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Page.B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Woman sues school
district over school racial .
balance policy, As

Federer is the clear-cut favorite to win U.S. Open
I

MASON (AP) - Roger
That's only the beginning.
Federer reckons that it
Federer is 138-9 ·over the
wouldn't take mu'h to pre- last two years, including 54vent him from winning his 3 this season. He has won
second straight U.S. Open his last 28 matches on hard
title.
courts. He and Rafael Nadal
. A virus. An injury. A are tied with nine ATP titles
windy day that makes every- this year. The la st three
thing go awry.
Wimbledon ti tl es belong ·to
"A lillie thing needs to go . Federer.
wrong and · you lose," he
He's p! Jyi ng. so well that
said.
opponents have no margin
For everyone else, maybe . · for error ·- ~.factor that
It 's going to take a whole lot }'leighs on the.if. nerves and
more to keep t~e Swiss star their shots.
from extending one of the
"You have to play prett y
most dominant runs in ATP close to perfect." sa id Jame s
hi sto ry,
.
Blake. who lost a first-round
Federer won ·his 22nd con-· match
to
Federer m
sec utive tournament final o n Ci ncinn ati .
Sunday, dispatching Andy
The rest of the fi eld had a
Roddi ck and ' any thou ght li ttl e hope when Federer
that he was vulnerable after dec id ed to take off after
a long summer layoff. Hi s beating Roddick for hi s lattwo-se t victory fo r th e est Wimbledon title. Federer
Cincinnati Masters title know s he's ' on the cus p of
made 'him the prohibitive hi story. as long as he doesn ' t
favorite
at
Flushing burn out or break down .
Meadows.
He went home to Oberwil.
"Federer is in a dass of hi s Switzerland, fo r· a public
own. " sai d Australia's celebration of his fifth
Lleyton Hew itt, who lost the Grand Slam title, then went
Open· final to Federer last on vacation . He celebrated
year.
·hi s birthday and practiced.
And few playe rs have but mostly rested hi s so re
mark s like Fed ere r, who feeL He knew it was a risk
turned 24 this. month and has -· he'd be goi ng into the
only recently come intp hi s U.S. Open with only the
prime . He's been No. I for tournament in Cincinnati tfl
82 consecutive weeks, one get ready.
of the longest 5t~y.s ,in ATP
By the time he got to the
rankings history.
final ,
11 looked
like

AP photo

Roger Federer, from Switzerland, hits a backhand during a semi·firial match with Robby Ginepri
at the Cmcinnati Masters tournament Sunday in Mason. Federer defeated Andy Roddick on
Sunday to win the tournament, the first he had entered since 'winning Wimbledon.
Wimbledon all over.
"EVe rythin g co mes very
automati c now.'' he said. " I
don ' t need to think anymore
where I'm going to hit the
balls. They just go automati-

cally. That 's very important
in my game. because I need'
to play with the. flow.''
That's the best wav to
describe his game. There 's
nothing dominant no

overpowering serve like
Roddick, no incredible
quickness like Nadal - but
no weakness, either. Plus,
the biggest points in a match
bring out his best.

One he gets ahead, it's
usually over.
"That's what I have been
doing very well over the last
few years,:· he said. "That's
wh4t I've been able to do
against the best - get the
first break, usually, and lead
from there . Because once
I' m in the.lead, I' m obviously the best" front-runner. "
Given the state of the rest
of the field, he'll · be the
undisputed front -runner ai
the U.S. Open.
Andre Agassi, who lost· to
Federer in a five- set quarterfinal match at the Open last
year;· had to withdraw from
Cincinnati because his 35year-old back was acting up.
Rodd ick h~rt his ri ght foot
during the fin al on Sunday,
leaving hi s condition in
doubt.
Ru ss·ia's Marat Safin has a
sli ght tear in hi s left knee ,
and five weeks of rest after
Wimbledon didn ' t eliminate
the pain. Nadal has matched
Federer in tournament titles
this year, but the 19-year-old
Spaniard hasn' t demonstrated that he can win consis- ·
tently on hard courts.
The New York crowds will
try to coax an upset out of .'
one of the Americans, but
w.ill likely end up applauding a player whose fame hasn '.t caugl:n up with hi s
accomplishments on thi s
side of the ocean ,"

Blue Jackets sign three Jones signs contract with Titans, starts·practice.

I

I

I
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•

COLUMBUS (1\P)
Center Mark Hartigan resigned for two years with the
Columbus Blue Jackets on
Monday. while center Peter
Sarno· agreed to a on·e-year
deal and defenseman Mark
·Flood signed a three-year
contract.
Hartigan. 27, was the leading goal scorer last year for
Syracuse, Columbus· top
affiliate in the American
Hockey Le'aguc. He had
career highs of 31 gmils and
28 assists in 69 games.

Harti ga n signed with the .
Blue Jackets as a free agent
before the 2003-2(104 season
and had a goal and three
assists in nine NHL games
that year.
Sarno. 2t1. ranked second in
the AHL in a-sists wnh 66
last year while totaling 82
points for Manitoba.
The 20-year-old Flood
spent the last four seasons
with Peterborough of the
Ontario Hockey League
where he had 25 goals and 95
assists in 253 games.

Piniella , said. ''We just gut
blown out there in the seventh inning . They've got
some tal ent over there . A
from Page Bl
good &gt;'oung ballclub. They're
right tn the hunt for the postsaid. "I didri't think I had season."
great stuff. I started feeling
Waechter allowed four runs
better by the fifth inning ~.nd . and eight hits - including
started batthng through tt.
three homers in six
Millwood went six innings. innings. He struck out six and
giving up four runs and five
hits. He had seven strikeouts walked one.
Notes: Crisp snapped an 0and three walks.
Sizemore's two-run homer for-12 slide with his homer.
and a solo shot by Peralta off · ... Waechter has given up 31
Doug ·Waechter gave the homers in 130 1-3 career
Indians a 4-3 · lead in the innings at Tropicana Field ....
third. Peralta has 20 homers, · Sizemore has four homers
three short of tying Woodie and 16 RB! s in his last 16
Held's team record for a games .... Lee has 99 homers .
in hi s career. ... The Indians
shortstop set in 1961.
Tampa Bay tied it at 4 in · al so hit live homers o n June
the b'Ottom of the third on 25 against Cincinnati. ...
Cantu :s .solo' homer. He is 9- . Crisp is the ninth Cleveland
for- 18 with four homers and player to have I0 or more
seven
RBi s
against homers thi s season. Texas
and Cincinnati arc the only
Cleveland this season.
"We hit some balls hard.'' other teams to accomplish
Tampa Bay · manager Lou the feat this year.

Warpath ·

Davis
from PageBI
Davi s also had lost his job
as Cleveland's No. I kick
returner to rookie Jo shua
Cribbs.
Now he has to win a roster
spot with the Patriots.
Deion Branch, last season's
Super Bowl MVP. and David
Givens liliely will start for
New England. The team also
has veterans Troy Brown ,
Bethel John son, Tim Dwight
and David Terrell , and
youngsters P.K. Sam, Jason
Anderson and Brandon
"Bam" Childress.
.
: Johnson, Dwight. Terrell
and Sam have all missed time
during training cam·p with
injuries.
"We'll put him (Davis) into
·the mi ll and see what he can
do," Belichick said.
The 26-year-old Davis.
who received permi ssion last
week from the Browns · to
seek a trade, won't have
much time to make an
impression with his new
team. Rosters must be
reduced to 65 playe rs by
Aug. 30 and to the regularseason limit of 53 by Sept. 4.
''I'm reaay to learn:· Davi s
·said. "I think I'm a smart guy.
Jt's ·going to be a little bit of a

whirlwind, but I think I'm up
for thi s challenge.''
The trade was the first
between the Patriots and
Browt1s
stncc
Ronieo
Cre nnel was hired as
Cleveland 's coach. Crennel
was New En2land's defensive coordinator the past four
seasons.
Davis was se lected with the
No.' 47 overall p,ick in 2002
by former Browns coach
Butch Davi.,, wl10 thought
th e for mer Virginia Tech
track star's speed would open
things up for Cleveland' s '
offense.
However. injuries have
slowed Davis' development.
Because of a nagging toe
injury, he started only seven
games artd had 16 receptio_ns
fo r -+ 16 yards and two touch-.
downs last season . One of
those TDs was · a 99-yarder
from Jeff Garcia. tying an
NFL record.
Davi s' days s,~:emed over in
Cleveland last week when
Crennel said the 6-fuot- 1.
195-pounder wa., ha ving "an
average camp."
"I real ly didn 't want i&gt;ut of
Cleve land," said Davi s, who
ha' "arted 19 games in three
sea,Oib .. 'That was a bus inc~~ decision lhat was 111:Jde
by both managemel)ls·. r&gt;iow '
I'm here with New England .
I'm j ust a player...

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - Top
draft pick Adam ''Pacman" Jones final ly signed hi s five-year contract Monday
and joined the Tennessee Titans in practice after a holdout caused him to mi ss
31 practices.
Jones had hoped to practice Sunday
after agreeing in prindple to a deal
Wednesday. but (he complicated contract had to be approved by the NFL and
the players ' association. His agent.
Michael Huyghuc arrived Sunday in
Nashville to help work through· th&lt;: final
details.
Appropriately enough for a player
who was one of the last two first-round
draft picks to reach a deal , Jones' arrival
on the field didn't come without secre cy.
With cameramen and reporters wait ing to watch Jones walk onto the field.
the Titans hid him on the back of a cart
loaded with equipment at a sii.le loading
dock and drove him onto the practice
field where he joined his ·teammates
after they had stretched.
Coach Jeff Fi sher said he's glad to
have ·hi s top pick on the field .
"It 's a unique arrangement. but it's
. good.'' Fisher said . "It's best for both
sides right now, and the most important
thing now is Pac. He's heen ready to
return really since camp started."
The ·Titans didn't take it easy on

'

.

Adam "Pacman" Jones

Jones, the sixth pick ~vera ll and first
defen sive player taken in the draft. The
conierback who left West Virginia after
his junior season found himself facing
off against starting receivers Drew
Bennett and Tyrone Calico in a one-onone passing drill.
Jones first tried jamming rookie
Courtney Ruby, then Bennen at the line
before · both receivers ·caught passes.
Receivers coacl1 Ray Sherman yelled to
his receivers to club Jones if he grabbed
someone else.

Then Calico went up against Jones.
and the rookie grabbed him and held on .
The 6-foot-4 Calico started banging tfte
g.erierou sly li sted 5- 10 Jones before
breaking loose. The next time up. Jones
ran alongside Cal.ico. who caught a long
pass.
"You're going to get beat here and
there," Jones said. "For the most pan,
I'm here to make plays . This is my first
day out here. It's going to pick up in a
linle while.''
Jones broke. up one pass to rookie
tight eild Bo Scaife.
.Jones didn't get to catch any punts,
something Fisher promised he will get
plenty of before Friday night's exhibition in San Francisco. The Titans
ranked last in the NFL last season in
punt return average.
"I can ' t wait.'' Jone,, said. "That 's a
big part of my game. and we need some
help in special teams. Whatever Coach
asks me to do, I'm going to do."
Jones also will be given a chance to
win the right cornerback job.
Tony Beckh&lt;Jm. a fourth-round pick
in 2002 out of Divis ion 111 WisconsinStout. tried to show it won't be easy for
Jones to step in as a starter. He intercepted a pass by Billy Volek imended
for rookie Brandon Jones in one team
drill, and nearly picked off two more
passes at the end of practice.

!I

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-;o tl:"\1~•\ol. .• .-;. '\o -

'

• Southern shines at
Pine Hills. See Page 81

I hi.'

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0

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0

Ma s te~C ard

Expiration Date
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.

got nothing, and now this through year 12 teachers , further explain. $24.500 goes
year, they will get a six (6) .receive a "step" or automatic to the. teacher wi th the least
percent increase . "So over the increase. After those fir st 12 experience with a bachelor \
three years it represents a years , that .the next step degree. and it almost doubl es
2.33 percent increa&gt;c annual- doesn't come unt'i! 15 years. over the yea" for those with
ly," said Buckley.
.
The one after that is at 20 the most experience with a
For comparison on what years, and th e final step master's -p lus degree.''
teachers are paid, the pay comes at 25 years.
Buckley said .
scale "steps" were explained
Steps. according to superThe new contract also proby the superintendent.
intendent , amount to about I. vide' fo r.· all teac hers to pay
He said first year teachers to 1.04 percent per year for
now start at $24,500, the the first 12 years and then live (5 ) percent ol'the current
highest in the county. Then "max out",at the.25 year level premium cost for group insurfor every year they teach with a 1.965 increase. "To
Pfei!Se see.Contract, AS

Bv BETH SERGENT

,

BSERGENT@~YDA ILYSE NTtNEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - Lily, a
golden retriever mix, was
found weeks ago nearly
hanging from a tree by the
Meigs County Humane
Society Officer.
The officer received a call
from a concerned citizen that
had seen Lily having a hard
time movi'ng on her chain.
The heavy log chain was
reportedly suspended from a
tree limb and then fastened to
Lily withput a swivel.
Making the situation worse
was that Lily was positioned
Page AS
on a slope and according to
• Jackie William Grose, 70 Meigs County Humane
Society officials, when the
• Eva Leonard, 87
dog would try to move the
chain became more kinked,
in essence the dog was strangling itself.
When tht! Humane Society
Ofticer arri·ved on the scene
• Meigs County Bikers
Lily's front paws were lifted
announce poker run ·
off the ground. The dog was
taken into custody and the
benefit. See Page A3
owner later relinquished
• Ripley auuthor
ownership.
publishes short story.
"According to the how the
dog
moved, in ten minutes
See Page A3 ·
she might have hung herself
• Family Medicine.
if the officer had not arrived
See Page A3
when he did ," Meigs County
Humane Spciety Trea ~ urer
• Local Briefs.
Vicky Baer said.
Page AS
Lily's story of alleged
• For the Record .
neglect is one of many in
Meigs County, many going
See Page AS
unreported but occurring on a
• Report says wor1&lt;ers'
regular basis . The. Meigs
camp must create new
County Humane Society
tields abuse calls on everyoversight measures.
thing from dogs being tied up
See Page AS
without food or water, to
• Woman sues
mutilation cases too horrific
io describe here.
school district over .
· Touched by Lily 's struggle
school racial balance
and eood nature, the Meigs
'policy. See Page AS
Comity Humane Society paid
to have her spayed and paid
• Women's reproductive
for
her shots to prepare her
clinic seeks to shield
for adoption.
medical records.
'· "She's just a good dog,"
Meigs County Dog Warden
See Page AS
Tom Proffi tt said. "She's very
good with kids and · has a
pretty coat. ..

,

·

I""

.

··

pool to end
season Ill red

.

m1x, surv1ved nearly stran·
gling trom her own cha1n.
The heavy log chain was
alleged ly draped over a tree
• limb and then fasten ed to
Lily without a swivel. The
chain became kinked and
because the dog was on
s loping ground whenever she
moved the ehai n became
tighter. When Meigs County
Humane Society officials
found her, her front paws
were lifted off the ground.
Lily has been spayed and
given her shots and is avail.able for adoption at the
· Meigs County Dog Pound.
She is friendly, good, with
children and waiting for her
new family.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

. MIDDLEPORT
- The
Middleport Pool will likel y
.end its season in the red next
month . but vi llage official3
are hopeful that some
changes in uperations ne~!
year will make the pool les~
of a burden on village
finances.
.
The pool was closed for the
2004 season due to ·needed
repairs. and reopened on ·
Memorial Dav. This summer
has seen an· average daily
attendance at the pool of
around 100. A Jul v 4 celebration attracted hu11dreds to the
Below: Unlike Li ly, these ani·
pool and General Hartinger
Park. and a Labor Day celemals dt&gt;n 't have tile berref1t
bration is planned to close
of someone to tell their sto·
ries of how they wound up at out the season.
The pool will be closed for
the Meigs County Dog
the Thursday and Friday. and
Pound . There are several
dogs of all shape.&gt; sizes and will remain open only Friday.
Saturday and Sunday and
dispositions at the pound
Sept. 2-5. before closing for
ready for adoption and for a
the
season, Pool Manager
chance at life.
· Dale Riffle sa id Monday
Bath Sergant;photos
evening .
Accordin~ to a ' fia ntial
repo11 of the pool's operation
prepared by Village Fi scal
Officer Susan Baker. the pool
operation reported an operating defic it of $ 1:1.851 a; of
Monday. Since May. the pool
has gen.;rated 525.040 in
im;omc. including 55.873 in
dail y admi" i,On fe~' · $ 1.210
in sea,on passe,. and S'l.52 1

INSIDE

see

Please see Fac:es, AS

·

Left. lily,. a go uen retnever

OBITUARIES

in

..
.,
•••

.·

•

..

.. ..

re,· enu~

from t. : oncession

sales. The ponl has :1lso
recc1wd S5.X76 in private
donations.
, Village nHI11(il originally
app ropriated $.1&lt;!.67:1.75 for
the
pool·'
operation.
Operating 'upplies and
su larics anJ related payroll
cxpcmcs make up most of
the p&lt;•ol's e.\penses t:or the
· sca snn· - nearly $ 19.000
was appmpriated for personnel. and S18.383 for suppl ies.
Please see Pool, AS

.•

•

Former Rutland
. . Gene Whaley takes top
woman receives Proceeds benefit 'Secret Santa' project
nursing award
the dealership . Whaley was

awards at car show

BY CHARL£NE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

one of eight bringing in
cars which took specialty
POMEROY
Gene award. The other winners
MINFORD - Dr. Mary Whaley of the Darwin com-. were Tim Casto: best com'Lynd of Minford, formerly of munity )Vas the winner of petition car; Jeff Hill. best
machine;
Paul
Rutland. was presented the not only best of show but st reet
the
people'
s
choice
award
Herron.
best
street
rod;
"Nursing Excellence Award
1
·n
Sunday
's
annual
benefit
Sherman
White.
best
truck.
for Mentoring" by
e
Nursing Spectrum Nursing · car show stag ed on the Tim Kimes. be st miniJournal at a recent awards . parking lot s of Don Tate car , truck ; Johnn ie Freeman.
best original ; and Neal
ceremony at the Dayton 's dealershtp.
The car show is held every Richmond , best tunner car.
W(\man 's Club in Dayton .
ye'M
with Bill Neutzling as
Others falling into the top
The graduate of Rutland
to
benefit
the
din50
were cars displayed by
chairman
High School and daughter of
ner
theater
and
"Secret
Jerry
Hill, Larry Painter,
Flossie Hysell of Rutland ;
and the .late Elmer Hysell, Santa" projects of the Rhonda Woolridge. Larry
was nominated by colleagues Mtddleport Church of Davis. Mike Johnson. B. L.
she had mentored during her Christ. "All prt?,ceeds ~o . Kirby: Eldin and Thelma
that ,
sa id Guinn. 'John Tant. Tommy ·
43-year career as registered toward
Neutzhng
.
Dozens
of
cars Kimes, Walte'r Ellis. Troy
nurse and a nurse .educator.
from
many
places
hned
the Skinner. Sheila Whaley.
She holds a diploma from
Charlene Hoeftlchj photo
Jots
and
hundreds
ol
people
Gene
Whaley.
Cinda
Holzer Hospital School of ,
Lots
of
little
children
\'I'll
have
a
nice
Christmas
this year
. .
Clifford. Jim Straight.
i'/ursing. a bachelor of sci- came to s~e them :
. Whaley s wmmng car IS a Charles and Judy lee. because bf the success of t11e Don Tate annual car show. The
ence in nursing from Ohio
19_69 C:hev_rolct Richard Humphrey, Charlie proceeds benefit the secret Santa project of the Middleport
'University. a master of sci- stlver
Church of Christ. He re Greg Smith looks over·one of the many
·
.
Mahbu . Th1s week 11 tS on
spruced-up cars brought in fo r the show.
Please see Car sh_, AS
display in the show room of
Please see Aw,rcl, AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A8

"Your Hometown Newspaper"

approved Monday by the
teachers and was approved
by the Board at Tuesday
hight's meeting . It ,provides
for a six (6) percent pay
increase in teachers salaries
·from the beginning · base to
the top of the salary index,
said William Buckley, superintendent.
He explained that in the
first year of the contract, the
teachers received one (I) percent increase, last year they

The faces of animal abuse and.neglect in Meigs Middleport

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:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - .A contract
providing for a pay increase
for teachers and their participation in the cost of health
insurance in the current third
year of an existing three-year
contract has been ratified by
both the·Meigs Local Teachers
Association and the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
The
agreement
was

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\\11)'1"'1)\\ . \l(,lSI

Meigs Loc~ r~tifie~ contract with Teachers Association

SPORTS

WEATHER

:

· Israel completes
historic withdrawal in
oneweek,A6

INDEX
2

S Ecrl&lt;lNS

-

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

'Ciassifieds

B4-6

Comics

' Dear Abby

· n7

Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Spoi;ts
· We;~ther
' tf

B Section
AS

::.nus Ohio Valier Ptlbllshing Co.

a

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel .

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PageA2

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VVednesday,August24,2005

Rumsfeld says Iraqi
constitution will not
end all violence

Government pr~poses new fu:~l ~tandards
for SUVs, ptckups and mtntvans
BY KEN THOMAS
ASSOCIATED PRES$ WRITER

WASHINGTO)'J - With
gas prices continu.ing to
rise. the Blish administration on Tuesday propo ~ ed
new rules to compel auto
manufacturers . to make
pickup trucks. minivans
and some sport utiiity vehi. cles more fuel efficient.
f:nvironmenJalists said the
plan . would do little to
wean · the nation from . its
dependence on foreign oil.
The
proposal
would
require th e au to industry to
raise standa rd s for most
vehicles other than cars
beginning in 2008. All
automakcrs would have to
comply with the new system by 2011.
"This is a plan that 'will
save gas and resu lt in less
pain at the ' pump for
motori sts without sac ri ficing safety,'" Transportation
Y
Secretary
Norman
Mineta said.
Mineta. speakin g at news
conferences in Atlanta and
Los Angeles. said the program was expected to save
about I 0 billion gallons of
gasoline over the life of
vehides built from 2008
through 20 II. The U.S,
currently consumes about
140 billion gallons of gaso·
line per yea r. according to
Energy Department statis·
tic s.
But . the plan wou ld not
apply to the largest SUVs,
such as the Hummer H2.
Passe nger cars : already
required to maintain an
average of 27.5 miles per ·
gallon. also would not .be
covered by the changes .
Ert\ironmental advocates
panned the approach. saying· it failed to go 'far
enough to reduce the
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nation 's dependence on
imported oil while creating
new loopholes that would
weaken the requirements.
Passenger cars and light
trucks, ·a ve hicle category
that includes pii:kups. minivans and SUVs. aci:ount
for about 40 peri:ent of the
nation "s oi I use.
"At
a
time
when
Americans are paying .
.record prices for gas. the
Bush admi ni strati on has
sided with its cronies in the
aura · in·dustry and rejected
real so lution s... said Dan
Becker. director of the
Sierra Club's globa l warmin~ program.
.
Sen . John Kerry. DMass ., called it ··back ward
looking·· and ··another lost
opportunity to help our
sec urit y. economy and
environment.''

John D. Graham. director
·' the
Offke
of
of
Management and Budget's
office of information and
reg ulator y . affairs. countered that the plan was projected to save more fuel
than any previous rulemaking in the hi story of the
light-truck CAFE program.
Under the current system,
automakers must maintain
an average of 21 mpg for
light trucks and will have
to meet 22.2 mpg for the
2007 model year. It represents an average of manufacturers entire fle et of
light trucks.
·The new system would
divide light trucks into six
categories based on Size.
Smaller vehicles would
have to ge t beller gas
mileage ·than larger trucks .
Automakers could opt to
comply with the old system
through 20 I0 or to meet
the standards in the six cat·
egories. If they stayed with

the old system, they wquld .
have to meet a 22.5 mpg
average by 2008. 23.1 mpg
in 2009 and 23.5 mpg by
2010.
Under the new anri.bute·
based system. the standards
would range from as high
as 26.8 mpg in 2008 for
smaller vehicles such as the
Chrysler PT ·cruiser and
the Toyota RAY 4 to 20.4
mpg for large vehicles such
as the Chevrolet Silverado
and the Dodge Ram .
By '20 10, the range w0 uld
increase to 27 .M mpg for
smaller vehicles to 20.8 ·.
mpg for the larges t. The
system provides fl exibility
- a lito makers could earn
credit s for exceeding the
minimum in certain categories and apply them to a ·
category where. they don "t
meet the standard.
American
automakers
have ci ted a disadvantage
against foreig n competitors
because sa le s of large
·SUVs, a major source of
profits in recent years.
mu st be offset by the sale
of smaller models to comply with fuel economy
standards.
Honda Motor · Co. and
· Hyundai ' Motor Corp. primarily sell smaller suv~
and minivan s, allowing
them to collect credits Jo
use in the sale of larger
vehicles.
Under the new plan ,
" they aren 't going to have
to nece ssarily sell smaller
vehicles that are called
trucks to offset their low
fuel econ6my in the big
vehicles," sa id Walter
McManus, a fuel economy
expert at the University of
M1chigan Transportation•
Research Institute.
Preu ss.
a
Chris
spokesman for General

Motors Corp., the world's
largest automaker, sa id it
might provide more equity
in the marketplace but
Bv JOHN J. LUMPKIN
stressed, "The devil will be
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
in the details.':
The
Alliance
of . WASHINGTON - A new
Automobile Manufacturers, constitution will ·nat end all
a trade group representing , the violence in Iraq, Defense
Donald
H.
nine automakers, said the Secretary
"higher fuel economy stan- Rumsfeld said tuesday;
dards will be a challenge, acknowledging that the con·
tinuing turbulence " ha~ to be
even with all of the new a hean-wrenching thing" for
fuel"efficient. technologies the families of US .. Jrces
that are offered for sale still fi ghting insurgents there .
today. "
"The process has been
With gas prices soaring delayed a bit, but democracy
this summer to an average has never been described as
of $2.55 a gallon national- speedy, efficient or perfect,"
ly, the new requirements Rumsfeld said during a
are expected to generate a Pentagon briefing. Earlier,
debate on the nation 's Iraqi lawmakers delayed a
vote on the draft constitution
dependence on foreign oil. to give negotiatornr\ore time
Mineta, however, said the to persuade Sunni Arabs to
timing of the announce- accept it.
ment "was not related to
The head of the committee
the price of gas at all."
drafting Iraq's constitution
Environmentalists said said an extra three days may
the requirements were dis- be not enough to win over the
appointing
because · Sunni Arabs and that the conau tom akers who , used the stitution may have to be
old system through 2010 approved by parliament as is
and taken to the people in a
would only have to boost referendum.
fuel economy an average of
Rumsfeld dismissed the
I .3 mpg, less than the idea that objections from
requirements from 2004 Sunnis could lead to civil
war. President Bush. asked
through 2007.
Eric
Haxthausen . an earlier about the possibility
economist
with that a constitutional conflict
Environmental Defense, could trigger a civil war. said:
sa id it was "emblematic of "The Sunnis have got to
make a choice: Do they want
the fact that they ' re not to live in a society that's
asking enough.''
free?"
The proposa l will be
said
the
, Rumsfeld
evaluated by the auto Pentagon expected more
industry
and
interest insurgent attacks as the coungroups durin g the next try finalized its constitution ..
three months and must be and he attributed the high
finalized by April 2006 to number of deaths in a fractake effect for the 2008 tion of such attacks to insurgents
"'becoming
more
model year vehicles.
sophisticated" in developing
deadly explosives.
He and Adm. Edmund P.
Giambastiani, Jr., the vice
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, . said the Pentagon
to
temporarily
expects
increase the number of U.S.
soldiers in Iraq to provide
security ahead of the sched·

Fatness growing in nearly·every
state, especially down South
8v KEVIN FREKlNQ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - Like a
lot of people, the nation's
weight problem is settling
bel6w its waistline. The sUites
with the highest percema~es of
obese adults are .mostly tl) the
South: Mississippi, Alabama,
West Vtrginia. Louisiana and
Tennessee.
In the entire nation. only
Oregon isn't getting fatter.
Some 22.7 percent of
American adults were obese in
the 2002-04 period, up slightly
from 22 percent for 2001-03.
. says the advocacy group Trust
for America's Health; citing
daUI from the Centers for
Disease
Cpntrol
and
Prevention.
Alabama had the biggest
increase. There, the obesity rate
increased 1.5 percentage points
to 27.7 percent.
Eight states dtme in under 20
percent:
Colorado,
Massachusetts, Rhode . Island.
Connecticut.
Vermont,
Montana. Utah and New
Hampshire. But their figures
were all rising. Oregon held
steady at 21 percent.
Hawaii was not included in
· the gro\U')) report Tuesday.
While~rtain regions of the
country fared worse than others,
particularly the Southeast, the
, organization said that no state
met the federal government's
goal of a 15 percent obesity rate
for adults by 20 I0.
An adult with a body mass
index of 30 or more is consid·
ered obese. The equation Used
to figure body mass index is
body weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared.
The measurement is not a good
indicator of obesity for museu'Jar people who exercise a lot.
"Bulging waistlines are
growing and it's going to cost
taxpayers more dollars regard·
less of where you live,'" said
Shelley Hearne, the organiza·
lion's executive director
Why the geographic patterns?
)Oxpert~ don't have afJY one
clear answer. Some suggest that
orban sprawl plays a role .
Others say it's easier to find a
burger and fries than apples and
aspar.q;us in poor communities.
Dr. Delia West. a professor of

public 'health in Arkansas, said
demographics play a part. The
South hns a larger percentage
of minorities, who have shown
an increased risk for obesity.
She said Southerners also tend
to. lead a more sedentary
lifestyle than their counterpans
in states such as Colorado or
Oregon. People will find' fewer
jogging trails in Little Rock
than in Denver, she said.
Also, the Southern diet prob. ably plays a role, said West, a
professor at the University of
for
Medical
Arkansas
Sciences.
"We know the . difference
between purple hulled peas
and speckled butter beans,"' she
said. "But we make them with
bacon fat or salt pork, so even
though we' re getting the ·
micronutrients, it often comes
laden with these extra calcr

better decisions. He said open·
ended entitlement programs,
such as Medicaid and
Medicare, don't provide much
of a financial incentive for people to watch their weight. The
government just picks up the
cost of treating diseases for
·those patients, regardless of the
amounts, he said.
He prefers that the government give Medicaid and

Medicare recipients an incen·
tive to open medical savings
accounts, which would allow
them to save money when they
dO not access the health care
system.
"If they knew they only had
so much to spend, or what they
did not spend could be saved,
th~n maybe you could instill a
certain sense of responsibility
Wld ownership," Balko said.

·

uled Oct. I5 referendum on
the proposed constitution.
They predicted one or two
battalions would be sent perhaps up to 2,000 troops·
a modest increase above the
138,000 already there. Those
·troops would not become part
of the permanent rotation trying to stabilize the country,
officials have said.
Still, Rumsfeld rejected the
idea that the United States
has gotten bogged down in
Iraq like it did in Vietnam .
saymg polls of Iraqis show
that anger toward the instability caused by insurgents is
·growing ..
"Regrettably, completing
the constitution is not likely
to end all the violence in Iraq
or solve all of the country's
problems," he said.
Rum sfeld said he would
tell families of fallen soldiers
like ami-war protester Cindy
Sheehan that thei~ sons and
daughters have contributed to
the liberation of millicms of
Iraqis . The alternative, he
said, would surrender Iraq to
"mass murderers and beheaders and terrorists whose goal
is to spread death and
destruction againSt free pea·
pie elsewhere on thi s globe."
'"It has to be a heart
wrenching thing for each of
the families involved," he
said.
.
Sheehm1 has been maintaining a·vigil outside Bush's
ranch, a demonstration that ·
has been joined by more and
more plher anti-war protesters.
Rumsfelil rejected the idea
that polls indicating growing
dissatisfaction
among'
American with the war might
force the United States to
give up the effort. sayirig.
'"That would be a return to
darkness."
He predicted the base clos·
ing commission that will
begin making its final decisions this week will "endorse
the overwhelming majority'"
of the Pentagon's recommen·
dations.

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Hearne said · the United
States is stuck in a "debate
limllo'" about how to confront
obesity. She urged government
action en several fronts. such
as ensuring that land use plans
promote physical activity. that
school lunch ' programs serve
more healthful meals. and that
Medicaid recipients get access
. to subsidized fitness programs.
such a~ aerobics cla~ses at the
local YMCA.
Radley Balko, a policy an~­
lyst at the Cato Institute, said
he was wary of the call for
more government action on
obesity. The institute is a think
tank that prefers free"market
approaches to problems.
"I think obesity is a very per·
sonal issue. What you eat and
how often you exercise, if that
comes within the government· s
purview, it's difficult to think
of what's left that isn't," Balko
said.
Health policy analysts maintain that obesity, increases the
burden on taxpayers because it
requires the Medicare and
Medicaid programs to cover
the treatment of diseases
caused by obesity. The repon
i:.sued Tuesday said taxpayers
spent 539 billion in 2003 for
the treatment of conditions
attributable to obesity.
Balko said it's not clear the
government really knmn hmv
to persuade people to make

. Meigs County Bikers announce poker run benefit Neighborhood flasher gives woman good cause to paus(!
POMEROY - At their
recent meeting, the Meigs
County Bikers Association
decided to hold a poker run
on Sept. 24 to benefit
Charles Noland Ill , a seventh grader at Meigs Middle
School who has polycystic
, kidney di sease.

The bikers also discussed
their March of Dimes poker
run which will be held Sept.
10. Bikers wifl meet at the
Athens Wai-Mart parking lot
with the last bike out at
noon .
The bikers also announced
that they will hold their,

Family Fun Day on Aug. 27 at
Jordan 's
Campground .
Members are to meet at 6 p.m .
on Aug. 25 at the campground
for clean-up.
The next regular meeting of
the Association is at 10 a.m.
on Sept. 18 at Jordan's
Campground.

SPECIAL GUEST VISITS 10VCS

Submttted Photo

Ohio Valley Chrisitian Elementary started school Monday with special guest "Rowdy"' a character developtld by Roger Hood. He was introduced to students at the school in a special assembly organized QY primary supervisor, Sandy Mock. Rowdy used skits, activities, music. and
jokes to teach the students to honor God by reading the Bible , studying, obeying the teachers,
and honoring the ir parents, all the while having good clean fun.

·Ripley auuthor publishes short story

DEAR ABBY: I am 62 and
my husband is 93. Our nextdoor neighbor, "Sam," likes
to expos-e himself. Other than
that, he's a good neighbor
and always ready to help out.
One .day, a couple of mywomen friends were over visiting, and Sam stood in his doorway naked as a jaybird. waving at them . Maybe he thinks it
pays to advcnise. Mostly, he
does this when my husband ·
has gone inside the house.
.His behavior worries me. If
anything should happen to my
husband, do you think Sam
would try to force himself on
me1 Could he attack me and
try to rape or murder me. or is
he just a nice guy who likes to
expose himself, and not the
least bit dangerous?
I don 't want to be "a bad
,neighbor, and .1 don't want
my name revealed, but this
neighbor is really making me
uneasy. Should I repo_rt what
he's been doing to the police?
- SCARED IN HAWAII
DEAR SCARED: Listen to
your intuition - it' s the
impulse that made you write
to me. It is an alarm bell. I
don "t know your neighbor, so
r c~n't predict whether he 's a
rapist . in the making .
However. I DO know that his
behavior is deviant and high"·
Iy inappropriate - and for
that reason , the police should
be notified. Immediately!
DEAR ABBY: My sister.
"Emily," became engaged
last week. She is planning her

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School events

Clubs and
·organizations

Church events

h() .. ., cho-:en a. day

Bank. Mason . with ltiiK h
from II a.m. to I p.m. Robert
Graham of Oh-K.1n Coi·n
Club to be there wi th cutn
collection.
Friday; Aug. 26
. SYRACUSE - Rec vcl ahlc '
Recycle Days will tak~· pl:~~c
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m .. Au!! .
26-28 at the parking lot ncar
the Syn~cu~c Village garage ,
The
service
IS
free .
Appliances can be dropped
off or those wishin2 to ha1·c·
appliances picJ.,cd up durin ~
the three d:~y cYcnt sl1uu ld
call the fo ll'i"in~ 1rumbcrs:
447-2151. 4-17 -2152 . lJlJ23140. Accepted will he ,ur• thing metal including :ur nrn. ditioners. bot \later tan ks.

·wednesday, Aug. 31
ATHENS - A Region 14
workforce investment CEO
·consortium will be held at I0
a.m. at the OU Inn. Athens .
Sunday, Aug. 28
CARPENTER
The
Agape Jubilee will be in wn.cert at the rvtt. Union Baptist
Church near Carpenter at Wllshers. etc . :'\Jo lire-, nr Jra . . h
6:30 p.m Sunday. For more
.
Tuesday. Aug. 311
information contact David
POMEROY
- The M ci~,
Wi seman, 7429-2568".
County Heal 1l1. Oc pa nmc\u
will conduct a Ch ildh ood
Immunization Clin ic fnnn "&lt;1
a.m
. to II a.n1. and I p n1. to }
·
. Sunday, Aug. 28
p.in . Please bring c·hiiJ"s &gt;11&lt;•1
LETART, W.Va. - · The records and mcJical c·ard&gt; if
Weaver reunion will be held applicable. A ~5. 00 Jona tinll
at 12:30 p.m . a1 the home of is appreciated . bu t n"t
Marcus Weaver. Letart, W. required. All cl1ildrcll mu't he
Va. on Peniel Rd. Lunch, f accompallieJ b) all ad Lilt.
p.m. Take lawn chair and
item for" silent auction . For
information call 882-2983.
Wednesda_l', Aug. ,,I
PORTLA\D Gavk
Pril·c will uh,enc hi, lJ)fh
Friday, Aug. 26
toirthda v oil Au e. 3 I. Cards
may be. sen t to !l im :tl. 57lJlJ)
MASON,
W.Va
Customer appreciation to be SK 12-l. Pprtland . Ohio
held at the City National 45770.

HEALTH FIRST ·
CARE CE. NTER

•

~he

thai ha' been tini!ed with .;adness ;md b tryin'g to gi\'C it &lt;t
happier connotation. Bec:~u se
Dear
her father ctinnot "ivc her
Abby
away. :-.he·~ inc luding him on
her special day in a differe nt
way. More power to her. ·
DEAR ABBY: My 111om
and dad are divorced. \1 11m
wedding , which will lake has a ne\\· hoyfricml and n1y
place nexi year.
dad has a girlfrienJ When
Emily's choice of a wed· I'm wi th my~ dad and lm girlding date is causing a lot of friend is over. I lccl le ft out
hurt feelings among our fam- because he doc,n"t pa y as
ily. She wants to be married much attent ion to me &lt;1' lie
on what would have been our used to. The saJ th ing is.
father's birthday.
when J"m witl1 mv 1110111 I
, Daddy passed away while feel
the same way. ·
we were young, and it has
Do you think it '"'uld he
been hard on the family. A lot
fair
if one day out of (he \\C ~ J..
of us feel she's being selfish
my
mom wouiJ tal&lt;c me
to choose a day .that belongs
somewhere
for. liJ..e . a11 l1uur.
to our father and make it her
own . Emily insists that she\ and THEf'.! my 111um and I uo
something
with
hc· r
trying to honor Daddy boyfriend?
The
.
~
o,amc
gne...._
tor
although some of he'r oth'er
actions suggest that she's act· my dad, too. - LOST I ~
ing out of spite for the rest of THE SHUf'FLE
DEAR LOST: From tbe
us. A lot of the family are saying they don't want to attend. mouth., of babe, , lthin J.. it\.:1
I would hate to see my sis- terrific idea. But I abo thiu.k
ter heartbroken on her wed- · your one-on-one time with
uing day, but do you find her e.ach of your parents shouiJ be
choice of date appropriate or more than on e hour a week .
Dear Ahhy ;,, written by
selfi sh? -·. ASKANCE IN
Abigail Van Burell , . af.w,
SOUTHERN CALIF
DEAR ASKANCE : I, too. k11own as }eartll£' l'Jrillip:,,
would .hate to see your sister and wa~ founded !Jy lri•r
heartbroken on her wedding. mother, Pauline Plrillip.f.
day. and I' m having trouble Write
Dear Abhy
at
understanding how her being www.DearAbby.cmri or 1~0 .
married on her dece&lt;~&gt;ed Box 69440, Lo.,·Augeles, CA
father's birthday would be 90069.

186, O.E.S. will be held at 3
p.m. at the home of Esther
and Scottie Smith. Chester.
Members and families invit ed. Take covered di~h. Meat
and drink will be furni shed .

Thursday Aug. 25
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30p.m. at the town hall.

RIPLEY, W.Va. - Gail Military Wife's"s Soul is a unite with kindred spirits to
. Gross of Ripley, W.Va. wrote · tribute to ihe women ·who raise families . maintain
·an original short story that uphold the wrillen and homes and uphold the most
, has been published in the unwrillen oaths of serv ice positive attitudes when fac·
newly released Chicken Soup and of·marriage ..
ing the feitrs of losing a loved
Friday, Aug. 26
For the , Military · Wife's's
All military · personnel one. Eac h p:tge" celebrates
RACINE
Southern
Soul, the most recent book \n swear an oath to uphold .the the unique bond between
will
hold
the #I New York Times best constirution and protect our military wives and spouses Elementary
selling Chicken Soup for the ·country, while their spouses and their dedication to honie Celebrating Achievement
Soul series. '
takes the unwritten oath to and country.
Day at 9 a.m. to recognize
This story is titled "Our live a life of frequent mov- ·
The stories selected for this students from founh to eighth
National Anthem."' It was ing, lengthy separations and book ·challenge, inspire, :md grades who passed the state
selected f'rom thousands of endless anxieties. Their ~om· make one laugh. but most of achievement and proficiency
other potential stories to be mitment requires a unique all arc said to encourage us to tests last year. ·
included in Chicken Soup blend of patriotism, dcdi~a­ remember the pain of
For the Military Wife "s 's tion. hard work and, must of deployment and the prob·
lems that being a military
Soul because of its ability to all. flexibility.
touch the hearts of one perThe stories in the book arc family entails.
san ·so that that person ca,n in written toy military famil y
The Chii:ken Soup for the
turn touch the heart of members and the couragcou.s Soul books were first pub·
Thursday, Aug. 25
another person . and so 011 women who themse lve s lished in 1993. The creators
CHESTER- Shade River
. serve in the military. They are Jack Canfield and Mark · · Lodge 453 will hold a special
down the line.
Chicken Soup For the ~clebratc the women who . Victor Hansen.
meeting at 7 p.m. at the hall
-----------~----~~----~----------for the purpose of conferring
the Master Mason degree on
a candidate . Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS YFW Post 9053 meets at 7
p.m. at the hall .
Question: My mother was about twice the osteoporosis a bone is brokell. That's why
Saturday, Aug. 27
it"s important to get screened
recently diagnosed with early risk w mpared to older men.
ALBANY
Meigs
Since our bune mass is for osteoporosis so that med- County Bikers Association
osteoporosis.. She. is only 52.
I have just turned 20, and I developed before age 25. b~ih.l· ications and other interven- will hold Family Fun Day
, would like to know about ing strong bones at an early age tions can be started early. beginning at noon at Jordan·s
: osteoporosis. Will I get it is cmcial. All children, teens Since· your mother has ' been Campground . Free camping.
· my mother and I are built and young adults should get diagnosed with osteoporosis. All child~en must be accom·alike. Is it too soon to stan enough calcium through dairy r d recommend that you see panied by an adult.
. worrying about this problem? products and other dietary your doctor now and ask
Sunday, Aug. 28
: Should I talk to my brothers sources such a' salmon. sar- ahout osteoporosis screening.
CHESTER - Annual pic; about thi ~"' Will they ge t dines. figs. dates. oranges. ft"s never too early to begin
·osteoporosis"' What can we pinto beans, brq&lt;:coli ahd kale. {tying to prevent osteoporosis,
Famity Medicine® is a
: do to prevent this?
Tofu processed with calci·
week/!
column. To submit
· Answer: Normally bones um salts is also a good source
· are very solid. but in osteo- of calcium. We also need ade- queshons, write to Martha A.
porosis they become "porous.'" · cjuate amounts of Vitamin D to Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., 0/Jio
College
of
or less dense. If s a gradual help the calcium get absorbed University
process that begins with a mild in the intestinal tract. Sunlight Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
thinning of the bones called allows the skin to produce Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701;
: osteopenia. This occurs when Vitamin D. but in nonhern or via e-mail to reoderques·
. the rate of new bone formation areas. you can become vitamin .tions @familymedicinenews.o
rg. Medical· infonnatilm in
is not enough to offset the nor- D deticieni in the winter.
column is provided as an
this
mal rate of bone loss.
Sometimes calcium .and
educational
service orllv. It
. ·The risk of osteoporosis vitamin D supp lements can
The Daily Sentinel
· increases as we age, with be helpful. The amount is does rwt replace the jadginent
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your
personal
physician,
: more than 40 million dependent on :\ge. so check
:·Americans over the age of 50 wiih your doctor for the cor- · wlw should be relied on to
Subscribe today
diagnose and ·recommend ·
: affected by it. During the rect dosage.
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. aging process. our bones go
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through a cycle. They become reduce your risk from ·osteo- conditions. Past columns are
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. denser as we age until some- porosis, Here are a few tips to availnble .online at www.familymedicinerrew.f.?rg·
: tirne in our. mid-20's. Then. help: avoid smoking, get
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• the bone density is stable. exercise ,every day. 'cat a diet .
:After that, the density hegins rich in calcium. and ~ se ako: to decline at about a half to I hoi only in moderation.
After menopause , the rate
percent per year. Thi s rate of
bone loss increases with. age of bone loss increases. Other ·
to a point '\'here by ~0. years medkal conditions like
of age. 90 percent ol women hyperthyroidism .
hyperand 50 percent of "men have parathyroidism . malabsorp·
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osteoporosis.
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bone density than women. and los&gt;- of mobility. and many
geriatric care.
African Americans have high· medications contribute to the
'
. er bone density than European development of o'teoporosi,.
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or
Asian
There are medications now
Call us at (740) 594-7979 tor an appoinrmenr : Americans. Osteoporosis also that treat o'leoporosi' and
M&lt;•nday through Frrday herween 8:00a.m and 5:00p.m.
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) 10 \Ve.r U mon , Suitt; A
·c ultural factors a' well. on Jhe. horillln. Unfonunatclv.
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Within any given racial or eth- a person wilh , o'leoporo,l&gt;
. nic group. older women ha~e usually has no &gt;ymptonh until

and

tivel

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VV~dnesday,August24,2005
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Jim Freeland
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Charlene Hoeflich
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Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or th£ right of the
·.people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
. the -Government for a redress oj'grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTO.RY
. Today. ts Wedne,day, Aug. 24, the 236th day of 2005. There
are 129 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History:
On Au~. 24. 1992. Hurricane Andrew sma5hed into Florida,
-cau&gt;ing record damage; 55 deaths in Florida, Louisiana and the
·Bahamas were b!amed on the storm .
· On this date:
In A.D. 7Y , long-dormant· MoJJnt Vesuvius erupted, burying
the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in volcanic ash.
An estimated 20.000 people died.
. In 1572, the slaughter of French Protestants at the hands of
Catholics began in Paris.
. Itt 1814, British forces invaded Washington D.C.. setting fire
l\l the Capitol and the White House.
In 1954. the Communist Control Act went into effect, virtually outlawing the Communist Party in the United States.
In 1968, France became the world's fifth thermonuclear
power as it exploded a hydrogen bomb in the South Pacific.
In 1970, a bomb planted by anti-war extremists exploded at
the University of Wisconsin's Army Math Research Center in
Madison, killing 33-year-old researcher Robert Fassnacht.
. In 1981. Mark David Chapm&lt;Ut ~as sentenced in New York
w 20 years to hfe 111 pnson tor slay mg rock star John Lennon.
· In 1989, Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti banned
Pete Rose from the game for gambling.
· Ten years ago: China expelled -Chinese-American human
rights activist Harry Wu, hours after convicting him of spying.
Microsoft Corp. began selling its ·highly publicized Windows
95 personal wmputer software .
· Five years ago: Mexican President-elect Vicente Fox met
with Vice Pres ident AI Gore and President Clinton in
. Washington. a day before he met with Texas Gov. George W.
-Bush in Dallas.
One year ago: An independent commission said the blame for
abu,es at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison lay mainly with the
American soldiers who ran the jail, but said senior commanders
&lt;Utd top-level PeP:agon ofticials could also be faulted for failed
.leadership and oversight. Osama bin Laden's' chauffeur was
arraigned at first U.S. mili~~mission hearing since World
War II. Chechen separatisl§ set cfl\bombs aboard two Russian
airliners that crashed after taking off from the same Moscow
·airport. killing a total of 90 people. Psychiatrist Elisabeth
Kubler-Ross, who famously theorized that ,terminally ill
patients go through live stages of grief, died in Scottsdale,
Ariz., at age 78.
. .
Today's Birthday.s: Former education secretary Shirley .
Hufstedler is 80. Actor Kenny Baker ("Star Wars") is 71.
·composer-musician Mason Williams is 67. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Marshall Thompson (The Chi-Lites) is 63. Rock musicirul Ken Hensley (Uriah Heepl is 60. Actor Joe Regalbuto is
56. Actor-writer Stephen Fry ts 48.· Actor Steve Guttenberg i's
47. Baseball star Cal Ripken Jr. is 45. Talk show host Craig
Kilborn is 43. Rock singer John Bush is 42. Actress Marice
Matlin is 40. Country singer Kristyn Osborn (SheDaisy) is 35.
Actor.-comedian Dave Chappelle is 32. Actor Carmine
Giovinazzo is 32. Actor Chad Michael Murray is 24. Actor
Rupert Grint ("Harry Potter" films) is 17.
. Thought for Today: ''No one knows his true character until he
has run out of gas, purchased something on the installment plan
and raised an adolescent.'' - Mar~elene Cox, American writer.

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~ednesday,August24,2005

Obituaries

Backsliding: Hawaii's race-based nation

-·The Daily Sentinel

r,

VVednesday,August24,2005

PageA4

Thirty-two years ago,
Mariin Luther King Jr.,
famously dreamed that his
children would "one day
live in a nation· where they
will not be judged by the
color of their skin but by the
content of their character."
Three: decades later. at
least in Hawaii, that dream
is imploding. In 2005 , Sen. Daniel
Akaka. D-Hawaii , is pressing for 'a future where his
"grandchildren and greatgrandchildren" may be
allowed to · establish a
nation, bo'rn out of what was
once Hawaii - entirely
race-based. lllOugh the se·nator· says he himself is not a
proponent of independence
itse If. the· trajectory he 'd put
hi s home state on may end
there.
Unlikely as it seems .now,
your grandchildrel) may one
day need a passport to sunbathe in Maui. And the
starter pistol that set the 50th
state on the road to a wholly
un-American independence
day would have been fired
by our •own U.S. Congress.
The Native Hawaiian
Government Reorganization
Act of 2005, now sitting on .
Capitol Hill, promises to
establish a dangerous precedent. The bill would create a
tribe consisting of direct
descendants of those indigenous to the . Hawaiian
islands, wherever they now
are. The llill, proponents say,
would
allow
Native
Hawaiians to "exercise their
right to self-determination
by selecting ,another form of
government, including free
association or total independence."
Although it's · easy to
assume that this is exactly

Kathryn.
Lopez

how Nali've Americans operate in the United States, the
analogy doesn't fly. Indian
tribes generally existed
before state hood as tribes,
and continued living, working and associating as tribes.
There is no such recognized
Native Hawaiian population.
In a state where intermarriage is high, there is no
active, mainstream "Native
Hawaiian
community"
clamoring for independence.
Congress, on the ~ lim
chance the act is adopted,
would have manufactured it
- and for no good reason .
The move is stunning
given the lip service we collectively give to · equal
r·ights .
As
former
Department of Justice
la\\lyer Shannen Coffin
pointed out in recent House
testimony, in this bill "racial
discrimination by Congress
is the first step in the formation of the Native Hawaiian
government." The · bill
"s pecifi~ally defines, as a
matter of federaJ law, the
racial group eligible · to
determine the governmental
organization and membership of the Native Hawaiian
govern men!."
As a paper ·from the
Republican
Policy
Committee in the Senate
puts it: "Federal Indian law
should nut be manipulated

into a racial spoils system. If
Congress can create a government based on blood
alone,
then
, the
Constitution's commitment
to equality under the law
means very little. Rather
than putting that constitutional question to the
Supreme Court, Congress
should answer the question
itself and defeat this legislation. ,
·Ironically, despite the current push, at the time
Hawaiians voted to join the
union in 1959, the territory
took pride in its diversity,
that it was a "melting pot."
And, in fact, even under a
monarchy, Hawaii was
never a race-based entity. As
one historian described the
kingdom: "The policy being
followed looked to the creation of an Hawaiian state
by the fusion of native and
foreign ideas and the union
of native and foreign personnel. bringing into being
an Hawaiian 'body politic in
which' all elements, both
and
haole,
Polynesian
should work together for the
common good under · the
mild and enlightened rule of
an Hawaiian king."
Even if you are continentai-U .S.-bound with no hope
or desire to sit on the sundrenched sands of Waikiki.
you should care about this
As
Coffin
told
bill.
Congress, "The bi II sets a
terrible precedent of racial
separateness and, if fol.luwed in other instances,
the
would
balkanize
American people."
In a 1995 case, Supreme
Court Justice Antonin Scalia
warned : ''To pursue ihe concept of racial entitlement even for the most admirable

.and benign of purposes- is
to reinforce and preserve for
future mischief the way of
thinking that produced race
slavery, race privilege and
race hatred. In the eyes of
the government, we are just ~
one race here. We . are
American." ·
The Hawaii bill is ,_unconstitutional - relying on
radal voting restrictions that
fly in the face of the 15th
Amendment - and likely to
get bogged down in courts
for years to come, if passed.
· But before we even get to
the judiciary determining its
legality, something demeaning would have already happened: The Congress of the
United States would have
embraced racial mandates .
"The bill ," says Peter
Kirsanow, a member of the
U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights, "is the triumph of
the politics of racial identity
and ethnic pleading over the
American creed. It's the logical conclusion to multiculturalism run amok - the
balkanization of America .
And it sets a very . troubling
precedent for furt}}er ethnic
separatism." .
And yet, with the support
of
some • prominent
Republicans, including the
governor of the state,
Congress is currently set to
say "Aloha" to a race-based
Hawaii .
Ask Oreg Brady what
happens when you mess
with ancient, bad taboos.
You don't want to go there, ·
Congress.
( Kaihrvn .Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online
(www.narionalreview.com). She can be cmitacted fit klopez@nationalreview.com.)

'

.

Report says workers' comp must create new oversigpt measures
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS -Eva Eilene Leonard, age 87, passed away
Tuesday, August 23,2005, at St. Ann's Hospital in Columbus.
She was born Feb. I0, 1918 to the late Alba and Ada Bahr.
She graduated in 1936 from Olive-Orange High School at
Tuppers Plains. She was a member of the Tuppers Plains
•Church of Christ. She was a devoted wife, mother and homemaker.
'Sfie was preceded in death by her husband of 34 years,
Charles Dana Leonard and her fir~t husband, James Riggs. ·
Others preceding her in death were a sister, Cleia (Bahr)
Koehler; half sisters, Idonia Johnston , Lavina Brannon, and
Louise Kecbaugh; and half-brother\ Weldon and Maynard

COLUMBUS - A report
released Tuesday says the
state must decide how to
manage its ins\Jrance fund for
injured workers because the
fund can't do the job itself.
The repo{t comes as newly
obtained documents indicated serious p(oblems with the
management of $1.3 billion
in funds to help Ohio work-,
ers suffering from coal-relat-

B*
.
.
She leaves behind a step-daughter Sylvia (James) Di GuiJio

BIDWELL- Clark Chapel Church's benefit auction to be
held on Saturday on the Ferrell Farm on Gark Chapel Road
has been canceled.

For the Record
Marriage licenses

Our city friends, · the
Fergusons, ·are visiting the
fan:n for a week or so. Today
we are going to the county
fair. The Fergusons go
upstairs to change. Beverly
comes downstairs wearing
black Spandex leggings. · a
huge printed blouse and a
baby blue, silk turban and
gigantic Liz Taylor sunglasses. Sue' l;lkes one look
at her and wonders aloud.
"How will we ever find you
if we get separated'?"
Bob, a corporate lawyer. is
wearing what he thinks are
"country" clothes - ostrich
skin cowboy boots with silver tips. brand new. ironedwith-a-crease blue jeans. a
skin-tight embroidered cowboy shirr with si lver collar
tips. a string tie and a large
white brand new Stetson. He
looks like Miss Kitty's
pimp.
Bresson, their 13-year-otd
boy, has · a ring through hi~
eyebrow with a. chain ·O.n it
that connects to his left ear.
His hair is dyed black and
shaved bald on one side. He
is welu"ing an over-sized Tshirt that comes down to hi'
knees and a pair o)' black
denim shorts that come tn
midcalf. Each pant leg is the
size of a hoop skirt. The T:
shirt advertise-; a band
n·amed "E-coli" in Iaroe letters of what appea" \, he
raw ground beef. '·
Cartier, Bre"on\ preteen

POMEROY - Marriage licenses wer!! issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Jeffrey David Howe11,,53, Pomeroy,,
and Deborah Lyrin Babbi'n, 50, Racine; James R. Oiler, 36.
Middleport, and Julie Marie Spradlin, 26, Middleport;
Andrew Bradley Coffman, 23, Syracuse, and Amy Ranah
Wilson, 22, Syracuse; and .Robert Webster Lively, 2.0.
Gallipolis, and Elizabeth Ann Kauff, 19, Middleport.

Jim
Mullen

sister, is dr~ssed like most
girls her age, as a Charo-intraining. She is wearing
ski n-tight hip-huggers with
the words "Buh-bye" written
across her rear. There is a
12'inch expanse · Qf bare
flesh. which ends with a lacy
white bolero top .
I feel a headache coming
on. I pray we don't run into
anyone we. know. Our first
stop is· the 4-H hall. Kids
from all' over the county
have brought in their projects - canned pickles,
jams, jellies, corn that
· they've grown, chickens
they've raised, the ag projects they've worked on like
"How to Raise Aqua
Pou'ltry." The judging took
place three days ago s6 the
vegetables are looking pretty
lorry. The carrot greens have
wilted, you can' t tell the bok
choy from the com.
Cart1er and Bresson have
no trouble dr sg utstng thetr
boredom . They are making
gaggiAg noises. They make
It clear that thts ts aH pretty
hokey on thetr entertatnment

scale. For everyone· else, the sausage and onions, cotton
Fergusons are the entertain- candy; all the . food that
ment. Sue and I are fi1nning makes the .fair a fair. The
into our neighbors right and sinell is making everyone
left. We pretend we're not hungry.
with the Fergusons, but they . I steer them to the Big
Pig's BBQ booth. .
all ·know better.
"Are you sure they have
At the dairy barn the kids
start to show a little 1interest. hummus?" Beverly quesHere are the .prize-winning tions.
"Most definitely. The best
animals from farms around
the
county
huge hummus you ever tasted," I
GuerrYseys,
Hol steins, lied. ·1 was starving. I wonBelgian Blues and Belted der if the Big Pig's cook has ·
Gal ways. lri the other sheds even heard of hummus. Up
are the bcefers, the clean and close we can see and smell
sleepy pigs, the nosey goats the food. The pork chops are
and spectacular longhaired two and a half inches thick.
· rabbits. The kids who raise With a side of com on the
them )ive ·with them- feed- cob and a glob of yellow
ing and milking them, keep- mashed potatoes. Finally the
ing ,the stall s clean and the line inched up to where we
bedding fresh. It has kind of can read the menu - the
Pounder
with
a tail gate party atmosphere Double
and the 4- Hers are about the Cheese, BBQ Pork with a
same age as Cartier and side of Pork Chops. The Surf
Bresson. The· farm kids and·Turf, a 36-ounce ribeye'
loved the way Bresson steak with a dash of sea salt'.
The smell of cooking food is
looked .
.
"I wish our parents would so powerful it blocks out aJI
let us dress that way." said other thoughts.
"That's funny,'' I say,
one kid. We left Cartier and
'Bresson to wander around 'They must be out of hummus.''
on their own.
"What's ·hvmmu s?" asks
"Is there anywhere we can
get some good hllmmus'!" Beverly. "Do you think one
Beverly the vegetarian plate of chops is enough, or
wan ts to know. We've b~en should I get two?"
(Jim Mullen is the author
passing booth after booth
selling· ice cream, funnel of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
cakes, hlooming onions. Cpmplicating the Simple
'Italian ices. fried dough. Life" and "Babv 's First
curly fries . deep fat fried Tattoo. " You carr reach /rim
Twinkics.
corn
dogs. _ at jim_mul/en@mywa,y.com.):

..

,

•

into $50 million inve;ted in
rare coins by prominent GOP
fundrai,er Tom NiJe.
A July 18 memo from an
outside consultant hired by
the workers' comp bureau
cited now familiar problc'ms
with five funds managed by
the bureau fur workers with
specific types of injuries.
The emp loyees include
workers &gt;uffering from
black lung. thme on welfare , disabled workers and
th ose working in marinerelated jobs.

AP Photo

Keith Cordell, 5, is seen with his mother Sandra Tharp and cat
Spike,. in their home, Monday in Cincinnati. Tharp has sued a
school district that she .says kept her biracial son from
enrolling in ·an elementary school because his minority status
would upset the district's ra~ial galance.dThe lawsuit filed with
U.S. District Judge Susan Dian, seeks amages to be determined by the court and .a court orde'r requiring the school district to transfer the boy to Welch El'ementary.
- "A child cannot be excludea
from a school because of his
race unless there are compelling state interests such as~
court order regarding past segregation," said Newman, who
added the lawsuit. also challenges the state law on which
the district policy is based.

The school di strict said in a
statement Tuesday that the
Board of Education believes
the di strict has complied with
board policy and state and
federal laws in the matter.
"Ohio .law requires school
districts to adopt an open
enrollment intradi strict trans-

fer policy that ensures an
appropriate racial balance is
maintained in the district ."
the statement said.
State guidelines advise dis·
tricts to use a factor of plus or
minus 15 percent from the
district average of pupils in
identifying sc hools rad~d
balance, the district said.
The average of minority
student.s in the district is
. approximately 25.4 percent.
with the average of minority
students at Welch Elementary
51.6 percent. the district said.
The lawsuit. filed Friday
with U.S. District Judge
Susan Dlott, seek s damages
w be determined by the court
and an order requiring the
school district to transfer the
boy to Welch Elementary.
"They 're supposed to be
giving my kids an education,
not turnin g them down
because of what color they
are," Tharp , of suburban
Colerain Township. said in an
mterview published Tuesday
in The Cincinnati Enquirer.
Tharp could not be reached
by The Associated Press. for
comment. There was no
phone listing for her in
Colerain Township.

Intermediate School, and the Holman. Amy Clark. James . Jo Marcinko. Karen Mullins,
Meigs Middle School, and to Ewing, Lisa Schenkelburg, Diana Sue Phillips. Connie
the athletic funds of the Jacqueline Wolf, Del Pullins, Soulsby. Cynthia Stanley, Jo
Meigs Middle School and the Nathan Robinette. Ryan · Ann . Willford. Julie Zirkle
from PageA1
.
Meigs High School; and Sleight, Artgelia Smith, and Melissa Conde.
David
C.bci
was
hired
as
·a
$7.500
into
the
Meigs
High
Janice Weber, Angela Weeks.
ance except for vision, dental
H. Craig Wehrung, Pamela substitute bus driver. and
arid life insurance. Prior to .School principal's fund .
Personnel
hired
at
the
meetthis contract only those ing included Jennifer Tesar as . White, Roxanne Williams , Carrie Wickline as a subtitute ·
.
teachers who were hired after a social studies teacher at Mila Woods, · and Barry secretary.• .
the
meeting
were
Attending
1998 - about one-third of Meigs Middle School on a McCoy, vocational.
· Aides hired were Beverly Superintendent Buckley, treathe staff - paid anything for one-year contract, and Karen
Allen,
Melanie Blevins, surer Mark Rhonemus. and
insurance. Those teachers Walker and Louanna Smeek
members.
Scott
paid six (6) percent, which as tutors for health handi- Cynthia Cotterill. Linda board
Victor Young.
!)leans under terms of the con- capped students in the district Dunlap. Beverly Fetty. Walton.
Norman
Humphreys.
Ron
tract they wtll pay less.
at the rate of $20 per hour not Kolleta Fridley. Angela Logan, and Roger Abbott.
Other business
to exceed five hours per week. Hoalcraft, Lori Kin ze l, Billie
Bids on commodities were
Subtitute teachers hired
awarded during the meeting were Eleanor Blaettnar,
award and will 'be honored at
to Heiner's Bakery, Inc . for Camille
events
· around the country in
Bolin,
Cara
bakery and bread; Broughton Bulington, lise Burris. John
September.
Foods Co. for milk and dairy; Chilmoik, Jessica Marcum,
"If nurses had a good men:
from Page A1
and
Ashland
Branded Allen Midcap. · Beatrice
tor from the time they first
Marketing by G&amp;M Fuel Cu., Morgan, Shirin Nuggud, Gay ence in nursing administra- began their nursing education
Inc. for gas and diesel fuel.
Perrin, Dennis Flaherty, tion from the University of to the time they blossomed
The board approved trans- Misty Rossiter, Cynthia Cincinnati, and a PH D in into a nursin~ mentor themfers into the athetic and prin- · Civale, Heidi . Delong, Bill nursing from Texas Woman ·s selves. there 'Woulu probably
be· no nursing shortages
cipals' funds. These included Downie, Andrea Gannaway, ·university.
.
$2,500 each to the principals' · Judy Gilmore. Jeanette Grate,
She was an associate pro- because more nurses would
funds of the Meigs Primary Vicki Griffin, Mary Hill . fessor at Ohio University remain in Nursing," said
School,
the
Meigs Kathie Hoffman, Melissa ·· from 1996-2003 in the Lynn while emphasizing the
School of Nursing and in fail . importance of mentoring.
lynd and her coll eagues at
· 2003
began
teaching
which has adoption hours Baccalaureate Degree and Wright State University
from 8 a.m. to noon, Monday Master's Degree Nursing stu- Coll~ge of Nursing have ·been
through Saturday. The phone dents at Wright State involved in a national initianumber at the pound is 992- University in Dayton. In tive partn~r s hip between
· from Page A1
3779 .to make other aqoption June 2005. she was appointed nursing edu..:~ttion and .nurstime arrangements. The cost
Proffitt estimates th;;t Lily to adopt Lily or any other dog to the position as director of ing practice to create a new
the new Master 's in 'Nursing master's-prepared role in
is not quite two years old.'
is. $10. plus $4 for a dug Program, the Clinical Nurse nursin~ . the Clinical Nurse
Despite her past, Lily is license fee. The Meigs
Leader. to impro\'e the qualistill extremely friendly and County Humane Society also Leader. at Wright State tv of bedside nur,ing care for
'
trusting of human beings and offers a voucher. to adoptive University.
.Each
•
year
Nursing patients. l;unilics. and comin need of a good home .
parents for paying half of any Spectrum perfolms a blind munitie~ .
Lily, along with many other spaying or neutering bill.
Lynd applauds these partreview by their editoria l
discarded but loving dogs.
If you suspect animal ,abuse board of all "nomina,tiuns li•r ner,hips because it is the first
are waiting to be adopted at call the Meigs County Nursing Excellence Awards. major c·ollaborative initiative
the Meigs County Dog Pound Humane Society at 992-6060. Dr. Lynd received a certiti- between nursing education
cate for this award as well as and nur&gt;ing pral'tice during
Jerry VaDyke·, Greg McCoy. an engraved crystal statue her -+.1 year&gt; in Nursing. The
Nurse
Leader
Gene Kunkle, Jerry . WelL fr01\t Nursing Spectrum. As a Clini.;al
are
a
result
of 85
Programs
Charlie Donahi1e. Janiie recipient. she will also be · a
for
Nursing collaborati,·e partnerships in
Rainey. Ed Parso11s. Billy candidate
trom PageA1
Spectrum
's
'Nurse
of
the
Yea~· · the United States.
Lambert, Stanley Houch,
Pennington. Cec·il Neal, Bill Bob Taylor, Don Cutlip. Gary
Nick
Stamper,
Holcomb, ,G reg Hill, Paul Hall ,.
Laymond Pierce, Joe Jeffers.
Lucas.
Jeff
Clark. AI Thompson.
Bruce Hill , Jane Hively.
Terry Ross, Ralph Holland, Jerry MtGintry. Larry Smith.
Eric Aanstead. Bruce Carota, and Mike Rogers.

Contract

ALB ANY - Meigs County Bikers Association will hold
Family Fun Day on Saturday beginning at noon at Jordan's
Campground. All children must be accompanied by an adult.
Free camiJing. ·

county fair lady

funded
by
portfolio
employer payment &gt; and
meant to help Ohio workers
injured on the job. ·
Currently, a five-member
committee with no investment, expertise approves
investments made by the
workers' camp bureau .
The review team was created after revelations about
risky i~vestments that caused
a loss of at least $300 mill ibn
in ,workers' camp funds.
Those losses becam~ public following an investigation

Woman sues school district over school racial bala~ce policy

Jackie W. Grose

Benefit canceled

~ My

ed diseases and other jobsp~cific ailments.
·
'The organization that
exists right now is not capable of managing an investment portfolio of this size,"
said Tom · Hayes, the Ohio
Lottery director and leader of
a three-person team that ana'lvzed investment problems at
the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
The team recommended
the creation of a new
investment board to oversee
· the agency's $14 billion

of Delaware; stepsons, Charles Ross (Linda) Leonard ot'
Delaware, and Roland (Barbara) Haycraft of Johnstown;
nieces, Janet Connolly and Marilyn Robinson; nerhew Randy
Bv LISA CORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Koehler; grandchildren J.D. (Sandy) Di Guilio o Mt Vernon,
Stephanie (Eric) Rosso of Honolulu, Hawaii, Ricci (Tim)
CINCINNATI- A woman
Gravely of Lewis Center, Carlene (Dewayne) Gibson of
Hodge,nville, Ky., and · Tracy · (Leonard) Wilkie of has sued a school district that
Pickerington; great grandchildren: · Niki and Dominic Di she says kept her biracial son
Guilio, Kaimana and Jade Rosso, Stephanie and Hope frqm enrolling in an elemenGravely, Eli and Abi Gibson and several other family mem- tary school because his
bers.
·
.
·
minority ·status would upset
Friends may visit from 6 to 8 p.m . Wednesday at the the district's racial balance.
Dwayne R. Spence Funeral Home, 650 West Waterloo St.,
Sandra Tharp wan teO - to
Canal Winchester, where the funeral service will be held at I0 send her 5-year-old son, Keith
a.m. on Thursday, w\th Randy Koehler officiating. lnterrnent ·Cordell, to Welch Elementary
will be at Betzer Cemetery.
·
School because .it would be
Online condolences may be sent to www.spencefuneral- easier to arrange transporta.
home.com.
. ·
•
tion from that school to her
son's day-care center. He is
now scheduled to attend
kindergarten at Pleasant Run
Elementary School.
DANVILLE - Jackie William Grose, 70, a former
Tharp's ' lawsuit said her
Jefferson County resident, died Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2005 at request was rejected because
Morning View Care Center.
·
her son is considered a '
He was. born Feb. 3, 1935 in Toronto, Ohio to the late Walter minority under a district poliand Orva (Collins) Grose. He was a United States Army veteran anc! served in Korea. On March 23, 1965, he was married cy aimed at maintaining
racial balance. She is white
to Elizabeth A. Fursh who preceded him in death.
and
her son's father is black.
He is survived by a daughter, Tammy (Bill) Severns of
The Northwest Local
Mount Vernon; two brothers, Charles Grose of Empire, and
Schools
district is violating
Melvin Grose of Pomeroy; two sisters, Nona Slentz of Canton
the
equal
protection clause of
and Wanda Randolph of Pomeroy; four stepsons, Thomas,
Steve, and Albert Burkey of Toronto, and Joe BurkeY. of Fort the 14th Amendment to the
Constitution by basing its
Myers, Fla.; six grandchldren and one great grandch1ld. ·
l" addition to his parents and wife, he was preceded in deth policy solely on race and is
creatmg a quota system,
by seven siblings.
Calling hours will be from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m on Thursday Tharp's attorney, Robert
at the Fischer Funeral Home in Danville. A graveside service Newman, said Tuesday.
. with military rites 'will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Aug. 26,
2005 at Sugar Grove Cemetery. This obituary can be viewed
on-line at fischerfuneralhome.com
·

Family Fun Day

LONGTIME'\

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Eva Leonard

Local Briefs
"Eil t'VE WANTED To .
LlVf T~E~ FOR ALONG,

The Daiiy Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Divorces
POMEROY -Divorces were granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to David Lee Hardwick from
Rebecca Marie Hardwick, and to Vicky A. Pumphrey from
Roger A. Pumphrey.

· Dissolutions
POMEROY -Dissolutions were granted in Meigs Couniy
Common Pleas Court to Tina Bugaj and Michael Bugaj and to
Ira Eugene VanCooney and Teresa VanCooney.

Foreclosures
POMEROY -Actions for foreclosure were granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to J.P. Morgan Chase
Bank, Milwaukee, Wis ... against Dennis S. Whitlatch, Athens,
and others, alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the
amount of $97 .299.02; City National Bank of West Virginia, '
Cross Lanes, W.Va. , against WiHiam T. Soulsby, Jr.,
Pomeroy, and others, alleging ·default in the amount of
$34,523. 12; Well s Fargo Bank, Fort . Mill, S.C., against
Darrell T. Young, Middleport, and others, alleging default in
the amount of $46,048.05; and Union Planters Bank, doing
business as Regions Mortgage, Cordova, Tex .. against Esther
L. ~Moss, Pomeroy, .and others, alleging de~au It in the
amount of $31,477.14.

Pool
from Page A1
. This year, the pool has
been under new manage- .
ment. with Pool Manager
Dale Riffle and an assistant
manager, Jim Brewer. The
two have coordinated a number of .cosmetic improve··ments and instituted new programs and activities at th~
pool this summer in hopes of .

attracting more swimmers both youngsters and adults.
Riffle told· village council
he plaris to present them with
a full report of the pool's
finances and activities for the
sum mer next month', and will .
also make suggestions as to
how to improve the financial
performance of the pool.
"In reviewing the records
from this summer, .it appears
there's no . reason why this
pool can't turn a profit,''
Riffle told village council
Monday evening.

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PageA6

AROUND THE WORLD
.Israel completes historic ·withdrawal in one week;
·· · ·Palestinian praises evacuation as courageous
_The Daily Senti~el

·BY RAVI NESSMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

. SANUR. West Bank bracli forces cumcd with riot
gear. saws and wire cullers
evicted militant holdouts from
!WO
Jewish selllements
Tuesday. completing Prime
Ministet: Ariel . Sharon's hbloric withdruwal from the
G&lt;Iza Strip and a l'Omer of the
West Bank.
The rdativc case and lack of
violence with which l&gt;rael
pulled out of the 25 selllcrnents in just a week was a
s,tinging setback to Israel's
ultra -nationalist movement.
which j()f momhs had niounted vocal and dramatic resistance.

Palestinian and Israeli lead, ers as well as Prcsidem Bush
said the pul lout - the first
ti,me Israel has abandoned terr,itory Palestinian' claim for
their future 'talc - opened
new opportunities for peace
negotiations.
·
· Mohilized for the final
push. about I0.000 soldiers
- and pollee ·overwhclm'ed
extremists pn&gt;tcsling the pullout in the West B;mk sett lemonls of Sanur and Homesh.
SWAT teams sprayed a fire
hose on dozens of extremists.
sliced thrm1gh steel hars of a
shtltlered seminary and hull. dozed a barbed-wire barricade
: to stonn rioters pelting troops
: with eggs (J!ld tin cans.
· The senler evacuations con- ·
eluded the major piece of the
Llnilatcral pullout Sharon
. envisioned 18 months ago.
: aimed at reduci ng friction
. with the Palestinians. easing
: Israel's military burden. and
· tightening its hold on the West
Bank heartland where most of
the 240.000 Jewish selllers
' live.
. Israel said homes in the
· abandoned selllcmcnts will be
: destroyed in I0 days. pan of
: an agreement with ·the
· Palestinians.
In Gaza. the Palestinian
Authority plans to build mul. tistory apartments in their
: place to ease an acute housing
:shortage. In the West Bank,
:Israel _is destroying homes to ·
prevent Jewish extren11Sts
from returning there .
Bulldozers leveled villas
. and ·collages in Ganim and
: Kadim - the first demoli . lions in the West Bank after · settlers there left
~

Wednesday, August 24,2005

injured i11 Tuesday's operation. Five protesters were
injured and 40 were arrested,
he said.
1
Sharon decided, to add the
isolated nonhern West Bank
selllemerits to the Gaza pullout plan "to show our seriousne" and willingness 10 reach
a comprehensive agreement"
with the Palestinians. said
senior Sharon adviser Raanan
Gissin.
Since the evacuation operation began eight days ago, the
army said 15.tXJO people were
removed from Gaza and the
West Bank senlements - far
more than the 9,000 who actu-·
ally li ved there. an indication
of the lierce resistance mounted by hard-liners backing the
settlers.
"We thought that the Jewish
was cvacua1ed after fortes
sawed through iron bars in the nation would wake up," said
doorway. Troops who broke Rabbi Dov Lior, a spokesman
in to a religio,us sem inary for the settler movement. "But
housed in · an abandoned I don't think our force is
.
AP Photo
lll&lt;hquc ca rried out 30 black- weakening," he said, predictJewish settlers barricaded on a rooftop use poles and ladders to keep Israeli police away; dur- garb~d ultra-Orthodox men ing a comeback for the seting the evacuation of the Jewish sell lement of Sanur. in the northern West ~;lank, Tuesday. holed up in side.
tkrs.
Israel wrapped up its historic evacuation of-25 Jewish settlements on Tuesday as troops armed
The four emptied West
The toughest resistance
with riot gear, circular saws, water hoses and wirecutters cleared out two militant West Bank came at a Homesh seminary, Bank selllemehts are near the
strongholds in the most forceful episode of their pullout operation.
where protesters barricaded Palestinian towns of Jenin arid
th.emsclves ·on the roof. Tulkarem , both militant
for their ex1remis111 and rejec- Resisters locked arms but did strongholds.
Tuesuav of their own accord. soon.
Sublri Alawneh, a 58-yearBush said Monday the pull- tion of the Israeli govern- not struggle when . troops
Destruction of houses in the
old
farmer from the nearby
placed
them
into
the
shovel
or
2 I Cata senlements were out has cleared the way for the ment 's authority.
resu mption of peacemaking.
. "Everyone knew we would- a bulldozer and lowered them Palestinian village of Jaba,
already under way.
called Tuesday "a day of celeIn Caza. explosions were "In the heart of the Mid&lt;)le n't win. that the army brought to the ground.
bration" for the more than
Below.
troops
sawed
heard late Tuesday in the ,East a hopeful story is unfold- big forces here . B•JI we came
to demonstrate determina- through the window bars and 40,000 Palestinians who live
abandoned selllemenl of ing," he said.
tion," said !do, a 17-vear-old main gate of the building to near Sanur.
The
West
Bank
evacuations
Dugit. were Palestinian offi"We were afraid of them all
cials said Israelis had advised began shortly after dawn' from the southern Israe li town carry out protesters who lay
on the lloor. arms locked. the' time," Alawneh said,
them they would lx; blowing when columns of troops of Sdcrol.
9fTering
prayers and songs of referring to the settlers. "After
entered
Sanur
and
Homesh.
For
many
Israelis.
the
evacup buildings and installations.
thev are removed. we will dispraise
to
Resistimce
rhere
was
staged
uation
of
the
West
Bank
setGod. .
With rhe civilians gone, .Israel
Navch. the nonhcrn rom- tribute sweets and show hapmust d.csrroy its military bases largely hy 1,5(M) Israel is from tlements - in the heart of the
biblicai,Land
of
outside
the
West
Bank
Israel
was
mander.
said 19 policemen 'pincss, we will go out into the
before staging ils own withsome
of
them
y.
o
uths
known
particularly
painl'ul,
and
and
soldiers
were light ly streets 10 celebrate."
drawal· - within a few weeks
- and end the ~8-year occ u~
pat ion of the coasral strip.
Israeli doves, who said lillie
while Sharon ballled his own
hawkish pany to push through
the withdrawal plan. were
jubilant. "This is the beginning of a process we always
regarded as necessary. The
hope is the slate of Israel is
authorities teared extremists
would tum violent. They did
not, and troops persuaded
most protesters to leave without a struggle.
"Rabbis were present at all
the· tlashpoinls and they lowered the flames." said northern commander Maj. Gen.
Yair Navch. .
In Sanur. resisters occupied
the roof of a British-built
citadel surrounded bv coils of
razor-wire. In a scene reminis~
Ge nt of troops breaking a hardline ·standoff in Ga?.a days
ago. cranes lifted a shipping
container loaded with troops
onto the roof. while other:
forces cut . ground-lloor iron
doors and carried out resisters
ki&lt;:king and squirming.
Sanur 's main sy nagogue

Iraqis resuming charter talks
:as U.S. envoy urges effort to
:win Sunni Arab agreement
Bv BA55EM MROUE

Shiites and Kurds to submit
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
the draft to parliament over
Sunni objections violated an
· BAGHDAD: Iraq - Sunni. agreemem thi11 no document
: Arab leaders showed no sign would be considered final
:of compromise Tuesday as unless all parties agreed to it.
: they prepared 10 resume talks
"The sticking points are
ih yet another bid by the related to the· identity"of Iraq.
Shiite-lcd government 10 win federalism. power-shm·i ng and
approval of Iraq's new consli- purifying the &lt;;onslitution uf
.: tution.
~my mention of se(.:Larianism,"
·· TI •c U.S. ;unbassador said said the Iraqi Islamic Party.
: every elTon must be ·made to wlm:h has roots in ,the funda:win Sumii agreement. but the memalist
Muslim
: chairman of the drafting com- Brotherhood.
. mitlee doubted thai differ''II' the wording is not reences could be resolved quick- examined in a way that serves
. ly and suggested parliamem the interests of the country
: might s_ubmit the current draft Ul)U ensures equality for
; to voters.
eveJybody. then this draft is
• Failure to win over the wnsidered as rejected. as a·
:once-dominant
, ·minority . whole-and in details ."
would undercut the U.S. stratSaleh al-Mutlay, one ot four
. egy of using the constitution principal ·Sunni negotiators,
10 lure Sunni Arabs frofn the
also complained 01i AI-Jazeera
: Sunni-domlnated insurgency television that the drat'! was
:so American and other foreign sent to parliamem without
:troops could stan 10 go home. consensus.
,
: Representatives of the major
''This procedure was · illefactions - Shiites. Kurds and gal." he said.
Sunnis - scheduled negotia- ~ With the Sunnis digging in
. tions for Wednesday morning their heel s. the chairman of
: in the heavily guarded Green the 71-membcr comr.ilillec that
:Zone after Sunnis angrily dralied the con,titution said ,
· rejected the draft presented ro three days were not enough to
: parliament Monday only min- resolve Swmi objectinm. He
: utes before the midnight dead- said the draft might have In be
. line.
approved by the Shiite- and
· Sunni negotiators opposed Kurdish-dominated parliament
. several paris of the draft. as is and taken 10 the people in
: induding federalism. reler- a referendum Oct. 15. ·
Chairman
· Humam
: ences 10 Saddam Hu s .,ein'~
: Sunni-led Baath Party and the Hammoudi. a Shiite. noted
: description of Iraq a.s an that unlike Shiite and Kurdish
Islamic - hur not Arah negotiators. Sunni Arabs on
country. Parliamclll put •&gt;If a the commillee were not clc\:1: vpte on the document for three ed parliament member' . hut
:days to try h&gt; win o\·cr Sunni, , were appointed to the panel.
· On Tuesday. the country\ Slllmi Arabs won only 17 .of
: I:Wggc.\ 1 Sunni roliticll group 275 parliament seah because
repeated those complaints. many Sunni voters boycoued
adding that the decision by Jan. 30 elections.

)

AROUND THE-WORLD
Venezuela's vice president slams Robertson's Government-run Peruvian airliner
call for Chayez assassination
crashes in jungl~, killing at least 3 7
Wednesday, August 24, 20Cf5

Bv CHRISTOPHER
TOOTHAKER

statement by a citizen of that he was lo board a plane for a
country,''
Rangel
told trip to Jamaica to discuss a
ASSQCIATED PRESS WRITER
'
reporters.'
"It's
huge Venezuela initiative to supp ly
they have stopped operations
Bv CARLA SALAZAR
hypocrisy to maintain this petroleum to Caribbean
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
because of darkness and the
CARACAS, Vene7,uela - · discourse agai•Jsl ferrorism countries under favoruble
muddy
terrain,'' he .,aid.
Venezuela's vice president and at the same time. in rhe finlU1cial terms .
LIMA.
Peru
-A
Peruvian
"Tom,orrow at 7 a.m. we will
accused religious broadcaster heart of thai country, there . Chavez has emerged as one
airliner
carrying
I
00
people
finish the recovery work."
· Pat Robertson on Tuesday of are enti rely terrorist state- of the most. outspoken critics
crashed
Tuesday
near'
a
jungle
But TANS spokesman
making "terrorist statements" ments like those."
of .PIXsidenl Bush. accusing town while allempting an Jorge Belevan told reporter&gt;
by suggesting that AmeriCan
The U.S. government dis- the Uni ted Stales of conspir- emergency landing, killing at
agents assassinate President tanced
itself
from ing to topple his government least 37 people and injuring there was still no confirma- tion on the death toll. He said
Hugo Chavez.
Robertson's comments.
and possibfy backing plots to about 40, oftlcials said.
the plane carried 92 [las&gt;enOn Monday. Robertson
Secretary of Defense assassinate him. U.S. olliThe
Boeing
737
wenr
down
gers
and eight crew members
said on the Christian ponald H. Rumsfeld. appear- cials have called the accusanear
the
Pucallpa
municipal
and was allempting an emerBroadcast Network's "The Ing at a Pentagon news con- tions ridiculous.
airport
after
the
pilot
radioed
700 Club": "We have the ference, said when asked:
"You know, I don 't know that he could not land because gency landing when it
nashed.
ability to take him om and I "Our department doesn't do about this doctrine of assassiof
strong
winds
and
a
torrenBelevan said the plane carthink the time has co~e that that kind of thing. It's against nation, but if he thinks we' re
tial
downpour,
Norma
ried
three foreigners. includwe exercise that ability."
the law. He's a private citi- trying to assassinate him, I Pasquel, a Pucallpa airpon
ing
two Americans . . There
. "We don '1 need another · zen. Private citizens say all think that we really ought to
receptionist,
•
told
The
was
no
indication if they were
$200 billion war to get rid of kinds of things all the time." go ahead and do it,"
Associated
Press
by
phone.
among the casualties.
one, you know, strong-ann
Department Robertson said. "It's a whole
Stale
The
plane
circled
the
air'There are,40 cadavers that
drctator," he continued. "lf s spokesnnan
Sean lot cheaper than starting · a port until trying to make the rescue
teams are pulling from
a whole lot easier to have McCormack
called war ... and I don't think any emergency landing. Officials the wreckage: There could be '
some of the coven operatives Robertson's remarks "i nap- - oil shipments will stop."
and radio reports said the more deaths. We assume
do the job and then gel it propriate.''
Rangel called Robertson "a plane crashed near a highway, some 60 people in toral since
over with."
"This is not the policy ·of man _who seems to have quite
the pilot might we've rescued 20 injured
Vice President Jose Vicente the United States govern- a bit of intlu ence in that indicating
Rangel said 'venezuela was ment. We do not share his CQUntry," adding sarcastical ly have been trying to land on people," a police officer in
the roadway.
Pucallpa, who. wasn't fun her
studying its legal options, views," McCormack said.
that his words were "very
Cesar Arroyo, a provincial identified,
told
adding that h9w Washington
There was no immediate Christian."
prosecutor,
told
Radioprogramas
radio.
responds to Robertson's comme111 from Chavez. who
The comments "reveal that Radioprogramas that between
Berta Garcia, a secretary ar
comments would put its anti- was winding up an official religious fundamentalism is 37
to 40 bodies had bee'n Pucallpa's municipal hospital
terrorism policy to-the test.
visit to C~ba on. Tuesday. one of the great problems pulled from the wreckage of told Radioprogramas that I0
"The ball is in the U.S. Scores of journalists awaited facin g humanity in these TANS
Peru flight 204.
bodies had been brought
·court, after thi s criminal Chavez at the airport, where times," Rangel said,
"There are still many more there. She said that her hospibodies to recover out ' now · tal was treating 26 injured

passengers and that 14 others
were being treated at a local
cli nic. Reports ;,a id many of
the injured had burns and broken bone,.
A man identifying himself
as William Zea. a passenger
on the plane. !Did CPN radio
by telephone that the plane
was traveling on a route from
Lima lu Pucallpa.' and ' from
there onto the nu11hern jungle
city of lquir os when "lbe
plane suffered some rmllfunction and we went down."
Tomas Ruiz. another passenger. tol'd Radiuprogramas:
"It seem;, it was a maller of
the weather. Ten minutes
before l!'e were tu land in ·
Pucallpa. the plane began to
shake a lot."
In January 2003. a TANS
twin engine Fokker 28 turbojet, plowed into a 11.550-foot
high mountain in Peru's
northern jungle. killing all 42
passengers- including eight
chi ldren - and four cre'w
members aboard .
Rain, low clouds and the
rugged, 'steep terrain of the
cloud forest region kept
search teams from locating
the wreckage for two days . .

...

Your sourCe for news _on the Net .
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

coming back to sanity,'' said

Tsali Reshef. a leader of the •
Peace Now movement.
Palestinian
leader
Mahmoud Abbas telephonejl
Israeli President Moshe
Katzav to congratulate Israel
on its ''courageous step" of
leaving Gaza. A day earlier,
Abbas telephoned Sharon and
the two leader&lt;; agreed to meet

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel ·

'
Located in the O'Bieness Medical Park, the Castrop Center represents the O'Bieness Health System's
commitment to progressive cari ng for our community. The largest single project of a four-phase
expansion plan, the Castrop Center provides conveni ent access to a variety of medical servi ces.

First Floor

Third Floor

· • Athens S11rgery Center
• Eye Physicians and Surgeons of Athens. Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, MO .
· Jeffrey F McAdOo, M.D .
• O'Bieness Laboratory Satellite

• 0 '81eness Patient Registration Satellite
• 0'81eness Radiology and Imaging Services
Bone Density
CT Scan
Mammography
MRI
• 0'8leness Rehabilitation Center
Physical Therapy .
Speech Therapy

· • Athens Pathology
Scott A. Jenkinson, D.O.
Nili Unel1, D.O . . ·

'

• Lung Diseases, Sleep Medicine
Christopher? Ryckman. M D , F.C.C.P.

• Internal Medicine
Pa ul E. Cadamagnani, D.O .

• American Cancer Society Patient Navigator
Coleen Y. Dietsch-Krubl
• Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology
Steven G. Carin Jr, D.O.

• Neurology
Garx E. Cord ingley, MD .. PhD ,' FAAN

• Mountain View 8one .and Joint Clinic
Steven M. Mille r, M.D .

• 0'81eness Dermatology Clinic
John P. Hibler, D,O.
Ty 0 Hanson, D.O., Res1dent
J. Michael Holsinger, D 0 ., Resident

• River Rose Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Jane E. Broecker, M.D .
Michael J. Clark, D.O.
,Jack M. Ramey, D.O.

Golden
Ripe.
Bananas

• General Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt, M.D., F.A .C.S .
• Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine
Andrew R. Murry, M.D .

• Otorhinolaryngology (Ear. Nose, and Throat}
Michael W Tome, D 0 .

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Linda B. Tome, D.O.

• .MidOhio .Cardiology i!nd Vascular..Consultants
Lucy La Perna, D.O ., R.V.T. ,
. David R. Richards, D.O., F. A.C.C., F.A.S .E.
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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wom~n's

reproductive clinic
seeks to shield medical records
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
clinic that provides birth con·
trol and abortions has sued to
block the state Health
Department's attempt to
review the medical records of
224 patients.
The Ohio Department of
• Health sought access to the
records of every patient who
visited the center in May and
June as part of an investiga·
lion of an undisclosed cnmplai nt.
The Central Ohio 'Women's
Center said·that releasing the
records could violate federal
rnedical privacy laws. The
center,
affiliated
with
Planned
Paren thood of
Central Ohio, said it is not
aware of anv complaints
against it.
·
The records include such
Sensitive information as type
of birth control used. number
of sexual partners and type of

Page AS

District Court in Columbus is'
similar to lawsuits Planned
Parenthood has filed to stop
release of medical records to
government agencies in other
states.
Lawsuits are pending in
Indiana and Kansas, where
officials said they sought the
records to investigate looking
for evidence of unreported
child · sexual abuse.' In
Kansas, officials also are
loqking for evidence of illegal late-term abortions.
Planned Parenthood successfully
prevented the
release in 2004 of about 900
patient records nationwide
o.ought by former Attorney ·
General John Ashcroft. The
organization also turned back
a 2002 attempt to get the
names of women who had
pregnancy tests in an Iowa
town where a dead newborn
was discovered.

intercourse practiced. said
Lisa Perks. the center's executive director. She called the
Health Department's request
a "fishing 'expedition."
State hc;ilth officials routinely get access to medical
records while keeping the
information from the public.
department spokesman Jay
Carey said. The department is
investigating, . whether the
center is meeting requirements of its license as an out. patient surgical center.
For example. nursing home
inspectors routinely examine
hundreds of resident records
in annual inspections, hesaid.
He would nut give spec ifics
about the center's case.
"This is something we've
been doing for a lung time,"
he said. "We keep it on a
· need-to-know basis for those
who are i11 vestigating."
The lawsuit filed in U.S.

INSIDE.

VVednesday,August24,2005

Local stocks
ACI- 60:89
A£P- 36.98
Akzo -41.U
Ashland Inc. - 59.36
AT&amp;T-19.79
BLI-12.27
Bob Evans - 25.91
BorgWamer - 59.01
Champion - 4.27
Charming S~ops - U.88
City Holding ,;,. 36.82
Col- 4!l.13
DG -18.96
DuPont - 40.38
Federal Mogul - .45

USB- 29.73
Rockwell - 51.37
Gannett - 74.28
Rocky Boots - 31.07
General Electric - 33.97
RD Shell - 63.13
GKNLY- 5.15
sac- 24.20
Harley Davidson - 50.22
Sears - 139.92
JPM- 34.35
Wai-Mart - 46.34
Kroger - 20.03
Ltd.- 21.93
Wendy's- 48.96
NSC- 3jl.20
Worthington -17.27 ·
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 30.57 • Dally stock reports are the 4
OVB-25
p.m. closing quotes of the
BBT-40.83
previous day's transactions,
Peoples - 27.01
provided by Smith Partners
Pepsico - 54.91 .
Premier - 13.24
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Wednesday, August 24, 20Q5
'.

.

I

College Cross Country -

'

.

l

I

.

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

The

University of Rio Grande
men's and women's cross
country pro~rams should be
improved '" 2005. Last
year's squads were extremely
young, but as the ·season
developed some of the runners matured and have con. tinued to mature and should

be strong runners thi's season.
It will be a season of
change as ,Rio Grande head
coach Bob Willey begins life
without the services of the
departed
Matt
Boyles.
"We 've got a good gro up of
young · people, of cuur~e.
. we've got some people that
ran last year that ran well
over the summer and are
b k" w 1·11
'd "W •
ac ··•
ey sal ·
e re
just pretty excited about it.
"Matt's been here at a cou-

pie of practices wjth
us and one
of things
that I told
them was
that Matt
Cross Co~ntly Boyles Was
an ave(age
runner in high school,"
Willey added .. "He was fighting to make the team as a
freshman, once he got here,
·realized what he had ro do

PrEp Golf -

MPH from the northeast
turning from the east as the
afternoon progresses.
Evenitrg
MidlliKhl)

(7

p.m.-

It will continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
fall · from 77 early this
even in g to 67. Winds will be
5 MPH from the northeast.
Overrrighl (1-6 a.m.)
It . will rema in cloudy.
Temperatures will stay near
66. Winds \viii be 5 MPH
from the northeast turning
from the east as the overnight
progresses.

'

GAL LIPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming college

Wednesday's games

Llplroecopy

Golf
SEOAL at Franklin valley, 4~30 p.m.

..

. TVC Ohb at OxOOw. 4:30 p:m.
Thu~\lgames

SOCcer
Gallia Aca~ at Alexander, 7 p.m
OhiO Valley Christian at Federal H~ng, 5:30
p.m.

Golf
Wahama at Meigs (Pine Hills), 4:30p.m.
TVC Hoc:king at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m.

BY FRANK CAPEHART
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

River Valley, Souttl Gallia at Wellston
(Fairgreens): 4:30 p.m,

Friday, August 26
Foolball
Gal~a Aca~ at Meigs
WdliamstCI'Ml at Wahama
Eastern at Soutl1 Gallia
Southeastern at River Vaiey
Green at Southern
Point Pleasant at Ripley
Hamlin at Hannan ~
Colloga SOCcer
. Rio Grande at Missouri Baptist, 7 p.m.
College ~Ieyba·
Rio at UMD Tournament, T8A

HOLZER
CLINIC

Satunioy, August '0

Crosa Counly
Early Bird lrMtatiOnal "at RNerValley, 9 a.m.
Glr1s Soccer
Ftint Pleasant al SprinQ Valley, TBA
•&gt;Jol!eyball
0/C Preview at River Valf!y, 1 p.m.

"''''""'·i&lt;.•

SOCcer
Jacksoo at Galia Academy, 1 p.m
Collogo SOCcer
Rio Grande at Colmbia Coli9ge, 5 p.m.

Meigs to hold
Meet the Team
Night Thursday
POMEROY - The Meigs
Athletic Boosters will sponsor a Meet the Team Night at
. Bob Roberts Field Tht1rsday
at 6:30p.m.
.·
The football and cheerleadin g teams will be introduced
at this rally and all Marauder
supponers are encouraged to
attend.

URG basebalJ golf
outing in October

PAR MAR STORES
2264 .Second Street
Mason, ·· wv

RIO GRANDE - The
2005 Rio Grande Baseball
Golf Outing will be held I
p.m. Saturday, October I at
Cliffisde Golf Club. An
alumni baseball game will
follow the next day.
Check-in t.ime for the gold
outing is 12:30 p.m. The
baseball game wi II be held at
I p.m. (DH) on Sunday,
October 2.
For more information
please call Rio Grande he.ad
baseball
coitch
Brad
Warnimont at 1-8(}0-2827201 Ext. 7486 and/or e-mail
· bradw@ rio.edu or Herb
. Sharfenaker 1-614-276-5263
Ext 436 and/or e-inail
HJS 13 @yahoo.com.

(Formerly Little John's)

.Marlboro $3.09 Pack
Camel $3.19 .Pack
$2.89 Pack
Kool
$2.89 Pack
Salem
Winston $3.14 Pack

$29.89 Carton
$30.89 Carton
$27.89 Carton
$27.89 Carton
$30.3.9 Carton

Basic
$2.69 PacktDora I
$2.89 Pack
USA Gold $2.39 Pack
Sonoma $1.99 Pack
Pall Mall $2.49 Pack

$25.89 Carton
$27.89 Carton ·
. $22.99 Carton
$18.49 Cart.o n
$23.89 Carton

Correction

'

•11111111111111111111111111111111~•
••
·••
•
••
•••
••
••
. Chipped Ham
••
•••
$1.391b.
•• •
•

FROM THE DELl

Bud or Bud Light Cans
Miller Light 30 pack cans
Miller Light 12 pack bottles
Busch 12 pack cans
Milwaukee Best 12 pack cans
·'

$6.49
$15.99
$6.99
$6.49
$4.99

·white
Falcons
fall to
.&lt;Point

and h1gh school varsity sporting events involving '
teams from Gallia. Meigs and Mason counties.

• llnlmally lnvlllve IJn)logy
Thursday, August 25
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It looks like a cloudy morning. Temperatures will drop
from 66 early thi s morning to
66 by 7 a.m. then climb back
up to 79 late morning . Winds
will be 5 MPH from the east
turning from the southeast as
the morning progresses.
Ajtemoo11 (1-6 p.m.)
It should remain cloudy.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 82. Winds will be 5
MPH from the southeast turn·
ing from the east as the afternoon progresses:

and he did it.
really into it and really mmi"I used that for motivation vuled and they arc willing to
'for the other people in the do what it takes to gel hener.
program that you don't have
Senior
Brad
Gilders
to be all-world coming in as a (Giou.,ler) will lead tl)c men's
freshman," Willey said. "If squad . GilJcrs. who ~ame 10
you stay with it you can Rio Grande . a' a middle dis·
improve and he's a prime lance track runner. has
example .
worked extremely hard over
"Some of the people that the past two seuwns anJ is
are ·coming in here have looking to parlay that hard
faster times than he had in ·
high school," he said. "We're Please see Improved, 81
excited, the young people are

TVC Hocking

• Uraloglc Oncologr
•

Wednesday, August 24.
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A
cloudy
1iwrnin g.
Temperatures will rise to 71
with today\ low of 60 occurring around 6 a.m. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the n01th
'turning from the northeast as
the morning progresses.
Afterttooll (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
rise from 72 early afternoon
to the high for the day of 81
at 3 p.m. as they drop back
down to 78 later this afternoon. Winds will be 5 to 10

\

.

'

CNP .SchEdulE

hannel

t

Rio Grande cross country looks to be improved in 2005

Email engagement wedding or anniversa,Yannouncements
.
. ana photos to news@mydailysentinel.tom! . .
.·

•

\

University of Rio Grande
'

RIO GRANDE _

Chong M. Ki_
m, MD IUrologist

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

URG Cross Country preview, Page 82
UC teUs Huggilt'l to nslgn or he'D be ftred, Page 82
Reds, Indians win, Page 83
Big Catch: Bryant impressing Browns, Page B8

••
•••

:

with Co.u pon

Exp.

9-9~05

••
••
•

.:

~11111111.11111111111111111111111•

Prices subject to change without notice

\

Dan
Bookman
was
misidentified as Dru Reed in
a Meigs golf article that
appeared in Tuesday's sports
edition of The Daily Sentinel.
Bookman joined teammates Kirk Legar and Steven .
Stewart with rounds of 41 in
a second-place finish at
Fairgreens Country Club in
Wellston .

Contact Information

.

. Fax- ,1·740-446-3008
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com

oPQLI&gt; _&amp;lil!l
Brad Sherman, Sports Edltqr
(·740 ) 446 -2342. ext 33
bsherman@ mydailyt ribune.com
Bryan Walters, Sports Wrilfilr
(74{) ) 446 -2342. exl. 23
bwalters @mydailytribune.com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675-1333, exl . 19
lcrum @mydailyreglsler com

..

-~, ·lf ...

.•
f ..... '

''

,..,..

•

•_..I

~. "*~

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Brad Crouch lines up a putt on the ninth hole Tuesday during the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division match
at Pine Hills G_olf Course in Pomeroy. Crouch and the Tornadoes won the team event with a score of 161, five shots better than runner-up Trimble.

Southern shines in Pine Hills shootout
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDA1LYTR18UNE.COM

better than
the Green
and White 's
total of 175.

POMEROY - "It's like
E v a n
deja vu, all over again."
Dunn and
Ex-New York Yankees
Michael
catcher Yogi Berra coined
Owen both
the phrase, but he prol:)ably
had rounds
didn't· have golf or the Triof 42 for
Valley Conference in mind
EHS, while
when he said it. ·
Harris
J a c o b
Ironically. the Hall of
. Warner
Fame catcher's statement
added a 45
fits nicely when looking at
in the third
how the early form of the ·
spot.
Ho~king Division chase is
R y a n
shaping up - especially
Nave and
when comparing it to last
K y I e
year.
Edwards
Three sc hools, Eastern,
each fired a
Southern and Trimble, bat46,
and
tled down to the wire for the
Nathan
league crown in 2004 before .
Carroll end
Owen
the
Eagles . eventually
Eastern ' s
walked away with their tirst day with a, 55,
t1tle .
Jordan Tuten led· fourth.1\fte~ Tuesday's match at place Waterford with a 47,
Pme H1lls Golf Couse, guess which totaled 203 as a team .
who has pulled away from
Miller finished
two
the other half of the field for strokes behind the Wildcats
another season-long strug- for fif\h, while Federal
gle.
Hocking came in last with a
Southern was able to 'team score of219.
claim a tive-stroke victory
Trimble now has nine
over Trimble with a 161 on points in the season title
rts h?me course, and Bryan hunt, while Southern sits in
Ham s led {he Purple and second with eight points.
champion
Gold With a one-under . Defending
. Eastern is lhird ~ with seven,
round ?f 33.
Harns earned medalist while Waterford sits fourth
honors on the day, and he with four.
~as the only g?lfer Ill the
Miller has two points in
s1x-team field hmsh under the .five spot, and Federal
·par.
Hocking has yet to earn a
Teammate Brad Crouch point this year.
and Trimble 's Brian Metcalf
both finished runner-up with
The TVC Hocking showdown
next heads to Brass
scores of 38 .
Ring Golf Course in Logan
Patrick Johnson and Alex Thutsday.
Hawley
con.cluded
Southern's team score with
TVC Hocldng StJmdings
rounds of 4 1 and 49, re spectively.
9
Trimble
John Bentz also fired a 49
Southern
8
for SHS, while Josh Smith
Eastern
7
tinished with a 50.
Waterford
4
The Tomcats edged out
2
Miller
. Eastern for second with a
()
Fed Hock
team tally of 166. nine shots

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - What a difference
.the home cou rse makes.
That's what Point Pleasant
High School
golfers must
be thinking
as thcv sue- _
cumhed to
Poca
at
Scarlet Oaks
193- 173 ·on
Monday, but
ca me home
tb Hidden
Garrison
Y a I I e y
Tuesday
where they edged past visiting \Vahama in a very close
177- 180 match.
Poca was a tough team on
their very testing. -tough
home course. Scarlet Oaks.
where the old pro cla»k was
played. The Dot' were headed . by the trio of Tyler
Si~man. Alex Duron and
Chfton Gibson at identi cal
scores of 43. while Josh Hill
was just stroke behind at -t_..
PPHS was paced by _.5
from Will Garrison. 48 from
Curtis Grimm while Eric
Milhoan carded a 49. Justin
Duckworth posted 51. and
Jacob Miller had u 61. The
four lowest total was 193. ·
Please see Point. Bl

Raiders
down Blue
Devils,
.Panthers
BY BRAD SHERMAN
8SH£RMAN@MYOAILYTRI BUNE.. COM

-·
'
Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern 's Evan Dunn watches in agony as his birdie attempt
on the ninth hole at Pine Hills Golf Course comes up just a
few inches short Tuesday. Dunn ant) t'1e Eagles finished
third behind Southern and Trimble with team score of 175.

GALLIPOLI S - Cra1g
lagers i' Teally enjoying
Cliffside Golf Cluh .
The River Yalkv .golfer
shot a round
of
40
Tue sdav to
win medalist
hmwrs, and
led
his
Raiders to a
tri-match
victory over
Che sapeake
and• Gallia
' Jagers
Academv. It
was his 'sec- .
ond medalist performance at
the course in us many days.
Ri1w Yallc1· shot I 72 as a
team. nine strokes hener
than Ohio Valley Conference
··I ri1·al Che sapeake . Gallia
Acmlcm1 finished with a
190.
.
Ja~c r s comfortablv fired
11te to1\· round of the. day as
his do-est competition,
teammate., Bruce Stou1

~Uld

Ju ~ tin

Nolan . were three
' trokc ' bad with _.3's . Craig

.Please see Raiders, Bl

.

�. '

·-

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

Women's College Soccer -

www.mydailysentinel.com

Uniw:r,sity of Rio · Grande

Wednesday, August

.'
24. 2005

perience will be a weakness
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEL
of the club. "We know one of
our weaknesses this year is
going to be the fact that we· re
RIO GRANDE - All the young," Oliver said. "And
planning and preparation is that we're going up against
over. it 's now time to get varsity teams that have much
down to business for the more experience ...
University of Ri o Grande·
The Redwomen have four
women 's soccer program. returning players from last
2005 will mark the first ever year's dub team and they will
varsity season for women's be counted tor !eadersh1p.
soccer at Rio Grande.
··we·re looking for leadership
Head Coach Amber Oliver from the four gir ls that played
is set to lead the fledgling last year that are still on the
program into compet ition for team ," O.liver ,aid.
Rio will also have a 's enior
the · first tim e. The first
women's socce r team at Rio in goal. as softball player
Grande will · be young . und Jenny Olding will man the
somewhat inexperienced. but' . net. "We look for her to
the roster does have tal en t ·guide us and lead us and be a
and is working extremely leader on rhe team: espec iall y
hard to excel on the pitch.
· from her positi9n as goal. · "We're looking forward to keeper." Oliver added .
Oliver has not set a goal as
thi s season." Oliver said. "So
far, in pre-season we'w far as how many wins she
·looked very impreS&gt;ive; the hopes to get th is season. oi1ly
work ethic of the girls has .that the squad improve . "We
beeri good.
'
haven 't se t .any (goals)
"The team has already record-wise because we just
bonded very well . the person- want to take it one ga me at a
ali ties are g reat." Oliver time, being so young it'S JUSt
added . "They' re working going to take games to ~et us
hard ."
experience.'' Oliver sa 1d. " I
Oliver know s that the inex- feel that from our first scrim-

.Point blasts Devilettes
Point Pleasant had only two
LC RUM@MYOAJLYREGISTER .COM
goals at the halfway point
before the offense picked up
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va._ and ran away with the game.
Cochran completed her hat
Sarah Cochran quickl y intra- trick in the second half at
duced hersel f to Raven, wood 4fi:OO on an ·unassiseted goal,
Tue,day night showing them giving the Lady Knights a 3-0
all kinds of tricks ~
· hal tricks · lead.
.
Other players begah to join
that is.
Cochran scored ,the· first in the scoring at the 5p:32
three goals of the ga me for the mark when Jeanette .Oliver
Lady Knights to help push . hammered' a penalty kick into
Po int
Pleasant
past the net tor
· 11er f.1rst goa 1 of t he
Ravenswood in a dominating season. followed a few min7-0 win.
utes later by Valerie Calandros
Tuesday' s win marks the who posted a goal on an assist
second ni ght in a ·row that the from Cochran. who proved to
Point defense limited its oppo- be in the right place at the right
nent to only one shot on goal time throughout the night.
i'n the game.
Anna Jo Morris scored the
. While the goalies waited for sixth goal of the night on an
some action to come to their assist from Char Bibbee at
end, the Lady Knights offense 67:22 · and Leah Eddy added ·
went to work.
the final goal of the g_ame at
At the 9:54' mark, Cochran 71 :50. her third goal of the
posted her flfsl goal of the year in the young 2005 season.
game, followed by another
Point Pleasant racked up 27
goal at the 27J5 time when shots
un
goal
against
Elizabeth Somverville punted Raven swood defender Molly
a corner kick that was eventu- Ritchie who posted eight saves
ally driven in by Cochran.
on the evening.
BY lARRY CRUM

Improved·

mage to our
last game
we
:are
going : to
tnake gteat
imprutement.'' •
Women's Soccer . "Ju s.t ~et.
tmg mmutes
under each girl's belt, finding
the right po sition , becau se
some girls will be playing
rositions that they have nO!
played:· Oliver added. "Our
goa l is. just give us time , let
us figure out the right roster.
right lineup, right position for ·
each gi rl and get soine games
under o ur belt and we· re
going to be great."
,
Ri o has a tough schedule
which co ul d make wins hard
to come by. "The level of
competition we ' re goi ng to
play will I&lt;e very high. "
Oliver said. "We played two
jayvee teams last year from
the confere nce and Cedarville
being · on·e of those and
they're always .a very strong
team." ·
"We know we're going to ·
have to step up and play our
best, especmlly in the conference. we know that we're

playing Marietta and I personally am very close with
the coach. ! played· there." she
said. ··we know that they
have a strong program, our
le vel of play 1s going to have
to nse to the1r level of play
throughout the season."
The first half of schedule is
loaded with home games
beginning with the ho me
opener on September 7 versus
Shawnee State . " I think that
(assistant coach) Mauri ce
(Muteti ) probably did that for
a reaso n, I think he felt that if
we got some home games
maybe the girls wouldn ' t be
quit&lt;! so nervous," Oliver
said. ''We were trying to get
a lot of home games at the
beginning so that they could
get the experience · and carry
that · on through the. second
half when we're away."
Other hom e ga mes have
Walsh. Ohio Dominican.
Salem International and
Asbury College coming to
Rio Grande.
The Redwomen open the
seaso n on the road September
3 at Urbana. Six straight
home games follow that
opener. Rio will also have a

scrimmage on October I versus Kent State at Evan Davis
Field. Road trips consists of
Mt.
Vernon
Nazarene,
Malone, Bluefield College,
Brescia and Tiffin .
With only 13 rlayers on .the
roster depth wil be a problem
.for the teatn. At thts pomt,
Oliver ; hasn't been able to
pinpoint a set lineup or what
the rotation off the bench will
be. "We · re not going to be
very deep , we don't have the
numbers thi s year,'' Oliver
said. "Position wise we kind
of have an idea just from
things we saw while recruiting. but being early in the
pre-season we aren ' t set, a lot
of things could change
between now and the first
game."
Former Rio. men's soccer
player Mauri ce Muieti will
help Oliver on the sideline as
her first lieutenant. " Maurice
brings so much knowledge of
the game," Oliver said. "He
has a lot of thing s he can do
with fi~ne ss. the things like
that that he brings are wonderful.
"The girls ·really look. up to
him because they know he

played here, they know that
he played on a very high caliber team," Oliver added.
'They know that he was
coached by great coaches
while he 'l"as at Rio Grande.''
' Oliver hasn't thought about
the fact that she is blazing a
trail as the first women's soccer coach in school history.
but she hopes she can make a
path that travels down the
same road the men's program
currently
travels
on.
"Honestly, l have not thought
aboutthat,")dle said. "(Rio's
men coach) Scott Morrissey
has made me feel very good.
about this, becau se he said
when he started the program
his first year that he had a
rough time getting thing s
started and 1 look at where
they are now and hopefully
one·day I can help to build a
team that is as high caliber as
tl:te one he has.
"I guess .J haven't really
thought about being the first
coach but I hope'thatl'm able
to have success over my time
here."
Her time begins in a matter
of days.

·uc tells Huggins to resign or he'll be.fired
.

'

CINCINNATI (AP)
Bob Huggins was ordered
Tuesday
to
resign
as
Cincinnati's basketball coach
or he ' ll be fired, the culmination of a power strpggle with
the school president
In a .letter faxed to his
lawyer by the university,
Huggins was given 24 hours
to resign and accept a financial compensation package
worth almost..$3 million. If
he doesn ' t respond by 2 ·p.m.
Wednesday, he will be fired ,
the letter said.
The S!-year-old coach was
traveling and had not se.e n
the letter, lawyer Richard
Katz said.
Athletic director Bob Gain,
one of Huggins' most loyal'
supporters over 'the years,
said he backed the decision .
" It's time for the university
to move on." .Gain said.
" We've reached an impas., e."
Hugg ins has won more
games than any other coach
at Cincinnati, but his tenure
also has been marked by
player arrests, poor graduation rates and . NCAA rules
· violations that landed the
school on probation.
His arrest for drunken dri ving last year upset new
school president Nancy
Zimpher.
Huggins
was
placed on unpaid leav¢ over
the summer, but returned and
coached last season, the

Bearcats' last before moving
into the Big East.
"Character
counts,"
Zimpher said emphatically.
"Our coaches must be exemplary role models on the
court and off."
By dumping their head
coach less than two months
before the start of practice,
the school put itself at a
major disadvantage heading
into one of the nation's
toughe st basketball conferences.
Cincinnati will have an
interim coach in the inaugural season and a mark on its
reputation that could chase
away recruits. Goin wanted
to take a few. days before
picking ah interim coach.
The basketball program
could feel repercussions for
years, but Zimpher said
Huggins' removal would
help the university in the
long run . She noted that the
school has been improving in
national academic rankings.
·"The only variable that we
have stagnated on is our
national
reputation."
Zimpher said, blaming the
basketbaliJ?rogram.
Earlier in Huggins' career.
the program had one of the ·
lowest graduation rates in the
nation. It improved recently,
but not enough to please
Zimpher, who decided to
take on a strong-willed coach

accustomed. to having things
his way.
The school declined to
invoke a roll-over provision
in his contract that would
have left Huggins with four
years on his deal, making it
easier to recruit. Katz has
tried unsuccessfully to get
the contract extended.
"We've been discussing
with them for the last six or
eight weeks an extension of
the contract," Katz said. "It
appeared he wasn ' t going to
be able to fulfill the remaining two years of the contract
because he couldn't recruit,
he was running into obstacles
at the university. It would not
have been appropriate for
that to continue."
The letter faxed to Katz on
Tuesday was signed by the
school's
legal
counsel,
Zimpher, Go in and the chairman of the board of trustees.
The letter, obtained by The
Associated Press through a
Freedom of Information
request . offered to keep
Huggins in some other job
until 2008, paying him $2.77
million over that time. He
could have no hand in the
basketball program.
If Huggins declines the
offer, he will be fired. the letter said.
"I think we would both
agree that these negotiations
have gone on far too long,"

the letter said. " Mr. Huggin s
has
clearly · expressed.
through you, his desire to
move in ·another direction."
Zimpher notified Huggin s
last May that he would not
get his contractnutomatically
extended. as provided for in
the deal. He was given the
option of leaving or-continuing to coach on the two-year
deal.
He held a news conference
to announce he was staying
rather than informing the
administration privately, a
move that evide~. tl)' drove
the wedge deeper. The ultimatum sent on Tuesday
referred to the May news
conference, noting the university had to issue · a statement "i n light of the fact that
coach Huggins chose to deal
with contract issues through
the media."
·
Huggins went 399-127 in
·16 seaso ns at Cincinnati ,
rebuilding it into a nationally
prominent program after
years in disarray. His teams
made 14 consecutive appearances in the NCAA tournament. and reached the Final
Four in 1992.
The program· also had a
history of player arrests and
infractions. )'he program·
went on two years' probation
in 1998 after the NCAA concluded there was a lack of
insJitutional control.

two ·summers she ran into
medical problems. but this
summer she's really had a
,great summer.
from Page Bl
"She's coming in healthy,
so she's looking forward to
work into a treme ndous
her best cross country sea,
senior campaign.
son ."
Sophomore . Chase Smith
(Chillicothe) has improved · Soulsby is also aiming to
improve after her initial seaby leaps and bound s and
son
of running cross country
should be a solid runner for
,i.n 2004. "Shannon's coming
the Redmen this fall . Other
in healthy, she's been running
sophomores Dennis . Hange
and
looks real good; she's
(Wooster). Cody Rochus
looking for a great season as
(Oak Hill) and Phillip Webb
well."
•
(Chillicothe) will also chal Sophomores
Nicholet
lenge to be .in .the top seven .
McKinniss (Gallipolis) and
Rio will welcome five
Kri sta Susi will run cross
freshmen .into the fold in
country for the first time this ·
Please see, Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy ·
2005.
Cory ,Culbertson fall and freshman Lindsay
(logan)
and
Jordan Caldwell (Gallipolis) rounds
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
Cunningham (New Carlisle)
out the squad.
had productive high sc hool
·'We' re excited about our
~:areers and should help the
women's team and we feel
men's program this season.
we can be, like the men,
Fellow fre shmen Troy much better than we were last
'. .
'
Houdy shell (McArthur, OH), year," Willey said.
and
,
Chris Peavey (Piketon )
The official opening to the
Paul Webb !Ontario) round season arrives September 2
out the team.
when the Redmen and
011 the women 's side . Redwomen will com pete at
se nior Dawn Nagle ! Preston . th•
Shawnee
State
England) will lead the squad . Invitational.
. She developed into the top
Other weets see Rio
:runner on the telim last year Grande 'co mpeting at the
and looks to build on tier best Xavier
Invitati onal
collegiate season in 2005.
(September
I 0) ,
th e
· "Dawn has really done a Friendship Invitational at
nice job for us since she 's Cedarville (September 17 ),
been here and she 's really All-Ohio Championships at ·
--:,...--- !"'---- -.---- •
learned more and more each Ohio, Wesleyan (October 7),
'
year about running," Willey the Wilmington Invitational
said. "She 's very enthusiastiC (October
14 ) and the
right now abou't a lot of · American
· Mideast
·things that we ' ve been doing. Conference Championships
"We had kind of a mini- (November 5).
camp, we brought them in
Rio Grand!! wi 11 have two
early, spent several sessions. ·
hotne meets thi s season. The
in the classroom three times a
highlight of the .year is the
daY. and ran twice a day,"
annual
Rio Invitational on ·
Wtlley added. "We 're talking
about the ,mental aspects of October - 1 at the Stanley
training and physical aspects Evans Field Complex. The
and again she's learned a lot men will begin the event at 9
a.m . with the women followfrom that fs well ." ·
ing
at approximatel y at 9:50
Fellow
se nior
Billie
' Robinso n (Indian Lake) and p.m.
Rio will also havean after· junior , Shannon Soulsby
noon
home meet on October
(J'omeroy) ' r"t~rn after running last season. Robinson is 28.
The
NA IA ' National
loo~ing to produce after (wo
will
be
seasqns of being marred by Cham pion'h iP'
injury. "Bi llie had a grelll Novemhcr 19 in Loui sv ille.
Borders and Artwork
summer." he 'aid. 'The hbt KY

Meigs County Fair "_
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GAINESVILLE,
Fla. 1997.
(AP)- The family of for"We're just glad it's
mer baseball home run king over," 'aid Roger Maris Jr.,
Roger Maris and Anheuser- so n of the baseball legend.
Bu sc h Cos. Inc. settled a " It 's been a long process."
defamation lawsuit Tuesday
The company had give n
stemming from the brewer's Roger Maris the distributorterminanon of the family's ship after he ended hi s
. beer distributorship.
·
career in 1968 with the St.
The sides did not disclose Louis Cardinals. which it
terms of, th e settleme nt , then ow ned . He died in
which came as jurors deli b- . 1985.
erated for a second day folBefQre the sett lemeni,
lowing a three-week trial.
1
jurors were trying to decide
Th
e legal ·ight between . if there was' "c lear at\d co n-·
Anheu ser-B us c h and the
vincing
evidence
that
Maris family had .cons umed Anheu ser-Busch officials
eight years. l wo trials and
'II'
f
knew they were making
mt tons 0 · dollars in lega l false statemen •s when. talk fees.
'
Walking ou t of the court- in g to the news media about
Af\heuser-ausch why th e con tract was canroom ,
. executive vice president ce led.
Jurors also were · deterJohn Jacob .said, '' It 's over."
The agreement encom- ·mining whether the Marises
passes the defamation law- invited the com me nt s by
suit and a $5 0 ,million jury hiring a media firm to publiaward that the Mari ses had cize the family's previous
· won against the nation' s lawsuit aga·in st Anheuser- .
' large st brewer in 2001 over Bu sc h. which the co mpany
a wrongful termination law- claims re sulted in a "med ia
suit. That award had been circtos" and forced the brewtied up on appeals.
er to. respond publicly.
Maris' s relatives accused
Ro ger Maris held the sinthe brewer of defamation gle - seas~lll home run record
after company officials said for 37 years after he hit 61
the family's bee( distribu- in 1961 for the New York
torship was deficient and . Yankees. He was traded to
sold repackaged, out-of- the Cardinals aft~r the 1966
date beer. The family was season. helpin g St. Louis to
seeking $5 billion in dam- the 1967 World Series title
ages after its contract with and the 1968 National
the brewer was canceled in League pennant.

. OJ» ..•

~&amp;ud -

~d(JI

Weekday

$23.40
Sunday

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(AP) - The Indians turned
an error and the absence of a
ninth-inning
balk
call
against Bob Wickman into
another victory.
Coco Crisp hit a two-run
triple in a three-run, seve nth
inning, a nd the Indian s
extended thei r winning
streak to six by overcoming
a four-run deficit to beat the
Tampa Bay Devi l Ray s 5-4
Tuesday night. '
'" We just have to prepare
· and focus -the same way,
regardless Of who · we ' re
playing and where we're
play.ing," Indians manager
Eric Wedge sa id.
Cas~y Blake homered for
Cleveland, which W(Jn its
ninth st raight road ga me.
The Indians moved ahead of
Oakland into seco nd in th e
AL wild card race, less than
u percentage point behind
th e New York Yankees.
Cleveland closed to 4-3 in
the seve nth when third baseman Alex Gonzalez was
charged with an error for
misplaying
Grady
Sizernore's
two-out
grounder against Trever
Miller ( 1-2) with runners on
second and third. Crisp th en
tripled off'Joe Borowski for
a 5-4 lead .
Wickman,
the
third
Indians reliever, retired
. Jorge Cantu on a grounder
back to the mound with runners on second and third for
his 33rd save in 38 opportunities. De vi I Rays manager
Lou Piniella argued with the
umpires after it . appeared
Wickman did not stop while
getting into the .stretch posi. lion as Julio Lugo. the runner at third, faked a dash
toward the plate with Cantu
batting.
" He didn't stop," Lugo

paused long enough.
"I took the sign. l cumc
up. 4uick pause and 4t1ick
threw a pitch up and away:·
Wi ckman said.
· Wedge agreed.
"It was just a 4uick pitch-: ·
the manager said . "Wickman
is a guy that vari es.his times:
varies i)is !nob. That 's the
way he pitche.s :·
Jak e We stbrook 11~- l :l J
gave up f{lur nuh ~ all in
the first ~a nd tO hits in (&gt;
2 ~ 3 innings. He h&lt;.1" \\Oil ~ i x

of his last

.-~~ve n

.. 1&lt;1rt:-..

"Down the "reich. C\ crything counts. "' I had to
· relax and settle Jnwn."
Westbrook said . " It "as a
big win ."
' Damon Hollin s had a twi&gt;- ·
run single during a four-nin
AP photo

Cleveland Indians' Coco Crisp watches his two-run triple off
Tampa Bay Devil Rays pitcher Joe Borowski durrng the seventh inning Tuesday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.
said. ' " II was obvious.
Another call aga in st the
Devil Rays. Another call,
another game. I ·asked the
third base umpire . He sa id
he didn't see anything. They
just missed the play."
After Cantu was retired,
Piniella left the dugout again
and yelled at the umpires as

first for th e Devil R,iys. "bu
lost for only the th ird ti me in
the last II &gt;!ame.s. Aubrc'
HuiT had an RBI double iln:l
Jonny Gomes drove I l l " run
· with a sin gle.
C,leveland. closellto -1- 1 i.n
the
'ccund
on
J &lt;He
Hernandez's su.:rifi.:c nv.
and Blake hit a .solo ho me r
in the third .
Tampa Bay _q ancr Mwl
H ~ ndrick son all owcll 1" o
runs and fi ve .hi Ls 111 ,;~

th ey walked off the fie ld.
"That was about as blatant
a halk as I've ever see n in
my l.ifc," Piniella said.
"They all said he stopped .
Anyway. we missed a lot of
scoring opportunities and we
didn't make a play. That was innings . He rn:ltcheJ
the ballgame." ·
cmeer-h i,g h \vith
. . c\ en
Wickman thought
he stri keouts.

..

:a

Indians bring back Tallet
CLEVELAND (AP) - Brian· Tallet was
recalled from Triple-A Buffalo on Tuesday
by the Cleveland Indians, who are in a virtua! tie for ftrst place in the AL wild-card race.
The club also optioned right-hander
Andrew Brown to the Bisons.
Tallet has made one appearance for the
Indians this season. The left-bander pitched
2 1-3 innings in Cleveland's 13-7 win at
Kansas City on Aug. 9 when the Indians
scored ll runs in the ninth inning.

He went 6-5 with a 4.27 ERA in 20 game~
at Buffalo.
.
.
Brown was recalled from Buffalo on Aug.
20 and did not make an appearance.
The Indians won their fifth straigh t game
Monday · night, 11-4 over the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays. Cleveland (69-56), which ha~
won eight straight road games, entered
Tuesday's game with a .552 winn ing percentage. Oakland (68-.55) and New York
(68-55) are at .553.

Hudson, Reds stymie Nationals, 6-2

larry Crumlphoto

Wahama's Garrett Kaylor tees off on the seventh hole at
Hidden Valley Golf Course Tuesday.

Point

Tlicn. J.T. Reynolds and ·
Curtis Grimm fashioned 46
apiece, while Jacob Miller
added 56.
from PageBl
For the Fakun strokers.
Reese ·led the way with that
Coach Howard Miller 43. Ju stin Arnold and Garrett
noted ·"we did prelly well on ·
Kaylor turned in 45 each.
the very challenging, unfa- Danny Roush came in with
. miliar course. If we could 47 and Adam Roush collect: toss away a couple bad holes
ed 54.
: for each PPHS player, it
'This wiis a really do'e
:would have been much betmatch , a good one to win."
: ter, but we're growing."
· That growing was helped said Miller. ''It could have
by returning home to Hidden swung either way, but our
Valley on Tuesday where the guys held on to play steady to
pull it out against the strong
· Pain~ . swin~ers placed live
Falcons."
.
· :men in the tourties to upset a
Looking
at
.the score sheet.
:potent White Falcon crew.
: Once again, veteran Will the matc-h wa' dead even
· Garrison showed the way for going into the final [1ole.
· Point, even though a couple PPHS managed to pick up
puus slipped. Garrison kept three precious strokes on that
: steady and chalked up a solid one hole to gram the exci ting
·43, which tied Wahama·s. win.
PPHS
next schedu led
: Darrin Reese fur medalist
match
is
Monday
when they
: honors.
host
Fairland
at
· Hid den
: Adding
fine
support
· rounc!s , Eric Milhoan and Valley in a 4:30 tee-off.
· Justin Duckworth were mere-. Wahama is slated to take on
. ly one stroke otT that pace Meigs Thursday in a 4:30
:with a pair of solid 44 totals match at Piite Hills.

..

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) Standing near the home
dugout at RFK Stadium an
hour before Tuesday night's
game against the sub-.500
Cincinnati Reds, Washington
Nationals general manager
Jini Bowden talked about the
importance of the next three
weeks.
" Your season's going to be
defined in that box." Bowden
said.
If so, the Nationals began
the key stretch in ominous
fashion . Cincinnati starter
Luke
Hudson
limited
Washington to four hits over
a career-best seve n innings,
and the Reds batted around in
a four-run third against a
hurting Tony Armas Jr. to
beat the Nationals 6-2.
There was more bad news
for the Nationals: Armas (77) left after that big third
inning with a sore pitching
shoulder, fe llow starter Ryan
Drese headed to the disabled
list with an injured throwing
shoulder. and outtielder Brad
Wilkerson sat out the game
with sinusitis.
. "Each coame that we're
playing here now we have to
try . to win that ballgamc,"
manager Frank. Robinson
said. "and we just didn 't give
ourselves a fair shake
tonigh t. ''

The Reds improved to 4-0
against the Nationals - even
though Nos. 3 and 4 hitters
Ken Griffey .Jr. and Adam
Dunn were~ combined 1-for10 with five strikeouts.
Hudson (.S-6) , who had
never lasted beyond the sixth
inriing in 21 previous starts,
gave up solo homers to
Vinny Castilla in the second
and Jose Guillen in the
fourth. For Guillen.'it was his
22nd homer but only' No.2 at
RFK Stadium.
Otherwise.
Hudson
encountered trouble only in
the fifth , when he hit Castilla
and Cristian Guzman reached
on a bunt single with none
out. Jamey Carroll pinch- hit
in the pitcher's slot and, with
the hit-and-run on .. laced - ~
first-pitch fastball ju st foul.
Rubinson wanted to switch
to a bunt on the second pitch,
but he said that signal wasn ' t
relayed properly. So Carroll
swung and missed on an outside pitch, and Castilla was
caught stealing at third.
"We ran ourselves out of
the inning," Wa shington 's
Jose Vidro said .
Carroll eventually struck
out, as did Ryan Church.
That began a stretcb in which
the last 14 Nationals batters
were retired. eight by
Hudson.

"We all know he's capable down in the low XOs. and
of having out standing ball- Hudson ' in gled.
Feli pe
games," Reds manager Jerry Lopez doub led. and ho rh
Narron said of his starter. " I came home on Rich At11'ilia··,
was happy after the ball that si ngle. After ,\ rmas g\&gt;1
Guillen hit, because that wa' Griffey and Dtltll&gt; ou1. 1\c
a bomb. Lots of times that"d walked Scan Casey. and gave
scare a guy out of the zone." up an RBI douh lc I ll r\u ,tin
Brian· Shackelford pitched Kearns. ·
the eighth, and David
·After Guillen ·, h'omer
Weathers finished the Reds' made it 4.-1. the :slat1onal;
f?urth . victory )n their pas'. bullpen kept 't he g"mc· ti ght
ftve games. .! .
. · until Mike St;tnttln g'"'' ,up
It was a return to the slug- RBI doubles in 1he ciehth Ill
gish offense that Washin gton LaRue and Encarri"o: "'ll.
had exhibited before the 1.3- drawin g hoos fl'&lt;llll lll"tll 111
game trip that ended Sunday. the crowd o f ."\.656 . . .
The Nationals averaged 5. I ' "One foot in last pl,r cc. one
runs and went 7-6 on the trip foot
in lou nil
plan· ...
to .stay in the thick of the NL Robin so n s" id . " Y&lt;HI itht
wild-card race.
can' t keep losing grolrnJ tl''"
"The offense didn ' t show and expect to junip '" cr all
up tonight." Robinson said.
these balkluhs ...
·
Hudso n took advantage,
Not~s: Drese\ rmto:r spot
and now has earned the win will go to KHP Tr;"·"
in four of his past five starts. Hughes. who\ he ill~ recllk·d
That comes on the heels of a froni Triple -A Ne\1· Ork"ns.
stretch in which he lost five ... The Reds bc~an" I ,1-~amo:
straight decisions.
tiip. their i&lt;lll ~~·s t si.licl·'.!unc
" lt \ just a matter of getting 19 R9.
1\o:ds
.1 B
to know yourself," he said. Enc"rnaeion made ntl'L pia',
'The mort! you pitch the on urmr ndcrs (l\· Prl'''""
more you . get to know . your Wilso n ill thl' .s;·coml '"Ill
' Brian Schneidn rn till'
body."
The Reds opened the third fourth .... Ann"' rca,·hcd 51 Ul

agairls.t Armas with four &lt;.:an:.:r slrikl'uuh b\
straight hits. startin g with
Edwrn Encarnacion's fifth
homer. tying the game at 1-1 .
By now . .Armas fastball was

Llllllll\ ~

Dtuin for the ' las t illlt "r til~
fi rst inn ing.....-\rn." l' ll ,1J
been 5-0 with a :2.7'2 ER. \ J l
honie. '

.

Welcome to Our Team
R.K. .GJri, M.D., andAtidriu$ Ruksenas, M.D.
are now scheduling appointments.
'

Geriatric and Internal Medicine
R.K. Giri, II.D.

Medicine
Audrius Ruksenas, II.D.

Raiders
from PageBl

Sunday $53.70

2 Col. x 2"

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

.
Anheuser-Busch, Maris Major League Baseball
· , Indians extend winning streak to six games
family settle lawsuit

. r

URG women's soccer ready to get down to business
BY MARK WtWAMS

, Wednesday, August 24.

: Barker carded a 46 to round
:out the Raiders' scoring.
: P.J . Rase . led 'l balanced
Chesapeake attack: he shot a
44 followed by 'Tyler Angle
· with 45 and a pair of ~6's
: from Andrew Copley and
:Brian Hu ff.
: Andy Noc was th e low
:man for the Blue Devil s with
· 44, while Greg Ru ssell was
one shot hi gher at45 . Travus
. Stout finished with a 48. on

the day and Kyle Hunter
posted a score of 53. '
In local scores that 'didn't
cpunt toward the tina! team
tallies. Jared Marcum shot
59 for River Valley ·while
Kamal Dayal and Tyler
Hou ck had a 54 and 5R
re spectively
for
Gallia
Academy.
' Galli a Academy is baf k on
Southca,tern
Ohio
the
At hletic League lour today
as the -league 'hift,, to
Fairgreen s Country C luh in
Wellston . River Valley.
along wilh Sou th Gallia, will
at
Fairgrecn s
on
be
TIJUrsdav.

Obstetrics and
Jane E. Broecker II.D.

· ··

Adolescent and Pediall1o: Gynecology
Hichael Oark, D
.O.

J.

Jack II. bmey, D.O.
•

Podiatry and Podiatric Surgery
Em L Drigs, D.P. H.

Call (740) 992·91 58 for an appointment
with any of these physicians.
·
113 East Memorial Drive, Suite A
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9 .
. I

--- ~--------------

-

''

�:Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

VYednesda~Aug~st24,2005

www.mydailysentinel:com

•

VVednesda~August24,2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentlnel.com

1Il:ribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFI.ED
J

\li\1-.111'111..,
,\II\I"IIH"

2 BR , washer dryer hookup, Upstairs apartment 2 bed- Thompsons Appliance &amp;
heat pump/AC.
room , stove. refrigerator, Repair-675-7388 For sale,

i.

In One Week
Us
. With
.
.
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR. AD NOW ONLINE
To Place

Your Ad,

Call Today•••

Word Ads

ANN()UNCEM ..NI'S
Fr1day/ Saturday. Bam-?.
1240 ·Kemper Hollolo)l Rd .,
Rewa rd for Into Conv1c11ng Iron Skillets, Old glass. tools
Persons who \la ndallzed &amp; f1sh1ng reels
Camper on Woods Far m in
July Cal l Mason County
Movmg Sale, Furniture ,
Shenll s De t
Tools. Variety ot mise ,
August 24th-26th 9am -6pm ,
645 St AI 850
1yr Morri Cat. 2 k1tle ns
1304 )882·2925

r

76

,

YARDSALE·

Pr. I'LEAsANr

GUide Post Ma gaz1nes to
Big
Yard
Sale
2403
G'Mlaway [304)675 -57 90
Jefferson Ave
besrde
Yellow Water lnses great for Church of God Thurs· Fn 8·
a F•sh Pond (304) 675-37 18 5 &amp; Sat 8-1 Etectnc Hospital
Bed $100, Children &amp; "J:een
(.(j!;r ANIJ
School Clothes, Good Pants
Fou~n
&amp; ShirtS for Men 25 &amp; .50
Lrg .
Clothes
Women 's
Found on Rockspnngs Road pnced to. sell Lots of Misc.
a White decl awed, tame cat Betty Perry
please ca ll 740-992-2215

Sunday Display: 1:00
' Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

YARD SALE·
Pr.PU:A.~

SHOP

CLASSIFIEDS

Business and Bulldlngs ................. ............ 340
Business Opportunity ........................ ,........ 210
Business Trainlng ................................... ,... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment... ................................ 780
Cards of Thanks ............. ............................. 010
Child/Elderly Care ..............................,..•...•. 190
El ectricai/RefrigeratiO!l-......................... ,.... 840
Equlpmenllor Rerlt .....................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 610
Farms tor Rent. ............................................430
Farms tor Sale .................. ........................... 330
For lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ............................::.......................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 5,90
Fruils &amp; Vegelables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Hauling ........................................... sso
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grain .................................................. 640
Help Wanted .............. ................................... tt 0
Home lmprovements...................................81 0
Homes for Sale ..:......................................... 3t0
Household Goods ....................................... 5t 0
Houses for Rent .......................................... 4t0
In Memorlam ......................................,......... 020
Insurance ,.................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment... ..................... 660
Livestock ....•...•....•.. .•...•.,.............................. 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlsceilaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlae .......................S40
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Molorcycles &amp; 4 Whoelors ...............,..........740
Muaicallnstrumenta ........\.......................... 570
Personals ..................................................... 005
Pels lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Hoallng .................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wantsd ..................................... 360
Schoolslnstructlon .....................................150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Silualibns Wanled .................... ..................120
Space for Renl ..... : .................. .................... 480
Sperling Goods ........................................... 520
SUV 's for Sale ...................................... : .......720
Trucks lor Sale ....... ..................................... 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wan led to Bur ............................................. 090
Wanted 1o Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620
Wantsd To Do .............................................. 180
Wanlsd lo RenL. ................................. ........ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls .................................:.. 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 07f,
Yard Sale-Pt." Pleaaanl ................................ 076

t

, TO

" COl T~I N ING
• FIN ... NCING ,t..'JAILABlE
' JOB PLAC EMENT
' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOA ·T AAILE~

TRAINING CE NTERS
WYTHEVILLE . VA

1·800·334·1203
_... all,.octrac!on,.i~• com

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Asse mble crarts,
wood items.
To $480fwk
Matenals provided
Free mformation pkg. 24Hr.
801-;4 28-4649

~

WJ\NTID
To Do

DRIVE '

Drl\ler.S
MARTIN TRANSPORT DR I·
VEAS NE EDED TODAY
Reg1onal r uns! O ne yr
tan ker or 2 yr n Gllp re,q
TOP PAY PLUS BONUSES.
866-293-7435

~-

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Looking for a pa rt-lime JOb
but havrng no luck?? We
may have JUS! what you are
looking for! The Po1nt
Pleasa nt Reg1ster is seek·
mg a dependable, hardworking 10d1v1dual for a
MOTOR ,ROU TE
f POSI!IOn, It Interested making $950 per month , work·
ing 5 hours a day, 6 days a
wflek ott on Sundays
Please Contacl
Sean Cul len ,
Dis! Sales Mgr
(304 )675-1333 ext 20

Fam1ly-Onented Carrie r w1th
loadS out ol Jackson, OH
An established busmess in needs OTA dn\lers to pull
Galhpohs IS look1ng lor one relngerated tra•lers 1n the
highly moll\lated salesper- east hall ot the u s
son wilh a slrong work ethiC
to 101n o ur company. Are you • Weekly Pay
looking lor IL,Jil-time work?
Are you loo~ 1ng tor a perma- • Late Model Freighthner
nent tull-t1me positiOn? Are Condos
you •nterested 1n unlimited
e No Forced NYC
earnings potential? All
replies will be kept in strict • 95% no touch freight
confidence . Send ;your
For a limited time make ~0 %
resume to CLA BoK 569, c/o • Fun benefit package
selling Avon Call (740)446GatllpciUs Tnbune, PO Box
3358.
• Homet1me on weekends
469. Gall ipolis. OH 45631.
Help Wanted---Overbrook
• $500 sign o n bonus
Center IS currently accepting
An EKc&amp;ltent way to eam
appllcahqns lor Pint-Time
rTloney The New A110n
Blue Velvet Transpo rt
LPNS lor the 7am to 7pm
C.all Manlyn 304· 882-2645
Call Bob a1 8()()-652·2362
shift Please come in and f1ll
out an applicalion aj 333
Applications being taken for Or~ ver s needed at Allied Page Street , Middleport,
full 1
t1me
'
office Wasle. Class B COL OH. EOE
required Pl ease apply a1
for
managerlrecept ionisl
Point Pleasant Job Ser\lices.
JOBS NOWII
local cleaning/restoration
Up to SBihour fulltime
company. Senb resume to
Drivers Needed:
Make calls to help protect
Spec 1al
Care.,
1743 CPL Drivers willing to dnve
gun nghts
Centenary Road, Gallipolis, for local rea dy-m1•-concrete
anct
ra1
se money for
OH45631 .
company. E111penence 1s
non-proftl orgamzahons.
preferred but· not necessary.
.. DUn • urover
• Pa 1d tra1m ng
Driver must~ be W11t1ng to do
Wontsd
· P'a•d holidays
pre-maintenance on trucks
peuver to store and' rae
• Pa1d vacat:ons
&amp; eqUi pment, yafd work &amp;
ocaM ns in G aUipolis
•Outstanctmg work envtronother miscellaileous chores
men t
~ppr oximat el y ,t O mile
Expenence operat1ng equipnd 1 112 hours per day
Start making a differUnce
ment &amp; eKt ra sk• lls suc h as
today!
~~ust b e avai lable a
weldm.g a plus
1-877-463-6247 ext. 2456
10.DOam Mond ay thr
Call (304)937-341.0
nday
and , s:oopn
www.intoci afon,com
aturdays roleect rehabl
EMT pos1t1ons ava1table in Now h•nng- All Shifts
ransportaiiOn and proof a
Hunlmglon,
WV
area. McOonalds of A1o Gr8nde
nsuranCE! II interests
FT/PT
Starling pay Apply m person
lease
contsct
th
$8.50/tl r
Contact M1k e
~alllpolis Tr~buhe a Matheny at (304!526-5780 Truck Mechan•c needed
740)446·2342
or !304)526·5!936
(740)388·8547

I

Computer
Aepair
and
Troubleshoot Web Design,
Networking, Programming .
6UIId New Systems , Restore
W1ndows. Virus Remo\lal.
Pho n e#7 4 0-992· 79 03
http //www.geoCI!Ies coml ho
tdamn329341Ema ll ho tdamn32934 @yahoo com

-~
....

I.

'

3BA, 2B home In Racine
1 6 acres, close to school. 2
car garage. k1tcpen appliances 1nc!uded. (740)9493069.

~

Eng1neermg f1r m seekmg
mdl\llduals to prov1de constructiOn mspechon serv1ces
lor watt! and sewer utilities
Experieflce a positive, but
not necessary {training provided) Must be willing to
Work out of town on a week·
ly basis. Must have reliable
tran sportatiOn
Benefit s·
40tK, Health Insurance,
Ewp enses , etc
Send
.
resume to Box TSC 19 c/o
Are you lookmg for a change Pc:l•nl Pleasant Aeg1s1er. 200
m your nurs1ng? FU ll-time Ma•n St Pt. Pleasant, WV
AN needed tor · growmg 25550
home
heallh
agency
Expenenced Pizza Shop
Flexible scheduling, compel·
workers lor growing bUSIili\l e wage s w1th benefitS
ness. Apply 1n person Only,
Call loll tree 1-868-368·
J1maneH1 's Pizz a, Buckeye
11 00
H1lls Ad , Aio Grande
AVQNI AU Area s! To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304675-1 429.
ConslruCIIOI'\ workers. local
a ~ea , exper~ ence preferred,
(740)992-7953

HOMES
FOR SALE

EKpenenced 10 Home Care 4yrs old, 3br, 2ba, w11h firefor the Elderly.
Point Place. on 1 5 acres ii1 counWe offer a COMJ:!ETITIVE Pleasant area only. Call lry $89.900 (740)709·1166
Day-sh1i1
SALARV SCALE, an ~ · eel ­ (304)675·6178
Attention! .
lent benefit package and a only
Local compa ny offering aNO
supp or tive wor k environPa 1ntmg DOWN PAYMENr pro·
ment Interested candidates lnterior/Extenor
Power
Washing . grams for you to buy your
PLEASE C~LL SHELLEY and
MECUM AT (749)992-11606. Reasonable rates , refer- home 1nstead of renting
ences, experienced Free • 100% financing
Extend• care
Health estimates Call (740)742· • Less than perfect credll
accepted
Ser\llces. Inc. IS an equal 2013 or (740)645-2638
opportunity employer that S t at e- C e rtif 1e d , Li n k ' P8ymenl could be the
encourages
workpl ace approved ch1ldcare has same as rent.
Locators
Mortgage
d1ve r~ lty. M/F ON
1mmed1ate openings tor
(740)367.()()00
ages 6- weeks&amp; up call
Rockspnng s Rehabilit atiOn Shell y 304· 675-2343 for Cape Cod Home 2165 Sq
Center is lookmg for dedicat· more details
Ft 2 112-Bath, 3-BR, 2 Car
ed compassional!'l State
Garage &amp; Carport, Double
Tested Nursing Assistants W~nted baby -si ttl~g job day Dnveway on 1/2 acre lot. 2
© 2005 by NEA. Inc .
Compelltive wages . heelth shift 1n my home live across
ld H rd od 1100 _
yrs o ,, a wo
•• ·
and dental benefi1S . and NB.W H aven gra d9 sc h00 I' Pnvate Drive.
$145 ,000
401 K available We take have, 9ood references 304 · "located 397 Honeysuckle
1
pride
1n our factlity and r8s1- 882· 92
ln , GallipOlis Ferry. WV
n.~, ll'..L'
1 tr..L
. .
in
(304 )[ )3-2864
dents and need great team '
playe rs to jom us. II you have Will do Babysllh.rtg
~
these qualifications please home,
.day-shill
on Y·
LICENSEO.SOCIAL
apply
to .
Aockspr~ngs , Located at GallipoliS Ferry,
WORKER
Rehabilitation Center 36759 Creb Creek·Area . (304)675·
0\/erb rook Aehab1l1tat1on Rockspnngs
' Ro ad, 4807
Cente r is now acceptmg Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
11'\\'\( 1\1
resumes for the positiOn of
All rtllll ubde Hvertlalng
.0 1rector of SOCial Ser\IICes Extendlcare
Health
In thlt ntwtplper It
The quah!led candidate Services, tnt . IS an equal
tubject to the Fe;dtral
mu s1 be a LSW possess ing opportul'\lty employer that
Fair Houtlng Act of 1968
strong verbal and written encourages
workplace
which makes It Illegal to
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
co mmumcat1on
skillS diversity M!F ON.
advertl. . "any
60
vending
machlnesl
Med1c a1d.. Med•care and
p...terence, limitation or
excellent location
MDS knowledge Long term The Me1gs Country General
dlscrlmlftlllon baNd on
all lor 510 .995
c are e•per1ence preferred Health D•stnct IS seeking a
race, color, rellvlon, 1111
_ -6
800 234 982
but not reqUired . Ouali f1 ed
familial stttua or national
qualified reg1stered nurse for - - - -- - - -- origin, or 111ny lntentlon to
c andidates
may
send the pos1110 n of Public Health
melee any auch
resumes to . Charla Brown- Nurse II . Oh10 Reg iStered Established lawn care buSIpreference, ll,;,llallon or
McG Uire ,
AN
LNHA Nurse li cens e and OhiO ness for sale Call (740)446 dlacrlmlnatlon."
Admini strator 333 Page Dnver's L1cense required or 1096.
Stree t, Middleport , Oh1o the ability 1o oblain these
•NOTICh
Thla newapeper will not
4576 0, EOE
li cen~ within 90 days of
HIO VALLEY· PUBLISH
knowingly ICc.pt
employment
Co mpu ter lNG CO. recommends tha
adlltrtlnmenla tor re~~l
NE ProJeCt Manager for skills, ab11ity to multl·lask
ou do bu s•ness w1th peo
"~' which Ia In
s al a ~y poS1t1on . Lead te am and ewcellent verbal/wnHen
le you know, and NOT I
violation of the law. Our
of assistants 1n reset ol retail communications
skills
end money througl'1 th
reader• are hereby
diSplays lor home Improve- required. Salary defendant
Informed that all
a11 until you have invesli
ment retailer Crew mgmt on educational qualification s
dwelllnga adllertiaed In
ated th e ofleri
and planogram e11.p a must, and
thle newep~~per ara
e~t pe ne nce .
Send
Trvl may be up to 3 wks resume Wllll three profesavailable on an equal
opportunity bans.
Expen ses pd. + per d1em. SIOnal references to 1 12
Must possess re liable trans- East Memonal Dr . Pomeroy,
1Ul.oAN
porlaflen Send resume to OH 45769 Clos1ng date IS
House for sale. 3 bdrm, 1 1/2
jordan justus@ resourcep co 29 August 2005 MCGHO IS
bath Crown C1ty area
m or law to88B ·50 1-797~
an • equal
opportunil y
1740)256-8149.
employer
OUTSIDE SALES
LoCated on 'qu1et dead-end
Borrow Smart. Contac
REPRESENTATIVE
street near GAHS. 4BR , 2
he Ohio D1v1sion o
Truck
Dnv ers
Needed ·
112 Baths,· extra large liv1ng
mancia!
Institution'
Henderson. W.J based carri Th e
Gallipoli s
Oa1ly er loo king for eKp er~ ence d
room, utility room , den ,
PH1ce
ol Consume
Tn bu ne 1s
accephng Clas s A COL D r~ v ers ,
~irs BEFORE you refi screened·m porch. LOTS of
resumes tor a full 11me
storage. Ca rpet less than 4
ance your home o
lnter est6 d
p arties
Call
outs1de sales representayears old, heallng/AC lesS
blain a loan BEWAR
(304)675- 7434
lti\le to jo1n our sales team
than 2 years old. (740)441·
f requests lor any largE
and to manage. an estal;&gt;· Wanl ed
0555 evemngs
Med1cal OffiCe
dvanc e payme nts o
lished account list wh1le Ass1stant w1th expanence for
ees or 1nsurance. Cal
Newly remodeled 3 or 4
call1ng on new accounts. phy sician off1ce. A un1que
he OH ic e of Consume
bedroom house, central air,
The suc'cesstul candidate
foffairs toll free at 1-866
position req u•ring knowl·
full basement, hardwood
w11l be a CIISCiplined, self- edge of computers and data
78.0003 to learn If lhl
floors, detached garage,
motived t8am player that
entry· also !CO and CPT
~ortgage broker o
large covered pai!O, fenced
understands !he impo r- cod1n g. Reliable transports ·
ender
1S
proper!
back
yard
$69,500
tance
of
developtng 110n 'neadod. No woct..cnds
iceneed {Trl is !! a P'Jblk
(740)709-1 382
stro ng, mutually benefi- o r
holid ays
required
ervice annou ncemen
cial bus 1ness relation - Benellts avai lable. Salary
rom th e Ohio VaiiBJ
BR/1 -bath
2
Older
ships w1ih our customers.
0
acres 1n
Farmhouse
w/1
negot1able w1th expenence .
A flex ible employer. Mall
country
3-m lles
from
The tdeal candidate w1 1l
resume to CLA BoK S68, c/o
$49,500
Ha rtford
have sale expenence. For GaJiipoli s Tribune, PO Bmc
I'RornNONAL
Homeslead
Real ty
conl1den!lal
Intervi ew
469. Gal lipolis, OH 45631.
..._
SERVICFS
(304)882-2405 (304 )675·
please ·send resume and

Hm.PWAtVIl:n
l,•,o-----..J l1.10_____.,J/j"o

no

rJ;:.

Now you can have borders and graphics ·
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOc for small
$1 .00 far large

AN/LPN
Rocksprmgs Aehabili1atlon
Center prov1des reSid en ts
w1 th outstandmg nurs1ng
care and rehabilitatiOn servICe s help.n g them return to a
life of mdependence at
hom e ' We currently have
opportunities lor AN's and
LPN 's at our facility located
1n Pomeroy, Oh10

Absolute Top Dollar U.S
Silver and Gold • Co1ns,
Proolsets, Gold Rings, Pre, 935
U.S
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M T S
www.comics .com
Coin Shop. 151 Second
YARJI SALE
Avenue Gallipolis. 740-446·
New Haven W Va . Haven
2842
Hts Wed &amp; Thurs Stone
Ja rS tOo ls, lots Ant1ques, -,-.,-,,--.,-,---~
HELP WANliD
YARD SALE·
plows. tols ol furn iture , cook- Reei·Eitlte Wlnted-Loca!
GAI.IJroLL~
person lOOking for a home to
1e tars .
buy All cash
Meigs or Are You Gettmg What You
~ug ust 26th -August 27th .
Gall1a No double-w1de or Deserve? Let us Tell you
How You Can!! Western
-9a m-4pm, 565 George s
modular 740--416· 3130
&gt;
EKpress is conducting a
C reek Ad
Tuppe rwar e
I \11'1 0) \II'\ I
Dnv9r h1rmg Conference 1n
Avon, Toys. Clo thes, D1 shes,
'-l tR\111.,
your Areal When? Sat ,
Pool. and Vanety of Mtsc.
August 27th 1Oam -4pm
110
Where? Holiday Inn 800 3rd
ANilll
1
Avenue HuntingloCI , WV
2570 1 (304)523-8880 Most
4x4."s ForSale .............................................. 725
All Tractors Replaced with
Announcement ... ,..............................,......... 030
New '04, 05 and '06 MOdels I
Antlques ......... .............................................. 530
Hinng Dec 1S1ons made on
Apartmenls for Rent... ................................ 440
the spot! Average 3,000
LEARN
Auction and Flee.Markei ........,....................OBO
m 1!week , EZ
Pass &amp;
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..........................760
Prepass 1- day Orientation
Auto Repair ..................................................
G reat Med1cal Insurance
DRIVE
Autos lor Sale ... ,.......................................... 710
class A COL required call lor
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
more info. 877-316-7100
' NO EXPERIENCENECESS AfiY
Building Supplles ................:................ ....... 550
Western EKpress.
' FULL TIMECLASSES

1$$ $

4367

304-773-9192.

Nice,
Used 14x64. 2
~OBILE HOME'i
Bedroom Only $4995 Call '
f'OR. RENf
(740)3S5·0698.
..__ _, __ __.J

lwrlght(!!llc.net

WANIID
TO BUY

HELP W

Broker
'New 3 BA Home Only Small 2 : Bedroom house in
$1 89/mo. lncludes ale, dellv· Clifton, WV $350 00 month.
ery and set up (740)385· $300.00 Depos11 No Pets.

675·5234

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Rummage Sate Fn A:1.1g 26
Found
Fema le Beagl e
8.30 am · ?, Sat Aug 27 8:30
wlbr 1ght green collar. m
am-3·30 pm Haven of Rest
Letart
Rad1cal
l ane
Church 40 Warw~ck Ad Pt
(30 41895·355 1
Pleasant (Behind Village
PIZZa)

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Nancy. Homestead Reatty

POLICIES: Ohia Valley Pubhlhing reMt'V.. the right to Mil, rejeet, or cancel any ad at any ttme Errors must ~ repor1ed an the ftret day at
I
Trlbune-Sentlnet-Riigiater w1U be reeponslble for no more than the coat at the epaee occupied by the error and only the first lnaertlan, Wa &amp;hall not be I
any toas or ••pan" that reeuhs from the publication or omission of an illdvertiHment, Corr.ctlon will be made In the flret available edition • Bax ,.W,IP'P"I
are aiwaye confldeatlal. • Current rat. card applin, • All rMI eslat. lldvertiumanta are aubj~ to the F.claral Fair Houetng Act ol 1961.
accept&amp; only t.Jp wanted eda m"'lng EOE standards. We will not knOwingly a~: capt any ·adveftlaing In violation of the law,

MOVING SALE
12ft boat and Ill! trailer.
2 motors, 2 trolhng
motors, 4 good !ires and
wheels Furniture, beds.
Ant1que· tu rn~ture . large
GE deep freeze. Power
tools, hand tools. table
saw, mower, shredder
\lac , mulcher, Christmas
decorations, lots ol
Santas, Home lntenor.
Womens and boys cloth·
1ng . d1shes. ON Route 2
5 miles out Crab Creek
Road , follow signs
Fnday and Saturday
9am till dark. Ra1n or
Shine I

t

Or Fax To

Display Ads

• Start Your ~~With A Keyword • Inttude Complete
DeKrlptlon • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

r

992·2157

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publlc::atlon

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

GAIHPOI.JS

House for Rent Pi. Pleasant
$400 (304)675·5540 or
(304)675-4024 , ask for

Oea.d'tf;,~

Offtee I!Pfif'~

YARDSAI.E·

Locators.

~ribune
Sentinel
l\egister
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156" "(304) 675-.1333
Or Fax To

1 BR cabin, heat pump, also water,
trash
mcluded
storage bU1!d1ng (740)286· Deposit requ1red. rent $300
2240 or (740 )44Hl117
(740)446·7620. (740 )441 ·
9872.
2br wfgas heat, AC, .washer/dryer
hookup,
SPA(."E
Aelridgt'Gas Range in Pt ___
FOR
Pleas.
$300/monlh
$20010eposil (304 )675·7628
Downtown Office Space - 5
4 room , 'bath , WID hookup, room suite $650/mo; 1 room
Porter/ Kanauga Area oHice - $225/ mo., 2 room
Water, sewer, trash pa1d suite $250tr00. Security
References. (740 )367·701 5, deposit required Vou pay
utilittes All spaces ~~ery nice
(740 )367-n46
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
BEAUTIFUL
APART· for aPpointment
BUDGET
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT JACKSON For Lea se: Off1ce or retail
ESTATES, 52 Westwood spaces m very good condiDriiJe, from $344 to ,$442 tiOn . Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx. 1600 sq ft eacn 1
Walk to shop &amp; mo\lies. Call
or
2 baths ·Lease price
740-446-2568
Equal
negotiable to encourage
Hous1ng Opportunity.
new
busmess.
Call
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· (740)446· 4425 or (740)446·
3936
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
Pr•me Commerc1al Space at
and/or small houses FOR
Spnng Valley Plaza, 3,000
RENT Call (740 )441 -1111 sq It Call (740)446 -3481
for application &amp; Information
Pnvate Mob•le Home Space
Deluxe
Downtown
1br m Centenary Close to
Apartment, No Pets call Grelm Sc hool (740)446·
(304)875·3788
4053

._... pw··~

eo~ . l

r

MONEY

------

'STATE ROUTE ~54, BIDWELL: New 4 bed t~m . 2
bath manulactured home
Features living room. lamily
room w1th fireplace and
UBONUS~ room Corner lot
Above ground pool w1th pool
house. Ready for mo\le-1n
PRICED
UNDER
APF'RA!SALII
(740)446·
9218

2 Bedroom Trailer 1n the
country. $300/mo, $150
deposit. Applications now
bemg
acc epted,
Call
(740)388·0462 for more
1ntormat1on.

Brand new 3 -., bedroom, 2
beth manufact ured home.
Completely set and ready
for move- in Features li\11ng
room . fam1ly room and
beaut1!ul sky Ill kitch en .
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!!
Call (740)446·3570.

no pets, m Gallipolis
Deposil (740) 446·01 39
H~
(740)446-1 409 or (740)4462003
Furnished upsta1rs, 3 rooms L,-••.Oiiiliiii""•-'
&amp; bath. Clean, ret &amp; dep
Available September 1 s1.
reqUired No pets (740)4462BD w/new carpel , A/C,
1519
12x24
Iron!
porch
$300/mth .
$300/deposll
Appliance
Grac•ous li\11ng 1 and 2 bed·
area.
Mtke- room apartments at Village
Rutland
(740)742·2595
Manor
and
Riverside

2 Bedroom tra1ler 1n Tuppers
Plains. Has nice porch.
$300 00 rent plus dflpoSII
al}d utilities 740-667 -3487

\II IH II\ \111..,1
Downtown 2 Bedroom, A/C
THEISS ROAD, VINTON : 2 bedroom , AJC. very n1ce , No
Pets,
References,. i~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r.

r·o

Warehouse

Beautiful river \IIBw m
Kan auga Ideal lor 1·2 peo 1 Acre With old house , 3ml . ple No pets , please .
south ot PI Pleasant on Rt Applications being taken
Call (740)441 -0181.
2 $16.000. (740)256 ·652~

4.46 acres

Wei nut
!sandhill Road.

t

E~~f:::~~A

REAL EsTATE

For rent m New Haven .
newly remodeled 3 bedroom
mob1le home, ale, fully furnished. includes dishwash er. w/d, m1cro &amp; TV, cable
hookups 1n all bedrooms. all
utilities . patd m.cludtng cable,
$1 15 eacn per week for 2
renters. $ t 00 each per week
for 3 renters , (330)336·5708
or 330-464-9424
•

WANTEII

Apartments m Middleport
From $295-$444. Call 740- m Hende rson . WV
Pre992·5064, Equal Housing owned appl1canes starting at
Opportunities.
'
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do ser\lice work on all
Immaculate
apartment
Make and Models (304)675Walking distance to UAG. ·
7999
Recently remodeled . 2BA
new pri\late deck $400/mo Brown
suede sofa
&amp;
(614)595-7773 or 800-798- !oveseat by Un1ted, good
4686
cond $400. Call (740)446-

One BA 1st Fir , AJC,'uttf. pd.
$350 plus dep Reterence,
no pet s Sto\le &amp; Refrlg turn.
Coin WID on pre m~ses . 258
State
St ,
Gallipolis.
(740)446·3667.

Mobile Home 1n New Ha\len
$330/monlh, $300/depoSII Tara
Townhouse
I Buy Homes- local person (304 )882·1107
Apartments. Very Spac1ous,
buys homes Confidential .
2 Bedrooms, CJA, t 112
Ou1ck cash . Jim, 740-992· Mobile home lot lor rent next Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
to Melhodist Church m
• 6300. No calls after 9
Pool Patio, Start $385/Mo
Kanauga.
No Pets, Lease Plus
IH "\I...,
24'~~&gt; 32 '· 3 stall garage
tor Security Depos1t Reqwed ,
rent . (740)446-4762.
(740)367-7086 .
.
Mobile home on Cora Mill
Rd. close to 325 gas heat,
no pets Deposit requtred.
Also p1gs lor sale (740)2451 bedroom house close to
' 5622.
A10 Grande college and
grade school $300fmo dep
req (740)446·2422.

r

1 bedroom house, 11
Garfield A\19 , Gallipolis 1 and 2 bedroom apart $300/mo
(740)441 -0194, menls, furnisl')ed and untur·
mshe d. secunty depoSit
(740)441 · 1184
reqUired, no pets, 740-992poss ibly 2 Bedroom 2218.
House 1n .New Haven ,
$300/month, $2 75/deposlt 2 Bd Apt B\lallable 1n
MiddlepOrt
No pets.
No Pels (304)00 2·3652
$300.00
Ca ll 888 -5142 houses. 1 1s 4 bedroom , 0192 HUD approved
$9001month 1 Is 3 bedroom.
$550/month , plus depos1l 2 bedroom apt. on SA 160.
Fu ll y remodeled . central a1r,
(740)256·81 52
washer/dryer hookup, stove
3 Bedroom, 2 Car Garage, &amp; refri gera tor Included
Basement. CIA. $700fmo $460/mo
(740)441 -0194,
includes water, sewer &amp; (740)441-1184
trash (740)446-4824
2 bedroom apt on SA 850
3 bedroom, 2 full bath. 2 11\,1: B rand New Central ai r.
mgrooms, dmm g, large stove &amp; rel ngerator mcludkitChen , ba sement, large ed , washe rldryer hoOkup
fenced backyard , Southern S700/mo
(740)441·0194.
School Oislnct, Available (740)441 · 1184
Oct
1st, 740-416 -1687.
2 bedro om. 1 bath. water
(740)753·2595
PBid, $350 month, $350
Call
deposit
38R house on Rt. 160 near secunty
north Gallia H S $450/mo (740)446-3481
pluS deposit No pets
Apt. for Rent. Beech s tfee1
(740)446-8495.
Middleport. One Bedroom,
House lor Rent 1n Po1nt furnished, utiliti es paid, references ' 740 -992-0 165
Pleasant (3o4 )675-6224

Happy Ad .

Hap~y Ad

40/UID
,,,
•. rr

BAPPY
BIII'I'BDJI

so•

WJr£DJlB

j

5540

111150

Concea led P1stol Class
Sepiember 3. 9.00 am VFW
Paramed iCS
&amp;
EMT's
Mason WV Ph (740)843·
needed Apply at 1354
5555. Cell (740)4 16-3329. ·
Jackson Pike . Gallipolis

POSTAL JOBS

G•lllpolls Career College
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446 -4367,
1·800-21 4·021-52
www gaii•OOII6Cilr&amp;eroolloge com

S15 94·S22 .56ftl r. now hirIng. For applicatton &amp; tree
govern ment JOb 1nto, call
American Assoc of Labor, Accrodt!ed Membef "ccred ohng
1-913-599-8226.
24/hrs C01.1r!C!I lor lnoeoenoenl Colleges
and S&lt;:;~s 127•6
emp. SOr\1
Res1dent1al

Treat ment

1711
1\11-;(.1-J.I ANF.UIJS

L--••••••_.1

Facility for boys now hmng
Direct · Care Workers . Pay
based on e~&gt;:penence patd DIRECT TV 3 room wrttl
msurance . {7 40)379-9083 T1\IO FREE 145 channels
9am-3pm.Mon-Fn
only $39 DO per month Ask
how to get FREE HBO
Wanted WSIIress lull t1me MAX and home entertainApply m person Holiday Inn. ment system Call 800·523Gathpohs
7556 for detailS

•

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm t
1·888·582·3345
1~ 1

\ 1

1

Hor.m;
FOKSAU

At 2 N. 3br, Full SIZe
Basement,' all Brick, 1 Car
Garage 1304!895·3129

www.orvb.com

... 1\11

'

17.5acre Iarin house with 3
bedrooms. livingroom, dlnmngroom
k1tcheri. 2tull
baths, an ached , 5 garage.
Small ba rn new 2 5 ca r
block garage. all fenced in 1
mile !rom URG on SR 325
(740)245·5469.

-~------­

Home Lilting•.
List your home by call1ng
(741l)446·3620
View photos/i nfo online.
t's a Steam 4 bedroom, 2
L~th , 2 car ga rage, New

r•~_n . '1(\J Code 6505 or
allt 3041882· 336B

rM~S~~ · ~

3BA Ra nch . 2 car garage,
pool, City schools. $90.000.
3460 SA 218, GallipoliS, 2001 Clayton 14w50. 2BA. 1
OH , {740)~56·1962
ba th, excellent condition .
$16.000 (740)245·9497 •
4 s'ale 9 Am . Home on
acre w/garage near AKZO 5 Homes unde r $10,000
$95.000 (304)675-5026
W1ll dell\ler. (740)385-7671

2 Oays Only!
Fri. &amp; Sat., Aug. 26 &amp; 27
· , 40% off
regular priced new latt arnvats

excludes "Priced Just AIQhl" 1tems and coal s

Extra 70% off 'Yellow sttcker s portswear
~ plu s, m 1sse s , Juniors &amp; glfls s1zes
20% off Red Sticker .

Ohio River

4417 before 7pm
Gas Range , alec range .
compant
washer . $100
eac h. Call (740 )446·441 7
before 7pm
Green Sola &amp; Ch a1r by
Southern Dreams, must sell ,
$300. Can (740)446-4417
before 7pm

i ANn~= Ir
___

V'"'~

""••••••••,.I

10 wk old Labs. Aeg1stered
Buy or sell
R1 &lt;J enne $7 5 each . Call (304 )675·
Antiques , 1124 East Ma1n 2503 or (740)247-2 11 7
on s'R 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
992-2526
Russ Moore. 6 Blue Heele r pupp1es, lull
blooded, but no papers,
$100. (740)446·3333 or stop
by Feed Stop, Gallipolis

Galllpolle

"
.,

cw.

Flnenc:ing for up to 36
months on John Deere
Compact and 5000 Series
Tract ors With John Deere
Credit approval Chec k !hem
out 1 Carmichael EqUipment

1990 Chevy Lumira 3 1 L 4
Dr aluminum wheels, good
runnmg car 167.000 miles
$1400 .00 OBO 740·7421011
·--------1994 Chrys ler LHS. Runs
Great. $1500 (740)256·
6002
.

r

.:.::=-"-====-

1

15

TRUC.:KS

&gt;OR SALE
1997 Dodge Dak.ota SLT V6
Automatic. 2 Wh eel Dnve
72.00 0 miles 30 4 593· 1614

r_OK
__s_A_L_E_....I

~7_4 0_·_9_4_9·_2_2_17--W-•b_'_'1_e
~ . hlltsresto. cbm

1993 Yamaha 500 2 sealer
Wa\le Runner &amp; trait9r
Overall great conc:II!IOfJ
Askmg $1 1000 OBO . Call
(740)44 6-5861 or [740)6437636
•

SUVo
mRS'-LI:

CAMPER'&amp;

M01UR Hor.tiS

1998 Jimmy 4D. 4WD. V6,
4 3L all Leather e~tcellen t
cond1 t10n
tots ol extras
304 675·8755
4x4

L-••Fi."iloiiiRiiSii"AiiiLii~il;• - '
2002 Toyo ta Tundra SR5 V6.
5-spd 80,000m1 matchmg
topper bed lmer'mat. lots of
extra s, S19 000 (740)3889634 e\le ask for Jell.

f:K!

V•NS

2001 Jayco Oes1gner Series
27 AKS, 5th Wheel Lots of
accessories '
$21 ,000
(304)67 5-2246
200J Coachman 24FT, TT,
Bath , AC, Furnace. Sleeps
5, $9,000 (304)675- 1444
89 30FT Nomad b umper
p un
new 'Fn dge
and
Mic rowave.- Trades conside r~d $4 ,300 {304)675-1043

I"

Sl· ln

~IO

H I._,

HOME

IMI'KOVEME.¥1&gt; '
1998 Dodge Gran d Caravan
ES. Wh ite. Tan leather, quad
BASEMENT
seats, rear AJC. New t~res.
WATERPROOFING
loaded.
$6100
0 80
(7'I 0)44 1_01 35
Unco nd111onal hlet•me guar·
an tee Loca l references fuf·
200 0 Chevy Astra Van, 6cyl n• sMd Establi shed 1975
Good Cof¥ji\lo n, New T1 res. Call
24 Hrs (740) 446 $5 200 OBO (304)576-2934 0870, Rog ers Basement
Waterprool1nQ.
40

1\·luiORC\'tJJ~

gallon bucket. (740)446 - Re sto ration &amp; Parts, Inc L-4,;,\,;V,;I;;IEii
~Eii:iLiil'ii.R!iiS•••
4807 Closed Sund ay
29670
Bashan
Road ,
Racine. Oh1o 45771 Phone 2002 HD Solta1 l Deuce.

r___

2002 Yamaha V-Star 1100:
1983 Yamaha 650 Ca ll
(74 01245-9 100

99 Ford Wmdsta r Auto, A~r, 4 1989 Stratos Bass Boat 16
door. 116K
N1ce Van Foot, 70 H P. Johnson MotQI
$4.500 00 746·742·2662
w1th power 1111 and tmri New
99 Grand Am SE. 2 door troll ing motor $3,700 Ca11
AC, AUto, Re d ' $290 0 alter 5 00 PM (304)6757382
(740)441-9054

(4iiii"9''"+ L,l--,;,f"&lt;&gt;iioRiioSiio'Aiil.iiiE-r

t

r--·B·UJLI)-·ING·--~1 _

2002 Honda Recon exe
cond $2,100 call after 6pm
(304)67~· 8 11 4
•

2003 Honda 450 Foreman S
Ewtendea Warranty $3 900
Inc . (740)446·241 2
1997 Honda C1v1C 109.000
080 1304)675·4807
m• Aft er •market accesJohn Deere 10 ft . No T1l Dnll
sone s, 38+ mpg Clean, 2005
black
Su zuki
lor
Rent
Carm ichae l
black/black Call P40)441
Boulevard CSO 1,300 mlles.
,Equipment (740)446·2412.
9865
Many ewas L1ke new•
John Deere Commerelat
$6 900 (740 )446-3431
Workalte
~ Products
Compact Excavat orsfSk1d
Steers/Tracto r
Loader
Backhoe •n .stock Clleck out
our rental rates G rea t 1999 Chevy Metro 4 dr . 4
fina ncmg
ava•l able cyl . 76 ,000 mtl es. $3,0 00
Ca rmichael EqUipmenl Inc
OBO. no reasonable otter
(740)44 6 _2. 412 .
BoATS &amp; M&lt;rroRS
•::..:.::..:.:.:_:_c.:_::
____ refu sed, m ust se ll Call
HJRSAU:
(740)44 1;071 2
POLE BUILDINGS

AKC AHAA Reg Beagle
pupp1es, In-colo red. first
Blonde Wooden Water Bed shots and worme d $100
Queen size.
Excellent
(304 )675-3508
Cond1t1on .
$150 00 Call
'An y Style
·Any S1ze
740-949-2607
Golden
Aetr•ever
AKC
·custom BUilt to f1 t your
Pupp1es, 1st Shots &amp;
needs
Wormed
. Mothe r/ Father on
DP Ultra GYM PAC complete
' FAE I!(stlmates
prem 1ses
$250
each
740·596-2909
weigh! lifting workout center ,
(740 )643·00 13
$180 080, must go.
Your ProStar Tra1ler Deater
(740)44 Hl1 35
AK C Mm1atu re Pmscher. Carmichael EqUipffient Inc
Tall 's Dock, Dew Cl aws, (740)44 6·2412
Sept embe r 1st
Extra long Twin Bed , Quality Rea'dy
Mattress, great for tall per- (740 )388·8788
son, $200. (304)682·2494
CKC Golden Retr iB\Ier puppieS tor sale $200. Wormed
For Sale 6• t 2 trailer with and secon d shots, Swk s old. 3 year old Quarter horse m1K
geldmg Very gentle , kidS
ramp, treated wood , usSd Ca ll (740)368·1l965
have ridden him 14 hands,
approx. 6 times. $750 firm .
Doberman Pup s. Black &amp; $450 (740)256.£8 24.
(740)245-9034
Tan. 2 Female. 2 Males no
papers, Parent s on premis- On e male Pygmy goat
JET
es. 1sl shots ' &amp; wo rmed (buck ) bla ck w1 th small
AERATION MOTORS
$250 (304 )675-8t 96 after amount of wh ite. Call
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt tn 5 00
(7 40)441·1 590
Slack Call Ron E\lans. 1·
I 1,\\'\ l\ (o\IWI' !IIIII',
Full blooded Bo~&gt;:e r Pup s
800·537·9528 .
Mother and Father on prem$500 Demonstration BonusIses.
Fem ale Brmdle &amp; Let us demo a John De ere Z
Fawn . w/ Wh ite ma rkin gS Trak or X Senes All -Wheel
Meyco Mesh W1nter Safety
Cover 16'x 32 ' w1th center $
c_250
_1:_3_04..:)_67_5_.£_5_0_1_ _ Steer on ' yo ur lawn and
rece1ve·an eKtra $500 off our
end step, PallO Table &amp; 4 Full blooded Lab pupp1es
already discoUnted pnces
chairs,
Other
Items Phon~ (740)446 -2460.
Limited
t1me
offer
(304)675-2045
Pit Bull Pu ppies lor sale Full Ca rmichael Eqwpment Inc
Blooded No Papers. $150 (Zi0 )446·2412 .
NEW AND USED STEEL
eac ll
(7 40)398-890 1 or
steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
(740)388 -8596
For
Concrete,
Angle .
flO
AlJI"O&gt;
Channe l, Flat Bar. Steel
FKurrs&amp;
FORSALE
GraUng
For
Drams.
VEG.:rADLES
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Canning tomatoes for Sale 1985 Mustang Faslback
Rangoon Red extenor . bla ck
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Very nice! $4 .00 you piCk,
Friday, Sam-4:30pm Closed
mteno
r, 6 cycle, 3 speed, a~r
$5.00 we pick(by order) Jim
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; O'Bnen Farm, Letart Falls. cond itlon1ng, radio, good
Sunday (740)446-7300
drTver
Aus t tree AZ car
Ohio 740-247-2 11 3
Pr1ce $1 9,000 00
Hill 's
Sharp bookshelf stereo sys- p 1ck white peaches, $10· 5 Automot1ve Class•c Ca r

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark tem, sounds great, $50 Call
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio. (740)446-4417 before 7pm.
(740 )446 -7444 1-677-8309162 Free Estimates, Easy
Su~
.
f1nancing, 90 days same as
cash . V1sa/ Master Card.
Twm Rivers Tower is acceptDr1ve- a- IIHie Sa\le alot.
Block, br~ck . sewer pipes.
ing applications tor wa11lng
windows, lintels. ate. Claude
list lor Hud·SUbSIZed, 1· br, Washer and dryer set, $100.
W1nters, A10 Grande. OH
apartment, call 675 -6679 Call (740)446·4417 before
Call 740-245·5121
EHO
7pm

~:":'u~b~tis~h~in~oC~o~m~o_la~,n~y)~~

cover letter to Gallipolis
Da1l y Tnbune Attn; J1rp
Freeland, 825 Third A\le ..
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 1

RENT

automatic
re-cond1honed
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeralors, gas and • electric
ranges, air condilloners. and
wrmgar wash~;~r s Will do
repaors on maJOr brands 1n
shop or at your home

DAVIDSON METAL
ROOFING
~ 18 Colors
"30yr. warr anty 1n wnflng
'Prolesslonaltnstallallon
' Free Estimates
740-596-2909

manychr
e•ome,
tras InClUding
Wiele
!Ire,
Python P•pes

~r~--------,
.
:

ExCAVAllN&lt;.J

OltchlngfTrenehlng
Service
For Sale:
1986 Ford Mu stang, V6,
4K4 CommfHC1al D1tch-Wit6h
Automatic, Fa~r Cond111 0n 2002 Honda ACE loade d, w•th 5111-way blade. Drgg1n g..
1968 Motor nome. 18', $500 080 (740)388-0481
1986
e11tm Adul t owned. Ma1nl Depth up to 56· Gas.
F250 ,
$1200
Plymouth Rel1 ant Wag on. For sale 1995 Co rvett e Shop Manu el S4.950. or Watar. Cable Electric &amp;
$7 50 (740}379-231 6
Coupe Call (740)446 4255 part trade (304)882-3454
Dram Lines (304)576-9005
7,000 m1les (740)44 6-2815

�Wednesday, August 24, 2005

www.mydailysentinel ..com

)

VVednesda~August24,2005

. www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily

Sentinel •

Page B7

ALLEY OOP

NEA

BRIDGE
Public Notl._-e"' I n NewOiplolpt-f"lll,
Yuur· Kl a h t l o Know, De l h-ered lll11-ht to Your

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

: ADVERTISEMENT TO

Plan Holdera Llat may following deacrlbed
Deed Recorda , Melga
be returned 81 nol Real Eateta: Tract ' County, Ohio.
:Jt.t.TER
IMPROVE· being responsive.
One: Situated In the
E•capllng
and
., .ENTS CONTRACT
Plan Holdera are ·County of Melgo, In
re~ervlng unto former
. ~ ·2005 VILLAGE OF . requested to provide the state of Ohio, and grantors herein , their
RACINE
·
an email address If in tho VIllage of
heirs and oaalgns, all .
!l:he VIllage ol Racine they wlsll . to receive Middleport, Township coal , oil and gas and
Will ,.calve saaled addenda ,and other ol Sallabury, and other mlne~ale underBids lor a Water
Information electroni- abounded
and
lying said real estate
: l.tn pro v a menta cally. Plan holders are described as follows, together with the
Anything Hauled
right to mine, drill and
. P.roject, which con·
requested to deslg· to-wit: Being 31 feet
'11'
.....
slats of the construc- nate Y(helher they are oft of lhe north side remove the same. It
• Metalt
Is undestood that
tion or a new 250 gpm
a. prime contractor, of Lot 61 , together
with any surplus that there will be no·
. Jron remoV'al and zeosub~ontractor or sup• Appliances,
Ute aoflening treat- plier if they want thi s may go with said par·
drilling on i ho real
• Cars.
The eotate
described
ment plant, a new information posted eel ol land .
Designed In Heat Your 1-lome
391 .000 gallon lin· on the project Plan above is a parcel of herein, and further• G ara ge Metal
:.• """"
· -.: '.'
e,·'J"*
more, that no air
land 31 feet, more or
lahed water storage
Holders List.
and Ym.!J' Hot Water !
- ~',1:;,
CONTRACTOR .. ·shall
less, on Third Street
shells will be located
tank, and a new radio
C all
and extending easl of on
real
estate
based telemetry and
pay wages to each
740-742-2595
an alley, and Is part of d e s c r i· bed
control system, along
laborer and mechanic
With miscellaneous
at a rate not less than the same premises hereln . Referenca
the ·minimum wages
water
system
conveyed from C.M. Deeds : Volume 47, . ~
specified in the cu r·
Vall to Mayme F. Page 123, and Volume
Public Notice
~pgrades necessary
by
Deed 43, Page 301 , Meigs
to facilitate the pro·, rent wage determina- Hobart
hearing request or
County
Olllcial
Recorded In Volume
posed Improvements, tion · in accordance
objection
Is received
Records.
Auditor 's
with the provisions of 102, Page 75 of the
until 5:00 P.M., local
by the OEPA within 30
parcel
No.:
03time , · September 6, the Davis·Bacon ~ ct.
Meigs County Deed
days of· Issuance of
Records. Reference 00069.000 Appraised
2005, at. Village Hall, Bidders shall comply
proposed acllon.
405 ' Main
Street, with the . President's
sso,ooo.oo the
Deed : Volume 298 , at :
Racine , Ohio 45771 . Execulive .Order No. Page
95 ,
Meigs
Property
Address: Written comments,
requests lor public
Bids will be publicly
11246,
Equal C014Mty.
Deed 43323 Frank Roed,
meellngs, and adjudl·
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
opened and read
Employment Records . Auditor 's
cation
hearing
Parcel
No: 15- Current Owner : Virgil
;. aloud beginning at
Opportunily
as
requests
mu
st be
: 7:00 P.M. local time,
Phillips et al Property
amended.
01092.000 Appraised
sent
to:
Hearing
The
procurement
Is
at
$20;ooo.oo
at
736
Soulh
3rd
Avo
: september 6, 2005.
OiliO
:·Bids are to be subject lo the EPA Property · address : Middleport, Ohio PP* Clerk,
Environmental
15·01092.000 Vol 298
policy olencouraging 736 South Third Ave.
:.addressed lo Village
Protecllon Agency,
Ohio Pg 95, $20,000.00 end
elf Racine, 405 Main the ·partlclpatloJl of Middleport,
P.O,
Box
1049,
· $ireet, Racine, Ohio small business In 45760 .
43323 Frank Road,
Columbus,
Ohio
'45771 , and shall be
rural areas (SBRAs).
Tract Two : Situated
Pomeroy, Ohio 03·
· marked "Sealed Bid· The Village of Racine in the Township of 00069.000 /vol 47 pg 43216 · 1049
:water ImprOvements ·reserves the right to Chester, County of
123 Vol 43 Pg 301 , (Telephone: 614·644·
2129). " Final Actions :
. Contract 1·2005.
reject any or all Bids,
Meigs and State . of $50,000.00
Are actions of the
·Bidding Documents to waive any technl· Ohio:
Being
In Tract One: Appraised
director
which are
school
cality. and to accept Section 5, Town 2 at S20,000.00; Tract
:may be obtained from
upon
Issuance
or a
the Issuing Ollice any Bid which It North, Range 13 West Two: Appraised at
stated effective dale.
K·4
· which
is · Slrond deems
advanta- of
the
Ohio $50,000.00.
The
Pursuant to Ohio
:(ssoclates, Inc., 109 geous. All Bids shall Company's Purchase appraisals do not
Revised
Code
Norlh Broad Street,
remain subject to and bOunded and
Include ·an interior
Section 3745.04, A
Third
Floor, accepi&lt;Jnce for 60 described as follows : exatnlnatlon of any
Lancaster,
Ohio
days after the time
Beginning at a point houses or strutures final action may be
appealed
to
the .
:43130. A non-refund·
set for receiving Bids. South 25 rods (412.5 on the real estate.
Environmental
·able deposit of tiTe
Contract award shall feet) and North 89 Terms of aale: cannot
Review
Appeals
:Jollowing
amounts
be made based on the d~g. · 59'42 " West be sold for leas than
Commission
(ERAC)
will be required (ship· lowest
responsive
1048.07 feel ; thence
213 ol the appralsod
(Formerly know as
p,ing and handling
and
responsible South ,5 dog. 45' 11 "
value . 10% down on
Environmental
fees .
included).
Bidder and no con- East
191 .4
feel ; Day of Sale, cash or the
Board
of
Review) by a
Morris
Ta~e
Overnlghl mailing ol tracls shall be award- thence South 7 deg. certified check, balEq i
Bidding Documenls ed or signed -before 29' West 64 feet ; ance due on conflr· Pl!rson who was a
party to a proceeding
U pment
will not be provided.
release of funds date. thence South 4 ~eg .
matlon of sale.
~~lorathe
,dlrec
tor
by
Let me doit fer youl
Division
A· Water The
Robert E. ·Beegle,
Strand 08 ' West 121 feet ;
ng an appea within
_
_
Transm i ssion/
Associates Project thence South 7 dog. Meigs County Sheriff.
740 742
30 days ol notice .of
- 2455
DIStribution
Manager Is Barbara
45 ' East 50'; thence
Atlorney
for
the
th~
final
action.
• Repairs
$100
South 40 dog. 06'03"
R. Anderson, P.E., and
Plalolill Lillie Sheels
Pursuant to Ohio
• Parts
Division
8 - can be c,ontacted at
East 239.33 feet I rom
&amp; Warner, 213 Eas"t
Code
WaterStorage
109 North Broad the mid point ol said
Second,
Pomeroy, Revised
• Service
Facilities $100
Street, Third Floor, Secflon 5 North line, Ohio 45769 992-6689. Section 3745.07, A
Final Action Issuing ~
for Farm EquipnH.:Ill ·
Olvislon D· Well Field
lancaster,
Ohio said point of bagin·
(8) 24 (9) 7, 14
denying, modifying,
Improvements $100
43130, (740) 687-4779 nlng
being
the
revoking, or renewing
Trucks Duzcrs
.Oivision E - Telemetry
regarding the project.
marked by an Iron rod
a
permit,
license,
or
•
Spccj&lt;lll
y • Clult.:hl.!"
Published by the on the Southerly side
$100
Public Notice
varianCe
which
Is
not
Bidding Documents
authoritY
ef
the or said 60 foot wide
• Brakl!~
may be examined at
Village of Racine, J .
stf-eet ; thence S. 63
Public Notice
preceded by a prothe offices of lhe
Scott Hill, Mayor
. deg. .59' West 121.07
County: Meigs
posed action , may be r
B B ._k • - - - - - - -...
Village ol Racine and . Dated at Racine, Ohio feet
along
the
The following, appll· appealed to lhe ERAC
by II ling an appeal
um• Y • • •
McGraw
Hill
August 12, 2005.
soulherly side ol said
cations and/or veriwithin
30
days
ol
Construction- Dodge
(B) 12.17,24 3tc.
40 loot wide street to lied complaints were
l3tiD R•llll,. on
offices In Columbus,
an Iron rod; then S. 13 received, and tho lol· Issuance or the final
action. ERAC appeals
IIIJIMppot
II'
Ohio,
and
inSt.
deg. 32' 14" East lowing draft, pro·
must
be
filed
with
:
.Lawnullt:hrrs
Phone
Albans, West Virginia .
Public Notice
213.13 feet to an iron
posed ,
or
final
~Lawn .:mel G&lt;\r dcn
( 740) 992 5232
No bid will
be
road; thence South 89
actions were issued, E n v I r 0 n m 8 n t a· I
Review
Appeals
T.acto" .ue ou•
received
unless
Sheriff Sale Case dog. 59'42" East 240 by
The
Ohio
11
Commission
,
309
not
~uJ;~fJ~iine.
··
Sx
I
0,
lOX
I 0~
"accompanied by a Number
04CV158 feet; thence N .~ 34
Environmental
Fourth Street,
c_ashler's, certified or
Farmers
Bank
&amp; deg . 49 '20" West Protection Agency South
Room
222.
10•15, 10x20,
bank check or a ~id
Savings Co Plaintiff 317.13 feel to the
(OEPA• last week.
Columbus ,
Ohio
10x30
~ond equal to at least
VS Virgil P. Phillips point of 'beginning , " Actions" include the
43215. A copy i:&gt;l the
Janet Jeffers
adoption, modifies10 ·percent of the
a~a Virgil R. Phil,lips
containing
1.01
appeal
ITfUSt
be
w,. ~-· · n·i· ·· · mo\lm o/o:(' \
:maximum
bid, aka Virgil D. Phillips acres, more or less.
lion, or repeal of
served
on
the
direc204 Comi.lr Str''"'
.U795 Hiland Roud
-payable to the owner aka Virgil Philips, etal Described below Is orders (other than
IO ilhi 3d
ft
Pll m&lt;'mv. l':)H
") a a guarantee that
rw n
ay~ a er
7411-99i-2975
PQmeroy, Ohio
Defendants Court of the centerline of an
emergency orders);
.after a bid is accept- Common
Pleas , access right of way to
the issuance , denial, filing the appeal with L..--:..;.;;..:.:.::;::.:.;.;~..1
the ERAC.
•
ad , bidder will exe- Meigs County, OhiO.
the parcel of' real
modification or revoFinal issuance of
Gene Arm.ow'Ownl'r·
I
cute and file the
In pursuance of an estate:
cation of licenses,
Permit
to
Install
'
Opt!rolor
740.992-J
IN
.Qbreement and 100%
order Of sale to me Beginning at a point permits, leases, variFacemyer'
lumber
"' Weekly Tr&lt;l' h Service
per1ormance an'd pay- directed from said North 14 dog. 34't4"
ances, or cerllficates;
--l yr~ u f Rclwbk St·n ict·
ment bonds within 10 courl in the above West 20.4 feet from
and the approval or . Comp~ny Inc.
days alter the notice entitled· action , I will the point of bagln· disapproval of plans
31940 Bailey Run Rd .
Ymu "''""' '·""' ''
Pomeroy,
OActlon
G&amp;R SANITATION
of award .
expose to sale at pub- lilng of ·a 1.0 acre lot; and speclticatlons.
J:l5'6 1 oa;~cy Ruu l~d..
97 Beech Street
Bidders who submit a
lic auction on the thence. North 63 dog. " Draft Actions" are Date: 0811612005
Facility
Description
:
P'""""
.
0
11
Middleport, OH
bid must be Plan
front steps of the 59' East 445.62 loot written statements of
Air
•
Holder of record at
Meigs County Court ·and North 40 dog . the
director
of
Identification No. :06·
1Ox 1Ox I Ox20
House on
lhe Issuing Office.
Friday 06'03" Weat210.11eet Envlronmen"tal
o1a93
YOUNG'S
Bids from bidders Sept. 301h, 2005 at 1o (40 loot wlda RJW to Protection's
992·:5194
who are not on the a.m. ol said day, the this point); thence (Director's)
Intent Issuance of Direct
Final State Only PTI
or 992-6635
North 15 dog. 14'35"
with respect to the
SERVlC~
Weal
25.22
feet Issuance, denial, etc. Wood Boiler.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
"Middleport's only
• Room Addit!ooa &amp;
(changing to a 50 loot of a permit, llcanse, (8) 24
Remodeling
Seii-Stora1e"
wide R/W on this
order, etc. lntere.Sted
• New G1r1ges
course) ;
thence
persons may submit
• Eleclfk:ll &amp; Plumbing
Public Notice
South 82 dog. t 5' wrllten
permit.
• Roottng &amp; Gu1t.rs
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Wesl 470.4 feel (50 license, order, elc .
PROBATE COURT OF
• P.tlo and Port h Decks
foot wide R!W on th s
Interested persons
We do It all except
MEIGS
COUNTY,
course) then.ce South
may submit written
lumace work
OHIO
85 dog. 36'53 West comments or request
IN RE: CHANGE OF
V.C. YOUNG ttl
93 Columbus Rd • Athens, OH
85.1 feet (changing to a public meeting
NAME OF AUSTIN
a 40 loot wide RIW on regarding
992-6215 wv 0Jii7:·~
draft
BRADLEY
CHIL·
• New Homes
Pomer'oy, Ohio
this · course ); lhence actions. Comments
DRESS TO AUSTIN
25 Years Local Ex rlence
South 82 deg . 15'; or public meeting
• Garages
MICHAEL THOMP·
• Must Have Valid ,Driver's License
West 99 .4 feet and
requests must be
• Complete
SON
South 58 dog. 01 '
submitted within 30
Remodeling
• Be Neat ln Appearance
30"West 291 .5 feet to days of notice of· the Case No. 2005 6 043
NOTICE
OF
HEARING
the centerline , of
draft
action .
Training Program ·
ON CHANGE OF
County Road C-26.
·~ Proposed ActionS"
NAME
• 5 Day Wbrk Week ·
Said right of way is to
ar~ written stateStop &amp; Compare
• FOR ALL YOUR
Applicant
hereby
be used in common
ments of the direc: • Hospitalizatior
gives nollce to all
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
with all adjacent
tor's
lntenl
with
l]1terestad persons
• MOBILE HOME
property
owners,
respect
to
the
: .~ Paid Vacation
their
·heirs
and
Issuance,
denial , and to Brad Childress
REPAIRS
thai tho appll'i:ant has
: • Bonus Program
assigns and all per- modHicallon, revoca·
• CARPENTRY
flied an Application
sons for the benefit of lion, or renewal of a
•
ROOF • PAINT
lor
Change
of
l:lame
the adjacent property
permit, license, or
in
the
Probate
Court
OHIO
LICENSE # 38244
ownl;!rs bordering or variance.
Wrltlen
ol Meigs County,
connnecting
said
comments
and
740-l67-0544
Ohio, requesting the
right ol way. Said real requests lor a public
estate Is subject to all meeting regarding a change of name of
740-l67-05l6
Help Wanted
Help 'Wanted
Austin
Bradley
covenants; restricproposed action may
Childress to Austin
tions,
building
be submlllod withi n
LEWIS
Michael Thompson.
re strictions ,
ease30 days ol notice of
The
hearing
.on
the·
ments, road and high- lhe proposed action.
CONCRETE
application wil l · be
ways of record fn
An adjudication hear·
CONSTRUCTION
deed recorded in Vol. lng may be held on a held on the 26th day
ol
September,
2005
al
Concrete Removal
270, Page 681 , or the proposed action H a •
1:30 o'clock p.m . In
and Replacement
the Probate Court ol
tielp Wanted
Help Wanted
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Milgs ·County, local·
Pleasant Valley Hospital is curr~ntly
ed at 100 East.
accepting re sumes for ' a Medical
Second
Street, ~o-teWofk'
WANT ED: Positi ons avai l able 10 assisl
Courthou'
a
e
,
•
2nd
25 Years Experience
Record' Transc riptionist. Reg istered
an individua l wilh mental re tardation who
Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio
Hea lth information Technician
David Lewis
~s i de ; in the Mei gs Cou nty:
45769.
preferr ed. One to •three years of
1) ,40 hr., (live-i n) 3- 12 pm Mon. 5-7:30
Lori Thompson
36720 Peachlork Rd ..
am/3- 12 pm Tues; o-7:30 am/6-12 pm
lnsurtd
medical transcription .experience.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1-"rl'l' Estimul cs
Wcdnhur"
:;.
7:30am
Fri
;
sleep-over
Minimum speed of 60 words per
(8) 24

:JliD

Hauling
Sarvice

r~
\

:======::!

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

8ANCI BURKE740-698-6809

I

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

River Valley Christian Academy
Now enrolling students ror the
2205·2006
year.
Grades
through.12

K·4 Open House
Aug. 25th at 7:00PM

For more information call
740-992·3824 or 740-667-0338

LLC.

1

1'

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

401 K Rollovers •

c,

Jldv.ntap ,,.

CARPENTER

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRUCDON

SALES PERSON NEEDED

Cornarslona
Elactrlcal
Sarvlca

740-992-1611

minute.
Excellent salary, hol idays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, long·
term disability and retirement. Send
resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/ o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
P t. Pleasant, WV 25550
304·675·4340

AA/EOE

requ ired. Exce lienl benefit p&lt;~c k age.
includ ing insurance and pai d time off.
2) 28 hrs. 2:30· 8 pm Monffues; 2·6 pm
Wedffhurs: 3- 1I pm Fii :· Mus1 have hig h
school diploma or GED. valid driver';
liccm-.c. three years gooO driving experience . and ;1ckquate au10mohik in ... uram:c.
~7.:!5/hr.

p
on
SAVINGS

"Insured"

to: beyccserv@yahoo.com.

'·- Prc -ci11 ployrm:nt Urug te.'lt i ng .
E uai 0 onunil Em lo •cr

GENERAL .

CONTRACTMIG

Send resume to:

Dcad li ne ror up pi icunl&gt; :.8/3 1/05.

TRIMMING' &amp;

· Prompt &amp; quality
work
.
• Affordab1e Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates.

Uuckeye Communily Services
P.O. Uox 604, Jackson, OH 456411
or c· mail

STANLEY TREE

Ca ll Gary ~tanley
Shop

Classificd s !

. 740· 742· 2293

' Leave a message

.•.

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Ra c me, Ohio
45771

2...

JONES~
Tree Service

•

K J

t

A K Q.Ji091l

Wesl

North

E ast

Pass

Pass
!'ass

z• . .

Pass

7•

Pass

P&lt;1ss

7 NT

Pa!&gt;s

Phss

lJbl

Pass

Pass

Pll&gt;:S

A good sign
of variation

'(O, G~n! •·· wttAT A~E YOu
MAKING wiTt' TttAT
/
YAK· MIL~1
,
.
.

Owner: Jeff Stethem

..

, vo ·

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING

.lv ......

.

(Comme5eial and Reildentia!)

Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Dri"oJeways,
·Sidewalks, Gas Stalion Awni ngs, Degreas_ing of
Equipment, Boa ts, Campers, ""T:ractor Tratlers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
.
or tog home, Aluminum brightening.
Specia l rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

LAWN CARE DIVISION

(Commerci:tl and Res •denrial)
Mowing, Trimm ing, Ttee Trimm ing, Aeration, Fertili zation,
Spraying of fence lines, l eaf Remo\lal, as well as small
landscaping jobs su'h as planting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GllARANTEEU LOWEST PRICES

BARNEY
EVER WISH YA WUZ
WORKIN' IN

NOPE

A BIG

MOSPITAL.
SOME -

!!

AI lhis point, Bacherich lost co ncentration. His pass guaranteed the spade ace
and inv1ted his parlner to b1d seven notr ump if he thought the penalty !rom
seven spades doubted would be pallry.
North should ha'Je doubled. (The penalty
would have been 1,400 with the club-king
lead, 1.100 ott1 erwise.) Soulh, wi th his
heart filler and solid 'diamonds, was
happy to try s8\len no-trump. East doubl!ad, and the contracl wen l se\len down
for minus 2.000. South' was unhappy
because East had hesilated o"oJEir se"oJen
hearls, whic h Soulh contended made il
• easier lor West lo sacflfiCe. But South got
no comfort from the appeals committee
·At the other table. North opened two
clubs. East, Roger Trezel , tried a psychic
lwo-hearl overcall. bul the Brazilians
brushed it astde and reac hed seven
hearls. Smce neither West nor Easl had
btd spades. lhetr sacrifice wen l begging .
North was plus 2,210, and Brazil gatned
25 international match points, the ma)(i-

AN'

DOc!!

NUSS

WINDOW SUPER SALE
Vinyl Double Hung

$219
INSTALLED
IO 101 Ul

P"

Opllontl Upgrades Ava~ablti
Argon Gas I Heal Mirror

· QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1-800·291·5600 740·992-4119

.

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~PSEI&gt; LI M\\!

""'I

'ir I'l'\ ':&gt;UPI'OS~I&gt; \0 ~If&gt;...'I "'l

W&gt;\'I 1&gt;0 'IOU f.l.r&gt;-.1/E.

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1&gt;-. ''Fk'.)\ L.r&gt;.\'o\E.

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mum

''Sifil ~'

iJI:I

&lt;

AstroGraph

*,j.

RocfW '~ A~·:J

·BIG NATE

'lbur 'lllrthllliY :

''Hupp ..·~

?

~;SNoRT !::.. NICE TR'f.
NATE ! I 'M NOT S.TUPI D
E NOUC.H T O f'AY YOU

BEFORE I KN&lt;J;.I WHAT
You'RE .SE L.L.tiiiG !
YoU HAVE m LET ME

IMPORTS
Athens

TR'(

IT

Foos.W!

N O ;.I ...

HI T

MEl.

'

,__,_

F IRST '

Whaley's Auto ·
Parts

S1. R1.6S I Darwin,'OH
740-992-701 3 or 740-992-555~

Rcslockitt&lt;J ln/e .\lodcl S..lu•gc
u 11&lt;1 Jtrll'r ,\/a rkel Po rts

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Sun. Cibscd

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A6AIN !THEV SOUNDED
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Thursdny, Aug . 25 , 2005
By B ernice B a de Osol
Do a ll th at you ca n to c u lt ivate friend·
ships
and
close
associa tion s.
"becau se they· ca n b e eno rmo u sly
h e lpful to you in the yea r ahead in furthering yo u r goa ls in ways n o t available to you at p resent
VIRGO (Aug.~ 23-Se p l. 22) N ot
ever yone is apt to dance Ia your tune
today. bu t don "t make a big deal of it
Where · 1m po rtfln l issues a r e con ce r ned, the br oad consen sus o f opin ion wil! clearl y be with you .
·
LIBR A (SepL 23-0cl. 23) - The pos slbUilies for wor king well Wl lh oth ers in
o r der to acqu ire personal accumuta - .
lion are very good today, prOVIdEid
you "ra wi ni ng to give a li ttle mo re tha n
you th o u g h t to gain a lot .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos

Celea,ity Cipher Clyotograms artr ~realed Irom OUllta~ns l;ly lamou$ peoDie. OiiSI ano pt~t
[8(~. 1ener •n ll"le Cipher stands 10! another

Today ·sclue: E equals C

"CGK

JVU

MFREF ,
HCZ
CS

•FJP

RZP

ZFCIVF

GUPP
. BC' IZF ."

WGUJP, IDUP .,

KRSSUDUHZ ,

.Z F J H

ZFU
M.P.

JD.U

W G U J PI D U P
LJIVFJL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Th·ere is no education like adverstty •
- Disraeli
·
"Vtctory is sweetesl wh~n .you '\le known defeat." - Malcolm Forbes

c_ lril '(} 41'" ~ -

lHA1 DAILl

\J \.,l.J {'~j ~"\.

PU!Il"! R

~di ttd

0 Reorr(J n\Jto
· fovr

I•· !len

'cr:-Jmbl~d

It 'C

~-,.. -&lt; ., , WORD
GA'II ·

~ ~ ~ ,-~

by ClAY i1 POH A. N - - - - - -

of

words

IC"Iw ro form four. iimpl f' worc'.lo

I IL II CIV 1I

·c- - -

s

!i

.

-

1 found a sure flte way to
bring our.family close· toget~er.
1bought a ~ -- - - - - -

.

-

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IIIII o
tn

.

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/N~',•.

SCORPIO (Oc' 24~Nov. 221 - You • ·
resou rcefulness IS not . li kely to be
~.-,.....-.....:...,.:....:;.,,:_~-l
a r oused today unless you EUe ~:on7
B
(cm~l~!e lhf ci'lu:~l e qvo~e d
fronted with challenge . II may take a
.
.
.
by /,j!,ng in Tht" ,., ,umg word s
b it of p ressure in order to bnng out •
yov de•ni!I"Jp j 10 m sl~p r'\fc 3 below.
you r best and perform a t your peak
SAGITTARIUS {N ov. 23-0ac . 2 1) PR INT NUMBEREO
1 '
l
W h en deahng w ith f nends or associLflTERS IN SQUARE S
a tes, don't try to defend your ego
when mak ing you r case f or your
be liefs o r posit ions ! oday. II will only
lead you as tray from your a ctua l argu ment.
•
'
CAPR ICOR N (Dec. 22-J an . 19) - SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
When it comes to planning you r soc ial
activ it ies roday. let everyone in11olved
Snitch. Unwed. Exult· Torrid· WIT/·IQUT JS
vo1ce h 1S: o r her preterences . Tempers
can easi ly be &lt;~roused when peop le
1
fee l their Ill Ough ts a re inc1denta l.
·c?n te ach ow chi ldren
how
gel
WITH- ·
AQUARIUS {Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Be
I'
supportive of family members today
Instead o f fmding f ault wit h every lin le
thing they do or not do. When everyone pu ll s together, the object rves o f
everybody can be achieved ,
P ISCES {F eb. 20-M a rch 20) .....:.... Whon
dealing v,/i1h personS you hli11e to
work with. if 1s w1ser to let your heart
rule your head. It IS one o f those 'Clays
when people ar e unduly sens1hve and
wil l 011orroact over the sma llest thm_g .
ARIES (March 21 - April t 9) - Do not
get drscouragod to day arod throw rn
, the towel 1f things don"t work ou t a s
you had hoped on your f1rst try.
Success can be achieved. because
you·u learn 1t1mugh e ach of your triOS .
TAUA U S (Apnl 20- May 20 1 - Th.;,i-e s
a poss1bilily th.al yo u could gel yourse ll lnvoived rn someth1ng today
where you"!! feel you have made a
bum deal Instead o f Sulking . tako the
necessary steps to rect1ty any 1mpropnet1es . '
GEMiNI (May 21 -June 20l - lt th1ng ~
go wrong for you lot:lay. s lop and fael ·
the favorable c hnnges t hat are 1n the
w•nd . That on which you're working
can be successful II you look for new
ways to improve your pos1t1on .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22 ) - The
types of act ivities that will turn out to
be the most fun today will be those
that require no expenses Oon'1 let a
pal mak.e you feel c heap because you
dOn "! need to spend to ha11e fun .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) You may
have td defend your Ideas o r beilefs
Involving your' c8reer against another
who Is. vying tor your gain!l If you get
irritable over it. 1t coul d affect the
effectiveness of your challe,nge

CUL S

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42 Khayyam

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StJavtnlk~

18 Brass:
component
20 Lands In
"Ia mer"
21 Columbus'
smallest
ship
22 mle
24 Ja,
to Jacques
26 Emblem
27 Milne bear
28 Extend
over
30 Cuzeo ·
builder
31 WNW

Grandpa to mother of three· "The most im~ortaot thing :
we
is
\o
along
OUT' US

renovatort

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii7;;40;;·985-3

11 El&lt;lrome,
11 w..ther
12 Frozen plain
13 Spotted cat
14 -along
15 " Pillow
Talk" namo
16 He loved
Lucy
17 "-!the ldUy
18 Alphabet
DOWN
ender
19 Warm·
Survey the
hearted
enemy
23 Shiny wrar 2 Turn Inside
25 Mr. Wino
out
26 Old albuma 3 Opinion
29 Free
4 Romantic
32 Hydrocarbon
deity
sutftx
5 Authorize
33 Cavamon
, 6 Gradations
from Moo
of color
34 Desktop
7 Dllferont
symbols
8 Regulatory
35 Marry's
org.
opposite
9 Cook bacon
36 Incite
· 10 Stockholm
38 Put in
carrier
the cooler 11 F&lt;u1lain trao1
40 Klutz 's cry 12 TNnk
(2 wds.)
possessor
41 JSnake River 16 Iron

ecz ,_,'

with T.M. uh. $5.7511 DOl b. bag

3 ~~37 St Rt 7 N

1 Mutiny

6 nzztea

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High coot of fertiUzer got. you worried?

rentalavalli bla.
,\ lushruoni t 'ompos• A\ ailablt
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• Airway p11st u~ reno\'lll!ln. &amp;: !let'ders antih1bl~ to rent.

46 Chongaa
directiOn
48 Shop cloaa
tool
49 Rio Grande
town
52 Bod-mouth
53 Kitchen
gadget
54 Genetlally
engineered
55 Oater extras
56 Drive lo!ward

position correclly, he sacrificed 1n seven
l:~~:~7i~~~~~EI ~spades.
..

HERE!!
JEST ME

WHAR,

Puzzle

In goulash bridge, the deck IS ne"oJer shu f~
fled and the cards are dealt in tKrees,
·lours or fi"oJes. But today's layout was r:tealt
normally. one card at a lime. It occurred
during a malch between Brazil and
France at the 1961 Bermuda Bowl in Sao
Paulo, Brazil.
North was Frenchman Rene Bacherich.
He decided that no number o' hearts
would describe Ills hand." so he passed!
Afler East had 'also passed, South , .
Claude Deru y, opened two cl ubs. Wesl
came in with two spades. Now North
leap! maJeSlic·al ly lo 'seven ll earts. wll ich
was passed around to West Judgif19 !he

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�•

Page B8 • The Daily'Sentinel

www.mYJlailysentfnel.com
.
.

Wednesday, August 24,2005

Big) aschool faD.sports
preview special section
inside today's Sentinel

Big·catch: .Bryant impressing ~rowns

AP photo
Cleveland Browns wide recei'ver Anton io Bryant grabs a pass dur,
ing training camp 1n B~rea Monday. Being a nice guy and solid
teammate isn't exactly what the four-yea r veteran is after. Bryant's
goal is greatness. and he won't stop at anything short of it.

BEREA (AP) - Antonio
"I've never seen a-guy run Morgan.
Bryant's first two seasons in
Bryant arrived last season routes like he does," rookie
Bryant's exit from Big , D Dallas were solid, but not
with the reputation of being guanerback Charlie Frye said. 'was greased when he got into spectacular. In his mind, he
an underachieving, jersey- . ' He cuts on a dime."
an argument with Cowboys can do so much nwre and is
throwing bad boy.
'
On Saturday, Bryant caught coach Bill Parcells. Bryant. just beginning to blossom.
Since joining the Cleveland a 51 -yard touc hdown pass upset that he was behind
''When I first came in the
Browns, however, the wide from quanerback Trent Dilfer Keyshawn Johnson and Terry league, I saw a tree,'' he said.
receiver has been a regular and had three receptions for Glenn -· players Parcells "Now, 1 can see the ap):lles on
Mr. Goody Two Cleats. But 78 yards as the Brown s coached in New York - first · the tree. Some guys get it earbeing a nice guy, solid ·team- improved to 2-0 iQ.the exhibi; exc hanged wo rds with the ti e r. I'm just' starting to undermate and decent player aren't . tion season with a 21 -.13 win coach before tossing hi s stand things a Jinle bet(er. As I
titl es the four-year veteran is at Detroit. ,
sweaty u1iiform at him.
catch up, .it's moving faster.
after.
· .Bryant missed a few days of
Bryant had to .be removed You mature .
· Bryant's goa l is greatness.
pract ice last week to attend a by sec urity from the practice
" When 1 first gut in the
''When people leave the sta- family funeral. but returned and didn't rejoin the team game, 1 was doing a lot of
dium, I .want them sayj ng, focused.
until training camp.
thin gs off anxiety. When you
'That's the best receiver I saw
"He's had a great camp," \He isn't dwelling on what learn how to bring your e mo today."' Bryant sa id.
Dilfer said . " He's really . happened, but Bryant said it lions under cont ro l. then you
He has eas ily been the · developi ng into a line player. has taught him some valuable ca n distribute tha t energy
'
h
d ·1 b t"
Browns' best player during I want to try and give him the lessons.
1 es ·
· ·
·
ba II e very c hance th a t I ,ge I.
" It 1's what 1·.1 1·s," h.e s·a1'd. w As
ere you
camp as .Bryan I 1s
for nee
th e runin with trammg
tinally showing signs of tap- He made a very aYerage pass " It's a learning process . Either,
,.
Ptlrcells .
Browns coach
ping into the potential and look good-· he attacked the you're going to get stronger .Romeo Crennel spoke with
stardom forecast for him football in the air. When you or it' s going to weaken you. I Cleveland offensive coordinawhen he came out of have guys that will do that for think I'm going to get
Pittsburgh in 2002 after win- you, and I have not had many stronger. 1 learn from things . tor Mauri ce Carthon, who
ning the Biletnik?ff Award as , of tho se in my career, it 11 didn't kill me. I'm still was with Dallas,. to find out
college football s lop w1de makes you w1llmg to · make · breathing."
·
more about Brya nt 's characreceiver- as a sophomore.
more aggressive decisions in
In
seven
starts
for ler.
.
During workouts, the 24- • plays.
Cleveland, Bryant had 42
"I asked Mauri ce what hap"I would like to see a . lot receptions for 546 yards and pened and he told me. That
year-o'ld, who can become a
free agent after thi s season, more of that from him ."
four TDs. Adding in his num- was it ," Crennel said. " I realLast October, the Browns bers in Dallas, Bryant fi n- ly wasn't worried that
stands out among the club's
cadre of )Videouts because of acquired Bryant in a straight- ished with 58 catches for 812 Antonio and I would have a
his blazing speed and the up deal with the Dallas yards, an average of 14 yards ·confrontation . If he did, well,
·
I'm the head coaci1."
crispness of liis pass patterns. Cowboys for wideout Quincy per grab.

Fifth annual RYIHM
Fest·scheduled for
Saturday at URG, A6

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, , ' l ' ':~·\,,!

,, '\ ,• . ._

SPORTS
• Prep football previews.
See Page 81

\1\l l\ ',11\,

\l L l ' l

,

. , ,tl,

..

Firefighters contain blaze ~t Gavin Plant
Bv PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBWNE.COM
CHESHIRE: - Fire team s
battled a blaze Wednesday
morning at the Gen. James M .
Gavin Plant; containing ihe
fire in one room.
·
. No injuries were reponed in
the fire, which was confined

to the coal handling area at
the American Electric Powerowned plant; sail! Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department
Chief Jeff Darst.
Fourteen firefighters from
the Middleport and Pomeroy
volunteer fire departments
assisted the plant's fire
brigade , Darst said. Gallia

County Emergency Medical
Services also responded with
one ambulance, he said.
The fire staned at 6:45 a.m.
and was extinguished by 7:30
a.m., said Jeff Rennie, an AEP
· spokesman.
Firefighters received the
call about the fire at 7:08
a.m., Darst said·. They

remained on the scene until
II :32 a.m .
The fire teams remained on
the scene to ensure the blaze
did not re-ignite, Rennie said .
The coal handling area contains a conveyer belt, which
dumps coal into a silo, Darst
said. Although no other parts
of the plant were affected, the

School begins

Cowher to give offensive starters Bulldogs blank Gallia Academy
plenty of playing time Friday _

'

.

~r.r------------------~

BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN@MYOAllYTRIBUNE.COM

LATROBE. Pa . (AP) - ·
The Pittsburgh Steelers aren't
accomplishii1g
much on
offense in the pr~season .
Maybe that 's why coach Bill
Cowher wants hi s starters to
have plenty of time to get
something done Friday ni ght
against
the
Washington
Redskiri s.
Cowher will play his reguIars for at least a half. and has
teld some players they may
play into the thi (d quarter.
That '·s far !o nger than · they
played in their first two ex hibition ga mes, and they likely
won ' t get nearly that much
time in their Sept. I game
against Carolina.
These statistics may retlect
Cowher's
thinking
for
extending the starters' time :
Touchdowns on kick or
turnover returns to date : 4.
bv
Ben
Tou chdown s
Roethlisberger and-the starting offense: 0.
"Oh, yeah. I don ' t think
there ' s any que stion:· Cowher
said Tuesday when asked if
he needs to see more consi stency .. "They still haven ' t
been able to put the ball in the
end zone yet. We certainly
have a ways to go before
we're where we want to be by
·
opening day. "
Cow her
think s
gomg
against a Redskih s defense
that was No. 3 in the NFL a
year ago, trai ,lin g only
Pi(tsburgh ' aiid Buffalo; wi ll
be a sufficient challenge fur
an offense that hasn't played
very much and hasn't done
much when it has played.
, The staners went only 10
plays in a 38-3 I victory over
Philade lphia on Aug. 15. then

.

.

didn't
do
much in I
,
'1/2 quaners
lio., of work in a
turnover filled I 7-3
decision
Notebook
over Miami
o
n
. Saturday. On one drive. the
S teelers stalled at
the
Dolphins· · 9-yard line when
Roethli sbe rger twice couldn't
connect with open receivers.
Another lime. he threw an
interception into the !lat. similar to two such interceptions
he threw during the playoffs.
Ruethli sberger has . been
spe nding extra time after
practice working with hi s
receivers, mostly Hines Ward,
Whose holdout kept him out
of camp until last 'week. Ward
said the extra work is necessary because he will have limited
game
time
with
Roethlisberger. other than
·Friday. to gel their timing
down.
" It 's really the only game a
' lot of the veteran s are going to
play a . Int." Ward said . "For
me. I didn't play much the
last game. and pretty much
the vets aren ' t going to play
much next week, so this is
really my test before the season start s."
Ward. who caught 80 passes .last season. is already seeing a · differen~e after only one
week of camp.
.
"My cQnditioning is running routes full speed, so why
not do it with Ben throwing to
me?,'' Ward said. "Overall,
we're looking pretty good
but. he y. it 's going to take
time. I want to get o n the

'#1 . .••

same page with him so there's
no thinking, only reacting.
Ju st throw it and let me make
a play for him.''
Meanwhile, nose tackle
Casey Hampton's new $22.75
million, five-year contract
cuts hi s base salary this seaso n to $325,000 from
$969,000, wh1ch he was to
have earned in the final year
of hi s previous contract.
Coupled with the prorated
share of his $6.975 million
signing bonus, his 2005 cap
value becomes $1.72 million
- up slightly from $1.607
million.
There is speculation the
Steelers intentionally waited
until now to announce
Hampton's signing to put the
pressure on Ward to sign now
for what the team is offering.
"! would like to gel it done ,
bull don't know what the situation is," Ward said. 'T m
still optimistic something's
going to gel done."
Asked if he is pressuring
agent I'Jigene Parker to get a
contract done soon, Ward
said, "I' vc been doing that
since .I got here. That's why
I'm here. I want to get something done." Notes: The
Steelers hold their final training camp practice Wednesday.
They will have only a walk·
through drill Thursday before
breaking camp and traveling
to Washington. ... Cowher .·
said backup QB Tommy
Maddox ·
will
follow
Roethlisberger. Maddox didn' t play,against Miami .... WR
Anlwaan Randle El will
return at least one punt, a job
filled last week by Ricardo
Colclough.

CENTENARY - Athens
scored a pair of ~oals within a
70-second span m the second
half to pull away from Gallia
Academy en route to a 4.-0 victory in the high school soccer
opener Tuesday.
The match also opened the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League campaign. ·
. Ezekial Thornton scored
two goals for the Bulldogs,
including a back-breaking
header at the 23:49 mark of
the second half that put his
team up 3-0. It carne a little
more than a minute after Alejo·
Delgado pad given Athens
some much-needed breathing
room.
A scrappy, Gallia Academy
team kept close throughout the
fir st half, only allowing a
penalty kick goal I :48 into the
matc:h. A hand ball in the box
set up the PK.
Blue Devil goal keeper
Wally Luckydoo . was a big
reason his team stayed clos" in
the opening stanza, recording

Carter has never played a
down with the Rave ns, yet
there isn't a player on the
team that doe sn't know what
he 's gone through.
" He's one of the mo st
impressive stories we have
right now," coac h· Brian
Billick said.
If Carter ha s hi s way, the
final chapter of his story will
be about him returning to the
form he displayed as a Pro
Bowler with the Kansas City
C hiefs from 1994-97.
Caner will take a big step
toward reaching that goal
against the Saints, when he
dons a game jersey for· the
first time in 21 months.
" It 's been a long time. I'm
looking forward to Friday."
he said. " I can ' t wait.''
It' s a sentiment that is
shared H'l a degree by running
back Jamal Lewis, who cou ld
aha see hi s fir;,t action of the
preseason on Friday. Lewis
reported late to camp after
;,erving lime in a halfway
house in Atlanta. part ·of hi s
se ntence ·for entering a g uilty
plea for u;ing a cell phone to
,et up a drug buy in 2000.
. '

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The open ing day of Ohio's l'all hunting season begin s in a week,
and officials with the Ohio
Department
of N'a tural
Re sources expect good
hunting.
Beginnin g Sept. · 1. -Ohio
hunter s can take to the
state's fields and waters in
pursuit of squirrel. mourning
dove, and Canada geese.
according to. the Division of
Wildlife.
" Many hunters look forward to ,openi ng day each
year," said Steven A . Gray.
chief of the Division of
Wildlife. " The ear ly hunt -

Page AS
• Joseph M. McCarty, 57
• Carl Parker, 47
• Jack Eugene Seelig, 74
• Charles Vroman, 69
Brad Sherman/photo

INSIDE

GAHS goalkeeper Wally ~uckydoo, right, tries to make a save
during Tuesdey's game w.ith Athens. AHS won 4-0.
14 siops amidst a barrage of
shots.
He linishcd with 22 saves
on the atiemoon.
Athen s' final goal came
with 10:49 left, when a Gallia
Academy player accidentally

detlected a shot into his own
goal.
·
Gallia Academy 1s at
Alexander Thursday before
returning to league play I p.m.
Saturday when Jackson pays a
visit.

1

.i

CB Carter eager for some
action after lengthy absence
Rolle. who has a sprained
knee.
Carter's return has been
delayed by 11 bruised thigh
bone that kept him out of the
Raven s· first two, preseason
games. It's been a fru stratin g
&gt;ummer for th e 35-year-old
defe nsive back. who has
been forced to watch from
the sideline instead of working with , Rolle . 'Ed Reed.
De io n Sanders and Chris
McAli ster.
"I said. ·Lord, you didn 't
bring me thi s far for this. 'It's
kind of frustrating, but one of
the things I'm glad about'this
team is thai they have veterans who have been through
some of the things I've been
throug h." Carter said. " !just
kep t my. head up."
Re ed can only imagine
what Carter ha&gt;
gone
through. and how hard he
worked to get back into football 'hape.
" It make;, you appreci,ate
the ~a me e'en. more . and
put;, things in pers pect ive for
you ... he '&lt;lid. "AI the same .
time. it makes you more
excited because you can feel
1hc energy he bring~ . ..

Fall
·hunting
season set
to begin

OBITUARIES

'

. OWINGS . MILL,S. Md .
(AP)- This isn ' t ju;,t a preseason game for Dale Carter.
When the Baltimore Ravens
f-ace the New Orleans Saints
on Friday ni ght. the vete ran
cornerback will take a significant step in his bid to return
from a life-threatening injury
that forced him to mi ss the
ent ire 2004 season .
While he wa s lying in a
hospital bed last July with a
blood clot in hi s lun g, the last
thing Carter thought about
.was resuming an NFL career
in which he intercepted 24
passes and was se lected to
'play in the Pro Bowl in four
straight seaso ns.
·
" Football wa;, the farthe't
thing from my mind." Caner
said Tuesday. "Livi ng was
my No. I priority. I wasn't
worried about anything e b c.
I had a chance to 'i' back and
think about all the thin g' you
take for gran.ted. All thi s i'
extra now."
Carter has n ' t played an
NFL ga me since No ve mbe r
20fl3. when he su ited up for
the Saint;, in a game ;1gai1N
the Ph iladelphia Ea Jics.
Caner will replace Samari

coal handlin g area recei\ ed
heavy damage. he i aid . ·
Fire units· used water to battie the flam es, Darst said. No
special chemi~al s were need· ed to extingui sh the coal fire .
The cause of th e blaze has
not yet been determined. and
an investi gati on is continu ing,
Rennie said .

• Transfers posted.
See Page A2
• Senior Center pie
baking contest results.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness honors
employees with service
awards. See Page A3
• TOPS honors
·
weight-loss winners.
See Page A3
• Democrats award
savings bonds at fair.
See Page A3
• School Bus Safely:
See Page AS
• Lpcal Briefs.
.S ee Page AS
• Fifth annual RYTHM
Fest scheduled for
Salurday at URG.
See Page A6
• Free show at Court
Grill. See Page A6
• Gospel sing this
weekend, See Page A6 .

mg seasons are a grea t time

for friends and famili es to
kick off the much -anticipated hunting seasons that
continue throu gh fall · and

· Above: The first day of school
ended at Meigs Eleme.ntary as if winter." .
The · Division of Wildlife
it were a military mission carried
predicts
huntin g for doves
out by staff who were armed
and Canada geese will be
with walkie talkies and signs
excellent
thi s year. Squirrel
directing the 950 students to
hunting should be very good
their correct buses. The staff's
·
especially in eastern and
secret besides the walkie
southern Ohio.
talkies? "Good communication,"
According to the Division
said Principal Rusty Bookman.
of Wildlife. l1unting is one
Beth Sergenti photo
of the state 's best recreational bargains. wi th a o ne-year
Left: Wednesday was the first
licen se for Ohio reside nf s
day of school in Eastern. Mei~s
costing $ 19. Those hunting
and Southern Local School
Districts. At Eastern Elementary
waterfowl must also purSchool, kindergarten teacher
chase a fede ral Duck Stamp,
Julie Spaun was working with ·.
along
with
an
Ohio
new student Taylor Carleton.
Wetlands Habitat Stamp, at
Th is we~k . kindergarten stua cost of $ 15 each . The se
dents there will attend only one
licenses and permits can be
.day of class. in small groups,
purchased a1 any of more
before beginning their regular
than 1.200 li cense vendors
· schedule next week.
in th e state. or online at
B~an J. Reed/photo
ohiodnr_com .

WEATHER

God's NET distributes school supplies to 280 kids

Tyler Lee
debuted a
·stand commercial he
conceived.
'wrote and
starred in on
Wednesday
to his classmates and
teachers at
Eas tern H1gh .
School.

BY BETH SERGENT
' BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~

...,_-,.iAart
,.

~

djse..._.
.

.

t

..

•

Coronary artery taldum scoring is O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's latest addi tion tn (.I
scanning technology, an important component of the hospit01 l's recent $2.5 million inve.&lt;;t ment
in enhanced diagnosdc imaging. This low ~cost test ~ reens for the rrr~ence of.calcificatit)n in
the arteries of the hearr. The non ·inv~sive test is painless,.t&lt;~kes only 11 fl'w minute s anJ may

Detab on Page A2

detect a high risk of having coronary artery di sease in iLs e(:lrlie~t smges.

To find out if you are a candidate for &lt;~ scori~g examination or to sch~dule an Cl(1P'I1i~tment 1 call
' (740) 592-9483 Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Physician refmal is not
requ ired. Fa&lt;details about scoring screening, see W\vw.obleness.org/newse,·ent&lt;/newsle!!er.asr.
Calcium scoring screenings are performed at O'Bieness' Radiology and Medical imaging satellite
ar the Castrop Center in the O'Bienc;s Medical Park. Our qualified staft-invites you to rake a
clnser look into your risk of heart dt:-casc as we· measure progress in co mmunity he:.tlth __..one
pancnt ar a nmc.

"

O'BLENESS
'
'

'Memorial Hospital

?':'!

7

J. /"':'.

... .

(AA.o'•tt'~J. ~; ~· (...{..(l.l.('~j lt"il H I.J.
'

(

&amp;

&lt;

•

INDEX

.'·

2 SECfiONS- 12 PAGF..S

Calendars
.cJassifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Pl;tces to go
Sports
. Weather
•

A3
B2-4

Bs
As
A4
As
A6
B Section
A2

© :;r.oos Ohiu Valley PublishinM Co.
.-:.-'-•J

"

POMEROY - The back to
school needs of 280 Meigs
County Children were met at
thi s week's school supplib
,.giveaway at God 's NET.
Children were required to
attend the giveaway and the
bags of supplies were placed
directly into their hands for
the first day of scHool .
During the giveaway a line
of families stretched almost
out of the building, waiting
patiently for their child' s turn
to present their ticket to the
receptionist
which then
passed it to the assembly line
of helpers filling the orders.
The tickets had no names
but denoted what grade and
sc hool the chi ld attended,
allowing workers on the
assembly line 10 fill the orders
by consulting the s~hool supply lists for each di strict.
,G od 's NET Administrator

Brian J ..

Beth Sergentf pholo

God 's NET volunteers (from left) Paula Fink. Joshua Dunham.
Kerry and Rose Prunty and Dee Rader fill orders on the assembly tine during the school supplies giveaway. The supplies were
donated by local churches , individuals and businesses for 280
children that lined up to receive them this week.
lists, they aid their best to get

all they could. .
Also g1ven away were
·
th 1
t
th
Dee Rader said that although ,. Items a were no on e
they didn 't have all the sup- school supply lists like tooth plies on the scl)ools' supply paste. tooth brushes , soap,
r

.

'

hand

sanitizer,

sandwich

bags, etc .
Rader was thankful for the
donations of supplies from 30
churches. 60 individuals and

Please see Supplies, AS

--- - - - - -- •

Reed/ photo

Eastern junior debuts
anti-smoking commercial
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Tyler Lee's classmates and
teachers at Eastern High
School have no doubt what he
did on hi s summer vacation.
Lee a1id staffers from the
local and statewide Stand
organization debuteq •a 15second commercial Lee ere-

~ued

for the teen tobacco pre-

vention

program

on ,.

Wednesday. tht;. first day of
school. The public service
announcement wa, prod~ced
in
June
and
debuted
statewide on cable and local
television o n Monday.
Last Octoher. Lee decided
to address the is.sue of tobacco

Please s~ Junior, A5

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