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DAYLIGHT SAVINGS
TIME ENDS

ALONG THE RivER
tt's Halloween
Time to get into the spirit, C1

Don't
forget to set your' clocks back 1 hour!
.
.

Hometd'Wn News for Gallia &amp; Meigs oounties

SPORTS
• High school football
action. See . , . 81

Intercbange project stiU ahead of schedule
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Rocksprings Interchange is
still ahead of schedule
though it's not set in stone
(or asphalt) that it will be
done this fall, in fact · the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation (ODOT) is
now looking at a possible
spring completion date .
"We're still way ahead of
schedule," ODOT District
10 spokesperson Stephanie

Fi Ison said.
The $7.6 million project
was d\le to be completed in
June 2007. ODOT previ ously announced the contractor had a goal of completing the project this fall
(weather permitting) so that
it could move on to its next
job though the rains and
now the onslaught of cooler
temperatures have done
nothing to funher that goal.
"The rains ob.,iously
completelY, . delay any
paving," Filson said, adding

that autumq weather is not lane near the project which
exactly conducive to sur- is included in the $7.6 mil·
lion price tag.
.
face work.
ODOT believes the proFilson said laying an
asphalt base for the road- ject will provide continual
way this fall and finishing movement of U.S. 33 traffic
the concrete paving in the in order to streamline the
spring remains to be com- traffic pattern and improve
pleted. The majority of the ·safety along the corridor.
eanh work at the site is now
ODOT has said traffic
finished.
counts are continuing to
Contractor
Beaver rise on both the U.S. 33
Excavating Co. of Canton Ravenswood Connector
is working on the inter- and U.S. 33 Athens to
change as well as resurfac- Darwin connection. The
ing a section of the four- Rocksprings Interchange at

the junction of 33 and Ohio
7 is in response to this
trend, and to the future
· completion
of
the
Nelsonville Bypass and the
recent completion of the
Lancaster Bypass.
"We still have a fantasti4:
relationship with the con:
tractor and we work well
with each other," Filson
added. "It (the interchange)
may very well be done in
spring. As (ar as I know it's
right on track."

reach
BY MlcHa.L£ MtUER
MMILLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLTA - Living on the
outskirts of Gallia County
can have its advantages, but
the biggest disadvantage
Page AS
comes . in the time of an
• Robert 'Pepsi' Haning emergency. ,
Over the last year, steps
• Roberta G~ Russell
were taken by the Greenfield·
• James Wayne Shaver Township Volunteer Fire
• Kelli Elizabeth Jones · Department to help balance
·
• CharleS E. Markins Jr. the scale.
Through grant funding,
• Allan Sheets
several department members
• Mabel B. Slater
received Emergency Medical
Technician (EMT) training
• Alice Ruth Viars
and now, with a mutual aid
agreement in place between
the fire department, Gallia
County Commissioners and
the . Gallia County EMS,
those firefighterS will be; able
• Springfield VFD nets
to "finn respond'~ to medical
calls within the fire departAEP grant. See·Page A2
ment's coverage area.
• WoA&lt;ers awarded
Greenfield Fire Chief
unemployment benefits in Jamie
Bartels applied for the
metals plant dispute.
training grant and II .fire
department
members attendS.PageA2
ed the EMT training.
• Bush reaffirms
Once the training was ·
pllam
support for Iraq's prime complete, Bartels ·met with From left, Greenfield Township Volunteer Fire Department Assistant Chief Steve Davis, Chief Jamie Bartels, interim Gallill
County
Commissioners County EMS Director Larry.Boyer and County Commissioner Harold G. Montgomery are shown with the oxygen equipment
minister. See Page A5
President
Harold
G. Greenfield's first responders will use. Montgomery is explaining the agreement made between the county and the town• Riverview Productions
Montgomery, Interim EMS ship for mutual aid for the first responders during 11 recent meeting at the fire department.
will hOst chamber event.
Director Larry Boyer and 9- could assist township resi- while the ambulance was County Commissioners pro- oxygen equipment to Bartels
SeePage A&amp;
· 1- I Director Stephen Wilson dents and offer mutual aid to enroute.
vided oxygen tanks for five during the Greenfield departto fonnulate an agreement Gallia County EMS by first
To assist the depanmein in of the first responders.
PI
I see Reidt, A2
where the fire department responding to medical calls their endeavor, the Gallia
Montgome.ry presented the

OBITUARIES

•PA8el6

-. ·~"
Middleport !_'Gldlipulis
•.J'oint Pfe~pnt
.
·. ·.

···-··-

'"·---....

INSIDE
...... I

WEATIIER

Collins retiring
fromODOT

1-tent are a few ways to keep safe:

•

• Befofe venturing out in the field, be sure you are familiar with your weapon. Know how it
works, know its range.
• If there's something wrong with it, don't try the fix-all for everything: Duct tape or ctlewing
gum. Take it to a competent gunsmith and have it repaired before heading out on the hunt.
• Wear fluorescent or hunter orange when hunting anything except waterfowl. Birds can see
oolor; orange will chase them away. Although pheasants also detect color, the rule doesn't
apply to them because hunteTS are not setting out decoys to lure the bi'rds.
• Weapon$ s1'loUid always 'be .unloaded until the hunter is out of the vehicle and in the field. It's
not the law, but it is the smart thing to do. "It's not illegal to do a lot of foolish things. There is no
state law that makes it illegal to have loaded weapons, with safety locks off in moving vehicles:
The Legislature has given us credit to be smart enough to make responsible decisiOnS." sa1d
Bill Antonides, retired Game, Fish and Parks conservation officer and current Hunt Safe
inst~or in Aberdeen .
,
That could change if hunters begin leaving their common sense at home. Many states already
have laws that say all weapons must be unloaded and in a case when being transported.
• Know your target, what's between you and the target and beyond the target. That's just in
case the shot misses or the bullet goes throu.g h target and keeps going. If you don't know the
range of your weapon , "you shouldn't pull the trigger," advised Antonides. .
• State law says road hunters must stay 660 feet from a building. Courtesy and common sense
would double or triple that distance.
• When hunting with permission near bui.ldings, always be sure to shoot away from people and
animals. "Many farmers have been rewarded for their generosity in letting people hunt their
land by. ending up with buckshot in a building's siding," said Antonides. Not only is that bad
SPQrtsmanship, it's likely to get hunters turned away the next time they ask permission to hun~
on the farmer's land.
• Never shoot unless you know exactly what you are shooting at; just because it moves doesn't
mean it's the target you are see!&lt;ing - it could be a domestic animal or worse yet, another
human. Once the bullet is on its way, it can't be brought back.
Hunters who respect the land, the wildlife and landowners are well on their way to safe miTmn

.

,,

BY CHARLENE Ho£FucH

,Detallo on Page A6

INDEX
4 SECnONS -

24 PAGES

Around Town
A3
Celebrations CSection
Classifieds
DSection
Comics
insert
Editorial!l
A4
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2
B Section
Sports
Weather
A6
© aoo6 Ohio valley Publt.hlng eo.

,PROUD 10 BE A
.\. PARTOF
¥OUR LIFE.

·Gallia DJFS to aid new,
expanding businesses
'BY MICIIEU.E MILLER

HOEFLICHOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

MMILLEReMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - · George

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Department' of Jobs
and Family Services is one
of 29 Appalachian county
departments that recently
applied and were approved
for Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (TANF)
Demonstration dollars.
In Gailia County, the
monies will be used for
employment retention and
advancement. by offering
an incentive to businesses

M. Collins of Meigs County .
will retire as District 10
Deputy Director of the Ohio
Department .
of
Transponation on Tuesday.
· Collins is one of two top
administrators
leaving
District 10 this week.
Highway
Management
Administrator Dan Pennock
of Morgan County ·is also ·
retiring. The two have accumulated m.ore than 65 years
of public service between
them.
Since 1999, when Collins
was promoted to the position
of top district administrator,
be has overseen the strategic
planning and day-to-day
operations of the district's
nine-county area. He is the
first District I 0 deputy director to not be an engineer.
Collins began his career
with ODOT in a business
and human resources position in 1991 after serving 16
years as Meigs County treasurer.
During his tenure as
deputy director of District
I0, he has seen more than
$300 million in major new
construction including the
U.S.
33
Ravenswood
Connector, the U.S. 33
to
Darwin
Athens ·
Connector, and the construction still underway of the
new
Pomeroy-Mason

that hire TANF-eligible
individuals.
Benefits of the project
include the employment of
TANF-eligible individuals
and monetary incentives for
both the employer and the
employee.
·Once the newly-hired
worker successfully completes the probationary period, the employer is eligible
to submit a request for
$1,000 per eligible employee to offset training and
wage expenses.
At that time, the employ-

ee is also eligible to receive
a vne time payment of
$1 ,000, which according to
Kathy M!:Calfa, director of
Gallia's DJFS , will go a
long way to help employees
with expenses incurred during employment, such as
clothing and vehicle maintenance.
Qualifications for the program, all of which must
·
apply, are:
• Employee must be a
Gallia County resident.

Plene see QJFS, A2

Patrol: Injuries part of cadet training

Dan Pennock
Bridge and the Rocksprings
Interchange
in
Meigs
County, as well a~ the new
U.S. 50 four-lane from
Athens to Coolville in
Athens County.
·
"ODOT has accomplished
a great deal in the past few
years," said Collins . "I am

PIMH see Collhls. A1

•

COLUMBUS (AP) Sixteen of the 41 cadets
who graduated "last week
·from the State Highway
Patrol
Academy
were
injured during tactical training exercises that include
wrestling, punching and
kicking , records show.
Five cadets and.-a trooper
had injuries that required
emergency room treatment,
including a dislocated
shoulder. dislocated elbow.
a broken ·nose and finger,
back a~d rib pain . and a
concussiOn.
Injuries should raise concerns,
said
R. Paul
McCauley. a criminology
Indiana
professor
at
University of Pennsylvania
in Indiana. Pa., who has
studied police training.

"The question is, is there 20-week program were consomething defective or sidered minor. ·
wrong with the' trainers, the
The State Highway Patrol
equipment and the training in Ohio defended the physi. protocols')" he asked.
cal exercises and said they
From 200 I to 2005, 27 are designed to prepare
cadets reponed injuries dur- cadets for difficult real-life
ing the academy 's "high- situations. Cadets wear proi~tensity tactical training."
tec.tive gear during more
which involves cadets fight· ' intense training when they
ing with troopers to simu- wrestle troopers posing as
late unruly arrest,, accord- suspecb onto their stoming to patrol records.
achs and place handcuffs on
Most poli ce and patrol them.
academie'
have
'elf"We don't look at (the
de[ense training. but ofti- injuries) a~ severe - a sepcials at several other pro· arated shoulder. a broken
grams said injuries aren't a&gt; finger," said Staff Lt.
frequent or severe as those -Shawn Lee. director of
in Ohio. Over the last two operations at the academy.
years. one state police cadet ''Not being prepared and
m Indiana broke a foot, and having to bury a couple of
22 cadet InJUnes in trooper,, that' s the la't thing
Michigan during the latest we want.''

�:6unbap lim·itntintl
Local Briefs
Leaf pick-up
schedule
posted

REGIONAL
.
Collins

Gospel quartet
performs
today
'

from PageA1
so honored to have had the
opportunity to participate in
all of these regional proJects. That, combined with
my top-notch colleagues
and a supportive public, has
made ODOT a ve!JI satisfying career for me. 1will truly
miss it."
Meigs native Stephanie M.
Filson, District 10 · public
inforrilation officer, commented that "I have only
worked. with George for the
past five years. but I have
come to sincerely respect
and admire him. He clearly
has a passion for southeast
Ohio and has turned that into
some incredible improvements for our region. ·
"He has not only driven

GALLIPOLIS - The
GALLIPOLIS __:_ First
.weekly leaf pick-up sched- Baptist Church, 1100
ule in Gallipolis continues Fourth Ave .. will host the
as follows :
• Monday - All cross southern gospel qua·rtet
Freed by Chrisr today at 6
streets and Fifth Avenue.
p.m.
Everyone is welcome.
• Tuesday - First and
Second avenues.
• Wednesday - Garfield ·
Avenue, state routes 141
and 588.
• Thursday - Third· and
Fourth avenues.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
• Friday Eastern
Avenue and Maple Shade County Local Board of
Education will meet in spearea.
cial
session Wednesday,
For information, contact
the city· garage at 446- · Nov. I at 5:30 p.m. in the
0600.
.
administrative office, 230
Shawnee Lane. ·
The board wi II accept
from PageA1
bids
for the early site pack•
age for the new ·River
Valley High School, and
• Employer must be locatWILKESVILLE
discuss site work for the ed in Gallia CoUtity.
Wilkesville Presbyterian new South Gallia High
• Employee .must be hired
Church will host a "Save School project.
between Oct. 1, 2006, and
Our Steeple" fund-raiser on
Dec. 31, 2007.
:Saturday, Nov. 4 from 5 ·to
• Employee must be an
·7 p.m. at the Wilkesville
adult in a household with a
Community Center.
minor child, whose total
The inenu includes chili,
household income 30 days
bean and potato soups, hot
prior to being hired was at
llogs and sloppy joes, and
TUPPERS PLAINS
·or below 200 percent of the.
lots of homemade desserts. Tuppers
Plains
Fire federal poverty level.
Proceeds of the fund- Department will have a
• The job must be fullraiser will go toward the . soup bean and cornbread time (40 hours per week) or
replacement of the church's dinner at the fire station considered full time per the
more than century-old
Monday from 5 to 7 p.m. as employer standards.
steeple.
• The job must pay at least
a part of the Hallowee·n eel$7.50
or more per hour.
.ebration.
Trick and treat in the vii- (Should not enough opening
. lage will be from 6 to 7 positions in the county be
available•. the starting wage
p.m.
may be reduced). .
RIO
GRANDE
• Employee must comUniversity
of
Rio
plete a probation~ period
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community ·College will
bold a preparation workshop to help students . POMEROY Meig
improve their performance County Health Department
from Page At
on the American College will hold a . childhood
Test (ACT) on Saturllay,
Nov. 11 and 18 from 9 a.m. immunization clinic from 9 ment's chili supper on Oct.
.until 3 p.m. in McKenzie until II a.m. and I to 3 · 17.
p.m. on Tuesday.
"The commissioners have
·Hall Room 224.
Bring
shot
records
and
been
striving to improve oov·
: The ACT prep workshop
medical
cards
if
applicable.'
erage
t:hrou~hout tl)e county,
:will be sponsored by
espec!~ly tn the outlyi~g
'Project Chanip/OACHE A $5 donation appreCiated areas,
Montgomery satd.
and will be free of charge. but not required.
"We've been working close-Space is limited to the first
ly with the Greenfield fire
:.W .people who register by
depanmentQver the past few
:Nov. 7.
months and we're happy it
: This workshop is intend.
has finally come to frutuon.
:Cd for ,students who will be
This allows people in the
outlying
areas to receive
:taking the ACT on Dec. 9.
MARIETTA
.,.--Ohio
:A continental breakfast and Public Works Commission !lledical help from EMTs
'unch will be provided. District 18 · Executive much quicker than before; it
could mean the difference
:Enrollees need only to
Committee
will
meet
at
I 0 ·between life and death."
:bring a calculator.
When there is a medical
: Enroll by contacting Bev a.m. on ~Nov. 16 at the
Holiday
Inn
in
Marietta,
in
emergency
within the townMcManus in the URG
ship,
the
Gallia
County 9-1-1
Career and
Advising order to select projects for
.Resource Service Office at Round 21 funding under Center dispatches the Gallia
EMS to the call. .
:(800) 282-7201, extension the OPWC State Capital County
Now,
addition · to dis;7279, or e-mailing bmc- Improvement and Local patchinginEMS,
the 9-1-1
'lllanus@rio.edu to reserve Transportation Center will also set off desigImprovement programs.
:a seat.
nated pagers for first respon-

· Special
meeting

·oJFS·

Church plans
fund-raiser

Soup supper
planned

Rio to host
:ACT workshop

Immunization
clinic ·

· PageA2

Reach

Sund•y, October 29, 2006

immeasurable success for
District 10 over the past
. seven years, he has done so
wjth concern, deliberation
and a bit of humor. We will
truly miss him."
Pennock, an engineer,
joined ODOT in 1975 in the
central office in Columbus,
and then in 1977 transferred
to District 10. . In 1995, he
was appointed to the highway management administrator position, where he
~upervised more than 200
employees in . highway
maintenance, roadway ser. vices and construction,
ODOT District 10 will
hold an open house party for
the two retirees, 9:30a.m. to
I 2:30p.m. Monday, Oct. 30,
at the district lieadquarters,
338 Muskingum Drive,
Marietta.
·
The public is invited to
attend. .
'
·

Springfield VFD nets
AEPgrant

Springfield than 130,000 volunteer
Township Volunteer Fire bours donated by AEP
Department received a grant employees, retirees and
from American Electric their families.
Power' in honor of Mark
"Although no monetary
Mohr, Gary Fisher and grant can compare to the
RobeiJ "Stumpy" Scott, value of the time our
memb'ers of the department, employees and retirees give
and Susan Scott, firefight- to worthwhile causes, the
er's mother and supporter of $150 grants made by the
the department, for their program in the names of
significant volunteer ser- AEP. volunteers will ·help
VIce.
schools and non-profit orgaThe AEP Connects pro- nizations meet the chalgram recognizes the com- lenges· of fulfilling impormitment of AEP employees tant human needs," Morris
and retirees to their communities and supports causes said.
Mark Mohr, . Springfield
that are important to them,
VFD'
s chief and honoree,
said Michael G. · Morris,
AEP's chairman, president expressed his appreciation
and chief executive officer. to AEP for the grants to the
More than 780 grants department and to the Other .
per employer standards or
30 days, . whichever is were made company-wide honorees for their continued
. last year, representing more support of the department.
greater:
.
• Employers m1,1st be
either a new business or
expanding their workforce:
Replacement of current
workforce does not apply to
MARIETTA (AP) - A employee of the company.
this program.
labor dispute that has kept ''There are a lot of guys here
Applications must be sub- workers off the job for two with families at home and this
mined by new hires to the months at Eramer Mariena is is going to help quite a bit."
Gallia County Department · a lockout, not a strike, a state
A state hearing officer ruled
of Jobs and Family Services agency has determined.
. Thursday in favor of the nearThat means workers at the
and applicants will need to
sign a release of informa- . specialty metal .plant may be ly . 300 union membe!'S.
eligible to start collecting Company officials said the
tion for data collection.
unemployment benefits.
decision would be appealed.
The department will hold
"It's a blessing, but what it
"We're certainly disapinterviews for all applicants holds for the future is hard to pointed with the ruling," said
to determine eligibility.
tell," said Steve Tompkins, Ethan Frank-Collins, human
Applicants will receive an 53, of Barlow, a 33-year resources manager at Eramet.
approval or denial letter
once a decision is made.
. Services undel: this program are contingent upon
funding availabil-ity.
lrll·
Installed*
/
For more information,
I l
contact Belinda Jones at
• Price lnchldes ..tlldow (up to 101 Ul) &amp; tabor
~-3f22, extension 231.
I :
I
BIDWELL~

Workei;'S awarded unemployment
benefits in metals plant dispute

10 Windows For

'=.:L

ders in Greenfield Township.
Trained Greenfield firemen can respond, provide
basic medical care and relay
patient information to the
responding ambulance by

I

-·- ·-1)

;

$1890

While VInyl Douhle Hilnl•

LIFETIMJ&gt; WARRANTY
~1111111:. Araon Gas &amp; Triple Pine ~vallable

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

radio

1-800-291-5800

This action was made possible, in part because of
effotts .by Bartels in obtain- ·
ing the grant and the necessary training for his fire
department personnel.

AROUND TOWN

iunbap CimH ·itntinel

Gallia County calendar
Community
events
Monday, Oct. 30
GALLIPOLIS - Free
cataract screening for all
senior citizens at the Gallia
County Senior Resource
Center, I 0 a.m., by Dr.
Anwar and staff from
Parkersburg, W.Va. No
appointments necessary.
Screening done on a first·
come, first-served basis at
no charge to senior citizens.
Thesday, Oct. 31
RIO
GRANDE
Halloween Poetry Reading,
7 p.m. in Bob Evans Farm
Hall at the University of Rio
· Grande. Free to public. Feel
free to bti ng in and read
your own work. Sponsored
by the English Honor
Society.
·
Wednesday, Nov. 1
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Board of Health, 9
a.m., conference room of
the Gallia County Service
Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

Support groups
GALLIPOLIS
Grieving Parents Support
Group meets 7 p.m. second
Monday of each month at
Holzer Medical Center.
People attending should
meet in the general lobby.
For information, call Jackte
Keatley at 446-2700 or
· Nancy Childs at446-5446.
ATHENS - Survival of
Suicide support group
meets 7 p.m., fourth
Thursday of each month at
Athens Church of Christ,
785 W. Union St., Athens.
For information, call 5937414.
GALLIPOLIS- Divorce
care group meets from 78:30 p.m. every Wednesday
at the First Church of the
Nazarene. For more information, ,:all (740) 4461772.

GALLIPOLIS AlAnon support group meeis
every Thursday, 6 p.m., at
St.
Peter's
Episcopal
Church, 541 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - Look
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday of
the month at 6 p.m., Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
Anonymous
Wednesday open meeting at
7 p.m. and Friday open
meeting at 8 p.m. at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church,
541 Second Ave. TUesday
closed meetin~ is at 8 p.m.
at St. Peter s Episcopal
Church.
GALLIPOLIS - NAMI
(National Alliance on
Mental Illness) Southeast
Ohio Support Group meets
at 6 p.m. on the third
Tuesday of the month at the
Gallia County Senior
Resource·Center, 1167 State
Route 160. Forinformation,
call Denise Rice at 2450454 .or Jill Simpkins at
441-0852.
..
GALLIPOLIS
Narcotics
Anonymous
Miracles in Recovery meets
every
Monday
and
Saturday, 7 p.m., at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
Narcotics
Anonymous Living Free
meets
every
Group
Wednesday and Friday at 7
p.m. at 305 Main St.

Regular
meetings
.RIO
GRANDE
Arthritis exercise class, I 0
a.m. to 11 a.m., every
Thursday,
last
class
November 30, University of
Rio. Grande, cafeteria B,
free of charge. For more
information call 286-8121.
GALLIPOLIS -Morns'
Club meets, noon, third
Monday of each month at

740-992-4119

ei
Carel~ Services Available
Milchell J. Silver, DO, FACC, is now
scheduling appointments at the Meigs
Medical Clinic.
·
Dr. Silver is board-certified in internal
medicine and specializes in interventional
'•
cardiology and peripheral vascular disease.
Dr. Silver is the medical director of o:Bieness Memorial Hos~tal's
catheterization laboratory at the Comwell Center in Athens. He is
associated with MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular C6nsultanu with
offices at the Meigs Medical Clinic, the Comwell Center in Athens,
and in Columbus. Prior to becoming affiliated with MidOhio, Dr. Silver
was on the Cleveland Clinic medical staff.

Sunday, October 29,

Community
Nursery
School. For more information, call Tracy at (7 40)
441-9790.
GALLIPOLIS - friday
Morning Coffee meetings to
discuss community events
will now be held at 8 a.m.
each Friday at Holzer
Medical Center's Education
and Conference Center. For
more information, call 4465053.
GA...LIPOLIS..:... Practice
for the . Fr~nch Colony
Chorus; a four-part harmony style women's group, 7
p.m. each TUesday at the
Gallia County Convention
and Visitors Bureau building, 259 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis. For more information, contact Suzy Parker
at (740) 992-5555 or Bev
Alberchinski at 446-2476.
. CHESHIRE -. Citizens
Against Pollution (CAP)
has its monthly meetings at
the Gallco Workshop building, north of Cheshire on
Ohio 7, the last Tuesday of
every month siarting at 7
p.m .. Anyone with concerns
are encouraged to attend.
For more information, call
(740) 367-7492. .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia ·
County
Commissioners
m~et every Thursday, 9
a.m.,
Gallia
County
Courthouse.
· GALLIPOLIS - · The
Gallia County Airport
Authority Board meets at
6:30 p.m., on the first
Monday of each month at
the Airport terminal buildmg.
.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) meets
each Monday at 6 p.m. at
the Sycamore Bral\ch of
. Holzer Clinic with weigh-in
starting at 5:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS ;....,. Bold
Directions Inc. social group
meets 3 to 7 p.m. each
Tuesday in The Cellar at
Grace United Methodist
Church, 600 Second Ave.

Public meetings

GALLIPOLIS - Mid,Ohio Valley Radio Club Inc.
meets 8 a.m. first Saturday
of each month in basement
of Gallia County 911 Center
on Ohio 160. Licensed arna·
teur radio operators and
interested parties invited.
For information, call 4464193.
GALLIPOLIS
qallipollis Rotary . Club
meets 7 a.m. each TUesday
at Holzer Clinic doctor's
dining room.
GALLIPOLIS _ Gallia
County Right to Life meets
7:30 p.m., second Tuesday
of each month at St. Louis
Catholic Church Hall.
GALLIPOLIS - Choose
to Lose Diet Club meets 9
a.m., each·Tuesday at Grace
United Methodist Church.
Use C . Street entrance.
GALLIPOLIS - French
City Barbershop Chorus
practice, 7:30 p.m. every
Tuesday at Grace United
Methodist Chlirch. Guests
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Hospice Gallia County
Dinner with Friends, meets
6 p.m., second Thursday of
each month at Golden
Corral in Gallipolis. For
information, 446-5074.

Monday, Od. 30
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
117 Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.

Wednesday, Nov. I
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, regular
session, 5:30p.m., township
garage.
PAGEVLLE
-Scipio
Township Trustees will meet at
6:30p.m. Pageville town hall.

Clubs and
~ . organizations
Monday, Od. 30
POMEROY - · Oh-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
Thesday, Oct. 31
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America will meet at 7 p.m.
at ·the Masonic hall. · The
change is due to Election
Day use of the hall.

Wednesday, Nov. I
POMEROY
-The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Nadine Goebel will
review Labyrinth by Kate ·
Mosse. Pat Holter is hostess.

ChurCh events

Card shower
COLUMBUS - Reva
Fraley, formerly of Bidwell,
is recovering from hip
surgery due to a fall. Cards
can be sent to her at the ·
Highbanks Care Center,
Room 204, 111 Lazelle
Road, Columbus, Ohio
43235.

.lr

Sunday, Od. 29
POMEROY "The
Uplifters" at Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church, 6
p.m. at the church. Soup
supper will·follow.
FRACUSE - Asbury .
United Methodist Church
hosts a songfest for the ·
United Methodist Church
Cooperative Parish, 7 p.m.

Other events
Friday, Nov. 3
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Oh·Kan Coin Club exhibit
at the City National bank, 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the lobby.
Extensive display, some
coin appraisal .

Birthdays
Saturday, Nov. 4
SYRACUSE - Edwl!fd
Wells will celebrate his 90th
birthday Nov. 4. Cards may
be sent to him at P. 0. Box
-836, Syracuse, Ohio 457791.
His daughters are Ruella
(Bob) Crow of Syracuse and
Jane (Danny) Mitchell of
Ravenswood, W.Va.

••

LMe·Home Car Business
lloiii.....WO

E-mail comlftllnity calen·
dar items fiJ kk.eUy@mydo.i·
lytribune.com.
Fax
annou11cements to 446·
3008. Mail items to 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. Anrwuncements
may also bt dropped off Ill
the Tribune office.

• fREE un Tlctlnlcll Support
• lnttlnt Mnuvtn; . ~your bUddy lilt!
•IO•mall add,.....wlthW.bl'l'lllll
• eu.t0m St.~ PIQI· ~, wtttllei &amp; morel

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AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court • Pomeroy
992-6677

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WINTER IS HERE AND ITS TIME TO
WINTERIZE...

Check out our website:
www.qualltywlndowayatema.com
FAMILY OWNED I

GIVE US ACAll AND lET US HELP.

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
,..

"m 1 mfmm ti

1'hank You·From

· Bashan Volunteer Fire Department
. ·The Fire Department would like to thank the
following ·sponsors for their help during
Morgan's .Raid II
Gheen's Painting
Wesam Construction
Rose's Excavating, Inc..
PDK Construction
1st Tennessee lnf. Reg. In~.
J.D; Drilling
Margie Lawson D~D.S.
Hometown Market
Kerr Distributing
Dannie Rosa Distributing
. Sayre's Produce

Home National Bank
Hill's crassic Cars
Athens Mold &amp; Machine
Baum Lumber
Shade River Ag. Services
Taz's Marathon ·
Hill's Citgo
Tradewinds Tea ·
Herr's-Potato Chips
TNT Pit Stop\s .

Area Lan"owners- Clinton Pitzer,
Jeff Hawk, Tom Pullins,
Ralph Trussell, Mary Holter, Harry Spencer..
Firewood- Mike &amp; Josh Marcum
Sanitation- Myers Septic·Service,·
White's SanitJ,tion

+'• .. 'rn!en z. Ctltmttqo .. m Gt!"??U'

~ OciiDIIer 31 8) 6:00pm lithe Holzer Tobacco Prevenlion Center, located at 2881 State Route 160 In
G.llipalts. Session ~ will cover relapse prevention and gradualion from ltle program. R&lt;lglmM!on for
.IIIII PR&gt;t~ram It cun-.ntty clOMd. Thow who • .., pre-n~~~l$torvd ""' Micome to -nd. For more

lnfonnaUon about upooml11g Frl!ldom From Smoi&lt;iog classes. call (74ll) «e-5940.

~·· En'

· Service calls for local campgrounds

412 State Route 7 North
Gallipolis, OH

( RV Winterization $39.99 )
Your Crazy Marjna js dro~~jng

umiied supply of Red Head Neoprene Chesl Wader.; $89.95
umiled supply of Red Head Coveralls .:..................... $67.95
umited Supply ofWalerfowl Bibs ............................. $71.96
Coming Soon ...
While LighlCrling Seen! Eliminalor .................. 7.'19 &amp; 12.'19
Gorilla 1Tcc Siands: Pro Series Kong .$129.'19 (Ltm supply)
King Kong Lounger.................................................. S.139.'f9
Gorilla Kong Sumd .............. ,...................................... $79.'19

2007 Moqel Fisher Pontoonurul.
Bass Boats are Here!!
inside and check them out
. Hours: M-F 10-6; Sat. 10-5
After hours
available.

•· ~
•

~rjces

27th

•

I' 1Orin .. tn GelltqqHI
w.dnadlly, Elclftmbw1 from 12 Noon unti15:00 pm at the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference
Center.

For more information or 1o sign-up. call (740)446-5171 .

Th11!'8dly, Nowo11ber Z at 6:00pm al Holu~s Assisted Living Community in Jackson. located 81101
MMchem Drive. Open to tile public . Refreshments will be served. For "!Ore information, call (74ll) ZM-8715.

CgnnwnMy Cof*te " In G''MIIs
Fltdly, - - 3 ftom 8:00 am · 9:00 am in the HMC Educalion &amp; Conference Center. HolZer Medical
Center Invites an to an informal and on110ing community co"ee promoling corwarsatioo betWeen area leaders

In buslness, community seM&lt;le, education, govemmenl and pnvare enterprise. Sponsored by the HMC
Chaplaincy Servlc:es Department. For more information. please call (740) 446-5053 .
10th Anruwl btwta A kbmkl Memgdal Caoptr SvmiJQIIym .. in Gattlpglla

Saturday, November 4 from 8:00 am • 12 Noon at the HMC Educalion &amp; Conference Centei. Topics
discussed will incluae. "Goneoc Counseling in Oncology", "Robotic Surll"ry in Urological Oncology', an.d
'Esophageal cancer".· Presenten; will mclude Sandra Hazra. MD, of Akron General Hospital, and Rahul Thaly,
MD afld Abbas E. Abbas, MD, both from The Ohio State Universily Medical Cenler. This speciol 011ent ts
open for physidans end the healthcarl! oommunhy. A oontinenlal breakfasl will be served at 8:00 am, wilt! .
presenlatlons beginning at 8:25 am. For more information or to rsgister, please call (740) 446-5313 .

prjpyeUoo tgr Chnetrtb • In r.ellloolft
Sundl)&lt;, N..........., 5 from 2:00 pm • 6·00 pm al the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conferenoo Center
Room AS in Gellipolia. Call (740) 441-5030 to register or for more informalion.

229 washington street
ravenswood. wv 26164
304·273-4401· tetrlckS@wvdsl.net

?'

t .. lelf Mm

pwnt Q••= .. ,

t:""eo't'

-.mw I, 7 Mid I (Monday • Wednesday) from 9:00 am - 12 Noon in the Hospital's French 500 Room.

:;oo~~=~l;n~Th=-e~Sto=re~. . . EI. .E.E.EI. E..E...EIE.E'I

Hours: 9:30 - 5:00 Mon. -Fri. - Sat. 9:30 ··I

Cell (740) 441-5171 to register or for rMfl! lnformatioo aDoUt I~ free classes. Please have a prescription
from your ptlyslclan to attend .

"olw P.nw tw Geaer"',., WeiAbt 1 =• $uqpga Qmyp • In GtWoo"•
.
Mondly, Nowollbel e from 10:30 am until 11 :30 am at.the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Confefl!nce
Centl!f Room All in Glllllpolla. "" eddition8l support group meeting will alao be h!tld at6:30 pm for those 'M'oo
are unable lo llttend the moml11g tesalon. For more infonnetlon. please call (740) 446-5825

1w 'a' *s' ht '·· h'"*' ?he' r r1 • .. to G·'r'b

llandoiJ, N-.. or I from 5:30 pm - 8:30 pm at the Holzer Medical Canter Educattor1 &amp; eonm.nc. Canter
Room All in Gllllpolla. Hyou n oonttt'ft~Uiing gatlrlc b)'Pitu surger;, you are oncoulllged to au.nd lhla
tnfallftl1i0Nil ~ 10 IMrn lboiJt welgttt toN aurgery at the Holzer Centwr for ~live Weight Laos.
A''"''" group cf 1M Co'*" blttiiM llllrlhl -'nu at • :30 pm whe"' potential Pllltlnll ean t-r

Thanks to Bashan Volunteer Fire Department
members and all the neighbors who helped.

II II~IIOIIIIle flom petlenla who -

AGAIN THANK YOU!

hid the IUI'gi&lt;Y. For morw lnformtii&gt;Ofl, call (740t 4 41 1121.

f'lllrR. .Ie !up 1 Ae'Q .. #a "Ptrtn
ManU,, No;e~otbW t from 5:30 pm · 8:00 pin In the Hotzer Medleal Canter · Jaa..on 0.1111 Conflrence
Room. tocallld at 500 BIKtlnglon Road. Toplce diiCUoud lndude pain ooniTat. eoarciM, Nllllletlon, latlgua,
dlpi'elllan and dodarlpitilnt rHillonlhlp. Gunt apul&lt;or for the evening wiM be chlroprlelDr Or. 801)

Bashan Volunteer Fire Department

~· For moro lnlo!mallon or Ill Ngillel. piMM call the Holzer Medical Center • J8dllon Therepy

Sarvtoes Deptilmllnt at (740) HNH7.

Sale $tarts October 30, 2006 Through December 24/ 2006
10% Down Will Lay(lway That Special Christmas Gift
•

•

•
'

•

2006 ·

.Meigs County calendar

Committee
.
to meet

..

PageA3 ·

.

more information. call

�'

OPINION

•

6unba!' lim~ -6enttnel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone 1111mber. No
u11signed letters will be published. Letters should be in
goo,d tasle. addressing issues, ,ot personnliries.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Oct. 29, the.302nd day of 2006. There
are 63 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 29, 1929, "Black
Thesday" descended upon the New York Stock Exchange.
Prices collapsed amid panic selling and thousands of investors
were wiped out as America's "Great Depression" began:
On this date: In 1618, Sir Walter Raleigh, the English
courtier, military adventurer and poet, was executed in London.
In 1901, President McKinley's assassin, Leon Czolgosz,
was electrocuted. ·
In 1923, the Republic of Turkey was proclaimed. · ·
In 1940, Secretary of War Henry L. St1mson drew the ftrst
number- 158- in America's ftrst peacetime military draft.
In 1956, "The Huntley-Brinkley Repon," anchored by Chet
Huntley and David Brinkley; pne.miered as NBC's nightly
television newscast, replacing "The Camel News Caravan."
In 1'956; during the Suez Canal crisis, Israel invaded
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
In 1964. thieves made. off with the Star of India and other
gems from the American Museum of Natural History in
New York. (The Star and most of the other gems were
recovered; three men were convicted of stealing them.)
In I %6, the National Organization for Women was formally organized during a conference in Washington, D.C.
In 1998, Sen. John Glenn, at' age 77, roared back into
space aboard the shuttle Discovery.
Five years ago: The FBI issued a terrorism warning asking Americans and law enforcement to be on the highest
alert for possible attacks .in the United States and abroad. A
gunman killed four people in the French city of Tours.
One year ago: Near-simultaneous bombings of two
crowded markets in New Delhi, India, killed 60 people and
injured more than 200. Hundreds of people slowly ftled
past the body- of civil rights icon Rosa Parks in
Montgomery, Ala., just miles from the downtown street
where she'd made history by refusing to give up her seat on
a city bus to a white man. Saint Liam won the Breeders'
Cup Classic at Belmont Park.
Today's Binhdays: Bluegrass singer-musician Sonny
Osborne (The Osborne Brothers) is 69. Country singer Lee
Clayton is 64. Rock !llUSician Denny Laine is 62. Singer
Melba Moore is 61. Musician Peter Green is 60. Actor
Richard Dreyfuss is 5'J. Actress Kate Jackson is 58. Interior
Secretary Dirk Kempthome is 55. Actor Dan Castellaneta ·
("The Simpsons") is 49. Country musician Steve Kellough
(Wild Horses) is 49. Comic strip anist Tom Wilson
.("Ziggy") is 49. Singer Randy Jackson is 45, Rock musician Peter Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) is 41. Actress Joely
Fisher is 39. Rapper Paris is 39. Rock singer SA Maninez
(311) is 36. Musician Toby Smith is 36. Actress Winona
Ryder is 35. Actress Tracee Ellis Ross is 34. Actor Trevor
Lissauer is 33. Actress Gabrielle Union is 33. Actress
Milena Govich is 30. Actor Brendan Fehr is 29.
Thought for Today: "The one function TV news performs
·very well is that when there is no news we give it. to you
with the same emphasis as if there were." . - David
Brinkley. American broadcast journalist (1920-2003).

Election letter advisory
Effective Tuesday, Oct. 31, letter.&gt; dealing with the
Nor. 7 election will not be accepted for publication.
Letters or guest viewpoints accepted prior to the deadline will be published.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letlers Ju the editor are welcome. They should be

less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing,
must be stgned, and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

~unbap

tlrimes -~entinel

Reader Services
Correc1ion Polley
Our ma1n concern in all stories is to be
accurate. 11 you Know ot an errOr in a

story. please call one 01 our newsrooms.

Our malo oymbi!'J ""
ttnbun1 • Gallipolis, OH

(740) 446-2342
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
(740) t92·2155
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(304) 675-1333
Our WJblltu art:
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www.mydall.vtrtbune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy. OH

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www.mydallyregllter.com
Our t-mall addretHI 111:
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lllWI

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Pt. Pleasant, WV

newsOmydallyreglater.cam
(USPS 436-840)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
P u bhsh~d

every Sunday. 825

Third Avenue , Gallipolis. OH
45631 . Perio drcal pos1ago paid
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'
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1he
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Virginia
Pross
Association, and the Ohio
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Poatmelter: Send address cor·
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Tribune. 825 Third ·Avenue,
Gallipolis. OH 4563 t . •

Subacrlptlon RtltM

ly a.rler or molar rout8
One month .....•.•••'10.27
One yeer ... : .... . ..'123.24
Sunclly ..•...........'1.110
Senior ·c ttl•n One month ......•....'1.24
One yeer .....•.....'103.110

Sut&gt;eclt&gt;e11 III'Ould ~~ In ~
dlnld 10 1he ClaHi&gt;ol• Dally Tribune. No
oubocllptloo by mall permitted In .,...
vmera home caiTier aei'VIOI ts available.

Mall Sub.crlptlon
lnalcle County
13 Weeks . . . .. . . .....'32.26
26 Weeks ............'64.20
52 Weeks ..... . .... .'127.11

Outalcle County
13 Weeks . . . . . . . ...'53.55
26Weeks ......... ' 107.10
52 Weeks
. .. .....'214.21

.

..._

'

..

PageA4
Sunday,~ober29,2006

Sunday, October 29,

(Editor's note: The following was submitted by
the wives of troopers at the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol and
Wives for Trooper Risner:
Leanne·
Cunningham,
Bethany Fellure, Jennifer
Hannon, Allison Harlow,
Tonette Hoffman, Missy
Howard, Terri Jacks, Amy
Johnson, Debbie Jordan,
Jody Lunsford, Bethany
McFann, Diana Pack, Star
Pullins and Angel Silvey.)

.

Gallia County suffered a
terrible tragedy on the
morning of Sept. 28. Three
people are dead as the
result of a horriftc traffic
crash. This includes Lori
Smith. The loss her family
and friends suffered is no
less tragic than the loss of
Trooper
Risner
and
Sergeant Holcomb. This
column is in no way an
attempt to overshadow the
loss suffered by the Smith
family. Our thoughts and
prayers are with you all.
. We are subnutting this
letter due to the media
release by the Ohio State
Highway Patrol on Oct. 13,
2006,
If our husbands were to
speak publicly about this
news release, they could
face serious consequences.
The press release stated
Trooper Risner had a blood
alcohol content of .08.
What they fail to mention

is that the blood drawn for
this test was taken somewhere around 60 hours
after the crash.
Blood drawn soon after
the crash was tested and
found to contain no alcohol.
The 'Highway Patrol
quickly released the .08
alcohol test ·result, while
fully aware of the discrepancy in the results. During a
mandatory meeting at the
Gallipolis Post on Oct. 13,
an OSP major told all post
employees the investigation
was complete, no other
investigation was pending,
EXCEPT for the investigation into how Trooper
Risner was able to consume
alcohol wh.ile on duty. ·
It appears the High way
Patrol was much more
interested in releasing this
than making any attempt at
verifying its accuracy.
All law enforcement officers understand that in
criminal matlers, everyone
enjoys the presumption of
innocence until proven
guilty in a coun of law.
Unfortunately,
the
Highway Patrol decided to
presume Trooper Risner
was guilty immediately
upon getting this result.
Instead of investigating a
discrep'ancy in . the test
results, they are investigating "when and where
Risner could have ingested
alcohol."
That does not sound like

a presumption of innocence
to us. It appears the
Highway Patrol is more
interested in deflecting liability than getting to the
truth of the case.
When our husbands
arrest common drunk drivers, they are expected to
prove their case by providing accurate alcohol tests.
They are also required to
obtain the blood for the test
no more than two hours
.after the crash.
If at any time, their test
results varied by .08, and
they still decided to release
this faulty information to
the media, they would be in
serious trouble.
If they waited 60 hours to
obtain the sample, · they
would be severely punished.
Apparently, this standard
is different for the leaders
in Columbus.
In addition, the Ohio State
-Highway Patrol has publicly
stated there was no radio
traffic to indicate why
TrQOper Risner and Sergeant
Holcomb were traveling at
such a high speed.
This is inaccurate.
The truth of the matter is
that they overheard an offduty trooper broadcast that
he was taking his nonresponsive son to the hospital in a marked patrol car.
There is an audio tape
that proves that.
Sergeant Holcomb himself radioed the Gallipolis

Post saying they were
enroute to assist.
This is another example of
an attempt to deflect liability. Law enforcement professionals do not wait for a dispatcher to "officially" tell
them lhene is an emergency.
When they hear of an
emergency, they respond.
That is what they do. You
may also nest assured, if you
have a similar emergency
involving your children,
they will not hesitate to
respond in the same manner.
We are not' suggesting
that our husbands are perfect or above the law. We
only wish the Ohio State
Highway Patrol would
have made substantial
efforts to investigate the
variance in the tests.
There are enormous
amounts of information
available that they could
have used to make informed
decisions about the test
results. Furthermore, there
are many expens who could
have called upon to interpnet these tests:
. All law enforcement officers .risk their lives each
and every ·day in the interest of public safety. When
things go badly, officers
need to know their agency
is behind them.
It is unfortunate that at
the ftrst sign of trouble, the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
has chosen to abandon their
lost trooper.

I5 THIS 015 EASE CURABL.E ?

DID

ANYONE

OTHER THAN
ME NOTICE
MICHAEL J. FQ)(.
FAKIN6 HIS
PARKINSON~?

Robert "Pepsi' Haning .
Roben "Pepsi" Haning, 63, of Gallipolis, died unexpectedly on Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2006, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
He was born. Nov. 12, 1942, in Athens County, son of
Anna Welch Gnffith of Pomeroy, and the late Willie Haning.
He attended Carleton Church.
·
· In addition to his mother, he is survived by ·P&lt;tughters,
Annette Harung of Jackson, Kara Walker of Gallipolis. and
Lynnlee Sue of Dayton; a son and daughter-in-law, Bobby
and Becky Haning of Lancaster; a brqther, Eugene Haning of
Pomeroy; and six grandchildren and two great grandchildren.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by a grandchild and a sister, Carol Knotts.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2006, at the
.
AP photo
Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Calvin Vice Rresident Dick Cheney, right,· stands in the bomb bay
Minnis officiating: Burial will follow in the Wells of a B-2 bomber with Lt. Col. Bill Eldridge, left, during a tour
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 9 a.m. atWhiteman .Air Force Base, Mo., Friday.
·Until I p.m. on Tuesday..

Roberta G. Russell
Robena G. Russell, 80, of Columbus, passed away
Fnday, Oct. 27, 2006, in the Willow Brooke Assisted
.
.
Living Center in Columbus.
She was born Jan. 16, 1926, in Cincilinati, daughter .of
the late Charles Lorn and Clara Wears Tinkam.
She married Claude R. Russell on Nov. 8, 1946, in
Columbus, and he preceded her in death on May 30, 2006.
Robena is survtved by her daughter and son-in-law,
Sharon and Tom Moore,of Wonhington.
She was a member of the Vinton Baptist Church and the
.
Vinton OES.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Monday, Oct. 30, 2006,
in the Vinton Memorial Park, with the Rev. Marvin Sallee
officiating. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home in Vinton on Monday from I until 2 p.m.

James Wayne Shaver
James Wayne Shaver, 33, of Gallipolis, passed away on
Friday, Oct. 27, 2006, at the Holzer Medical Center.
·
He was born Sept. 28, 1973, in Gallia County, to Norma
Jean "Jeannie" Halley Shaver and Lloyd Shaver.
Wayne is survived by his mother, Jeannie Shaver of
Gallipolis, and his father, Lloyd (Donna) Shaver of
Gallipolis; a sister, Wanda Eblen, and a half-sister, Candace
Shaver; both of Gallipolis; and two nieces, Whitney Shaver
and Ashley Eblen, and a nephew, Michael Eblen.
'Several aunts, uncles and cousins also survive.
Services will be 7:30 p.m. Monday evening, Oct. 30,
2006, at the Willis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Alfred
Holley officiating. Burial and committal services will be II
a.m. Tuesday morning, Oct. 31, 2006, at Mina Chapel
Cemetery. ·
.
Pallbearers will be Al1111 Sowards, Curt Lee Cox, John
Hornsby, Robett Hornsby, Carl Nichols, Lance Halley and
Chris Beaver.
Honorary pallbearers are Mare Siders and Paul Siders.
' In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to the family
in Wayne's memory.
.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Deaths ·
K•l Ellzabellt Jones
· Kelli Elizabeth Jones, 20, Wellston, died Wednesday,
Oct. 25, 2006, at her residence.
·
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Huntley &amp;
Cremeens Funeral Home, Wellston, with Pastor Will
Gillum officiating. Burial will follow in the Salem
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday
from noon until the time of the service.

Charles E. Maltdns Jr.

Warm and fuzzy Cold War memories
Back in 1954, when the
Russians were evil and I
was a first-grader at
Wampus
Elementary
School in Armonk, N.Y.,
the school authorities regularly conducted emergency
drills wherein we students
practiced protecting ourselves from nuclear attack
by crouching under our
desks. We'd hunker down
there until Mrs. Han gave
us the word that the nuclear
war was over, then we'd
craw I back out and resume
reading about the fascinating adventures of Dick and
Jane. ("Ha!" said Dick.
"Ha ha'" said Jane. "Ha ha
ha!" said Dick. "Ha ha ha
ha," etc.)
I Understand this drill
was conducted in many
• schools in the '50s.
Apparently the desks used
in classrooms back then
were made of an exceptionally missile-resistimt variety of wood. During the
Cold War years, I o~n
wondered why it never
occurred to our defense
planners to protect the
entire nation from nuclear
attack by simply covering
it, from sea to shining sea,
with a huge Strategic
Classroom Desk.
I now realize that our
defense planners did not
have time to be fooling
around with ridiculous
schemes like that. They
were too busy spraying
deodorant
on
cows.
According
to
an
Associated Press story sent
in by many alen readers,
the Arrrty recently admitted that in 1963 and 1964,

it. Because there was a spraying deodorant on
Cold War on, and for all cows than jpr printing up
we knew, somewhere yet another 652-pound
over in Russia, commu- health-care plan.
Fonunately, there is _one
nist scientists, bent on
world domination, were government outftt that still
Dave
spraying deodorant on has some of that old Cold '
Barry
THEIR cows.
.
War paranoid spunk. I refer
Of course, those days are to the Central Intelligence
gone. The once-migllly Agency; which recently
·
Soviet Union has degener- admitted that it had been ·
Army scientists went to ated into a · bunch of · hiding four Iarge ·buildings
in suburban Virginia from
stockyards in six American obscure nations with the
rest of the federal govnames
like
"Kazoobistan,"
cities and "sneaked up on
You probably
cows and spra~ed them populated by would-be ernment.
..
about
· this. Under
read
capitalists
trying
to
borrow
with deOdorant.' I am not
questioning
from
a Senate
money
from
us
so
they
can
making this up. The idea
committee,
the
CIA
admitwas to find out whether buy frozen yogurt franenemy agents could spray· chises. Gone, too, is the ted it was building a $310American cows with hoof- very real threat that at any million office complex that
and-mouth disease germs, moment a nuclear war nobody, including the presthereby
spoiling · our could wipe out human .civ- ident, knew anything
nation's beef supply, not to ilization.! frankly miss it. I about. And if you're wonmention wreaking havoc in mean, during the Cold dering how a project that
War, you could always say large could be kept secret,
the ketchup industry.
Needless to say, the to yourself, "Hey, any then you clearly have never
cow-spraying operation, minute now I could be seen the federal · budget,
like just about everything bIown to ·atoms.. so why which is larger than your
~arage. The CIA could easelse the federal govern- should I (choose one):
a.
clean
the
toiletr'
Ily
have slipped $310 milment "id during the Cold
b.
give
up
herqin
7''
lion
in there under a headWar, was a secret. I'm
c.
not
eat
these
last
seven
ing s~ch as "Snacks.''
guessing that it had a clasTh1s story gave me a
sified name, perhaps eclairs?"
Yes, you could have warm feeling. It reminded
"Operation Cow Pow."
After spraying deodorant guilt-f~ fun during the me of the good old days,
on cows, the Army scien- Cold War, as opposed to when life was exciting and
tists probably went to a bar now, when the prospect of communists were trying to
to celebrate their successful reaching old age has turned .destroy the nation's moral
mission by having a few us into a bunch of health- fiber via such tactics as
drinks and - in the tradi- obsessed wussies, · squint- "rock 'n' roll" music and
tion of suave coven opera- ing at .product labels in the J. Edgar Hoover \).las
tives such as James Bond supermarket, trying to. keeping an eye on every.
locate the low-fat bean dip. body in the United States
-picking up women.
ARMY
SCIENTIST Also, with the Soviet except actual criminals,
(suavefy): Hi. I'm a coven Menace gone, our govern· and Richard M. Nixon
operative. Don't tell any- ment hard Iy ever does fun was ftnding enemy microbody.
stuff anymore. I'm sure I film in pumpkins apd
WOMAN: What's that speak for millions of nobody had ever heard of
on your shoes?
Americll!ls when I S!IY that "dietary fiber.'' Just for
Ye s, it was a risky job. I'd rather see my tax old times' sake, I'm going
But somebody had to do money used for covertly to crouch under a desk.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries

GUEST VIEW

Presumption of innocence apparently forgotten

2006

Charles E. Markins Jr., 93, Canton, formerly of
Gallipolis, died Saturday, Oct. 14, 2006, at Green Meadows
Nursmg Home.
·
.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Georgia Markins.
Graveside services were held Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2~. at
the Forest Lawn Cemetery, Pecks Mill, W.Va., w1th the
Rev. Bob Thomas.officiating.
·
Arrangements were by the Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

Allan Sheets
Allan Sheets, 47, Gallipolis, died Friday, Oct. 27, 2006,
at his residence.
Arrangement~ wiD be announced by the Willis Funeral Home.

Mabel B. Slater
Mabel B. Slater, 88, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday,
Oct. 27, 2006, in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant.
Graveside services will be 11:30 a.m. Thesday at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends may
call at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, on
Tuesday from I 0 until II a.m.

Alice Ruth V.ars
•

Alice Ruth Viars, 73, Scottown, died Thursday, Oct. 26,
2006, at her residence. .
.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Haske! Viars.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the 'Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville. Burial will be in the Locust Grove Cemetery.
Visitaiion was held in the funeral home from 5 to 7 p.m.
Saturday.

·~···············································
W.ls IIIII IaD ldll Y•~

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pays 117.77 par ysar lorlrcalllJ!ll&lt; heantl seok:es via ItO healh ranawalkl"'l
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R~'O '4111

White House denies
Cheney endorsed·
.'water boarding' .
Bv TERENCE HUNT
P.P WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTONPresident Bush said Friday
the United States does not
tonure prisoners, commenting after Vice President
Dick Cheney embraced the
suggestion that a dunk in
water might be useful to get
terrorist suspects to talk.
Human rights groups
complained that Cheney's
words amounted to an
endorsement of a torture
technique known as "water
boarding," in which the victim believes he is about to
drown. The White House
insisted Cheney was not
talking about water boarding but would not explain
what he meant.
·
Less than two weeks
before midterm congressional elections, the White
House was put on the defensive as news · of Cheney's
remark spread. Bush was
asked about it at a W,hite
House · photo oppottunity
with NATO SecretaryGeneral Jaap de Hoop
Sche ~fer. . . Presidential
spokesman Tony Snow was
pelted with questions at two
briefings with reponers.
Democrats also pointed to
Cheney's statement.
·
"Is the White House that
was for torture before it was
against it, now for torture
again?" tweaked Sen. John
Kerry, D-Mass. ~erry, in his
unsuccessful camprugn for
the presidency, had been
skewered by Bush for saying he had voted for war
funds before he voted
against them.
Cheney triggered the flap
in an interview Thesday by
radio broadcaster Scott
Hennen ofWDAY in Fargo,
N.D. Hennen said callers
had told him, "Please, let
the vice president know that
if it takes dunking a terrorist
in water, we're all for it, if it
saves lives."
"Would you agree a dunk
in water is a no-brainer if it
can save lives?'' Hennen
asked.
''Well, it's a no-brainer for
me, but for a while there I
was criticized as being the
vice president for torture,"
Cheney said. "We don't torture. That's not what we're
involved in."
' At his j&gt;hoto op, Bush
said, "This coun:tty doesn't
tonure, we're not going to
totture. We will interrogate
people we pick up off the
· battlefield to determine
whether or not they've got
information that will be
helpful to protect the country."

AFTS

Snow, at a (TlOrning meeting with reponers, tried to
brush off the controversy.
"You know as a matter of
common sense that the vice
president of the ' United
States is not going to be
talking about water boarding. Never would, never
does, never will ," Snow
said. . "You think Dick
Cheney 's going to slip up
· on something like this? No,
come on."
.
Snow said Cheney did not
interpret the question as
referring to water boarding
and the vice ,pres idem did
not make any comments
about water boarding. He
said the question put to
Cheney was loosely worded.
In water boarding, a prisoner is tied to a board with
his head slanted down and a
. towel covering his face .
Water is then poured on his'
face to create the sensation
·
of drowning.
The administration has
repeatedly refused to say
which techniques it believes
are permitted under a new
Jaw. Asked to define a dunk
in water, Snow said, "It's a
dunk in the water.''
At a televised briefing
later, the questions turned
tougher and more PQinted.
"The vice president says
he was talking in general
terms about a questioning
program that is legal to save
American lives, and he was
not referring to water boarding," Snqw said.
Yet, the spokesman conceded. "I can understand
that people will look at this
and draw the conclusions
that you're trying to draw."
Larry Cox, executive
of
Amnesty
director
International USA. said in a
statement, "What's really a
no-brainer is that no u.s.
official, much less a vice
president, should champion
torture. Vice President
Cheney's advocacy of ll'ater
boarding sets a new human
rights low at a time when
human rl'ghts is already
scraping the bottom or the
Bush administration barTel .''
Human Rights Walch said
Cheney 's remarks were "the
Bush administration's first
· clear endorsement" of water
boarding.
A new Army manua l.
released last month , bans
tonure and degrading treatment of prisoners, explicitly
barring water boarding and
other procedures.

FE

~unbav '[:imr!i -~ rntmrl • Page As

·Bush reaffirms
support for Iraq's
prime minister
Bv JENNIFER LOVEN

leader of the Iraqi people.
He i,, in fact, the sovereign
leader of Iraq."'
WASHINGTON
Al-Maliki squabbled with
President Bush on Saturday the Bush administration this
sought to repair ten sion' w.toe k over his objections to
with Iraq's prime minister a timel ine proposed by
and the White House a•sen- Washington for bringing
ed that Nouri al-Maliki b security to Iraq .
not ''America·s man in Iraq"
''There are no strains in
but a sovereign leader the relationship."' Snow said.'
whom the U.S. is aiding.
"In this prime minister,
Ten days before the Nov. · you have somebody in the
7 congressional election; in Iraqi government ,who
which the unpopular war in want&gt; to lake charge, who
Iraq is a top issue , Bush and wants to take responsibility,
al-Maliki played down a is working on all fronls, on
feud over a U.S. plan for the economic side, on the
benchmarks for reducing security side, and on the
violence. The dispute has political
reconciliation
thrown the While House on side ... the spokesman said .
the defensive and vnder'·And he believes it's
mine!i Bush's auempt to put important to do whatever he
a new face on his much -crit- can to build greater faith
icized ·Iraq strategy.
and trust with the Iraqi peo•
For 50 minutes. Bush and pie ill the democracy. So the
al-Maliki talked by video president's very happy actu.
conference to find common ally with the way the prime
ground. AI-Maliki demand- minister is working."
ed the lalk. according to a
In the video hookup, Alclose aide, because U.S. Maliki portrayed the U.S.Ambassador
Zalmay
· 1 ·
·
Khalilzad was ·•no L. Paul 1raqr re at1onsh1p as strong
Bremer" _ the former and growing stronger.
according to Snow, and said
udministrator of the U.S.- ttiere are many signs of sue- '
led occupation - · who
could make decisions on his cess in Iraq. Mos.t of the
own. · The White House conversation focused on
issued a statement summa- security strategy, with the
rizing the talks.
prime minister pressing for
The leaders said they ·more control over Iraqi
were "committed to the forces and greater ability to
partnership" and would respond quickly to probwork "in every way possi- lems, the spokesman said.
Bush "expressed not only
ble for a stable, democratic
Iraq and for victory in the his confidence but happiwar on terror."
ness that you've got a prime
"On the overall strategy for minister who's being very
proceeding, the two coun- assertive about building
tries are entirely aligned," greater Iraqi capability and
White House 'press secretary also engaging in the necesTony Snow told reporters.
sary business of using force
Bush and al-Maliki . out- when necessary to go after
lined three goals: speeding the people who 1 are going
up the training of Iraq's wrong," Snow said. ·
security forces; moving
Snow said it was imporahead with Iraqi control of . tant that prime minister said
its forces: and making the "the door is now open to
Iraqi government responsi- anybody who wants to join
.ble for the country 's security. in the reconciliation of
A special group of high- political process."
leve1 Iraqi ministers will
"He is inviting people to
work with the top U.S. com- sort of lay down arms and
mailder in Iraq, Gen. George get with · the politici!l
Casey, and Khalilzad to rec- process , but on the- other
ommend how best to hand he is resolute .. , in his
achieve those goals.
derermination not to accept
"As leaders of two great the activities of people who
couptries, we are committed want to commit acts of vioto the security and prosperi - lence to destabilize the govty of a democratic Iraq and . ernment or to jeopardize
the global fight against ter- democra~y," Snow said.
rorism which affects all our
"He's making tough decicitizens," according to thei r sions, and he 's showing
·
to ughness and he 's also
joint statement.
During the video hookup. showing political skill in.
ai-Maliki
told
Bu sh. dealing with varying fac"History will record !hat tions within his own counbecause of your efforts. Iraq trv. And both leaders underis a free country." according sland the political pressures
to Snow.
·
going on,'' Snow said.
AI -Mal iki wHs quoted by · The death of a Marine in
a close aide as having told Anbar province west of
Khalilzad on Friday, •·! am a B!lghdad on Friday brought
frie nd of !he United States. to 98 . the number of
but I am not America\ man American forces killed in
in Iraq ." ·
Iraq in October - already
In responS'e. Snow told the founh deadliest month
reporters,
"He's
not since the Iraq war began in
America's man in Iraq . The March 2003. Overall, U.S.
United States is there in a deaths have topped 2,800 as
mle to assisl him . lie's the the war drags into its 41th
pri1i1e mini ster - he's the month.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

. . ~o'/.1\

S\9t' \)9

October 30 -,6:00 - 8:00
Age 6 ·- Grade 2

October 31 - 6:00 - 8:00

19th Annual

Grades 3 &amp; 4

Eastern Music
Boosters
Arts &amp; Crafts Fair

November6 - 6:00 - 8:00

NlfllMIER tfTH • 9Mf - 4 PM .

AT EASTERN ELEMENTARY SCHOOl

•
Door prizes . $2.00 per person
Food
• Stud~nts &amp; youngsters free
llaffles

Come enjoy the Eastem High School Band,
Choir &amp; Handbe/ls
•

All proceeds benefit Eastern Musrc Boosters for ne~'&lt;

Grade 5- Age 12 ·
Every Child Plays!
· Every Child Learns!
Every Child Is A Winner!

First Church
of the Nazarene
1110 First Avenue· Gallipolis. Ohio

740-446-1772

�OHIO

iunbap ltmn -6tntinel
Locai·Weather
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A 60s .
chance of sprinkles in the
Tuesday night...Mostly
morning. Highs in the upper cloudy with a · SO percent
50s. West winds 5 to I 0 chance of showers. Lows in
mph.
the mid 40s.
Sunday night...Mostly
Wednesday ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper cloudy with a 40 percent
30s. Southwest winds 5 to chance of showers. Highs
10 mph.
around 60:
Monday... Mostly sunny.
Wednesday night ... Partly
Not as cool with highs in
the lower 70s. South winds cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
5 to 10 mph.
Monday hight...Mostly the upper 30s.
Thursday
through
clear. Lows in the mid 40s.
cloudy.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy Friday... Partly
Highs
in
the
lower
50s.
with a 30 percent chance of
sho.wers. Highs in the mid Lows in the mid 30s.

·Local Stocks
ACI-36
AEP- 40.98
Akzo -55.99
Ashland- 57.42
BIG- 20.17
Bob Evans - 33.64
BoflWamer - 58.25
CENX- 38.35
Champion- 7.19
Channing Shops - 14.83
City Hpldlng - 39.16
co.l - 57.90
DG -13.82 .
DuPont - 45.55
Federal MQCUI - .41
USB-34
Gannett - 60.29
General Electric - 35.21
GKNLY- 5.60
Harley Davidson- 67.62
JPM -47.29

PageA6
Sunday, October 29, 2006

Riverview·Productions will
host chamber event
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
Chamber
of
Commerce has scheduled
its November Business
After Hours · at Riverview
Productions Inc., according
to Lorie Neal, executive
director.
It will begin at 5.:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 2, at
Riverview
Productions,
located on Jackson Pike,
just west of J::Iolzer Medical
Center.
Riverview Productions
Inc., was incorporated in
March 1987, with work
training and work opportunities for the residents of the
Gallipolis Developmental
Center as primary objectives. It all· began with
Riverview Recycling. ' Now,

it has branched out to
include hourly paid individuals who work at the
Roadside Rest areas on U.S.
35, with a contract from the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation,
through
Ohio Industries for the
Handicapped (OIH); mowing at Tycoon Lake and
Butler Boat Ramp for the
ODNR; handling vending
for the GDC; assembly type
jobs for Electro-Craft, and
this past spring. reopening
of the two Rl verview green,
houses.
The renovation of the
Annex building on Jackson
Pike, originally Unique.
Impressions, located just in ..
front of the main rehabilitation center worksl'lop, has

include ToJ;ll Meadows,
chairman; Paul Shoemaker,
vice chairman; · Sheila
Wood, secretary/treasurer;
Robert
Muller,
Gary
Harrison, Dan Thomas and
Ted Staton.
The evening's program
on Nov. 2 will feature comments by Keating and a tour
of the new facility on
Jackson Pike. Refreshments
will be served. Chamber
members are urged to attend
and call the chamber office
at 446-0596 to indicate their
attendance. This event provides an opportunity to network with other Chamber .
members and learn more
about
the
work
of
Riverview Productions Inc.

been completed, and is
where work-skill training
takes place.
Riverview provides paid
employment to about 35
hourly workers and 125
individuals who participate
in assembly work.Gallia
County residents who volunteer their services to
Riverview Productions, Inc,
make up the board of directors. Their primary role is
administrative direction for
the organization, relating to
client needs and program
goals.
The board meets monthly
and works closely with the
vocational ma.riager •. Ann
Keating, on maJor deciSions
for Riverview Productions
Inc. Current board members

Kroger - 22.60
Ltd. :- 29.23
NSC- 53.33
Oak Hill Financial - 26.86
OVB-25.23
BBT- 43.113
·Peoples - 30.05
Pepsico - 63.54
Premier - 14.25
Rockwell - 63.22
Rocky Boots - 13.45
Seara -176.93
Wai-Mart - so. 73
WendY's ~ 34.97
Wortlllri&amp;ton - 17.36
Dally: ~ock reports: are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the pravlous day's transac- .
tlone, provided by Smith
Financial AdvlsOIS of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS Ohio
State University was ready to ·
roar a little extra at homecorning Saturday, and why
not, with the country's topranked football team and a·
student enrollment newly
minted as the nation's largest:
Instead, the death of a fres~
man student in a dormitory
elevator accident has ternpered the campus mood and
brought unwelcome attention
to a school hoping. to avoid
bad publicity for a while.
"It's a big place where a
. lot of things happen, most
of which are very positive
and very good," said Curt
Steiner, the university's vice
president for university
relations. "In a place of this
size and scope, there are
going to be some things that
happen time to time that are
sad apd disappointing."
Andrew Polakowski, 18,
of Erie, Pa., suffocated Oct.
20 trying to leave a Stradley
Hall elevator stuck between
floors. He was pinned
between the top of the elevator doors and the third floor.
Fire officials said the elevator that killed ·Polakowski
was crowded with 24 peopie, exceeding its 2,500pound weight capacity by as
much as 1,100 pounds.
After the accident, six elec
vators ." failed emergency
brake tests in four high-rise
dormitories, including both
passenger elevators in
Stradley Hall. Those are the
only six that failed of the 41
elevators tested in all the
university's high-rise dorms
since the accident.
Records release&lt;;! by the
university Thursday sh0w
57 reports of trapped passengers in Stradley Hall and
five other high-rise dorms
. on the university's south
' campus in tha past year.
Freshman Leo Obasohan
said studenL~ are still thinking about the accident but not
ready to let it ruin the year.
"This homecoming will be
better because it's in his
memory," said Obasohan, 18,
who lives in the dorm where
the accident happent'd.
1he dormitory's lone working elevator ran fine Friday,
stopping at several tloors in
both directions with no prob!ems. Chatting students got
on, pushed bunons and continued their conversations.
But newly posted warning
'igns inside the elevator
reminded students not to
overcrowd or exceed the
weight limit and not to get
out of a stalled elevator but

call for help instead.
.
The university posted the
signs after the accident, ·
although they are not
required by Jaw.
Ohio State has weathered
its share of bad news in
recent years, with footage of
students ~ing Su-es ,after ...
football game·s and reports
of loutish behavior toward
visiting Texas fans last·year.
The publicity ~urrounding
former football star Maurice
Clarett also hasn't helped,
ranging frorn his allegations
of special academic treatment for athletes to his arrest
this year on armed robbery
charges and his guilty plea to
those charges just as school
started in September.
But then the school year hit
a more positive note as Ohio
State announced its enrollment of 51,818 beat out
Arizona State for the title of
the country's biggest campus.
Meanwhile, the university's No. l-ranked football
team plays Minnesota at
home Saturday hoping to
extend this season's eightgame winning streak on the
way to what many fans hope
will be a second national
championship this decade.
At Stradley Hall, booster
signs for Saturday's game
- "Welcome Home! Go
Bucks" - competed with
signs promoting fundraisers
in Polakowski's honor.
"You're in our hearts and
prayers," read one comment
on a homemade poster from
a neighboring dorm sent to
comfort Stradley residents.
Students are !~king f~r­
ward to homeconung desptte
the tragedy, said Chelsie
Plant, 18, a Stradley resident.
"Everyone is still mourn- .
ing it, everybody is excited
about something else to go
on to," she said.
Others put the weekend
celebration in slightly
harsher terms.
"People love their football," said junior Diana
Koester, a zoology major.
"I'm sure it will be hard on
people who knew Andy, but ·
everyone else will just continue to party as much as
they always have."
· Some studehts were quick
to blame the university for the
accident, saying the elevators
are old and often don't work.
"It's really pathetic with
OSU being the No. I school in
the nation not having that stuff
replaced," ·said 20-year-old
Noah Scheib, a junior, as he
waited for a campus bus just a
few feet from Ohio Stadium.
But others said the overcrowding on the elevator
that day shouldn't be overlooked.

Inside

Bl

•

Prep football standin~, Page 82
Prep football scores, Page B3
Midget Football League, Page BS

'

Sunday, October 29, 2006_

locAL ScHEDill.E ·
GALLIPOI.IS-A-~ol~cologo
and hlgl achool varsity sporting S~~entt ilvolmg
teams from ~Ia. Meigs anc1 Maaon counties

ns,

li

Tutldty'l gemta

BY BRAD SHERMAN

College Volleyball

BSHERMAN@MYDAIL\'TRIBUNE.COM

Rio Grande at CedarviNe, 7 p.m.
Fridoy'l g•m11 ·

Football

•

Wahama at Wlrt County, 7:30p.m.
Van at Hannan, 7:30p.m
D·VI Ohio Playoffs, 7:30p.m

Setyrdav'a QIQ)II
Crou Covntry
OHSM State Meet (Scioto Oowns)

Football

D-Ill Ohio Playoffs, 7:30p.m
College BuketbiH
Milligan College at Rio Grande. 4 p.m.

Women'• College aoakelblll

Cal1ow at Rio Grande, 2 p.m.

College Soccer
AMC Playoffs, TBA.

HAMLIN, W.Va. -This David
Goliath match-up didn't
exactly follow the script.
Lincoln County, a newly-formed .
Class AAA West Virginia high
school, got the better of muchsmaller South Gallia, and in the
process, picked up its first-ever footversus~

still

ball victory 27-0 on Friday night.
Running backs Chubby Nelson
and Andrew Bias each topped the
century mark for the winners and the
Panthers rolled up 286 yards on the
groun~ en route to the long-awaited
firsJ wm.
Lincoln County had failed in eight
previous attempts this inaugural season, but finally found the win column against the small Division VI

Ohio school with an enrollment
around 200 students.
In contrast - the new Lincoln
County giant, a consolidation of
Hamlin, Guyan Valley, Duval and
Harts high schools, has in excess of
800 enrolled.
Despite the loss, the Rebels will
still qualify for the state playoffs in
Ohio after a record-setting 8-2 campaign. South Gallia entered the con-

test having already won the most
.games in the history of the 11-year:
old school, but needed one more to
totally secure a second straight play·
off berth.
The outcome ended up having no
bearing on the Rebels' playoff statu.s, however, as a Waterford loss to
Federal Hocking clinched the berth;

Ple•se -

R.a..ls, 82

·school Football I Week 10

College Vottoyblll
TlHin/Pikavllle at Rio Grande, noon

College Cron Country
AMC Championships. 10:15 a.m.

Devils head to playoffs on high note,
•

INSIDE .

Bv ASHLEY SHAW
AND lARRY CRUM
SPORTS&lt;IIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Elevator death tempers
buoyant mood at Ohio State
BvANDREW

•

• RErl11en season preview.

SeePageB4

Prep Foolball
...

Raiders
shut out at
Coal Grove
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

r

f,

, ,-,

~ !l;!t_ ~ Como in to porti&lt;ipo~ng Ongular WireleSl retail store• ond get &amp;ghlnin~·fo•t AT&amp;T Yohoo!" Hi!Jh-Speed Internet

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"-tor

COAL GROVE - The
· Coal Grove Hornets completed the 2006 high school
football season with a 38-0
shutout over River Valley
- clinching a winning sea- ·
son in the process.
.
. Shane Jenkins ran for two
touchdowns as Coal Grove
finished the regular season
at 6-4 and 3-2 .in the Ohio
Valley Conference. River
Valley, on the other hand,
failed to win a league game
for the second straight season and finishes 1-9.
Jenkins started the scoring with a seven-yard
touchdown run in the first
quarter, then ·Matt Cooper
added another Hornet score
to make it 12-0 at the end of
one quarter.
Jenkins plowed in from a
yard out to stan the second
quarter, then quarterback
Trent Blakenship ran the
ball himself 37 yards as
Coal Grove took a commanding 2-6 lead into halftime.
Frank Delauder and Cody
D'avidson added third quarter scores en route to the
lopsided win.
Friday was a crazy night
in the OVC, as South Point
was crowned· outright
champions. The Pointers
upset Rock Hill 7~6; then
Fairland upset Chesapeake .
to knock the Panthers out of
the title picture..
Complete statistics from
the River Valley-Coal
Grove game were ·not made
available.

Clutrtla Shepherd/photo
Gallia Academy Blue Devils' Jeff Golden outruns Athens' Jake Anderson (8) during high school football action 'Friday night
at Memorial Field in Gallipolis. The Blue Devils won 52-0 to finish the regular season 8-2.

GALLIPOLIS - No one
has been able to slow the
·Gallia Academy offense all
season - not ·even Motheii
Nature.
With sloppy playing con~
ditions and a steady rain
making playing conditions
less than stellar, the Blue
Devils still didn't miss a
beat as they pummeled vis·
iting Athens 52-0 Frida)!
night at Memorial Field .
In doing so, the Gallian&amp;
clinched their seyenth
playoff spot in the past
eight years.
"
The Devils finish the
season 8-2 overall and S-2
in Southeastern Ohio
Athletic. League play. After
suffering two losses early
in the season, Gallia
·Academy bounced hac!(
winning five straight ove(
Portsmouth,
Ironton;
Jackson, Warren
and
Athens for a spotless sec.
ond half of the season.
But on Friday, Athens
was the only thing on the ·
· Blue Devils' minds as they
attempted to finish out the
second half sweep - and
did so in impressive fash-

Piuse see Devils, 82

Cardinals win ho~hum World SerieS.
BluM

BY RONALD

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. LOU1S - No Fall
Classic, for sure..
Flatter than the Midwestern
heartland and a flop in the TV
ratings, this World Series
i:rowned a champion that bare.Jy made it to the postseason
a¢ then had to survive rain
arid cold as much as the bumbling Detroit Tigers.

The St. ·Louis Cardinals
will take it, though.
,
They beat
b ;, . . .. '
- •
the Tigers 42 m Game 5
on Friday
. . .
. ~ ' . mght behind
• castoffs Jeff
Weaver iUld
David Eckstein and soreshouldered Scott Rolen to
wrap up their ftrst Series title
in nearly a quarter-century

...

~

and I Oth overall.
..
" I think we shocked the
world," Cardinals center
fielder Jim.Edmonds saiq. . ;
Manager Tony La Russa'S
team had just 83 regular-sea- ·
son wins, the fewest by a
World Series champion, and
nearly missed the playoffs
after a late-sea"&gt;on slump .
·
·

Pluse see Series, BJ

11/Vo/I(Q/( t Tou.e~
Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
{· '

.

~

Hedy M. Wi~ilsOt~ MD
IBn McNemar/pilato

Meigs· Casey Richardson celebrates after his Marauders
won a 20-0 victory over visiting Belpre Friday at muddy Bob
Roberts Field in Pomeroy.

Meigs beats Belpre
BYD.wEHARRIS
SPORTS CORRESf'ONDENT

POMEROY- Aaron Story Scored a pair of second period
touchdowns, and Cornelius English added a third period score,
to lead Meigs pa"&gt;t Belpre 20-0 Friday evening at a soggy Bob
Roberts Field.
The field was very sloppy due to Friday's all day rainfall,
with
standing water on the turf. The wet conditions caused II
CoNfACI'US
fumbles for the two teams, and took the passing game out of
the contest.
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·t o.m.)
After the two teams slopped through the a scoreles~ first peri1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
od, the Marauders broke into the scoring column when Story
scored from a yard out. Story added the extra points at the 9:29
Fa•- 1-7&lt;0·«6-3008
mark of the first half to make it an 8-0 score. The Story score
E-m~~ II - sports@ mydallysentinel.com
capped off a 39-yard, 11-play .drive that was set up when
Soo';it Staff
Brandon Fisher recovered .a Belpre fumble at the Golden Eagle
·Brad Sherman, Sports Editor 39.
(7~) 446-2342. OJ&lt;t. 33
The Golden Eagles were driving late in the second period
bsnermanOmydailytribune.com
and
Story picked off a R.J . Walker pass at the 16. Aaron cut U£
•
the
visitors
sideline, and with a host. of Marauder blocker s
Lllrry Crum, Sports Writer
leading
the
way
went the distance 84 yards for the score at the
(7~) 446-2342, elC1. 33
Ierum 0 m~aityr&amp;gister.com
l :24 mark of the first half. The run for the extra points were· no
good but Meigs went into the locker.room with a 14-0 lead.
Ashley Shaw, Sports Writer
( 7~) 446-2342, elC1. 23
Ple•se see Melp. 82
sponsOmyda•lytribune.com

'

Now acceptiag appolatmeats &amp; ~ew patieats~
Dr. Windso{ will begin her pmcti~e on November U1 2006 .
. '

'

• "Poillt
Office:
¥ •. ' Pleasant
•.
, ·;r
r · ·.,304-675-4839

• ..Ripley OffiCe!''
304-372-5?56 ~-~ '•

l

I

·

,

••

~

•l; • &lt;G;nocological examinations
«- &lt;&gt;bsietrical

Care

• ·&lt;Pelvic inflammatory diseaSes &amp; pelvic pain
• ~~Cysts and tumors

of ovaries, uterus and female organs

• -H~tomy, Laparoscopy &amp; other female surgeries

· • 'fliP smear &amp; breast exams
• -complete blood analysis. infections, evaluations
'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk raArt~ of P~futiul(ak
'

•
,,

•

�Sunday, October 291 aoo6

Sunday, October 29. 2006

Pomeroy • Middleport • G8llipolis

SchooiFoolball 1lhloill.va.scotas

·High School.Football I Boxscores
Han1111r1 26, Bla Cnlek 24
8

Big Creek
Hannan

0

a-

8 0 -

6 14 6 -

Aecet.t"'l

SG-Tytar Duncan 2-38,
cCombs 2-23. Caleb
24
26 McClanahan 1·7.
. LC--lan H~ t-11 .

Scortng aumm.-y

FlniO..W
EIC--Aonnio Benton 25 "'" (Nick

Dustin

Gallla Academy 52,
AlhensO

Patterson pass from Cody Johnson)

Athens

3:12

Gallipolis

secoollla.-

H--Wes Gue 6 run (Nn failed) 10:44
IIC-Emmanuef Foster 64 pass from
Johnson (Ben1on Nn) 8:40

Thlrda.-

Scor'n-,g IUt1IIMry
Ftnll au.ter
GA-,Jeff Golden 17 run (kick faied)

6:22 .

BC-Foster 30 pass from :Johnson
(Foster Nn) 3:14
H--Gue 29 nJn (run failed) 1:26
H---VICtor Ericsson 33 fumble reliJr!l
(Gue run) :20
·
Fourth Quarter
H--Gue 68 nJn (run failed) 8:34
First Downs
Aushes·yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-in1
Fumlllos-fost
Penalties-yards

0000-0
14 :ll 0 8 - 52

BC

H

5

4

30-123 41·222
95
. 2
218
224
5-12-0 2-2-0
8-4
4-1
4·25
5-35

GA.....,Jeff Golden 23 M (Golden
pass to Sh$"" Tll&lt;lnl&gt;San) 4:15

SecondO..W
GA-8eth Haner 4 run (Golden nm)
10:48
GA-Tyter Glimm .reoovemd blocl&lt;ed
punt (Nick Stevens kick) 8:55
OA--8afety 7:47
~ayme Haggerty 55 nJn (kick
failed) 7:32
GA-Haner 8 run (S1ellons kick)
1:04
· Fourth Ouart8r
GA--f'hi Bokovilz 6 "'" (Giimm nJn)
10:15

A

Brad Sherman/photo

South Gallla Rebels" Micah Cardwell (24) brings down Lincoln.County•s·Andrew Bias during
high school footbal l action Friday in Hamlin, W.Va.
·

Rebels
from Page 81
The Rebels will either finish
·sixth or seventh in the
. region and will travel to
either Danville or Fisher
Catholic.
Many
late
Saturday games could dramatically alter the seedings.
Official playoff pairings
will be released Sunday.
Monday's Gallipolis Daily
Tribune will reveal opponents for South Gallia, as
:well as neighboring Gallia
Academy, which made the
·field in Division III.
JCs the .second straight
year, and second time ever.
that two Gallia County
teams have qualified for the
playoffs in the same s.eason.
But South Gallia didn't
find out its playoff destiny
until after other Friday
results came rolling in,
thanks to the Rebels' second
.loss in the Mountain State
·this season. The only other
:Joss came at Wahari'm back
in Week 4. South Gallia is
just 2-5 against West
Virginia teams the past two
playotl' seasons.
Lincoln County ·wasted
.little time jumping out to 6.0 lead on the visitors from
0

Devils
from PageBl

\,

ion - · shutting out the
Bulldogs and rarely letting
Athens cross into · Gallia
Acad·emy territory.
The Devils scored on
every first half possession
except the first and last,
when quarterback Jeff
Golden took a knee on the
Athens five-yard line with
a little Jess than a minute
left iri the first period to
end the half with · a dominating 44-0 lead.
The first six points the
Devils put on the score
board came with 6:22 left
in the first quarter when
Golden ran 17 yards into
the end zone.
Golden posted 34 rushj ng yards and threw three
passes ror 24 yards on the
ni ght.
On the Devils next pos-·
session, Golden again took
the game into his hands
whe.n he ran 23 yards for
(he "ore and capped the
drive wi th a pass to Shawn
Thompson for the conversion to give the home
squad an early 14-0 lead:
Afte r sw itching ends,
Set h Haner wasted little
l ime putting the Blu e
Devils back OH the board
when he crossed the li ne
with .10:48 left in the half.
adding yet anot her six to
the already impressive fi"t
.quarter "ore. Less than a
·minute later, Athens'
·punter Steven Ebert,· kick
wa' blocked by Cole Jones
in the Gallia Academy end
zone· and was recovered by
Tyler Grimm for another
touchdown and, after the
"Stevens kick, gave Gal li a
Academy a 29-0 lead.
Grimm rushed for 33
yard~ on three carries.
During the following
Athen'&gt; po,sc~sion. another
mi'lake led to more point\
for the Blue and White
I

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att·int
Fumbles-lost

Penallie&gt;:-yards

"-t-.o

pp

HH

17
43-181
81
262
5-11-1
2-2
2·10

21
41-370
152
522
9-11-0
2-2
5-35

Ohio Htglo lollaol
·
f'ridoly'l Allulto
~· !~~- Akr.•~onmo,. 0
1. -r. N. O
A~ 27, Alhvillo Toayo

o. o

Belpre
M~igs

Scoring IURVn"'Y

Second Quart8r

3?. -

0

Alhl&amp;nd 35. Loxlngloo I
AJhlond c..- a. Colllrla Wostom
~ 0. 20T
Alhtaliula Lakeside 35. Palnosvlllo
Harvey 7
A111ca Seneca E.
N. Ba~""'"' 0
Aurora 6. Ptny 2
A"'n 6. Bay Vlllago Bay 3
Avon La~e19. Amherst Steele 7
BamosviNe 26. Belmont Union Loca16
Beavercreek 35, Xenia a
Bedfora Chano12•. Garflold Hts. Trtnlty 0
Bellaire 23. Martina Fany 0
Bellbrook 21 . W. Milton Mmon·U~Ion o •
Bellefontaine a. Urtana a
Boltofontalno Benjamin Logon 14.
Sc&gt;ring. Kenton Ridge 10
.
Bollvfllo Clear Fort&lt; 7. Mllle-rg W.
Holmes 6
. Beloit W. Branc;M 21 . Atlilnoo Martlngton
7
.Berlin Center Wostem Reserve 14,
Wellsville 6
Blanchester 40. New Richmond 7
Brecksville 16. Westlake a
B'llnSWiok 49. Strongsvitle 16
Bryan 6, Metamora Evergreen 0
Bucyrus Wynlord 47. N. Robinson Col.
Crawford 7
.
Burton Berl&lt;shlre 26. Middlefield Cardinal

•1.

20

.

M-Aaron Story 1 run (Story run)
9:29
M-S1ory 84 interoaptlor) (r\Jn mlled)
1:24

10
Cambridge 27, Byesville MeadoWbrook 0
Can. Gent. Calh . 36, Louisville Aquinas 7
Con. S. 20. Carromon 8

Conal Fullon NW 20, All~nce 0
Conal Wu'dlester 9. Cols. Hamilton Twp.
3

1111rd Quart.

~melius English 18 nJn (PIISS

failed) 2:34

Canfield 9, Poland Seminary 7
Carey 12, Tiffin Gatven 6, OT
Gal'lisle 38, New Lebanon Dixie 6
Casstown Miami E. 28, Union City
Mississlnawa Valle'; 7

with Belpre fw;;ing a fourth
and 18 fium their own three.
Fnglish closed out the season with I03 yards in 23 c;trries. The jwuor finished the
season with 1,230 yards rush.ing. Poole added 76 in 17 tries
to close out an outstanding
high school career, the senior
Charlie Shepherd/photo also added an interception
Gallia Academy's Cody Noble was one of many mud&lt;overed fium his linebacker slot
players that took part in high school football games across
Story threw the ball only
the region Friday. Heavy rainfa ll the entire day made for ooce, and ·that fell incomplete.
The Marauder defense held
less-than-ideal playing conditions.
the Belpre rushing attack to
when ·the Bulldog punter story throughout the first only 31 yards in 35 tries for
was forced to down the two
quarters,
Gallia less than a yard a carry. Josh
ball after a bad snap in the Academy ended the half Si:remore led Belpre with 21
Blue Dev il end zone for a with another ,big play when carries in 12 bles, Bryan
safety.
Beau Whaley intercepted a Walker added 20 in five carOn the ensuing kick-off, Chris Carpinelli pass and ries. Walker was one for six
Jayn1e Haggerty returned returned it to the Bulldog passing . with' two intercepthe ball 55 yards fo r anoth- 5-yard line where the tions, Tim Randolph ·had the
.
er Blue touchdown with Gallia Countians chose to one reception.
l11is
wa~
a
great
way
to
end
7:32 left in the half, take a knee and end the
the season,. especially for
putting his club up by 37 first half carnage.
point&gt;.
•
The final score of the these seniors. A muddy Mike
said after the game
Haggerty managed 15 eve ning came in the fo urth Chancey
after his team gave him a colru, hing yards on four car- quarter on a six-yard run lective hug m the locker
rie&gt; and caught one pass by Phil Bokovitz wit h room. ''I want to thank this
for a yard on a night where 10:15 left in the game fol-· senior class for all they have
the backups got plenty of lowed by a Tyler Grimm . done. This was a great group
playing ti me.
two- point conversion to of kids, and we a~ a coaching
The Blue Devils put cap the scoring at 52-0 in staff have enjoyed coaching
together a.nothe r scoring Athens last visit to them. Now, the youn~ kids
drive which began at thei r Memorial Field as a mem- get a month off then it s time
to hit the wei~;ht room."
own 42-yard line and ber of the SEOAL.
Playing thel! last game for
e nded when Seth Haner
The Blue Devils will
the
Maroon and Gold were
crossed the goal line with re turn to ac tion Saturday. ·
Michael
Blaettnar, Poole,
I :04 l~ft to cap the first on the road. in the first Brad
Soulsby,
Casey
half scoring for . Gallia round the of R et~ i o n 12 Richardson, Andy Garnes.
Academy as they had little playoffs. The offic1al play- Dakota Smith and Brad
trouble dominating the off pairings will be Ramsburg.
Bulldog,.
· announced Sunday. preMeigs ends the season .with
Hanc r ran the ball 10 liminary report' 'uggest . a 7-3 mark overall and 203 in
times for 97 yards.
Gallia Academy will face the TVC, Belpre fi nishes 2-8.
And, a&gt; had · been the Fairfield Union.
and 0-5 in the TYC.

... 124 ..74 .....4-6
.262
... 115 ..89 .....6-4 : ..256
... 11 3 .. 78 .....6-4 .. .2n
. .' .118 .. 132 .....2-8 ... 166
... 49 ... 200 ..... 1-9 ... 107
Friday, October 27
No playoff teams

!lrookoldt 0 .

Sunbury Big Walnut ta.- Allony 8
Swanton 33. l.aklslde Danbury 0
Sycamcro Mooowf&lt; 21. Buoom
Hopewell-LOudon Q
Sylvania Northvlaw 21, llowtlng G,_
14
sy~vonto Souttrvlow14, Porryoburg e
Talllnlltjgo 17, Wadiworth 1
Thompaon Ledgomont 9. Youngo.
Chrtsttan 0
Tlltln Columbian 7, Shelby 6
npp Cliy n~noe 42. Spring.
Sha-1·
Tot - r 22. Tot. Libbey 14
Tot. Ch- 39, 1bl. Ottowa Hll~ 0
Tot. Rogoro 43, Tot. Scott 8 ·
Tot. Sl Joltn's13, 1bl. Cont. c.th. 7
Tot. Waitt 6. 1bl. Woodward 0
Tot. Whitmer 26. Tot: Sta~ 0
Tontogany 0taego 36. G - r g 0
Tmtwood-Modloon 14, V.ndda 0
TwinSburg 14. Stow 6
Uniontown Lake 25. Ybungs. Royen 6
Upper A~ington 13. Revroldoburg 7. OT
Upper Sandusky 13. Willard 7
·
Utica 14. C-lllurg a

Kent Roooevett 21i. Norton 7
.
Kotter1ng A~or 33, Do)'ll&gt;rl Ct1lfT\Inadeo
Jullervle 15
Kings M~l5 Kings 45, Cln. Wolnut Hilt 0
Kirtland 32. Nowbury 6
Lafayette Allan E. 12. Sidney L.ah!nln 6

Lancast9' 42. Galloway Weattlnd 14
Lebanon 12 Miamisburg 0
Leetonia 13. Salineville Solllhem 7, OT
Lewisburg Tri.COOnty N. 25. Tipp City
Bethel 0
Liberty Center 26 Archbold 21
Lima Ce'nt. Cath. '40, Ada 6
•
Logan 7, Ironton 0

Van Buren 22, Vanlue 7
Versailles .22. Abckford Partcway 7
W. Jefferson 32, Canal W1nchester
Harvest ~rep 20

London 6, Madiaon Plains 0, 20T
LoulsviHe 58, Minerva 6
lowellville 26, Sebring McKinley 1
Lucas 8 . Bucyrus 0

W.

Newcomersto'Nn 6

Mansfield Madison , 9, Mansfield Sr. 7
MAntua Crestwood 61 , Ravenna SE 25
Maple Hts. 28, lakewood 6

6. 0T

Brush 14, Cuyahoga Falls 7
Macedonia Nordonla 12. Hudoon 0
Malvem 16. Ma~ia Sandy VIJtoy o

Maria S1ein Marion Local 34, New
Bremen 0

Minlord 13. Lucasvile Valkly 7
Mogadore 6, E. Can. 0

Cle. Glenville 33. Ckl. Lincotn-W. 0
Cia. John Marshall 6. Cle. RhOdes 0. OT
Cia. S. 44, Cia. E. Tech 0

Coldwater 20. Detp!los St. John's t2
Cols. Beechcroft 8, Cols. NQrthland 0
Cots. E. 1B, Co is. Linden McKinley 6
Cols. Eastmoor 49, Cots. Africentric 22

Cots. Hantey 6. CoiS. Ready 3
Cols. Marion-Franklin 21 , Cols. S. 13
Cots. Mifflin 6, Cols. Brookhaven 0
COls . .W. 14, Cols. ~riggs 0
Cols. WalnUt Ridge 21 , Cols.
Independence 6
•
Cols. Whetstone 7, Cols. Centennlal6

Columbia 38. Oberlin o
CotumbiJs Grove 35. Bluffton 7
Cortland Lakeview 27, Leavinsburg
La.Brae 0
'

Cory-Rowson 21 . Arcadia 6
Coventry 24, Mogadore Field 6
Covington 43. Bradford o
Creston Norwo)'A8 18. Dalton 6
Cridersville Perry 46. Yoltow Springs 6
Cuyahoga Hts. 24. tn&lt;!Opendonce 18
Ooy. Carroll 33, Cln. McNicholas 23 .
Day. Christian 13. Troy Christian 6
· Day. Dunbar 24. Day. Meodowdale 0
Day. Slebblns 20. Spring. NW 13
Defi8nce Tiriora 19. Sherwood fairview
16
· Delaware Buckeye Valley 28, Mt. mead
6
Delta 20, Montpelier 0
Dola Hardiil Northam 27, Arlington 6
Dover 14, New Philadelphia 7
Dresden Tri·Valley 14, Cots. St. Charles
9

Oublin Coffman 21 , Westerville N. 3
E. Uvei'JX)OI19, Salem 9
. Eaton 31, Camden Preble Shawnee 0
Eltda 7, Van Wert 0
Elyria Cath. 13, Cle . Cen. Cath. 0

Erie (Pa.) Cathedral Prep 14. Warren
Harding 13
·
Findlay 26, Napoleon 7
Findlay

Utle~W-Benton

Gilboa 7
Fostoria 28, Bellevue 14

28, Pandora·

Frankfort Adena 33, R~hmond Date SE
6
.
.
Franklin 7, Day. Oakwood 6
Franklin Fumace G~n 2e:. Oak Hll16
FredericktCWt'n 21, loudonV'IIa 14
Fremont Ron 49, Sandusky 6
Ft. Loramie 35, Ridgeway Ridgemont 6

N. Bend Taylor 27, Pendleton County, Ky.
6
N. Can. Hoover 21, Massillon Jackson 7
N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 14.
McDonald 6
N. Lima S. Range .t3, Lisbon Davtd
Anderson 12
Navarre Fairless 12, Massillon Tuslaw 6
Nelsonville-Yol1&lt; 47, Albany Alo&gt;&lt;ander 6
New Carlisle Tecumseh 36, tewlstown
Indian Lake 0
· New Concord John Glenn 21, ZanesvUie
Maysville 14
New Lexington 35, PhiJo 0
··
New Middletown Spring. 7, · Mineral
• Ridge 0
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 12,
CresHine 6
Niles 28. Warren Howiand 0
Norwalk 30, Gallon 0
Norwalk St. Paul 39, Plymouth 0
oak Hartlor 35, Huron 7
Old Washington Bucl&lt;oyo Trail 40.
Beverly Ft. Frye 6
Olmsted Foils 16. N. Olmsted 0
Ontario 26, Mt. Bilnchard Riverdale 6
Orange 46, Wicld!hl 7
Omgon Clay 3. Tol. St. Francis 0
Oregon Stritch 18. Northwood 0
OnviiO! 2e. WoostOf 0
Orwell GrandValley40, Richmond Hts. 7
Ottawa~landorf 28. Defiance 8
Painesville R~erslde 14. Eastlake N. a
Parma Normandy 7. N. Royalton 0, OT
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 20, Dub4in

SCioto 7
Pemberville Eastwood 14, Bloomdale
Elmwood 0
Pickerington Cent. 49, Mt. Vernon 6
Pickerington N. 14, ThQmas Worthingtqn
0
Plain City Jonathan Alder , 6. Cla11tsvMie
Clinton-Massie 0
Pomeroy Meigs 20, Belpre 0
Portsmouth 28, Vincent Warren 21

W.Va. HighSchool-ScorN

Frldly'l Rooutto
Al-.gany. Md. 39. Bert&lt;ekly Springs27
Bridgeport. Ohk&gt; 24. Cameron 0
Brooke 13. Rayland Buckeye Local. Ohio
0
Buffalo 18, Matewan 8

Cabell Midlon~ 12, Riverside 0
Colhoun .14. BraxtOn County 6
Elkins 20. North Marion a
Fairmont Slnlor 26. Bridgeport 14
George Washington 12, Cepltat 7
Gilbert 20. Man t2 ·
Grafto.,c,: · Liberty Harri~ 0
Gree · West :i6. Fayettoyllo 14
Greencastle, Pa., ~• . 17, Joltenron 0
Hannan 26. 8lg Creek 24
Hedgesville 12. H~ro 7
Hert&gt;ert Hoover 46. Point Ptoesant 10
Hurricane 12. G....- Eut 0
James Monroe
Bluetield 28
Keyser 13, FrenkfM o
Liberty Raleigh 3, Shady Spring 0
Lincoln County 27. Crown City S. Gallla.
OhloO
Lisbon Beaver Local. Ohio 30. Weir 13
Magnolia 19. Oak G"" 6

•t.

Martinsburg 39; Muuelmen 3

Midland Trall26, Valkly Fayette 14
Morgantown 40, Untversity 14
Moun1 Hope 22, Meadow Bridge 14
Mount VIew 8, Oak Hill 0 ·

Nicholos County 16. Philip Bert&gt;our 14
Nitro &lt;45. WOOdrow .WHson 0
Parkersburg 31, St. Albans 0
Parkersburg SOuth 3, Preston 0
Petersbur"Q 27, Tucker County 0

GaiUpolls Gallla 52. Athens 0
GartO!Id 28. Windham 0
Gatos Milts Hawl&lt;en 48. Falrpon Hort&gt;or
Harding o
Geneva 42, Conneaut 0
Genoa 21 , Millbury Lake 20
Germantown Valloy VIew 20. Brpoi&lt;vlllo a

Sarahsville Shenandoah 8, Caldwell 5

Sidney 7. Graenvll~ 0
Smithville o!S. Rittman 0 .
Sparta Hltjiland 14. Morrol Ridgedale 6
Spance!Ville 22. Detphoo Jofterson 6
Spring. Cath. Cent 35. Spring. NE a
Spring. Greenan 20, St. Paris Graham 0
Spring. S. a. Spring. N. 0

'

down through some of the yard touchdown to put
oth« kids and that is what we Hannan behind 24-20 after 11
tUe shooting for," Richardson two point conversion run bY.
POINT
PLEASANT, said "We have to start some- Gue with 20 seconds left in
W.Va - Unfortunately for . where, but you have got to tbe third quarter - shifting
Hannan - Pomt Pleasant get tbe kids believing lind the the moq~entum away from
will be using its field next only way they could believe the Owls.
Friday night
is getting some confidence
"It is so much between the
For the second time in threo and now we tUe doing just ears, they got the feelinli
weeks the displ~ Wildcats that"
when Gue knocked tbe ball
have been forced out of
And Richardson is not the out we were one play away
Ashton and int~ Point only one noticing a differ- from fueling the fire and that
Pleasant to pl~y the!! football ence, the players can see it as is
~hat
happened,''
games and m those two well. Hannan senior Wes Gue Richardson said.
games the ~e result has was part of the team's two After the score, Hannan's
occurred - VIctory.
. year losing streak which was defense answered tbe call and
Using ~ strai$ht touch- finally broke up last season did nGt Jet Gue's big plays gO.
downs while shutung down and now he is seeing a whole to waste, shutting down Big
Big Creek (1-8) late in the nef.t attitude with his team. · Creek and knocking them
game, Hannan (2-7) _was able
"Before, when we got around on the muddy field
to rally fium a one time 24-6 down it was almost like we where players had trouble
deficit to take bac~ to J\shton stayed down and gave up walking let along making big
a ~6-24 ho~ecom~ng vtc~l)' right there and this year, plays. The Wildcat defense
Fnday mght tn Pomt · when it is getting rough, we also forced eight fumbles, .
Pleasant, a much needed con- just start to get something four of which were recovered
fidence booster for the team going and we don't give up by Hannan, while the home
that c~ntmues to tumaro~d and that is what happened squad limited their own givethe atbtude at Hannan High tonight. It is jusl a whole dif- aways.to just one.
School.
.
ferent morale this year," Gue
Finally, on Hannan's ftrSt
"Just heart and character. said
possession of the fourth quarAJJ the adversity they have
H~nnan ' s rally came ter, Gue found a big bole and
been
through
and
they
just
behi
· pay
1 of ·bro ke f ree 1&amp; or a 68 -y ard
kept fighting," said Hannan
nd the supenor
II
Gue, who was behind each of touchdown score to put
footbal
coach
Wayne the Wildcats four louch- Hannan on top 26-24 and the
RichardSQn. "'The team JUSI downs. ·He rushed for 203 defense did the rest. Hannan
stayed together and fought yards and three scores while kept Big Creek off the scorethrough it and that is really &amp; •
fu
what character is all about. I •Orcmg two mbles, one of board in the final cantos
·
.r .
which was returned 33 yru:ds including ·a big stand with
am JUst swrr mg, 11 was an by teammate Victor Eric.sson under a minute with the Owls
emotional ride."
for a touchdown .- the tum- . inside the Hannan 20 yard
Hannan's victory Friday ing point in the contest.
,.
·
·th b'
night was all the· more
me, commg up WI tg presimpressive considering the
Down 24-6, it seemed like sure on quarterback Cody
team has only played one true another Hannan homecoming Johnson while forcing three
home game this season. heartbreaker as the team had straight incompletions and
Being forced to move one failed win a homecoming forcing a turnover on downs,
home game to the visiting game since the 80s until sealing the Wildcat victory.
school and two games to Friday night. Gue got the
"On the carries I had I
Point Pleasant all the while ream back in the game with found good holes and as soon
managing to make progress under two minures left in the as I broke the line I ran as fast
and growing stronger as a third quarter when he broke as I could and that is all there
team speaks volumes about free for a 29-yard touchdown is to it," Gue said. "On
the new age of Wildcat foot- scamper to get the Wildcats defense, when I forced the
ball
back within two scores.
two fumbles, one of them my
NJd throw in lh~ most of
Less than a minute later, friend Victor (EricsSO!l)
the reams Hannan has faced Gue struck again when he picked it up and ran for a
this season tUe quality forced a Big Creek fumble touchdown and I am just glad
schools with double the size which was picked up and he picketl it up instead of Jayand it is clear the Wildcats are taken the distance for a 33- ing on it."
makin~ progress as they now
lay clatm to their first multiple win season in years.
In-Between Jobs?
"We played a tough schedAAA has temporary health plans along
ule with no scrimma~es and
with other policies
at the halfway pomt . we
to meet your needs.
talked about playing. the second half of the schedule. We
Sherry Fredericks
AAA tneurance Aoent
divided this year into two
Give Sherry a Call At
,..,.._
halves and V(ith Wahama and
1100-216·1217
(800) 285-1217 or (740) 446-0699
tff'edeftell:ae ... wp.com
what we did with Thg Valley
'
and these two wins we tUe
lnsursnce With Someone You Trust
just seeing a different football
team and I think it will ftlter

n

..

~oca 2a. Sissonville 14

.12
Prtnceton 47, Spring Valkly 28
Ravenswood 21 . Rpkly 6
Robert C. Byrd 28, Lincoln O·
SCOtt 13, Sherman 8
South Charleston 24, Huntington 21

St. Marys 44, Doddridge County 0
Summers County 22. R&lt;:hwood 14
Tolola 3'1. wtnfletd 6
Tug \/alley 32. Burch o
Tygans Valley 26, Hundred 0
Valley Wetzel 16, Paden C~ 8

Richfield Revere 20. Copley 5

Sandusky Portdns 21 , Clyde 18
·

Displaced Hannan wiils
in Point Pleasant again •

Pocahontas County 46, Gilmer County

~ortsmouth Sclotovlllo 13. Willow Wood
Symmes Valley 6 . '
Powell Olentangy Llberry 26. Cols.
Franklin Hts. ,4

·. Ricllwood N. Union 28, CardingtonLincoln 6
Rooky River •1 . Fairview Park Fal!"law
12
Rocky River Lutheran W. 20. LaGrange
Keystone 0 ·

Gahanna Cols. Academy 27. Boxley 0
Gahanna Uncolti 32, Newark 0 .

Monroe 34, Johnstown Northridge 0
Monroeville 26. Ashland Mapleton 6

Washing1on C.H. Miami Trace 40,
washington C. H. 21
Waynesville 32, Madison 18
Wellington 7. Medina Buckeye 6
Wellston 20, McArttlur Vinton County 9
WesterviiO! Cont. 14, Marysvitle7
.
Westervill6 S. 1. OubHo Jamme 3
Wheelersburg 21 . Po)1smouth w. a
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 17,
Maumee 0
Williamsport Westfall 31 , Bainbridge
Paint Velley 8
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 6, Wetzel
(W.Va.) Tyler Consolidated 0
Worthington Kil~ 15, Lewis center
Olentangy 14
·
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 28, Youngs.
Boardman 7
Youngs. Chaney ~- Youngs. Wilson 12
Youngs. Mooney 3Z. Cots. Wattanon 14
Youngs. Ursuline 9, Al&lt;r1SVSM 3
Zanesville W. Muskingum 16, ThomviMe
Sheridan 0
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 20. Wooster
Triway·7

Ravenna 12, Akr. Spring. 0
Reading 24, W: Carronton 14

.

43.

·

W. Salem NW 13, Jeromesvine Hillsdale

Mechanicsburg 21. N. Lewisburg Triad 6
Medina , 4, Elyria 7
Mentor 31 , Euclid 6
Middleburg Hts. Midpark 28, Berea 12
Milan Edison 27, Castalia Margaretta 6
Milford Center Fairbanks 6, DeGraff
Riverside 0

Cle. Collinwood 47, Cle. E'. 8

Ridgewwd

W. Uberty-Salem 24. Greenvilkl o

Gin. Colerain 50, Cin. Oak Hills·7
~in. Elder 51 , Gin. Westem Hills o
Cin. Hills Chnstian Academy 34, Cin.
Mariemont 13
Cin. Indian Hill26, Cin. Purcell Marian 0
Cin. N. College HiH 39 , Cin. Madeira 20
Cin. St. Xavier 21 , Cin. Moetler 0
Circleville 34, Lanc8Ster Fairfield Union

Lafavette

Lyndhun~t

Van 26, Williamson 0

Wayne 26. Chapmanville o
W-r County 40. Cloy County e
Wheeling Part&lt; 33. John Marshall 7
Wheeling Control 38. Llnsly 7
Wllllarrtatown 29. RitChie Couroy 0
WOOdafleld Monroe Con., Ohio 6, Tyler
Consolidated o
.
Wyoming East e. l~nce 0
POSTPONEMtNTS AND
~LLAT10NS

Bishop Walsh, Md. VI. Eut Hardy. ppd.
10 Oct 30
Moore1ield vs. Pendleton County. ppd. to
Oct30

Tri·Valley Conference

· OhiO Division
TVC
ALL ·
W·L
PF
PA
W·L . PF
PA
Nelsonville-York .................5-0 ... 157 .. 59 ..... 9-1 ...339 .. 116
Wellston ........... .. .. ; ...... .4·1 ... 122 .. 69 ...... 7-3 ... 244 .. 2·10
Vinton County .... ...... ..........3-2 ... 115 .. 68 .....5-5 .. 182 .. 172
Me1gs . , ..........••..........2-3 ...88 ... 84 : .... 7-3 ...267 .. 155
Alexander .. . .. . .. ..
. ..... 1-4 ...80 ... 157 . ..3-7 ... 190 .. 285
Belpre .................... ... .0-5 ... 45 .. 148 .....2-8 ... 106 . £29
Hocking Division
TVC
ALL
W-1.
PF
PA
W-1.
PF
PA
· Federal Hocking ....... . ........5-Q ... t42 .. 20 ......9-1 ... 237 .. 54
Trimble .. .. .. .. .. .
.. ... .4-1 ... 100 .. 45
...7-3 ... 214 .. 154
Waterlord ..' .... . . . . . . . . . .. 3-2 ... 150 .. 82 ......7-3 ... 232 .. 150
Southam .
.. .. .. .. .. .. .1-3 ... 57 ... 121 .....5-4 ... 172 .. 166
Miller ....
. ...... 1-4 ... 45 ... 102 ..... 1·9 ... 73 ... 2t2
Eastem .................. .. .0-4 , .. 19 ... 143 ..... 0-9 ... 81 ... 340
Frlday'a '"""'
Friday, November 3 ·
NelSonville·Yoric: 47, Alexander 6

Wellston at Martin$ Ferry

Me1gs 20. Belpre 0
Wellston 20. Vinton County 9
Federal Hocking 36. Waterlord 13
Trimble 6. Mi'tler 0
Saturday's result
Southern at Eastern, late

·
Sltunloy, November 4
Columbus Academy~~ NelsonviiiO:York
Federal Hocking at Johnstown Monroe

Independents
ALL

W·L
PF
PA
South Gallia
...8-2
.219 .. 144
Wahama ...
. .. ..6-2 ... 211 .. 95
Hannan .
... 2-7 ... 85 .. 278
Friday's results
.
Friday, November 3
Lincoln County 27. South Gallia 0
South Gallia at TBD
Van at Hannan
Hannan 26. 89 Creek 24
"
· Slturday'a result
Wahama ~ at Wirt County
Wahama at Pa rkersburg Catholic, late

I

Series
fromPageBl
But St. Louis beat San
Diego and t)le New York
Mets in the ftrSt two rounds,
then won its fl!st title since
1982 by taming a heavily
favored Tigers team that
entered the Series with six
days' rest and still looked
stale.
Detroit pitchers made five
errors, two more than the
previous Series record.
After
closer
Adam
Wainwright struck out
Brandon Jnge for the · final
out, the . ballpark erupted .
Wainwright r.:tised his arms
in triumph, catcher Yadier
Molina ran to the mound and

the pair bounced off toward ·defending NL champion.
Minnesota, in 1987, had
second base, where they
were joined by teammates . set the previous low for wins
running from the dugout and by a Series winner, going 85the bullpen. Ace starter Chris 77.
"The team that win.s a
Carpenter and injured closer
Jason bringhausen gave La world championship is the
team that played the best,"
Russa bear hugs.
Minutes later, fireworks La Russa said.
A repeat of 1968's dramatfilled tbe sky above the ballic
Tigers-Cardinals matchup
park.
"No one believed in us, but - won by Detroit in seven
we believed in ourselves," games - ended on a cold
said Eckstein, .the 5-foot-7 night more suitable to footshortstop who . was selected ball than baseball. The Tigers
Series MVP after batting made two more errors, raising theii Series total to ei~ht
.364.
St. Louis (83-78) almost - . three by Jnge, the th1rd
didn't even make it to the baseman, the rest by pitchers.
"We didn't play. welJ
postseason. The Cardinals
· had a seven-game NL enough," Tigers manager
Centr.:tl lead with 12 to go Jint . Leyland said. "There's
but lost eight of nine before no excuse here. I don't really
recovering to finish I 112 know what the reasons
games ahead of Houston, the were."

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Then. call when you're d~wn the street.
Outside or In, dlrlilt1ing a nalullllgu W is easy. To help you SfM'I a leak frorn a gas
line or applianat, a familiar odor ~- rot111n eggs is ofmn added to nall.lral g8s. Or you

mightSII blowing dirt, bubbllngy.tater, or an unusual area of dead vegetation. Aleaking ·
pipeline migtt alto make a hissing sound you can HEAR.
Natural gis pipelines are

energy. W.ile

.

.

it's

unlikely that a problem could occur, accidents can happen.·Remember 10 call the Ohio
you start 10 dig for any landscaping or conm.ction project on your propert)'-it'5 the

Cardinal Conference
CARD
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
Poca. .....
.. ............ 5-1 ... 179 .. 68
..7-2 ... 263
Wayne . . . . .
. ....... 4-1 . .. 120 .. 42
.7-2 ... 220
Logan .. .
.. ... 3-2 .. 122 .. 92
... 4-5 ... 169
Sissonville ... ........ . ..• ...... 3-2 . .. 60 ... 73
.6-3 ... 152
Herbert Hoover .. .. .. .. . .. .. . ..2·3 . .. 114 .. t36 ..... 5-4 ... 221
Po10t Pleasant . . . .. .. . ..
.. 1-4 .. 67 ... 1.73 ....2-7 ... 157
Winfield ......................0-5 .. 67 ... 112 .....2·7 ... 112
Friday's resulti
Friday, November 3
Herben. Hoover 46. Po1nt Pleasant 10
Herben Hoover at Wmtield
Poca 28, S1ssonville 14
Poca at Humcane
Tolsia 34. Winfield 6
Logan at Wayne
. Wayne 26, Chapman11ille 0
Sissonville at Po1nt Pleasant

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Utilities l'tot8ction Sel\lice (OUPS) at 1.aoo-362-2764 at least two working days before
law! And if you ever suspect a gas leak-walk away, right away. When you're clear of the
PA
.. 142

·· arwa, Call ~r local natural gas company or 9-1-1 lor emergency response.

.99
..209
.. 136
..203
.. 312
.. 167

•'•

.

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' .

"

Fronl&lt;lin 0
Sullivan Black Rlvtr 12, Shofllold

Marion Elgin 19. Gallon Northmor 0
Marion Haroing 42. Lima Sr. a
Marion Pteasant2. Marton Rlvar.Valley a
Mason 35. Lovollnd a
Massillon Perry 24. Con. GlenOak 20
Massillon Tuslaw 12, Navarre Fairless 6
Mayfield 27, ScHon 0
McComb 23. Leipsic 0
McConnolsvKie Morgan 13. Crooksville 0

14
Cirdeville Logan Elm 26, Bloom-Carroll6
Clayton Northmont 21, PiQua 14·

.. 278
.. 156
.. 195
.. 274
.. 335

.

Homlor ~- Honr; 14. w""""" 1
Homlln Lincoln County (W.VIl.) 27,
Cl1lWn Cit; Solllh Gallo o
HIVIIond Wayne Tr11011 till, Edgor1on 7
Huth 1e. G,.nvlllo 14
·
Hebron l.ol&lt;ewood 20, Wh"-holi-Yoo~lng
7
HIHiord Darby 21 . G"""""n-Modloon 8
Hllliln:l DIVIdson 14. Grove City 0
Holland Spring. 14. Aooaford 6
Hubbard 14. l!rookfiald o
·
Huber Hts. Wll)'nl t•. Troy 13
Jad&lt;oon 31 . Mar1etta 17
Jolte110n 13. Aahtabulo Edgewood 7
Jolteraon Area 13, Aalltlbul« EdgewoOd
7
Johnstown-Monrot 16. Johnstown
Northr1dgo 12 ·
·
Kanou Lakota t4 Etmc,. WOodmere o

Coda!Ville 20, S. Charteston SE 0
Centerville 63, Kettori,ng Fairmont 6
Chardon 45. Wllloutjiby S. 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 35. Chagrin
Falls 0
Chillicothe 27. Zanesville 14
Chillicothe Huntington . Ross ~ 3,
Chillicothe Unioto 0
Chillicothe Zane Trace 19, ~iketon o·

Cin. Sycamore 42. Ml~rd a
Cin. Tufllin 41. Wilmington 11

.· . Meigs

Chesapeake ........... : . ......3-2
Coal Grove ....................3-2
Rock Hill ... .. .... .. ...........3·2
Fairland .... .. ..................2·3
!liver Valley ..... , ..............0-5
Fridly'o rwulto
Fairland 32. Chesapeake 24
Coal Grove 38, River Valley 0
South Point 7. Rock Hill 6

Nl11onol T,.H 7

CNpp"'
" t4
Alcanum 9, W. Alexandflo Twin Vslloy S.

across the river, as Nelson amassed 231 yards of total (·7).
I ·2, Tim Kltlla 1-(-2).
M
B
broke a 62-yard touchdown offense, despite never findGA--seth Haner 10-97, Jeft Golden First Downs
10
4
run on a counter play less ing the end zone.
Lincoln County 27,
50-174
35-31
4-34, Chns McCoy 2-41 , Tyler Gnmm Rushes-yards
South Ga11ia's Dewey
than four minutes into the
0
3·33, Rusty Ferguson 4-27, Jeff Passing yards
15
South Gallla 0
174
46
Cantrell led all rushers with South Gallla 0 0 o 0 - o Howell4-18, Jaymes H~~ggerty 4-15, Total yards
contest.
0-1-0
Comp-att-tnt
1
~2
urmnCo.
6
14
o
7
27
Bokovltz
Hl,
Quinton
Nibert
1-4.
Phil
Nelson finished with II 0 124 yards on 17 totes and
6-2
Fumbles·tost
6-2
Clint Saunders 2-5.
yards on just I 0 carries , Derrick B"eaver added · 28'
Panallles-yards
2·10
2·10
Scorfng aummary
PUalng: A--Chis carplnelll 4·13-1
while Bias added I 07 yards. yards on the muddy, sloppy
FlmQuarter
41 .
Individual SWU.Ia
Josh Wade chipped in 54 · playing surface. The field Lc-ct!ubby Nelson 62 run (pass
GA--Jaf! Golden 3-3-0 24.
Rulhfng: 8-Josh Sizemore 12·21,
failed)
8:49
· more in the potent ground hampered a Rebel offense
Aeclt*'01!1' A-Zach Str1cl&lt;ma~r 1- B,Yan Walker 5-20, Mike Walderf&lt;er
Second Quarter
15, Steven Eberts 2-14. Jake 4-(·1), R.J. Walker 7-(-3), Aal\ton
that depends heavily on the LC-Andrew
offensive.
Bias 10 run (run faJiad)
Audeoaon
1·12.
Packard 7-(~).
Bias added the second speed of its two feature 6:49
GA-Austy Ferguson1 -20, Chris M-Comelius Englsh 25-103, David
Lc-Ne!Son
5
run
(tan
Handy
pass
Panther score, part of a 14- backs. ·
McCoy t-3, Jaymes Haggerty 1-1.
Poole 17-76, Aaron Story 7-(·1).
1:32
John Wens completed 5- from Tyler Browning)
point second quarter that
Brandon F!fM.!: 1-(-1).
'
Fourtll QulltW
llelt.t Hoo\lel' 46,
Paulng: 8'-A.J. Walker 1~2 15.
saw Lincoln County take a of-13 passes for 68 yards. Lc-&amp;van Cooper 61 irllaroeptlon
M--Aaron Story 0-t-0 0:
Paint Plllllnt 10
healthy 20-0 advantage at Twice he found Tyler retum (Sclluaytar Prtlchard kick) 4:42
Receiving: B--lim Randolph 1-15.
Pt.
PlaaSant
3
0
0
7
10
halftime. Bias had three Duncan for 38 yards.
H. Hoover ·
8 t8 14 6 - 46
LC
so
runs of 10-plus yards on a Dustin McCombs, who First Downs
Coal Grove 38,
11
11
Scoring tiUIIIIMry
quick six-play drive th.at entered the contest · with Rushes-yards
37·163 46-286
River Yalley 0
Ftnll au.tlr
11
68
River Valley
0 0 0 0 0
.I 00-yard Passing yards
culminated in a I 0-yard back-to-back
· H~ Whft9 9 run (Josh
Coal Grove 12 14 12 0 - 38
yards
231
297
rumble that made the count receiving games, saw the Total
Morris pass from Whlta)
1-1-0
5-13-1
streak stopped with a two- Comp-att~lll
12-0.
PP-&amp;n Hemas 25 fiatd goal
Scoring IUmtllllry
2-1
1·1
Fumbles-lost
Second au.rtw
2-10
Ftmau.rter
Nelson scored his second catch, 23-yard night.
Penalties-yards
1·5
HK-~10Nn~m~
CG--Shane Jenkins 7 run (kick
One of Wells ' aerials
touchdown with I :32 left to
HH-{).J. Taylor 29 run (pass failed!
failed)
...l Slllttetk:ll
play in the first half, and a found Lincoln County RUihlng:lndtvtd
CG-Matt Cooper 1 r\11 (run miled)
SG-Oewey cantrel 17· HH--Josh Hart 8 M1 (pass failed)
twq-point conversion _pass · defender Bryan Cooper; 124, Demel&lt; Beaver 10.28, John
111fnl OUirW
Second OUirtw
HK-Taytor 4 run (kick failed)
CG-.Jenkins 1 run (Delauder pass
from quarterback Tyler wl\o returned the. intercep- · Wells ~. Ira Tumer 2-5.
HH---Taytor 92 run (Manis pass from from Trent Blankenship)
Browning to Ian Handy tion 61 yards for .the final LC-Chubby Nelson 10-110, Andrew While)
CG-elankenship 37 Nn (run failed!
.
Bias
18-107.
Josh
Wade
14-54,
Tyler
made the lead reach 20 by knockout punch and the Browning 2-a • .losiJ Miller 1-5. SCott
Fourth Quarter
,
111frd Qullrtar
· final score later in the TerTY 1-2.
halftime.
lfi-Chris Smith 18 r\Jn (pass faied) CG-f'rank Delauder 6 r\Jn (run
failed)
Passing: SG-,John Wells 5-I 3-1 68. PP-James Casto 10 run (Hemes
South Gallia played we11 fourth quarter.
CG-Davidson
33 Nn (kick failed)
LC--Tyter
Browning
1-1-0
11
.•
kick)
Lincoln County finishes
to start the second half, but
saw its best scoring·chance its regular season on Friday
of the night foiled by a against Mount View. South
PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
turnover. The Rebels drove Gallia's regional quarterfi- ·
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
all .the "·ay to the Lincoln nal will be on Friday
North Dlvloton
Coiinty 7 before coughing against a yet-to-be. deterfromPageBl
SEOAL
ALL
W-L ' PF
PA
W.L
PF
PA
up a fumble.
· mined opponent. Wh~rever
Logan . .. ................... .7-0 ...256 .33
...8-2 ...308 .. 109
it
is,
the
game
wi11
be
the
.
It was South G'allia 's
...... ........... .... 4-3 ... 152 .. 151. ... 4-6 ... 187 .. 224
The Marauders closed out Marietta
Zanes~lle ..... . ., ..
. .. 3-4 ... 172 .161 .....4-6
.232 .. 258
deepest penetration of · the Rebels ' eighth on the road
the scoring in the third period Warren ... ........ .. .......... t-6 .. .78 ...276 .....3·7 .125 ..344
··
night. The Gallia Countians this season.
when Cornelius English went Athens ......... . .. . ...........0-7 ...72 ...334 ..... 1-9 .149 . .450
South Dlvlalon
off tackle, broke a couple of
SEOAL
ALl
tackles at the I 0, and then
W-1.
PF
PA
W-1.
PF
PA
Chillicothe . .. ..................5-2
.228 .. 162 , ....7-3 ... 280 ..216
drUg two Belpre tacklers the GalliaAcademy
.. , ..............S-2 ...213 .123 .....8·2 ... 317 .. 161
final five yards for the score. Ironton .......................4-3 .. 194 .. 157 .....6-4 ...259 .. 205
Once agam the extra points Jackson .... : .. ................4-3 ...256 .. 163 .....6-4 ... 336 .. 204
Por:tsmouth ....................2-5 ... 145 . 204 .... .3-7 ... 250 .. 288
were no good.
.
Frldoy'o mulb
Friday, November 3
The fOurth period, Meigs Galli&amp; Academy
52, Athens 0
Ironton at Westtall
played baH control with Chillicothe 27. Zanesville 14
Chillicothe a1 Bishop Wanerson
semor David Poole and Logan 7, lrontoo 0
Saturdly, Nove-r 4
Gallla Academy at Fairlield Union
Fnglish doing the honors run- Jackson 31, Marietta 17
Jackson at DeSales
ning eight minutes off the Portsmouth 28, Vincent Warren 21
Logan at Hilliard Davidson
clock to ice the game. Meigs
put together a 14-play drive
Ohio Valley Conference
that ended when Poole was
·
OVC
ALL
stOPPed after an 11-yard gain
W.L
PF PA
W·L
PF
PA
on lourth and 15 at the Belpre South Point ................. . ..4-1 ... 125 .63 ' ...5·5 ..200 ..203 .
II.
Three plays later, the 2006
fOOiball season came to a end

8

Hayoo
Homllton 20. Folrflold 1...,3_""
23, t.II6JIR&gt;wn Fonwlck
0Hamilton -

•~ "--"
.....,..-.....Wo~37.
~

o

0 0-

0 14 6 0 -

~Trimble e.~Iller o
0
G,_2e,LMJ~f
.
G - McClain 12, ~ 0
G-rwtch s. Cont. .... London o
G.,.. City Cont. Crooolng 11, Dolawo,.

A - f'ymatunlng \/alloy 11. Vlonna

=a:.
'MI- 15~orlo
~lo

Springboro 28. Folrbom 14
51. Bomard Roglr IIICan 34. Mt. ~
2e, 30T
St. Henry 56. Ft. RocoJOt)' 0
St. Me"ff ~~emortot e. umoBoth o
-~~ 34. BaltlrnoN (Md.l MI. 91.
Joaeph 20
F-.1 Hool&lt;lng :te, Woflo; food
13
ShJ t we a, F\»cAAbtn 3
S1nrthont 30. Clmpbol Mernortol12
Sugor Grove Bomo Union 27. Qrondvlow
Hta. 7
Sugarerook Garaway 14. Stf'Ub&lt;lrg·

Graftcn Mldvlew 27. N.

11anoy e

fndlvidulll Slllllltk:a

Meigs 20, Belpre 0

Cllrard 11, Newton Folo a

"N·- - 2

Aulhlng: PP--Derek Mitchell17-68,
TyterGrant 12-51 . James Casto 7-40,
Troy Lepvrt 4-t5. Na1haniel Raub 16, Craig Copley 1-1 , David Wallaoe 10.
HH- D.J. Taylor 23-300, James
White 6-15. Oenicl&lt; Barnette 2-13,
Chlis Smith 1-18, Dustin Belcher 313. Stonn Robinson 2~. Nathan
Cooper 1-5, Matthew Rector 3-0.
Paaalng: PP--James Casto 4-8-Q
65. B.J. Lloyd 1-3-1 16.
HH--James WMe 8-10-Q 142.
Matthew Rector 1·1-0 10.
Receiving: PP-Tyter Glover 1-44,
Brad Layton 1·16, 'rytar Grant 2·13,
Derek Mrtc:hell 1-a.
HH--Josh Hart 2-46, Coctv Moore 343. Josh Manis 1-31. D.J. Taylor 113. Da~on Lipscomb 1-10, Michael
Keiffer 1·9.

GA

lndlvlduel Slatlltfce
15
4
First Downs
RUihlng: BC-,-Ronnte Benton 12- RusheS·yards
35-278
24-38
61, Nick Patterson 3-29, Joey Rifle 8· Passing yards
24
41
21, Cody Johnson 3-10, Emmanuel
302
Total yards
79
·
Foster 4-2.
4-13-1
3-3-0
H--Wes Gue 21-203, Chri911an Estep Comp-att-lnt
4.()
2-Q
7-18. Zach Sturgeon 7-10, Victor Fumblaa-lost
5·30
2·10
Penalties-yards
Ericsson 3-4, carl Leap 3-(-13).
Puatng: BC--Cody Johnson 5-12-0
Individual Stattdca
95.
Ru•hlng: A--Jake Anderson 7H--Can Leap 2-2-0 2.
Receiving: Be-Emmanuel Foster 13,Chrls Carpinelli 7-13, Reed
3-89, Aomle Banton 2~.
'Anderaon 3-13, Justin Pugh 3-2,
H--Chnstlan Es18p 1·9, WH Gue 1· · Ml1ch Crabtnla 1-3, Zach Strlckmaker

Pomeroy • Middleport • C.WpoU.

1,.. s t

l-

Fiw ' 'A6\t 'a

,.-, _ _ 1 . ... uo

/ft ...

w...

lft'IDOMIDn

421 Mllll Street, P01111 Pleesaul

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org

~·' ll'ltlllTM ........,.
5ni(" alltlldl'ntJtfl

Th•s safety awareness rfloeSNge is brought to you by the natural.gas m@mb.r compan•es of th,e

R~YMONOJAME'i

Ohio G.s Assoc•atiort

·-

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�·6ullhp limd-itntinrl

REDMEN PREVIEW

PageB4

. Sunday, October 29, 2006

Sunday,~obera9,2006

MFL completes Week 3
sM 1-. om
SPORTSOMYD.Il.YmBUNE.COM

'

BY MARK WIWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

-•wn

·Preseason AMC Coaches Poll

..

•

Outdoors

Lt costs a lot to live poorly

Although neither team had
ELKS 26 REDSKINS 0
won a game this season, each The final contest of the night
team had shown real improve- pitted twO reams that had won
Sometimes we all take our
ment during the previous one and lost one. The lives for granted, and it doesweeks. The Clagg &amp; Dyer Gallipolis Elks defeated the n't hurt to occasionally "step
Logging Company Packers Galhpolis Career College outside" of yourself and try
beat the Bob "Evans Fanns Redskins ~(&gt;.().
to look at your life from a
Cowboys 8.() in sudden death
The Redskins got the ball slightly different perspecovertime.
first and Jacob Shockey gal- tive.
The Cowboys won the tos.~, loped for 30 ·yards before
For instance, many of us
but de.ferred possession to the bemg _tackled by T. Jaye here in southeastern Ohio
second half. lbe Packers got McCalla .of the Elks, sa\ling live a relatively simple counthe ball illld mounted a sus· the · touchdown. The. Elks try lifestyle, but have you
tained drive that included three defeme got tough and the Elks ever paused to consider how
first downs and included a got the ball back on their own much it would cost to live
complell?d ~s from quarter· 44..
.
bade Griffii\ Stanley to Chris
Runs b¥ Teran Bam1tz and your lifestyle if you lived,
Gorden, and runs by Eathan . Jacob White got the ball down say, in New York City? Even
Swain
and
Quenton to the Redskins 3, where the most modest little farm
McKinniss to march ihe ball White took it in for the appat· would be worth a fortune in
out. to the Cowboys 32.
. ent score. The touchdown was the midst of an urban land·
Good defense by the called back on a holdina penal· scape; to be sure, we have to
Cowboys' · Jacob Leach, ty, and the Elks then fuinbled make certain sacrifices to
Andrew Steger and- Justin · on a 3rd and 18 play.
. live uncomplicated lives, but
Denney, whO all recorded
The Redskins got the ball on we also have a lot less probsacks, ~ the drive short the 44. A completed pass from lems to deal with.
That thought occurred to
of the .
line and· gave the guarterback Cody Call to
me
a few weeks ago. This
ball to
Cowboys. .
Joshua Cox added five yards,
was
the situation: I had some
Quarterback Ethan Spurlock but on the next play, the
scampered for 15 yards, get- Redskins fumbled the snap plans in mind that the rain
ling the ball back to midfield. and the ball was recovered by· had interrupted - nothing
Back-to-back penalties stalled the Elks' Austin Whobrey. Oil too serious, but I wanted to
the drive and turned the ball the next play, White rushed complete the mowing for the
,over to the Packers with 2:38 around the right end for a 49 season so I could move on to
early.
remaining in the first half. The yard touchdown, the fust of his other things, check off some
The Browns then got the Cowboys got the ball back three for the night The extra more items from my mental
ball, and gajped 2I'Oiind on after four aowns, but lost it point !JY failed, and the Elks to-do list.
runs of nine, five, ll and three when Tyler Reynolds reoov· Jed 6-0.
A few days earlier I had
by Justin Bailey, but the ered a fumble knocked loose
The Cowboys offense, on created a little woodland
Steelers defensive play by by Jacob Martin. The half their next drive, completed opening, and now 1. needed
Nathan Thylor and D'Loren eilded with no score.
pass to Dustin Wamsley, but to get the trees removed and
flouchey stOpped the drive on . The CowbOys took their sec· g_OOd defense by the Elks' the area planted. I could have
their own 41 imd got the ball ond half possession, but were 'lyler Byus, Briggs Shoemalce!' shoved the trees out of the
back for the Steelers.
forced to punt on a 4th and 24. and Jacob Gilriiore combined
but I didn't want to
Nicholas · Clags
and · Noah · Moore punted for 20 to stall the drive. The first half way,
waste
.firewood, so I
Wamimount combmed to yards and it was touched by a ended with the-score stili6-0 in · pushed the
them
aside with the
move the ball out to the Packer, then recovered by the favor of the Elks.
small
bulldozer
for later
Browns 45. Cody Russell Cowboys. The Packers
The second half started off
The
job
remained
attention.
romped down the field for the defense ~ up, led by with an exciting run of 66
to
saw
off
the
root
balls,
and
. score, Warnimoun.t swept Brian Williari!s, Bryce Saxon yards for the score by the Elks'
around the left end for tlie and Gage Roush, who inter· White, the longest of the sea- pull the trees out of the
.
extra point conversion, and the cepted a pass, bringing the ball son. Logan Allison added the woods.
Fortunately
I
wasn't
taking
Steelers led 14-0 as the. first back to -the Packers on their two points after, and the Elks
on
timber-s1zed
trees.
just
half ended.
own 34.
led early in the second half, 14The Browns were on
Back·and·forth the Packers 0.
defense starting the second and the Cowboys traded .pos- . Pressure from the Elks
half of play and Trenton Smith sessions with no one able to defense turned the ball back
intercepted a Jarrell ~s to get punch it in for the score. Tune · over to the Elks,· The ftrst
the ball back to the Browns. ran out in regulation playwith touchdown of the series was
Bailer and Clint Lee Sa~ the oontest scoreless.
called back on a ~alty, but
combmed to driye from the 40
In the overtime period, each White added his tliird score of
to the 6-yard line in their best team got four downs, no clock the ni2l1t on a first and goal
offensive. series of the game. running. If no one scores, or from .tlie 6. The_successful twO
Sayre then charged up the mid- they tie, it remains a tie.
point conversiOn play was
die for the touchdOwn, and
The Cowboys won the toss, Called back on a penalty, and
added the two point conver- but again deferred to ·the the Elks lead was 20.().
sion, narrowing the Steeler Packers. On the first play for
The Redskins countered
lead to only six {&gt;Dints.
the Packers, Eathan Swain~ with a. completed pass to
Good defense by both teams, ·for eight yards, then took 1t m Marquez Griffin, and a k~per
including fumble recoveries by from the two for the six points. for 23 yards that looked like a
the BroWllll' Bailey-and Sayre, Blade Eblin added the two surescoreuntilthe 'Eiks' White
and sacks by the Steelers' Reid point conversion so the caught up to Call and brought
Eastman, Nathan Taylor and Packersled8.0. '
himdownontheEiks37.
Seth James kept either team. Excellent defense by the . Then ~rey ra:overed a
from adding pomts.
Packers Justin Mabe, TYler tipped pass m the rur fqr the
PACKERS 8
Lefffingwell and Jacob Elks and rambled 58 yards for
COWBOYS 0
Marcum stopped the Cowboys the final Elks t~chdown to
The SC)OOrKI iame was also a in four straight plays and the round out the sconng.

PhoiD courtesy of the Unlven~lly of Rio Grande

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
men's basketball program is
ready to embark on a new
era. Long time ,assistant
coach Ken French 1s fulfilling a lifelong dream as he
takes over the reigns of the
Redmen hoops program.
"Obviously I'm very
excited," French said. "This
is a dream come true for me.
"This is a
great oppor·
tunity to be
the
head
coach of a
prestigious
and tradition-rich
program
like
the
University
of
Rio
F~
Grande.
"I've been blessed to have
worked with some great
head coaches, whether it be
at the high school level or
now at college.
"I had the opportunity to
OVPFIIe
work
with coach Earl
Former Rio Grande coach Earl Thomas, left, and new head
coach Ken French coach from the sideline during a game Thomas, he has been a mentor to me and obviously .
last season.
there are going to be things
that reflect what I picked up
from him," French contin2006-07 Schedule
ued. "But there are going to
Dl1e
Opponent
Ploct
nmo
some changes and hopefully
November 4
..... Milligan College ... Rio Grande ..... . .. ,,. p.m.
we'll keep everything
.OhiO Chri stian .....Rto Grande ........ .7:30p.m.
November 7 . .
November ~0
.. Myers• .......... .Rio Grande .......••8 p.m.
rolling
with that tradition
November ~1 ......... Bevo Francis Tour.. Rio Grande .........418 p.m.
and
history
and hopefully be
November 17 . . . .
. .Spalding .... ..... S. Euclid ...... .. .•. 8 p.m.
November 18 .
.NDC Tournament .. S. Euclid ...........TBA.
able to add to it."
November 21
. . .. Urbana .......... Rio Grarde . ....... ,8 p,m,
French and his staff have
November 25 ..
. .Findlay ·........... Findlay ... . ........3.p.m.
the task of returning Rio
November 28 .
. ... Shawnee State . . .Portsmouth . ... .. .. . .B p.m.
December 2 .
. .Walsh . . . . . ..... N. Canton ..... . ....4 p.m.
Grande basketball to the
December 5
.WVU·Tech .
. .. Montgomery, W.Va ....7 p.m.
prominence that it once held.
December 9 . . .
.Wilberforce ... , ... Wilberforce ...... . .• 4 p.m.
.
December 15 .
.Bluefield College• .. Rio Grande .. ·......7:30p.m.
after a couple of seasons
December 16
. .Union# . ..... ... .Rio Grande , .. . . .... 113 p.m
that fell short of the stanDecerrber 21
. . .. Ohio01ilicol!-.. ...... Rio Gnlnde ............ . .12:30p.m.
dard that had been estabDecember 29 . . . .
.Milligan College ... Milligan, Tenn... . ....7 p.m.
January 3
. : Ohio Dominican ... Rio Grande ..... ....8 p.m. ·
lished. He is confident that
January 6 . . .
. ...Malone ..........Rio Grande ... . . ... .4 p.m.
Rio Grande can be a very
January 9 . ·.
.Mt. Vernon . . . . .. Rio Grande .... ....8 p.m.
January 13 ........ . .Walsh .. . ... . .... Rio Grande .... , .... 4 p.m.
successful program again.
January 16
. Tiffin .
. .Rio Grande ........8 p.m.
"I think that was one of
.January 20
.... Cedarv~le ... . . ...Cedarville ... .. . .... 7.:30 P-'T'.
the
most impressive things
January 23
....Ohio Dominican . . .Columbus .......... 7:30p.m.
January 27
.. .Wilberforce ... . ...Rio Grande . . .. . .... 4 p.m.
about being the head coach
January 30 . . ........ Urbana ..... . . ...Urbana . .
. ...7:30p.m.
here is the tradition, you can
• F9bruary 3 ..... .
. .. Mt. Vernon ..... ~ ..Mt. Vernon ' . . ....... .7:30p.m.
February 6 . . .
. ... Shawnee State ... .Ala Grande .. ..... .8 p.m.
be successful here," French
F9bruary 10 .
. .. Malone .. . . . .....Canton ..... .· ...... 7:30p.m.
said.
"We have dropped off
February 13 .
. .. Cedarville
.. .Rio Grande .
. .. 8 p.m
the last few years, but I
February 17.
. .nttin .
. .Tiffin . .
. . ... . .. .4 p.m.
think that with the recruiting
· - Bevo Francis Tournament ·
class
that we've brought in
#- Newt Oliver Classic
and the effort that the coach·
ing staff put in bringing
2006-07 Roster
these kids m, I think we're
No.·Piayor
Pol. Hl
wt. Cl111
going to be back on track a
QO-Ma~ Christman ......CIF ...6-6 ...225 ... Fr......Glouster
2-Marcus Manns . ... .. ; .G . . .5-11 . .165 ...Fr ..... Beckley. W.Va.
lot quicker than what folks
3 -Aaron Drakeford
...G . . .6-0 ... 175 ... So..... Columbus
probably think."
4 -Kory Valentine
.G .....5-11 .. 165 ... So.....Circleville
The Redmen have some
5-Chrrs Dinwiddie
... G .....6·1 ... 180 ... Sr : . .. Proctorville
10-Man Auger
.G .... 6·1 .. 175 .. Fr......Portsmouth.
building blocks in place led
12-Travis Keeler
.. G .....6-0 ... 180 ... Jr......Hunting1on. W.Va .
by senior Chri s Dmwiddie,
20-Bren Beucler
.. G .. 6-2
.180 ...So. . ... Sardinia
33-Curtis CISrl&lt;
.F
6-6 .. .235 ... Jr. . ....Columbus
junior Travis Keefer and a
34-Brandon Ivery .
. '. G/F
6-8 ... 226 .. .So
.Columbus
trio of sophomores in Brett
35-Terrence All en .... . . .F .....6-3
.18Q ... Jr. . . . .Cleveland
Beucler, Kory Valentine and
52 -Will Norwell
.. C . , .. 6-8
240 .. So.
.Cincinnati
55·Aaron Quinn
.... C .... 6-10 .. 240 .. .Sr. . . . .JacKson
Wili..Norwell .
"14le guys returning in the
Head Coach: Ken French
,
Assistant Coaches: Thad Haines. Cain VaMatl, Reggie Williamson
program are the backbone
and they are going to be the
heart and sou'i of our pro·
gram." French said. "They
know the league, they know
CEDARVILLE The Preseason
the expectations that we
American M•deast Conference mens
have within the program and
baslo..etball poll as voted on by the coaches (F1 rst-'p1ace votes in parentheSIS)
they have been tremendous
in accepting all of our new
NORTH DIVISION
players."
Sct•ool
Pts
1 Pomt Park (6)
36
Dinwiddie, who at times
2. Oaemen
...
28
last
season displayed a
3. RobMs Wesleyan
21
4. Notna Dame
·.19
propen sity to s~ore , is the
5 Geneva
. 15
featured defensive stopper.
6. Houghton
. .7
He averaged 7.6 poims per
~ SOUTH DIVI~ION
game. Keefer was steady at
SChool
Pts
the point guard. position, in
1. Walsh (5)
94 ·
2 Mollnt Vernon Nazarene (5) .93
both starting and coming off
3 Cedarville
81
the
bench ; he averaged 6.1
4, Mak&gt;ne . .
.65
points and had 63 steal s . .
5. Ohio DominiCan
46
6. rlffin
.45
Beucler (12.4 ppg.) and
·7 Urbana
.39
Norwell
(8.6 ppg ., 5.5 rpg:.)
8 Shawnee State
36
were both named to the Allq R1o Gra•·cte
35
10 W•lbe.rforce
16
Freshman team by the
American
. Mideast
'

well-matched oontest between Packers win their first game 8-

teams with identical records. 0.

GAlLIPOLIS - The thin!
week of the Gallipolis Midget
Football League paired the
teams with identical records
for some very evenly matched
and exciting games on
Saturday, OCtober 14 at
Memorial Field. Two teams
were undefeated, two teams
were even at 1-1, and two
teams had yet to win a game.
By the end of the niglit, the
standings had changed.
STEELERS 14,
BROWNS 8
' The first game of the night
the Eastman Foodland Stores
Strelers remain unbeaten with
a 14-8 victory over the previously undefeated · Saunders
Insuiance Browns.
·
The Browns went on offense
first, but were forced to punt to
the Steelen. Tyler Wanumount
got the ball for the Steelers and
rushed around the left end for
an apparent touchdOwn from
the :Z:Z, but it was called back
. on a penalty. So Wamimount
tried the same play from the
27, and that one was good for
· the score. The extra point try
failed and the Stee1ers led

Pictured above are members of the Rio Grande Redmen basketball team. In front from left are coaches Tyler Swackhammer, Reggie Williamson, Ken French, Thad Hain'e s , Cain Vandall
and Brandon Baston. In back are Marcus Manns, Matt Auger, Travis Keefer. Brett Beucler, Curtis Clark, Will Norwell , Aaron Quinn, Brandqn Ivery, Matt Christman, Terrence Allen , Chris
Dinwiddie, Kory Valentine and Aaron Drakeford . .

French era begins at Rio Grande

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

wa' calm and quiet.
In a neighboring fiel&lt;t
there were seven deer graz~
ing in an alfalfa field; there
seem to be an awful lot of
deer around. and some ot
this year's fawns were still
sporting spots, I observed. .
A solit.ary buck fed along
the edge of a food plot across
the valley. about 200 yards
away, watching us watching
him. He slowly worked ollr
direction. closer and closer,
smaller sassafras. ash and the eventuall y to di sappear into
small valley in front &lt;?f
occasional · twisted blac k the
us.
After
a minute or so h1s··
cherry, so the task wasn't too
antlers
and
head appeared
difficult.
almost
directly
in front of us;
Most of the mowiqg was
he
identified
us
as humans, .
already completed, with just
and
with
his
.curiosity
satispan of one field remammg.
fied,
bounded
back
the
way
and when the rain finally let
he
came.
In
another
field
up I was quick to get on the
tractor and complete that four deer worked their way
task for the season.
• toward a deer feeder.
) t got darker and darker,
. I prefer to mow the broom
with
more and more stars
sedge before it goes to seed
becoming
visi ble. and as it
as the fluffy seeds . tend to
grew
too
dark
to see through ·
clog up the radiator on the
the
binoculars,
a screech owl
tractor, but I left a few
wildlife travel corridors began·its wavering, eerie call
along the waterways. which and a doe snoned at us a couis p~obably a good thing ple of times. Those were the
.
since 1 also jumped about a only sounds. .
It
wa~
time
to
call
it
a
day,.
dozen rabbns · out of the
and as we headed back to the:
fields while mowing.
That it made it a relatively house, I just couldn' t helP'
productive day. by my way but feel sorrv for all those:
of thinking, as far as routine poor business executives,
·chores are concerned, so lawyers and celebrities liv"
later that same da~ it was ing in the big city. I wonder.
with a sense of sat1sfact10n if they would be willing to:
that Maty and I looked over pay to live like the rest of us?·
(Jim Freeman is wildlife:
the vista. It was evening twilight time, the sun had specialist fo r the Meigs Soit,
alread&gt;:' set, but the stars and Water Conservatioi!
weren t yet out; it was that Dim·icr. He can be ctmtacted
time of day whim you could weekdays at (740) 992-4282 ·
still see ear.ily, gray light or at jimfree/fl(ln@oh.nacdwith no harsh edges .- 1t net.neT)

In the
•Open

Jim Freeman

FIRST BOW ·KILl

OVP Fl..

Rio Grande's Brett Beucler returns for his sophomore season after landing a spot on the .
AMC's All-Freshman Team last year.
Conference.
Valentine set forth for the season.
excelled in his role off fhe
"We've got high expecta·
bench and provided a spark lions, but we've kept them
for the Redmen with a good close to the vest and we
long range stroke and junior don't want a lot of ~ople to
Terrance Allen is aJso back know what we are,' he said.
this year as one of the veter· "But, this group has exceedans.
·
ed all expectations, whether
The Redmen have a slew it be in the weight .room,
of newcomers made up of conditioning, team chem·
transfers and freshmen alike istry, work habits and hav·
and all have plenty of talent. ing done all those things
"We don't have a go-to going into the season, I see
guy within our team con· no reason why we won't
cept," French said. "We may exceed our expectations that
have some go'-to guys_ but we're setting for ourselves
we don't have a go-to guy now."
.
and I think that is evident ·, Joining French on the
when you look at our roster. sideline will be Thad
"We have some guys who Haines, the former junior
are very talented, but varsity coach, who has ties
together, collectively as a all the way back to the high·
group I think we have a · ly successful John Lawhorn
chance to be pretty good," teams of mid-1990's~ as
French added. "If we start well as former players Cain
relying on one or two indi· Vandall
and
Reggie
viduals, I think our success Williamson . Vandall is in
is going to be limited, so far second season as an assisall 13 guys have bought into tant . and will guide the
that concept and I think if junior varsity program · this
we continue down that road, year. Williamson, who finwe are going to be very sue- · ished up hi s playing career
cessful."
last February, will get his
Amon g the newcomers. feet wet this season serving
four come with previous as an assistant on both varsicollege experience. Aaron ty and junior varsity squads.
Quinn, Brandoii Ivery and
French gives hi s staff a
Curtis Clark will give Rio tremendous amount of cred·
immediate help in the low it for shaping this year's respost an\1 Aaron Drakeford ter.
''One of the most
will team with Keefer and important things about the
incoming freshman Marcus staff is that we wouldn't
Manns as a very potent have the roster that we've
put together if wasn't for
point guard trio.
Two other newcomers those three guys," French
will challenge for playing said. "They put in the time,
time and provide depth in on each individual player
forw ard/center
Matt that we recruited; we were
Chri stman and guar\-1 . Matt pretty selective about who
Au§er.
we brought into the program
'We're going to open a and we wouldn't have been
lot of eyes around the able to get thi s group
league," French said. ·'Some •together if wasn't for those
people are going to take guys."
notice that we have
The schedule is a mixed
improved
and
we 've bag filled with new and old
improve&lt;' tremendously in a challenges alike. Non-conshort amount of time."
ference home opponents are
French said he and the Milligan College, Ohio
coaching staff have high Chri stian University (forexpectation; for thi s year's merly Circleville Bible
SLJuad bul would nol reveal College)
and
Ohio·
the goals tha! the team has Chillicothe.

The Bevo Francis Classic
field will have WVU-Tech, ·
Point Park and Myers while
the Newt Oliver Classic will
see Shawnee State, Union
College and Bluefield
College come to Rio
Grande.
Rio will travel to Notre
Dame College for a tourna·
ment in which the Redmen
will face Spalding and also
have road trips to Findlay,
WVU· Tech and Milligan.
"With the addition of
Milligan, home-and-home
on our schedule, we're
going to play Findlay
University again and we've
added WVU-Tech, they're
playing in the Bevo
Tournament · and we are
going to their place on
December 5,'' French said.
"We're looking forward to
it.
"Our '
non -conference
schedule is highlighted by
the
Bevo
Francis
Tournament and the Newt
Oliver Classic," French
added.
"At the end of November
and the beginning of
December, we 'II know a lot
about our team and where

Pratt
Dawkins, 11
of Gallipolis :
Ferry, W.Va., :
landed his
first bowdeer kill
while hunting
with his
father. It
brings
Dawkin's
total deer kill
to six. Pratt
is the son of
Jay and
Carol
Dawki ns of
Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.
Submitted
polo

.

Submitted photo ·

Gallia Academy's Jared Golden (20) runs the ball during a win over Athens while Josh
Saunders (66), Corey Straight (11), Ethan Moore (32) block for h1m.

$332

IU6 &lt;(be'! ' Malibu LT \'6 IIIJ71lll.lJIOOmlo.IIOH\ FJ'.-\ nlk'd 31 mpg f'\lt Pwrnts (1) ~T- mllf:
(bevy Impala 40 IS IHJMK 80f\\ f.PA ntlt'd 31 Mil(; AT AC lltmtP\\' PLP"\'T W:IIlliS

516,995

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S2l3

Pondac Gnmd Pri.X t l.'t..Jl Y,OIIIi~(l&lt;; R(&gt;fo'\\

GA 8th grade foo~ball team completes season
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

we're at."

French knows the AMC
South Division is again
going to be a difficult grind.
"Our league is · extremely
strong, we're going to have
Mount Vernon, Walsh,
Cedarville and probably
Malone are going to be the
top four teams in our di vi·
sion,'' French said. "If
y~&gt;U' re one of the top teams
in our division, you're one
of the top teams in the coun·
try; our goal is that we want
to build ourselves back to
where we' re in that category."
The AMC Sou~h D.~v i sio n
season once agam lips off
early in the year with the
Redmen playing host to
Urbana on Nov. 21. Rio then
has three straight confer·
ence road trips to Shawnee
State,
Walsh
and
Wilberforce.

GALLIPOLIS · The
Gallia Academy eighth
grade football team defeat·
ed Warren Thursday night
by a score of 46-6.
Running touchdowns for
the Blue Devils were Caleb
Warnimont, Jared Golden
and Ethan Moore . Tyler
Eastman also threw a touch·
·down pass to Caleb
Warnimont and a two-point
conversion to Ethan Moore.
Other two point conversions· were scored by Jason
Wray, Ethan Moore and
Jared Golden.
the Blue Devil defense
played well during the
game. Warren 's quarterback
was pressured and sacked
several times by the defen·
·sive line and two punts
were blocked by Golden ,
helpin~ the team gain their

..

_.._

back. Austin Smith, Justin
victory.
The team finishes its sea· Northup, Cody Lloyd, Josh
son with a 4-3 record .
Saunders, J.D. Nelson and
The season started out Cody Billings provi~ed
positive with a win against blocking on the offens1ve
Meigs at home but then line.
took a down slide with three
The interior line lead by
consecutive close losses Northup
and
Smith
against Jackson, Fairland anchored the defense. A
and Logan by a combined solid linebacker corps
total of 12 points put the included Moure, Go 1den
Jearn's hopts of a winning and Bill ings along with
Russell Qennison and
season in jeopardy.
A deci sive victory at David Saunders.
No team ever mounted a
Athens put the team back
on the winning track and significant running game on ·
the · Devils' coasted to . two the Blue Devil s. The defenmore victories in the clos- sive secondary suffered the
ing weeks at Marietta and loss of safety Austin Wil son
Warren.
to injury in the · first game
Througtl out the season but pulled together through
the offense was lead by the hard work from TYler
one-two punch of Golden Davis, Ben Robinson. Ben
and Moore in.the backfield. Saunders
and
Cody
Eastman and Corey Straight Robin son rotat!ng at the
a11d
alternated at quarterback corners . Stra1&amp;ht
with Warnimont and Jason . Eastman tilled 10 a\ the
Wray filling in at runnin g safety slot.

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Sunday October 29, 2006

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

86

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STORY AND PHOlOS BY Joy KGCMOUD
JKOCMOUO@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

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YOUR CAR &amp; ·TRUCK SUPERSTORE
NEXT TO WAL-MART
1900 Eastern Ave. • GallipoliS, OH

IMal

f'lll File

GALLIPOLIS - Every year, costumed children run from door to door gleefully collecting candy from neighborhood residents as part of a tradition started long ago.
Haunted houses, jack-o-lanterns and trick-or-treating all signal the celebration of
Halloween.
This year pirates, princesses, witches, he~s. monsters and clowns paraded through the
streets. greetmg each other with smiles and waves.
It's easy to see why so many people" enjoy the fun activities related to Halloween such
as bobbing for apples, watching scary movies and visiting haunted places at night.
Halloween is an opportunity f~children and adults to enjoy a special night of fantasy, A skull, like this glowing one, is another symbol of Halloween. It Symbolizes the scary por·
and a feast of candyo. . ·
·
tion of the holiday.

Here, Vital Links students Nathan Lynn and Andrea Withee
from Gallia Academy High School explore the underground
tunnels at the Haunted Ariel Theatre. They are pictured here
as they are frightened fJy the hanging body bags in the
"Cooler."

Halloween is the only time of year when it is okay to accept
candy from strangers. Children simply approach a resident
and asli, ·rric~-or treat?"

Ablack cat is one of the most widely recognized symbols of
Halloween.

�PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN Sunday, October
concert will feature
·White-tailed deer were rare untill920s Memorial
noted Japanese vocalist.
iaau, GtlmH ·it11ttntl

Sunday October 29, 2006'

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

29, 2oo6

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C3

.

'

BY JAMES SlUIDS .

.

•

The white-tailed deer,
:which now number some
:SSO,OOO or more in Ohio,
were
largely
extinct
statewide from 1904 to
1923. According to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, "as Ohio was
settled, habitat was eliminated and hunting was
unregulated. By the early
1900s white,tailed deer
were extremely rare in the
state. Between the 1920s
and 1930s, limited stocking
combined with the natural
movement of deer from
neighboring states. and the
establishment and ·strict
enforcement of hunting
laws allowed the develop)llent of a heard that today
oocupies all 88 counties."
Last year's gun season
had 2,331 deer killed in
GaJlia county out of the
-116,855 taken in all of Ohio,
: ·Those numbers were
:down from 2004 when
2,517 deer were taken in
Gallia-and 125,681 in Ohio.
It is estimated that deer
hunting adds -$266 million
:yearly to Ohio's economy.
: We also note, however,
'that in many rural counties
almost one third of all of the
reported automobile colli:sions involve deer. In Gal\ia,
·27
.I percent of .all of the
.

" Watt fixed his eyes
. traffic collisions involved
deer. In Harrison County, steadily on the animal for a
moment when he discerned
thefigure is 37.8 percent.
The ratio statewide is just the pretriest pair of antlers
7 .I 0 percent deer collisions that he had ever been priviout of the total number of leged to see. The sight of
collisions. The average cost the timid beast, whose fonn
of repairs to a car hit by a was oow plainly silhouetted
deer is about $2.600 against the hillside, gave
statewide. While Gallia is Watt the thrill of his life .
20th among Ohio counties in time and he'slipped away as
deer killed, it is fifth in the easily as h&lt;: could to his
percentage of deer collisions. home and told other memIn 1956, when deer hunt- bers of his family of. his
ing was extended across strange discovery.
Ohio again. some 3,911
" Taking the children Watt
deer were killed in Ohio.
returned to the woods and at
From 1904 to the 1940s, almost the same spot where
few deer were ever seen he saw the deer, they had a
here. We have recently run good view of the animal
acro~s a column of Crown before it became frightened
City · news written by and bounded away in the
William A. Lanier for the woods.
.
"Jack Ours who was huntGallia Times
in late
November 1924. ·
ing on ·the same llay, report"It was · believed that ed lhat he came suddenly
about everything iri Guyan upon the deer and fired two
Township :Ilready had .been · shots at it as it turned its
discovered.
oourse and disappeared into
"Now, it. comes that a vhe thicket
"Jack is sure none of his .
. fleet-footed ~eer actually
was seen last Sunday on the shots too effect 'lls he was so
farm of G.H. Woodyard badly frightened he doesn't
bordering on Guyan Creek. know whether he fired
"W.E. WoodyarO, Mr. straight up or which way.
"The discovery of the
Woodyard's son, who lives
near and who is a skillful deer in this section has set
hunter, was looking after his . the nerves of all the nimrods
traps on the farm when he in a tingle and ttie woods are
came face to face with a now being scoured in an
strange lo,oking creature effon to bag the big game.
peering from the underbrush.
"Tf this should be done,

trouble is likely to be precipitated among the hunters,
RIO
GRANDE
She stays in contact with
some of whom desire to let Internationally - known Hirota. and he and a fnend
the animal roam at will over Japanese vocalist Emi visited Brown last year.
the haunts of its ancestors, Fujita will perform at the
"That's when he said that
while others are eager for its University
of
Rio he would like to do someblood and flesh to satisfy a Grande/Rio
Grande thin~ to honer our relationlong felt desire to be in the Community College on ship_. ' Brown s~d.
class of the big huntsmen.
Friday, Nov. 3, in a memorHirota . put together ~he
· "Various opinions are ial concen forthe late Dean. · concert m order to &gt;ratse
expre~d as to how the
S. Brown.
money for the scho~arship,
deer reached this locality. · All area residents are and Brown is expecting that
Some say ; it pmbably invited to this concert. it will be an enjoyable show.
escaped from the Roosevelt Admission to the event will
Fujita will have one
game
preserve . near be by donation at the door to musician accompanying
Portsmouth, whHe others the
Dean . S.
Brown her, and the \'oncert will be
are of the opinion that it. was Meroorial Scholarship Fund. performed with piano and
driven across · the Ohio
Fujita will give two per- guitac
.
.
River from West Virginia."
formances at Rio Grande on
While Hirota concetved
, Later repons claimed that Friday. One show will begin the concert to help fund t~e
this Qallia deer had come at I :30 p.m., while the other scholarshtp, another . R1o
from Pennsylvania through will begin at 7 p.m. Both Grande graduate now l~vm~
West Virginia to Ohio. concerts will be held in the in
Japan,
Toshtyukt
Ordinarily, deer migrate in Berry Fine· and Performing Taguchi , also r~cently
an area less than two square Arts Center on the Rio· donated to the Ltghtmg The
miles provided they can Grande campus.
Way capital campaign at .
.find food which consists
l;lrown was a 1965 Rio Rio Grande as a way to
mostly of wild crab apple, Grande graduate· who honor Dean Brown. . .
com, sumac, Japanese hon- wciked in numerous posi"The really amaztng
eysuckle, grasses, greenbri- tions at the institution dur- thing is that we never know
ar, clover, soybeans, jewel- ing his career. The beloved how what we d() in this
weed, acorns, dogwoods administrator served the · world is going to affect the
and assoned woody plants.
university as vice president future," Petrea Brown said.
The life expecta'ncy cf . a of institutional advance- "I would never have
white-tailed deer is less than ment. Brown died in an dreamed that these young
·
10 years.
automobile acCident on men, when they were stu(James Sands is o speciJJl Sept. I, 2005.
dents here., would go as far
co"espondent j6r the
The upcoming · concert as they have gone and been .
Sunday 'Jimes-SerttineL .He was
conceived
by as successful as they have
can be contacted by writing Masatoshi
''Toshiba" been , and that they would
to 1040 Military RtJad, Hirota, a former Rio Grande then come back here and
ZanesviUe, Ohio 43~01.)
student aild long-time friend share that sucqess with the
of Brown. Hirota is the gen, university in such a
era] manager of Yomiko remarkable way.
Advertising Inc·., in Tokyo,
"It just touches me deeply
Japan, and works in promo- · to think that they would do
and a fellow of the tions in the entertainment this," she added.
She is honored by the
College
of business.
American
"This
concert
is
Toshi
's
work
being done· to hdp
Surgeons.
gift
to
Dean,"
said
Susan
fund
the
Dean S. Brown
A complimentary contiScholarship
. nental breakfast wilt be · Haft, director of alumni Memorial
at
Rio
Grande.
Fund,
and
she
is amazed
relations
l!Ctved at the event at 8 a.m.,
per·
that
someone
as
talented
as
Haft
said
that
Fujita
and displays will also ~ set
forms classic American Fujita is coming to Rio.
up for attendees to review.
The program itself, which music, and adds th&amp;t while Grande to perform and help
Fujita sings in English, she raise money for the fund.
is open to tlle public, will does
not speak English.
For more information on
start promptly at 8:25a.m. .
Petrea Brown, wife of the concerts, call Hqft at
For more information
the
late Dean Brown, said 245-7431 or (800) 282about this year's sympo-·
that
when Hirota wu a stu- 7201. For additional inforsium, or to register, contact
dent
at Rio Grande, he marion about upcoming
the hospital's E4ucation
often stayed with the events at Rio Grande, as
Depanment at 446-5313.
Brown family.
well as information on the
"We spent a lot of time wide variety of academic
with Masatoshi," Brown and professional programs
. said. "We got to know him offered by the institution,

Schmidt Memorial Cancer Symposium slated Nov. 4
GALLIPOLIS The
:lOth annual Lewis A.
'Schmidt, MD, Memorial
Cancer Symposium will be
held on Saturdli~, Nov. 4,
from 8 a.m. unttl Noon in
the Holzer Medical Center
Education &amp; Conference
Center, located on the
:ground .floor Qf the Charles
·E. Holzer Jr., MD, Surgery
Center, located at the rear of
the facility in Gallipolis.
srakers for the ·. event
wil include Dr. Sandra
Hazra of Akron General

Hospital , who will discuss · practiced ~eneral surgery.
"Genetic Counseling in He was mstrumental tn
Oncology"; Dr. Rahul Thaly developing the Tumor
from Ohio State University Registry and . the Tumor
Medical· Center, who will Committee,
which
he
present "Robotic Sulj1ery in chaired for ·se"~Ceral years.
Urologic Oncology' ; and
Schmidt was very active
Dr. Abbas E. Abbas, also with the Gallia County
from the OSU Medical . Chapter of the American
Center, who .will speak on Cancer Society and other
"Esophageal Cancer."
civic organizations. He was
The annual symposium is also a member of the Coller
held in memory of Dr. ·society, the Gallia County·
Lewis A. Schmidt, who Medical Socie~, American .
joined the staff of Holzer Medical Assoctiltion, Ohio
Hospital in 1967, where he State Medical Association,

:Noted pianist to grace OVS Nov~ 4·concert
"tmapolls· S&gt;m))hony, the ports quality

.GALLIPOLIS - Pianist
Joel Wizansky will join
forces with The Ohio Valley
,, Symphony on Saturdey,
Nov. 4 for Rachmaninoff's
devilish - and achingly
beautiful - "Rhapsody on
:a Theme of Paganini,"
:lcnown more recently for its
11se in the movie Somewhere

in Time.

Mozart Classkaf Orchestra,
and
the·
Orchestre

.

The orchestra also per-.
forms Elgar's beloved
Enigma Variations and
"The Unbegun Symphony," ·
by Peter Schickele's alter
.
ego, P.D.Q. Bach.
The 8 p.m. concen takes
place place under the direction of OVS music director
Ray Fowler at the Morris &amp;
Dorothy Haskins Theatre of
the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Centre, 426
Perfonning
Second Ave., Gallipolis,
Wizansky
has · been
.acclaimed by audiences and .
"'llusicians alike for his com~ination of fiery pianism
:and probing musicianship.
: "As impressive a Brahms
D-minor as· this listener has
~eard in years," raved the
:Baltimore Sun about a con-ceno appearance, while the
:washington Post .spoke of
:his "emotional and rich performan ce," "sparkling runs
and beautiful phrasing," and
."dramatic interpretation."
Among
Wizansky's

Arts

~WtaUitJ

null)erous awards are first
prize . in the Helen Hart
International
Piano
Competition, fifth prize in
the prestigious Marguerite
Long
International
Competition, and first ,prize
in
the
Yale Gordon
Competition.
.
. Wizansky made his debut
with the San Francisco
Symphony at age 17. Since
that time he has performed
frequen~y across the .U.S.
and in Europe, Taiwan alfd
Korea. Among his solo
appearances bave been
reciials at the 92nd St. Y in
New York, at the Phillips
Collection in Washington,
and at Old First Concerts in
San Francisco, as well as
performances with the

lab tes'ls and X~rays are
availablf) in Albany!

Symphonlque de Nancy in
Prance.
Wizansky has been heard
in radio broadcast performances in New York,
Washington, Baltimore and
Chicago. He has recorded
for Albany Records, and his
compact disc, "A Brahms
Recital," appeared recently
on the MRC labeLWizansky
is also a noted chamber
musician and collaborator,
and' has appeared in duo
recitals at such venues as
Weill Recital Hall in New
YOdt, the National Concert
Hall in Taipei and the Seou1
Ans Center in Korea.
A graduate of the New
England
Conservatory
Wizansky earned the Artist
Diploma from the Peabody
Conservatory, where he has
also served as Adjunct
Piano Faculty. He was a stu- ·
dent of Leonard Shure and
Leon Fleisher, and today
perpetuates the artistic tradition · of their teacher, the
legendary Artur SchnabeL
Funding for the symphony
is provided by the Ann
Car~on Dater Endowment, It
is also supported by the
Ohio Arts Council. The
Ohio Arts Council is a state
·agency that funds and sup-

log onto www. rio.edu.

well."

KJ.41J% 011 Otlgltrlll Ptice

'

tilts cxper,i·
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communtties culturally, educational!}' and economically.

'til A!IOh ·PfOdqcff 4pm-·~pm
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The public is encouraged

Dtitlng UIJOIII/ghf M11dneft

·Handmade
Holiday Treasures
Craft Show

to attend rehearsals for free
on Friday, Nov. 3, from 7 io
I0 p.m. and on Saturday, •
Nov. 4, from I to 4 p.m.
OVS
Saturday
dress
rehearsals are an excellent
way to introduce young
children to symphonic
music.
Three additional concerts
of the season are Dec. 2,
March 17 and April 28.
Tickets for the OVS concen are available by calling
the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre at
(740) 446-ARTS (2787) or ·
at the theatre box office
located at 426 Second Ave.
Prices are $22, $20 for
seniors and $10 for students.
· The Ariel-Dater box. office
is open Tuesdays through
Fridays from 9 a.m. until 4
p.m., and 90 minutes prior
to the show. Call ·(7 40) 446ARTS (2787) or visit
www.ohiova]ley symphony.org for more infqm1ation ..

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�CELEBRATIONS

•

·C oMMUNI1'Y.

·PageC4
Sunday, Odober 2C), 2006

Five ways
to cope
with all that
Halloween
candy

READ MORE ABOUT ·IT

English Major no
longer popular
Headlines
of
the
Gallipolis Tribune this week
indicated that the University
of Rio Grande is dropping
its majpr in English for lack
of panicipation and interest.
eetty.
The announcement has genClarkson
erated some concern among ·
current students - and former students as well.
As ·one with an English
major in a career typically
predominated by English literacy to the ability to
majors, I find the informa- read, interpret - and ulti·
tion disturbing. Aware of mately enJOY - advanced
research conducted by the forms of creative writing.
The study of more than
National Endowment for
the Arts, I do not find the 17,000 adults asked if the
information
surpnsmg. individuals - of all age
According to Reading at groups and ethnic backRisk: A Survey of Literary grounds -· had voluntarily
Reading in America (June · read, in their free time (not
2004), "literary reading is work or school) a short ·
in dramatic decline, with story, novel or poem in the
fewer
than
half o.f past year. The complete
American adults now read- study •can be downloaded
from NEA.gov- or read af
ing literature."
The steepest rate of the library.
Literarf reading ·(the
decline is in the youngest
reading
o literature) develage groups. This would follow, then, thanhe younger ops a caP-acity for "focused
adults would not be choos- attention ' and "imaginative
ing English as a career growth" that, according to
choice. The major problem the study, enriches both priDAYTON -John and Brenda Halley of Dayton proudwith accepting this trend is vate and public life. An ly announce the engagement of their daughter, Megan J.
that readers are highly Internet search provides this . Halley to Christopher A. Hammond, son of Allan and
soctal people who partici- · brief list of . books which Glenda Hammond of Wellsboro, Pa.
pate. in the arts, in sports, should be read by English
Megan is a 2002 graduate of Stebbins High School and is
and in community life.
majors -· or individuals graduating with a bachelor of science degree from Wright
If we lose the readers in interested in reversing a State University in Dayton_
·
society, we lose our volun- nationwide trend:
Megan is the granddaughter of Nellie Stover and the late
• teers, donors, and supportOxford
English Harry Stover of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and the late Virgil
ers. We also lose our capa- Dictionary;
Robinson and B~rtis Halley of Gallipolis.
bilities as "informed, active Crusoe (Defoe); Mansfield
Chnstopher, a 2001 graduate of Wellsboro High School,
and independent-minded Park (Austen); The Great is serving as a military police officer at Wright Patterson
Americans ... qualities that a Gatsby (fitzgerald); The Air Force Base in Dayton.
free, 'innovative or produc- Riverside
Shakespeare;
tive society cannot afford to Jane Eyre (Bronte); Hamlet
lose." The dual purpose of (Shakespeare); Alice in
an English degree ts to a) Wonderland
(Carroll);
expose students to a wide Frankenstein
(Shelley);
variety and history oflitera- Poetry of Robert Frost;
·ture (novels, shorts stories Gulliver's Travels (Swift);
and poetry) and to b) teach and other titles by Mark
students to . communicate Twain, Charles Dickens,
well verbally.
Edgar Allen Poe, Jack
According to various London, J .R.R. Tolkien,
universi ty Web sites, a Rudyard Kipling, Aithur
bachelor's
degree
in Conan Doyle and Robert
English provides .skills for Louis Stevenson.
a variety of positions in
Any public library can
government, research, edu- provide access to any of
cation and publishing, as . these titles or authors - no
well as in the cultural, degree needed. Remember
entertainment and commu- to visit your public library
nications industries. The - the place where learning
NEA study has been fre- (and imagination) grows.
(Betty · Clarkson is the
quently misquoted as
applying to literacy rates Director of tilt Dr. Samuel
throughout the country. L. Bossard Memorilll
Literacy is the ability to Library, 7 Spruce St.,
read and understand mate- Gzllipolis. The library is
rials written on a fifth OP!" Morullly .througll
grade
reading
level. FrUiay, 8 a.m. until9 p.m.;
Literary reading, which Saturday, 9 a.m. until 5
was the subject of this p.m.; and Sunday, 1 u11Jil6
·
study, goes beyond basic p.m. Call446-READ.)

HALLEYHAMMOND
ENGAGEMENT

Bible hunter gives
families peek of the past
Bv JAMES HANNAH

had found a German Bible
ASSOCIATED PRESS Wl!l'ltR
purCh&lt;!sed by Thompson's
great-great-great grandfather
GREENFIELD - Chid in in 1830, a discovery that
a brown, animal-hide cover enabled Thompson to trace .
spiderwebbed with cracks, the family tree back several
the Bible gives off a musty additional generations.
smell as Earlene Scott gen"It's hard to explain,"
tly leafs through its fragile . Thompson said. "It gives
me ~oosebumps. It's just
pages yellowed with age.
· . The 178-year-old book · excitmg to me to know who
gJVes up clues about its orig- my ancestors were."
inal owners - not only
Scott, a 60-year-old miliname; and dates of births, tary retiree and genealogy
c;leath s and marriages, but buff, got· hooked on Bible
two locks of hair, a handwrit- hunting more than 10 years
ten poem and several pressed a~o when she found - but
leaves, possibly from a dtdn't buy - a Bible at an
funeral floral arrangement. · auction in Alabama that
Scott bought the Bible at belonged to a secretary of the
an auction in this southwest late Gov. George Wallace.
Ohio town. She finds old . Scott said it struck her as
Bibles at auctions and estate ·odd that anyone would want
sales and then-. armed with to sell the family Bible, felt
today's
computer-search that the information inside
powers- uses them as trea- would be of interest to
sure maps to track down the someone in the family, and
modem-day descendants of was curious to see whether
their original owners .
she would be able to find
Scott has reunited Bibles, the descendants.
Scott generally mails the
or infonnation from Bibles,
with about a dozen families. Bibles to descendants, askData recorded in the Bibles ing to be reimbursed for the
by families that owned them price she paid for the book
provide many descendants -'Usually between $10 and
with family history .crucial $20 -- plus postage. It typiin tracing their ancestry.
cally takes her a few weeks
"They now can hold it, to track down the descentouch it, and hopefully share dants, but has taken as long
it," she said. "When each piece as four months.
of the puzzle begins to fit into
She has yet to track down
place in your 0\11;11 family, a descendant of Wallace's
you're just that much closer to secretary so she can share
knowing who you are and why family mformation she jotyou're the way you are.''
ted down from that Bible.
In August, Scott e-mailed And she is currently workMarti Thompson, 61, of . ing on finding descendants
Milford. Ind .. telling her she of a Norton family Bible.

James and Audrey Haley

HALEY
ANNIVERSARY
RUTLAND - James and Audrey Haley of Rutland
observed the1r 61 st wedding anniversary on Friday, Oct.
27, 2006. They W!!re married in 1945 .
. .
They are the parents of two children, Connie L. Nelson
and James E. Haley, both of Whitehall. They have two
grandsons, Marty Gene Nelson and Alex Austin Haley.

Bands
Plain ~ Carved
Diamond ·

A

..n. .x

Bv BETH J. HARPAZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

For many parents, the
most frightening thing ·
about Halloween is dealing
with all the candy kids
bring home.
You can't help but think
about cavities and empty
calories when you see those
plastic pumpkins full of loilij&gt;?PS and caramels. Older
kids will instead bring home
something even scarier· - .
backpacks
enormous .
stuffed with .bubble gum,
chocolate bars and licorice.
The good news: · You ·
don't need to act like a
witch to get them to give it .
up, and you don't have to
be a wizard to raake the
candy disappear.
Here are five simple
strategies for what to do
with all that candy.
• Buy · it back. Offer ·a
nickel apiece for candies
your children are willing to
sell you.
· After the kids make a pile
of what they don't want, tell
them you'll give them a
dime per candy if you get to
make the selection. Look
for the chewy, sticky stuff
that's hard to brush off or
rinse away.
"It's not the candy so
much as the fact that we've
got to get it off the teeth,"
said Dr. Matthew Messina,
a dentist in Fairview Park,
Ohio, and a consumer
adviser for the American
Dental Association . "If
we're looking · for candies
that are ·more problematic,
they are things that are
going to be stickier."
Also look for candies that
are both sticky and sour.
Sour treats are acidic, and
may dama$c tooth enamel,
Messina satd.
But with a linle negotiating, for a couple of 'Ducks,
you can reduce the stash. ·
• Recycle it. Wrapped
candy has a long shelf life.
Surely there is a children's
birthday party in your
future. Save that leftover
Halloween candy for good_Y.
bags and pinatas. So what tf
you're . handing
out
Halloween-themed treats at
your Christmas party or
sweets wrapped in orange
foil for a January birthday?
Squirrel away a few
pieces for the next time you
need a last-resort bribe. A
lollipop · works wonders
whenyou're trying to shush
a noisy 4-year-old at a ballet
recital or a wedding.
• Appropriate the chocolate. We all know that
Hershey's Speciltl Dark and
Dove bars are utterly wasted on anyone under the age
of 12. Beg, buy. or, as a last
resort, steal {that is, quietly
confiscate) the choicest
chocolates from your children's haul, and save them
for yourself.
J
..
• Bring the leftovers to
work. Here's a well-known
magic trick: Put all your
Halloween reject candy in a
bowl , leave it by the office
coffee machine, and watch
it 'vanish. ·
• Ration and discard . Tell
kids they can pi ck out a few
candies to have each day,
and impress upon them the
importance of brushing
their teeth especially wellm
the.days after Hallowe.en.
· "Maybe the negotmtlon
point is not so much to
eliminate the candy, but that
we brush after the candy,"
said Messina. "If we can
enhance brushing ·behavior
for a lifetime, that's a win ."
Finally, many parents find
that after a week, kids will
have forgotten about their
loot. Make your move and
dump whatever's left.

Mr. 111111 Mrs. A11drew 8oek4l

HALLEY-BOEKE
WEDDING
DAYTON - Jessica Halley of Dayton and Andrew
Boeke of Sidney, Ohio, were married in a June 17, 2006,
ceremony at the Historical Village Chapel, with Guy
Fisher officiating.
.
The bride is the daughter of John and Brenda Halley of
Dayton, and the bridegroom is the son of David and Judy
·
Boeke of Sidney.
· The bride is the granddaughter of Nellie Stover and the
late Harry Stover. of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and the late
·
Virgil and Bettis Halley of Gallipolis.
. The bridegroom is the grandson of Marilyn Kloeker, the
late Lester Kloeker, and the late Faustin and Helen Boeke.
A reception was held at the Makoy Center in Hilliard. The
couple honeymooned with a cruise to the Caribbean. They
now reside in Hilliard with their black Labrador, Cameron.
The bride received her bachelor's degree in ~ly childhood development in 2003 from Ohio State University. She
earned her master 's degree in education fromOSU in 2004.
She is a fourth-grade teacher in Hilliard City Schools.
The bridegroom is a 1999 Sidney High School graduate
and earned his bachelor's degree in sociology from OSU in
2003. He received his master of education degree from OSU
in 2004. He is a sixth-grade teacher in Dublin City Schools.
.
The couple met while attending OSU.

CELEBRATING
ANNIVERSARY TODAY
POMEROY - Norma Louise and Leonard "Lennie"
Jewell of 214 W. Main St., Pomeroy, will celebrate their
60th wedding anniversary with a reception at the social
room of .the Trinity Church after the .church . service on
Sunday•. Oct 29, 2006 (today) fron\ II :30 a.m. to I :30 p.m.
-All fnends are mvtted . The couple requests no gifts.

ut the good times roU!
What a wonderful Fall tour we had to
the Cape Cod area which included a
cruise to Nantucket Island. The autumn
colo~. fantastic weather, the blue of the
wate~. all combined for a most enjoyable
time.
,
Hishlights included a dune buggy ride across the sand dunes of
Provincetown at the tip of the Cape, an authentic-lobsterbake
where everyone attacked one of the delicious critters, bib and all,
and observmg the art of cranbeny harvest time with the fields
being flooded .and the berries raked in. Of cou~e we sampled
cranberry muffms, candy, JUICe, and more everywhere we went
The island of Nantucket with the weathered homes, shops, even
the schools and churches was postcard pretty and we had a
beautiful day to stroll the cobblestone streets and the friendly
shops.
.
We ~tayed at the. Red Jacket Resort ri$ht on the water in
Hyanms Port and VISited the J~hn F. Kennedy Musetim, the site of
the Kennedy h~mes, Post Off1ce and candy shop where JFK took
John and caroline for a walk. We had a great time and visit with
old friends we have worked with for the past 15 vea~ who
showed us their usual hospitality.
·
Now we are J&gt;reJ&gt;aring for our Christmas Tou~. Our one day trip
to the Lacomedia Dinner Theatre near Dayton, OH to see "It's a
Wondelful Life• will be Nov. 30. Our Williamsburg, Jamestown,
Yorktown and Newport News tour will be Dec. 2-5. We have a
few seats available still so let me know if you're interested as final
J&gt;lans are being made. The Grand Illumination in Williamsburg is
s~ectacular a~ the nat~ral decorations in the homes, shof&gt;S and
h1stonc bu1ldmgs are lit as the cannon shot sign~ies the start of
the Grand Illumination. We are staying at tne beautiful Fort
Magruder Inn and lull breakfasts and dinne~ are included, one at
the beautiful Boxwood Inn, one at a tavern in the historic district
and one at the hotel.
Visits to Jamestown and Yorktown will celebrate the 400th
Anniversary of the landing at the fi~t English settlement in Nonh
America . A riding tour tnrough the Illumination celebration at
N~J&gt;ort News, VA., is also included and we· can finish up our
Chnstmas shopf&gt;lng at the Williamsburg Pottery. Come join us- irs
not too late. call me at 674· 1028 if interested- we'd love to have
you come along as we again...
.. LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

f

DI¥'I5IOn d City Nat10n11
·Blink r.A West Virgm18 ~FDIC

Peooias Choa iS •

Sunday,Cktober29,2oo6

New sewage disposal rules: Not so scary
BY StuART lsrrz, MS 1 RS
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
_GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH OE~RTMENT

be come more complex, and nance and inspection of the tained and that the new will work and is in compliwill require 'five-foot test system.
owner is not buying a prob- ance with the new rules.
If a design does not meet
pits be dug on the lot to
Fact: If the system has lem sewage system. The
determine theses soil char- mechanical or electrical pre· operational permit fee will be compliance a report as to
acteristics to 60 inches deep. treatment components such $125. which will include all why. and what modificaSeptic tanks and conven- as with an aeration tank, a inspection and report costs. tions are needed. will be
tional leaching will still con- service contract will be This op&lt;;rational inspection ,issued. If the design is in
tinue to be used, but many of required with .a licensed ser- report may also be .used by compliance and the site a~d
Gallia County soils will vice provider. If a service your realtor to satisfy the soil conditions concurs wtth
require larger leach fields or provider is not on contract mortgage company's sew~ge the system designed ·then an
additional treatment meth- with the owner, then the inspection requirements at installation permit would be
ods than previously used.
health department is respon- the time of sale. ·
granted. Therefore, it could
· Myth: Existing lots that sible for conducting annual
Myth : Propert.y owners be possible that several
have not been developed inspections to verify proper will not be able to install types of system designs
will have to install sewage operation and maintenance their own sewage system would be suitable for the lot. 1
systems that meet the new of the system. Non-mrchan- after the effective date of · Myth : Under the new
code standards.
ical systems or systems with the 'new rules.
rules, property located withFact: The new rules have
only a pump or lift station as
Fact: The new rules do in a 100-year floodplain will
three-year grace period (Jan. the only mechanical compo- not prohibit property own- not be pennitted to build or
1, 2010) in which the owner neD'. wtll no! have to have a • ers from installing a sewage install a sewage system.
can obtain the installation servtce proVIderon contract. system that serves their perFact: The new rules do not
permit for the sewage system
Myth : Operatmg permtts sonal residence, provided prohibit sewage system
that was initially intended for and fees will have to .be the owner can successfully installation within a floodthe lot, with the.exception of renewed on a regular basts. pass a one time state sewage plain provided there is not
a direct discharging system.
Fact: Both the old. and system installer competency any local. state. or federal
However, any new lots creal- new se.wage rules r~mre an exam. Anyone installing flood plain restriction for
ed after Jan. I, 2007 will operatiOnal pel\lllt for a sewage system will have to that . area. Developm:enl
have to be able to support a sewag~ system. However, ·pass this exam. ·Anyone within a flood way is strictly
soil-based sewage disposal up unttl Jan. I, 2007, any installing ·a sewage system prohibited.
Additional
system. Sewage system dis- sewage system that was for a home other than their sewage system components
charges of any kind will not , i~stalled ~nder an installa- personal residence, in addi- or construction techniques
be permitted for new lots tion permit and approved by tion to the exam, must regis- may be required in order to ·
under the OEPA discharge the health departmen.t was ter as an installer with the protect the system from
permit system.
all?wed to carry the mstal- local health department and flood waters, but currently
Myth: If my current !alton pen~nt as the operat- provide proof a .$20,000 Gailia County does not liave
sewage system fails, and my mg ..permn wnhout any performance bond.
any areas that are designated
lot wi II not support a new addti!Onal charge for ~s long
Myth: Only the health as restricted. Property ownsystem that meets code, will as the system was m the department will design my ers need to consult the Gallia.
the lot have to be abandoned? . ground regardless of age ·o r sewage system, . what if I County
Flood
Plain
Fact: No. The ruk&gt; do change of ownershtp. The want another system other Management Oftice to deterallow · for flexibility ·on rules allow local Board of than what the health depart- mine if a tlood plain develreplacement .systems where · Health. to set the terms and ment proposes. ·.
opment permir is required.
the lot cannot meet the new condttlons of these permtts.
Pact: The new rules will
For additional informastandards.
Effe&lt;;ttve Jan: I, 2007 , the allow anyone to design and tion regarding the new
Myth: New sewage sys- Galha County Health cite a sewage system, but the sewage disposal rules, contems installations after Jan. Department w1l! change the local health department must tact the Gallia County
I, 2007 will cost over terms :md condt!tons of the conduct a site and sOil evalua- Health Department at 441$10,000.
operaung permits from .. a lion to determine whether the 2018 , Monday through
Pact:
Probably
not. unrestncted h~elong penm~, system designed as submitted Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m:
Cw'rently the average cost for to an operational permn
a sewage system installation only valid as long as the
in Gallia County is approxi- owner has legal . ownership
mately $4,200 to $5,600. · of the property. In other
With installation of larger words, when..: a developed
leach fields and other treat- property which has an on
ment modifications the ·price site sewage system changes
for a new sewage system ownership, an operational
after Jan. I, 2007 will likely inspection must be perincrease by 15-25 percent, or formed and approved prior
in the range of $4,800 to to issuance of the new oper- ·
$7,000. The exact cost will ational permit to the new
vary depending upon the soil owner.
This new operating permit
and lot conditions, availability of materials, and the con- will be valid for as long as
that owner or his or her surtractor's rates.
Myth: All newly installed viving SP,OUse o~ that propsewage systems will require erty. This ensures that dle,
a service contract with a sewage system at least meets
registered . service provider the old code standards and
to conduct annual mainte· has been properly . main-

On Jan. I , 2007, the new
Ohio Household Sew~e
Disposal Regulations will
take effect. These are the
first changes to Ohio •s
sewage disposal regulations
.
since 1977.
The Gallia Courity 'Health
Department has been working
with . the
Ohio
Department of Health to
prepare for implementation
of the rule revisions, and to
provide the public with
mformation regarding the
major changes and impacts
oLthe new rules.
However, many rumors
and myths have been
spreading across the state
that the new sewage·requirements will make new residential development almost
impossible and very expensive. The :truth is that the
new requirements are not as
scary as one might ·think.
· The following are oome of
the rumors that you may
have heard regarding ·the
new sewage rules, and the
facts to help you decide how
the rule changes will affect
you·, your property, and
future development plans.
Myth:Ail sewage system
owners will ·be required to
upgrade their existing sewage
system to the new rule standards on Jan. I, 2007.
Fact: False. The new law
Ohio Revised Code 37 I 8.02
specifically states that all
systems in existence and
operational on Jan. I, 2007
shall be deemed approved
unless they are causing a
public health nuisance.
Myth: The health department will be implementing
annual or regular inspections of all sewage system~.
Fact: False. The Galha
County Health Department
does not have the staff and
resources available to conduct annual or even Inannual inspections of every
sewage system in the county. The new rules do require
that the health department
conduct a one-time operational inspection on all new
sewage systems within 18
months after the sewage
system is installed.
This inspection is to verify
that the system is working
properly and to provide an
opportunity for health
department staff to train and
educate the owner on proper
maintenance and operauon
of ttle system. Annual
inspections ·will only be
required on sewa~e systems
in which a vanance was
grant by the board of health,
or on an aerobic system with
direct discharge installed
after Jan. I, 2007 under an
OEPA discharge permit:
Myth: Traditional septic
tanks and leach lines will no
longer be allowed to be
used.
·
Fact: False . The new
sewage rules emphasize
proper soil and lot characteristics to properly design a
system that will work for ·
the owner.
Site and soil evaluations
and reviewing criteria will

a

."

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Keeping Gallia,
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jrlformed
Sunday TUN!S·Sentinel

Mary Fowler, Director
Peoples Choice Travel ,
City National Bank

PageCs

'

Gallla • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2155
Malon • 675-1333

�PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
After 75 years, Frankenstein stomps on Miners' tal~ is major drama
..• this time on .DVD anniversary e&lt;Uti~n

Sunday, October 29, 2oo6

INsiDE
Down on the t=.m, Page 02

•

Dl

6u8ap Cimd ·6tntinel

Gwcllnil.g,PageD6

a warren of tunnels and
interconnections try to save ·
SCHMID
their lives.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Duggan was a "ni~r," a
come to Hollywood in 1930
The studio feared · the
"Fin and Brimstone: relatively low-level Job that
and had proved his taste and movie would be too scary Tlte North Butte Mining involved going through the
artistry m "Journey's End" for audiences and so an Disaster of 1917." By mines to collect tools for
and "Waterloo Bridge."
opening sequence was Micltael Pllnke. Hyperion sharpening. It was a job that
gave him a detailed knowl"Whale's visual style filmed in which an actor Books. 338 Pages. $24.95.
of the mine, much betedge
added much to the film," appeared from behind a cur~··
When fire breaks out . ter than would be had by men
remarks Chris Horak, cura- tain to warn theatergoers.
tor of the Hollywood That proved unnecessary at especially in the narrow workjng in only one area.
Facing fire in seemingly
Entertainment Museum and the film ' s preview. The confines of an underground
a lecturer on film at UCLA. viewers .screamed but they mine, the namml desire is 1o every direction, Duggan
"There were a lot of other also seemed fascinated.
try to escape . Manus collected nearly two dozen
horror fih'ns that never
·"Frankenstein" made mii- Duggan· a,nd J.D. Moore miners at a dead-end tunnel
became classics. Whale had lions for Universal, and mil- became heroes by recogniz- where they walled themunique style in his work."
lions more when it was re- ing the need to do· just the selves· in , stuffing cracks
with their clothing, hoping
. Karloff was more of a released as a double bill opposite.
gamble. He had been a char- with "Dracula."
More than 2,000 feet the fresh air inside would
acter actor in films since
Laemmle ordered more below ground, fire erupted last until rescue came.
Hours passed into days,
1916, often cast as a villain. films in the horror genre, in the Granite Mountain
Whale saw a soft side to including · "Bride
of mine in Butte, Mont., on the air would no longer
Karloff and thought he Frankenstein" and "The June 8, 1917. Flame, smoke keep their candles lit and
could bring empathy to the Mummy." He went on to and poisonous gas killed men began to pass out from
produce other hits such as 163 miners in what has been lack of oxygen and water. .
role of The Monster.
Duggan .went back, per· The other essential mem- "Imitation of Life" and called the· worst hard-rock
·ber of the team: Jack Pierce, "Show Boat," becoming an mining disaster in U.S. his- haps looking for men who
weren 't able to walk, while
an inventive makeup artist independent producer. He tory.
In his book ·"Fire and the others were lifted to the
who had worked on died in 1979, still an object
Brimstone," Michael Punke surface and medical aid.
"Dracula."
of derision.
A few thous~:~nd feet away,
"Every morning Kadoff
Whale continued making carefully describes how the
would report to the studio his stylistic movies un1il he blaze broke out, the efforts a half-dozen men led by
and sit four hours while retired to devote himself to of miners to fight the fire Moore also had walled
Pierce and his assistants pamtmg. In 1957 he and to escape from it, and themselves in, saving the
applied the makeup," says drowned in . his swimming how some died and some lives of most when rescue
came after 55 hours.
Scott Essman, who has writ- pool. His life wa~ portrayed . were able to survive.
But the most riveting draOne dazed miner, Manin
ten a book about Pierce and in the acclaimed 1998 film
take
place
thousands
of
Garrity,
was revived with a
mas
lectures on.Pierce's career.
"Gods and Monsters." . ·
Making Karloff seem a
Pierce
remained
at feet below the ground as . whiff of ammonia and then
towering menace proved to · Universal, supplying make- groups of miners working in coffee.
be a tedious process. Cotton up for the "Frankenstein"
rolls were applied on his head sequels, "The Wolf Man"
to make him seem taller and .and other films. Dropped by
square-headed. Electrodes · the studio in 1946, he
were installed on each side of worked in low·bl)dget fil,m s
his neck. Coats of makeup and television and died in
made his face seem stolid.
obscurity in I%8.
BY RANDOLPH E.

BY BOB THOMAS

at Universal Studios. (It was
first presented to gasping
audiences 75 . years ago on
LOS ANGELES - The Dec. 6.) His father, Carl Sr.,
terror of "Frankenstein" who founded the company in
dates back to 1818, when 1903, had presented his son a
Mary Shelley wrote .the unique 21st birthday present:
novel. Many theatrical ver- oommand of Universal's prosions followed, as did silent duction. The young man was
films; the first made by derided by the Hollywood
Edison's company in 1910. crowd, who referi'ed to him
Yet not until James disparagingly as Junior.
Whale's 1931 version was
"Junior had a lot more on
the horror movie accepted the ball than people .gave
by audiences and studios as him credit for," says cousin
a classic genre.
Carla Laemmle, now 96.
Universal has unveiled
"He was called a rich
the DVD "Frankensteinman's son. That was true,
75th Anniversary Edition," but he did have a vision i:llld
which includes the new dig- a sense of what people
itally remastered movie, a wanted," notes the fonner
biography of star Boris actress and ballet dancer
Karloff, plus featurettes, who once lived in a bungaincluding one about the ' low at her uncle's studio.
film's influence.
Despite his father's disapUniversal is giving the • proval, he believed that horsame
treatment
to ror films Would be popular
"Dracula," which was also with the masses. He proved
released in 1931. But no his point with "Dracula,"
horror picture quite cap- which starred Bela Lugosi
tured the realism and style in the vampire role he had
of Whale's "Frankenstein." played on Broadway.
"It's one of those iconic
Encouraged by the film's
films that had a lot of influ- success, he bought another
ence," comments Rick Broadway
play,
Jewell, a University of "Frankenstein" by Peggy
Southern California professor Wehling .. Lugosi and direcspecializing in · American tor Robert Florey had been
films of the 1930s and '40s. assigned to the project, but
"It really established the hor- . Laemmle decided to try a
ror film as one of the. more different team.
The British-born Whale
potent genres in Hollywood."
Carl Laemmle Jr. produced turned out to be an inspired
the first "Frankenstein" talkie choice as director. He had
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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View of the beach in Cancun, Mexico on Sept. 26. Cancun's new beach, built by pumping 96 million cubic feet (27 million cubic meters) of sand from the ocean floor,
is the highlight of an extreme makeover the resort has gone 'through since it was savaged by Hurricane Wilma on Oct. 21, 2005.

BY lOAN GRILLO

"The white beaches are what Cancun is
all about. So we wanted to make sure we
were getting that same silky sand that peoCANCUN, Mexico - Carl Johnson swd pie love, and a lot more of it than before,"
his bean missed a beat when he saw the said Patricia Lopez of Cancun 's Convention
beach outside his Cancun timeshare.
and Visitor's Bureau.
He was expecting little sand a year after
The new beach is an average of 140 feet
the reson was savaged by the most intense wide, compared with an average of 70 feet
Atlantic hurricane on record. But what he . before Wilma, officials say.
saw took him by complete surprise.
The resort's avenues have been lined
His patch of golden-white sand had with 6,000 new, full-grown palm trees and
tripled m size, stretching a ~aping 140 feet · almost all the shops and restaurants have
toward the crystal-clear Canbbean water. . reopened. ·
"After the initial shock, I just burst out
However, there are still sporadic conlaughing. It is so weird when you are used struction sites in the row of nearly 100 towto seeing something and then it completely ering hotels that fill the Cancun skyline.
changes," said Johnson, a 50-year old airIn October, about 10 percent of the
craft mechanic from Chicago. ·
hotels were still having work done, with
Cancun's new beach, built by pumping 96 the last scheduled to be finished by the
·
million cubic feet of sand from the ocean end of 2007.
floor, is the highlight of an extreme
Diana Cedillo, 43, of Laredo, Texas,
makeover the resort has gone through since booked a room next to a hotel crawling with
it was punished by Hurricane Wilma on construction workers. But she srud the work
Dolphins jump over tourists at the Xcaret eco-park near Cancuri, Mexico on Sept 28. Mexican
didn't bother her.
Oct. 21 .. 2005 ·
.tourist.
officials are promoting tl1eir Caribbean have~ as being fully revamped and made big.
Mexican tourist officials are promoting
"I haven't heard a thing. And as there
ger,
better
and more glitzy than it was before hurricane Wilma pounded it last Oct 2005 and
their ·caribbean haven as bemg fully are no tourists in the next-door hotel, then
revamped and made bigger, better and more our bit of beach is that . bit more exclu- many of the nearby attractions like Xcaret park were not so bad!~ damaged during the storm.
glitzy than it was before Wilma. Public and sive," she said, sunbathing on a tranquil
shore, with most visitors ferried into pons mally works as a chef.
·
private investment for the rebuilding has · stretch of sand.
"All we have here is tourism ..That is what
totaled $1.5 billion they say.
However, Scott Gardner said his parents on smaller boats.
One of the main piers should be finished we all live by," Ortiz said. "So we gave
In many aspect-s, the reconstruction has came to the Cancun Palace to find it was
everything to get those
been a Herculean success, letting most under construction and were shipped off by the end of the year, and the other will
tourists enjoy their holidays oblivious to down the coast to the Moon Palace.
be completed sometime in 2007, offi- .,.,_illt'-----..,_,~tourists back. We all
the destruction that wracked the reson a
cials sa1d.
wanted to. make
year ago. Bikini-clad sun bathers line the
"It's a bit of a pain because I have a 45Tourists have responded well
Cancun live
beaches, honeymooning couples sip mar- minute drive from my time-share to be to the
rebuilding
of
"-OU
again." garitas in hotel pools and crowds of red- with them,'' said Gardner, 39, of Mexico's Caribbean coast,
faced revelers croak karaoke songs down at Washington D.C.
with their numbers ris--.
Senor Frog's disco. ·
Some resorts used the opportunity to
.
II
h
•
.......... 1V GO·• Him.
·
dramatlca y as t e
December
""" season beg'
.
105
But the devastating power . of Wilma remodel and upgljlde their premises. The ing
spring and summer
dry
. and ·lasts until about M
1n midwrought some damage that could not possi- Ritz Carlton invested $15 mjllion to expand months went on.
season. Rates are llO
·
ay, Wh•ch is also the
bly be fixed within 12 months, and signs of the size of its rooms, add tennis courts and
By
August,
mer lWid fall. but )'Oil also lis~~aiJY_ cheaper during the sumthe wreckage can still be found in corners build a Cl!linary center before opening in Cancun
hotels
• 0" umcanes and tropical storm
of the Caribbean retreat.
September.
were filled to 79
Carmen, ·Isla Mlfieres ful:mThed nearby resorts of Playa ~I
"We thought that if we are going to
Wilma came with little warning, swelling
percent capacity,
'lliCe
dufirW the storm, 1111 han Cozumei Suffered some damfrom a tropical storm to a Category 5 hurri- · rebuild, then -let's make it better. If it takes
drop from the
famous CC!tlll reefs
ave mostly recovered The
.
cane in under 24 hours, then pounding II months, then so be it," said marketing a·.
86 percent in
~ars before they were also hit hard by the 5 t
·
region's
Cancun for two days and nights, felling director Rafael Vazquez. ·
2005, but an
• AIINOlA"'CfS· rec&lt;wer fully.
orm, and it will be
roofs, hurling palm trees and submerging
Wilma has also left scars in the pearby
sion,
b • The area has suffered from a r
streets in stinking flood water.
jungle. Thousands.- of trees were ripped e nco u rag i n g
number
under
•
8ErnNQ
A::!f:!:!'"
be found in and around ~nt locust ill\l&amp;When the storm finally retreated, an 8 out of the ground and thrown into dense
the
circumhot
nvunD:
Public bus
ancun.
mile stretch· of beach was almost com- piles that exploded into forest fires dur- stances .
es shuttle guests betwee
e 15 • restaurants sho 1
pletely washed away, exposing a line of iqg the summer heaL Environmentalists
Cancun resident
&lt;:ar rentals are ~tn··eas:~~~:~ and the airport. Taxis andn
ragged rocks.
, say the woodland will take decades to
Maria
Ortiz,
.
41,
!laVed, lind it is usually ea:r optiOn. Roads are wellHowever. worldwide beach erosion has fully recover.
.
their way around.
Y for foreigners to find
led to rapid advances in the techniques for
Yet there are still millions of acres of jun- says those who live
•
fliNt
Mil
Ill
.
.
COCiWA~.
there
deserve
some
its reclamation, and Belgian company Jan gle for tourists to visit, and the forest's
of the credit . Ortiz
(118tion on Which ho~ ..
For up-to-date inforde Nul made Cancun a showcase for its Mayan ruins were untouched.
joined
thousands
of
resi
under
e
s
are
still closed or
·
The biggest problem remaining for the
newest technology.
dents
in
cleaning
garbage
construction
go
· Two ships sucked up sand 20 miles off tourist industry is a Jack of cruise ship
off
the
streets
after
Wilma,
http:f/WWw.cancun:into.
to
the Mexican. coast, carried it ,to the shore piers on the nearby island of Cozumel, one
•
and used colossal pipes to lay down half a of the world's busiest cruise ports. For and she then helped with construction
at
the
hotel
where
she
nor·mile of beach a week.
now,. the big ships will be moored offASSOCIATED PREss WRITER

r~-,

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sandwiches, ftesh baked rolls to homemade desserts, drop off delivery to
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CaJJ Hometown market and ask for Debbie or Richard 992-3471.

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·
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~enus
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=: :

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••.,

�i.unbap limH·ientinel
"

PageD2

·DOWN ON THE FARM·

Sunday, October 29, 2006

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

Sunday, October 29, 2oo6

·•

~ribune .-

,.

Sentinel - l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
,

EXTENSION (ORNER
Finding a use for those fallen leaves
Bv

bloom and leaf growth.
Where should you plant
What are you going to do your bulbs'? Pick a wellwith the. fallen leave s in drai ned site that has plenty
your yard? Rake them up of organ ic matter and a pH
and create a compost pile. · of six to seven. Plant the
The soil created by com- ·bulbs in ·a sunn y, well posting will improve the drained ,locati on so they can
garden beds next spring produce another bulb after it
with rich organic matter blooms. Planting under
teeming with microbes and deciduous trees (trees that
earthworms.
lose their leaves each fall)
A compost pile may be will allow' suffi cient suncreated by alternating layers light in the spring for most
of leaves (carbohydrate plants to mature and form
source) with grass clippings, another bulb .
Daffodils, crocus, Siberian
fertilizer or manure (nitrogen source s)'. Add a few squill , windflowers, snowshovels of gardel) soil which drops and early-!lowering
provides the necessar~ tulips: Triumph, · Parrot and
microbes, bacteria and fung1. Fosterana types, do well
These micro-organi sms under such conditions. Later
use the nitrogen and carbo- blooming tulips: Darwins,
hydrates provided, as a food Lily and Cottage types, lilies
source as they grow . and and fritillaria need inore sun
reproduce. Their growth to develop next year's bulbs,
cycle breaks down the so plant them in open sunny
leaves into the rich soil we garden beds.
call compost or humus. A
Scatter your plantings 10
four-by - four- by- four- foot to 14 day s later than a
or
westernpile of shredded leaves will southern
break down into just a few exposed slope.
How should you plant
shovels of compost.
For more information on your bulbs'? Mass plantings,
composting, please call the either f(Jrmal or natural,
Extension Office at 992-66% work better than single line
and ask for fact sheet CDFS rows. Clump bulbs in groups
132, ''Compostingat Home." · of five , seven or larger numbers. . For larger bulbs like
•••
Fall is quickly becoming tulips and daffodils, allow
winter, but it's nol too late eight to 12 inches between
to plant hardy spring bulbs: bulbs so the bulbs can multiDaffodils, tulips, hyacinths, ple in the forthcoming years.
The general rule is to plant
crocus and lilies need to be
planted now in order for bulbs with the pointed end
their beauty to be enjoyed up. Cover the bulb with soil
next spring. Bulbs need to three to four times the depth
be planted in the fall to of the bulb, i.e ., a daffodil
grow the root systems need- bulb two inches in length
ed to support the spring should be covered with six
HAL KNEEN

to eight inches of soil.
Water your bulbs after
• planting, especially the first
fall season to ensure good
root development. An inch
or two of mulch over the
planting will extenil the
rooting time for the bulb.
The mulch insulates the
warm fall soil from the
coming winter weather.
Mark your planting so that
you don ' t accidentall~ dig
them up when creatmg a
new spnng flower bed.
If you have problems with
mice, chipmunks or squirrels, plant daffodils and
hyacinths as they are not
readily eaten by these creatures. Most other bulbs are
quite edible. In small numbers you can plant more edible bulbs in 1/2 to 3/4 inch
hardware mesh wire boxes. ·
How should you care for
the bulbs in the spring?
Keep the areas weed free if
possible. Fertilize with a
low nitrogen, but high
potash and phosphorus fertilizer like 5-10-10 or 6-2424 at two pounds per I 00
square feet just as the bulb
. growth appears and again
just after they ·bloom. Make
sure to prevent seed heads
from developing ·as they
pull plant strength from
bulb production. Allow
foliage to mature naturally,
don 't cut ·off or tie up green
leaves after blooming or
bulb production will be
greatly reduced.

Galli a
County
OH

E-mail

cl~ssified@ myclailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
H OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

R

S V

R AD N

675-5234

•

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Submitted pholo

Larry Marr, commu11ity outreach consultant for the Gallia·Vinton Educational Servlce
Center, is seen preparing for an upcoming class in home electrical maintenance.

Monday thru Friday
7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Home electric repair class offered
CHESHIRE - Adult stu- cles, and how to repair dam-·
dents will have the opportu- aged drywa ll areas .
nity to learn some basic
Students attendin g the
s.kills in home electrical classes will also construct
repair in a series of classes and wire a special project of
taught by Larry Marr on a portable shop' hght with
Thursdays, Nov. 9, 16 and 'switch and duple" recepta30 from 5:30 to 7:30p.m . at . cle. The project will be
River Valley High School.
taken home at no charge.
In these three classes, stuThese free classes a~e prodents will learn how to vided by Gallia- Vinton
replace switches
Educational Service Center
tacles, add lighting fixtures (ESC) for parents and comand additional wall recepta- munity !Jlembers in the

and recep- .

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
Couffly Agricultural and
Natural
. Resources ·
Educator, 'Ohio State ·
University Extension.)

Gallia County Local School •
District ,to encourage adults
·w participate in their local
school community.
Class size is limited to 12.
Interested persons may register for this class by .contacting Larry Marr, GalliaVinton ESC Community
Outreach consultant, at
(740) 245-0593 'or by e-mail .
at 90_ lmarr@ seovec.org.
Participants are asked to
register by Nov. 7.

t

ANNouNcEMmrs

r
I·
r

No Hu~tinWfraspassing on
any propel1y of Robert L
Wingett's Estate. Previous
agreements &amp; permissions
voided.
Ruth
Strode
Executrix.

r

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Gn.'EAWAV

Wprd Ads

plsplay

Dally ln~Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Jn-rtlon

All Dl•pl•y: 1;1 Noon 2
Bualn••• Days Prior To

In Next Day•a Pap•r
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Publication
Sunday Dlapl•y: 1:00

frl•~•v

Thu ...ct.y for Sund•y•

DOWN

1 Puth
2 Slender candle
SChqe

various educational awards.
Plan .to attend the annual
banquet and enjoy the meal.
Tickets for the banquet are
$10 for adults, $5 for children 5-12, and children
under 4 are free . Tickets can
be purchased in advance by
Oct. 30, 2006. If you are
unable to attend the banquet, and wish to vote by
absentee ballot, come in or
contact the office at Ill
Jackson Pike, Suite 1569,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, or
call446-6173 .

• · - Gala s-f'

5 8iulhlna
.
6 Put on fie ~~*ice~
7 Lila some sldlls
8 - ll'd 4lbet
9 Pial's 'OK"
10 BoWit ll1imlll
11 Geoo lilllok:olf9Re
12 '£loU' et.13Tr•., '-a
t 4 Old Qlllllllll
15 ·- Artter.·

16 CJne.ceiledCINiure

171illflllr
18'Miby--

19 Slcul tiVIIy
20 Clloe at lea lime
30~CIIy

32- olluNy
34 Glvufllpe ID
37- poelca
38 Obsorvo

40FWman

Along Vermont's ch~se trail, artisans
open doors to gotTnet cheese aficionados
•
GRANVILLE, Vt. -The
biggest investment Daniel
Hewitt made on his sheep
farm was a cheese plant that
feature s a tasting room with
a view - visitors can watch
t~e art of cheesemaking
while
sampling
hi s
European-style tommes and
blue cheeses.
Hewitt's Three Owls Farm ·
is located in the heart of the
Vermont cheese trail, where
arti san cheesemakers we! come visitors to their dairy
farm s in hopes of educating
customers about their craft
and .drumming up business.
" It 's important having
people know where their
food and local cheeses are
co ming ·from ," He witt
said. "The more educated
.people become about thei.r
sources ' of fo od, the more
likely we' ll get good food,
I believe." ·
Visitors drop in from
Boston, Quebec and New
York. Some have downloaded the cheese trail map
from the Internet; others
wander in. When they time
it right, they get to see
cheesemaking. Other days,
they can see the animals and
sample the cheeses.
At Three O wls Farm, visitors can pay $250 to be a
cheesemaker for a day - a
hands-on .experience that
· mcludes mtlking the sheep.
"There's nothing like tasting the products, to sell people on them." said Jonathan
Wright, of Taylor Farm in
Londonderry. "This is one
place where people c an
reall v come and see the ·
process of cheese making,
they can see the animals,
they can make the real con-

nection to how these prodUCtS are pr(JdUced."
Before the .cheesemakers
developed the trail, Vermont
already was on the map in
the cheese world.
The state has the highest
number of cheesemakers
per capita, said Cillheril1e
Donnelly, co-director of the
Vermont Institute of Artisan
Cheese in Burlington.
They produce more than
100 kinds of soft and aged
hard. cheeses ·using milk
from cows, goats, sheep and
water buffalos.
·
Most are made from raw
. milk rather than pasteurized milk, which cheese-

41 Yes!
&lt;42 Ploct in ,..
48 T..,.,lllimlll
48 l'llnllhool.
50 Spine

5111rag

52 Head "' WhlriDn

58 SIWoo

makers say is more flavorful. And from farm tO farm,
the flavors and textures
vary like wine.
"Taste can be altered by
the temperature of the room
in which you ' l'e working,
the size of the holes in the
mold in which you d[ain the
cheeses, just the bacteria
that are in the milk from
your farm ," Hewitt said. ·
That flavor earned Cabot
Clothbound Cheddar produced , by
Cabot
Creamery and Jasper Hill
Farm in Greensboro - best
in show at the American
Cheese SoCiety's annual
competition in July.

55 N1110111 opening
56 Love PIIIOiilied
58 Fallule 01 a Fom
eo Benetl
61 Songft-danco
show
82 - ninisllr
65TUI1
67 ~'s pe11 nome
71 Rlvtl' in Eng1ll'd
73 ClllUe
75lslt011liiie
n Fillhlll
eo Pftdln
81 R...,.,_y (llltt.J
83 Se1 ead

'

• All ads must be prapald'

I

YARD SALE

I t'o

• 'l

I riO lfiuWANJTJ) l .ot'.o_Hru&gt;
__w_~
__l t'o lhuW~

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assem ble crafts,
wood ~ems.
To S480/v.1&lt;
Nov 1-4. Anti que items,
Materials provided. .
dishes, cast' iron ware, old Free Information pkg. 24Hr.
cane cha irs, library ta~e
801-428-4649
lamps, Mise, items. 9:00 • li'~~~~~~"ii
5:00. 31353 Nobl e Summit
Road, Middleport. Rain or
I

4t

YARD SALE·
l'oMERoY/Mmoi.E

100-M • ·

101 Manila' ilUPifkr

102 Set of belleta
103TNCIW

105 Ttxallandmaltl
107 Sign 1111
109 ll1lngil of Ylklt
111 Kild Of edlpoo

- - - - - - - '---iiiiii!iiooo_.j

112 Sidestep

White cat wttan spots on

t 13 Dud on Mleell
liST•
116 o...dllrge
lar1ickels

1

1~::~~~:i.~U

1~ :::..llllop

123 Flooring pieces
125 Bed (prelixj .
130 Hilllnl'llllll (abbr.)
, 132 ""-'I
134 ~!seller
137 SlndWicl1 stGi1

1.411 F&lt;ench ri:le
1.411 Weep
149 To pieces
1508w
151 Hadcneyed

··

153,..,., ..... ~

155 Mlp bo&lt;*
.
156 AIitie wei
' 158 NlwiDn "'Asimov
t59 /lvt expiolioe,
tar sllorl
t60 Wondti1ul
163 Dletorv
166 Cly In t.ievada
169 Byway of
171 Poem

tlead &amp; t811. t:Hack collar. Abso lute Top Dollar: u .s.
Sliver and Gold Coins,
(740)446·9636.
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs. Pre·
~~ :\ND
1935
u.s. Currency,

•
r

I

FOUND

~~~~~~~~06~S8~or::;.(7;40:)7:09~·~t9:3~1·...,

;:

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'a For Sale.,............................................ 725
Announcement ........... ........ ......................... 030
Anllquea ...........................................,........... 530
Apon1mento tor Renl ................................... 440
Auction and Ft.. Morket .............................oao
Auto Porta &amp; Acceoaorlu ................. ..... .... 760
Aulv R-lr .......................................... ... ,... no
Autoa tor S.le .............................................. 710
lolita &amp; - . . l o r Sate ............................. 750
Building SuppiiH ........................................
..,.._. ond Buildings .....:....................... 340
BU81i1M1 Opportunlly......., ........... ..............210
BU81_. Trelnlng ....................................... l40
. Cllmperl &amp; ••:........................ 790
Cllmplng Equipment ................................... 780
Cllldl DIThanka .... .............. ...............,........ OIO
ChllciiEtdorly Core ....................................... 190
Electrlcaimelrlgeratlon .. .............................840
Equipment tor Rent ....... ...=......................... 480
ExcaVMing .................... .............................. . 830
Form Equlpment... ....................................... 610
Farm• for Rent ..............,....................... ....... 430
Forme tor S.le ..........:.................................. 330
For LMIII ....... ................ ..... ......................... 490
For Sole ........................................................ 585
For Sole 'or Trode ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Yegetableo .....................................sao
Fuml8hed Room1.. .......................................so
- o l Houllng .............. ............................. 850

172 Born (ff.)

m Anlilk:le
175 Depol(llltt.J .
176 Fteur-de- -

Holzer Assisted Living Gallipolis
has
Em p Io y m a n t
Opponuni1ies to r Full
Time. Part Time and as
needed
Resident
Assistants. Prefer experienced STNA, but not
required. Please apply in
person or sand Resume

to

attention: Diane
Camden AN. DON.

Solitaire Diamonds- M.T. S. ll;;;
EO;;;iE;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=.-ll
" - - - - - - - Coin Shop, 15t Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446FOUND: Small male Terrier, 2842_
60 pOlling place workers
white &amp; black on BeJhel
needed. No e"nerie nce
Road (304)675 2634
,......
•
needed. Must be ener.getic
euying Junk Cars, Trucks &amp; and able to work 7:00AM
l ost- Brown &amp; White 3 yr old Wrecks, Pay Ca st! J D until 7:00PM Tue sday,
male Boxer On Mitt Creek Salvage
(304)773·5343 November 7th. Must also be
(740)446-0731 or 741J.44t· (3().4.~674-1374
· available for one day of Paid
7573.
~----..,-- training . (Bn)B34.Q430.
- - ' - - - - - - Cars any cond. or babla.
k""Mit!~llost:Bover/Maslrtf
in (74o)38B·B228
·
Evergreen area. Very frienc:tAn Exc:ellent wwy to earn
ly. Fawn color, answers to
Th N A ·
Ace. Reward. (740)441 - Want to buy new end old -money.. e ew von.

1381dlll'l140 Of balled clay
t-42 $ld(
144~

junk .carsttrucl&lt;slva,.. 74(). Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
416-1594 or 741J.4t6·t 588

-- - - -WIH pick up unwanted and

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sh
5
. k
Ph
II.
irley pears. 304·
.
8 ~eye1es.
JUn
one 675 1429
.
(7401379: 9278 please leave
'
'

.,

88 HoaiiiUid
·90S.....

94 USUIIIIood
96 - lhe line (obeyed)
96 Sing jazz
.

G-81f ...................................................... 040
ttoppy Adl ............... :....................................oso

H8)T • Gr11ln ..................................................640
Help Won!H ....:........................ ................ .... IIO
Home lmprove.-.ts...................................810
HOIMI tor S.lo ..:.... ..................................... 310
Hou..tlold Gooda ....................................... 510
ttou- tor Rent .......................................... 410
In Uemorlilm ................................................ 020
lnlurence ....................:... ...................... ....... l30
Lawn • Gorden Equipment........................ 660 ·
Llveatock .......... ......... .............. :.............. ......630
LMt ond Found ................................,.......... 060
Lola &amp; Acreoge .....................,...................... 350
M1-'1o.-ul••.'...........................................170
lllacello.-u• -cllandloe .. ..................... 540
Mobile Home Repolr ....................................B60
Mobile Hometl tor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homel lor Sole................................320
Money 10 Loon ............................................. 220
MotoiC)'ciH &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Musical lnstrumentl ................................... 570

GM11POUS - United Producen; Inc. nlllrlU!t report

from GaJ1ipolis for sales conduct£d 011 Wednesday, Oct. 25.

Feeder Cattle-St~dy/Lower
275-415# St. $80-$129 Hf. $80-$122 425-525# St.
$80-$ 118 Hf. $80-$110 550-625# St. $80-$115 Hf. $80$100 650-725# St. $80-$105 Hf. $75-$95 750-850 SL
$80-$95 Hf. $70-$90.

Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fieshe&lt;l $46-$52; Medium/Lean $42-$46;
Thin/Light $1 0-$30; Bulls $50-$59.

f'eNonala .........,,.........,................................ oos

Pels tor S.lo ................................................ 550
Pluinblng • Heotlng .................................... 820
ProleUioNtl Servlcea .................................230
Rlidlo, TV • CB R-lr ............................... 160
Rol Eatole Wonted .....................................360
~lllnotrucllon .. ........ ....... ,...................150
s-d , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sllulllonl Wonled ....................................... 120
st&gt;-lor llolnt.............................................460
Sporting Goode ...........:...............................520
SUV'a tor S.le..............................................720
Trucks tor Sole .......................:.................... 71 5
UphOIIIary ............................................. ...... 870
- F o r S.lo...............................................730
W-10 Buy ............................................. 090
WMilH to Buy- Form Suppllel ..................620

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $550-$885 ; Bred Cows $3 10-$750;
Baby Calves $20-$230 ; Goats, .$22:$80; Lamb s,
$98.50-dn.;' Hogs, $41 -$43. ·

Upcoming specials:

Wen~*! To

Do .............................................. I 80
Wlnlld 10 Aent ............................................ 470

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

Y..a Slife- Glllllpolla....................................072
YM'd Slile Pomeooyllllddle .........................074
YM'd S.le-Pt. Pleulnt. ................. .............. 076

\

BANKING

I

\11'1~•'1\11

\I

Banks. ~: CredltAnalystl,

PO bo&gt;&lt; 647, Jacicson, OH
456&lt;'0 or to hrOoakhillbanks.com. Please reference Job Code f599E,
EOE, MIF/DN

TRAINING CENTERS

Help Wanted

. Help Wanted

·-

'Lilf.n....nu

•:~~=~
c; 1~· 24-IIOur R.2.o

For inlomYtion, please contact:
Anpe Clellind
Director of Nursing

c- une"
10526-5606

(304) 675-52l6
AA/EOE

$$ STNAs $$
NEW WAGE SCALEII!
Arcadia Nursing Center is now hiring
STNAs lor afternoons and night shifts.
Full and part time positions available.
Come join our caring team!!!

TnunrnQ m 'Mfheville. V11-gme

' """"~ Mil..

: . ;j,;~~
. •4ltK
·- - .
'PrafiCSIIIri"!!
. Plietv_,.
. • Po~llolldly•
. Emp~oyooDiscounto

differential, excellent salary,
holidays, health . insurance,
OH 45131.
J!!E!i;;;;;~;;;i;;o;;;i!;;;;;;;;;I!J
sincle/family plan, dental, life
Help wanted at Darst Group
insurance, vacation, lone-term
Home, working with elderly,
heavy lifting involved. 740disability and retirement
992-5023.

Help Wanted

1

i

Ext. liS
! Al&gt;lliY "' lhe at- r2&lt;l.c:cm i

=====-===~
Help Wanted
Help Wanted

l

RENT ·2-0WN

j

Help Wlltnted

Quality Control Manager
'

.

Join • dynamic small company where your decll~tlon and
commitment will mal&lt;e o difference. You will be responsible lor
honda on qllllllty ma,._ment of a dlv""'e group of monolithic
refr.ctory producta ot our -lcoted production laclllty,
loclted In eouthem Ohio. A, degree In ceramic Engineering and
experience In monoiiH:tlc refractories are desirable, but not
required. The QC Monoger will conduct row material, process
and finished product tasting; Interface with customers
-rdlng moterlal-tlon que1tlono or complaint&amp;; and
molntaln computerized d~ , ln~ludlng product, TDS,
MSDS, and -latlcal QC. S.lory Is nogotlable , depending on
qu811flcattons and experience. An excellent benefits package Is
provided, Send resume to:
The Nock and Son Co. ·

Pleasant Valley Home Health/Hospice
and Private Duty is now hiring
contingency Registered Nurses lor home
care cases in Gallia; Meigs and Mason
Counties. Flexible scheduling. One year
nursing experience is required. ,.
Or more information, contact
Tia Wooten at (304} 675-7400.

ALLIANCE

"Manager Trainee
• Cusioolo&lt; Sales

Bol 716, GlilllpoMI,

e

TAAClOR- TRAILER

$10/Hr.

1

v

ox...-.

REGISTERED.NURSES

• FULL·TIME CL.I.S$ES'
'COL TRAINING'
' FINANCING AVAILABLE'
' JOe PwtCEUENT' •

••"'!

~

Help Wanted

LEARN
TO DRIVE

Help Wanted

-==He=lp=W=a=nt=ed::;;:~=H=e=lp=w=an=ted==i ,j Ready
To Hire
' EWMIX'IO

Please apply in person or call
740-667-3156
Ask for Jane Ann Casey

' ' 1\\ lj I '

Overbrook Center Is currently accapling applications tor
full and part ttme AN's
Competitive wages and ben·
efits package available. AI!
Interested applicants should
pick up an application at 333
Page Street, Middleport,
OH. For additional inlormation please contact Hollie at
(740)992-6472. EOE

BODVSHOP
Modi Home Hoanh
MAKE MORE MONEY I
Agency, Inc
TECHNICIAN
•$1.5M\our
CftidH Anllyot I
Experienced only. ICAA cer•Full and Part time
tified a plus, smoke tree
Full Time LPN for our
schedules
Very successful indepencl· wori&lt;place
Gallipolis office.
•Medical Benefits
ant bank has career opporApply In person at
•Paid Training
tunlty for a Commercial
Smtih GM Superstore
We offer competitive
•
Vacations every 6
1900
EASI:ern
Ave
Crnt Analyst I. The suesalary, beneliis package
mont!ls
cesstul candidate will have
Gallipol~ Ohio
and 401 K. EOE
And Much More!
the ability to analyze and
Glenn lawson Shop
review personal and corpoManager
Please send res~..me to:
CALL TOOAVt
352 Sec00d Avenue,
rate tax returns , financial - - - - - - 1-877-463-6247
statements, credit report:S Deve's American Grill is now
Gatlipotis, . OH _~1.
ext 2341
and other relevant informa- accepting resumes tor
Atln: Vlcl&lt;i A~. .
tion to determine the flni!n- Ass istant Managers and
Clinical Manager
cial capacity of an indivld.ult applications fo r all other
or business and the ability to positions may ba plcl&lt;a&lt;f up
re - pa~
borrowed funds. at the front office of the
Minimum
qualifications Super 8 Motel. Please Do
require an Associate Degree Not Gall the mo1e1 as they do ,.
with ali emphasis in finance, not have res1aurant info.
aooountlng or general busi·
nesS or equivalent experi· · 0rn1gn EnglnMI"-2 .V'·
ence as a Commercial
manutacturlng cllelgn
·
Credit !\nalyst, in&lt;l PC prot;.
Autocod
Pleasant
Valley
Nursinc &amp;
ciency. Position is based in
lmawllf'IL Apply •
J cl&lt;
Oh'
E 11 nt
2150 e~
A
Rehabilitation
Center
has
openinp
a son ,
10. xce e
~,.,.
vefor Certified Nursinc Assistants.
compensallon and. benol~s.
Golllpolll, 'Ohio "'
5 an ...
• resume a·•
-·mo
..... sa1ary
·
- to SFS
Twelve hour · shifts, shift
·
ts t o: 0 ak H'll
1l\lcl&lt; ~......,
Inc. PO
requ~remen
1
-.
, •

a message.
'

·I

lfEt.p WANIID

5e

sso

BSS.~

.

lliuWANDD

300 Briarwood Dr.
Gallipoli s, OH 45631
(7401441 ·9633

LivEsTOCK REPORT

Nov. I , 50 preconditioned calve s, I 0 a. m.
For more information. call Brad at (740) 584-482 I m
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241.. Visit the Web site at
www. uproducers.ci'Jm

For Sundav• Paper

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
· addedtoyourclasslftedads
(.~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per od
l,!iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

Ads

• St.ut Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • Indudt: Complete
Ducrtptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•ttona
• Indude Phone .Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should lllun 7 Days

Items

..

Gallia SWCD vote, banquet slated

Bv USA RATHKE

l\egister
(304) 675-1333

~

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NL N

~ribune

To Place

•!

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia in order to vote. If you are
Soil and Water Conservation . unable to attend the banquet
District's annual banquet is and wi sh to vote for superThursday, Nov. 2 at Buckeye visor, you can either vote
Hills Career Center. ·
prior to the banquet from 6
Voting will again be held to 6:45 p.m. or contact the
pri9r to the )lan(fuet from 6 SWCD office as soon as
to 6 :45 p.m. Four Gallta possible for .information on
County landowners are can- voting by absentee ballot.
didates for two positions on
. In addition to the election,
the board of supervisors.
awards will be presented to
Cooperator,
Candidates are Bryan Cox, Outstanding
Joe Dailey, Angela Owens Outstanding .Farm Family,
and Robert Woodward.
Outstanding Farm ·woman.
Service
Eligible voters do not Distingui shed
have to attend the banquet Award, Big Tree Contest and

Websjtes: ·
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

PO Box40368
Clevelond, Ott 44140
or vii email to
sales@nockemtaon.com
An Equol Opporlunlty Employe&gt;

AA/EOE

1-800-334-1203
Help Wanted
Help Wanted

Help. Wanted

Activities Assistant·
Enjoy a new career in
long-term care!
Arbors At Gallipolis Nursing
. &amp; Rehabilitation Center is
currently seeking a Part-time
Activities Assistant to
.enhance our existing resident
activ ities program.
Please submit applications to:

170 Pinecrest Dr.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Ex1cnd1care Health Service,_ Inc.
is an equal opponunily employer 1hat
eneourages workplace di,er&gt;ity.

Help Wanted

e

INFEOlON CONTROL/
EMPLOYEE HIALIH STAFF NURSE
PART-TIME
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for Part-time ·
Infection Control/Employee Health Staff
Nurse. Appl icants must have a current
West Virginia RN license. Computer skills
required. Knowledge of or background in
infection. cMtr91/employee health
beneficial.
Health insurance single/ fam ily plan,
dental plan, vacation and retirement.
Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 67Hl40
Fax (304} 675~975
or apply online at www.pvalley.org

It'sClmrr
better
here.
filii milk• lllflerenct
1

We sef\le the world's largest nonprofits and
the most influential conservative political group~.
Better Par' • Better s~hedule • Better Benefits
.
$8.50 per hour 1 Day and eyentng shtfts 1 401(k)
Medical 1 Dental 1 Vision 1 Paid holidays 1!. vacation

AA/EOE

·-

- -- - - - - ---------·---

,.

�Page D4 • 6unUp ._..lihntitld

DIIIVE

Pomeroy • Middleport •

AehabliMOOn Center, a 100-

bed skit~ nurs.ing tacH~, Is

Drl¥lng Job

-

Awlloblo

Houseclaanlng. Referenoes. 7-room House, _.,118 frame, Ranch style homo on 2.6 G•lll• Co. Rio Grande, 4 bedroom house, Addleon
FREE Estimates. Two located
below
Point acres owrkloking ttle beau· MObley Ad. 8 acres co. water Pika. Ph. (740)441-9760.
"""'""·Call (740)367·7422 Pleasant in Gallipolla Forry, tlful Ohio River In Long NOW $11,9001 Vinton, graet - - - - - -- on Johnson Lane toward tha Bonom , Ohio located at 12 aero homeolle $23,500.
A-ont
. leaf removal. Please call hill. Large lot, large garage, 81818 SR 124. This six Kyger, 10 acres $13.900. Local company ollorlng "NO
(740)2-'5· 93 10 or (740)339- fenced yard, new paint, car- room house indudtl 2.!5 . . . . CO. SR33 to Cook DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
3612.
pet, electric, heat furnace, bedrooma, ona full~ and Rd., 5 acres 121 ,500 or grams fol 100 to lloy 100r
Ray &amp; Son'&amp; Complete Car water pipao. Priced- a three quarter bath. 1421 t andakOf Rd. $16,500. homo lnotNd ol rooting.

currentty seeking a MOS

Nurse ~o manage wtth our
Canton, OH Motor Carrier Program. Candidates must
years of van or reetei- expe- management

experience.

rlenoe to haul loads out of EniO\' an exoellent support
Jadooon, OH.
system from oor Regional

f

•$500 Sign On 8onUI
~ 111 mi...
....tcty PlY .
•lete ~I Frelghtllner
Condoa
•No NYC or C.nMII
&lt;115% no touch height

36_7_-7_129
candidates tiOn of secreta,ry in the keeping and fix meats in _
_ · _· _ _ _ _
should
apply
to: College of Liberal Arts and downtown (lalllpotls or Rio
Attention!
Rocksprings Rehabilit(ltion Sciences for the Soda! Work Grande
area .
Phone Local company offering ·No

Driver
FLATBED OWNER
OPEFIAtoAS NEEDED!
•Avg. St ~JUS&amp;· loaded •

.n

mile

·. cp

m on fuel ·

,
•Flatbed Tra1lers Ava1lable
6 months ~TR exp.
required
.SO DOWN LEASE

StartPURCHASE
yOur buelness

I

•Low Monthfy Payments
•Aatbed Trailers Available

8611-713-2776

.

www.maoneconlrllctorl.e
om

Energetic sales oriented
people needed tmmectiately.

No eocperience neoessary.
Must be money motivated
self starter. High income
po1ential fo r right person .

Call

. now

(8n)634~

r•

·

Here we GROW again!
Friendly, Efficient Office
Staff Needed for Busy

Chiropractic Office.

Pleaoa

HAND·DEliVER resumes
to
Back
to · · Heatth
Chiropractic, . 1OA Old

Airport Ad, Gallipolis. Call
(740)«6·7460 for mo;e
information.

Holzer Medical Center is

acoeptlng applications for a
part·~me CRT "' ART. S~
months expet"tence is pre-

ferred. Cendida18 must be
lb6e to perform with a team,
as well as independently.

Must. be ooinpotent

in'

all

respiratory therapy procedures, ventilator management, EKGs, Hotter moni·
torll and be part of the Code
Blue Team. Hours wil val'y
and weekends And holidays

will apply. Please cal Wilma
McNeal at 740.395.8555

11.4~.

Temporary
positions.
Sensttlve
situation
for
unarmed seoorily officers.
84/tlour
work-week.
Approximately 5954/perweek. ApptY with lmac on
Thuraday Nov-2 1rom B-3 at

Apply in person from noon-3
at Duke Cleaners. 656
Secon? Ave..

:..C'-'--''-----'----- Painters: Painters are needed at the Oickirson
Corporation in Riple'f, W\1.

in
the
Switzer
Conferences Room. Must
have a valid driver's license
and proof of insurance and
pass a drug Test
Large, Local
Property
Casualty Agency seeking
quality. individusl in1erested
in Career. P&amp;C license pre-

Competitive com-

ferred .

Local Employer looking to
hire. full time Receptionist.
Must be fast leaming and
able to muHi task and handle
stress Computer knowledge
is a plus. Pay starts out at
$8.00/tir. Please send
resume to CLA ~ 558 r)o
Ga.llipolis Tribune," PO BaM

469, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
l:.ocill

Manuf.:turer
looking for weldlra.

P-. •Pl'ty In -

II:

.

SFS lfuOk Sileo,
2150 Ealom A -

GIIIIIpolla, OH. ·
No ptoono ..tt.

p-.

LPNIRN's
needed
1n
Gallipolis. Ohio. Pediatric
caSe Days/PT Call Pr~mary
Care Nurs1ng Serv1ces at
800-518-2273 or 6141-7640960 and ask for Jean.

MEOI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY
OPENINGS FDA

....... PRN AN ......

Cltmcsl Manager al
(740)441 -1799 or 1-800-

481-6334

origin,"' ony lntwntlon to
- . •nv such
preforenco, llmhltlon or

••NOTICE••

dlocrimlno~on."

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of consumer
Aftalrs BEFORE you refi ·
nance yo ur home or

This newsp.per wll nol

~.:::_
~rHI

ettlte whlch Is In
vtoldon at tht llw. Our
.....,. .,.. hereby
lntonned thlt 11
- l n g l - l l d In
thlsnewsp~~perare
av1btM on •n lqUIII
opportunity bull. •,

I.

.

tion. (740)446·8855.

c

01 14, 8-5.

Shop
Classifleds!

- - - - - , . .- - Taking applicatiOns, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 car garage,

2

2001 , 16&gt;00, 2 acras, 10&gt;16
bedroom house on State
bull~lng, appliances stay. Route 586. Pats wolcomel
shin~ed roof, nioe oountry Call (740)44 Hl194.
sening. $57,000.· (740)256· --~----8801 .
2003 16•80, Aeetwood,
3BR, 28A, vinyl siding, shingle roof, oentral air included,
nice Home. Call tor pricing.
Daytime
(740)388-0000.

Apply at Ferrell Gas,
8239 State Route 58B or
call 17401245-0493 or 1.
800-642•1327 _

Tribune

PO

"e

Gallipolis Bakery
Outlet Store. . DUties
include register operalion, lifting and moving
inventory,
stocking
sh8tves,
answering
phones and asslsting
shoppers.
Qualified

applicants must be 18
1'88"' of age and have a
HS diploma· or GED.
Individuals must be
available to
work
M onda~ · Satu rd ay ,

9am- Spm, and wort&lt;
20-40 """"' per week.

The position pays
$6/hour; · no benefits.
Interested persons may
apply in the Gallipolis
store located at 1108
Eftstem Avenue. No
phone calls, ptease.

EOE.

r:-::::::~

~=~ ~~

Join the winning team!
Training- Two week ini·
tlal &amp; orientation classes
with continued ongoing
tmining.
llan1g ....-. The best
management team In the
country to assist 100.

Long Tenn Care and
more.

...""

~-Sing­

u~..........,
established a 35 ywr
reputation of~,
integrity and outstanding
OJStomer service- before
and attar tna sale. With
the hottast products on
the markat and as the
fastest growing dealership in our region, we're
adding SOles Assoctetes
to better aervice our

customers.
ft 100 are looking to stsrt
a

new career or maybe

ycu donl

leal

you're

paid

or treated as wei as you

shoukl be and K100're
tired of worioing lor
someone who isn't
working tor you , give
Pa,t Hill or Brad SartQ

a call today
(740)-446·9600 01'
1-800·272·51 79.
person at
195 Upper fihver Ad.

Gallipolio, Ohio

Turlley
help
woman.

"-'"11

T....,or

~"""

Fll'lll, Olio 1111, Ohio

(740)812-7470.

Is

property

I

~ . ..

.-~

New Helix Cuts Curl also
verifiable ecp
f&lt;Ml Hilte, price vary dependCall1-aoo-..62·936S·ask 1or ing on length . of hair.
Kent
"Where• All About You, sixth
~--,...:c::;_____
and Main St. Pl. Pleasant,
OTR ·

,.....

Raady for a rawanllng and WVA 304-675- ! 411

challenging career? Apply
tor a CHHA dass beginning
Nov. 6. Applicatlono must be
submitted bV Nov. 3. We can
assist with }ob placement
and also have posltiOOs
for f'CA, CHHA and

_.s
STNA. (740)992-o990

hi~e.

1998 Chevy Ve nture, Great
Condition, 2 built-in child
seats, 2 sliding doors. CaU

Oebi
Adkins
license
MSIS8ge Therapy 20%-off
TURNED DOWN ON

No Fee Unless We Win!

1-ll88-562-3345

SEALS, a mtJ!ti.type library
I~ I \ I I '- I \ I I
consortium earvtng central
and southeast Ohio, invl1es iiiiio~;;;;;~_;;;;
resumes for lhB position ot
"""""'
Clerk Trauurer. This full- L _ _.;fOII.Iiii.OSiiAIE--.,.1

.. _;;;;;;;;

dutiae, and minU18 taking.

..,

1 112 Story, 38r./Bath. All
electric, Riverfront property
on Buoktown Road, Letart.
Porch &amp; Oeok. 740·949·

2253.
Asaociate of Arts Oogreo In - - -- - - - accounting or a related fletd 2·story, 3 bedroom, 1 bath·
required. Extensive knowJ. room house in Chester. 2
edge of accounting and car garage, large lot, asking

business

administratiOn $68,000. 740-949-,949

through 8 3 bedroom home for sale on

minimum "' 3 1'BBrs of expe- land contract. 5 mies from
rionce. A complete job Holzer or s1ore. (740)388·
description is available at:
8228
_
_ ·_

_ _ _ __

Jobdtagiptloo htm . Salary 4 bedroom, 2 bath, double
30,000 - 35,000.
garage, pool, 2 acre s,
Eastern School Distri ct.
send a' tetter of application, 740-982·3465 after 5:00PM
a current rewme, and a list
of three professional refer· 4 rental houses •For Salew
enoes to: Marion Cochran, Good income produ ci ng
262 W. 13th St, Walston, .properties. Great location!
OH 45692. Mus1 ba Prlce(s) ere Negot1able.
Seller!
In
received by 4p.m. Nowmber Motivated
Gallipolis. Call Wayne
8 . 2006.
(404 )456-3802.
Tractor Trailer drtvent with 2 - - - - - - - YfS COL and oome flatbed
experience . Ortver avoragea
Auction

IY8r'f -

a-.

end. Oolivorlng

to OH, KY, VA ,WV, IN 330-

527·2789.

Concealed

Pistol

located on Forest Run
Aoad, Aaane,
· Oh'10. Call

-~--'~-'-)~_9-,·2_6_5_8_

&lt;_•v_•_ni-ng_s

A,anch Style Home; Yost
Road with 2 Acres. 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, garage,
enclosed breezeway. Pool
and Spa . included.

$83,500.

Cell 740-992-

r

Lors &amp;
ACRF.AGE

OnN In. Nurolng homo.
I have opanings lor 2
lem.tes ,2 mates 01' a cou. pie 1n my horne. 24 hf Cflte.
25 YfS. _.,., toe, ratal

llartlng ., s1,500
(304)675-6193

Rome Aulo Setea
(740)441·9544.

with carport. Refldep.
required.
$375/mo.
(740)446-4762 ..

tie work. $2,600 (304)6752263

1967 Olds Toron ado, very
oondnion, newer tires. - - -- - - - $1 ,700. Caft (740)«1 -7390. 84 Honda Shadow, motorcycle, 2 windshieldS. Honda
good

·• 2 bedroom Apt. available in

Syracuse. $200.00 deposh
$350.00 per month rent.
Rent Includes water, sewer,

Butcher lambs-$1 .00/lb plus
butcher cost. We deliver
after butcher w/1 30 mi.
1740)-446·9814 evenings or

Jim:s Farm Equipment

!rash. No pets. Sufficient

, 2150 Eastern Avenue

Income needed to quality.

Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740)4.4&amp;-Bm
Get 100r Early Bini Service taaw massage.
II~\ '"l'l II~ I \
dona n&lt;M before the spring

740-378-61'1 1.

rush

on

your

Farm

·--iiiitiiitiiii-pl
•

3BR,

1997 Plymouth Breeze, 4 CC:M!Ir, SJI:C. cond. New bat~
leather
saddle

door, 4, cylinder. $2,199 tery,

(304)675·4624

------- ------Happy Ad
Happy Ad

II! I\

OH.

Phone

or (740"'"

r·
....,

.Arline Davis
Getober !8, 1000
How Preeloue are the
IWIIt memort...

The l11111ily or Opal Ruth Gaul \\'kkhlll)l ~ish
to

praise are ntt..ml to E-.ting Fuaeral Home for ·their kindness~ to
Rev. and Mrs. Herbert Grate.for their numerow;
given to apaJ~to!l
\isits and his consoling words at the sen-ices: to
forhis leadership, t;dafyln Wilrox for her comforting music: to all
his
who visited, sent cards and flowers; and most

Ellm View
Apartments

Auction

Auction

Auction

•Central haa1 &amp; AIC
•All electric· avera~ng
$S0.$60hnonlh '

· baby bed, dr....r NDnCE TO TAXPAY·
wlmlrror, &amp; chester drawen~ ERS
Ref8ntnce:
$300,C8fbed$25(304)675- 5715.17 Dh!o Reviled

•Owner PaYS water, sewer,

67.17

•Waoher/dryer hook&lt;41

(304)882-3017
•

.lfH;bon, \'tolbi, GIIIINI Co. • Mint In 47lnll*

Prime Hunting Lltnd
Super Buldlng Stt. • DftelopiiNIIt P"*nlill
Woods- Crwa·- Pondl

-

Code

Afmineral~

e:AI==:-111!!11!
m
lOcations. ' .
"One,,.....,

IAucllon:

&amp;Rt 93 Jackson, Ohio. Propelties in vllioos
Buy lilY indiWilallrld combination oflraclsor wllole pi~.
0. . . . . olleftdln SoufMrn CM!Io"

WEDEMEYER AUC110N BARN
GIFTS. GIFTS, GIFTS
CHRISTMAS AUCTION FRIDAY
NOVEMBER 3, 2006 AT 6:00 P.M.
LARGE TRUCK LOAD!
SOMETHING FOR EVERY ONE
286 TRAIL END ROAD THURMAN,
OHIO 45685 CASH/CHECK HAS TO BE
APPROVED WITH/10 NO OUT OF STATE
CHECKS. LICENSED AND BONDED
STATE OF OHIO 115149
PHONE: II 740-245·5078
AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY AT
7:00P.M.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

For a det lie ~ bloChln call

1-800-45CJ.3440
wwvi.wilnat.com

Auction

Auction

Auction

~--~ il::'ullt
Real Estate. &amp; Personal Property

Auction

A:cHln
.

Toddler Town Laugh &amp; leMn Oily care, LLC.
202 Evan Avenue, Oak Hill, Ohio 45656

Saturday. November 4th, 2006
10:00 a.m.

Owner: Ester C. Salser
P.O.A.: Pat L PerldQS
49471 State Routa 681
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

Ooen House. Oct. 26.3-5 PM &amp; Oct. 28. 1!1-Noon

wsaudrlvera, Craftsman 112 inch drive s ocket s et, rakes, s hovels,

out bUilding not gone through yet.
A u c t -: Billy R. Goble Jr.· Cei1 740-416-1164
Aucllonzlp.com or email : captbil165@yahoo.com
Ucen- In favor of the state of Ohio
Food will be ~erved. Terms : cash or check with positive ID.
Announcements made 1he day of the auction take prec-nce ovar
ail pri nted material. Bring a chair and dress l or the -ather.

JET
·
AERATION MOlORS .
Rapatr~ . New &amp; Rabui~ In
Stock. Coli Ron Evans, 1·
1!00-537·9528

.,;ch.

pets,

$300/month

Ret/Dep,

(304)675-2749

Garage
Apt
2br,
$2BO/monlh. ln.Mason, WV
Fifst and last months ren1 in
advance. . (304)773·5040 or

(304)773-9181

STEEL BUilDING: MfN·
lNG· Must se~ quanzet style
SIN building. 25&gt;34 paid
$8,no wltlsacrffioe for quiok
sale $6.«0. brand new, still
on pallet. Call HlOQ.352·
0469

Real Estate Sells at Noon
Joe Moore, Broker/Realtor
Alan K. Haley
Auctioneer/Realtor
740-441-1111
See Details &amp; Pictures

www.evans-moore.com
Oomniorclal Gnock Kltcllon Equipment
Vulcan Six B u"ler Stainless Steel Gas Range/Oven, Eagle 3 B ay St.ainle~'&gt;s
Steel Sink with Right Side Drain &amp; Grease Trap, Arctic Air Refrigerator,
Stainless Steel Serving Trays &amp; Cart , C::hest Freezer. Microwave &amp; Utility
Cart, Stainle!!is Preparation Steel Tll.ble , Stainless Steel Stock Pots. Above
Equipment Is Only One Year Old and Jn Great Condition.
laloud Equipment
High Chairs: Cribs: Koala Care Changing Stations: Assoned Toys
Equipment
Li ttle Tykes Cars. Li nle Tykes Sl ides. Tricycles
Toddler Equipment
15 S Unite Storage Cubb1es: Adjustable Tables WI M llfl y Chairs; Approx . 50
Napping Cots: Teacher Desks: Computer Desks and Much M ore
Offict' Equ ipment '
! Large File Cabin~ts. Small Fi le Cabinet"; Chairs. Fax . Table!&gt;, Computer
Equipment , Hund Held Wa y Radios: T\' and Cart.
VCR &amp; DVD Pla;er
For Pictures Go To

Pior

ww"" . Haleyauction~ .Com

TERMS: 1~~~~ Down day of auction
Balance Due within 30 days
No Contingerx:tes
Personal Property, Cash o~ Check with 10

.

The Melg• County
Boltrll ol Revlllon IIIII
ciomplelld b wor11 o1
equeliDtlon. The ...
retumt tor tu year
heve been
rwiMd MCI the Wtluat1on1 complalad and
.,.. open tor public
lnt~J~Ktlon In the
omce of .thll llelga
County
Auditor,
s-.1
Fl-.
Courtlloute, Second
Strell, -oy. Ohio.
Complaint• tgalnat
lhe valuatlona, 11
•lllbllthed tor tar

-•t

year 2006
be
made In acconlltnce
with Section 5715.19
ol thll Ohio Reviled •
Code. The1e co•'
plltlnta -.1 be filed
In
thll
County
Auditor.. Dfllc:e on or
- t h e 31st daly ol
~rd1 2007. All plltlnta flied with the
county Auditor will be
hiiMI by t h l l - ol
Revillon In thll provided by
Section 5715.15 of the
Ol)la Revl8tld CocMo.
Mary T. Byer-HIII
llelgl County auditor
(10) 27, 29, 30, 31, (11)
1,2,3,5,6,?'

Love,

The Members of Deer Creek
Freewill Baptist

BULLETIN BOARD

Nice Mobile Home
Lot for rent

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Qwner. ~ W111on, TfUIIIIIa

'

Auc:tlon

.

.

Kenmore 9 CU»cfeet. Chest
Garage Apar1man1 for Ren1 Freezer Hot .Point Wasloer
(304)675-5375
2123 t f2 Lincoln Ave.· lbr, $100
no

deserves
all. but when
think of PR.o:tnA
Mickey Ma;vna1v!
and his
Ann, we are teminded of love. Gods!
love. love requires much de,vot.ranl
and Mickey is certainly deserving.
our love and f/lankfulness for that
so much more. He is truly a -""'""~
shephen:/, always giving', caring
prayerful Thank you for being a
of our Chn'stian Walk.

·Public Notice

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

OLD GLORY AUCTION
HOUSE

Auction

during her

staff and therapistS at the Holur Medical Center,
the Rehab Unit, and Holzer Hospire in Gallipolis;

trash

Auction

famil~·

JHaess and subsequent passing.

304-773-5447 OR 304-l'l3·5785
Terms: Cash or check wilD

Auction

licensed &amp; Bo~ed in favor otthe &amp;tate of Ohio &amp; wV

thank each and CVf.TY one for tht love and

support shown to her and her

ExecutriJC Anna Willis

~""""

Come out and enjoy a fun filled evening.
Everyone welcome.
Something for everyone!
Food &amp; Refreshments Available
Auctioneer Jim Taylor 110014
740·992·9553

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

C0.#66

SM . Dan, 28TH.

1409.

461 S. Third St. • Middleport, OH
NEW ITEMS AUCTION Oct. 30th
Monday 6:00 PM

In Jllemory of our
Dar Mother,
and Orandmother

0
Equipment. CBII for appointAUIDi
mant.or drop by. Plokup and ~w-..;,I'ORiliitiiSAIE
___.
deliver avatlable

In Memory

only

RICK PEARSON AUCTION

Rocksprings area . Deposit
1111.
- - - - - - - - and reference s. (740) 992Mobile Home Lot in Johnson' 4025.
Mobile Home Park in
f'74QUAA.20Q3
,. r -

In Memory

7am·7pm bags.(740)36H987.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

~~n~~ 7':)= ~~:et woC:S:t:r. N !~-;

GQ.IIipolis,

The family of
Grover C. Long
would like to thank our friends,
neighbors, and Tho Flrs1 Church of God
for all the kindness, love and support
Mown to us at the death of our husband
and lather. Words cannot express our
thanks far all the prayers, cards, food,
flowera and many visits: We would like to
thenk Scenic Hills Nursing Home, Holzer
Senior Care Center and Holzer Medical
Center Hospice for the excellent care
given. Pastor Paul Voss for the touching
service at Willis Funeral Home.
Thank· You Mal\' Long Penny Haner,
Edith S1out, Denise Null

Thanks to all the doctors, the ent.irt nursing

3644

s-

Dan, _ _ . . _

tBR hJrnlaned apt. Su~at;e
for 1 Bdult. Private drlvaway

' Special Edition 660A
"03"
Ratte r white
Brother's
exhaust, ve~ fast. needs ttl-

2003 Ford Taurus

encas, ~I alec. (740)446-

Ohio, WV, Nov. 4, 2006 ,.
$75.00.
9:00am. VFW Dlqc!!ont from Ptrklrsbura: take Roulot 7 to caution fight-turn
Mason wv. (740~3-5555, right onto
Route ell-follow 681 (approx. 3/.4 mite) to
74().4 16-3329
.Morelltnd Addition-tum left -wlltch for auction tlgna.
FJO!D Pomerpy: follow Route 7 to Cllutlon fight-turn left onto. sGlllllpollo c... COIIogt
Roulll 681to- 681 (approx. 314 mile) to Moreland Addition-tum
(Coroeoo Clooe To Homo)
Coli Todayl77,
..rt. W. hllve commlaslo- to Mil thll peqoottl property of
HOQ-21-62
lflra. s.t.r due to her lllneu:
.gdpolilar-..n:ollgl.com
""'•pllold Item• lncludlna: pota lo """'' diahlls, nice m..,..
AcctWdilMI Member AccMCI!I:Ing
kitchen lltble w/4 chMrs. couch lo living room chitin, glider rocker,
Coud for lmllp l idli4 Collegel
..., 5ctloc*; 12748
rocldng c:hlllr, 3 piece cedar bedroom tult, C&lt;ldtr wardrobe, niCe
drwulng table, end tablet, lamps, bell collection, Fire .King cups
tnd .....,.,., Fire King mixing bowtt, ClOke platet, aenrlng tntya,
TY't, nice corn. thlllf, Compeq computer &amp; printer, cookbOoks,
file
Cllblnets, Mayteg washer 1o dryer, water bed. ·
Amos and Son's Trash
Service, Firewood &amp; Exna Col!tctlble! : old qullta, old 33 and 45 records (Eivi1, a..tlet &amp;
Hau~ng . Reasonable Rates.
mtny o - country stars), oeveral pieces of costume ,lewttlry,
Heap Aooapted . (740)388- rlngt, neck'-cet, broaches, doillet, lldlet handkerchief!, aprons,
0371 •
crock bowl, HI of Cuc:noslovakla china, knick knacks, lo much
morw ... box• not yet gone through
·
WUIIIlJ
ThDo
ll!!!ll.; Cr.tteman 12 hp. riding mower, push mower, hammers,

r"

ntshed, eacurtty deposit
/ required, oo peto, 740-9822216.

'

Auction
November 4, 2006.10:00 A.M.

Glasa

1 and 2 bedroon'l apartments, furniShed and•unfur-

"'ewides stsrting at $199.84

~======::.-=======::.-=======::;
Hc&gt;r-.

$600.00 to $900.00 ,.,.

home -

building. In private setting,

(740)367-7997.

Card of Thanks

·card of Thanks

bottom

Pl. Pieeoent all app. fum., all
New 2006 Clayton siri· elect 304-675--4060

Auction

t· SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

time pel'800 is re&amp;pollsble
for · maintaining all fiscal
records accord!ng to the
provisions of the ORC, HR

place and outside staraga

Sue Underwood Spedai 4001 .
10%-off perm, color, cap

88&amp;-993-0990.

. . {j ...... ,. . ....... . hnD;JJwww qval lll ph usiCT

SALES
ASSOCIATES

i

ts Dump Div 1 - r

p!1ldlco ocqulrad

liJiiJIIIJ!!I

lender

service announcement

• •T-.~
H'"
Rca.~
IIUU\JIIg MW
mng at

r---.. •

__ . _In

469

R&amp;J TRUCKING from the Ohio Valley
:P:u;bll:sh;i:ng:Com:::pan=y)=~
Leading The Way
u-..

Sara LeeiHeiner's is
oaeking a customer Qri.

Box

Gallipolis Ohio 45621 _

3 acre. Wlnew roof, heat
pump, S.S. Skle by side and
air fiHration, electric· heat,
w/stand by propane fire

(7o10)3B6·8017, month. (740)44Hl3tO

s

"
,
per month. 1rade-ins wei- 3BR home- SA 554, Bidwelloomes. can (740)385-2434 . $575/mo- sec. dep. refer·

hours' Class B with haz·

ardou s materials and
tanker endorsement.

Hazmat &amp; Tanker win be
considered, local route,
good houn;, good benefits
CLA Box ~· c/o GaH~is

Evening

2BA home- VInton Ave.
$375 mo.+ sec. dep. You pay
utilities. Gas heat. (740)446·
3644
_
---=--_·- - - - -3 BOA + 2 , 12 baths, 2 car
.garage, all appliances-- close
to Holzer hospital. 750

licensed. (This is a public

ParHime driver, flexible

Position Available

Fuel tl'lJCk cfrtWr, must haw
Class B COL Hazmat &amp;
Tanker preferred but Non

TRACTORS &amp; TRAILER
M.F. 230 Diesel4150 Hrs, M.F. 263 • 1690
Hrs. Rops , canopy, Cub Cadet 2206 lawn
tractor 20 H.P. 46" deck, 6x10 utility trailer
..
EQUIPMENT
.
Vicon DMP 2800 7 ft. disc mower, Trip
type loader fits 230 M.F., M.F. 256 hay
rake, N.H. 253 Grinder mixer, N.H. 273
Hayliner square baler. N.H. 329 Manure
spreader, D.I.' 1 Row com picker, Kuker 55
gal sprayer, Claas Rolan! Round Baler
1996 model, Set cultivator, 5 round bale
feeders, 2 gravity wagons , 3 .hay wagons
Gehl 14 ft., Troy built Pony Reartine tiller,
Sev. Tobacco Trays, lots of fence posts, 2
plows, chain saw, garden tools,
steer stutter (needs work) &amp; more.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Sofa, recliner, entertainment center,
bookshelf. and more. ·
VEHICLE

ca1S

Cell (740)645-6150. 6, 14 &amp;
16 wide's to choose from.
3 bedroom house close to
library and schools. No pets.
Great used 3BR home only (740)446·1 162.
House and Lot for Sale! 3 $9,995. Will help with deliv·
Br., 2 Bath home on approx. ery. Call (740)385-~671.
3 br. hoose for rent Park Or.

S2B

Cell VoCI&lt;o ReynoldS. RN.

Alll"'llettateedvertJ-'ng
In thlt new paper ls
tubfedto.the Fedlrll
FaJr Houalng·Act of 1181
wllk:h - .. h lllogoltv
ldverllse "any
peeference, limitation or
dltcrlmlnltlan btHd on
"""'• cotor, notlglon, " '
fltmlllll status or netionll

MOBIIJ':
I'OR·SHOMEli
..

•
t
S~481mol 4 Bedroom HUDI
n.u:.
1
•-,.;oiiioiiiiii-r
4% down. 30 years
8%.
'
For listings 800-391-5228
2000 Fleetwood 14K60, like - eKt F254
new, central air, 2 bedroom, - , - - - : -- -- big bath, stove, $15.500.
2 Bd, 4B0 Paxton Rd, $275
14x70 Clayton, 3 bedroqn, ·month, $275 deposit, WD/H ,
1 bath, stove. refrigerator, 6 months lease, you pay UT.
new carpet , excelleni condi- Hud ate. (740)446·2515, not

of requests for any large
ad~ance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1--866.
278 .()()()3 10 learn if the
mortgege broke 0
r
r

Monday·Friday

PEA HOURI '
$42 PER VISIT

~:::1'0:::1..0:·AN==·=~

r

I

rTO

long-term disability insurances, retirement. and paid
vacation. Apply In person at
The Oiddrsoo Corporation,
At 21 &amp; 1-77 Ripley, WV
25271 (304)372-9111 ,

You may also apply in
HAS

------Nice home In Spring Vtllley,
3BR, 1.5 bath, nlca neigh·
bomOOd. Oovo 1740)441 ·

llcated tr.i Pl. PletSIIIt, WU. Take Rl2
south 6 112 miles hn left on Send FDIII
Rd. flcress from Belle flementiq. llltch
for •
We'll be setUng the estate
Benny L WelDs.

acre level lot. Well malntalned home.
Reduced r.:~-"'!'~--.....
$89,900.
740-949-8010.
HOUiif.S
Vine Street , Racine.
FUR RENr

obtain a loan. BEWARE

pensation package. Send eon._..,.
resume : Customer Service ' Bonuses, commiai011,
Representative, PO Bo11 haalth care, Disability,

144. Athens, Ohio 45701

Resources
University Of Rio Grande
PO Box 500
Rio Granda. Ott 45674
Email: pmasonOrio.edu
FAX {740)245-4909
EEOIM Employer

"'t···:r .

14
.

We offer neallh. dental and _ _ _ __.:_:___

Bossart! Ubrary. Gallipolis,
OH

n
.- ~
OPPolrruNnY

i

2006

Warehouse Position, RA 1
SO. 332, Point Pleasant, WV
25550. • No phone ~lis
please!

ro

........,....
FIM/DN.
I
equivalent is required. Prefer
Middleion Estates will be ·two year degree in' secretar·
for
ial science. Computer com·
•NOTICE•
acoepting applicationS
a
Home Supervisor pos·•on. petenca in woroj ~•ng, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
"
• ·- Training will be provided. If file management, spread· lNG CO. recommends
sh t d skt
btl h'
you would like to take
ee .;..,..~. ~ pu 5 II'IQ that you do business with
advantage of th is Opporruni- and nmvr ~nt required. people you know, and
ty, application will be taken Previous office expefienoe NOT to send money
at 6204 Certe Drive 6:oo- he~ful.
through the mail until you
4:00pm. An equal opportunihave .investigated the
ty erT'f)loyer. FIMIDN. ~. .
Atl applicants should submit :;offe;:rlng::
. :;:;===~
and
..
.Need HVAC lnstaMer, helper a letter· of....c interest
111
resume onctuuing • names
••oNE\'
and . service tech. Exp. or three ra1erences on or
m·

desired but will train right before NowmbOf 3,
to:
pe,...s. Apply at Coml:&gt;rt
POSTAL JOBS
Air1 160 Jactrson Pil&lt;e.
Ms. Phyll~ Mason, SPHR,
$15.67-$26.19/hr., now hir· No experienoe necosoary.
OirectorofHuman

Fruth Inc. is seeking a an
associate to work in the
warehouse. Qualified can&lt;i-dates must have a valid driv·
ers license. be able to H1 a1
least ao lbs. On a regular
basis, have a high school
diploma or equivakmt, and
be able to tolerate extreme
temperatures. If interested
please mail your resume to:
Fruth Corpqrate Office, attn:
Human
Resources-

and an 11.118ched two car $59,500. · wood· acc.piad
garage. Aleo Includes a 32' ed 7. ""'"" $15,5001 Colt • Payment could be the
&gt; 40 heeled metal outside (740)44 t-lol92 for free mapo oama .. rent
'" with concrete floor. or
visit Mortgage
bull\llng
Locators.
Home is equipped with heal· www.brunerland.com. We (740)367-oooo
lng, cooling, water, and all flM~
- -- - - - - Clean, nice 2br new paint,
electric utilities.
Some
kitchen appliances' are Prime building lot In Bldwel. · carpet, heat pump, garage,
included. For more lnforma· 2 lots' oomblned. Sewer and full basement. Ref, Dep, No
tlon call 740·985-33 1 5(d~· water tap Installed. Paved Pats(304)675·5162
flme).
or
740·992- road with ·allay access.
Modulars and doublewldes For rent, 5 room house ·in

--

FEDERAL

ing. ·For application and free
governement job info, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1913-599-8042, 24Alrs. emp.
serv.

I

111

9:00-4:00pm.
Anemployer.
equal A h'ogh school di""-• or
opportunity

odeyl

6264.

a

C.ll 1-100-652•2362
_ _ __ ....:,_ _ _

overs 37

BR, CIA. clean, new carpet,
nloe love! tot, Rt 633. Small
out bldg. $475 plus utlltlts
&amp; dep. No pais. 740-843-

outbuilding, Green School
;.&lt;740~)2~45-·.;.56.33~.'!""---. DOWN PAYMENr pro·
District. $550/mo. $550
Cmi.D'FJ..omlLcon~y
grams for you to buy your 207t(evening).
Price
allowed. No owner flnanc· GaiUpotla (740)«!Hl974. depoen (740)245-0372. ·
45769. EKtendicare Health ResponsibUities of the postIU\I:o
home instead of renting.
$160,000.00
ing/NO realtors. $39,000 for - - - - - - - Services, Inc. is an equal lion include, but Sre not lim·
• 100% financing
both lots. Must" be sold
oppor1unity employer that ited to; Providing general
• Less than perfect a edlt
..._ • •~ Ill
Auction
Auction
together. Call T.M. Wooten
encourages
workplace secretarial, clerical and Companion and ca re giver accepted
·
•(505)281
·4430.
diversity. MIF ON
technical assistance to the for an elderly person in my • Payment could be the
Social Work Program; regis· home Private or semi private same as rent.
Middleton Estates .will be taring students and main- room with bath . I have 20 Mortgage
Locators.
accepUng applications for taining social work student years of exp&amp;rience &amp; refer- 17401367-oooo
Direct Care Stsn. You woukl nicords, providing reoaarol\ enoe. Call (740)446-4300.
Need to sell your home?
~ part of. a tea":' ~·.t pro- assistance to the Program
• · Beautiful Rarich Style Home
-··ces
to
ondoviduals
Home away from home. ·on 2 1 1~ acres. Must see to
des
'
vr.
"""""'
.
Director, Maintaining promy-thame.oom Late on payments, divorce,
with MRIOD. We prOVIde on gram records for aocredfta· Ekterty men Rnd women in appreciate.
2br, 2ba,
job transfer or a death? 1
(740)8211-2750 can .buy your home. AU cash
the job tra.lning and .gukl· tion, making on-campus my house, 30 years experi- kitct]en, dining room, living
ance. Applications w111 be arrangements tor communi- ence. 7-t0-667-6668.
room, family room,2 car Three~-Be
,-dr_oo
_m
-,--=-Tw-o and quidc closing. 74()-416·
taken at 8204 Carla · Driw ty meetings and other cieri·
garage.
Price reduced Bathroom, oversized two car 3130.
(acrosS from golf ~urse) cal d1J1ias as assigned.
$149,000 080 (304)675· garage, storaga ~&gt;Widing, 1f2
Il l '\ I \I ..,

Center, 38759 Rocksprings Program.
Road, Pomeroy. Ohio

encll

vg.

wv

we wash by -

Sl5-l37S.

Interested

•Homellme on molt week·

House for rent. flon1aroy, 2

Cteaning 26t ~ t/2 Jac:M&amp;on S5,000 wilting-to-negotiate square feet of living space Tuppers Plains 5 ecru " 100% flfllncing
""""""''"'~to, 2000 lwe. F'l. Ploulnt,
(304) (7
. _40_:)4_46-Q628_.:
_ _ _ __ with full finished buamont $15,500. Danville, 26 8Cf1ll • L... than parfoct credit -

terns. We otter competitive The University Of Rio
bath. Perfect credit not
wages and a team·based Grande invi1es appliCations Will sit wtth elderty person or required Payment $52S.
working
environment. for a 20-hour per week posi· persona, will do light house. Appraised SrO,OOO. 740-

•hnlfttl•nd401K

•A

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT

MOS team, which ofters PART TIME SECRETARY hand special complete About $3000 - .. 612 S.
assistance in problem solv· SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM job $4.00 oil. Exterior wash 3nl. Ave., Mkldlepor1. Totally
ing and implementing sysjobs $2.50 off
· remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1

We offer:

Sunday, October 29, 2006
Aatt:AGE

•

hoe _.logs for OTR Class have a 1111lid RN Ohio tk:en·
A COL drivOfs with at least 2 aura and at least one year of

OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
Lors&amp;

®)

MOS NURSE. Rocksprings

Galllpoll~;

Kyger Creek Rinky Dink
Baske1ball and Cheerleading
Sign-ups
Mon. , Oct. 30 Tues., Oct. 31
6·7pm
Addaville Elementary
$25 for 1st child $10 lor other siblings
No late registration

JIMANETTI'S
PIZZERIA &amp; GRILL
(Buckeye Hills Rd. .Rio Grande)
Spaghetti Special
Monday

&amp; Tuesday

4:00 pm • 9:00 pm
All You Care To Eat
Served with a Fresh Gardeo
Salad, Garlic aread and a
Glass of Red Wine
The Best USDA Choice CharGrilled Steaks,&amp; Great Pizza, too
Dine In or Carry Out

740-245-5369
Look for the White FaiTil HOUIIB

Mollohan Carpet
Fall ~ale
.
Commercial Starting at $5.50 yd
Beiber starting at $5.95 yd.
See what the carpet 'man can do tor you .

446-7444
Amvets Auction (Kanauga)

Truck Load Sale
New Items
Nov. 2nd· 6 pm
A GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFT
FOR YOUR CHILD!
Just Mel Music
Personalized COs &amp; Books
November 3, 2006
9am - 3pm
PVH Main Lobby
VeggieTales. Wiggles ,
Bamey&amp;Eimo
For more info please call
PVH Community Relations

ESTATE SALE
November

North of Pomeroy, Ohio .

(played

Presented by:

Featuring

Play

20%0FF
Now thru Oct. 31st
Acquisitions 446-2842
151 SecondAve .

wholesale

446-1998
Wante~

.

French City Shrinettes

Longaberge~

Baskets

JEWELRY REPAIR

as bingo)

as prizes.

20 Games for $20 .00

Sat. , November

4, 2006

Games start at 5:00 pm
Doors open at 4:00 pm
Gallipolis

VFW Bu ilding

3rdAve.

.

Clusters, Bridle, pretzels,

The original

Purple Turtle

Basket Game

Bulk Chocolates
35 varieties
Sold by the pound or

at the

"

H\'MN 0}" PR'm tiSE
1 n our end is our beginning:
Jn our time, inlinit~· ;
In !JUT doubt there is bclit:"ving:
In our lire, eternit~·.
In our death, a resurrection:
A_t the last , a ,·ictory.
Unre,·eak-d until its ~aso11 ,
Something GOO alone can sef.
\Words &amp; Music by Nallllit Slrt:th.l9861

1-740-367-7995

30o/o off
Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.
hiring for Full time RN. Full Time
and Part Time CNA, STNA,
CHHA , PCA, and Per Diem OT,
ST. Competmve Wa~s and
Benefrts including health
insurance and Mileage.
Apply at
1~80 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV or
phone toll free 1-866-441 -1393.

Ever)' deed that· was done ~as ·n~ r~· much
appreciated. Never to bt forgotten ··Aunl Opal"
• ·as loved b~· so many a nd she , in return. ga ve
back that lon~ . Ma~· f.od bless t"ach ont of you.

gum candies, nut goodies

(Denim bags)

Pike/Flatwoods Rd .

'tho!!t who donated to Holzer Hospict· . to The
Gideom:, and to her Church; and to a n~· one t'l se
who helped in '~m)' " '3)' at this difficult time.

Dep. and Ref. required

Bootie Bags

Comer of Pomeroy

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326
PUBI:IC IS INVITEDI

4 9-5

$125.00 mo.

importantly thanks to everyone for their pn1~·ers.
Thanks also to the pallbearers: to the htdies of
Opal's Na7.art'ne Church famil~· and ttle Chester
~• who prepared and sen ·td the d e liciou ~; meal
following the graveside service: to the Chester
Fire Department for lheir kindness and ·llelp: to

Over

savings by the case

Ohio Valley
Warehouse
Jackson Pike
Across from Gallia
•

Fairgrounds

446·6174
OUR BUILDING HAS SOLD
30% off everything
Open 10 am till 5 pm
Saturdays and Sundays only

Immediately

Certified Bus Driver
Applications are being accepted
· lor a long leiTil Subst~ule Bus
Driver with the Gallia County
Board of MRIDD (and could
possibly lead to a full·time
position) transporting enrollees
who attend Guiding Hand SchoOl
· and Gallco Workshop.
Qualifications: Current bus driver
physical , abstract, COL with Class
B endorsement, background
check, and School bus
certification certificate.
Applications are available at the
Guiding Hand $chool, 8323 North
SR 7, Cheshire, O~o 45620. The
Gallia County Boa of MR!DD is
an Eq~al Opp~rtu nity Employer.

through the end of October
Aunt Clara's Collection of

Fine Amish Tnings

740-446-0205
Everyone I nvited
Thank You

Thank You

FREE FREE FREE
Food, Drin ks

&amp;Door Prizes

Gallia Co. Senior Center

Sat. , Nov. 4
5:00 · 7:00 pm
Gallia Co . Democratic
Skip Meadows Treasure

�ianbap lim~ -ienttnei
'

•

PageD6:

GARDENING

'

Sunday, October 29, 2oo6

.

Now's the ti1ne to ensure your
greenhouse is ready for winter

Owen second, on
to state, Bt

Eagles soar, Bt

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR I&gt;P WEEKLY FEATURES

I

NEW MARKET, Va. October is the time of xear
when greenhouse gardeners get serious.
. The, emph;~si s changes
from simply stretching the
growing season to plant
survival, . ensuring that
tender shrubs, vegetables
or flowers make it through
the potentially lethal · c hill
of winter.
An estimated 7 million
American households have
greenhouses, accerding to
Bruce Bunerfield, research
· director for the National
Gardening
Association.
Most use them to over-winter bulbs, perennials and
. container plants; get an
early start on spring with
seed trays; toughen plants
for transplanting; or even
serve as entertainment
annexes, places for wine
and appetizers or just reading a book accompanied by
the sound of 'rain drumming on the roof.
Roger Marshall, author
of "How to Build Your
· Own ·Greenhouse" (Storey
Publishing), does all those
things and more. He also
uses one of his two backyard greenhouses for supplementary home heating.
"After about 10 a.m. on
a sunny February day, the ·
attached greenhouse gets
up to about 80 degrees,"
Marshall said. "I can open
the window between my
studio and the Jean-to and
catch . the aromas from
. AP photo
trees and flowers along This is the time of year to insulate greenhouses to ensure your tender plants survive the
with pulling in some radi- winter. Art Hegeman of New Market. Va., uses inexpensive foam sheeting to seal open
ant warmth."
spaces against drafts and a gas heater that will continue operating despite power outages.
•
Now is an opportune Along with tropical flowers and cool weather vegetables such as spinach, he also keeps
a
time to clean and winterize cockatiel and several finches in his greenhouse.
~
hobby greenhouses. That
includes disinfecting all gies one to l l/2 · (plant good electricity alterna- heated sections of the
growing surfaces; power- hardiriess) zones warmer tives, although they should house, or cover them with
washing roof panels and than they would be if they be vented,
newspaper or other insulatoutside walls to remove were growing in the
" Another
emergency ing materials until the
algae, tree sap and pollen ground. That means 5 to step that can be taken is problem is resolved.
residue; coating the cedar 10 degrees warmer." ·
to dra;n the househol.d
If nothing else, a cozy .
or redwood frames with
Stale air can be a prob- water heater and place greenhouse can provide an
teak oil or some kind of !em with greenhouses, buckets of hot water in offbeat wintertime retreat.
preservative; and Jubricat- espeCially
in
winter. the greenhouse," accord"The best pan of all this ·
mg vent openings and Warmed air should be cir- ing to a fact sheet on the is that oR a cold February
door hinges.
culated evenly · to keep Web
site
Charley's · day, instead of·heading to
"You need to check your pockets of cold from form- Greenhouse and Garden.
Florida, I just walk into
heating ·s ystem early," ing around plants near the
"If the greenhouse starts the greenhouse, sit do.wn
Marshall said. "If you ground.
to freeze, the water will and take it all in,:·
don't, y ou could run into
"If you use a heater, buy freeze first, and as it does Marshall said.
trouble if you need to wait one with a fan on · it," it will release heat. This
for parts."
' On the Net:
Marshall said. "Ventilation wiil give. the plants an
Other winterizing sug- is important. "
additional buffer before
For more about building
·
gestions:
You can keep energy they start to freeze."
and operating a hobby
• Install a layer of inex-·
costs down by using atherIt's also a good idea to greenhouse, see this West
pensive bubble wrap on
mostat to control the beatet, ,. have a battery -operated Virginia·
University
inside walls and replace
said
Mike
Helle,
sales
.
a
nd
alarm
set
to
go
off
if
temExtension Service Web site:
broken panes.·Secure glass
!llarketing
manager
for
peratures
in
the
greenhouse
http: llwww. wvu . edul
or poly sections to the
Sunshine
GardenHouse
in
start
to
fall.
You
always
can
718agexten!hortcultlgreenframework
to protect
Longview, Wash.
,bring treas~red plants into houlbui[ding.htm.
against wind.
"
Most
greenhouses
need
• Stack insulating bales
of straw or hay along only be kept just above the
freezing temperature, not
exposed walls.
• Caulk drafty air spaces. tropical," Helle said. "You
Seal openings around doors can find gas or . electric
· and vents with foam tape. heaters to fit your greenUse aerosol cans of foam house. Think about nonfor plugging holes around.. electrical backups if you
electrical boxes or along want to avoid trouble during power outages."
• F«fE 2~7 ~ 14ochnic:al Support
floors and foundations.
• Drain wat;::r lines unless
A generator is a good
• Unlimited Hw,., No Co1-dl
• 10 E-moil Add,_
you plan to heat your · idea if you value your overgreenhouse through winter. wintering plants. Propane . • FIIEE Spom .
Many greenhouse grow- or kerosene heaters also are
ers, including Marshall,
operate either warm (night
temperatures . 65 to 70
degrees) or cold (night 35
to 45 ), although there are
variations (cool, 45 to 50
degrees, and moderate. 55 .
to 60).
"I run heat into the leanto in winter, where I have
my orc h a~d (of lemon,
lime and banana trees) and
anything else needing ele vated
temperatures,"
Marsha ll said . "We had
enough oranges from our
trees last winter to make
marmalade and we grew
tired of Key Lime pies."
Hi; frees tand ing gre en house, mea nw hile , goes
unheated, used primaril y
for growi ng such tough
cool-weath er -cro ps a ~
spinac h. cabbage and artichokes .
" I ca n safe ly harvest
until Thanksgiving," sa id
M ars ha ll , who lives in
James town, · R.I. " By
using bubble wrap on the
wall s and throwing fleece
covers over , the plants. I
probably keep my veg-

Middleport • Pome roy, Ohio
;,o &lt; 1·. \ITS • \·ol. :;h . :'oio ..) '1

:\10:\D \'r . OCTOBER :Jo, 2006

~s

SPORTS
• Southern keeps Eagles
winless. See Pnge Bl

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Gary Wayland, 69

INSIDE
• Law You Can Use .
See Page A2
• Land transfers.
See Page AS
• Fewer arrests made at
annual Halloween bash
in Athens. See Page A6
.• Ashtabula hopes river
cleanup leads to rebirth .
See Page A6

"""

J.

"'"!.'"'" "' "'' ' · "'"

toPomerov

bc~n. '"w~·re all in this -together,"
and he ha' promised an '"honest. eth ica l and lran,parcnl administration,"
POMEROY - Mak ing hi s first
if dectcd.
offic ial ca m p~ i g n vi sit to Me igs
Strickland also mad e a pledge:
CoUiity since the governor 's race
That be wou ld move the governor's
began. U.S . Rep . Ted Strickl and. Doffice from the Ri fe Towe r where it
Lisbon, recalled his close re lationis no w. '"bal·k ll&gt; the .statehouse
ships with M e i g~ Cou nty conwhere il belongs."
stituents and the support he has tra. Such a move, h~ sa id. would be
ditio nall y enjoyed from both
'ymbolic.
Republicans and Oemocrats here .
" It\ close to the people, it's accesAs part of a tour of the southeastsible to the peopk. an9 it would
ern Ohi o cou nt ies which help make
. keep state gowrnme nt more
up his Sixth Congressional Distri cl ,
acco untable symbolil·ally to the peoStrickland sto pped in Pome roy
p1e. "
.
Satu rday to address supporters and
Strickland ~va' accompanie&lt;.l on
promote t he De mocratic ticket for
hi
s
·vi, it hy two me mbers of the
statewide offi ce. He an·i ved from
sta
tew1de
Democratic tic ket, and by
.Mar ietta anc.l was heading next to •
the Democrat who hope' to succeed
Vinton Count y.
Stri ck la nJ in Congress, Charli e
"Meigs County ha1 been good to
Wi lso n. Wihon won a wri te-in camus and we· ve tri ed to be good to
paign fnr the nomi nation in las t
you:· Strickl and said after introducspring\ pr imary.
-ing his wife, Frances .
Brian J . Reed/photo
Strickland also encouraged sup"This county has suffered a lot .
U.S.
Re
p.
T
ed
Stri
ckl
and
greeted
supporters
after
a
speech
along
the
Oh
io
port
of Debbie Philli ps. the Athens
but you 've worked hard to keep thi s
River
in
Pome
roy
Saturday.
Demonat
runni ng fo r th e 92nd .
\.
region vi able for the futu re,"
Strickl and said . "Thank you for your primary . th at yea r to fe llow Count y told him during his llr.' t Hou se District seat, c iti ng his need
faith, and thank you for cari ng for Congressma1i Bob McEwen · in a campa ign !hat Meigs County was a for support ive Democratic legisladivisive· rnce that many of Mill er's hopeless cause for hi h1 - that he . tors to help with the refo rm s he has
others in your communi ty."
Since he f1rst won th e Democratic loyal supporters fo und offensive. co ul d ne,er w in an e lecti on in proposed .
Jenn ifer Bnumer. candidate for
primary for the U .S. House in 1992 , The liberal-lean in g Stric kl and Meigs or Washington Counties.
"He did n't kn ow what he was Sec retary of State and Richard
Strickland has ne ver lost an e lection ga ined many of Mil lei·'s bipartisan
Cordray. ca ndidate for Treasurer of
talk ing about." Strickland said.
;n Republican Meigs County. U.S . supporte rs.
Strick land said his message du ring State. also addre,sed th e crowd of
Rep. Clarence Miller, immense ly
Stri ckland sa id Saturday a promi popular here, lost the Repub lican nent Republican in his nat ive Sci(llo the guhcrnatorial campaign has approximalcly 100.

BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pumpkinport

Antiquity
man dead
incilleged
shooting
incident

1

ANiiQC ITY - George
Donald Stobarl of Antiquity
wa;, dead on arri val at a
hos pital
Huntington
·s aturday eve1ii ng where he
'"" lifefl ighted for treatmen! of inj uries ·allegedl y.
,uffcrcd in a shootin g inciJ~nt.

i\ccordi ng to Bob Beegle.
.'-'leig' Cou nty Sheriff, the
body was ta ken to the
' ·l nn tgnmery
Count y
Cnron~r·s office in Dayton
fm an autnp'y.
Beecle said the incidem
rcmaill~ under .investigation

and tha t the re has .been no
Jcterm ina't inn a' to whether
any other perso n was
invol\·ec.l. Stnbart . according
to the 'hcriff. was about 68.
The BC I was o n th e
"ene a, · V:'as Matthew
Dmw huc. Meics Co unt y
ass i ~tant prosecl1tor. alon£·
with officers of the sheriff's
offict'.

• Democrats claim ·
momentum, Republicans
hope to mobilize base as
Nov. 7 vote nears .
See Page A6

............ , .,.

Brian J. Reedlpholo

WEATHER

Trick or treat brought out many pretty. funny and scary characters to the streets of Midd leport Thu rsday night. The
Halloween festivities are·'not ove r quite yet, though. The Middleport Community Association will sponsor its second. annu
al Pumpki nport event Monday eve ning, with activities for children and adults. alike. Aubrey Lyons . 5. Pomeroy, and 011via
Wyatt, 5, Middleport, look over the selection of pumpkins at Mitc h's produce stand. in preparation for the pumpkin dec·
orati ng contest to be held as pa rt of to night's event. School-aged children are invited to enter the ir decorated or carved
pumpkins in a contest for prizes, including a bicycle and gift certificates. Me rchants will hold special Moonlight Madne ss
'promotions, and free refreshments· will be.served. T~e event begins at 6 p.m. in downtown Middleport. Regist ration for

~:; :;;;;~; '""i\,i;~h'of Dimes honors Torres
'Enduring
Freed.om'

Detalta on Page A6

BY CHARLENE HOEFL:ICH

HOEFUCHIIMYDAILYSENTINEL coM

POM'E ROY Norma
Torres. RN. · BSN . MS Ed.
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM has bee n selected "by the
March of Dimes for thi'
RACINE - - Wit h only year' s
Lifetime
two soldiers left oQ its maii- Ach ievemenl Award .
mg list the Enduring
Torres will be honored and
Freedom Su pport Group presented the award at the
was preparing to go into organ ization's annua l Health
retirement once th ose two
Leadership Awards lun returned home around
cheon
to be he ld nt the
Christmas but in a matter of ·
Greek
Orthodox
Cath~dral.
weeks that has chan ged and
the group now has eight ser- 555 N. Hig h Street in
vice men in need .of it' sup- Columbus at I I:30 a.m. nn
Nov. 15.
pm1.
"The Health Leader,hip
Enduring
Freedom
Lu11cheon i' an
Award;
Member
Jan
Cardone
opportunily
for health care
laughed and sai~. '"We're
profes,ionals
to recognize
back . We ' re coming ovt of
semi -retirement hu t th at's and applaud their ov. n." '&lt;lY"'
l&gt;r.
R1chard
l\kCicaJ.
okay "ith u, ...
Profes,or of PediaTri c' at
the Ohio State Liniversit)
Ple•se see Duty, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

INDEX
2 S ECilONS- 12 P AGFS

-fJt

LIN C O LN

~MERCURY .

Glllllllls, II

A2
Calendars
Classifieds
B2-4
Comics
Bs
Annie's Mailbox A2
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
A5
B Section
Sports
"
A6
Weather
© aoob Ohio Valk"Y PUblishing Co.
v

.

Norma Torres
and Children\ Hospit :d ·
March of Dime' Board d1air
and
He alth
l.caucr,hlp
c\\\anJ..., l'nnH nith't' ~.: n l'll &lt;llr
~ k llllh"d 1' 1•11 " 1 ,!11"' 11
tc&gt;l\11·res. llthers Ill he rccc&gt;gn_;tell :md honuml 11 the

•

LandlordS
·re.qui• re·d to
.

register
i properties

1

luncheon will k leaucn in
the fields of ad' am·cd prac- 1
STAFF REPORT
l ice nur,ing . l"l&gt;rporatc. i NEWS@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
hcalih ca re support. nursing. \
communit) ph y"cia n. and
POMEI-tOY - A n e\\~
public hcalih care.
1 'tate' Ia\\" re4u1re' owners ol
Torre,. retired health wm -~ rc\ldcntwl re ntal property lo
mi" 1011 .,r anJ nursing Jirec - re gJSter I heir prupertie; wi th
wr ~~ the Mcig;, Count~ the counl\ auditor. Meigs
Health Department. Ill\\\ 1 Count~ AL1di10r Mary Bye'rserving a' th" .:finical ,upe1 - • Hill said.
, isor of home care servie·cs ' The nc" law is part of
c&gt;ll"c rcd thrn u~h 1hc Me·i~s Substitute· House Bill 2'!4.
c.,u 11 ty Cl&gt;un~-il on .\gin~. "h1ch became hi\\ 011 SepL
\\",IS ,clc.:tcd fm the ''r!': 11 uch , The 11e\\ rental rcgi,trJtation\ tor :1\lard lwc:~t"'' lillll rcr.juirc' re·nt:d property
nf he'! '" t1cmc 11 J., 11 , contri - "" 11crs tn pnn ide the audibut ion' to health care ...
tor "1th contact mforma,\ n:llive' nf "Jc\\ Yorh tion. including a telephone
Cit). she came to Oh 1o in the numha. mahmg it ca,ier tc•
I,Jtl' 197(k Her "nr~ has ~cl ill touch "llh the O\\ ner
hcen dcclic:ned tn \\riling ;n the ncm of ,, pmhle1~
~ 1 a 11 t , dnd c..:-ttl'L' \ hn1 \,
"11h thc11· prnpl~rt ~. The new
~u,h ,,,· 11 1 ~· '&gt;pc·,·,·h """ lc'qlllle'llll'l11 "'" ,trcamlme

Please see Torres. AS

Please see landlords. As·
'

-

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