drivers end
adult service workers to
work with children and
adults with developmental
disabilities. High School
diploma
or
GED.

I

°

i

e -"

-

••

2·Story house· 26A, t ba1h,
CIA, lrg baser'nent. Available
Nov.1. No pets. 1638
Chatham Ave. GaHipolis.
446·4234 or 740·2087861
2BA, 1BA on SA 160 , 4
miles North Of Holzer.
$430/mo + sec.dep. and rei.
No pets. Call. 740·379-2923
or 740-446-6865
'

2br, in Point Pleasant. nice
deck and hot tub. Many $465, Homestead Really
extras, call (740)441-8257
304·675-4024 or 304..S75·
- - - - - - - - 0799 ask for Nancy
~
::....:.:..::::::__::::__:::._:;:__ _
House for sale in Racine 3 bedroom home at 3408
area•. Approx. 4 acres, all Mossman Avenue Poirtl
professi onally landscaped . Pleasant, WV $400/mo!lth,
. - - - - - - - Ranch style house with 4 $400 damage deposit 304·
bedrooms. Kving room, din- 576-2247
ing room. kllc hen. large lam·
ily room, central air, gas heal 3 Bedroom House in
and 1 fireplace . Addition of a Syracuse. $500/month +
large Florida room com· deposit No Pets. (304}675All re1t •t.ta •dvertlslng
pletely cedar opens onto 5332 weekends i 40·591·
In this newspaper Ia
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in 0265
.
IUbjectta thl Federal
ground poOl enclosed by pri·
Fair Houalng Act of 1988
vacy fencing and land - 3BA, 1 bath, 2·story older
which
II Illegal to
scaped. Finished 2 car ta.rm house on SR 554 .
advertfae "1ny
garage attached to house B•dweff/AV
schools
and finished &amp; heated 3 car $575/mo plus sec dep. Pets
garage
unattached under_ 15 l~s w/$575 pet
r1ce, color, religion, aex
Excellent condition ready to deposit. Available 10-13·07.
famlllll 111tus or national
Call 446·3644 for applies·
move ln. $255,000.00. Catl : lion .
origin, or any Intention to
make sny such
(740)949·2217
---~---~
preference, limitation or
69 Garfield • 2BR, 1BA
New hOme in Gallipolis
dlaetlmlnatlon."
$460/month + sec . dep.
2BR, 2BA. 3 acres M/L.
You pay all utilities. Call 446$82,500.
Call740·446·7029
Thl1 new•paper will not
3644
llnowlngly accept
Price reduced BriCk Ranch
•dvartlnments for real
AHenllonl
Home 2/3br. 2ba. 2 car
estate which Ia In
local
co
mpany
offering "NO
garage, all electric. Visit pic·
vlolltlon of the law. Our
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
at
www.orvb.com
code
lures
reldera •re hereby
grams tor you
buy your
7137 or call 304-675·4235
Informed that aU
home Instead ol renting.
dweiNngs •dvertlstd In
Aacinefranch home 1500 • 100% financing
thla newspaPer are
sq. ft., 3/2, seller assisted • less than perfect cred it
available on an equal
finan cing, (740)416·397 7, accepted
opportunity ba....
• Payment could be· the
740-222-5570 .
same as rent.
Momu: .H~tE:&lt;;
Locators
Mortgage
ll&gt;RSALE
(7401367{)000

rll!!l"'""~:"""---.,

""*•

w~~.NriD ILl~.tO.··"-Fl·P·W-ANTFD
__.,ll L.r.50_.;1N.m•Sc!loo•u•CI10N•~--.,~1· :::!~r;~~:u~:~:: :~

Deeded
Timeshare
at
·
mail resume to:
Experienced preferred but
Westgate Sm
okey Mounlatn
· Gall' b
T
Burger King
training is available. Submit
Aesort tn
1ns urg, 1enn.
PO Box 2407
2 Bedroom • indoor water
application or resume lo:
park, au taxes are paid.
Hunotri'91faxorne,suWVme25to725
Carleton
SchoolfMeigs
.
C
Industries, 13 t0 Carleton
Odd number years .
an
'll
1~
Paid
740-446-3400 or
Street, P.O. Box 307,
·
&lt;J&gt;,.
•
·...y ·
·
·sI1 use ' ~~s year.
304•52g. 0055
45779
$11 ,000 sell for $6,000. hr. ·Call lex resumes to 740·
EOE
Syracuse, Ohio
Phorle 740-446-4316 after 353·29 1~
- - - - - - - - Teacher needed: Preschool
5 pm.
An_E_&lt;e-el~
lent_wa_y_t_
o -.ar~n Manpower Is now hiring for Special Education . Must
the following
positions have
current
Ohio
T
A
Flr.wood. 2yrs.a•..drled , cui money. he New von.
"
c 11 M ·1 304 882 2645
Automobi le
Prodution Department ol Education
and split,98%oak.2% hlcko·
a an yn
- Workers in the Buffalo, wv certification/licensure and
ry, yo1,.1 haul,or 1 haul AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Area Beneflts available Call have or be eligible to obtain
OH.HE.t\P Vander 949·2038 Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Today 304·757·3338
Early Childhood Intervention
675·1429.
- - - - - - - - Specialist
validation .
_
Mechanical Services Co. Benefits include life, health,
GIVEAWAY
specializing in the repa ir ol vision and dental insurance.
coal processing equip tor . Send resume and copy or
· 6 month old black female
the Power Industry has an teaching license by October
tabs. CaU 446-4645
opening for a mechanic. 26th to: Carleton . School,
Basic mechanical skills and 131 0 Carleton Street. PO
7 month old 112 Porn, 112
knowledge of hand, pneu· Box 307. S~racuse. Oh.
Yorlds, To Good Home 31)ol·
matic 8 hydraulic tools req'd. 45779. (740)992-6681
875·2529
Health plan, vac .. 401K .
Wage commensurate w/exp. The Mid·Ohio Valley Health
Blue Tick Coonhound 2yrs
Call 740·446·3145 or fa~e Dept. has ari opening for a
old. GrB)' Tabby male cat,
resume to 740·446·3t53
Nutritionist ih o~r WIC
neute'red and declawed, 811
Program ..
Requ1res
a
shots inside 304·675-2634
Needed· Ded1eated e)(pen· Bachelors degree/12 cr.edil
enced HHA's. PCA's. CNA's ' hrs In Nulnltbn. Contact:
Female, spayed Golden
&amp;
STNA's. Established and lynne Peters 304·485 · 1489
retriever, Male bladt: Chow
well respected local home EOE
Lab mix,· neutered . 441·
health agency Located in The Ohio Valley Publishing
1014
Gallipolis, dhio has avail· Co. is seeking 8 Sports
Free beautiful kittens, 1 Foster Parents &amp; Respite able 1u11•time and part•lime Wfiter to add to its staff. covProviders Needed, homes
11
h e a ds••re
orange wlyellow stripes, 1
cases. you av
""'
erfng local athletic events.
needed in Meigs &amp; Gallia to ark as e respected
solid black, litter train ed CounlyforyouthOthru 18, TEAwM
b
40
Thepositionisaluil·time,
11
old""'
·
memtoer .
ca. hours a week wr'lh a benefits
6 .~
"_"s_
_
~_·675
_·3508
_ __ Ohio provides the training, 17401446
3808
00
~
r lmm I- and 401k plan available.
you receive reembursment ats ,·ntervlew
Kittens, 1 black/white M &amp; 2
.
Newspaper pags layout
black F, approx. 6 mo old . of $30 to $40 a day paid - - - - - - - resp ite, and support for Part time Police Officer posi- ski lls are desired but not
have been fixed, rabies
youth placed in your home ti on opening for the Town of necessary. Must be willing to
shots/litter ·trained.446·321 0
Training begins October New H8\len, wv. All appl l· learn and be people friendly.
L&lt;~rANu
27,2007 at Albany. call cants Interested should stop Send resumes 1 Kevin
fOUND
Oasis Footercare toll free, 1· by the City Building at 218 Kelly, Managing Editor, Ohio
825
1.,~------· 8n-325·1558
Fifth St. The New Haven is Va~ey PubHshing Co. ,
an
EquEII
Opportunity Third Ave , Gallipolis. Oh
Found: Mother dog &amp; pups. F 1 h
H' ·n Now
45631
reg I rVI\er lrl g
Employer
Looks like an English work from Home. Earn - - - - - - - - Truck Drivers COL Class A
Call Medi Home Health Care
Pointer. Found In Spring axcellent Income.
Valley area. "46·8702
(304)722·2184
M:F
t'
II t'
Req uired. minimum of 5
now accep mg app ca IOns years
driving
exp.
8:30am-4pm
tor dependable STNA, CNA,
FOUND : Pair of Ray Ban :...:_:;__:___.......,__ ..,..,-Experience
on
glasses 111 beginning ol Home Health Care of SEO is CHHA, PCA for more infor· Overdeimensional toads .
Kemper Hollow Rd. Call currently accepting apptica· mation please cootact laura Must have good driving
41_4_6 _ _ _ record . Earn up 1o $2,000
740-441-8817
tlonsforLPN's. Fulltlmepart _•t_7_40_.._46
_-_
time per diem. Competitive
POST OFFICE NOW
weekly\ For application Call
FOUND: Pale Yellow Male wages . 1·866·368-1100
(304 )722·2184
M·F
HIRING
8:30am·4pm
Cst with Pink Collar. Found toll free .
Avg Pay$20/hror
11 ·::_::.:::....______
at Gallipolis Post Off ice. Ca ·
709.1816
Ladles, would ~ou like to be
$57K annually
In business for your SQit? Including Federal Benefits
end OT,Pald Training.
Lost Male tan &amp; silver Yorkle Make big money. we will
vacatlons-FT/PT
p\4lPYin Mason. Child~ Pet, show you how. Small invest·
monl
of
tess
than
$50.00.
1-666·542·1531
anawere to •Baby" Reward
Cell 740·367·7886
USWA
304-8 I 2-01)olt)

r

.,

• Less than perfee1 credit
· accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367·0000

0
0

www.comlcs.com

""

~

-------~

0

Machinist and Welders .
less than 4 yrs experience
need not Apply. Ambrosia
Machine Inc. 304-675·1722
Mon·Fri 7:30-4:00

.,

1.

:
:
sq It home located on
Attantlonf
Raccoon Creek in Gallipolis,
local company offering ~No 1.3 acre yard with large
DOWN PAYMENT" · pro- detached pole garage lor
grams for you to buy your car/boat storage and paved
. home instead of renting.
u-shaped driveway. Access
• 100% financing
to boat ramp. Wrap-around

5ME

~-F&gt;~\"IIN~
~~~N\,

MOBILE ljOMES

1 ' 11 '1(1, \ fl \ 1
-... 1 1n lt l ...,

"'li&lt;t Nil.

1'\P.l&gt;ll' 1"-1\AI \lf'
fl'eoOJ'f A !'lo- 011'-

ance.
Family Options
Providers offers fle)(ible
hOurs, low caseloads and
the best contract pay in the ·
area.
Interested Social
Workers should submit their
resume and cover letter
identifying county (s) ol
interest by fax at 304·254·
9099
or
email
to
- - - - - - - - haro l d@fam jlyoptjon:
Want to buy Junk Cars, call somvidArs com
"
. 740-388·0864

WE BUY USED

\ \ \ fr l \f I \II \I ...

~r•.~o_...:.::-,.s.~--1 ~.,L._.ro.".~.s.~.LE..._.I ~:::;;:::::~
\ ~.,r.10_•••::.~.~
.......
16

Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
U.S. . Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 15 1 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·446·
2842.
.

-------We Buy Cars That Need A
Little Work Or Not. Ne)(l
Door To McDonalds. 740446-7278

All Display: 1:Z Noon :z
Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday f'or Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lnr:lude Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed

~.,t__Losr.;Fi:.Oll l l_AND_ _.jll110

*POLICIES*

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
""
Borders$3.00/perad
l!_ii4l
Grophics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for. large

Display Ads

• ..,

·

Gallipolis Career College
Va cancy Announcement •
Engineering Technician .
Full Time - 40 hrs. per wk.
Ben ellts · Include State
Retirement, paid vacation
after 1 year, paid sfck leave.
Medical, dental, vision insur·
ance available. Salary contingent .on knowledge and
experience. Must hold .valid
driver's. licenSe and be will·
·
b ·
F d
mg
to su m11 to e erel
Security Clearance. Must be
d
"
SCOTI
·
reglstere
Wlt11
(www.scoti.ohio.gov) sys!em. Submit resume with
cover latter to: Ohio
Department ol Job and
Family Services, 848 Third
Ave. Gallipolis. OH 45631 .
we
are
an
Equal
opPortunity
Employer.
Engineering
Technician
Requirements : 1. Make site
investigations, prelimina ry
engineering surveys and soil
inventory and evaluation. 2.
Layout and supervise con·
str uclion. 3. ProUclent
in
,
using surveying tools. 4.
Survey, design, layout,
supervise and inspect ,constructton practices In refer·
. ence
to . Engineering
Authority Approval chart. 5.
Must be able to wOfk out·
side. 6. Call OUPS tOr
design location of utilities. 7.
Assist landowners in select·
ing engineering practices.
8. Interpret aerial photo·
graphs . soils maps. topo
maps, etc. 9. Become profi· .
cient at knowing lhe con·
tests of NRCS 1Tech Guide,.
standards &amp; specifications,
as work will meet the mini·
mum criteria required . 10.
.frolicient with computer. 11.
Needs to become proficient
tn technical and personal
relation aspects of program
implementa.tton.
e are go ng rea y
for the elections and
weneedYOUI
Help us make cells on
behalf or conservative
Political organizations,
candidates ana causes.

t

Earn up to $8.50/hour

+' 300 Hiring Bonus
+Fu~ benefits package
+Full and part lime
schedules

{Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446·4367.
·
1·800·214-0452 ·
VfWW.galipoliscaraercollege.com
• a:..~•
Accredn&amp;d MentJer
,.. 11 og
Cooncit klr lrodepftodent Cpl~&amp;ge&amp;
1

ii'":;'~"':!::""":::•~'~"~'"!o·--....,

W,ANTFD
To Do

ldil
.

~------,.1
SMITH Plumbing repair
service--· 24 hrs. Toilets,
sinks, showers, &amp; tubs. 740·
.
•
517 9132
11\ \ \ ("1

~riii10;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;
~

1.,.. •
~:::;;~;
"- ~;:~
1 '-!

tNOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. recommends
lhat you do business with
people · you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investigated the

buill , all brick, main·
tenance free home located
in Syracuse. 3 SA &amp; 2 112
SA, 2.800 sq fl of fi nished
living space. 40 Year dimen~o:ff;•r:in:g·::;;::==~ slonal shingles, natur'el gas
heat This mutli·level home
lis in Immaculate condition
and has oak hardwood trim
10 LoAN
throughout. The basement is
partially finished and could
be used as a 4th bedroom.
••NOTI(; E** workout room or a children's
play room. Large fa mily
Borrow Smart. Contact room with 40 ' ca,binets, all
the Ohio Division of bui" in appliances and
Financial
Instituti on's ceramic tile floor. also launOffice of
Consumer dry room with 6' of cabinets.
Affairs BEFORE you refi· Master bedroom with walknam:e your home or tn closet, master bath with
obtain a loan. BEWAf'E double bowl vanity, ceramic
of requests for an~ large tile floor and marble' shower.
advance payments ot Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large
tees or insurance. Call the closets, main bath Kas a 7'
Office \ of
Consumer vanity. marble bathtuQv Sep;-'
Affairs toll tree at 1-866· arate shower p·nd linen clos·
278·0003 to learn if the et. Two coveffld porches and
mortgage broker or a brick paver patio. The 2 1t2
lender
is
properly car garage has attic storage,
licensed. (This is e public csment d rlv
· eway· wt'th pie nt Y
service ennouncament 0f
k.
M t
1
pa r lng.
us see 0
from the Ohio Valle" epp ec'ate all amenil 'es
Publls"'ngCompany) '
'th'
L
S 'h ' ·
1 c 001s
1"
5
Cou ern oca
a11740
·441_:_
·,5171
.i
_
__
_ _ __:~
n..~
I"Kvrr..MIONAL
For Sale by owner. Nice.
SERVJm
3BA. 2BA, ,Bri ck &amp; Siding
-Ranch with unattached
TURNED DOWN ON
garage on 10.5 acres. 24'
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? above ground pool wldeck,
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
located just minutes from
1·888·582·3345
t;;allipolis city, south off
NelgbbOrhOod
Rd,
$127 ,500 . Ca ll for Appt.
(740)441 -0448

i

MONEY

r

Cell today!
_
•• •• 4_
1 877
Errt. 3~ 7

23 21

Shop Classilieds

r1Q

HOMES

FOR SAIE
0 down payment. " bed·
rooms. Large yard . Covered
deck Attached
740·
gllf8lge.
.367·7129.
' 3 bdr., 1 ba., Ran ch In
S
rt 1 1
yracuse, 0 h, carpo pus
ed 740 992
car garage &amp; sh •
·
31 41 or (740)442-1281

==------

I

o

:_;_:.:::..__ _ _ _ __

Nice used 3 bedroom home 2BR, AJC , porch, storage
vin"'/shingle.
Will help with bldg. No Pets_ Very nice in
''
clelivery '740·365·4367
Gallipolis. Call 446·2003 or
446-1409
OWNER FINANCING
Nice 3J2 sing 1ew1de s
From $1 ,800 down
payment"
Adam (740) 828-2750.

r

~:::=====~

.1 !

.

Wrs &amp;
ACREAGE

L,~------_.J

-------~

•1rar·1er 1or rent. 3BA , 2 BA .
c a11 367•7762 or 446•4060

r

APARThlfNfS
ffiR lbNr

~------,.1
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
lor Rent, Meigs County, li1
town, No Pets, Deposit ,
Required, (740) 992-51 74 or.
(740)441 -01 10.

.
. .
App.rmc 3.2 ac;es, pnvate .
-------~· Si,:, miles from Hospita l. 1 and 2 bedroom apartFor~ sale ' by owner. 3BR Ele c, septi c, 'water $30K ments, furnished and unfur·
8
nished, and houses iil
RanCh , 1 bath, Family 060 · 740 •446•947
Room. Stove/Fridge. W/D
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Included. Asking 570 ,
. &lt;3:r~~n Acres (10~. ~arm security deposit required. llO
000
Call
_ •
Llvtn . Fresh A1r. 3 m11es from pets, 740·992·2218.
740 709 6339
-------~ New Haven. WV $34.500
Lots ot House for the ::30:..:4..:
·7:.;,73:..:·5::8.:81:..____ 2 bedroom apt in Centenary.
M
' 3BR BA LA FA
all utilities pd except eleCtric,
oney.
• 1 •
•
• MOBILE HOME LOT FOA $325fmo. call (740)256lg K". Basement , Newly
"
AENT.1031 Georges Creek 1135
remedied. New WH &amp; Fum..
-------rA;;;
d._4_41..,
-t, l.,.
" =._,.--, H
b
2 r.
CA,, new ptlcrpt. Appl.
oneymoon cottage, ootr

Included. Lg Porch. Across
Good starter home or Invest· from Vinton Elem. Sch.
ment property In Rutland, $65,000. 245·5555 cell441$21 .500, co111740)667·0641 51 OS

•
-- ~

2.9 acres, 1989 2BR/2BA Pomeroy, 2·3 br_ apt. or
M b'l H
$38 000 N
house. partially furnished,
.0 1e orne.
'
· ear HUD approved .. near park.
R10 Grande. Leave meset
_
.
17401992 6886
sage. 740-286·4502.[1
~o-'p'-s-'.- ' - - - Taking applications for 3 br.
2000 t4)(70, 3BA, 2BA.' Lots
of up grades . qn rented loL home in Middleport. .references required, $400 plus
34
Kra us-Beck
Ad.
deposrt, 1304)576·2000
Gallipolis. 3 miles from
Gallipolis off SR 588. 446· Very nice 3BA, 1 mile from
8935
·
town on 588. No pets.
Includes stove &amp; fridge.
20° 4 16x80 Clayton 3Bed $475/mon. Ref &amp; dep req
16,:,80 740-446·3292
2Bath,
2002
Oakwood 3,~ed 2Bath, 3 ~i::ti-~,;;;.;;;...~-.....,
More 16x80 and 2 More
MOIIILE ~
u~. ~
14 X70 to choose from. Days
· FOillbNr
,
740 -388 · 0000 Eves ~ 40 388-8017 or 740-245-9213
2BR Mobile Home for ren t
Great used 2oos 3 bedroom $350 firm, $300 deposit.
16x80 with vinyl/shingle. H/P,W/0,
Ret,Stove,Cvrd
Must sell. Only $25.995 with Patio, Bldg, t.enced back
delivery. Call (740)385·4367 ~ard, on
private
lot.
Galllpoils Ferry No Pets
New 3 Bedroom home s from 304-675-7149 leave mes$214.36 per month, Includes Sage
many upgrades, delivery &amp; - - - - - - ' - - set·up. (740)385·2434
2BA trailer on farm. 540·
New Fleetwood Mobile _7_29_·1-'-33_1_ _' - - - - fiOme , 40,:,48, $!8,000. Call 26A trailer. No pets,
74o. 446- l6 ! 7 afte r 7pm, Addison Twp. Call 740·446·
keep trying it no answer.
722

I

+ Paid hclldays
Start doing wOfk you carl
be proud or. start doing
work that makes a
difference.
Start your new career
today l

to

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

country settillQ, Vtld h
up.
no pets, · $400 ·plus utilities
deposit required, (740)992·
4119.

"'

�Monday, October 22, 2007

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~~~-,

~

~M~moocr~-a-w~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

Monday, October 22, 2007
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

· The Daily Sentinel • Page BS:

4WIIFJllEIIS
, Apartment for 're~t, 1-2
Bdrm., remOdeled, new carPet. stove &amp; !rig., w8ter,
sewer, tra sh pQ Middleport.
$.!'25.00. No pats. Ref.
r~u i red . 740-843-5264.

Spacious sacond·lloor apt.
overlooking Gallipolis City
Park and river. L.A. den,
large kitchen-dining area
with all new appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR. laundry
area. 2 1/2 bath s. $900 per
Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740- month. Call 446-4425, 441 9.9_2-,-5_85~8_._ _ _ _ _ · 5539 or 446-2325
~
fieaUutul Apts. at Jackson
Eatates. 52 Westwood
Drive, !rom $36.5 to $560.
740-446·2568
Equal
~ sing p pportun.ty Th•s
institution 1s an Equal
Opponunity Provider and
Employer.

Tara
TownhOu se
Apartments. very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
Bath. Adult Pool .&amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pet s. Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required,
(740)446-3481.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
ing applications for waiting
Townh ouse
apartments lisl for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
and/or small h,ouses FOR apartment, for
the
RENT Call (740)44 1- 1111 elderlyld•sabl ed call 675for applicaiiOn &amp; 1nformal1on 6679
Equal
Huusing
Opportunity

3pc . blue Living Room Suite, Lab. Retriever puppies for
gOOd condition $250 304- sale. 2 yetlow,2 chocla1e.7
773-5693 or 304-514-5244 · wk.old,vet.ck'd.&amp; have 1st
shot &amp; wormed.3046745070

Registered Yearling Et
Angus Bulls &amp; Heifers.
Double J AngUs. 740-3792789

-----~-­

4-Sale Commerical Tanning
Bed, &amp; Gas remote con trolled Fireplace 304 -895~
3129

Miniature Pincher Pups, 2
I R \ \. -...r'!IIU \ IIU\
BlaclclTen females , $300
each. 8 weeks
old. ~10
At.rl'(li

FOR S

(740)388-81 24

"-----ALil
iilii.-,.J

Bow-Flex extreme with all - - - - - - - -

attachments. $550 Call 740441-01 82
_ _:__ __ _ _ _
Fisher stereo, AMIFM dual
cassette, C/0 player amplifier &amp; 2 large speaker cabinets. new cost over $1 ,000 .

Reg. Miniature Australian
.Shepherd puppies. Solid &amp;
Tri-colored. $350 each. Call
740 •25 6-6360
- - - - -- - Toy poodles- 1 tamale,

-

JET

Ml.SICAL ~ORIJMENTS

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 In accessories. Paid

I

90 ,000 mites, automatic.
$2800 080. 740-256-1652
or 256-t233

Alto SaMophone by Selmer 02 Buick Century, excellent

AERATION MOTORS
(USA) in excellent cond with condition. 127.000 miles Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
V6, $3995. Call 441-7534.

Stock. Cali Aon Evans, 1- leather case. Model AS210. Can be seen at 1403
$2100 new, sell tor $500.
Two. t bedroom. unfur- 800-537-9528.
Eastern Ave.
BARGAIN
740-339·2237
nished. 2nd floor. an ractive - - - -- - - 1 \tn l -.. t 1'1'111 '"'~
apa•tments. corner Second NEW AND USED STEEL
1951 Pontiac 4DR Sedan,
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments &lt;?nd Pine. Water/trash Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
,\ I I\ I "'I(H h.
$3200 or trade. Also, 400
• Central h.eat &amp; A'C
Included.
No
pels. For Concrete, Angle, -.::1"""....;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; small block Chevy motor,
FARM
Relerences and security Channel , Flat Bar. Steel 10
• Washer/dryer hookup
best offer. 740·256·1445
For
Drains,
EQuiPMENr
deposit required. 5275-300 Grating
• Tenant pays electric
per month. Call 446-4425 or Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L ·--·iiiiiiiii._.J 1986 Volvo 240 DL. High
(304)882·3017
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
mileage. but exterior and
446·3936
BIG FALL SALE
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
interior in good condition.
JIM'S FARM
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Runs good. 304·675-6937
EQUIPMENT INC.
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
or 304-812-4096. $BOO OBO
21.50 Eastern Ave.
Housrnow
Sunday. (740)446-7'300
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Goous
1987 Toyota Tercel 4 Wheel
Pumpkins for sate we have
1 40-446-97n
drive, Ssp, manual transmisabout 200 left and we would
F.urnished upstairs 3 rooms Flat screen HDTV
Round Bale feeders
sion, cruise, good mileage
sale.
and bath. Clean, no pets, Take on small mon •• . , pay- like to have S1 .00 each or Starting a1 $125.00, Aoto $800 304-675-2088
make offer for all. Call 304Tillers 4', s· &amp; 6', Bush
d8posit req. 740-446-1519 ments. 1-800-398-3970
675-8154
Hogs 5' &amp; 6' All Have Seen 1989 BMW - 525i. 1995
Qraclous Living 1 and 2 Mollohan FurnitUJe. New ----~-'--­ Marked Down. End Ot The Chevy Lumina ts. 18 foot
eGdroom Apts. at V1Uage Sofa&amp;Love Seat $400 _ Seasoned Firewood, Picked
Season Sale On
pull behind campe'r. Priced.
Manor ard Riversfde Apt s~ in Several to choose !rom. New up or delil{ered. OH HEAP Finishing Mowers Starting to sell. 740.367-0625
&amp;LAA, WV LEAP accepted. At $899.00, Get Your Rear
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal table w/6 chairs $599.95. Call Melvin Clagg_74 ().44 1• Blade Now While Prices Are 99 Ford EMplorer 4x4 $2995;
202 Clark Chapel Rd. 0941 or 740·645-5946
Housing Opportunity.
00 Dodge 4x4 Quad Cab
Low Before The Snow.
Bidwell, Oh 45614. 740·388·
$3250; 98 Camara $3200:
0173
.
M-F
9-4
Sa19·3
Underpinning
for
sale.
$50.
Come
On
In
And
Gel
The
Mlj:ldleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. fur01 Hyundal Tibron $2700;
'
Best
Deats
Now
On
CaII 740-256-8814, leave
nished apartments. no pets,
97 Jeep Wrangler $3900: 01
ANlli.)VES
•
message.
Anything
In
Stock!!!!
While
dDposit &amp; references,
Hyundai Sonata $3000: 99
i&gt;-10)992·0165
Ranger $2800; 93 Ranger
FOPI:R
iT
he
$1250; 98 Ford Wihdstar
~odern t Bedroom apt. Call Iron bed w/ rails, walfiul L----~~~--,.J.
uv....,Juu.
446·0390
wash stand, store tea bin,
" - - - - - - - , . J $2000; 95 Explorer $2000;
01 Buick LeSabre $3400; 01
• store flour bin, C&amp;O Rwy CKC Miniature Pincher
fo!odern 1 BA Apt. Call 446· can , cobblers ki1, wood Pups. Tails docked &amp; 2 Miniature. 1 Stud, 1 mare . Olds Intrigue $1200; 99
3736
churn, cutter quilts, call 740· wormed. $150:00 each. CaU Mare Is pregnant. $600 Cavalier $2900; 99 Dodge
080. 740-256-1652
Stratus $2200: 00 Chrysler
Racine,OH,Apt3Br.,1&amp;1/2ba 446-1714forpriOOL
740-388-8788
Cirus $2650; 98 Ford Escort
5 Full Blood Angus Heifer
th,W/0 hookup,lront&amp;back
~~CilANDIS·ANID~
pOrches,includes:H20,trash,
lYI.tM
~:.
Full blooded Choc. Lab Calves, 6 -7 months old. Call $1500; 99 Escort $1500, 99
Grand Am $2000; 98 Dodge
pups. Parents on premises.
sewage.$4 75M.,
. $300
740-245-5595
Neon $1900: 97 Pontiac
deposit. ALS0,2Br.. 1bath
4 males, 2 fe males. $125.
.-P-ai-ro-1-good--w-or_k_M_u-le_s_w-ith
Sunfire $1795: B &amp; D Auto
1
pair
Quaker
Pa
rrots,$~
446
7913
645
0141
. traller,new carpet &amp; paint.
or
·
harness. Weight approM. Sales, Hwy 160 N. 446-6865
$'350M-S350Dep., utilities 1' 44 Magnum Super Red
not included. No Pets.740- Hawk
pistol,
$BOO.
8001bs. $600, Quarter
TRUCKS
· HOfSe, Mare &amp; Colt $400
949.0 145 or 304-273-2 152 (7401742 -3706
FORSALil .
304·576-2247

Tree

HOME
IMPRoiiEM!NfS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local relerences furnished. Established 1975.
CaU 24 Hrs. 11,101 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterprooring.

r

I

Sel:t::::~ooo.l

I

Heip Wanted

Heartland Publicat ions LLC. a fas t growing
newspaper publi shing company, with a regional
i.ll:counting oflice· in Gallipolis. Ohio is seeking
the positions of Accountant, Collections
·Supervisor. and AL1:oun t Specia list fo r
immediate employment.

Acrount3nt: A successful candidate will have
a degree in accounting and will be proficient in
Excel and Word software. Responsibilities will
include creating and posting journal entries,
calculating inv entories, and preparing monthend and year-end financial SlHtemcnts. Three
years of general ledger and month-end dosing
expericnl:e preferred.
·
Collections Supenisur:
A sul:Cess ful
candidate wi ll 1 have three years of experience
collecting accoums ~ml will be proficient in
Excel and Word software. Responsibilities will
include contacting customers directly to resolve
issues concern in g del inquem accounts.

Acl.'OUDt · Specialist: A successful candidme
will have three years of accounting experience
and will be prolil:ient in Excel and Word
software. Responsibilities will include billing,
accounts receivable. cash application, and
account reconciliations.
Successful applicants must be people oriented
and hUve good organizational skills. Positions
offer all company benefits, including health
;md life insurance, 401 (k ), and paid vacation.
~or immediate consideration. send your resume ·
'and references to
Jkhill@heartlandpublications.com, fax to 740441 -0578, or mail to

Diane Hill
Heartland Publil:atiuns
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4563 I

Help Wanted

Chartered Coach

Transp~rtatiOn -

Friday. November 30, 2007 lo
Sunday, December2,2007
$195/person (double occupancy)
$250/person (single occup.ancy)

WANTED: Buckeye Community Setvices,
an agency that is opening a new home in
Chester for two people with mental
retardation, will be accepting applications
and conducting inietviews on October 24,
2007. from 10am·2pm at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church on Highland
Avenue in Pomeroy. Full and part-time
positions available. All applicants must
have a high school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license and three years good driving
experience. $7.50/hr. Pre-employment Drug
Testing. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Pleasant Vall ey Hospital currently has an
opening for a full lime MLT/MT. Baccalaurcale
degree in Mc'dical Technology or relaied fi eld
plus eligibilily for cenification by ASCP. Must
be able 10 work all shifts.

I Churclt 01-t

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing. Siding,
Soffit. DeckS,
Doors, Windows,

Own~ r-

Free Estimates

740-367.0536

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Human Resources
. 2520 Valley Drive
· Point Pleasanl, WV 25550
or fax lo (304) 675-6'175
or apply online al:·
www.pvalley.org

H&amp;H
Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bon.ded
740-653-9657

Staying al Hampton Inn
credit cards and money o rders

all cliecks

payable lo PVH Founda l ion
LIMITED SPACES!
To make reservalions please
call PVH Community
Relations, (304) 675-4340 ,

Ext. 1492

'

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

currently accCptillg resumes for a Physical

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

M-F schedule,

No

l
/

Gues~

IT IS /III{.E OF 7'ti~M.
JUT IT DO~SN'T
DO MIJCti FO~ MY

Holidays,
No
weekends,
competitive
pay/benefits and mileage reimbursement State
PT li L:emmre, gradume of an approved schoo l
uf PT m graduate of accredited college or
university with a certificate in PT. Current

{.ONFil&gt;~NC~

IN iti~ l&gt;Ot..LA~.

'1'0'RE HERE EARLY,
PAW WON'T GIT
LOWEE:Z'1' !! ~-_.,.....__.__ OUTTA BED
'TIL HE'S
READ TH'
PAPER !!

HE NEEDS TO MAKE SHORE HE
AIN'T IN TH'
FURST tt

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

THE BORN LOSER
.F?-._ T. W~ JU~TT\.\IN.KI~
~UTT~ 1&gt;\fATLO/&gt;.f
'IOU MOCLI&gt;.':&gt;i" N.IC.f\T..

_r.--...

DOt&gt;!'\ ~OU li\O~t1t&gt;.."(-,
1&gt;\0R.N.I NG QUI&gt;.Ri"E.R·
&amp;\C.K ME, Bll~W~.!

WOULI&gt; 1-ito.\lf. &amp;:f.~
~TiE.R IF "(OU 1-\l&gt;.t&gt;

IT

·U:&gt;E.b fi\OR£ (,/&gt;,f{i,.IC. I

~J-:::.:-----

WHAT A· DEAl!!
Feed

Insured
Free Estimales

O

BIG NATE
f"l"-101 OLI&gt; •AATE WRIGHT"
I~ so LAME! A t1tDPLE
N"ME WOULD MAKE IT

$10.50/100

~DUO!()

CAREFUL
WHAT '(OlJ

SO 1\UC.H

Wl?li
FOR .

&amp;ETTE~!

BCLS (CPR) cenification . Current WV and/or

Ohio license preferred. Dual license required
within 30 days of employment.
Apply al:
Plea§l!nt Valley Hospital
do Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
or apply online al:
www.pvalley.org

AAIEOE

YOU GOT

*Insured
*Experienced ·
References Available!

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur·
auance of a Resolution
of 'lhe Board of
Township Truateea of
the
Township
of
Orange,
Reedsville,
Ohio, palled on the
15lh day of May, 2007,
there will be submitted
to a vote of the people
of said aubdlvlelon at a
general ELECTION to
be
held
In
the
Townehlp of Orange.
Ohio, at the regular

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised .
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur·
suance of a Reaolutlon
of the VIllage Council
of the VIllage of
M I d d I a p o r t ,
Middleport, '
Ohio,
paeaed on the 23rd day
of July, 2007, !hare will
be aubmltted to a vote
of the people of 11id
subdivision at a goner·
al ELECTION to be
held In the Village of
Middleport, Ohio, at
the regular places of

ing therein, on the 6th
day of November, 2007,
the question of levying
a tax, In exceea of the
ten mill limitation, for
the bene!H of ¢hester
Township lor the pur·
poee of lire protection.
Said tax being: a
replacement of a ttx of
1 mill and an Increase
ol 1 milllo constitute a
lax ol2 miUs at a rala
not excsedlng 2 (lwo)
mills lor each one dol·
lar of valuallon, which
amounts to twenty
cents ($0.20) lor each
one hundred dollars of
' valuation, lor live · (5)
years_
The polls lor aald
Election will open at
6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open unlll 7:30
o'clock P_M _of IBid diiV
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Malga
County, Ohio
John N. lhle
Chairperson
Rila D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 12, 2007
10 22 29
( ) •

places of voting .there·
In, on the 6th day of
November, 2007, the
question of levying a
tax, In excess of the
len mill limitation, lor
the benefit of Orange
Township lor lhe purpose of Fire proteelion . Said tax being: An
addlllonal tax of 1.5
milia,' at a rate not
ex~sedlng 1.5 mills lor
each one dollar of val'
uatlon, which amount•
to fifteen canla lor
each one hundred dol·
Iars of valuation, lor
.llvt&gt; years.
The polls . l&lt;:&gt;r said
Election will open al
6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open unlll 7:30
o·crock P.M. oleald day
By order of the Board
of Eleellona, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John' N. lhle
Chairperson
Rita D. Smith
Olractor
(10) 22,29

voting therein, on .the
&amp;Jh day ol November, r
2007, the quaellon of ·
levying a tax, In exceas
of the ten mill limite·
tlon, lor the benefit of
Middleport VIllage lor
the purpose of lire pro!action. Said tax being:
A renewal of an exlsllng tax of 1 mill, at a
rate not excsedlng 1
(ona) mill lor each one
dollar of valuallon,
which amounts to ten
canis ($0.1O) lor each
one hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5)
years.
The polls lor said
Election will open at
6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open until 7:30
o'clock P.M. of said
day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
Counly, Ohio
John N_lhle
Chairperson
Rita 0 _Smilh o(reclor
Dated Sepl.12, 2007
(10) 22,29
.
.
•

V .C

,~

ANOTHER
51)( ON
T~AT HOLE ..

YOUNG Ill

9Y2 U~1 ~
"u neroy Ol11o
Yt• nlo Ll•Lo~ F~pl• r •'no

I'VE 60T

MOI!.E SIXES
Tl-lAN THE
''BOOK OF
REVELATION ''

'

COW and BOY
I HAD A. DREAM
LAST NiGtiT THAT
YOU DIED. CJJW.

(_
:==============~

z•
Dbl.

a•
Pass

Pass

IT WA.S HORI11BLE.
I TRIED TO REPLACE
YOU WITH OTHER COWS.
BUT IT WAS NEVER'
THE SAME. Pl10MISE
ME ~J'LL ALWAYS
BE HERE.

· I PROMISE.

~

THAT'S WHY
YOLII BACK WA.S
50 COMFOQTA.BLE
__)

.

Pass

~HOPA11t ..

ANN AND

DAve, we
HA~DI...Y
KNewye

f!l"===l .

fiYJIIBT.PIICES.
' 11•W11111

II:IUIIdC Clllllillll'l·••
.............

ICIIIftrl:lll'lliPI'Ical

45 Beyond rad
49 Have deb1s
50 Conundrum
52 Skier
Tommy 53 Lunch
54 Grabs a cab
55 Ozarl&lt;s st.
56 Do Easter

f£1!o-;~

eggs

16 Fan noise
57 Blubber
17 Largest bird
or suet
19 Sketches
58 Lawyer's
21 Numero thing
22 - - loss
for words
DOWN
23 Tilt
26 Subtle
1 Bonkers
diHerences 2 Hubbubs
30 Old masters 3 Curved
31 Response
4 Traveler
on deck
-Polo
32 Mouths, in
5 Bryce
biology
C-anyon
33 Charge
location
34 Md.
6 Sweater sz.
neighbor
7 Campus
35 Cheshire .
building
Cat, finally
8 Russian
36 Barge pushczar
er
9 Morse sig·
·
39 Carnation . nals ·
colors
11 Pinch
40- Kippur
pennies
41 Archeologi· 12 Silt deposit
cal site
18 Hurries

20 Fleming or 39 Landing
Woosnam
'places
22 Ayla's
41 Resldad
creator
42 Worl&lt;ed the
23 Cushiony
soli
24 "Instead of" 43 Tow·-

word
25 Shake-(hurry)
26 Bori s'
refusal
27 Field crop
28 Estrada or
Satie
29 Lacking
31 Ponderosa
son
.
35 Temporary
jobs
37 "So longl"
38 Zing

zone
44 Solar
plaxua
45 Vast

continent
46 FitzGersld'o
poet
47 Addlllonal
quantity
48 Cartoon
shnekl
51 Lout

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

·

Celetmt;o C1t11er cryptograms a~e creiiiEIO 1rom quotauons tl~ 1amous people past and Plesenl~
Each letter ,n lhe c1p'1 er slands lor a11o~her •

Today's clue: Mequals H

" NMVH
OBWF

FMVP
XCF

SJLIV ,
-

FJVOF

FC

HC

FOEV

UOFFVJ

WOFRMVA

PCB

KO I,

ROJ'r CZ

PCB
PCBJ

NMOF ."

SOLXV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'After lwo yearSin Washington, I oftenlong lor
realism and sincerity of Hollywood· - Fred Thompson

....

WORD

~y

leHers of the
0.Rearrange
four scrambled wordJ b•

low ro form four simple words.

. 0 I HNE 0 I
1

1

1

I

I

I

1

L UCMH

I I 1I
3

l--.J.....J..-1-J.....J ~

r------.., o

DNRAG ~
1-...,.......,.,...,.......,.--j
N

L-J-1
. !I"JI.~.-~
I ~

,-lI

.---------,

" There are two good lhings
in life," one old gent told his

pal, "and lhey ate freedom
ofthoughli!Dd freedom of·-

RO T OAR

1-:-~1...:...;,-.~,,..,~;_·....,.,.,....... c)"c~~~lete

the chuckle quoted.

by filling in the missing wo~cb
L.....L.-1-..J...-1-.J.....J you develop from S!ep No. 3 below.
.

.

.

_

@ PRINT

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

A UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
~ TO GET ANSWER
·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS I o- 19 - o7 •
Glance - l"ease- Obese - Exceed- CLOSED
"The fanatic," the philosopher opined, "goes lhrough life with his
moulh openand his mind CLOSED."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

TAURUS (Aprii 20·May 20) - You're a bit
too independent to enJOY partnership
a rran gements~ul you could partake in a
very gratifying one with someone who
shares a mutual interest. Be prep ared to
team up.
GE MINI
(May 21-Jun.e 20) Regardless of the problems you have on
lhe job. if you shOw a willingness to work ,
lhem oul amicably, II could turn out to be
a new beginning that you'll lind qu1te
rewarding.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II mey
look more troublesome than It's worth,
but once you lake the inlt18.11ve to resolve
an Issue with someone who has been
disagreeable, you'll find the social turnIng point.
·
LEO (July 23-Au'g. 22) - Happy-ending
reaults are Indicated 'regarding somethlrig you've been unable to linallze up
until thla point. The aharpnns of your
mind will be responalbls lor ac:comptl ahlng this leal.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl . 22) Clrcumatanc11 may untold In a manner
that will cau11 you to rethink your current
plana. Your naw conc:aptlons will bring
the very succes• · that hu eluded you
thus far.

SOUP TO NUTZ
A WeT BED iSN T lf.le
saMe- as a wa~

M~ i"'DM's ST!LL SK•CI&lt;· I&gt;J
l'\7oS .. SHe 5 1iLL
9Laep,; ON
"waTer

lH[

a

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
·'

the:

~~~:t:~'
S©~(l}A~ 'BtfS'
,
1411JCI
ClAY R. POllAN _;;.__ __

odds.

11' t..OOK&amp; t..IKE l'f MIGH'f
BE HAUNTEP Bioi A

511•11l•IIUI•ft.IIG180
7...12...
.
ll•llllllllffiMiri.IIIHi:ll••
111Jn11rt11•12:11•
'

&lt;!bur 'lllrlh&lt;IIIY:

By Bernice Bede Osol
Owing to troublecJ conditions you've
recently endured, a new, refreshing personality could be in the offi flg for you in
the year ahead. It .will be much more
independent and adventurous .than yoyr
old one and attract lots of good things.
LIBRA (Sept . 23·0cl. 23) - Don 't
despair it things haveh'l been fruitful !or
you where your material affairs are concerned. Today could mark the beginning
of something 'to smile about once again.
SCORPIO ~Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Today's
events might cause you to ratt1ink your
course of action in order Ia advance a
personal interest. Once you do. you will
find many reasons to bo glad ovorything
worked out as il did .
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 2 1) - Pay
particu lar auentlon to those hunches or
perception s that provide you with lhe
ways and means lo fulfill an ambitious
aim. They'll gel you what you couldn't get
on your own
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ) - A
troubled relationship could take on new
signifiCance if you get involved in an
important arrangement ihat is ol mutual
interest You'tt figure out that you both
· have much in common.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) -This is
an especially good day to assess your
ob}actiYes and establish new goals,
especially if your old ones weren't going
anywhere. It's time to make that change.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcli 20) - Because
you may finally speak up and voice your
position and intentions with respect to
your friendships with others . things could
start ,to work lor you concerning your
social involvemenls
ARIES (March,21 -April 19) - Your pos·
sibllities for teaming with another lor the
purpose of generating adj:litional income
looks quite promising, but only alter you
resolve some issues !hat have been al

(
HOMICIPAI...

lair
Fall flower
Performed
Poetic lribute
Overfed
Caviar
Swindle
Export or

Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2007

GARFIELD

Manier.' 8
Racycl ng

III....RICIII••

••

Astro·Graph

12% All Stock

NOTICE ·o F ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, Section
3501 . t t (G)
5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given .t hai In pur·
suance of a Resolution
of the Board of
Township Trustees . of
the
Township
of
Cheater, Cheater, Ohio,
passed on the 3rct day
of July, 2007 !here will
be submitted to a vote
of lhe -people ol aald
subdlvlalon at a gener·
al ELECTION to ba
held In the Township of
Chester, Ohio, at the
regular places of vot-

4•
Pas s

East

Bob Hope said: "Bigamy: The only crime
where two rites make a wrong."
In this deal, you have to hope for some
good fortune. What is~ ?
You are South. in five hearts. West leads
the club king. How would you plan the
play?
The auction was eMciting. After South 's
one-heart opening and West's onespade overcall, North had a close call.
He was a tad strong fOf two hearts with
10 high-card points, bul he had 4-3-3-3
distribution (a big minus for suit play)
and nine losers (the normal number for a
single raise).
East then made a pre-e~tiv e jump to
three spades. showing tour-c'8rd support
and at least nine losers. (Wi!tl a stronger
hand and spade support, he would have
cue-bid three hearts.)
South bid lour hearts, of course. West
judged Well to go on to four spades.
North made a penally double, but South ·
prelerred to declare. (Note that lour
spades doubled can be defeated by ·lwo
tricks for minus 300.)
The opening lead is irritatin g. The
defenders are threatening to take two
hearts and one club. You could win with
your club ace, play a spade to dummy's'
ace, and call for the heart queen, hoping
East will cover from king-doubleton.
That. though, requires East to misde·
fend.
Much bener is to hope that hearts are 21 with East or West having a singleton
honor and th at diamonds are 3-3 .
Immediately play four rounds of diamonds, discarding your remaining club
If East ruffs, it costs his heart .ace. If
West rufls, lhe heart ace and ~ing w111
cra sh when South leads a trump. _

Hill's Self
Storag e

J&amp;L
Construction

740-992-6971

4•
5•

Nort h

If there is only
one hope, hope

H-Honest

David Lewis

WeSt

Opening lead: "- K

' .......w.-berortlelu&gt;ablnerry.com

26 Years Ex1Derifem:e

South

1•

Hardwood Cablneoor And FurnHure

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings .
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

~

J

• AK8

BARNEY

tO Years

... J !I H 7 6

4 A 5

Stop &amp; c_ompare

304-773-5061
304-881-3294

~-=ty

¥ A
t LO 7 2

9 109864 32

740·992-1m

MOWER

...THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
fOR YOU!!

A \l H -1 :l

•

•,

Servicing
l..awn Traclon·,
Mowtrs, . ..,.~'''11
Murray.
Craftsman,
MTD, Briggs
&amp;Stronon

F:asl

Sout h

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $60
PER MONTH

Guttering

West

Ril:k Wise

Please leave

PVH Medical Office
Building
Suite 118
October 25 &amp; November 1
9 a.m. to 11 ;30 a.m.
on both days Accepting
pa_tlents 6 months &amp; older
"Please bring Insurance
information
Legal guardian must be
present lor minors
For m.ore Information
please call,
(304) 675·6015

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1 Chemist's
4
7
10
11
13
14
15

Crossword Puzzle

42 Sheik's
bevy

-import

f

A K QI U71i
• K 7

• 6 5 4
4 K Q3

15 yrs. Exp. Free Estimates

Help Wanted

time,

• New Homes

740-,92-5929
740-416-1698

740-367-(1544

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health is
Full

,._ I 0 4

Al l 1ypes or concrete

Local Contractor

Help Wanted

Therapist.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CDNSTRUCTION

Wise Concrete

Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

Gladly accept cash , check,
Please make

s.nb Clfltelt

;::::::::::::::::..:::::::::::::::::; 740-256· 1233.

Office of
Ed Ayers, MD .

Cherokee, North Carolina

Oil Changes,
Brake Svc, Tune
Up, AJC Svc,
Engine Work,
Shocks Struls
All work
guaranteed
Certified Mechanic
Bumper To
Bumper Service.

- - - - - - - - 98 Dodge Dakola, 2WD, V6,
Help Wanted
5spd slandard, $2500 ooo.

FLU SHOT
CLINIC

Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
fo·r Christmas
·shopping

7110-4AI-IW

r·s

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

H~lp Wanted

740·992-1030
Mon-Fri 9-5

..,_"'" • l'ree Elti""'"

to-u-tn

• A5 3
• QJ 5
• QJ 9 3

Electric, Plumbing,

®

s.t;'ov

Complete TrH c,re
.10,.......~

r·

.Ir

A-One Auto Repair
99 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

Service

I-

Ellm View
Apartments

r

North

$24,000 new-·$19,800. Call ~~--~-=~-.
740-367-7129.
Johnson 's

~!;~~~:~l:ta~co~~:: rlO

need cash. will sacrifice lor $350, CKC Reg ., Tails
$175, Orrini Kero Su n docked, (740)446-1672
01 Red Neon, 4 cyl, AJC,

r= .

Phillip
Alder

Ol

er. Asking $3200. Call 740Choc., $400; 1 blaCk mate, 709-6339

kerosene h9ater. like new,
$65; Craftsman snow-plow
bl~de , $50, (740)992-0954 ~

ACROSS

2000 Polari5 Trailblazer new
top end, after market pipe
new rear tires, new batter~
clutch k!1, good condition
$1 ,200 740-418-8584

"I H\ I~ I '
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback. 5 speed trans, a:::ll'""...;.~:-----,

NEA

BRIDGE

'

�,_

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October;:_-,22, 2007

www.mydailysentfnel.com

16-year-old
suspected of killing ·
mother, shooting
. pastor father, A6

OES initiates·new
·member, presents
membership pins, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o l'I •: I\'TS • \ 'ol. :&gt; ~. No. lq

SPORTS
• Red Sox relax before
facing Rockies.
See Page 81

J liES II\' , O(' 1'&lt;11~1':1{

BY BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENJ@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'Pumpkinport'
party set for
Saturday

Meigs runners Andrew O'Bryant (left) and Kimi Swisher compete during the Division II Southeast District Meet held Saturday in Rio Grande. O'Bryant finished 24th overall and Swisher
placed 38th overall during Saturday's meet.
·
·

Advance

and , Hope
Hajivandi 0 ' Bryant posted a time of
(33:01.72) rounded out the 19:39. I9, good enough for
team scoring with respec- 24th overall. Nathan Cook,
tive finishes of !16th and in 35th place. was next with
from Page Bl
!24th. There were 126 com- a time of 20:30. I5, followed
petitors
in the Division II by Jacob Riffle (22:57.67)
Division II.
girls
race.
in 53rd.
· The
Tri-Valley
· In the first D-2 boys
Morgan
Kennedy
Conference
champion event, Gallia Academy had
(24:27 .13)
and
Noah
Meigs Lady Marauders only two athletes compete. Hajivandi (30: 16.46) roundfailed to advance anyone to .Dallas Craft led the Blue ed out the team scoring with
next Saturda y. fini shing Devils with a time of respective finishes of 54th
13th overall out of 17 22:36.76. finishing 49th and 64th. There were 67
teams. Kimi Swisher led the · overall. Jacob Wheeler was competitors in the second
Maroon and Gold with a 54th with a time of D-2 race.
time of 23: 12.75, placing 22:55.82. There were a total
In the first Division Ill
38th
overall.
Devan · of 68 runners in the first girls meet. Eastern had a
Soul s by (23 36.15) was meet.
pair of runners in the connext in 43rd, followed by
In the second D-2 event, test. Audrianna Pullins led
Jessica Holliday (25:07.70) Meigs placed eighth out of the Lady Eagles with a time
in the 80th overall spot.
l 0 teams and was led by of 24:53.70, good enough
Olivia Bevan (29 : 18.3R) Andrew
0' Bryant. . for 34th. Jule Draehn

(25:29.49) al so finished leading the Tornadoe s with
42nd.
·
a time of 18:46.06.
Behind Fitch in that same
Southern posted a team
race was Kelsey Sands, who score of 254 in the first D-3
placed 48th overall with a meet, placing lith overall
time of 26:26.83. There out of 14 teams. Other finwere 76 competitors in the ishers for SHS were Dyllan
Roush (20:23.87) in 54th,
opening girls race.
Southern's
Chelsea Colby Roseberry (20:29.01)
Freeman was the lone area in 58th, Kraig Kleski
participant in the second D- (21 :08.12) in 71st, Drew
3 meet, placing 60th with a . Hoover (22 :04.76) in 87th,
time of 26: 16.76. There John Holsinger (26: 20.42)
were 95 runners in the sec- in l 0 I st, and Kris Kleski
ond D-3 event.
(26:34.76) in l02nd. .
For the boys in Division
There were I 05 indi vi duIll, Martindale was fol- als in the first D-3 boys race
lowed by teammate Keith and another I I4 in the secAeiker with a time of ond meet.
18:42.50 for 2 1st overall.
River Valley participated
Southern's Kyle Goode was in the finale, posting a team
right behind Aeiker in 22nd, . score of 230 and finishing ·

eighth out of 15 teams.
Vince Weatherstein Jed
the Raiders with a time of
!8:49.60, finishing 22nd
overall. David Householder
(19:30.82) was next in 36th,
followed by Sean Sands
(20:45 .16) m 63rd. Tyler
Noble (22:05.32) and Kody
Johnson (22:5 1.74) rounded
out the team scoring with
respective finishes of 77th
and 87th.
Jon Porter cone! uded
things (or the Raiders .with a
time of 23:02.27, finishing
88th overall.
Complete results of the
Division II and Division Ill
races are available on the
Web
at
www.baumspage.com

See your local

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dwight Sherman
Haley Jr.
• Magdaline E. St. Clair

INSIDE

WEATHER .

MS 180 C·B STlHL MiniBossN
14" Bar ................... $229.95

dealer for a full line
of STIHL blowers.

MS 270 STIHL WOOD BOSS•
16" Bar . ................. $349.95
MS 270 C·B Chain Sew

Ches~er .

Gallipolis ·

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248

Twin Rivers Marina
412 State Rt 7 North
740-446-6700
Next to River Front Honda

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

home on Nye Avenue next on the li st
which also includes several others,
including the · one located behind
Auto Zone.
Councilwoman Mary McAngu s
once again pressed about the road to
Monkey Run and its statu s. Musser
said the property had not been transferred from owner Jay Hall and/or
hi s subsidiaries to the Community
Improvement Corporation (C IC ) but
when the CIC takes the title the road

© 2007 OhJo VaUcy PubUsh.ing Co.

'"'" ·"'"lail"''"t;,,.,
,...,,,
.
.

will be ope ned·.
"It will happen," Musser said. "I
can't tell you when or if the road
stay s where it is now but it will
remain on that property and will be
complete when the village gets it."
Musser said he'd&lt;ltad talks yesterday with the owner of the property ·
and the outlook seemed positive, as
if itmi ght happen right away.

..

Please see Alumni. AS

Please see Houses, AS

Defendants
in weekend
drug raid
arraigned

'.,
."

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Submitted photos

Employees of the Meigs SWCD and the Natural Resource Conservation Service assists
Home Creek Enterprises Inc. of Pomeroy with construction of the new wetland at the Meigs
SWCD Conservation Area on New Lima ·Road near Rutland .

BY JIM FREEMAN
MSWCD WATERSHED
COORDINATOR

RUTLAND - Work is
nearly complete on the new
wetland at the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
Di strict 's
Conservation
Area on New Lima Road.
The long, winding dam,
the viewing "peninsulas"
and "i slands," and the
water-level control structure
are all in stalled and waiting
to function . Most of the topsoil has been replaced. At
thi s time the only missing
ingredient is water.
However, the district is
confident that at some point Meigs SWCD Conservation Area wetland which is nearing
the wetland will be full of completion, will appear much like this, minus wat~r. when it
water along with the blend is completed. The wetland will include soil and rock islands
of aquatic plants and macro- and a viewing peninsula for educational purposes . It will be
a little over two acres in area and . sHghtly less then three
Please see Wetlands, AS feet deep at the deepest spot.

POMEROY - A new scholarship for a Mei gs High School
graduate has been established by
the newly formed Meigs Local
Alumni Assoc iation . .
The first scholarship for a MHS
graduate of 2008 will be in the
2 SECI'IONS- 12 PAGES
amount of $5,000 with the speci fication that the student attend
Calendars
A:3 Ohio
University. It is being called
the
Pam . Crooks Memorial
Classifieds
82-4
Scholarship in memory of the
1982 Meigs graduate. The fundBs ing
Comics
was provided by one of the
Alumni
Assoc iation's douors.
Annie's Mailbox
A:3
According to Paul Reed, president,
of the goals of the
Editorials
A4 AlumnioneAssociation
is t~&gt; raise
mone
y
to
support
Scholarships
for
Obituaries
As Meigs students on an annual
Sports
B Section basis . Scholarships are a part of
. the Meigs Local Enri chment
Weather
A6 Program which also includes

INDEX

'

stihhisa.com

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport will become
"Pumpkinport" Saturday,
with a full day 's activities
planned
to
celebrate
Halloween. including contests for children, ghost stories and Jive entertainment.
It will be the first year the
Middleport
Community
Association has held the
Halloween
party
on
Saturday. Acilvities will
begin at 2 p.m. in Dave
Diles Park. Costume judging, ghost stories and an
inflatable " bounce house"
are planned, and, of course,
decorated and carved pumpkins will be displayed and
judged.
Children aged pre-kindergarten through fifth grade
are invited to participate by
brin ging their . pre-carved
pumpkins to the park by 6
p.m. Judging will be at 6:30
p.m., and winners will be
announced at 7:30. Winners
in four age cate~orie s will
receive $5 in Metgs County
Chamber Bucks.
Costumes will be judged
in three categories: Prettiest,
ugliest and most original.
Children participating in the
contests will be eligible to .
win a free bicycle .
The Association is seeking vendors for the arts and
crafts show, which will
begi n at 2 p.m., and continue through 7 p.m. There is
no charge to set up in the
park,
according
to
President
Association
Brenda Phalin.
Donna Wil son will entertain with ghost stories at 4
p.m., and the Big Bend
Cloggers wi II perform at 6
p.m.
Free refres hments and
free Halloween photos will
be made avail able from
Peoples Bank. ·

Details on Page A6

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tiona] $5,000 and be paid out of the
·general fund. Jeffers Excavating is
doing the work .
Homes slated for demolition using
distress grant funds were finali zed
months ago and the money appropriated for this speci fic purpose. Mayor
·John Musser gave council an update
on the project, saying three of the
homes on the demolition list located
on Ohio 7A have been removed as
well as one on Lincoln Hill with a

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• HEALTHBEAT:
Caution still counseled for
women considering
freezing.. iheir eggs.
Seep. A2
• AP NewsBreak: Panel
advises unified control of
private security in Iraq
after Blackwater case.
See Page A2
• Communist reshuffle
sends China'sHu into
next 5 year-term in
stronger shape.
See Page A2
• Holiday care
workshop announced.
See Page A3
• Medal of Honor
ceremony held at Wh~e
House Monday for
Navy SEAL killed
in Afghanistan.
See Page AS
• Deer hunters
encouraged to hunt wild
boars. See Page A6

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Pomeroy to demolish more houses
. POMEROY
- Last
night
Pomeroy Village Council voted to
demolish two more condemned
homes in addition to several homes
already in the backhoe's cross-hairs.
Council voted to take down a
three-story home on Ebenezer Street
and a home at 161 4 Lincoln
Heights. The work will cost an addi-

Bryan Walterllphotos

:!;1. !!007

POMEROY - Two men
and three women charged
with felonies relating to the
manufitctvre of methamphetamine appeared before
Judge Steven L. Story
Monday.
The latest meth-related
charges were filed yesterday morning after .sheriff's
deputies discovered more
chemicals believed to have
been used to make the dru g
at a residence on Story 's
Run ,
just
outside
,
M iCldleport.
• Laura K. Hysell, 39, of ·
Cheshire, is charged with
illegal possession of chemicals used in the manufacture
of methamphetamine. She
is already under indictment
in Mei gs· County Common
Pleas Court and charged in
Gallia County Common
Pleas Court on meth-related
charges filed after a
September drug investigation at the same location.
Story set her bond at
$25 ,000, with 10 percent
cash allowed, and set a preliminary
hearing · for
Thursday.
· · Hysell is also charge(.) on
a bench warrant from
County Court for failure to
appear on an unrelated
charge, and Story set bond
in that case at $5,000, with
I 0 perce nt cash allowed.
• Jesi. L. Johnson, 23,
Gallipolis, is charged with
illegal possession of chemicals. She also is charged
with failure to appear on a
2003 assault case. Her bond
was set at $25,000, with 10
percent cash allowed, on the
drug charge, and $5,000,

Please see Raid, AS

Racine skatepark taking shape
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The Racine skatepark
is looking less like a hole in the
ground and more like a mini-bowl.
Wh at is a mini-bowJ'l It- will
appear like a ·shall ow sw immin g
pool once the concrete is poured
which contractor Brewce Martin of
Skatopia says will happeti next
week, weather permitting.
Martin said hi s crew dug two feet
below the surface to give the mini bowl enough depth to tie into existing drain lines . The crew also placed
French drains into the skatepark to
help protect the concrete should
floodin g occur.
Yesterday work·was being done on
laying and tying rebar in the minibowl also called a bow led-in halfpipe. Martin sa id ·he h ope~ to next
start work on the mini -street area of
Beth Sergenl/photo
the park by doing the fine grading. Skatopia founder and contractor on the Rac 1ne skatepark Brewce Martin
He's also optimist ic to finish "placing (foregrou nd) works with his crew laying and tying rebar 111 what w111 be the
the 8.000 feet of rcbar thi s week park's concrete mmi-bowl.
which is meant to shape the 'e ntire
"This park is going to change this skatllollark and · des igned hi s own
park .
community." Martin sa id .
skatepark , Skatopia, located outside
Please see Park, AS
Martin has worked on the Athens of Rutland.

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