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.

•

,r

Levee fixed.as
New 9!-leans mayor
makes direst death
prediction yet,'A2

Jetliner cr~hes
into Indonesian
neighborhood; at
least 147 dead, A6

Mi4dleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o {I:\ IS • \ ol. .} 4. :\o . 1,)

ll I Sll \\. SI ·. I'I·I :\IBII{ h.

Loc~l

SPORTS
• Eastern falls in tri"match.
See Page 81

''"" · '"'claii~M·ntinc·l., . ,,,.

:!Oil.}

Food E~trepreneurs to support relief efforts

ATHENS
The
Appalachian Center for
Econom'ic
Networks
(ACEnet) will host a
gourmet luncheon II :30
a.n'l. to I :30 p.m. Fri'day at
its
facilities
at
94
Columbus Rd. to . benefit
Hurricane Katrina relief
efforts.
Bill Justice of ACEnet
Food Ventures m conJunction with Jonathan Leal of
Gourmet Your Way will be
the featured caterers and
will utilize local meats and
produce donated by Athens
area farmers and ·· food
entrepreneurs for the event.
All proceeds from the
event will be donated to

the Farm Aid Family Farm
Di saster Fund which will
channel e mergency asststance to farm families devastated
b..y
Hurrican e
Katrina.
Earm Aid ha s
activated the Fund to
encourage donation s so
that farm familie s can get
the help they need to
recover from the hurricane
and continue farming.
As a first step, Farm Aid
has sent an initial $30,000
to several of its partner
family farm organizations
in the southeast to immediately begin assessing needs
in these states and pro\'id ' ing emergency relief.
"This is a moment when

each of us can take stock
of what ·we can offer to
everyone affected by this
catastrophe, and Farm Aid
is in a position to act for
farm families,'' said Farm
Aid
President
Willie
Nelson. · '·Crop and livestock losses wi II be masstve. Many farm · buildings
·were destroyed in the
storm and ensu1ng floodIng.
A disa ster of this
magnitude can be a breaking
point
for
many
Souihern family' farms."
While the full extent of
the pamage to family farms
is ~tiil unknown. Farm Aid
repre sr ntativcs have been
told that the infrastructure

of many rural so uth eas tern
communities has bee n devastated and will tak e.
month s to repmr. That
mean s many farm families
are facing an ex tended peri od without phone service.
electricity, clean water or
.modes of tran sportation .
n addition, maJor c rop
lo sses are anticipated as
many crops were just a
week or two from being
harvested when the hurri cane hit. Without tran spon
or feed for farm animals.
livestock and poultry farm ers fac e serious challenges
to ke ep their animal s alive
over the coming days and
weeks.

At the r&lt;:que -,t of . Farm
Aid. ACE-net will he
exhibitinoe the weekend of
the
Farm
Aid
20th ·
Annivcn,an· co ncert and
will prescnl the group wit h
a check on behalf of the
community at th at time· .
The Anniversary Farm Aid
concert 1~ ,c hed ul ed for
Sept. IX in Tinley Park, Il l
j ust so uth of Chicago.
Indi vid ual s can contribuie
directly to Farm Aid' s di saster fund on-lin e at
www.fa rmai9 . by callin g
rXOO)
FARM -AID.
m .
throu g h donation s at the
go urmt:t
lun cheo n
:!l
ACE net.

OBITUARIES
Page A~
• Ralph Hall, 85
• Matilda Rowley, 87
• Mary Jane Pugh, 77
•Tommy Ray Walters, 47

INSIDE
• Bush chooses
Roberts as chief justice
to succeed Rehnquist.
See Page A2
. • Krawsczyn graduates
from OU.
See Page A3
• Thirteen suspected
Taliban killed in fighting
in southern Afghanistan,
official says.
See Page AS

WEATHER

Beth Sergent

'Students at Meigs Intermediate School are raising money for victims of Hurricane Katrina. The
money will be used to locally purchase bottled water and other supplies. Pictured with their
donations are (from left) students Ronnie Lavender, Sammy Ash, Patrick Evans and Ashleigh
Sayre; back row (from left) teachers Vicki Haley and Paula Whitt.

Meigs lnterme~iate don~tes to hurricane relief
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND
"Kids'
hearts are good," said Meigs
Intermediate School principal
Rusty Bookman about his students and their desire to help
victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Helping to organize the
effort at the School is Paula
Whitt, Title I teacher.
"The kids see what's happening on television and this
makes them feel like they ' re
doing something to help,"
Whiu said. ·
The kids have been bring-

illg in spare change and dropping it into an Igloo water
cooler to represent the bottles
of water they hope to purchase with the pro~:eeds .
" It makes me feel sad for
the people,'' said student

Phiase see Donates, AS

·Get a mammogram, win a quilt
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Meigs
County women who have
'Details on Page A6
received a mammogram within
the calendar year or who are a
breast cancer patient and I or
survivor are eligible to enter a
drawing for a hand quilted wall
hanging mea~uring 50 inches
2 SECTIONS -16 PAGES
by 60 irtches.
.
Calendars
A3
The pink wall hanging features a commemorative pink
Classifie~s
B3-s ribbon which is embroidered
along with the message "Where
·comics
86-7 there is hope, there .is possibiJity."
Dear Abby
A3
The quilted wall hanging is
sponsored by the Meigs County
Editorials
A4
Cancer
lnitiative, •Inc. (MCCI)
'
and
was
crafted and dpnated by
Obituaries ·
As the Hemlock
.Grove Quilters to
breast cancer awareness.
B Section · raiseThose
Sports
wishing to enter the
drawing
are
asked to provide
A6
Weather

INDEX

~

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Please see Quilt. A~

Beth Sargent/ photo

A quilted wall hanging made and donated by the Hemlock Grove
Quitters will be given away as part of the Meigs County Cancer
Initiative's effort to raise breast cancer awareness. To be eligible to win a person must have had a mammogram within the
calendar year or be a breast cance( patient and I or s urvivor.
Pictured with their creation are the Hemlock Grove Quitters
(from left) Sara Cullums . Courtney Sim (MCCI ). Pau la Welker.
Helen Quivey, Rosalie Story, Jeannine Offutt. Rosalie Story.

. ROAR, the roar of the crowd, the roar of .
the band filling the ·stqdium; these are the ·
~ounds you've been waiting to hear.
But ... admit it, other roars have taken their
toll: loud music, highw9y noise, power tools. .
Get back to the top of your game with the best
hearing.
·
·

Diles Demo Days September 7, 8, 9

Charlene Hoeftlch/ ph&lt;ito

The Howard and Geneva Nolah Anne x built on a lot adjacent to
the the Meigs Museum is completed and will be dedicated by
the Meigs County..l;;listorical Society in mid-October.

Dedication if new
Meigs Museum a11nex
set for mid-October
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - Construction
has been completed on the
annex to the Meigs M.u,eum
on Butternut Avenue ;md
plans are now being made for
a dedication of the building in
mid-October.
It was named after the primary benefactor. Howard·
Nolan of .Syracuse , who
died earlier thi s year. and
his late wife . Geneva . The
nam e of the buildin ~
"Howard
and
Gene1 ~~
Nolan.
Meigs
Count~
Mu se um Annex" in bol.d
white letters adorn the front
of th e structure .
In side
han gs a bronLe plaque in
, tribute to the Nolans and a
lapidary. display and other
obj cch sy mboli c of th eir
liv es and h obbic~ is on
exhibit.
The interior nf th e ~Ox-10
. foot stru cture has open
space for ex hi bi ts.. an
office. kitchenette. and re'1
room. with a 'ecnnd llonr
storage loft._ The hrid
facactC •of the exterinr ..'nnrdinatcs well with the

Museum: Tru,tees Bob
Win ge tt and Ferma n· Moore
ha ve co-c haired the building project for the Meigs
Cou nt y Hi stori·cal Socie ty.
G1;oun,dh reaking for th e
anne:-. lOok pace un June
13. 200-1 . "At that time
tru.,t ec Rae 1\loorc 'poke
and dc,cribcd it as "a n
occa,ion of a lon g. long
aw&lt;i ited dream ...
"Extra 'pace' for ex hibit s
ha' hcen 11ceded for n1any
yea r'&gt;.
,aid
!\largaret
Parkn. pre,ident of th e
Historical Society . ,ince
198-1. She said the ini1ial
bhibit' will be farm
equipment and - mililary
di,plays feaiLlrin ~ malcria l
on loca l men and ll'l1111cn
11 ho ha1·c been in 'cr1 ice.
"Thi' nc'll LIL' i lit~ will
allllW u' lo &lt;li,pla~ .'10red
agri..:uiJurc equipment and
nthcr lar~e item' 11c ha\'e.
and gi1 c' u' an opport unit y
Ill l11l11C '&gt;lli11c' lhing' 11l11\
nn di,pla~ in 1he mu.,eum
In th.: apne\ ...

·cALL TODAY
.740.594.3571
800.237.7716
•

DILES

ARING CENTER
275 West !Jnion St., Athens

~),/v~•
Jf-l. CCC·A
and

.

�NATION

The Daily Sentinel

-------='=J:. . y.=. . ...:-T=-=I.=I.=E=.....:·)=l::.:E=:N:..:..::D=---=--____..:·Tu~e~sd: ;aY:.:.,:-·s~ep!: tep~rn,: :!g.:.:~r ,~ o : .52

_Pag~A2
Tuesday, September 6,

-._Th_e_D_a_il_y_se_n_tfn_e_i

2005

Community Calendar.

lEVEE FIXED AS NEW ORLEANS MAYOR MAKES DIREST DEATH PREDICTION YET .

.Public meetings

· the federal government and
has turned to a Clinton adminASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
-istration official, ·former
Federal
Emergency
NEW ORLEANS - A
Management
Agency
chief
week. after Hurricane Katrina,
James
Lee
Witt,
to
help
run
engineers plugged the levee
relief effons,
break. that swamped much of
Blanco, a Democrat, was
the city and floodwaters began
not
informed of the timing of
to recede, but along with the
Bush's visit, nor was she
good news came the. mayor's
'
i
mmediately invited to meet
direst prediction yet:" As many
him
or travel with him. In fact,
as I0,000 dead.
Blanco's office didn't know
Sheets of metal and repeated
when Bush was coming until ·
helicopter drops of 3,000-·
told
by reporters.
pound sandbags along the
Late
Monday, Blanco
_ 17th ·Street canal leading to
denied there was tension with
Lake Ponchanrain succeeded
Bush.
Monday in plugging a 200"We'd like to stop the voices
foot-wide gap, and water was
out there trying to create a
being pumped from the canal
divide. There Is no divide.
back into the lake. State oftiWe're all in this together," she
cials and the U.S , Army Corps
said . "Every leader in this
of Engineers say once the
nation wants to see this prob'
canal level is drawn down two
lem
solved."
feet, Pumping Station #6 can
In
Texas, U.S. Health and
begin pumping Water out of
Human Services Secretary
the bowl-shaped city.
.
Mike Leavilt declared a public
Some parts of the city
health emergency for that
already showed sl ipping
state, saying it would speed up
floodwaters as the repm r
federal assistance to . help
neared completion. with the
240,000 storm evacalmost
low-lying Ninth Ward dropuees _ the most of any state.
ping more than .a foot. In
Whil e the New Orlean s
downtown New Orleans. some
were. mostly poor and
.refugees
streets were merely wet rather
black , · Jefferson
Parish
than swamped.
brought
the
storm's
deStruction
"We're starring to make the
to a much wider economic
. kind of progress that I kind of
cross-section. The sprawling
earlier."
New .
expected
AP Photo/ David J. Phillip
parish stretches from Grand
Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin A helicopter drops iJ sandbag as work to repair a broken levee Sunday in New Orleans.
Isle on the Gulf of Mexico to
said the work on the break.
Lake Pontchartrain in the
which opened-at the height of
again
Wednesday.
evacuate
but
didn't
say
if
it
t:rmilies.
"Some
simply
left
stymied
by
random
gunfire
nonh, and· includes some of
the hurricane and tlooded 80
"If
I
can
just
get
my
kids'
was
taking
that
step.
He
did,
because
they
said
they
could
and
lawlessness.
the
metropolitan~a's most
pen:ent of the city up to 20
baby
photos."
she
said.
"You
however.
detail
one
heavynot
deal
with
the
catastrophe,"
"Go
on
the
streets
of
New
exclusive
neighbo1'hoods.
feet deep.
can't
replace
those·
.
"
handed
tactic:
Water
will
no
Riley
said
,
Officers
were
Orleans
_
it's
secure."
said
In
the
enclave of Old
The news came as many of
In
New
Orleans,
Nagin
longer
be
handed
out
to
people
.
being
cycled
off
duty
and
Army Lt.- Gen. Russel Honore.. Metairie. the rows of palatial,
the 460,000 residents of subttpticked
hi
s
estimate
of
the
who
refu
se
to
leave.
given
five-day
vacations
in
"Have . you been to New six-bedroom homes sustained
urban Jefferson Pari sh waited
prob:rble
death
toll
in
his
city
In
another
effort
of
"encourLas
Vegas
and
Atlanta,
where
Orleans''
Did anybody accost lillie ;tructural damage but
in a line of cars that stretched
. ')"
had some· of the worst floodfor miles to brietly see their from merely thousands, telling ageme nt," a Louisiana State they wo uld also receive coun- you. .
NBC's
"Today"
show,
"It
Pol.
i
ce
SWAT
team
armed
with
seling.
Hopeful
sig
ns
of
recovery
ing. Only a few windows were
flooded · homes, and to scoop
wouldn't
be
unreasonable
to
ritles
confronted
two
brothers
At
a
news
conference
in
were
accompi111ied
by hrnkcn and the live oaks surup soaked wedding picwres,
at their home in the Uptown Baton
Rou ge.
police President Bush's second visit· vived. but the water rippled up
baby shoes and other cher- ha ve 10,000."
As law enforcement ofticers section of New Orleans, leav- Superintendent
Eddie ·to Loui siana that exposed a I he knobs at front doors and
ished mementoes.
and
even
bands
of
private
ing
one
subbing.
Co
mpass
denied
officers
continued rift between state completely covered Mercedes"A lot o( these peopl~ built
"I thought they were going deserted in droves, acknowi- and federal officials over the . Bcn zes, pickup trucks and
these houses anticipating some individuals _ including actor
· garages.
.
tlood water but nobody imag- Sean Penn _ launched a door,- to shoot me," said 23-year-old edging some officers aban - slowness ef a relief elTon . The BMW s Ill
to-door
boat
and
air
search
of
Leonard
Thomas,
weeping
on
doned
their
johs
but
saying
he
first
signilicant
·
convoy
of
Many
residents were happy
. ined this." sobbed Diane
food, water and medicine did- that the storm spared their
Dempsey, a 59-year-old the city for survivors, they his. front porch. "That dude didn't know how many.
up
against
a
.
came
and
stuck
the
gun
dead
Two
police
officers
killed
were
running
n't arrive in New Orleans until homes. but angry that the failretired
Army
lieutenant
familiar
obstacle:
People
who
at
my
head."
themselves.
Another
was
shot
four
full day s after the hurri - ure of the levee system left
colonel who could gel no closer than the water line a mile had been trapped more than a · One ofticer, who did not 'in the he~d . Compass said 150 cane, .and the mayor and oth- .them swamped. Some were
from her Metairie home. "I'm week in damaged homes yet give hi s name, said hi s.' team had to be rescued from eight ers said some survi vors died considering a lawsuit against .
tried to make sure that tlie two feet of water and others had awaiting relief. · ·
the federal government for
going to pay someone to get refused to leave.
"We
have
advised
people
men understood that food and gotten infectio~s from walking
The
Times-Picayune, having a levee that could surme back there. anything I have
that thi s city has bee n water is becoming scarce and through the murky soup of Loui:siana's largest ne ~spaper, vive no mo·re than a Category
to do."
"I won't be gelling inside destroy~d." said Deputy Police that disease could begin chemicals and ·pollutants in publi shed an open leuer to 3 hurri cane.
~
nooded areas.
Bush, called for the firin g of That's what so devastating.
today unless I get some scuba Superintendent W.J . Riley. spreading.
With almost a third of New
"No police depanment in every oflicial at the Fede ral that goddamned levee breakgear," added Jack Rabito, a "There is nothing here for
61-ye·ar-old bar owner who them and no reason 1-.,r them Orleans' police force missing the history of the world was Emergency
Manage ment ing." said Bobby Patrick, a
waited for a ride to visit his to stay, no food , no jobs, noth- in action, a caravan of law asked to do what we were Agency,
resident of neighborhood now
enforcement vehicles, embla- asked," Compass said with a
At a stop in Baton Rouge, living in Houston. "My home
one-story home that had water ing."
Riley, who estimated fewer zoned with em blems from mix of·anger and pride.
lapping to the gulters.
Bu sh said all leve ls of the gov- didn'tlose a shingle but it's got
than
10,000 people were left across the nati on and blue . The leader of Nationar ernment were doing their best. six feet of water in it"
Katharine Dastugue was
overjoyed to find that tlood- iil the city, said some simply li ghts tlashing, poured into the Guard troops patrolling New and he pledged again: "So
Si~ce the storm. rumors had
waters had gone across her did· not want to leave their city to help establish order oi1· Orleans declared the city long as any life is in danger. sw irled that looters. had
largely free of the lawlessness we've got work to do. Whe re crossed over the parish line
lawn but stopped just inches homes _ while others were the city's anarchic streets.
. from · her doorstep. As she hanging back to engage in
Between 400 and 500 ofli- that plagued it in the days lui - it's not going ri ght . we' re and began break ing 'into evacstood waiting for a boat to criminal activities, such as cers on .New Orleans' I,fiOO- lowing the hutTicane . And he going to make it right. "
uated homes in Jefferson.
take her in. she made a li st of looting.
member force were unac- angrily lashed out at a reporter
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Many were relieved to return
things she hoped to salvage
Nagin said the city had the _counted for. Some lost their who suggested search-and-res- Bla'nco has refused to sign home Monday to find their
before being forced to· leave authori ty to force residents to homes. Some were looking for cue operation s were being over National Guard cont rol to bel on g in ~~ untouched.
Bv DOUG SIMPSON

Thesday, Sept. 6
RUTLAND
- Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m .,
Rutland Fire Station'.
RUTLAND
- Rutland
Village Council, 6:30 p.m .,
council chambers.
ALFRED Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Ossie Follrod.
Wednesday, Sept. 7
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
townhall .
.

.Clubs and
organizations
Thesday, Sept. 6
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p,m,, Masonic
Temple . Refreshments.
CHESTER -. Daughters
of America , 7:30 p.m . on
Sept. 6 at Masonic Building.

AP WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

•

more imponam." said Senate
Minority Leader Harry Reid,
D-Nev. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., expressed
concerns about the coun's bal.
ance.
"Replacing two jtlstices at
the same time will have an
enormous impact on the coun
and-on the li~es and libenies
of all Americans for decades."
said Ralph Neas. president of .
the liberal advocacy group
People for the American Way,
which opposes Robens' nomination.
,
,
Senate Majority' Leader Bill
Ftist, R-Tenn.. said Robens
was "one of · the most well
qualified candidates to come
before the Senate." He said he
stil l expects Roberts to be
confi rmed before the new
coun session begi ns Oct. 3.
Like Rehnquist , Rohens is
deepl y conservative. He was
nominated in. Jul y 10 succeed
retiring Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor, who ·angered conservatives with her tie-break-

· WASHING,TON- Seizing
a historic opportunity to
. reshape the Supreme Coun,
President Bush swiftly. chose
conservative .John Robens as
chief justice Monday and
weighed how to ti II another
vacancy that could push the
nation's highest coun to the
right on issues from abonion
to affinnativ.e action .
Polished and plainspoken,
Robens had been on a likely
track to be conlirmed as an
associate justice and it
appeared Bush turned to him .
for the top job to avoid an
acrimonious fight at a volatile
moment. Bush was on the
defensive about the administration 's sluggish response to
Hurricane Katrina and his poll
ratings had fallen to their lowest point of hi s presidency.
"For the pas t two' months
members of the United States
Senate and the American people have learned about the ing vote!'! on conte nti ou~
career and character of Judge issue s like abortion restricR(lbens," Bush said. "They . tions. campaign finance limits ~
like what they see."
discrimination laws, and reli Roberts' nomination , just UIOil .
two days after the death of • The Roberh-for-Rehnquist
Chief Justice William H. ·nomination would not affect
Rehnquist, raised fears among the balance. but Bush cou ld
Democrats about a rightward force an ideological shift by
shift as Bush lill s two open- replacing O'Connor with a
ings on the nine- member reliabl y conservat ive vote.
coun . Democrats haVe been O'Connor , has offered to
frustrated by Rubens' popltlar- remain on Jhe bench until her'
ity and said the Senate must succe"or is named. and Bush
take. a closer look at his new &lt;:ailed her Monday to say he
nominatipn.
wou ld . move quick ly to lind
"The stakes are, higher and her rcplaccmcn~"' well. H ~ is
the ..Senate\ advice and con- not expected to nan1e a ne\li
sent respon sibility is even O'Connor succe"or this week .

Reunions

Other events

Monday, Sept. 12
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Tobacco Prevention I
Cardiovascular
Health
Coalition will ti1eet at II :30
a.m. at the Pomeroy Library,

Thesday, Sept. 6
POM EROY
Meigs
County Health Dep'artmenl
evening clinic hours from. 4
p.m. to 6 p.m. Childhood and
adult immuni zation, bl ood
pressure I sugar assessments.
WIC, prenatal serv ices, head
lice screening, envi ronmental
Sunday, Sept. II
health , vital statistics, general
RACINE - Tlie annual health-related
questions
Harvest Festival will be held answered. Call 992-6626.

Church events

Krawsczyn graduates from OU
POMEROY Andrea
Krawsc zyn recently graduated magna cumlaude with a
bachelor 's degree in education from Ohio University.
She was chosen as Ohio
University's
outstanding
intervention specialist (special educator) as a junior in
2004 and was again recog.
· nized for this achievement
as a senior in 2005.
She has been inducted
into the Kappa Delta Pi
Education Honor Society
and also into the Phi Kappa
. Phi National Honor Society.
Krawsczy n
plans
to
attend graduate sc hool at
Ohio University' thi s fall to
attain a master' s degree in
Andrea Krawsczyn. with
special .education instrucOU Dean of Education Dr. James L. Heap
tion, and has been awarded
She is a 21MJI graduate Hobstetter of Pomeroy and
a graduate assi stantship in
preparation
of
student of Meigs High School and John Krawsczy n and Celia
the dau ghter of Bette McCoy of Racine.
teachers.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Health Systems' 32nd Annual
Service Awards Dinner
recently was held at the hospital's
Education
and
Center
111
Conference
Gallipolis.
The following employees
were honored for their years
of dedication;
FIVE-YEAR AWARDS
Melba Leporl, Tim Leport,
Rosalie Smith, Tim Lunsford,
Donna Gorrell , Carol Bailey,
Robin Love , Scott Plants,
Willa Camden, Jennifer
Harris, Sharon Clifton, Angie
Owens, Santa Suver. Kim
Brunton, . Donna Slayton,
Lisa Nelson, Vicki McGuire,
. David Thacker, Jill Strauch,
:Linda Vanlnwagen, Shclli
· Barnette, Heather Blazer,
: Vikki . Birchfield, Penn y
·Brown , Kim Brumfield, Jill
Clagg, Kyle Clark. Tanya
. Cremeans, Dorot~y Greenlee,
. Doris Halley, Carol. Harold,
:Margie Hart , Kirby Hill,
Cathy
Jenkins,
Dana
:Johnson, MJ Kelly, Vicki
· · Kern, Lisa Lee, Marilyn
.

~

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Endo:-.~o:d j , 111;

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~5lJ . l.'i li1r a 0 momh !&lt;.Uhl'&gt;t:ription .

N&gt;mlc--------------------------------...:..Addn.' :-. .. - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - Ph:mc _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:__

Ovisa

_:__ _ _ __:_ _ _ __:__

DEAR AB/3 Y: · In response
to the question of where to
place one's handbag in a
restaurant, you replied: "If
you ' re carryi ng a small ,'
dressy evening bag. place it
on th e table. However; if
yo u're carrying a large handbag, put it on the tloor next to
your chair or beneath the
table so the server won't trip
on it."
I keep my smaller purses
,between my body and/or
trusted companion or the
·waiL ~nd· I place larger bags
on the tloor, .. making sure my
foot is in contact wit h it at all
ti mes. (Usually between my
. feet.) .
'
I was in a service bu si ness
fo r many years, and custo mers would co nfide the
mos t outrageous detail s of
their personal lives. Once, a
young woman told me she
vi sit ed large churches when it
rained because she could use
her umbrella to reach under
pews and hook purses. Then
she' d slip out before the fi nal
prayer.
Women need visual contact
with their purses at all times.
- OLDER AND WISER,
SPRINGFIELD. MO .
DEAR WIS ER: It's sad to
think that not eve n a house of
God is safe from purse
snatching. I received a lot of
mail about that letter. Not
everyone agreed with my
answer to that question , nor
do they agree with each other.
Read on:

Love, Deb Parks, Jenny Dow
Saunders,
Karen
Rodgers, Angela Ru ssell , Newberry. Juaquime Justice,
Melinda Sallee. Robbie Carole Facemire. Marsha
Syrus, Lisa Theiss . Melinda Rodgers and Terri Evans.
Venoy and Jean Zirille.
25-YEAR AWARDS
10-YEAR AWARDS
Shirley Coburn . Carolyn
Tammy
Epling,
Paul Taylor,
Cheryl
Frazier,
Beegle (Board Member), Debbie Evans, Bobbi Hill ,
Eugenia
. Moore . . Lori Gary King (reliree), Linda
Cremeans, Pat Cochran, Laudermilt, Janet Reynolds,
Maggie Lee , Sheryl Lamhen, Renee Ridgeway and Sherry
Sue Bowers, Debbie Mayes, Ritchi e.
David Hammons, Debbie
30-YEAR AWARDS
Caldwell, Mark Foreman ,
Ron Saunders~ Nancy
Retha Canter, Tim Casto, Ohlinger, Denise NulL Keith
Brenda Fellure, Doug Jones, Bond, Marie Clay, Richard
MD, Marianne Metzler. Anita Manl ey, Betty Meadows and
Roberts, Brenda Seagraves, Bess ie Robinson.
Rex Shenefield
(Board . 35-YEAR AWARDS
Member),· Jeannie Swisher
Florene Wat,on, Mary
and Linda Weethee.
Fields. Marlin Wedemeye r.
15-YEAR AWARDS
Bill Gouckenour, Penny
Phyllis Brown, Ann Elliott, · Moore and Eve Smeltzer.
Christi Burns, Linda Hodge, · 40-YEAR AWARDS
Jay Mershon, Cathy Moore,
Doris Wilkins and Ruth
.Judy Pennington, Sherry Ann Sattler,
Saunders. Tami Scarberry.
45-YEA R AWARD
Sharon Stout. Susan · Taylor . Rosie Ward . ·Ward was
and Linda Young.
only the third employee in
20- YEAR AWARDS
· Holzer Medical Center histoRuth
Dunlap.
Jan ry to receive a 45-year serHolcumb, Kim Gillespie, .vice award:

For the Record

1 ,
" Your Hometown Newspaper"
I Drop thi " l:m1pon 11ll it11HI'-11fficl.." at Ill C'111trt St .. Pomeroy. Ohio with your P&lt;Jymcnt ~Uld n.::..:civc a FREE comic umbrcii&lt;L
I
. .
.
. .
.

Purses not kept in sight
may soon be out the door
choice , it shou ld be balanced
on your lap. close 10 your
knees. (Thi., can be accomplished by keeping your feet
tlat on the lloor or crossing
th em at the ankles.) Dear
V:A.R .. JONESBOROUGH .
Abby
TENN.
DEAR ABBY: Any purse
placed under Dr next to a
chair ,is vulnerable to' theft. If
a woman puts it on the lloor.
DEAR ABBY: Sadly, there she should put the strap
are purse snatchers in resta'u- aro und the leg of her cha ir. so ·
rants, food courts, · picnic . if so meone tries to ,take it. the
areas, .elc. l hi!ve seen women .strap wi ll be caught on the
sling .their open bag over the . leg. Bett.e r ye t. when she
back of a chair and arri ves at the restau rant. she
swoosh goes the handbag or should take out her billfold
walleL
and lqck the purse in the
Other than . an eve nin g trunk of her car. - DAV ID
clutch on the table, I place my F. , KANSAS CITY. MO .
hand bag either underneath
DEA.R ABBY; A portjon of
the · table. between my feet your answer to that question
where I can feel it at all times, was correct... Abby, in re stauor sling the strap over my rants in Rio de Janeiro.
knee and let the bag hang or Brazil. a chair Is always prorest on the floor. It may not be vided to hold a large purse.
the most comfonable option. Only "ladies. of the even ing"
but I still have my bag when put their purses on the fl oor.
I'm ready to pay my tab.' Granted. not everyone is
VANESSA R., CHICAGO
going to be going to Rio to 'l
DEAR ABBY: Placing a restaurant, but it is "food for
purse on the table inconve- thought" here in the States .
ni'ences the person sittin g JAN . R., BEVERLY
next to you. If you're al a HILLS , FLA.
tqble for two with no one
Dear Abby is written by
beside you, it 's still a bad Abigail Van Burell, aim
idea. Even in upscale restau - known as .Jeanne Phillips,
rant s, the 'purse can be stolen. and was jou11ded by her
You suggested putting the mother, Paulin e l'hillip,·.
bag on the floor. Floors in Write
Dear Abby
at
public plnces are til thy! Large www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
handbag s should be le(t at Box 69440, Lo.&lt;Angeles, CA
home, but if you have no 90069. , .

Proud to be apart of your life.
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155

Holzer Health Systems honors employees

Bush chooses Roberts as chief
justice to succeed Rehnquist
BY TERENCE HUNT

Silent auction and practice at the St. John Lu theran
for in spection .
Church, 33441 Pine Grove
Road, Racine. Worship wi ll
Thursday, Sept. 8
be at I0 a.m. with a special
CHESTER - Shade Rive r music presentation at II a.m.
Lodge 453 , 7:30 p.m., at and a potluck dinner at noon.
halL Refreshments.
RACINE - The Bethan y
D.orcas Sonshine· Circle will
meet at . 7 p.m . at the
Sunday, Sept; 4
Bethany Dorcas Church. All
MASO
N, W.Va. - · Annual
women welcome.
Johnson family reunion. I
p.m ., Mason City Park. Take
Friday, Sept. 9
a
covered dis h and item for
MID.DLEPORT The
Widow 's Fellowship will the auction.
meet at noon at Bob Evans
Restaurant in Mason, W, Va.

..
·. ·.

POMEROY
- Jeff
. Ohlinger, 48, of Rocksprings
Road. Pomeroy, ana Eric
:Smith, 37 and Jerri Smith, 24,
.: both of West Columbia,
wer.e
arrested
:W.Va.,
·Wednesday on drug charges
· aft.er Smith allegedly tried to
cash stolen and forged Checks
at the 124 Maraihon near
Middlepon.
According
to
Sheriff
·Robert Beegle, Deputy Scott
Trussell arrested the three in a
vehicle in the- gas station
· parking lot.
. The three appeared in
· Meigs County Court on
:charges of possession of

cocaine, possession of drug
paraphernalia and adu Iterating or altering a package containing drugs.
•
Jerri Smith was give n a
$50,000 cash bond. and Eric
Smith and Ohlinger bos of
$25,000. Jerri Smith has out standing
felony · check
charges.

Willner if Brooks-Grant ·

Camp No. 7drawing

POM EROY
Mark
Waller of 33986 State
Route 68 1 in Albany won
the drawing at the Meigs .·
County Fair of the BrooksGrant Camp No. 7 Sons of
Union Veterans of the
Civil War.
• Waller won a 33-star.
reproduction "United States
!lag known as the ·'Ft.
Sumter Flag" for having
flow o'ver the· fun at the
POMEROY
- Sheriff time the Civil War be~an
Robert Beegle reponed thaa with the firing on that fon.
bi cycle was found in ·the
dutc h along U.S. 33 during
the Meigs County Fair.
Anyone missing a bicycle is
asked to contact the sheriff's
depar.tment at 992-3371. ·

Missin.g property

·VISit us
online at

·KEEPING MEIGS COUNTY INFORMED
Your online
The Daily Sentinel
source for n~ws

1) Health Questionnaire: You may fill out the heanh questionnaire online
at our website, www.c8healthpnoject.org. This is the fastest and easiest way to initiate
the process. If you don't have the ability to complete the questionrraire onlin.e, you
may pick up a copy either at the Brooki'nar office at 417 Grand Park Drive, Suite
201 in Vienna, or at one of our testing sites. You may then take the questionnaire
home, fill it oul, and drop it off at the testing site nearest you or the Brookmar office.

~) Appointment

Scheduling: Alter you have submitted your completed

· s urvey, either on our website or. by dropping it off at one of our locations. you

will be contacted by a Brookmar representative to set up an
appointment for you at one of our testing sites. Do not call us
·
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for an appointment, we will call you.

3) Validation of eligibility: You are ,responsible for validating your
eligibility by bringing official documentation proving your residence/water usage for at
least one calendar year. For example, bring a utility bill from January of 2002 and
January of 2003, or bring a 2003 Tax statement. You must prove that you

consumed water from public or private sources within the six
affected water districts for at least one calendar year PRIOR TO

December 3, 2004.

4) On-site review: When you come to your appointment at a mobile testing

.

site, a nurse will review your questionnaire with you atid verity your e ligibility to ·
participate. When you succe'ssfully complete this step, you are eligible to be paid $150.

5) Blood Testing: Once your on-site review is compl;te: you may choose to
have your biOQd tested. You will not ,be tested lor drug use, HIV, or sexually transm1tted
diseases. Your privacy will be strictly guarded throughout the information and blood
screening process. Alter having your blood drawn, you will be paid $4Dq - ($150 is
for the health questionnaire and $250 is for blood testing.) Absolutely no blood

testing will be done on children ages 2 and under, and testing on
ages 6 and under is strongly di~uUtged. ·
.

Lubeck

Belpre-Little Hocking

Pomeroy &amp;
Tuppers Plains Chester

Roote 95 South,
behind Tebay Da1ry.

Slone Ad . off Washington Blvd ,
behind Cornerslone Healttlcare.

92 Memorial Drive.
Pomeroy, OH .

Now Open! ·

Now Open!

Now Open!

Mason County
. 326 Ohto R1ver Road
Rl. 62 North
(n~xt to Exxon)
Point Pleasant. WV

Opens Sepl. 8th

www.mydllltytentlnet.com

417 Grand Par1&lt;. Drive. Vienna, WV 26105 • 1-800-551·7658 • www.c8healtl1project.org

�PageA4

'.

The- Daily-Sentinel

OPINION

•

Bv

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor
'

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Tnday rs Tuesday. Sept. 6, the 249th day of 2005 There are
116 days \elt 111 the year
Today"' Htghlight 111 History.
On Sept. 6. 1901. Presrdent McK inley was shot and mortally wounded hy anarchrst Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American
Exposttton tn HuiTalo , N.Y. McKinley died eight days later;
he wa' succeeded by Theodore ){ooscvelt.
On thi ' date·
In 18:17. the Otrerlin Collegrate ln strtute of Ohio went coeduc .rt 10 nul.
·
In \909. Arne1ican explorer Robert Peary -~ent word that he
had rcdchctl the l'iorth Pole five months earlier.
In llJ39. South Africa declared war on Germany.
In I 94 1. Jews over age 6 111 German-occupied areas were
ordered to wear yellow Stars of Davrd.
In \94X. Queen Juliana of the Netherlands was coronated.
In \952. Canadian televrsron broadcastrng began in
Montrc,r\
In 1966. South African Prune Mmrster Hendrik Verwoerd
was ' tdbbed to de~th by a deranged page during a parliamenta ry 'e"ion in Cape Town.
In I \!70, Palestinian guerrillas seized control of three jetliners wh tch were later blown up on the ground in Jordan after
the pds,cngers and crews were evacuated.
In I9S5. all 31 people aboard a Midwest Express Airlines
DC-9 were killed when the Atlanta-bound jetliner crashed just
dfter takeniT tram Mrlwaukee's Mitchell Field.
In \997. Britain hade farewell to Princess Diana wrth a
funera l 'en ice ,11 Westmmster Abbey. Weeping masses gathered 111 Crlcu.tta. India, to pay homage to Mother'Teresa, who
haJ died the day before at age 87.
Ten years ago: Hurricane Luis moved away from the
Caribbean after lashing resort islands. Los Angeles police
dctectrve Mark Fuhrman invoked his Fifth Amendment right
against sclf-mcmmnation as he was called back to the witness
stand at the O.J ." Simpson trial. The Senate Ethics Committee
voted unanimously to recommend expulsion of Senator Bob
Packwood. accused of. sexual and ,official misconduct.
Balllmnre Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken broke Lou Gehrig 's
record by playing hrs 2,13lst consecutive game.
Fi ve years ago· The Millennium Summit, the largest gathering of world leaders in history, convened at the United
Natrons. Thousands of pro-Indonesian militiamen and supporters stormed a UN office in West Timor, killing three foreign staffers. mcluding an American. Michael Swango, a former doctor suspected m a str!ng of poisoning deaths. pleaded
guilty to killing three pauents in a Long Island, N.Y., hospital,
and was 'emenced to life in prison wrthout parole.
One year ago: Former President Clmton underwent succe"ful hean bypas-, surgery during a four-hour procedure at
l"ev. York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia. In Iraq, seven
member' of the First Marine Division from Camp Pendleton,'
Cal.if. ,mel three U.S.-trained Iraqi soldiers were killed by a
car bomb ne&lt;~r Fallujah. Former hurricane Frances pounded
the Flond&lt;r Panhandle as a tropical storm.
Thought for Today : "We live in a fan\asy world. a world of
rllusron. The great task 111 life is to fi'nd reality." - Iris
Murdoch, Anglo-ln sh author and philosopher ("1919-1999).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
'

LeiTer., lo lire editor are welcome. The)' should be less than
300 11 ord1. All Inters we wbject to editing, mu.&lt;t be signed,
and " " lude addreu and telephone number. No umigned leiten· 11 ill be published. Le11ers should be in good tasre.
addrt'.\ .11118 IHl/&lt;'.1. not per.IUnalllin Lellers ofthank.s ru urgam~atW/1.\ and indmduall &gt;nil not be accep!ed Jor'publication.

The Dai!y Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Obituaries

Freedom's next step in Iraq

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

Tuesday, September 6,

DONALD lAMBRO

WASHINGTON
Pictures of .Sunni women
registering to vote in next
month's constitutional referendum spoke volumes about
the likely political outcome
of. Iraq's march toward
democratic self-government.
Whtle the emphasis in
news reports here about the
completion of Iraq 's ·draft
constitution has b.een on
Sunni opposition to some of
its provisions, principally
those regarding federalism,
the lines of voters seeking to
register for the Oct. 15 vote
on this historic document
tell a different story: lraqrs
- Shiites and Sunni s alike
- eager to cast their votes
on the next step in what
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani
calls the struggle ''f01
democracy and freedom. "
Photos beamed around the
world .last week of headcovered Sunni women standing in voter-registration lines
sent an inspinng sigmil of
their eagerness to vote on
the new document - even ,
as negotiations on its provisions were in danger of
breaking down.
After a few weeks' delay.
a constitution was hammered out, to the relief of
many Iraqis. Its completion
was a vrctory for the Iraqis .

and for the Bush administra- to happen in the current
tion 's efforts to plant the flag · environment.
"I think it will be extremeof democracy in the mrdst of
ly
hard to defeat," Yawar
this
terrorist
breeding
said .."That's why I think we
ground.
While gloomy armchair (the Sunnis) have to aim at
analysts here spoke of the the next elections. Whoever
obstacles to come and gave a feets grievance now has to
million reasons for failure, work harder in order to be
President Bu sh this week in" the new government.
· What Sunni opponents are
spoke of his reasons for
"opti mi sm
a\;lout
Iraq most worked up about ts the
because first of all I believe . constitution's federalist sysdeep in everybody's soul is tem, giving self-governing
· nghts to certain regions. parthe desire to be free. "
Indeed, we have good rea- ticularly .the southern oilsons to be even more opti- nch Shrite regron that is
mistic about Iraq' s future comprised of nearly half of
now because the draft con- Iraq's provinces.
··
shtution, whatever its inadeI think Iraq 's government
quacies, will be overwhelm- needs a strong central
ingly approved next month, authority to fight and elimiclearing the way for ,the nate the insurgents,"but after
elections of a constitutional the dictatorship of .Saddam
Hussei n and his bloodthirsty
government on Dec. 15.
Who says the coustitution • rule, the desire for a more
will be approved? None decentralized federalist sysother than key Sunm leaders I tem is certainly understandthemselves.
&gt; able. Sounds like the states'
Vice Presrdent Ghazi rights
provrswns
the
Yawar.. the highest-ranked Founding Fathers put into
Sunni Arab in Iraq's provi- ·our Constitution.
Terrorist thug Abu Musab
sional government, said
Monday that whatever oppo- ai-Zarqav.i has vowed to kill
sition there was, it would not any Sunni who votes for the
be enough to prevent the Constitution, but the force of
governing ·document from freedom is inuch more powerful than Zarqawi's threats.
being adopted.
It would take two-thrrds of There are several thousand
all voters in at least three mostly foreign-born terrorprovinces to defeat the con- ists in Iraq, but there are 25
stitution, and that isn't going million Iraqis citizens who

want to be free. The odds are
stacked against the insurgents.
But can approval of the
new constitution and the
election of a permanent form
of government eventually
end this nation's bloodbath?
I think it will. Yawar's call
for Sunnis to join the democratic
movement
and
become part of the govern. ing process will encourage
new parties to form and
grow. drawing increasing
political participation, mostly among younger, once-disaffected Iraqis .
At the same time, the constitutional vote and subsequent elections will give
Iraqis a rebirth of self-confidence in its own future. That
wrll surely help boost military and police recruitment,
producing a more effective
anti-terrorist force .
Zarqawi 's terrorists have
shown that they have the
means to kill a lot of people,
but they have been unable to
defeat the one force that they
hate more than anything
else: the desire for individual freedom and self-rule.
That unstoppable force
was running at full' throttle
this week in the heart of the
Middle East. There is no
turning back now.

LOOTING CONTINUES...

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

The Daily. Sentinel • Page As

Agencies try·to cui back -. -Lemonade.s~nd- raises.
as prices at pump rise ·$1,603 for hurricane victims ·

'

Ralph Hall

·

BY THE

AssociATED

PRESS

.
year.
City departments also will
closely monitor employee
purchasing to try to prevent
fuel thefr .and will have to
justify the practices of lettmg
some employees take city
vehicles home.
Officials hope such measures will save Toledo
$300.000 on the $2.8 million
it expects to pay in fuel costs
at current prices.
Canton also is scrut inizing
the 30 vehicles employt~es
lake home. Budget Director
Bill Allen said the city wrll
likely go at least $350,00Q
over budget on fuel costs.
"We've got services to
deliver through the pohce
department, the fire department and the street department," said Robert Kellogg,
city manager in northeast
Ohio's Rittman. "I don't see
where there's much we can
do to decrease it. I can't tell a
fire truck not to respond to a
fire. We've just got to find it.
It's that simple."
With H ,589 vehicles in its
fleet, the state spent $24.5
million on gas last year. With
Hurricane Katrina pushing
gas prices hi~her, the state
could spend $41.4 million
this year, said Ben Piscitelli,
spokesman
for_
the
Department
of
Administrative Servrces.
But options are limited for
reducing costs at the State
Highway
Patrol ,
Ohio
Department of Transportation
and Department of Natural
Resources.
"We have to be out there,"
said patrol spokesman Sgt.
Lance Shearer. "It would be·
much more costly to the
state's residents if we

CINCIN NATI (APJ - A Cameron\ mother.
4-year-old boy who sugge&gt;tThe f~mily i' hoping a
ed settrng up a lemonade bank or bu,ine" ~&gt;.ill match
stand to rar se money for the amount before it\ donalchrldren left homeless b) ~d to charit y, \he ,atd.
Hurncane
Katnna
h&lt;h
The kid, didn 't set any
$1,603 and counting. .
pnces. but .1sked people to
Along wrth three srbhn gs dolt'atc ,omethtno lor a cool
and a · cousin, Cameron dnnk The wtman who
Frueh sold lem onade and made •the hr ggest donation.
.bottled water outsrde the S I00. took nothmg, Laurie
family's home over the Frueh 'aid
Labor Da;,: weekend
Most peopl e donated S5 or ·
The chrldren wore masks SI 0 fur a cup or two of
and Mardr Gras bead s lcmcmade. Doud'" Frueh
because they lo ve vistllng an satd
"
aunt whose Louisiana home Cameron v,as a"i'tcd by
was destroyed by the storm . hr s bruther. Clayton. 2, " 'Cameron's father: Dougla s ters babella. 14. and lirama.
Frueh, said Monday nigh t.
16. and 6-year-ol d cousm
Their stand. advertised by Taylor Mc\1 ul len of Da vton .
a sign reading "Lemon Aid,"
"The adu lts would ask the
made so much that 11 will be kids, "What are )Ou Ju111g
in business again Tuesday with thr s''' And e'en the 2and Wednesday after school .- year-old would , ul\e the
"My son JUSt keeps· say- answer. 'It's t'or the people
ing, 'I want thrs to go to the 111 New Orlean' who don 'r
little krds who don 't have have homes."' Lau nc Frueh
home s," said Laune Frueh. said .

loiARTFORD, W.Va .. - Ralph Hall, 85 , of Hartford,
W.Va., d1ed Sept. 3, 2005 , at his residence.
High gas prices have some
He was a coal miner for the Central Coal Company.
school
distncts cutting extra
Hall wa~ born Aug. 24, 1920, son of the late Albert
on buses, and govoutings
Hall and Thelma (Cund1ft) Hall. In addition to his parernment
agencies across the
ents, he was preceded in death by hi s wife, Rosemary
are
reconsidering
Hall, brother, Albert "Buster" Hall. and two grandchil- state
whether
employees
should
dren.
in
an
effort
to
take
home
cars
Survivors. include his ·daughters/sons-in-law, Joyce
conserve
fuel.
'
(William) Wamsley of Hartford, Diane (C harlie) Flowers,
The school year began
and Mary· (Charles) Grimm of Letart, W.Va. , Sharon
about
the same time the
(Roger) Spaun Of Racine; son/daughters-in-law : Ra'lph E.
state's
average gas price
(Sue) Hall , and Mark (Terri) Hall both of Middleport,
reached
about $3 a gallon.
Harry (Kimberly) Hall of Letart, 19 grandchildren, 22
great-grandchildren, three great-great grandchildren; sis- Besides cutting back on field
ter/brother-in-law. Irene (Art) Taylor of Columbus . sister, trips, districts that already
Ruth Zaw of Columbus. brother, Donald Hall of Mason, are over budget aren't finding
many other ways to increase
W.Va.
·
transportation
efficiency.
Services will be held Wednesday at I p.m. at
Districts
are
required to
Foglesong-Tucker F,uneral Home in Mason. Burial will
follow in Union Cemetery. Visitation will take place from provide morning and after6-9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. ~ondolences may noon bussing, and many drivers already run dual routes,
be sent to the family at foglesongtueker.com via e-mail.
said Bill Zanders, .superintendent of the St. ClairsvilleRichland School District in
eastern Ohio.
~
POMEROY- Matilda M. Hunt Rowley, 87, Pomeroy,
"That is going to be a
died on Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at Overbrook Center in tremendous drain on our
Middleport.
budget," Zanders said of
She was born Aug. 17, 1918 in Spencer, W.Va., daugh- prices at the pump, which
ter of the late Noah and Laura Price Hunt. Matilda was a have far exceeded what the
bookkeeper for the Heiner 's Bakery in Middleport and a district expected when it
member of the Bradford Church of Christ.
budgeted fuel costs.
Beside s her parents, she was preceded iii "death · by her
Stretched budgets are makhusband , Wilbur H. Rowley Sr.; her daughter, Laura ing it hard for cities and
manage r. &gt;a id the bcilVt'l '
Bv JAMES HANNAH
Rowley Harrison ; and son, Wilbur Rowley Jr.; brothers: counties to absorb increasing
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
have attracted touriq, to the
Horton, Burt, Ben , Bill, George, Dayton, Orville, Roy, gas costs.
city uf 40,000 ju' t e,rst of
and Elmer ·Hunt; sisters: Rachel MacMurray. Myrtle
·: 1 can't think of anything
BEAVERCREEK - First. Dayton He sa id the 'culpwe can do to conserve," said
Wolfe and Goldie Wyant.
Builder Beave1 went mi " ing'. tu res are hard to resist
'Surviving are her daoghter .Kate Rowley (Jim) Parker Jane Leaver. the mayor of
Then Dr. B. Verr was kid''It's a big heaver. " Hane y
of Pasco, Wash.; a daughter-in-law, Charlotte Murray Medina in northeast Ohio.
napped. And finally there said. "It 's so htg It 's funny."
Rowley of Ironton; seven grandchildren: Johnnie where the city spent $7,000
were assorted acts of vandalAll srt at mnstde locations
Harrison, Danny Harrison. Steve Parker, Cathy Parker more on gas in July than it
ism on the other towering , except for th ree. ~&gt;.htch are
Petersen, Michael Rowley. Angela Rowley Kettel and did in July 2004.
toothy tiherglass beave rs cre- mmle a sbop pmg mall. The
CW4 Roderick Rowley; 15 great grandchildren; I 0 greatGovernments have few
ated to mark thiS western stat ues will he aurtiuned Oct.
great grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Leah Rowley Paxton options for cutbacks to save
Ohto city's 15th anmversary. 15. wtth the proceeds u,ed
of Ravenswood, W.Va. , and several nieces and nephews. costs. Unlike ~esidents who
So city leaders turned to for ltnpr(?Vements at a \e ni or
Servrces wrll ·be at 2 p.m. Tuesday Sept. 6, 2005, at the may be able to change their
modern technology to stop ci\izens ce nter, ,r community
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Pastor Art transportation habits, agenthe beavernappings. Tracking theater ,m d ,r teen center
Cies are expected to bus stu·
Marcum will officiate.
devices have been added to
Hut th e sculptures have
Friends may call from noon ~ntill the time of the ser- dents, pick up garbage and
the 25 street sculptures.
proved temptmg targe ts
vice on Tuesday. Burial will follow in Meigs Memory patrol neighborhoods.
weren't.
ult's a shame we ha ve t'o do
Builder Beave r "'as stole n
The higher gas prices also that," said Deb Venable , a 52- and was misstng fot two days
Gardens in Pomeroy. Memorial contributions may be
Agencies that buy in bulk
made to Holzer Hospice. Meigs Branch, I 00 Jackson usually get reduced prices, slowed traffic on the nation 's year-old resident who likes until 11 was spotted in somePike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-15630.
but they aren't immune to the highways over the Labor the statues, "They are a very one's back yard and .retncved.'
Online -condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- increases consumers have Day weekend. In Ohio, clever and thought ful com - 1\ group of teens took Dr. B.
seen at stations across the patrol Sgt. Michael Forshe in mumty project that promote ' Verr. wh ich had been il oatmg
homes .com .
Zanesville said traffic was a sense of pride."
state.
011 a pl ,1tfonn in a ponJ : Vann
Toledo Mayor Jack Ford definitely down this weekend
The beavers are the hram- 'aid. The teens v,erc cdu ght
said the city will ban its dri- on Interstate 70, the main chtld of Julie Vann. a former "'hen they returned to get
vers from idling non-diesel· east-west artery through the mayor in spired by Chicago\ their ltshnw pole s.
RACINE - Mary Jane Pugh, 77, of Racine died vehicles when no one is in central part of the state.
fiberglass
cows
&lt;~ nd
Se\'eral &lt;lf the stamcs were
Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and the car. Ford also said he will
"I don't see it as the end- Cincinnati's fiberglass pi~s
\'andal1
zed. Some were
Rehabilitation Center in Pt Pleasant, W.Va.
cut back on the city's fleet by of-summer blowout like it
·'With
a
nam
e,
~l ik e spray-pamted. Lady lustrce
She was born July 5. 1928, in Zanesville. daughter of I0 percent by the end of the used to be," Forshe sa1d.
Beavercreek. it was ju ~ l an Bea ver w'" sp irt 111 half.
· ~he late Howard and Hazel Hecker Pettibone. She was a
opportunity
sitting there to Marching BanJ Bell ve t\
former Postmaster of the Minersville Post office, a memhappen."
Vann
said. "It', tlombonc \\as stolen and
ber of the Minersville United Methodist Church where
whimsical and it's fun ."
Brhs Be,rve r\ hi b 0\er.rl\s are
she was the Treasurer for 25 years , was a member of the
Kenh
Maxwel
l,
a
local
const,mtly
betng pull ed
choir, and belonged to the United Methodist Women. In
cham
saw
artrst.
-sculpted
the
down
recent years, she attended the Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
prototype beaver out of a
The electrontc trackrng
. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
huge
tree
that
had
been
cut
devices
wrll alert poke 1f the
financial
institutions
would
Bv JOE DANBORN
sister, Kathryn Pettibone.
crews.
The
down
by
road
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
beawrs
are prcked up The
consider refugees' circumSurviving are her husband of 56 years. Herbert D. Pugh
stances when asking for iden- prototype was used as the devi ces also ~ " e oil loud
of Racine, whom she married Feb . 5, 1949.; son Alan
model for the 6-foot-6, 250- beeprng sound ; rt the hc.a1crs
Hurricane
Katrina
refugee
tifying information.
· (Jill) Pugh of Scott Depot, W.Va.; daughter, Marsha (Ted)
Christopher
.
Dotson
·
has
pound fiberglass sculptun,s.
arc mo,·cd tmm thctr loc-.1Other
records
might
be
Russell of Racine; grandchildren: Della (Jamie)' Haynes ,
"I
.
was
really
afraid
about
uons.
Carrie Pugh, Michael Russell and Renee (Todd) Powell , enough to worry about with- tougher to come by.
Stnce the dc11ce' "ere
Dotson said replacing his makrng them too small
great grandchildren: Bradley Haynes, Cody Haynes, out trying to track down a
because
if
they
were
the
stze
irl'talled
Jaq mon th. there
from
four
states
piece
of
paper
birth
certificate
won't
be
a
Alexa Russell and Emma Powell; a brother, James Robert
of
a
,
t
rash
can.
people
\vould
hav
e
been
no bea1 er ktdn&lt;~ p­
away.
problem. The couple are stay(Jeanette) Pettibone of Buffalo," N.Y.; and a sister,
The Navy transferred him to ing with family m the north- hardly see them." Vann 'aid. ping'&gt;.
Marjory Camr.bell of Lowell.
·
Biloxi,
Miss ., in !llid-August, west Ohio city of Lima where · Each statue hn, rts own .H.rnc) '" iJ the I"Jt?,r,·c rn:.pServices w11l be held at II a.m. Thursday Sept. 8,
just
in
time for him and his Dotson grew up. so all he'll unique paint job. ornamenta- pers [1erhan, vic11 ed the
2005. at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home
to
move their belongings need to do is present $1 5 at a tion and name .
thefts as ,imply :1 prank. akm
wife
with Rev. Jonathan Noble officiating. Burial will follow
Vincent Van Beaver rs 10 tipprng 01-er .111 outhouse .
to an apartment and _ he pre- Department of Health office
in Meigs Memory .Gardens in Pomeroy.
sumes
_
lose
them
to
the
painted
111 the style ol the Ho\1 c\·er. he ' atd the thefts
and
say
his
name,
birthplace
. Fnends .may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept.
'
storm
.
The
apartment
was
Dutch
artist
Vrncent Van arc a se nou' ~Tillie hccdu~e
and approximate age.
' "/ , 2005 , at the funeral home .
and
because
the
"I don't know how we're Gogh. Dr. B. Yen ha ' ,1 lab of the 52.500 prll·c tag ,,f the
Memorial contributions may be made to the M,!nersville uninsured.
United Methodist Church. c/o Kenny Wiggins , 43410 couple left on a short vacaiion going to get hers with her coat and m'edteal ba~ . Bu st,\ 'culptures.
Venable "ud the the ft- ,rnd
Dutchtown Hill Rd., Racine, Ohio 45771 or Trinity before Katrina was much of a being out of the state," Dotson Move s Beaver em rie . ., a
concern.
the
contents
included
skateboard.
To
Be
or
Not
to
'a
nd&lt;~ Iism ~oth er h~ 1.
sard his wife, a Florida native.
Church, c/o Rev. Jonathan Noble , 213 Mulberry Ave.,
their original birth certificates,
"It 's kmJ of ~~~.din~ ,\\\ clV
Beu'vt.::r
w~ur.;.
Louisiana's Office of Motor Be
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
.marriage
license
'
and
other
part
ol the communi,t'\ ... ,he
Shakespearean
ga
rb
Vehicles
asked
its
counter·: Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralsaid
·
records.
in
other
states
to
be
flex
Jack
Hane
y.
a"i
't
&lt;~n
t
city
parts
homes .co m.
Hurricane
victims ible with their normal procemarooned with little or no dures to help people who may
documentation will need have nothing but the clothes
Soc~al Security forms and they are wearing.
'
other materials _ some of
Copies of birth certificates.
which ordinarily require sup- a prerequisite for many other
porting documents _ to re- documents.
are
easrlv
establish their identities.
acquired in most states. proTommy Ray Walters, 47, of McArthu~ and formerly of
Some paperwork should be vided a person can state basic
Middleport, passed away Friday.
relatively easy to acquire. personal information and pay
Graveside services will be conducted at I p.m .. Refugees with access to tele- a small fee, said Michelle
phones or the Internet can LoParo, · a spokeswoman for
Wednesday in the Riverview Cemetery, in' Middleport.
Arrangements are under the direction of the Garrett manage financial records and the Ohio Depa~unent of
initiate insurance claims even Health . The agency got lis
Funeral Home.
without
passwords
or first such request Friday from
accounts or policy numbers, an Ohio nallve in Louisiana
The
Hemlock
Grove banking and insurance indus- who had no documentation or
Quilters began on Feb. 24, 1988 try officials said.
'
money. The request was
with around 23 members and
Tiffany O'Shea, a spokes- denied because state law
are now down to what they call woman for the American doesn't provide for a waiver of
from PageA1
the faithful six. including Insurance Association, said the $15 fee, LoParo said.
Hemlock. Grange Hall caretaktheir nwne, phone number and e~ and former quilter Leota
chase some cleaning supplies ~~""-~~
the date of their recent marnmo- Smith.
and ,possibly diapers depend-.
Besides Johnson, others that
gnun or diagnosis.
ing on how much money i'
Entries may be submitted at worked on the quilt re Helen
from Page A1
rarsed.
·Holzer Meigs Clinic, the Meigs Quivey, Sara CuUums, Paula
Whitt and fellow teachers
County Health Department, the Welker, Jeannine Offutt and
Ashleigh Sayre about what ___Fill geliver the locally pur- •
~ Fall Harvest 1Oth
Meigs County Senior--Citizens Rosalie Story. _ _
she
has
seen
of
the
disaster
·
chased
supplies
to
Bob
"s
All of the members said they
Center and Meigs Medical
· Anniversary
Market and Greenhouses in
Clinic from Sept. 12 through had friends and family that on television.
Celebration
" It made me very, very Mason , W.Va. which has
were touched with cancer and
Oct.31.
Saturday, Sept. 1Oth
There is a limit of one entry were happy to construct and upset," student Patrick Evans become a local drop off point
agreed
.
"
K1ds
are
having
a
for
H~rricane
Katrina
relief
donate thetr quilted creation.
per person.
• Specials
as has Jacob's Will Mini stnes
The wall hanging will be hard lime getting places."'
Courtney Sim of MCCI said
Many
students
as
well
as
in
New
Haven,
W."Va
.
and
*Snacks
display
throughout
Rosalie Johnson from the on
people
have
several
images
101.5
The
River
rad1o
statiOn
'
'Door
Pri:aes
Pomeroy
at
the
Meigs
County
Hemlock Grove Quilters took a
of
the
disaster
that
have
stuck
and
the1r
remote
locatrons.
picture in a magazine to con- Health Department, Sept. 12 Layaway &amp;
The cut off for donations
struct the pattern. Then 23 ; Meigs Medical Clime, with them.
..G11t Cert1hcates
"People dymg." said stu- at Meigs Intermediate School
· Johnson, along with her quilt- Sept. 26 - Oct. 7; Meigs
Avatlable .
Ing coUeagues, turned the pat- County Semor · Citizens dent Sammy Ash about what IS Thursday. The cut off for
100 East Main Street • 992· 7696 •Pomeroy
donations at the other drop
tern into the wall hanging that is Center, Oct. I0 - 1-4; Holzer has stuck with him .
Whi!t
also
hopes
t?
p~roff
locations
li
s,ed
is
Friday.
~~~~
Meigs Clinic. Oct. 17 - 31 .
now available.
·

Matilda Rowley

City keeping close eye on
beaver street sculptures ·

11

Mary Jane Pugh

Proving identity without documents
another challenge of hurricane

The Bush-Ashcrift-Gonzales rule of law
Since 9/11 , I'm se ldom
shocked by the collateral
to
the
U.S.
damage
Constitution by this administration's violations of our
domestic and internatiOnal
rules of law in the name of
prospective
security.
However, a statement in a
Brooklyn federal drstrict
court on Aug. 9 by Mary
Mason, an attorney of the
Justice
Department's
Co.nstitutional
and
Specialized Torts Section,
astonished me by the breadth
of its disregard for the core
of our system of justice.
The case was the tirst civil
lawsuit to challenge the
CIA's "extraordinary rendilrOJ1S" - sending terrori st
suspects to countries known
for torturing their prisoners.
Maher Arar, a naturalized
Canadian citizen. is SUing for
damages in Maher Arar v.
John
Ashcroft. Acting
Deputy Attorney General
Larry Thompson, et al. He
was seized by American
agents an~ shipped to his
native Syria. where he wao,
tortured for nearly a year
after bemg picked up at
Kennedy
International
Airport on Sept. 26, 2002.
when he was changing
planes to return to his home
in Canada from a beach
vacation in Tunisra.
As reported in the Aug. 10
New York Times- and conflTITied to me by Georgetown
University law professor
David Cole. Arar·s attorney
for
the
Center
for
Constitutional rights - this
is what Mary Mason, speaking' for the U.S. government.
said 'in federal court
.
· "Fore rgn cmzens who
change planes at airports m

Nat
Hentoff

the United States can legally ·
be seized, detained without
charges, deprived of access
to a lawyer or the courts. and
even demed basic necessities
like food ."
Asked U.S. District Judge
David Trager: ""Would not
such treatment of a detainee
- in any context, criminal.
civil. immigration or otherwrse - violate both the
Constitutron and clearly
es1ablished case law?"
Mason said it would not.
All the government has to do
is declare the seized passenger an "inadmissible alien"
beyond the reach of the
Constitution.
It's important to note at
thi s point that Maher Arar
has not been charged with
any crime - despite his horrifymg ordeal in a 3-by-6-by7-foot cell, descnbed by ~im
as "like a grave." where he
heard the screams of other
tortured prisoners. After
Syria finally released him.
that government considers
Arar completely mnocent.
Mou siapha.
said
!mad
Syna 's high-ranking diplomat in Washington. on the
Jan 21. 2004, CBS "60
Minutes 11 ·•
Arar did falsel y confe;,after ongoing.. savage bout~
of tc,Jrture- that he had been
to an AI Qaeda trainmg camp
m Afghanistan. But he has

never been in Afghamstan.
He confessed, he says.
because he was ready to "do
anything to stop the torture."
Syrian official Moustapha
admits : "We tmced links . We
traced reliuions. We tried to
find anything. We couldn't."
Now back in Canada, Arar
is a free man. In addition to
suffering continual nightmares about hrs torture, and
other resultant difficultres, he
is afraid that he can never
clear his name~ Arar is suing
AshGroft. former Acting
Deputy Attorney General
Larry Thompson. and other
official s for compensatory
and punitive damages.
In court papers, his attorneys note that the U.S. government removed him chained and shackled - . to
Syria "with the full knowledge of the existence of
state-sponsored torture in
that country..,
Our own State Department
has repeatedly confirmed the
torture in that country.
Moreover. as his attorneys
add, this officral kidnapping
was committed "in direct
contravention of the U.N.
Conventron Againq Torture
and Other Cruel. Inhuman or
Degradin g Treatment or
Puni&gt;hment. a treaty ratified
by the Untied States in 1994"
- and in vrolation of this
country's subsequent Torture
Victim .Protection Act of
1991.
As usual. the Justice
Department -as often stated by Anorney Gem•ral
Albeno Gorllales - maintain s that no suspect i&gt; o,cnt to
a country known for torture
unle o,s "assurances" are
given that ihe pnso ner.
UQCharged wi th any crime.

will not be tortured. As 1 and
other reporters, along with
human .rights organizations,
have documented these
"assurances" are a farce, and
the Bush administration
knows it. despite the president's frequent pledges that
·'we do not engage in torture.',

This government's papers
in Arar's lawsuit actually
say, as The New York. Times
reported. that when foreign
citizens are seized and
abused on our soil and then
sent away to be tortured.
"even if they are wrongly or
illegal!~ designated inadmis. sible ... such aliens have at
most a nght against 'gross
physica'l abuse."' And, of
course, no American official,
up to and-including the attorney general, is responsible
for any "illegalities" resulting in that innocent victim
being tortured.
The government claims it
has classified information
that Arar is an AI Qaeda
member, but it has invoked
its "state secrets" privilege to
refuse to release that "evidence." so that Arar can .
refute rt. It's no longer a
secret that, in the~ "extraordmary renditions," this
administration has repeated- .
ly and cynically been flagrantly lawless - whtle
Congress. k~eps abdicating
rls constitutional investigative responsibilities under
thy separation of powers.
(Nar Hemojfis a nariona/ly rellollned awlwritv on the
First Amendment and the
Bill of Riglrts ·and quthor of
ma11v booh. mcluding "The
War on the Bill of Rights and
the Gathering Resistance "
(Seven Storie., Press, 2003).)

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

·Deaths

"Pf~c~f@ ~&amp;'

Tommy Ray Walters

.fhungc$ f@ JP@"

Quilt

Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the tri-state

Donates

...

' .

Hartwell.~ouse

1

�.'
~The Daily Sentinel --

.
'

PageA6

WORLD

'

(

were seated at the buck of the
plane.
"It was very. very scary.
Unimaginable," he told Metro
TV stat ion from his hospital
· bed . "The plane was taking
,. ·:
·off, but suudc.~1ly there was a
strong tremor anu it jerked to
the left and c.Tashed. There
was fire everywhere. from the
front oft he plane to tl1e back"
Hundrcus of policemen.
parumedtc s and residents
t:vacuated
vil'tim!-i ,
hul
Syahrial An us, a doctor Pwr:
seei ng the removal of charred
bodies. said !lames anJ !l1c
thousands of onlookers al tile
crash site lrampcred tl1e tr
efforts.
"I saw at least ~() petiplc
running around \vith their
clothes on lire," ·said Awi. a
shop owner. "They were
shrieking in agony and shouting 'Help I Help I'"
Monday \ crash I ollows
five major airl ine acctdcnts in
August: tiK: deadltest month
AP Photo
for rLtne Jisasters si nce May
Medan res1dents walk through the remains of Indonesia's Mandala Airlines flight A330 which 2002 . s.m1c J.14 people dted
crashed moments after lakmg off from Medan. Indonesia enroute to Jakarta Monday in Medan. in
'ctccidcnts
in
Peru.
The Boeing 737-200 crashed w1th a total of 117 people on board killing 102 on board with 15 Venczticla . . Greece
and
s urvivors.
Tuntsla Ltst month. A plane
overshot a rutlwc~y m Toronto
hound Boeing 737-200 start- flames inside the cabin. Then like manv Indonesians uses ;md c.·aught fire: no one dted.
ed sh,tk ing whewit reached an we crashed.
only one name .. Medan police
Dozens ol re latives and
&lt;tltitlllil' of :tbout 100 yards
"I struggled to take off my chief CoL Ira wan Dahl an said friends of victtms wept at the
bdore tilting sharply and seat belt and then ran through there were 15 survivors from mrport in Jakurta upon' hear·
sm&lt;tshtng tn the ground at a hole in the fuselage, jump~ aboard the plane. but ing the news·.
1hl0 .i.m. Some described a ing over charred · bodies scat ~ Transportation Ministet Halla
"I am waiting for my mothl1&gt;ud han ~ while the plane was tered all over the road." said Rajasa sa id there were 10.
er. bttl Mandala just said that
still in fliglll. followed by a Sitepu, who had minor bruisRajasa was quoted by . the· the plane crashed and she was
b;tll of fire .
es to his legs. "It's a miracle I private Detik.com news Web on board," , aid Aryati. m
"It h.t rp~ned very fast. no survived."
site as say ing 47 people on tears. "Her name has appeared
~&gt;nc t•vcn had time to panic,"
The plane was carrying 116 the ground were among the on a ltsl of victims on TV. "
Rohadi K,umah Sitepu. 35, passengers and crew, airline dead. City hospitals were
Rapsu appcalect' ·for fm111·
told The Associated Press officials said . Sixteen sur ~ treating a! least a dozen resi~ Iics to come to the morgue to
from hisolJOspital bed. "There vived, including the infant dent s. ·
· tty and identify their relatives:
w:ts an ex plosion putside the and his mother. said Nining, a
One passenger. Rohadi saying lorensic expert s were.
rlanc followed by huge Mandala spokeswoman, who Sitepu, said all the survivors havin g· trouble doing so

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
MEDAN . lmlt\nesta Secoml' &lt;tfter takeoff. an
Indonesia n airliner shook viulentl y, veereJ to the left and
slmnmeJ in to a bus!ling
n.eighhorhood Monday. hurstin ~ 1111&lt;&gt; J'Jamcs and killmg at
Jcnst 14 7 people _ many on

\

th~..· ~ roUnd .

L:l'

In 16 passengers surviwd the crash. tnduding an
18-month ·o ld shielded by ht s
muthc1 \ arnl~ .
The Mamlula Atrlincs plane
went down :;oo yards from
the· Medun airport 111 n!lrth

:Jh~ Daily Sentinel
••

Swmttra, ~ !loving · aside ~.; ars

and llHltO li..:.)'C JC' .., hl..'fOI C pJow Jn g int o ,, Ill\'.' or houses.
.Witnes:-.e-.. said some pcopiL·
werc .,on Cite,,, they fbi the
..,hatter eLi '' fL'1..:ka~e
Inve..,l i!.! ator..., ~ "ettrch.:d

Tuesday ;,mid the 1&gt;1\'Ck.tge.
finding h1ld ) p.!rh ,md hit s t l l'
llL· , h ~.~ ... the' ''nrk~d. while
forcn ... ir l'Xp.erh ... lrugg kd to

identil\' the rcmc~in' of the
147 'l~ till1'.
Jt W.LS !llJOIIL'Sit.l\ seCO !ll]
air tl1"a"lr t in . . even month ...

and the '1xth worldv.ide since
AULIH II i ti~" co llsid -

Aul!. !

ercd foul pl.ty . tullikcly. hut
Wl'rC l'X~ IIllil l tll g lhl" j)ll\si b i!i tV of hum.tn' ( tTl)! or tel'llniL·a l
r~rillm.:, ..;a id ,tirlin e' mtm.tging
din:ctn r A"rd Tanjung.

Thnu ... and " of Jknpk ..... ~.une
st,u1din ~

on

hu scs . v. ~I tc hed

I'L)Oill1P" dlld
~h firl'f't~htcrs

strU!2t!lcd in .1 li~h l dri;/lt_; In
put, t;llt a fire Lth.1t "L'll l up

thick clouds ol' bLtd smnke .
S eve ral

hoU ... L'"'

.tnd

dUIL'llS

ur

l:ar-. ,UlJ lllO!O rL'\ L.'ll'.., .\\'CI\'
engulfed 111 ll.Hllt'~
.
Survivors said th t' J.tk.trLJ -

because most were badly
humt
.
"The families know what)p
look for." he told el~Shin,t,a
radio.
.;
R;tjas.i said investigators
would he looking at why tile
plane failed to t.akc off Jlrop~
crly. The planes tltght daia
recorder. or bi&lt;Lck box, has
been found. of1'icials said. ·
Mcdan, the country's thir~~
l.tr!'est tity. has been a maJOr
stat:ing p&lt;lint for . tsunami '
r~ Jid upcratiOilS 111 Aceb
pro\ tnCl' , on Ihe nonhern tip
~ ~r S um~1tr.1 isl~tnd

· . _PageA7

'

Tuesday, Septembero, 20~5

Jetliner crashes into Indonesian neighborhood; at least 147 dead
BY IRWAN FIRDAUS

~

riK' tn t•·rnational airport is
ncar : l•c· c· nter of town at)f)
sutTou, ~cl. .i hy den·scly popu~
luted ,tl&lt;'." Residents · ha~
for ycw.s argued that it shoultl
he lllllYed. and Rajasa told
reporters at the .crash site he
hoped that would happ~.n
soon.
,,
Mandala Airlines is a
Jakarta-based uomestic carrier founded 111 1969 by a military -run foundation. In rec~·nt
·xcars. the financially troubled
aitline has been forced to cut
services anJ fares to remaitl
competitive.
The plane was nearly 25
year' old .md received its l~st
comprehensiye service ill
,June. the airline said. It wa&gt;
slateu for retirement in 2016.
Indonesia's last jetlih~r
crash was in February 200~.
Twenty-six people were killc;tl
when a plane operated b,y
low-cost Lion Air skidded off
the runway on Java Island.
The rotmtry's worst crash w~
in September 1997: a Garud!l
Airbus smashed into mourrtains near Medan, killing ali
2.12 people· on board.
:.

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

Business Highlights

JACKSON (AP) -As half funds were collected by The
of the Gulf Coast refineries American Red Cross, which
Qamaged by Hurricane Katrina said it has raised $196.9 mil, be_gin to ran~p up production lion from individuals and cor·
t'fns week, mdustry experts porations. But with needs still
have this message: be 'Patient. tmpossible to estimate and
'' The goin!l is also slow for likely to stretch on for
·me restoratton of offshore oil months, relief groups say
t~nd gas production. Almost . they don't know how much
•70 percent of normal oil pro- will be enough. And they
..duction arid half of the natur- caution that, . for all the desa) gas' output remains shut peration to help the victims,
~l!own , according to the U.S. there are numerous com plica~
,Mmerals
Management tions to doing ·so.
LONDON (AP) - Stock
·Service, which said activity is
'slowly recovering.
markets rose Monday across
" Eight major refineries that Europe as lower oil prices
produce gasoline, diesel and pushed automaker and trans~
jet fuel and heating oil were port companies higher. while
·knocked out of commission European clothing retailers
~tind the output at two others benefited from an EU deal
Was cut by last week'·s killer that will free-up Chinese tex~
·hurricane and the J'Jooding tile imports. In Asia, the
•that fol·lowed. That cut over~ Japanese market bucked a
•all U.S. relining capacity by generally lower trend to ci()Se
·more ~han I0 percent and on a four-year high.
·
.~ontributed to a surge in retail
U.S. markets ' were closed
gasoline prices and spot Monday because of the coun~
shorta~es around the country. try's Labor Day Day holiday.
" Mottva Enterprises LLC.
In London, the FTSE 100
·Mamthon Oil Corp. and Valero was up 0.2 percent to close at
Energy Corp. satd that they · 5,338 pmnts, while in
:hope to restan, and in some Frankfurt, the D~X lqdex
•cases make fully operational, rose 6.4 percent. or 0.1 per·four of those refineries this cent, ·· to 4,623.51. Paris'
:week.
CAC-40 rose I .5 percent to
UNDATED
(AP)
4,909.89.
Americans are responding to
October~dated Brent crude~
Hurricane Katrina with a oil futures fell to $64.68 a
·massive outpouring of giving·. barrel in London, from
at times overwhelming ca:ll $66.02 on Friday, . after the
centers and computer servers International Energy Agency
set up by charities to field said late Friday that it is
\lonations. To'tal donations going to make available 2
passed the $200 million mark million barrels a day of oil for
by Friday. four days after the at least 30 days . The Nymex
storm slammed into the Gulf light sweet crude-ml contract
'Coast. The bulk of those was not trading Monday.

--

~·

Blast levels house in Gaza, killing four
Bv IBRAHIM 8ARZAK
__
AS_SDCIAT ED PRfSS WRIT ER

lsr.tcl is trying to revive
Jow-JeveJ lies With Mu slim
nations that languis hed dur~
ing more · than four years of
Jsracl-Palcsti 111 an contlict _
,1s well as trytng to establish
new ones. Palestinians arc
unhanpy with Israel's recent
successes. however, and have
urged Mttslim nations to
frc·ezc tic ~ with Israel until a
I mal peace dealts reached.
M h k
11 t
1
u ara wt
rave 10
Israel m November to attend
a serv 1ce markml; 10 years_
'!nee, the .us.sass matJUn .o l
h 1me
Mnmter . Yttzh_ak
Rahtn, th e otf 1 c 1 ~1. smd ..
'rcak tn ¥ on condttton o.f
anonymny because he wasn t
authonzed to make a formal
announcemen t.
However.
Mubarak 's
sp 1ikesman Suleiman Awad
told The As~ocmted Press. "I
can &lt;Jssure yu u that the presi~
uent doesn't have any plans
to go anywhere outside Egypt
until the end of this year."
" He is quite busy with so
many things. the rresidential
anJ kgislative elections, and
dodn't have any plans to go
anywhere uutside Egypt." the
, pukcsman added .
The Egyptian· leauer has
not visi ted Israel since
Rabin's funeral in 1995, and
Israeli officials interpreted
his planned visit as sending a
message to .other Arab and
Muslim countries that Israel
shou ld be rewarded fur evac~
uating ~I settlements in Gaza
and four in the West Bank.
Jordan's Kit1g Abdullah is
al so planning to visit Israel,
Israeli govern ment officials
. l1avc satd. but Jordanian offi~
ctals ha ve ' not confirmed that.
S&lt;tcb Erckal. a Palestmian
negotiator. said. lsrad must
fir st make peace wtth the
Palestinians if it wants full
relations with the Arab and
Muslim world .
''On ce we make peace.
once the occupation is over.
once there is a Palestinian
state: (Israel) wtll have full
nnrmal relations. " Erek'at

(IAZA CITY Ca~:1 Strip
- A my.stcri &lt;,us bl as t alter
nightLtll MPnday Jcveku a
builJ111g 111 u.u.t Cay. ktlling
four people cn1li woundmg at
least .10, tesiJcnts and hospi ·
tal &lt;&gt;lfit·ictls so~id. file 1iol'cnt
Jsi.llllic H :~ mo~s group olamed
" !·'''1, llll ttltc lsr:tcli military
sc~id 11 w,ts n&lt;11 in volved.
1'he ~xpl11,sion came hours
alter Paksunian se,·urity
forces got th,·tr first Jnok at
dcnw lts hcd k11 tsh . settle·
mctll s in Gat.a. tc&gt;Lnin~ the
area aheaJ of .Jsr:~el\ fZ&gt;nnal
handn vc t; 111 mid-September.
The j11tnt tnur hy Pctkstmi.m
commanders and hto~ e l i mtli t;tn nlllual.s ma rked the first
1111ie l'ak sllman .tuthorities
were aJJ 11 wcd imo tile &gt;ell lements. '' hich were evacuated
tv.o weds a~o .
The hlast ;"the (i.t~Ct Ctty
ncighhorho&lt;&gt;tl 111 Sltajaiyeh
Jest ro ved "· house "he re
kno wt i Ha n"'' members
lived !Lnnas ch.trged thai :111
lsraell nu ssile hit the hnu'&lt;: .
w11h .1 group spokesman .
J'vlLtntr al-1\l:tsri. ac.:u,tng
Israel pf t·ontlnutn~ tts "duw
as""sittat tun polt:y. wh1ch
gives LIS tit,· rig ht to tnpond
and to defend otu sc lvcs."
Some te,idents s:.td 11 was
app.trentl y a ,·a"· of ~xplo'ives in th~ house dctonattng
prcm:tlur~l y a' llamas mili tarlls wor'cJ on cl homh •
l'.tle slln tc\11
le.tdcr
Mahmoud Ahhas called tile
cxploston "regrettable'' anu
said '\ecu ril! ts tmestigallng
the cause. ·
lsr&lt;ic li annal! ha1c often
raided the nct~hhotlmoJ. tar~
!.!,etin~ Pale"--lni.lll mi!ltallh.
httl th~ l.tiJ , .Iii hut sll&gt;rpcd
ctftcr a ce:tse-ftrc went into
cfkct in ~ehru . try
Also . Mond:ty. Jll Israeli
n flk tal
sa!ll
Egyptt:tn
Prestdcnt . llos ni Muharak
11 :ts i1lanntng to VISit
in
No1 embcr. another dirlomat·
K
dt\ idend fro m lstael's
G;ttd
pullm1t. Howe ver. ~aid .
Mubara' 's sl'okcsmatt said he
lsr;tcl made progre" last
. had no s.uch pl:ms.
"eek when Fnreign Minister

Where to find
news on the web·

Silvan Shalom met publicly
for the first time with his
Pakistani
counterpart,
Khursheed Kasuri. However,
Palestinian President Gen.
Pervez · Musharraf said there
would be no full relations
with Israel until a Palestinian
state is established.
A five~ member Israeli delegut ion is currently in Tumsta
planning Shalom\ November
visit to participate in a 'U. N.
conference, Regev said.
The trip to Tunisia has spe·
cia! significance for Shalom,
·who was born there in 195 X.
He immigrated 10 Israe l when
he was one year old and has
never ·been hack .
Also Monday, dozens of
unemployed workers in the
Palestinian town of Khan
Younis demonstrated outside
a
municipal
building,
demanding jobs and better
living conditions.
For a second straight day,
the protest escalated into violent clashes with security
forces. Protesters pelted riot
police with stones and fire·bombs, and police fired into
the air in an attempt to con~
trol the crowd.
The Palestinian Interior
Ministry said seven officers
and three civilians were
wounded.
In Damascus, Syna. Hamas
political
leader Khaled
Mashaal said that no Israeli
presen~e is ~cceptable in the
Gaza Strip.
"Any presence means the
occupation is -still there."
Mashaal told reporters after
meeting in Damascus with
the head of the Palestine
Liberation
Organization's
mainstream Fatah · faction,
Farouk 'Kaddoumi.
Mashaal reiterated earher
Hamas
statements
that
Palestinian armed resistance
drove Israel om of Gaza and
that resistance "still' is the
only way 10 continue the road
10 liberation."

Thi~een suspected Tal~ban killed _in.fighting
Ill

southern Mghanistan, official says

BY NOOR KHAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
KANDAHAR. Afghanistan
Two hundred Afghan
police, supponed by U.S.-led
coalition. forces, killed 13
suspected Tali ban fighters in
southern Afghanistan following a spate of guerrill:t·style
strikes in the area over the
. weekend. an Afghan official
,
said Monday.
•
Meanwhile. a C-130 U.S.
military plane carrying U.S.
Ambassador
Ronald
Neumann suffered •tn ~n g ine
failure · as he ·returned from a
trip upcountry to see preparations for the upcoming Sept.
Ill electmns. The failure was
)Jiamed on an oil leak.
Emergency crews were on
hand in KabuL when the
plane landed safely m ·Kabul
using it s remaining three
engmes.
Coalition and governmtmt
.forces suffe,n:d no casualties
in the fighting Sunday night
during an ongoing military

operation to llush uut msurge nts from mountains in
southern Kandahar' provi nce,
said
K,mdahar
Gov.
Asadullah Khalid.
. We have the dead bodies,"
Khalid saiu. rel'erring. to the
slain Taliban fighters. He
satu ' .f4 other su;pects were
arrested and assault rifles and
some ammunition were con~
f't's·L·,·ttell.
U.S. militmy spokesman
Col. James Yonts confirmed
that more 'than 40 suspected
insurgen ts had been tletamed .
He said some may be
released after questioning.
He gave no det&lt;lils on
ca&gt;ualties pending complclion of the operation.
More than 1.100 people
have been killed in the past
six months. and US. military
commanders believe the viu~
Jencc may worsen 'ahead .of
the lcgJslatt ve elections. the
ne xt key step toward demo,·1.1cy alter a !JL1at1er ~;ent ury
. of fighting.
The U.S. militmy satd nine

''

other suspected militant's
were detained 111 a two-week
operation that ended Friday
in the eastem province ct(
Pakt1ka. They mcludeu "fot~r
suspected leaders and advisers of .1 criminal cell," arrested with "Taliban propaganda
on audin tapes," and three
others linked to a bomb-mal(
ing cell
US A. b
d N
h
. . m assa or euman
Jid not rule out the possibility of rebel violence at th~ ·
polls, but said it wduld not
prevent Afghans from votini.
It will not stop them froin
electing a goyernment. It will
not stop them from go ing
forw:ml with democracy," he
said dunng hi s visit to
Ban11yan in Afghanistan's
ce ntral highlands.
:::
Following his return trip.
when the airplane engiJJe
failed. Neumann said the C130 could fly safely using
just two engines .
.At ·110 time did I feel at nil
threatened." he said. "I even
went to ~ Jeep for a while." ,

U.S. nuclear-powered submarine Proud to be apart of your life.
collides with cargo ship in Gulf
'l92-2i55
Subscribe today •

BY JIM KRANE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
DUBAI. · United
Aral\
Emirates - A nuclea r~pow­
crcd U.S. Navy submarine
collided ~ith u Turkish cargo
ship 111 the Persian Gull early
Monuay, the U.S " Navy
reponed.
Nobody was injured and
both ships appeared to suffer
only superficial damage, satd
the spokesman fcm. the U.S.
Navy 5th Fleet, Cmdr. Jcllrey
Breslau.
It was the U.S. Navy's second collision with a civilian
vessel in the Gulf in · ,14
months.
The USS Philadelphia wa.s

travehng i1n the surface of the
Gulf when it hit the Turkishnagged M/V Yaso Aysen at
amu11U 2 00 a.m. local time.
satd a ' tatemcnt from the 5th
Fleet ~kadquarters in Bahrain.
The collision h&lt;tppened
about 30 mtks northe&lt;tst of
Bahrain. said Breslau.
· TI1e Philadelphia was conducting surface opcruttons 'On
ih way to Baht:ain fur a sched·
uleu po11 visit. the. N&lt;tvy said.
Afterward. the submarine continued ·to Bahrain where
it)Spectors wi ll check it fur
damage.

The &gt;ubmarine's nuclearpowered propulsion plant was
not damaged in the crash, the
Navy s&lt;tid .

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Restaurant chains

.....

Bv JoNATMAN DREW
COLUMBUS - Fast food is
slimming down.
Two of the biggest burger
chains- Wendy's and Burger
King- are developing restaurants with smaller kitchens and
seating areas that operate profitably in small towns, ~ost less
to build and fit i,nto cheaper
parcels of land. A third chain,
Popeyes Chicken &amp; Biscuits,
also is trimming the square·
foot fat, and even Applebee's, a
sit-down chain , has reduced
restaurant 'size in rural areas.
Analysts said the smaller
stores operate more efficiently
and allow chains to stake thc1r
claim both in sparsely populated
areas that. generate leS&gt; traffic
and urban areas where large
plots of land are scarce and have
become increasingly expensive.
"The rent goes down, the
labor goes down. the entire
overhead shrinks. but the prOduct keeps moving out,'' said
Arlene Spiegel, a restaurantindustry consultant in New
York City. "They really don't
have the luxury of hi g real
estate opportunities any more."
Fast~foodexecuttves satd the
slimmer .restaurants can save
up to a thtrd of construction
costs and can be squeezed on to
half the acre usually needed.
"When we really sal down
'and started talking to franchis~es about why they weren't
building new re staurants it
became clear that we needed to
change," said John W Chidsey,
president of the Americas for
Burger King Corp .. based in
Miami.
The burger chain has cut
overall square footage by about
a third. reducing the size of the
kitchen and cutting the seating
roughly in half to 40 seats. The
new design will account for the
majority of stores built 111 the
future, Chidsey satd. The chain
has II ,000 locations, about 90
percent of which ar~ franchised.
Such stores are meant to go
in smaller towns or areas
between larger stores, :Wendy's
President and Chief Operating
Officer Tom Mueller said. The
chain, based in suburban
Columbus, also has a new
design that's roughly a third
smaller than its traditional
restaurant.
'·Yet it's designed tube more
Jabor-eftictent, et cetera. so it

AP Photo

Matt Phtlibin, 15, left, Drew Necamp, 11. and Hunter Davis, 15 . gather for lunch at a newly
designed Wendy's restaurant in PowelL Fast-food and casual d1ning chai'ns are developing
restaurants w1th smaller kitchens and seating areas that operate profitably 111 small towns. cost
Jess to build and fit 1nto cheaper parcels of land.
can be profitable potentially at
lower volume of sales," he
said.
Atlanta~based Popeyes this
year introduced smaller build~
ing designs - one with only
pickup windows and a 2~-seater
- to complement its I .HOOrestaurant chain, made up mostly of restaumnts with 48 seats.
"We did that because given real
estate economics today and given
that in some market' there's a
scarcity of real estate sites. we
thought it was important that we
provide some type of tlexibility,"
said company spokeswoman
Alicia Thompson.
Bestdes, · most fast-food
meals arc handed directly into
the v.induw of a car. About 80
percent of fast-foud sales are
takeout , said Tom Miner of
restaurant
consultants
Sit~dow·n
chains
Technomic .
such as Applebe!'!'s, Chili's and
Outback Steakhouse also have
emphastzed takeout, with separate entrances and phone lines.
So. with fewer customers s it~
ting inside to eat. it's no surprise that some fast-food
chains are paring down seating
areas by as much as 50 percent.
Popeyes ami Wendy's also arc
expe,rimenting w·ith stores that
have only ptekup wmdows.
· But these designs still arc
dwarfs in the Goliath fast~food
industry.
Of Wendy's 6.700 locations.

about 30 stores have tlie smaller seating ·area and smaller
kitchen. In addition, there arc
14 pickup window-only
restaurants.
Wendy's plans to increase
the small · store presence.
Mueller estimates the two
smaller designs will make up
I0 percent to 15 percent of all
new Wendy's stores.
Some of the 14 pickup window-only locations. which are
still being .tested, have posted
higher sales than those with
dinin g rooms, Mueller s.ud .
Those sues require only I0 to
12 workers during peak hours,
about 40 percent icS&gt; than at a
larger re~lauranl.
Some customers· suiu they
appreciate the larger stores.
~ve n if they don't always dine
111.

reduce restaurant size. And Carl
Sibtl.skt. ol Mornmgstar Inc..
said
only has heard of the
company operating low-maintenance satelllle stores. such as
those in airports and malls.
McDonald's oflicial s dtJ not
return calls for comment.
Applebee 's,
based
111
Overland Park. Kan ., has 111
recent years placed !50 restaurants in cilles of less ·than
50.1100 people. Phtl Crimmms.
senior vice prestdent of de vel ·
npmcnt. said in an c-muil. The
chain operates ahout 125 stores
ttiat are between 3.600 and
4.300 square feet, compared
with the standard 5.000 square
feet. he satd.
.Technomic's Miner said
peopl e in rural areas appreciate
the chain's efforts.
"It's lik e a coming of age for
their tuwn when they get to the
population size that they' re big
enough for th eir own
Applebee's."' he satd .
However. super-sized fast
fooJ 1e~taurunh are nowhere
ncar extinction. Miner smd a
store's largeness can bolster its
sales by makin~ a b1g impres-

ne

" It's kind of nice to come in
and no! have it be completely
packed in side," sa id Josh
Obert. I'J, of Pataskala .
· Analysts have noted si mtlar
trenus among other re tailers.'
particularly among department
stores scaling back their free~
standing outlets. But the small·
er restauram design is different, they said. hecause it's been
fuel ed by a drop in CLblomcrs
SIO n \ll1 l:Ustomcrs.
who d111C inside.
"There· s a ·Jot of value to
Analyst Amy Garber. of the
Nutiun·s Restaurant News. said tmpact." he satJ. "If the si te is
she had not heard of small. the store IS small. you
McDonald's making an effort to don't get that nnpact. .. he said.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ... .

Nlcol&lt;t Fields/photo

.Karl Brudke, second from right. owner of Digital Concepts m
Point Pleasant, is eager to bring new wireless technology to
'lOcal residents . Shown with Brudke during the recent ribbon
cutting are. from left; Hilda Austin, Mason County Chamber of
Commerce: Jacob Hill, ·mformation technologist; Mayor Jim
· Wilson: Denny Bellamy. Convention and Vtsitors Bureau director; and Jennifer Miller, indirect account manager for West
·virgtnia Wireless.

\

"G).)~aeeJ f(; ~ &amp;' Tlzingc$ f@ $)@"

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
New business bringing
APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
_technology to Point Pleasant SHOW
Here are some of.the most popular "Thank You1' ad sizes.
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BY NICOLE FIELDS

NAELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

POINT PLEASANT, W Va.
- Seven years ago, he started
:iringing West Virginia into
;:1he 21st century by opening a
owireless phone service busi~
!tiess in Cabin.Creek.
;;.: Now that journey has landed him in Point Pleasant
• Karl Brudke, owner pf
Digital Concepts in Point
Pleasant, said he is excited to
be offering local residents
exclusive wireless contracts
and business.
· "Ttie people who live in
Point Pleasant can't go anyWhere else in town and get
these contracts," Brudke said.
"(Digital Concepts) should be
,11hk to give the best coverage
J!l&lt;'und here."
"': Brudke sa id he first got
involveu in the wireless
phone industry in 1998
because th•lt's when the mar-

ket really seemed to be gain~
ing ground. Since then, he has
opened four more stores- in
Charleston.
Marmet,
Montgomery
and
most
recently in Point Pleasant. f'ur
Brudke, the only direction
from here is up.
During the business' grand
opening celebration this
month and next, Brudke is
.offering a variety of ueals and
contracts to new and existing
wireless phone customers.
His main goal? To save people money. He said several
people have complained to
him about the quality of wireless phone service in the area,
and he hopes to change that
Digital Concepts is located
on Jackson Avenue and is
open 10 a.m .~ 7 p.m. MondayFriday and noon~6 p.m.
Saturday.
For more information, ctlll
rile srore ar 674-0029.

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call992·2155 for details: Ads must b.e paid for in advance.

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The-Daily Sentinel

'KEY

_rage AS
Tuesday, September 6,

2005

Bv JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PUT-IN-BAY - College
students weariitg Mardi Gras
beads and "Got Beer?" Tshirts have forgotten all
about the intestinal illness
outbreak that sickened hundreds a year ago, re'viving
the party atmosphere this
summer on the Lake 'Erie ·
resort of South Bass Island .
Families and children have
returned tud. pedaling bikes
through ·the quaint downtown and exploring the
"The drinkin g crowd is
definitely coming ," taver,n
owner June Stoiber said as
she poured t hrc~ Bloody
Marys on Friday morning.
Business was booming this
summer at most restaurants.
bars and girt shops _ fueled
by warm weather. increased
advertising and a helid' that
the island's groundwater
problems had been solved .
"If there's ,;urpri se. it 's
how much business came
back."
said
Maggi e
Beckford. executive director
of the village of Put-in-Bay's
~humbe r of commerce. "We
thought it wDuld take another season for that happen."
The tourist season ended
early last year after the out break of gastrointestinal illness sickened abot1t 1.400
people last. August. Most
':"ho said they ·became sick
within two or three days of
visiting the island suffered
from cramps. di-arrhea. nausea. fever and chill s.
Ohio's health department
found that septic tanks on
the · island contributed to
widespread
groundwater
contamination that was the
likely source of the illness.
While
most
vacation
homes and businesses that
cater to tourists draw · their

Cllylfltcllon
High I Low temps

Forecast forTueedly, Slpt 8

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

have helped publicized PutMICH
in-Bay." ,
With its village's quaint
Toledo•
downtown next to a park,
es•159•
abundance of btu's and party
atmosphere·, the is! and is
Vounglllown •
sometimes called the "Key
81 ' 154'
West of the Midwest," drawMtnefleld•
ing about 15,000 people by
82' 155'
boat on . the weekends.
The two lar~est boat lines
that ferry tourists said
they've had outstanding sea*Columbue
D1yton•
son s.
. 83' 159'
82' 158'
&gt;
"We had the busiest July
and August !hat we 've had
in years," said Jul-ene
Clnclnnetl
Market , spokeswoman for
•86'157'
Miller Boat Line . The Jet
Express made gains too.
Portamouth•
Bolh boat lines said they
es•1ss•
' . . ..,
greatly increased advertisfng
this summer, targeting families.
"I didn't have any wor~ Ooudy
Ttulder· ~ Flumes ~
Ice
ries," said Mark Gilchri-st, of
t'.,.._)
SIOimS ~
Plftly ~
~
'. • ••
Aurora, whose friend was
Cioildy "{.......) Showe,. ~ R..,
o •
S.OW ·'1f+i.i+l
hospitalized for a day last
year after visiting the island.
Welllher UndorgrOU1d •
He and his wife brought
their two sons for a day-trip
Tuesday... Mostly · sunny. noon.
10 begin the Labor Day Patchy dense fog , in the
W e d n e s d u 'y
weekettd.
morning . Highs in the night ••. Mostl y ·.clear. Lows
Others weren't so sure.
lower 80s. South winds in the mid 50s. Southeast
Lori Roberts-Cobbledick. around 5 mph .. . Becoming winds around 5 mph .
Thursday and Thursday
of Marblehead, brought juice southeast in the afternoon.
Tuesday night ••• Mostly night...iy1ostly clear. Highs
and v.:ater just to be ·safe.
"You have to be careful clear. Lows in the mid 50s . in the lo-,.ver 80S: Lows in
when you have kids," she Southeast winds around 5 tile upper 50s.
Friday
through
rn
the
said. "But it doesn't seem to mph
cloudy.
light Saturday... Partly
be a big deal anymore. It's evening ... Becoming
Highs in tile lower ROs.
and variable .
nol like it was the plague."
Wednesday ... Mo s t I y Ln~vs · in the upper _,Os .
·. There are still . small
Saturday night through
reminders of 1he water war- sunny. Highs in lhe lower
clear.
Monduy
... Mostly
80s.
West
winds
around
.
5
ries from a year ago.
mph
...
Becoming
si,uth
Lows
i.n
the
,
lower
60s .
Visitors see window ~igns in
many downtown businesses around 5 mph in the after- Highs in the mid ROs .
stating that the · shops get
water from the city system
'
rather than wells.
Email
engagement wedding or anniversary
"They still ask about it,"
saiu Stoiber. who owns
··
announcements and photos
Frosty Bar and several gift
·to neiiiiS@mydailysentinelcom!
shops. "Not too many
though."

0

.o.

island's cave.

drinkin~

water from the
llllllliciP,ri system, about 400
use groundwater from wells
for drii1king and bathing.
The village since has
extendeu its water system to
serve some businesses and
trucked water to others for

drinking. But there still was
concern whether the island's
only industry would recover.
Bill Blumensaadt, who
owns a waterfront restaurant,
said that the problem got so
much media attention that
"in the long run, it may

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state has socked away $ 1..14
billion in a poverty assistance
fund , but less than half of it
has been design,1ted for a particular tlse, a newspaper
reported.
· Of the total surplus in the
Temporary Assi stance to
Needy Families program.
$599 mill.ion is listed as
'' unobligated. " which mean s
the state doesn't have specific
plans for it. That figure is up
grew by $168 million in the
past year despite Census data
showing Ohio's poverty rate
rose a full percentage point in
that time. The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer reported Sunday. ·
Critics said the Ohio
Department of Job &amp; Family
Services could end up losing
funding if legislators see that
the agency's allocations aren't
being used. The combination
of rising poverty and growing
. surplus "sends the wrong sig nal to Congress because lhese
resources aren't being used
when they're de sperately
needed," said John Corlett.
director of publ(c policy 'at
the Center for Community

Solutions in Cleveland.
Last year. Cleveland was
the poorest city of more than
250.000 people. according to
Census data. Figures .released
last week showed it had
dropped to 12th on th&lt;ll list.
Barbara Riky. director ot"
the ·state agency. said the
unspent money in the face of
the rising poverty rate "does
not look good and it makes
us easy pi•king s. I guess you
could say, and that makes me
nervous and concerned."
Still, Riley said improved
forecasting and new programs should reduce the
unobligated balance from
$599 million to 5265 miHion
hy 2007.
.
Part of the problem , otTicials said. is that many counties still don't have programs
to spend their TANF money.
which must be used to assisl
families with children under
18. So the st&lt;tte's 88 counties
end up r,cturning a combined
S I00 lllillion to the state
every year.
"How can anyone say .that
we have kids suffering in this
state for lack of money'' "

asked Jack Frech, director of
County
the
Athens
Department of Job &amp; Family
Services.
Frech said he has sough!
cash payments from the sur"
plus to eligible families . .
But every time he proposed
it, he said. state officials told
him, "No. we \:un't.:we'll run
out of money."
Riley said her agency has ·
allocated $35 million to
allow counties to develop and
share new programs to spend ·
tfte TAN F dollars.
She. Corlett and Frech
agreed the state should carry
some surplus. but none could
say for ~crtain what a proper
amount would be .
"We don't take a position
that there's a right amount to
have unspent," said , Zoe
Neuberger. a senior . policy
analyst at the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities
in Washington, D.C.
"There's always a balance
between wanting to serve as
many people as you can and
wanting to have a cu shion in
case there's a downturn and
an increase in. poverty."

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Schwarzenegger cainp difends Noe contribution retum
TOLEDO (AP ) - · Arnold
didn't realize
that he could have returned a
contribution from ·Toledo-area
coin dealer Tom Noe to anyone
other than Noe when he decided he didn't want it, a
spokesman tor t~e California
governor said.
Schwarze negger returne(l
$10,000 to Noe. the central figure in an ongoing investigation
into the state's $50 million
investment in rare coins.
Several other J"'litical fi gures. including President 'Bush.
ga••e funds that Noe contributed
to charity or filtered them to the
Bu~cau
of
Workers'
Compensation.
.
"Had we known about other
. options, we may have made a
different choice, but that's hind· sight." Marty Wilson. the govemor'&gt; &gt;pokesmJn. said Friday.
"The fa• t i, the money has gone
out. "
Sen. Marc Dann . a Democrat
from •uhurhan Youngstown. in
Jul v cal kd f()f politicians to '
Schwarlen~gger

\

gi-ve any Noe contributions to bution to the Pregnancy
the bureau. Schwarzenegger Deci sion Health Centers in
returned his contribution in Columbus. Attorney General
June. but Dann said that was no Jim Petro donated his Lo Ohio's
. excuse.
Elections Commission. Auditor
"It's money that clearly wasn't Betty Mon'tgomery put her
his money 10 begin with. and money into an escrow account
Gov. Schwarzeneggcr knew it." the BWC set up after the funds
he said.
went missing.
Dan.r
suggested
the
Bush redirected the $4,000
Califo rnia governor give anoth- . Noe personally donated to him
er $ 10.000 to the BWC. the to the American Heart
. state's insurance furid for Association's "Go Red for
injured workers.
Women" campaign . He has not
"If he wanted to contribute to said he will do the same with
Tom Noe's defense fund. that's 1110ney Noe -rJised for his reup to him."· Dann said .
election.
Noe was in charge Of the
Noe earned a coveted spot as
BWC's rare coin investment a Bush funclraiser atier collectand now is bc in~ accusations ing more than $100,000 for the
that he stole i1s much'" $4 mil- president's camp.
liun of the $ 13 million he has
Questions about the state's
acknowledged .is missing from in ~estment in ·rare coin s ha\'e
the fund .
ballooned into a scandal involvNoc ga,·c money to t11ree ing $300 million in inve,tment
politi &lt;:ia n'
'eeki ng
the lo" e' . 'tate and federal investiRepubl ican nomin&lt;Jt ion m gations inlo slate financial poJ.iOhio\ .2006 guhernatorial race. cics · and eth ics violation'· by
Secretary of State Kenneth Gov. Bob Taft invol ving golf
Bla•~ well redirected his contri- outings he failed to disclo...c.

'ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

Raiders, Angels-place third at Warren Invite

'

Soccer

GaDia Academy at r.wietta, 5 'p.m.
Winfield at Point ~sant. 7 p.m.
Girts Soccer

Point Pleasant at WinfiEild, 7 p.m

Golf
TVC Ohio at Franklin Valley, 4:30 p.m.
TVC HockJng at Arrowhead. 4:30 p.m. ,..
River Valley at Chesapeake, 4 p.m . Wahama at Buffalo (Deer Run), 4 p.m.
South Ga•ia ' at Gallia Academy (Cliffside),
. 4::30 p.m.
·
-~

o.'f;,:,.,:.:) t?.:::--

Report: Poverty fund -has $1.14
billion that hasn't reached poor

GALUPOUS- A schedule ol upcom 111g college
and hfgh,school varsity spofllng (WOOlS involving
teams from Gallia, Meigs ami Masoo co unties .

Gallipclis Invitational at Rio Grande, 4:30
p.m.
.
Vclleyball
South GalliaM'ellston at · Ohio Valley
Christian, 6 p.m.
Fairta.nd at River Valley, 5:30 p.m
Gallla Academy at Warren, 5:15p.m
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Vinton County, 6 p.m

'

AP Photo

Prep Cross Country --:- WarrEn 'Invitational

CIOUCounby

0

o

OVP SchedulE
TUesday. Segtembef 6

0.

·0

Vi s itors walk the business district Put-In-Bay, Ohio on South
Bass Island Friday, Sept. 2. Tourism is booming again on the
Lake Erie Isl and this summer after a gastrointestina l illness
traced to contaminated groundwater sickened about 1 ,400
peo ple last August and ended the tourist season early.

-Bl

The Daily SentineL

-~

Browne gets win at Deutsche Bank; Page B2
NFL news, Page BJ
Reds faU to Brewers, Page B8
Indians close in on AL Wildcard lead, Page B8

Local
weather
WEST OF mE MIDWEST'.REBOUNDS

FROM-ILLNESS -OUTBREAK

'

INSIDE

---- - - - -------

Wednnday. Stptamber 7
. Volleyball
Southern at South Gallia, 5:55 p.m.
Sherman at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Go~

'·

·'

•

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIB UNE.COM

Golf
Soutn Gallia at Point Pleasant (Hidden
Valley), 4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 4:30p.m.
TVC Ohio at Hidden Hills, 4:30p.m.
TVC Hocking at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m .

Redmen ~ ­
Soccer
-~

.

. '

Redmen soccer
improves to 3-0
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen soccer teant; ranked
No. 5 in the pre-season NAJA
Top 25 rating, moved to 3-0 on
tl1e 2005 season with a 3-0
blanking of Bryan College on
Saturday afternoon at Evan
Davis FJeld in the final contest
of the Rio Grande Invitational.
Rio Grande got the scoring
underway very quickly when
sophomore defensive back
Wayne Maden (Biackpoo[, ·
England) scored in the 5th
minute off a header afler
receiving . a · nice' feed - from
senior John Carroll (Preston,
England). ·
. Bryan College (2-1- I) .goalkeepet Jonathan Sutton was
extremely active as •the
Redmen peppered the net with
shot after shot and he was able
to tum most of the attempts
away in keeping the Lions in
the ~rune . ·
Rto led 1-0 at halftime.
After. missing on numerous
scoring chances 1he. Redmen
finally found the back of the
•. net 'again in the 68th minute
· when sophomore foJ:Ward Guy
Heywood · (Preston, England)
and junior mid-fielder Benn
Hughes (Lianduno. Wales)
hooked to give Rio a 2-0
advantage. Heywood deliv·ered a nice header over the
hand of Sutton and safely into
ihe net. providing the Redmen
with some bre~thing room.
Rio tacked on one more
. marker in the 73rd minute
when
freshman · Paul
Nicholson
(Whitehaven, ·
England) scored his ftrst collegiate goal to up the count to 30. · Fellow freshman Kyle
Segebart (Dayton, OH) was
credited with an assist on the
play.
,
,
· , Junior lrllnsfer Derek Talcott
.(Independence. MO) played· in
goal for the Redmen and
slopped two shots in collecting
the shutout.
'
Sutton manned the net for£5
minutes for the Lions and post-·
ed 13 saves.

._l

Fax - 1-740-446·3008
E-mail- sporls@myda~ysantinel .cqm
Sports Slatf

Brad Sherman, Sparta Editor
(740 ) 446-2342, ext. 33

&amp;;yen Wahers, Sports Writer
(740) 446 -2"342, ext. 23
bwaltarsOmydailyt ribune.com

4

Le"v Crum, Sporta Wrlllf
(3041675-\333. e.t. \9
Ierum 0 mydailyreg ister.com

I

Please see Invite, Bl

'

BRAD SHERMAN

Soccer
.'

Chri , Lester wa' the top
River Valley placer in 8th
( 18: 26 1 fol lowed by Vince
WeatheN ein in 171h i IX: 48i.
Kyl e Hi \'c ly " ''" 25th
(19 : 171. Malt Nihcn 47th
t20:5 tl ) a11LI D&lt;lllicl Hill 57th
(2 1: 16) ove rall to gi\'C th e
Raid e r~ a Il l team 'core.
Galli a Academy's boys finished 12th w1th ,125 point'
and were led hy Shane Plant 7
in 51Jth pl ace t ~ I :36 1 Tyler
Counts \vas· 61 st t2 1:3 6).
Timmy
Huffman
64th
(22 :05 ). Greg Baker 7-+th

Blue Angels win tri-match
over Eastern, Oak Hill .
BY

SOuth Point at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.

bsherman 0: mydailytr i bu~a.com

~510-01 ·611892

Close behind in ninth place
man Lauren Adkins was second (20:31 ), while her class- overall was Meigs with a 233
mate LeeAnn Townsend was team score. Freshman Kimi
fourth (21 :41 ):
-Swisher wa s 20th overall
Carol Fahmy was 14th (23 :08)
for the
Lady
and
(22:26), Aarika Stanley 28th . Marauders
Jess ica
(23:48) and Andrea Wiseman HollidiJy also cracked the iop
47th (25:24) to round out the .50 (44th , 25 :10). Ashley
Blue Angel s' 86 team score. Samar was 62nd (26 :20 ).·'
River Valley took eighth Ashley Sa vage 69th (26:56)
with 221 points and was led and Cecili,a Core fini shed the
by kshley Fitch's 27th-place sconng in 94th (30:06).
finish (2 3:47). Stephanie
On
the
boys
side.
Griffith was 41st (24:59) , Marietta's Jacob Malcomb
Tiffany Oiler 52nd (25:41 ). won the race in a time of
Elaine Householder 57th 17:01 and five of his team(26: 14) and Samanlha Larson mates also fini shed in the top
10.
93rd (30:05 ).

lllymday Septambar 8
Volleyball
Southern at Eastern, 5:55 p.m
Ale~&lt;ander at Meigs, &amp;p.m.
Aiver"Valley at Chesapeake. 5:30p.m.
South Gallia at Hannan, 5:30 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m,

Contact Information

, ' SO Down, 0'11 A Pfl _ III\II~C.&gt;'~; !~1 lttml "~ ICl Je mor11t111•1~1blt III!UUQ" StP~tmh&lt; )0 XI05 on"' "' UUIP'!' I"II~'+I"'IrliOOf II ~..t00:'1'1 11"'1 dult !l ~ ut1011 IIT\1101l
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lllbtt•ltq ,,,d.l oppr(&gt;Wtl •iQ"'' '"''~nan• appt ,
'

VINCENT _ Orange and
Black crossed the finish lines
first and many times early-on
as Marietta swept both the
boys and girls -divisions at th"Scenic Hills Lions Club
Classic, be.tter known as the
Warren Invitational cross
country meet Saturday.
The Tigers scored 24 to
easily win the boys division
over .Parkersburg South with
62. The Lady Tigers finished
with 47 points, 19 points bet-

ter than girls
runner - up
Parkersburg.
It was also
a good day
cfor0 u Gallia
n t y
teams
as
G a 11i a
Academy's
girls
and
Swisher
R i v e r
Va I I e Y. • s
boys finished third in their
respective divisions . .
· Marietta'.s . Bmmy Moore
won the girls race in a time of
20: 13. Gallia Acadet;ny fresh -

Ironton, River Valley at Meigs (Riverside), •·
4:30p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Shawnee state at Rio Grande, 5 p.m.

Ple1se see Redmen,

ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS . ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH
740-593-3279/800-710-1917

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Participating in a tri-match
typically requires a team to
play more volleyball than a
regular match , considering
there are two opponents.
But that wasn't the case for
Gallia Academy, which swept
visiting Eastern and Oak HJII
in straight games Saturday.
The Blue Angels. who
needed five games each in
order to win their first two
matches, played only four
total on Saturday ·while
improving to 4-0 · on th e
young season .
Gallia Academy defeated
Easlern 25-15, 25-23 then
beat Oak Hill 25-18. 25- 17 .
The Lady Eagles did pick up
a win over Oak Hill 25-10.
25-18 ..,
Eastern is now 4-1 follow ing the split.
In the win over the · Lady
Eagles, Gallia Academy
grabbed a 4-3 lead early and
never looked back en. route to
a comfortable 10-point win in
the opening set.
Game iwo was much different as Jillian Brannon
served seven straight points
early on to help Eastern to an
8-1 advantage. The . Lady
Eagles maintained a big lead
at I 1-3 until the Angels ral lied
~
Fourteen of the next 20
points scored belonged to the
hom~ team, which ewntuallv
pulled even at 17 apiece. Eastern took the lead back
at 20- 18, but the An~ c l s
Bryan Walters/photo
Eastern's Darcy Wlllebrenner. right. prepares to spike the ball past the outstretched arms fought back again and took a
lead at 22-21 that they newr
of Gallia Academy defender Lauren Saunders· (9) during Saturday's contest in Gallipolis.

'

relinquished again .
Felicia Close scored eight
points and added six kills and
15 digs for Gallia Academy
while teammate Kayla Perry
also had an all-around good
match with seven points. 16
dig, and eight kill s.
Heather Withee had eight
assist s and Katie Taylor three
for the winners. while Alexis
Geiger had three' hlocks. ·
Brannon's seven point~
paced Eastern, followed by
five
from
Darcy
Winebrenner. Erin Weber led
the way in kills with four and
!iad 'ix blocks.
Th e second match . pitted
the L~Uy Eagles againsl the
Lad y Oaks.
Winebrenner scored eight
points while Katie Hayman
and Kel sey Holter served up
se ve n point&gt; apiece in . the
win . Setter Brittany Bissell
added five tallies.
Brannon. Holter .rnd Weher
led Eastern in kills with three
apiece anJ Webe r al so
amaS&gt;ed three blocks.
Withee sc,)red nine points
and handed out nine assists as
the 'An eel s beat Oak Hill in
the day&gt;, final match. Perry
had sewn points and seven
kills. while Close also had
se\'en kill s. Geiger chipped in
six point s along with a kill
and Whitney Mayo had fiv e
aSSIStS .

Defensil'ely. Leslie Niday
played a strong back row to
help secure the victory.
Gallia Acaden1\' . 1s at
Warren
for
·a
key
Southea slern Ohi o Athletic
League cont"t on Tuesday:
meanwhile . Eastt!rn visits
Vinton ·couniy.

Rice calls an end to a sterling career
Southern falls to Lady
Bucks in _close showdown
'.

BY

EDDIE PELLS

ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
, SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

- - - -------BUCHTEL' An old fashioned knock- down. drag out
battle of two great teams
went well
beyond the
expected
duration and
ri~;~ht to the
w1re with
t
h
e
Nelsonville
L a d y
Buckeyes
L..._ _ __.J eventually
Williams
winning out
over
the
Southern Lady Tornadoes.
Tied at two ~ames each,
Southern led 9- I m the rubber
match of the
five
sets,
'
only to stall
out and fall
to the hosts
14-16 in the
finale . N-Y
·. :I won the ftr&gt;t
game 25-21,

····-·;

.-...

t

h

e· n

Southern
won
the
Wolfe-Riffle next · two
easily 25-11
and 25-14 before the 'Bucks
came back to claim the founh
: round 28-26.
Southern is now 3-2 overaiL

Nelsonville's
Stevie
Mitchell led with 20 overall
points,
while
Megan
Edwands added 14. Southern
was led by Kristiina Williams
with 31 (l?ints, and Whitney
Wolfe-Rtftle added 23.
Eylem Gurbuzer had 16 kills.
Except for Southern's runaway's in the second and
third games. the action was
fast and furious. Numerous.
lengthy volleys highlighted a
suspenseful evenin~ full of
great overall defenstve plays
and saves.
'
Nelsonville took the early
lead in the fourth game, but
Southern came back on six
serves by Wolfe-Riffle to take
the lead at 24-23 before the
game went even at' 24-24 on
the side-out. That game was
tied two more times and went
several points past the "f1rs1
to 25, win by two" rule.
Finally, Mi-tchell scurt&gt;d the
game-point as the game went
to 'fifth and final rubber
match.
,
Scorin~; two aces in a nm of
7-0, Wilhams gave Southern
a boost that seemed insurmountable. Then Riffle
added two more as SHS went
up 9-1 . The Lady Tornadoes
went up 14-7 on serves · by
Eylem Gurbuzer, Kasie
Seller&gt;, Bethany Riffle. and

Pluse 5ee Southem, Bl

DENVER - The. greatest
receiver of all lime realized
he would be no better than
the fotJrth recei ver for the
Denver Broncos. It was no
way for Jerry. Rice 1o end his
career. so he called it quits
after 20 sensational seasons.
"I never tho.ught I'd ever
see this day.'' Rice said
Monday during an emotional
news conference at Broncos
team headquarters .
And the NFL may never
see anyone like Rice 'again.
The 42-year,old receiver. a
first'round draft pick out of
tiny Missi ssippi Valley State
in 1985, leaves the tleld With
38 NFL records . including
,
..
, AP photo
the most career reteptions Jerr y Rice. one of the most dornioa nt w1de receivers in the
( 1;549 ). yards re cei,·ing NFL. waves goodbye after a news conference announcing his
(22.895 ) and touchdowr!s retirement 111 Denver on Monday.
receiving.( 1971.
"Not many people that . in ake h1e \·hlnt&lt;lqa and Steve
But as Ill" h a' the num, own a\1 the rewrd, , pend Yn11n~ look · great. He ma s-.
.bers, it' was the way he did that type of commitment and tered 1he \\'est Coast offense
'things that made the biggest give that typ~ of commiJ - anu made a career (If turning
impress ion - the right' way. ment . in . the offseason." short catche' into long gains.
He was a slave to details. a Broncos · coach -Mike His work ethi ~ and attentic;m
master of route-runn ing pre- Shanahan said . "That\ wh\'. to the little t h i n~s ga \'e an
cision. a good guy off the in my opinion. he's the greai- em ire generiuion of receivers
field and a workout junkie est player to eve r pl ay the someone to look up to.
both in season and out.
game ." ,
How detail oriented was
R~ ve re d by fans and his
t\ext. it' s t i m ~ for that he''
peers, Ril·e iold the players · de bate. and nobod \ can
Shanah"n 'aiJ Ri~e insisthe was retiring during a short acc use Sh anahan of o\·erstat· ed rhe righ t-handed assistant
who thre\, pr:H:tice passes to
meeting held after hi s public ing it.
Rke led the 49ers to three
announcement. The Broncos
gave him a standing O\ation. Super Bowl ti tles and helped
Please see Rice, BJ
'

�•

•

•

'

Page B2 • The Daily Senru.;el

Tuesday, September 6,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 6,

'

RookieFrye named Browns backupQB Bengals can't afford to start O-l-e-

Browne pulls out su~prising victory at Deutsche Bank
BY DoUG FERGUSON
ASSOCI ATED PRESS

'

''

NORTON. Mass.- Desptte
failing to keep his PGA Tour
card the la&gt;t two years. Olin
Browne ne,er doubted he
could still compete wtth the
best players Now he has a
victory to sh01y for 11. closin g
wtth a 4-under 67 on Monday
to wm the Deutsche Bank
Classic.
Browne emerged from a
five-way lie for the lead to
b~ild a three-, hot ad' anlage
on the back nine. And· with
Jason Bohn closing fas t. he
holed a 15-foot birdie pull on
the 17th hole to restore hts
cushion .
Bohn needed an eagle on
the par-S 18th to Ioree; playoff, but his fairway meta l
from the nght nlugh '&lt;lllcd to
the right of the green. and his
chip nn cr had a chance .
Bohn sell led for a btrdtc and a
68 to finish one shot behtnd.
~' It' s been -;o lo ng." sa id
Browne. v.ho won lor the first
time smce the 1'1'19 Colontal.
''I'm speech le" ..
Brown e tinl'hed at 14under 270 and earned
$990.000. more than he had
made in .my ot hts-II prevtous
years on the PGA Tour. More
importantly. it ga'e the 46year-old Browne a two-year
exemption on tour

He has been scrapping by
the last two years after heartbreak endings to his sea;on
kept him out of the top 125 on
the money li't. Browne had to
write letters to tournament
directors asking for exempltons. or geumg int&lt;i the
lower-ranked events that had
room m the fie Id.
"The amount of time' yo u
play is irreleva nt ," he said
earher in the week. ''It's how
you play when you get 111 ."
He was al hts best on the
TPC of· Boston. espectally on
Latiur Dav.
Browne kept the ball in the
fairway and on the greens.
and kept ht s mmd from wandenng. The reward was
sweeter than •he could tmagmc . especially after he dectded to rebutld ht s swmg last
year wllh Hou ston swing
coach Jun Hardy, a risk} dectsion for someone in the tWIli ght of hi s career
Bohn. who •.von the B.C.
Open in July. also. showed h"
mellle. bouncing back from
back-to-back bo~'evs
by eotv"' •
ing hi1melf a ch.mce on the
last hole.
Reno- Tahoe Open champi on Vaughn T.1y_lor shot a 118 to
fimsh thtrd ,1t I0-under 274.
Charles Hlllwl l Ill l1.1d a 67
and JOined three other' who
fimshcd anNlJei shot beht nd.
Tiger Wouds.the first -round

leader, was never a factor over
the final three days He shot
7 1 to tie for 40th.
The fivc-way lie lor the lead
going .into the last round wa~
the btggest Slllce the 1983
Colonial , and Wtlh 16 others
wllhin two shots of the lead, it
seemed certain to come down
to the final holes.
And it did - but only
Browne and Bohn were left

\ tanding.
Hometow n fa vorite Billy
Andrade fell apart with a doLtble bogey when he hit tnto the
water on No. 6 and had a 41
on the fro nt nine. John Rolltl)S
shot 40 on the front nine to
also dtsappear. Carl Pellerson
slowly tumbled frQm contention, llllable to make
btrdies as Brown and Bohn
surged ahead.

Rookie Busch youngest Nextel Cup race Winner; points shaken up
ASSOCIATED PRESS

FONTANA. Caltf. ~ Kvk
Busch elbowed his way iino
. the spothght with a recordsetting vtctory at Caltfornta
Speedway
With nearly everyone
focused on the baltic lor the
final spots tn the Cha'c lor the
Nextel Cup champiOnship.
the 20-year-old Busch '!ole
the show Sunday night wllh
his first career vtctory He
.became the youngest wmner
in NASCAR's top stock car
series.
At the end of the Sony HD
500. with only one more race
before the start of the IO-man.
·10-race Finale, the bottom of
the top I0 in the Cup point
standings was shaken up. with
Matt Kenseth and Jamie
McMurray mo viQg in and
Ryan Newman and Jeff

Southern
from Page Bl
Jenny Warner. A sptke and Kill
by the ~uckcye front line
regamed the serve and added a
point. before Mitchell 'cored
the last eight points to wm the
game (Teams must go to 15 in
the fifth and final game of the
match ).
Southern's Williams was 2i36 serving wtth four aces and
had a great night at the net (2
kills) and passmg c18-46 ):
Bethany Riftle was 14- 17
serving, 27-3H passmg. and
61 -64 setting . Sellers was 6-l)
servmg, 16-25 passtng, ard

· Redme~
from Page Bl
'1lleir ~oalkeeper today was
fantastic,· said Rio Grande
tiead coach Scott Momsscy. "I
think in the tirsl fi ve minutes
he must have had four saves."
''Not to take anything away
from Brya 1, but 11 s hard when
you play back-to-back."
Morrissey added. "Guys staymg mentall y focused game
atier game and you could tell
both teams, the fatigue from
Friday wa' somewhat of a factor (today).''
"But take nothing away
from Bryan. they came 111 and
battled and competed and their
goalkeeper was the man of the
·match tor both teams. because

Gurdon tallin~ out.
Th.ll te nse battle, however.
was not on the mind of Busch,
the brothet of retgning Cup
champio'n Kurt Busch. as he
ce lebrated hi s breakthrou gh
vtctorv
at
California
Speedway.
"It's unbelievable ... s.tid the
rookte whose prevtous best
fintshes were seconds thts
year m Las Vegas and Dover.
"We shou ld have been here at
least ltve tunes this year, but
we ha ve n' t been able to close
the deal."
The prevtous youngest wtnner was Donald Thomas. who
was four days older than
Busch when he won in
Atlama 111 November 1952.
Driving a Chevrolet for
Hendnck Motorsports, Busch
Jed 95 laps on the way to the
victory in his 31st career swrt.
Busch was leadmg on lap
240 when debris brought out
the lOth of I I cautions 111 the
had five blocks. Eylem
Gurbuzer had 16 kills in a 2935 spiking mght, and a good
passmg g.1me Ashley Robie
had iwo block' and w.ls 7-13
pas~ mg; Jenny Wamer &lt;:.even
blocks, was I.l -14 spiking, and
S-13 ' Pikmg: Whimey Rittle
had 5-l-57 sellmg in a great
tloor game. '~'" 3H-.J 7 passing. and I H-22 servmg with
two aces: Selena Spencer had
a good pa ~~ m g game.

race . With the race scheduled
to end on lap 25 0. Busch
faked as tf'he was going to pit
on lap 241 and, when all the
other leaders followed. he
wem ahead and pmed.
Hts crew put on only two
tires and Busch was able to
beat everyone else back onto
the track and hold the lead to
the end.
"My nerves were geni ng to
me," Busch said ·'When I
made that last pit stop (under
caution). everybody followed
me in and I thought, 'Cool ,
we ' re going to he all nght.'
That stop is what got us the
win."
Team owner Rick Hendrick,
-who also fields Chevrolets for
Gordon. Jimmie Johnson and
Brian Vickers, was as thrilled as his youngest dnver.
· ·'Jt's fun to watch· him
dri ve,'' Hendrick said. ··We"re
just h~ppy we go t him !n the
stable . .
•

r_. _. _.

•

~··-

While Busch took control
late tn the race that was
extendecl. to 254 laps becau~e
of a caution period, the battle
wtthm a battle was raging for
positions in the standmgs.
Only the top 10 drivers in
the point• following Saturday
night's race at Rtchmond will
be eligible to contend for the
championship in the last 10
races of the season.
Greg Btftle, already solidly
in The Chase, finished second, followed by Vickers,
Carl Edwards and series
points leader Tony Stewart,
with his II th consecutive finish of eighth or better.
Kenseth, coming .o ff his
first victory of the season last
week in Bristol , had another
strong race, finishing seventh.
He has charged from 17th in
the points following the
Pocono race July 24.
Edwards solidified his spot
in the top 10. remammg

eighth and all but clinching a
spot 111 The Chase, while
Ken seth moved to ninth. I0
points ahead of · McMurray.
who ts one poim ahead ot
Newman. Gordon. who began
the night in IOth. is 12th. 30
p~ints Olll of the final playoff
spot.
Going into Richmond, only
62 points separate eighthplace Kenseth from 13thplace Elliott Sadler, who finIShed 17th after winning last
year's race.
A crash on lap 247 involving Robby Gordon, Scott
Riggs, Scott Wimmer, Jeff
Burton and Sterling Marlin
gave Biftle one last shot at
Busch, but he was unable to
challenge the youngster after
the green flag waved for a
two-lap shootout on lap 253
- three laps after the scheduled finish.
Jeff Gordon , who struggled
throughout the race, appeared

. -·-_
. _. _. _. _. _.

_,~

tentton when he got into the
top I0 late in the event. But a
hanllltn g problem sent the
three-lllne Cahforma winner
reeling frmi1 lOth on a restart
on lap 216 to a 21st-place finish
"It' s JUSt one of those
mghts:· he said. "It was
patheti c.
We· II
go to
Ri chmond and see what we
can do. It doesn't matter right
now . (w here we race).
Everywhere we go, we either
stmk
or
we're
good.
Apparently what we 've done
in the past doesn ' t mean anything nght now."
Newman also was disappointed with his 18th-place
finish.
"We're still alive now,"
Newman said. "We've got our
heads just barely below water.
but we've got time to pick it
back up and get a breath of
fresh atr."

it could' vc been a lot worse:·
Morrissey said.
.
Morrissey was pleased wnh
the effort of his club. "I'm
proud of the guys. we battled
back, we had some adversit).
couple of guys silling out with
injuries and a couple with suspensions and we still gel it
done," he said. "That's what it
takes: 'it was a good learning
· lesson ll)r our guys:·
Rto wtll make the trek to the
Windy Ctty next weekend to
face Tnnll} lmemational 011
Friday al 7 p.m. and then wi ll
challenge Illinois Tech i11
Sunday -at I p.m.
' ·In the lirst game of the day.
NAIA No. 4 AuburnMontgomay knocked off No.
1-l Bethel. 6- 1.
Bryan .md Bethel eia~ cd to a
scoreless ue 111 the lmal game
on Fmlay. ·
-

. - . - . -·--:. - . -·-·1

:

Invite
from Page Bl

... cores v. ere Eastl'rn '..,

B ~t h

H\scll (.17th. 28 :07). .tnd
Gallia Acadenn ·, H.mnah
Rou'h (7fith . 2~( ().J ). Jc"ica
Willet 1XOth. 2X:26J. Bnll\'n
Saunders ( I0 1st. ~I OX J ailll
Andrea Mcndicla (I 07th,

(23 . \3) and Dalla' Craft Xht
(2-1.02).
Ea~tcrn's
Chri&gt; Da' i'
cracked the top 20. lumhmg .14:06 ).
in 20th place (I H:51) and
Alithe local tc.um arc bad
teammate Aaron Martmdale 111 actton Tuc sda' ,11 the
, was X4th (24:5 1). The Eagles ' Gal ltpolts ln vllalullial. "h1d1
did not have enough runners , "ill be held at the Univet,tl\
of Rio Gr&lt;tndc
.
10 generate a tcum ~core
I

FROM ANY OF THE
OFFICES OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES. ·

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
the Apple Grove·
Dorcaa and Johnson
Road Paving Project
wilt be receiVed by
the Meigs County

Bid documents may
be secured at the

i

Number 740-992-2911
lor a $10.00 nonrefundable lee.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
eHher a bid bond In
the amount of t0% of
the bid amount wllh a

surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County

Commissioner or by
certified
check,
cashiers check, or let·

ter of credit upon a
solvent bank In the
amount of not less

than 10% of the bid
amount In the favor of
the aforeeald Meigs
County

I

!/JJJJdl
on his 651h
Birthday.
Septemher6
Happy Birthday
Ken, you're always
in our hearts and
thoughtl.. We m.ss
you and lo~'e you
always.
Tom. Janet
and Tom

•

I
••

i
r®alhpolls Bail~ leribunr
.•

The Daily Sentinel ~oint -l9lragattt.l\egtster
L-···-·~~!.~:.~~·-·-·-··-··-·\~1.~:.~.-. _ . ~.....;...(~. ~:J~.-·_j
t
J

'

I

'

--- ·- -

for
School
Bus
COnstruction of the
of
Department

4~.769

26, 29, (9) 6

Education adopted
by and wHh the consent of the Director of

Highway
Safely
Spaclllcatlons and
Instructions to bidders are on file In the
office
ot
the

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Separate, sealed proposals
will
be
received at the Office

Treasurer,

~.520

.

Racine ,

of the Treasurer of the
Board of Education of

OH.
The

Southern
Local
School District of
Racine, OHin Meigs

Education reserves
the right to reject any

County,

until

o'clock

Board

of

and all or parts olany
and at! bids.
By order of the Board

t2

noon.

September 23, 2005.
At that time, opened
by the Treasurer of
said
board
as
Provided by law lor a
71 passenger school

Education

of

Southern

of
Local

)&gt;chool District.
Dennie E. Httt
Interim Treasurer
Local
Southern

specifications of said
board of education.

School District
920 Elm Street
Raclne.OH '45771

Separate and Inde-

(8) 30, (9) 6, t 3

bus,

according

to

pendent bids will be
received with respect
to the chauls and
body typa, and wlU

CINCINNATI _ They got
through the preseason without a major setback. They
raised expectations for thetr
fi rst wmnmg record in 15
years. The last thing the
Cincinnati . Bengals can
afford 10 do now is stumble
h · t"
on 1 etr Irs! step.
·In 'Cleveland, no less.
"We have 10 win," otfensive tackle Willie Anderson
said Monday. without qualiltcatton or cqu 1vocauon.
"We have to go up there not
sugarcoating this thin g."
Nobody\ even trying It's
rare for an NFL team to
declare the season opener a
must-wm game, but that"s
what the Bengals are doing.
Consecutive B-8 season s
under coach Marvin Lewts
have convinced them that a
few opening win s mean
everythmg.
··we need it,'' recetver
Chad Johnson said . "Our
whole key 10 our success is
h r f
Th ·
t e trst tve games. e lirst
five games wtll tell us
whether ,we ' re going to the
postseason or not:'
For once, he's serious.
The Bengals haven 't had a
winnmg record since 1990
- one of the longest streaks
of futthty in NFL history because they haven ' t been
able to get started. Since
1991 , they 've gone 11-41 in
August and September. playgames.
When Watts unproved,
Rice was bumped back down
the depth chart in the third
preseason game After the
·finale , Shanaha~ told Rtce
he'd be a No 4. at best, competing for playing time with
}Ollllgsters Charlie Adams
and Todd Devoe.
Talk about a generation gap
- Adams said he has Rice
posters on his wall at home.
" He worked hard every
day," Adams s.1id "He didn't
take any days off. he didn 't
take any plays otT. That's
how he dtd 11. He never took
the easy way out •·
But he dectded 11 was ttme
to get out.
Shanahan was willing 't o
give Rtce u roster spot. but

Pleasan~

ing themselves out of content ion before midseason
It's the only btt of Bungals
that Lewts couldn ' t eradicate
Ill his first two seasons.
Cincmnati opened 1-4 111
2003. before rallying to the
8'-8 ftntsh . Last season.
another 1-4 start left the
Bengals too far behmd to
catch up.
Everythmg. is aligned for a
qutck start in Lewis' third
!lme around. The schedule is
favorable - only one of the
first six opponents had a
winning record last. season
- and Lewis changed training camp routtnes to get
players toughened up for the
first game and beyond .
v111ually every day, Lewi s
stressed the fast start in some
way.

,
..
haven l relaxed.
Lewi&gt;
. has some! h'mg eIse
in his favor : The players
know he\ right after the la11
two years
''It's hard to start from
behind," 12th-year center
Rich Braham said. "We'd
finiSh like we're a team that
could have an opportunny in
the playoffs, but we were .a
h •·
game or twos ort.
·The Bengals nave a htstory
of locking up in then b1ggest
moments, e'pcci:dly season
ope-ners . Thei1 e .J-10 in
openers since 1991. losing
the most sigmficanl ones .
· They lost the 1naugural
game at Pau l Brown Stadtum
to the Browns in 2000.
qutckly dashmg hopes· that
th e new stadtum would
result m a new era ol success. Thev also lost thetr two
&gt;ea&gt;on openers under Lewis.
who has made them competiti ve for the ftrst time since
the 1980s but faded to get
them into the playoffs
because of the slow start&lt;.
He doesn ' t hdve 10 do
much persuading tn the lock-

·Tve pushed hard. and we
came through it healthier .
than when we went into n;'
Lcwts said. "That's a .good
thmg. So we have the right
mmd-set, that we have
accomplished something.
"They've . been pushed
very, very hard. Every
chance where they thought
they were going to relax, we

er room thi ' year.
·'The last couple i}f years.
we were st llmg at honic after
bemg 8-8." Anderson satd .
"We won five games down
the stretch. but lost three 01
four early on that cost us. So
we realize the import.tnce
"He was saying it before.
but now we te,llize the
importance of getting otfto a
fast start.''
not as explost;e as he used ttl
be.
"Eventual!}.'' il c satd.
·'everything ts going to catch
up wllh you "
Now that he's acknowledged it's really over. Rtce
satd he was grateful lor the last few years ot hi s career.
when he finally took tile
blinders off and paid atte ntion to the fan s who chanted
his name .
An ~lV Id gol f pl.1yer who
wns otten spolted play1ng at
the resort hotel where he
stayed while in Den, cr. Rt ce
said he is "looking forw ,ud to
the next ph ."e ol my life ..
"There are opp"rtunttte'
out there . I'll approach them
like I did football. wtth Jctcrminatton and prtde:· he said .

told h1m the third receiver
spot was out and there were
no guarantees he'd play
every week. Rtce didn ' t want
to deal w,ith the possible
indignity of beiijg declared
inacti 'e for games or withering. away on the bench when
he did suit up.
''He did everything he
could possibly do to get that
job." Shanahan said of
Denver's thtrd receiver spot.
'·But it 's my JOb to be hone st
to the team and do the tough
job. I had to do the right thing
tor the organization. Jerry
understands that. He understood ~xactl} where I was
. coming from··
Rtce believes his route running was "still pretty good."
although he concedes he' s

been filed in the
Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio for
approval and settle·
ment.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
will accept bids for
the following : 1996
Dodge High Top Van.
t !-passenger with

ESTATE NO. 27879Ruby

'
.

Eynon,

Guardian of the person and estate of
James C. Casto, an
incompetent.
Unless exceptions
are filed thereto , said
account Will be set
tor hearmg before
said Court on the 6th

lift.

accepted until Frrday,

September 16, 2005.
The Meigs County
Council on Aging,
Inc. reserves the right
to accept or reject
any and all bids. For
more information call

day of October, 2005,

at which time said
account Will be considered and contin·
ued from day to day
until finally disposed

740-992-2161 .
(9) 6, 8

of.

Public Notice

Any person interested may file written
to said
account or to matters
pertaining to the execution of the trust,
not less than five

tN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
,
tN THE MAITER OF
SEITLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

._.a-.••~

·~..._-

.......

r.... •• c:A...,.~ts

,-.-~c:•

days pnor to the date
sel for hearing.

J. S. Powell
Judge
Common
Court,

Pleas

Division
County, Ohio

Probate
Meigs

(9) 6

exception

Help Wanted

•..c.·~

.......... -.,. -. ._ ..... •••

Johnson Road, Meigs

County, Ohio. 16'
width, 4490' length.
Specifications provided In bid packet.

Specifications, and
bid forms may be
secured at the office
of Meigs County

Commissioners,
Courthouse,

the Paving of letart
Township Road 631 Johnson Road, Meigs

each set of plans and
specifications.
Each bid must be

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769·
Phone 740-992-2895.
Adeposit of 0 dollars
will be required for

County, Ohio will be . accompanied

by

received by the Meigs
C o u n t y
Commtssioners
at

either a bid bond in
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a

Co u r t h o use.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until
1 :00
pm .;

the aforesaid Meigs
C o u n t y
Commissioners or by

29, 2005 and then at
1:15PM at said oHice
opened and read
aloud for the follow-

cashiers check. or letter of credit upon a
solvent bank in the
amount of not less

Paving

amount in favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs

their office at the

Thursday, September

ing:

of

letart
Township Road 631·

surety satisfactory to

certified

check,

than 10% ot the bid

County

- - - - - - - - . Commissioners . Bid

Help Wanted

Bonds

shall

accompanied

be
by

0

! '1 t! i~.

Ct~ unlil..;;l

Full-Time. Part-Time
thru Friday Schedul~
· :'1\o HolidaYS, :'io Weekends
Cotnpctitl.-e Pay/Bellefits
:\lilea~e Reimbursement
Excellent Work Em ironment
\lunda~

Purrssionai . Autonom~·

'

and marked as Bid

for LetartTwp Rd 631-

Johnson
Road
Paving Project and
mailed or del1vered

to:

,

Meigs
County
Commissioners
Courthouse

POmeroy. Ohio 45769

Attention or bidders
is called lo all of the
requirements contamed 1n lhis bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor
Standards Provtsions

and

Davis-Bacon

Wages. various insur·

ance requirements .
various equal opportunity prov1srons. and
the requirement for a
payment bond and
performance bond for
100% of the contact
price.
No bidder may1with draw his bid Within

thirty (30) days a"er

the actual date of the
openmg lhereol.

The Meigs County

Commissioners
reserve the right to
reJect any or all brds.
Mick
DavenpOrt.

president

Meigs

C

the official or agent
signing the bond .

Commissioners (9) 6,
12, 15

o

u. n

'

Sul,mll Re:.umt" 10·

Pleasant \'aile~· Home Health
I0 II \'land St"'et ,
Pt. Pleasant. W\ 25550
Or fax to: J0-'·675-740t
Fnr mo"' information call:
.lt"'-675-7400

t

l: prLOOking For, ,

\lhl.'"-"· Glllha , \la"iin &amp;: Jal'k&lt;&gt;on C'ountir-sl

Physical Theranist

Sneech Theranist

.~

proof of Authority of

Bids shall be seated

\Pleasant Valley Home Health
Po~itions AYailable

•. ,_ _
........
-_

~~---•Joa•a~..._-

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRAI;TORS
Seated proposal for

Help Wanted

Full-Time. Part-Time
Monday thru Friday Schedule
No Holidays. No Weekends
Compctiti\·e Pa~/Benefits
Mileage Reimbursement
Ex&lt;-ellent Work Em ironment
Pofcssional Autonom~
Submit Resume to:
Pleasant Valley Home Health
lOll \'land Strt'et
Pt. Pleasant. W\' 25550
Or fax tu: ~-675-7401
For rna"' information call:
304-675-7400

Polm Pleasam. WV 25550
(30-1) 675-43-10
'
www.pvallcy:org
AA/EOE

...

The 12th Account of

Seated bids will be

, 1Meigs. Athrns.. Gallnt. :\lasoo &amp;. J~u:k!\Qn

'

,_..~

Accounts and vouch-

Inc., P.O. Box 722, 112
E. Memorial Dnve,

wheelchair

........,;,..-. ....

ers of tho following
named fiduciary has

Valley Home Health
Positions·A\'ailable

Valley Dri\e,

1 - -.. ~-----~------ -- - -- ·-·---------

•••~~o~:.•••

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Meigs County
Council on Aging,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.

----f

and current Ohio
Minimum Standards

Commissioners

Pleasam Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a Medical Record
TranscnpliOlllSI. Registered Hea lth
lnformati_on Technician preferred. One to
three year' of medical lran scription
experience. Minimum speed of 60 words
per minute.
Excellent salary. twliday s, health
msurance &lt;ingle/famtl y plan. demal plan,
life insurance. vacatiOn ! long-term
disability and retirem~nt.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
c/~ Human Resource&gt;.

~«&gt;§- ·

••

district specification,
all salety regulations

County

TRANSCRIPTIONIST

9'1'--'"

i

prior to delivery, comply with all school

ct) MEDICAL RECORD

In Loving Memory
of the best brother
and uncle in the
world,

•••

Meigs

(8)

Phone

lor thta project Is
$307;450.00.
DOMESTIC STEEL
USE
REQUIRE- Commissioner. Bid
MENTS AS SPECI- bonds ahall be
by
FIED IN SECTION accompanied
153.011 OF THE 'Proof of Authority of
REVISED
CODE the ofltclat or agent
APPLY TO THIS PRO. signing the bond.
JECT. COPIES OF Bids ahatl be sealed
SECTION 153.0t 1 OF ar)d marked as Bid
THE REVISED CODE
CAN BE OBTAINED
Help Wanted
In Memory

••

ered to:

45769;

engineer's estimate

•

RQad Paving Project
and matted or deliv-

Courthouse, Second

The project provides
lor paving 35470 L.F.
of Meigs County
Road 28 Apple GroveDorcas Road In Letart
and
Sutton
Townships and 4490
L. F. ot Township road
631 Johnson Road In
Letart Township In
Meigs County. The

'

when assem,bled and

their office at The
Meigs
County

read aloud.

•

state that the buses

Dorcas and Johnsoh

Tho Meigs County
Courthouse, Se&amp;&gt;nd ·
Street Pomeroy, Ohio

at

Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1:15 p.m.
Local
Time,
September 8, 2005
and then opened and

Place Your P,aid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily -Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
I
The Tri-County Marketplace! .

lor: Apple Grove-

office of The Meigs
County
Engineer,
34110 Fairgrounds
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio

Commissioners

•
••

ASSOCIM ED PRESS

-. . . . -......-

••

Other local Qirl litll,her~
not included 111 ihc tina I team

tit: a team with a winnmg tradition. coached by a man
with whom Rice was familiar
and comfortable. So R tce
signed wtth the Broncos,
knowing there was no guarantee of a roster ·spot
After some early trouble
adjusting to the mile-high
altitude. Rtce looked in shape
and ready for a 21st season.
About halfway through training camp, he moved ahead of
Darius Watts. to .Denver' s
No . 3 receiver spot.
That move caused a stir,
but a closer look 'howed a
receiver who had trouble separating from thtrd- and
fourth-string cornerbacks in
practice. a receiver who finished with four Gatches tor 24
yards in four preseason

,
BY JoE KAY

For fast results, advertise in T.he Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Smnhcm won the rese rve

game in three se1' 27-2S. 2025. ,md 16-1-l. Emma Hunter
had 15 poiilh. Ka ylyn
Spradling II. and Chelsea
Pape 10.
Southern goes to South
Gallia Wednesday.

Inevitably, though, time did
catch up with Rtce.
After '!6 years with the
Niners, Rice went to
from PageBl
Oakland, w~ere he had three
fairly
productive seasons.
the receivers be replaced with
But
it
became
clear the end
. a lefty when the 49ers
switched from the right- might be near last se~son
handed Montana to the left- when the Raiders phased him
out, prompting a midseason
handed Young.
" ... I'd see him upstairs. trade to Seattle.
One time, I said, 'Jerry, what - He still avera-ged 14.3
are you doing?'" recalled yards a catch last season and
Shanahan, who spent three scored three touchdowns,
·years coaching Rice as San showmg traces of the bigFrancisco's offensive coordi- play capability he !lashed so
nator. " He said, 'I was look- often earlter in hi s career.
Last spring, his agent put
ing ·at film . I'm looking at the
out
a league-wide memo stattop 10 receivers in the AFC
and the top I0 receivers in ing that the GOAT - the
the NFC:. I don't want any of Greatest Of All Time - was
these young guys ever to available.
Denver ·Jaoked ltke a great
catch me."'

Rice

to finally get back into con-

,_Reaeh 3 Counties

guy who has been In a Pro
Bowl and won a Super Bowl ,
. a fter
I' m not ~01.ng to pu Ill11m
the first mterceplion;' Crennel
said. "Why would I do that?
I'm going to gtve him time to
lead this otTense and lead this
team. At whatever point I
decide tt's not where I want it
to be or it's counterproductive,
at that point we' ll put somebody else in and give them a
chance.
"It won't be after the tirst
intercepiiOn or after the first
bad play."
Notes: Crennel hasn't decided on his starting runnino
back .Wllh Lee Suggs out with
a sprained ankle, Reuben
Droughns and William Green
will both play. "The starter
mtght be a game time decision
to give Cmcinnati something
to think about;: Crennel said.
... Suggs was out of a protective boot and ran sprints with
teammates during the portton
of practice open to reporters.
... ,TEAaron Sheadidnotpractice because of a strained chest
muscle. Shea's inJury led to
the signing of TE Billy Miller
on Saturday. Miller, a six-year
veteran, was Houston's leading receiver in 2002. The
Texans cut htm last week. ...
Crennel said CB Gary Baxter
is "questionable or dOltbtful"
tor Sunday's game. Baxter
hasn't practiced since suffering a concussion in Detrott
Aug. 20.... Crennel said he
was concerned by K Phil
Dawson's inconsiStent preseason. Dawson, one of the
league's stead test ktckers.
went5-for-9

BEREA - Charlie Frye is
no longer an ordinary NFL
rookie. He's a backup quarterback, too. Just one snap away
from being Cleveland's starter.
· Frye beat out veteran Doug
· Johnson and was named the
· Browns' No.2 QB on Monday
by first-year coach Ro'meo
' Crennel, who is confident the
former Akron star could capablY. fill in for starter Trent
Dtlfer.
uc harlie has stepped in, and
he has performed and done a
nice job," Crennel said. "At
.this point, he's ahead of Doug.
I feel like he's done enough to
warrant the No. 2 spot."'
Johnson, who started eight
games for Atlanta. in 2003
when Michael Vick was
· injured and was signed by the
· Browns as a free agent in June,
missed one exhibition game
and a week of practice because
of a sore arm.
His absence gave Frye the
chance to pass him on the
depth chart, and Frye made the
most of it.
The ·third-round pick had a
strong trainmg camp and
played well dunng the exhibition season. Frye sealed the
backup job last Thursday
: when he got a surprise start at
Chicago and responded by
- ~oing 12-of-14 for 186 yards
m leading the Browns to a 166 victory over the Bears.
"Just about every situation
he's gone m, he's been able to
move the team," Crennel said.
"He hasn "t been perfect by any

'

BY MtKE HARR15

stretch of the imagination, but
he has some .pocket ~r~sence,
he can evade the rus , he can
make plays and he has made
plays. That's why I think he
can do it."
· Frye hasn' t been a backup
since his freshman year at
Akron . He said Crennel's decisian to make him the sewnd
stringer won't alter his preparation.
"It doesn 't change my thinking at all •." said the Willard
native who grew up rooting for
the Browns. 'Til still prepare
the same way and do every!hmg l've.~en doing all trainmg camp.
Frye is already a favorite
with Cleveland fans, who have
cha~ted "&lt;;:har-lie," "Char-lie"
dunng trammg camp and preseason games. Crennel was
asked how soon he expects to
hear the calls for Frye dunng
·sunda)"s ; season opener
ag.~mst Cmcmnatt.
· ..
. Probably alter the ..f-trst
m~ompletmn by Trent, he
satd.
Crennel, though, isn 't going
to yank Dilfer just because the
fans mtght want htm to make a
swtlch.
The Browns made that mis·
take before . Ty Detmer began
the 1999 as Cleveland's starter
but ':Vas benched in favor of
rookte Ttm Couch tollow 1ng a
43-0 loss . to Pittsbu~gh in
Week I. Wtthout a strong supporting cast around him ,
Co~ch was . roughed up the
ent1re season.
Crennel promises he'll be
patient with Dilfer.
"If I've g.ot a proven vet, a

BY TOM WITIIERS
ASSOCIATED PREss

No one from back in the ping perfectly from a shaggy,
pack made a move, least of all downhill lie behind the I lth
Woods.
green. down the ridge to 5 feet
After opening with a 65 to to save par.
take a one-shot lead. the
Hi ' only bogey came from a
world's No. I player never fairway bunker on the 15th.
broke par the rest of the way. but he was solid the rest of the
He closed with a 7 1 to tie for way. He now can plao his own
40th, ending hi s streak at schedule the two years, start·
seven straight finishes in the ing with a trip 10 Kapalua for
top 5. All that mattered was wtnncrs-onl~
Mercedes
getting out of town and onto Championshtps in January.
hi s boat for a week of vaca- . Di vats:
Fred Couples
tion .
caught allier out of the rough
"To be honest wtlh yo u. I and sailed his approach so fat
really don 't care nght now." over the ninth green that it
Woods said . ''I'm done. I' ve bounded down a htll next to
had a very long summer. I the scorin g tratler. He was
haven ' ttaken hardly any days oiven relief, but instead ol
off this summer. so it will be ~arkin'g his ball with a tee, he
ni ce tQ actually get some time snatc hed a chrysanthemum
off and let my mind and body , trom the flower bed to spot
just kind of heal."
his original lie. "He can do
Browne and Bohn separated that," PGA Tour rules otfictal
themselves by making btrdies Jamie Conkling said, "as long
on both par 5s. ptcking up as the flow er dtdn ' t blow
:mother btrdie along the way away." .. Tiger Woods got oft
and avoiding mistakes. Bohn to a slow start 111 more ways
that one . He dtdn't show up
blinked first.
He pushed his tee shot on on the ftrst tee until 22 secthe 'ninth so far to the right it onds before ~i s twosome was
wound up in a hazard. and he announced. ·My_ cart dnver
had to get up-and-down left of was taking his ttme," Woods
the green 10 ltmitthe damage satd of the shullle ride from
to bogey. Then he went over the range. "Every speed
the IOth green, chtpped past bump, he slowed down 10 an
the hole onto the ft .nge and absolute stop and looked
around. We were telling ·hi in.
made another bogey.
Browne suddenly had a 'Hurry up, don't worry about
three-shot lead, after hltting a. it '" Then , Woods went
beautiful draw into 6 feet on through the motions on his
the lOth for birdie. and chtp- way to a double bogey.

AP photo
Oltn Browne celebrates hts f1nal shot on the 18th green after
winnmg the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston in
Norton. Mass. Monday. Browne fintshed at 14 under par.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www~ydailysentinel.com

2005

2005

ANew Home?
TrY the
C'lassifieds!!·
•

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September (j, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

.

Tuesday, September 6, 2005
I~

'QI::rtbune - Se:ntinel -

HOI.5E'i

, Bedroom l:iouse Pomeroy
$27500 plus oep 740-416·
4906

28R cottage near Porter
$3501dep $35Qirenl refertnce needed Water/trash
patd No pets Call {740)388·
1100

:1 bedroom. 2 full bath, 2 llvlngrooms, dlntng, large
kitchen , basement. large
lanced backyard, Southern
School D1stnct, Available
Oct 1st, 740-416 -1687
(74())753-2595

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW

'QI::rtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

Offtee flo""~

Word Ads

Monday thru Fri~ay
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

i
I
r••••••••,.J

__

I
,

;,.R'OlNAI.,

L

1

Found all black S1amese cat
w1th cream &amp; brown Klt1en
SW M M1ddle aged Non Wllh
perfect
markmgs
Smoker, Dru g Alcohol Free Spnng Valley (740)446Soekmg SWF 40-50 honest 4466
canng P et1te wJ same
Mora ls
Smo Ker Ok no
Hefld Games Sene! Photo
Phone-Number to OJ Rt2
Box 940 Po1nt Pleasant WV
25550

(;1\EA\\i\\'
2 Female K1!1ens to good
Home only (304) 882-2623
lea ve message

Blackl wh1 te
shor thau ed
shots
female
Spayed
1ndoo1 only (740)44 6-2700
ClaSSIC grCy !dbby female
Spayed . shots 1ns1de only 2
yr s
old
shorthaired
Found Older Yor~1e at the
(740)446-2700
pound weanng colla r To
Free K1ttens Call 740.949- 1dent1fy call (740)441 ·0490
2188
' G1veawa y to goo d home
female Cali co ca t 1yr old
spayed
Call
Lmda

~~7~·':::0)~
4 4~·~9::3~·7:.:__ _ _

r

70

·r

YARDSAU:
YARD SALE-

For sunday• Paper

4

YARDSALE·
l'oMER&lt;JYlMIOOLE

~.w.:.;_.,.

I

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng reHrYel tiHI right to edll, reject, or cancel any ad eteny time Error• must be r.portltd on the nral day of
Trlbun.S.ntlnei-Reglatar wm be reaponalble for no more than tl'le caat altha apace occupied by tl'll error 1nd only the llrat lnHrtlon. We ahall not bt
any loaa or ••penH that raaulta from !he publleatlon or omlaalon alan ad~o~artlaemant Conection will be madt In lhellrat availeble edlllon • Bo• n~~~:.:::l
ara atwaye conrtdential • Current rate card appllel • All real •.tate •dvllrtl•em•nte ar• subject to the Feder•! Fair Houelng Act of 1961. • Thl• 1
ace•ptl ontv help wented ad• meeting EOE 11tanderd1 We will not knowingly accept any advertlelng in vlollltlon altha lew

cL

4 Family sale, Sept a &amp; 9 5
m1tes ou t 325 DanveU e
Furn1ture TV, Baby 1tems, &amp;
Cloth1ng all s1zes

The Mo1gs County Board of
Mental Re tarda ti on and
Developmental D1Seb1htms
seeks a Health Serv tce s
Coordinator to work three
da)'S a week, wtth students
and adults with developmental disabllrtles 1mplementmg
a comprehensiVe health and
delegated nurs1ng program
Must be a regiStered nurse
currently licensed m the
Slate of Ohto
Preferred
qualificatiOns, expenence 1n
public health nurs1ng expe rience workmg w1th children
and adults w1th developmental dtsablii!Jes Send resume
by September 16 2005 to
MCBMAOO, t310 Carleton
Street
P0
Box 307,
Syracuse 01'110 45779

Carpor t Sale! Thursday,
September 8
Lee residence Tyree Blvd , Racene
N1ce Wmter Clolh1ng &amp; Lots
of Miscellaneous
Huge yard sale to bene111
HillSide BaptiSt Bus MiniStry
Clothes, ligh t pictures muzzle loader. craft Sllpphes
computers Windows 98 6
, pentim Ill , stackable cha1rs
from school, and Poodle
Pupp1es Bake Sale Thur &amp;
Fn w1th tree coffee. lots
more 1ns1de and out 100 s
ol 1tems located ott of 33
tour lane on Co Ad 19

I·i~

IIO_ _ _
HfU WAII1I'EIJ '

lwrtght@tc.net

Do WIIA-1
I!&gt;O-

CD\i(1H

'fOM iJj' !

HoME'&gt;

MONEY
TO LoAN

~---

FOR SAUl
Newly re modeled, 3 or 4
bedrooms central a1r, full
basement. hardwood lloors,
detached garage, large covered patio. fenced back
yard, close to schools, Point
Pleasan t,
$69 500
(740)709·1382
No down payment appx
2000 sq It c/a &amp; heat 3·4
bedrooms 1n Pomeroy 740·
949-7004
R1verv1ew property 732
acre. 4 bedrooms 1 4 bath.
sLJn porch or sm1ng room ,
kitchen. living room, ut1Uty
room , garage, workshop, 3
storage bUildings Asking
$95,500 (740}446·1211 or
(740)208-7117

..
- . ·"''
----..

~

School untforms, toQdler to
adult ctoth1ng housewares,
kn1ck-knacks
468 Mam
Street , Rutland

Ir

1·800·334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood 1tems
To $480twk
Materials provided
Free 1nlorm81Jon pkg 24Hr
80 1·428-464'9

www Qlllllpoilscareetcd l&amp;g~ col'll
Acc rer:lltfld

Drivers Needed:
CDL Dnvers w11tmg to d n&gt;~e
lor local ready-mix-concrete
company Expanonce IS
preferred bu~ not necessary
Onver mLJst be w1lling to do
pre·ma1ntenance on trucks
&amp; eqLJipment yard work &amp;
other m1 scellaneous cho res
Expenence operatmg eQLJIP·
ment &amp; exira Sk!Us SLJCh as
weld1ng a plus
Call (304)937-34 10
-;;
,.~-'-----­
~ For a hm1led t1me ma lo.e 50"-6
sell1ng Avon Call (740)44 63358
'-'..:..:___ _ __ _ __
H1nng Buns Party Bam -dell/dnve·lhru/carry
out
Must be at least 19 yrs old
Pick up apphcat1on M-F a...J

AMERIC~ S NUMBER ONE
HOME BUILDER IS seekln!l
a career m1ndod organ1zed
and energehc person to sell
h1gh- t1Cket prodLJcts and
sen~~ees Perse'llerance and
strong work ethiC are our
keys to maktng $75K or
more 1n the first lull year Full
benefits 1nclud1ng matching
~OSTAL JOBS
401K
Fax con hdenllal $15 94-$22 56/hr now hlr·
resume to Sales Pos.bon at 1ng For appliCatiOn &amp; tree
(740) 446-3599
gover nment JOb 1nlo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor.
EMr pos1t1ons ava1table 1n
1-913-599 8226
24/hrs
HLJntmgto n
WV
area
emp serv
FT/PT
Start1ng pa y
5
EMT s
S8 50/hr
Contact M1ke Pa ramed iCS
Matheny at {304)526-5780 needEu:t Apply at t354
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS
or (304)526-5936

LICEN SED SOCIAL
WORKER
Ove~brook
Rehablhtahon
Center 1s now ,accephng
resiJ.CleS lor the pos1t10n of
D~recto r ol Soc1al Serv1
ces
The qual1f1ed candidate
must.t&gt;e a LSW possessmg
strong verbal and wntten
commLJnt catlon
sk1lls
MediCaid Med1care and
MDS knowledge Long term
care experience preferred
but not requ1red Ouahf1ed
cand1dates
may
selld
resumes to Charla Brown McGUire
AN
LNHA
Adm1mstrato r 333 Page
Street . Middleport OhiO
45760 EOE

'

LICENSE D SOCIAL
WORKER
Overbrook Rehab1htal10n
Center IS now accepting
resumes for 1he pos1t10n of
Duector of Soctal Sorvu::es
The qualihed candidate
must be a LSW possess1ng
strong verbal and wnuen
commun1ca110n
sk1ll s
MedJcatd Med1care &lt;llld
MDS knowledge Long term
ca re e•penence preferred
but not reqUired Quallf u~d
candidates
may
send
resumes to Charla BrownMcG we,
AN
LNHA
Admm 1stra ror 333 Pa ge
Street Middleport Ohro
45760 EOE
Looking tor a new, career?
We have just what you are
looking fori
•Up to $8/hour
• Both lull and pari t1me day
and evenmg shtft s available
•Pa1d tra1mng
holidays
vacat1ons
•FLJII benelns package
• ProfeSSional atmosphere
G1ve us a call and start your
new ca roor todayl

Hln-463-6247 ext. 2454
· www.lnfoell~n .com

AeCrfldltlng

I and scnoos 1:1746

HEIJ&gt; WA,'IThll

.______..~ 1'
OUTSIDE SUES
REPR ESE NTATIVE
The
Gallipolis
Datly
Tnbune ts accepting
resumes for a lull 11me
outs1de sales representative to JOm our sales team
and to manage an established account l1st whtle
callmg on new accounts
The sLJccessful candtdale
w111 be a diSCiplined self·
mot1ved team player that
understands the Importance of developmg
strong, mLJt LJally benef~
c1al bustness relation ships With our customers
The Ideal candidate w111
have sale expenence For
confidential
mterv1ew
please send resume and
cover letter to Gall1polis
Da1ly Tnbune Attn J1m
Freeland, 825 Th1rd Ave ,
Gallipolis, Oh1o ·45531

70

MtSCEIUJIIEOUS

I

DIRECT TV 3 room w1lh
Ttvo FAEE 145 channels
only $39 00 per month Ask
how to Qet FREE HBO,
MAX, and home enter tainmen t system Call 800-5237556 lor deta1ts
'

WAATID

To Do

Art of Color 1ntenor/e•tenor
house pamt1ng Free estimates Call (740}388·9950
Computer
Repa1r
and
Troubleshoot Web Destgn,
Networking Programmmg,
Bu11d New Systems, Restore
Windows V1rus Removal
Phon eJI 7 4 0-992 • 7903
http 1/www geoc1!1eS comlho
td amn 32934 / Emall hotdamn32934@yahoo com

Fall IS Near Let us help you
OHK
Cleamng
&amp;
Powerwashmg We II clean·
Overnrook Center IScurrent- er-up &amp; Get-A-Done Call
ly accepting applicatiOns tor 740 - 985 - 3639 / 985 a full 11me admm1strat1ve 36331740-416 1823 '
secretary Computer skills
reQLJ~ted
M1crosofl Word I Will babys11 1n my Home
and Excel expenence pre- close to School &amp; Hosp1tal
ferred
Beneltts package Referen ces
Available
avatlable Please stop by (304)675-447 1
our Q!llce and complete an
applicatiOn No phone calls - - , - , - - - - , , . , . - , please
333 Page Street lntenot /Extenor
Pamtmg
M1ddleport OH 45760 EOE and
Power
Washmg
Reasonable rates, relerRockspnngs Aehab11ttal10n ence s e •p e ner~ced Free
Center Is lOOking for ctedat· est1mates Call (740)742ed €ompass1ona1e State 201 3 or (740)645-2638
Te sted ~urs1ng Ass1Stants
Competlhve wages health Slate - Cert 111ed , L 1nk
and dental benefits, and approved childcare has
401K ava1l able
We take 1mmed 1ate openmgs lor
pnde 1n our lacthty and rest; age s 6· weeks&amp; up call
dents and need great team Shelly 304 675 2~3 lor
players to 101n us tr you more details
have these quallhcatiOns - -- - - - - - please
apply
lo Tw o-- 2 -- 0 o-- 4 -· U
Rockspnng s Aehab1htat10n Dependable
Honest
Center 36759 Rocksprings D1screle
and Excellent
Road
Pomeroy
Oh1o References
Homes and
45769 ExtendiC are Health Oft~ees
Mary (740-992Sarv~ces Inc IS an eqLJai
7414)
opportumt y employ er that
workplace
encourages
diversity MIF ON

LPN needed
full-lime,
Monday-Friday day sh1f1 no
weekend s. no hohdays
Apply at 936 St At . 160, Truck Dnvers Needed
Henderson WV based earnGa!llpolls, (740)44 6-9620
er lookmg lor e•penenced
Med1cal
Ciass A COL Dnvers
Independent
med 1 cally ~ Interested
parties
call
trained personnel needed to 1304)675-7434
complere 1nsurance exams
1n Mason County WV and
on
Galtta and Me1gs Cou lll ~s m
SAVINGS
OhiO Must be phlebotomy
~ert1 tied and nave reHable
1
transpo rtatiOn
Flexible
hours Fax resume lo 866366·1037 or e-matl resume
to hsa ounn1ngt1amOexamone com
Need respons1ble person tor
lpuse cleamng careg1Ye1 2
afternoons per week S7Jhr
Leave msg (740)446·3460

Membflr

Council tor lndepanCion1 COII9gea

110
1

-Ab

Gallipolis Career Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1-S00-214-0452

www.comlcs.com

HEL1• WAN1Hl

~

SLWlOI$

INsrnucnoN

~

September 9 and 10 at
35961 Rocksp rmgs Rd ,
TV, Bath TLJb,
Pomeroy
S1nk, Household Items , and
Moret

TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

ISO

'

no

Insurance ......... ... . ... ...... ... ...................... 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ...... ...... ........... . 660
livestock .
. ... .. .. .. ... ... . ...630
Lost and Found ............. ............... ............. . 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .
....... .... •• .. ... , .•... 350
Miscellaneous . ........ ..... ............... ... . ........ 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ............... .. 540
Mobile Home Repair. .. .. . ..... ..... . ... 860
Mob1le Homes for Rent .. ........ ..... .... ............. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale .. ..... ... ... .. .. ..... 320
Money to Loan .. ... .. .................................... 220
Motorc ycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
.... ..........740
Mus i c al Instruments .... .. .......... ......... ......... 570
Pers onals . .... .. .. . .. .. ............................. 005
Pets tor Sale ..
.. . •............ ..... 5-60
Plumbtng &amp; Heating .. . ....... l . ....... ..... ... ...... 820
Pr ofe s sional Services ................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ........... ................... 160
Real Eslale Wanted ....
. ... ..... 360
Schools Instruction ......................... 150
Seed , PlAnt &amp; Fertilizer .... . ... ........... : . .... 650
Stluations Wanted ... . ........ ............ 120
Space lor Rent ........,, .. , ...... ... .. .. ................. 460
Sporting Goods .
. .. . ... .. ............ .... 520
SUV s for Sale ............. ..... ........ .................... 720
Truck s for Sale ... ... ....... .. ........ .. .... ... 715
Upholstery ...... ......... ................... ~ -- ..... 870
Vans For Sale ........ .. ...... ............ ........ .... ... 730
Wanted to Buy .. ... .. .. . • .... •. .. .... 090
Wa nted to Buy- Farm Suppliel .. ................ 620
Wanted To Do ..
.. .. ........................ 180
Wanted to Ren1 .................. ; ..... ... ................ 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis , ... .. .. .. ....... .... 072
Yard Sai&amp;-PomeroyiMiddle . ........ ........ . .. 074
Yard Sale-pt Pleasant ... .... .. .... .......... . 076,_,

Publication

___IPI

L~•••GiiiiAiiWiiiii'Oii.lli1JS--~

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Bu•lne•• Dav• Prior To

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Yard Sale next to Me1gs and
HELP WANTFJl
Gallla
road(Roufe
7)
Huge yard sale l1rst and last Clothes(many) from 25 to
of season 9·2 thru 9·8 $1 00 Many other things An established bus1ness 1n
S1benan Husky pupp1es W11i 10544 State Route 141
Wednesday to Saturday Galltpohs IS look1ng lor one
be ready 9/8.105 Free to
h1ghly motrvated salesper(Sepl 7-10)
good home (740)388·9125 Mult1 fam1ly yard sale Sept
son with a strong work ethic
7th&amp;Sth Toddler gtrls. teen Yard sale Saturday Sept to JOin our company Are you
Wtule shortha1red fem ale boys womens clothes, toys,
10th New Haven , WVa , lookmg for full-lime work?
cat 2 yrs old spayed shOts. housewares old trunk, too
Haven
HIS
Antique Are you looktng tor a perma·
ms1de onl y only cat 1n much to list 11158 AI t 41
Furniture
Stone
Jars- nent fLJII·t1me posttiOn? Are
household (740) 446 2700
(Gage)
Churns, Plows, -Hundreds you Interested 1n unlimited
of Tools and much more 5 earnmgs potential? All
replies w111 be kepi m stnct
Noce Guns
confidence
Send your
W&gt;.NIID
resume to CLA Bo,11 569 c/o
TO BUY
Gallipolis Tnbune, PO Box
469 Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
Absolute Top Dollar US
Silver and Gold Coms, An Excellent way to earn
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Proofsets,
Gold A1ngs Pre- money The New Avon
4x4 s For Sale ... ...................... :......... :....... 725
Announcement
. .. ................. 030
1935
US
Currency, Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
Anttques •.. ••. , .... , .... .... .. ........... ..................... 530
Sollta1re D1amonds- M T S Appalachian T1re IS look1ng
Apartments for Rent .... .. ... ... .. . • . 440
Com Shop 151 Second lor a General Serv1ce
Auction ~md Flea Market.. ..... ..................080
Avenue Gallipolis 740·446· Person
Stop by our loca·
Aulo Parts &amp; Accessones . .................. .... 760
2842
t1on @ 426 V1and St Pt
Auto Repair .. ..
.. . . .... . . .... .. . ..
Pleas lor a Apphr;at1on
Au los lor Sale ....... .. .... ............................... 710
Reel-Estate Wanted -Local
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .. . ... .. ... •• 750
person lookmg tor a home to Are you IOokmg for a change
Building Supplies ... ............................. 550
buy All cash
Me1gs or 1n your nursmg? FuU -ttme or
Bus m ess " "d BUildings ... .. .... .... ... .. .. 340
Gallla No do'6bte-wide or Parl -ltme AN needed for
Bustness Oppor1umty ..... ............... ..... ...... .21 0
mOdular 740-416-3130
grow1ng
home
healt h
Bus mess Traming.. . .. .,........................... 140
agency Flextble schedLJiing,
Campers &amp; M otor HQm,s ..................... 790
l\ll'lln\11\1
competitive wages w1th ben·
Camptng Equtpment ................................... 780
"I In II I ..,
Cards of Thanks.. • . ...... .. ........ 010
ehts Call toll !roe 1-866Ch tld/Eiderly Care . . ................................. 190
368-t 100
Electri ca 1/Refrigeratlon... .. .. . .. . . ............. .... 840
AVQNI All Areasl To BLJY or
EQUipm'ent for Rent .. ... .... .. .. . ............. 480
Sell
Sh1rley Spears, 304Excavating ....... ...... .... .............. ........... :.... . 830
675- 1429
Farm Equ1pment .......... .... .............610
Farms l or Rent ........................................... 430
Cook Needed
Farms l or Sale. . . .. . ........ .... ................ 330
For lease
.... ... ... ,.... ..... .............. 490
LEARN
6 Hours per day, MondayFor Sale .. .... ............................................... 585
Fnday day Shift Only no
TO
For Sale or Trade
.. ...... ... ................. 590
ewmngs or weekends Pa1d
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .......... ........................... 580
DRIVE
benef1ts Include vacation
Furntshed Rooms ,.......................... .. ...450
std(
&amp;
holiday
pay
General Hauli ng ... .... ...............................850
Giveaway. ...... ...... .. .. .. ..... ....................... ... 040
EKpenence helpful or we Wi ll
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
' FUlL t i .AECLASSES
Happy Ads . .
. ... , .... ........... ... .....050
tra1n you Apply 1n person lo
' COCTRAINING
Hay a Grain ............... .. ... ......................... ... 640
ALJth RICe or ca ll (304)675·
• 1' 1'-IANCING AV-"ILABLE
Help Wanted .
... .... .. .. . \ ........... . .. 110
• JOB PLACEMENT
2369 Mason County *etlan
' E NAOLL ING NON
Home Improvements~. ... .............................810
Group Inc (Pt Pleasant
Homes for Sale.... ................................. 310
Semor Center) 101 2nd
Household Goods
......................... .. 510
Street, Pt Pleasant WV
ALLIANCE
Houses for Rent ............... ................... ....... 410
EOE,MIFA/A
In Memoriam ..
. ... •.. .. ... •.. .... . 020
TRACTOR TRAI LE R

Several k1tte ns longha1red
vanous colors 4 mo old
(740)446·2700

All Display: 12 Noon ::Z

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A K11yword • lndudl! Complete
De5criptlon • Include A. Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Adt Should Run 1 D•v•

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

LosTFOVNANDn

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

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1•888·582·3345
1{1\11-.1\11

fliD

HOMI~

mRSALE
11 2 Pleasant Street 3
Bedroom 1 1/2 Baths
Fam11y Room. t:lln1ng Room
Full Basement, Storage
Bldg, Garage, New Central
Atr Cond, New W1ndows
(304)675-4034

oNOTICI•
HiO VALLEY PUBLISH

NG CO recomm ends tha
u do buSmess w1tn peo
le you know and NOT 1
end money through th
all unt1l you have 11'1vesh
ated !he o1ter1n

c-..

-

12x65 3BR mob1le home,
$3,200 OBO (740)379-2486
or (740)379-2923

5 Homes under $10 000
W11t deliver. (740)385-7671

99 Skyl!ne DoLJblewlde, 3bf,
2ba 1 85 acre
Whitten
f\ldge area, Formal LiYtng
Room &amp; Dtmng Room Eat in
Kitchen &amp; Den w/Fireplace
and
Atnum
Wtndows
Cedar
St Beautiful Home MUST SELL
t 40 1
Meadowbrook
Add
3 $65,000 (304)550·6368
Bedroom. 1 112 Bath,Corner
lot new Roof, move-tn con· CLEAN SWEEP SALE: Lot
d1110n , new Carpet and model clearance All remainFloonng, Storage Bwld1ng, Ing 2005 s must go to make
Fenced m Back Yard room tor new homes under
(304)773·5254 0&lt; (3041593· constructiOn SAVE! SAVEl
SAVE' OAKWOOD HOMES,
4135
GALLIPOLIS Call (740)446·
3B A- 2 Bath home 2 lg out- 3093
buildings on 2 acres Call
a!tor 6 OOpm {740)446- Great Used 1994 14x70, 3
9759
Bedroom, 2 Bath lnciLJdeS
heat pllmp Call (746)385·
4yrs old, 3br, 2ba wtth l1re- 2434
place on 1 5 acres 1n coun
try $89 900 (740)709-1166 New 3 BR Home Only
Attention!
Local company olfenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home 1nstead of rent1ng
• 100% fmanctng
• Less than perfect cred11
accepted
• Payment could be lhe
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators

$1 89/mo Includes ale, delivery and set up (740)3854367
---------Nice, Used 14• 64 · 2
Bedroom Only $4995 Call
(740 )3BS-06SB
ne ere.
1e ame
BA, 2BA LA Krtchen
eck&amp;BLJIId1ngs, Atr See a
76 Oshel Ad

(740)367-0000

STATE ROUTE 554, BIDBt-level hoLJs~ 4bdrm, 3bth WELL: New 4 bedroom, 2
LA FA, kitChen DR. w1th 9 bath manLJiactured home
acres large pallo &amp; deck tn Features llvlnQ room , femlly
coun try •
$125,000 room w1th fireplace and
"BONUS" room Corner lot
(740)742-3142
A.bo'lle groLJnd pool with pool
house Ready for move-tn.
PRICED
UNDER
APPAAISALII
(740)446 3218
All reel eatat. adv«Uslng

In this MW P!llllr It
subject to the F~
Fair Housing Aei of 1H8
which mikes It Illegal io
advertiM " any
preference, llmlt.Uon or
dtlcrlmlnMion bued on
raee, eOior, ,..lgion. HK
famlll•l 1t11tu1 or nation.!
origin, or any lnt•ntion to
m.ke In)' such
prefwrwnce, llmtbitton or
dlacrimlnatlon "

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
ldvltrtlsement. for rMI
EstabhsRed Busmess for
sate by Owner Oebb1e s
Flowers N-More 1722 2nd
.Street Mason V'N across
from C1ty Nahonal Bafl k
S1ncere buyers only Contact
(304)773-5503 before Spm
after ~ call (304)882 3279
priCe Nego11able

"

Ht.ale which Ill In
violation ot the l.w. Our

rndert IN her-eby
informed thai all

ctw.lllnga advartlaed In
thla new.pa.f*.,.
•vella~ on .n equ.l
opportunlty bHu

THEISS ROAD, VINTON:
Brand new 3 bedroom, 2
bath manulactured home
Comptetely set and ready
lor move-In Features liVIng
room. famtly room and
beaLJ!Iful sky hi kitchen
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!'
Call (740)446-3570
Used 3br Cameron $2 ,500

must be mowd (304)675-

r
7783

2 65 acres 3,100 sq ff
barn. city water, el&amp;etriC, .
septiC. aty schools 2 miles
so~h of Gallipolis on A1
2t8 Pnme locatiOn, won't
last
sss.ooo senous
tnqUines only
(740)441 -

1333

r

s(

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments m Middleport
From $295·$444 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housmg
OpportLJmtles
Modern 1 bedroom apt
Homes
from
$7 000 $265 month Includes water,
Foreclosures, VA HUD For $200 depos1t No pets
listi ngs 800·391·5228 e~~:t (740)446-3617
1709
Mod'ern 11 bedroom apt
House lor Rent PI Pleasant (740)446·0390
$375 (304)675· 5540 or
(304)675-4024
ask lor New 2BA apts In town All
Nancy Homestead Realty electnc water/sewer/tra sh
mcluded $525 rent plus
BroKer
deposit No pets (740)441 ·
House for Rent In p01 nt 1184
Pleasant (304)675-6224
-"--------New b1 ~ 2 bedroom apt
Hou~esforrentlf410 3 BA· Pnvate location close to
1 bath $400 ren t $400 dep hospital
WaterJsewer
154 Second No pets mcluded No pets DepoSit
(740)446-4949
requ1red
5695/monlh
SpaCIOUS 3BA 2BA, 0/R (740)441·1164
15x22 LA. heatpump, 20 Pleasant V~ll9y Apar1ment
mm
to
Galhpolis/A1o Are now takmg App1tcat1ons
Grande, no smokmg no lor 2B A , 3BR &amp; 4BR
Indoor
pets
$500fmo Apphcat1ons are taken
mciLJdes water (740)379- Monday thru Friday hom
9465
9 00 A M -4 PM Off1ce 1s
Located at 11 51 Evergreen
....
Dnve Po1 nt Pl easant, wv
.._
rv .n.u11
• Phone No IS (304)675 5806 E HO
2 Bedroom mob1le home m
Townh ouse
Racine
$355 00 Month Tara
Apartments, Very Spac1ous,
$355 00 depoSit
1 year
2 Bedrooms. CIA 1 1f2
lease
No pets No calls
Bath . Adult Pool &amp; Baby
anor 9PM 740-992·5039
Pool, PallO, Start $3B5/Mo
2BA Green school d1stncl, No Pets, Lease Plus
no pets J=lelerence &amp; dep SecLJnty Depos!l ReqUired,
$325 (740)367-0632
~(7_;4.:.;0)C:.36::.;7_;·7_;0B.:.;6:.;__ _~

I

M'!'~RD~o~

Rr.u. Fsr..n:
WANim

I Buy HomM· Local person
buys homes Confidential,
Qutclo; cash .,Jim, 74().9926300 No calls affer 9

.. ..

Wa sher $125, Dryer $125,
electric range 5125, refrlger·
ator s 1so, chest freezer
Whirlpool
165 ,
washer/dryer set $250
couch 5125 rocke r recliner
$75, loveseat $50, table &amp;
chairs $125 table &amp; chairs
$40
lamps $10 each

s

r

~~--------,
LIVESIOCK
•~••••••••-"'
1Ei Charl01s Cows, 1 Reg
Chariots BLJII 740-742-2274
or 74D-742·3065

41800 SR #7

OUTSJDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

Tupper~ Plains, OH

~-

'

j

bANctBURKE 740-698-6809

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPPH4

·HARMON
LAWN CARE

JONES'

L1censed m Ohro and WV

r

Buy or sell
R1venne
AntlqLJes. 1124 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E Pomerpy 740992; 2526 .Russ Moore
iow;:n;re:;;r~------.,

r

ML-l&lt;ELANEOUS

r

r

FOR IbM

I and 2 bedroom apartments lurn1shed and unfurnished. secunty deposit
reqLJired, no pets. 740-9922218

{M~•gs. Ath~ns. Gaill11, M~ &amp; Jackson Counties)

Occupational Therapist
Full·Time, Part· Time
Monday thru Friday Schedule
No Holidays, No Weekends
Competiti•e PayiBenefito;
Mileage Reimbursement
Excellent Work En•ironment
.Pofessional Autonomy

f\ ~cnq

AKC M1n1a!U1e Pmscher
Ta1l s Dock Dew Otaws
ReMy
September 1st
(74())388-8788

~·

The W t!&gt;emJn
lnl:
45 1 Scw nU &lt;\vcllUI.'
.-nrRar.rf'O"
PO BuK 159
,:.:.:,.~:::
Gal \1pol1 q OH -l- 'ii o~l - tn'il) _ ....
Ph 800· ~9 2-1~ 1 )1.) 1•r 7-l\1-44\l - ~ Il-l I

•

WW"- \\.

IS Cll\,lll,L~CJI ~Y ~ \ 1111

For more mfom1at10n call ·

Phone

oeo

FIND AJOB .
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

I

'

V1 nyl Double Hung

$219

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOxiO,
l0x15, l0x20,
10x30

Sales • Parts • Serv1ce

INSTALLED
to 101 Ul

2150 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis, OH 45631

OphonaiiJpgrades Available
Argon Gas &amp;Heal M~r~or

740-446-9777

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800·291·5600 74()..992·4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

OiAOt . . ,
KlngKutter

(t. FAAMHANO ~NEW IOEA

K&amp;K EXCAVATING
Dozer - Skidsteer
Mini Excavator Work
Years Experience
David Lewis

Call
Danny 740-590-3702

740-992-6971

or

r

V.w:;
FoR SALE

40

r 4~~~~

Hupp

Gene ArnL&lt;iiOwner•Weekly Trash Servtcc
4 yrs of Rehable Scrvtcc
(Kl"cp Your Mont} loc ul)

G&amp;R SANITATION
33,50 1 Bade} Run Rd
Pomcro . O H

I"

HOlliE

IMPRoVEMINI'S

r

IMPORTS
Athens

" Room olddltlona Ill

SElf STORAGE

ExCAVAllNG
Dltchlng/llWnchlna

Service
4•4 Commerctal D1tch-W1tch
Wrth SUI·Way blade D'QQIOQ
Depth up Ia s·a· Gas .
water. Cable. ElectriC &amp;
Dratn Lill6S (304)576-9005

GAI.LII'OI.!S

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
992-3194
or 992-6635

tl.\ 1Srt'Ond AuBIIf
1

ol.l&gt;no lr&lt;., P\:.: Nfi ~
~ot11' l oo
~ '1.1- ll'fll

n,,.,,

(1401-m-1619

We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv o36n

"Middleport's only

IAC KSih~

ATHENS

lJl Huroo Slrl'l'l

2r( \Ia~ I n.-.. '\lm.i

ll,iu l\•o ~ l'\...-' :.:

!~t 'l " ~~

~ lut 'tiN liiii'I!~~'P'l

(1401 !116- 14.11)

O.•t lhol~

'''lf'm

\,;!,-_,, ;, 'IW.UI""

J 1~ r l'Jl.JS7 1

Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTIUCnOII
• New Homes

Pomeroy, Ohio

,17·17·17 • S275ton (bulk only)
12%Tnumph 12% sweel horse feed

S5 50150 lb bag
Cob Meal w~h T.M. Sail

56.501100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

140-992-1611

Shade River AG Service, Inc
1:'iSJ7 St

Stop &amp; Compare

• FOR All YOUR

got you

48%Soybean Meal #13.25/100 lb bag

• Garages
• Complele'
Remodeling

lance

Cornerstone
Eleclrlcal
Service

DiaD&lt; \lc\'c)
\H l\l \

Remodetlng

• New Garege•
• Eleetrlcll &amp; Plumbing
• R~Hng &amp; Gult•r•
• VInyl SicHng &amp; P•lntlng
• Patio and Porch Deckl

25 Years Local Ex

DILES HEARING CENTER

MANlEY'S

10x10x10x20

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER,
1
SERVICE

Jayco
Campe r.
2004
29FBS, Excellent Cond1t10n.
Super Shde-out , ducted
ACIHeal (304)675-1938
I~

Rocky "RJ"

~

Op&lt;rator 740-992-3174

1999 Star Craft Soft Side
13FT, Truck Camper Sell
Contained. Furnace Sleeps
4 Clean, Good COnditiOn
$5,000 (304)675-4082

"I I{\

See

Bob 740-843-5437 ~~

2002 K1a Sedona Van.
50,020 mtles, all Power,
Loaded new T1res Quad
Seals SLJnroof CO, H1tch,
rema1mng Warranty, mce.
$12,900 OBO (304)675·
5253

1994 Chevy Lumma van 7
sealer, runs good , looks
good Ask1ng $1 tOO OBO
(740)44Hl488

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
ES WMe, Tan leather, quad
seats, rear AJC New tires
56100
Full blooded Prt Bull pup- loaded.
pies $75 each (740)388· (740)441 -Q I35
8901 or (740)388-8596
1999 Chevrolet VentLJre
Toy Rat Terner puppes 12 E111ended Van, blue 82 .000
weeks female CK:C. shOts m1les great condftion. one
&amp; wormed
$75 ea~_; h owner sa 500 (740)36 7·
7435 (740)339·3955
(740)251; -3168

(Commern-31 .tnd fh• 51dent 1&lt;ll)

Mowmg, Tr1mm1ng, Tree Tn mm1ng, At&gt;rat1 on Fertili zatiOn,
Spraymg of fence lines, lea1 Removal, as well as small
landscap1ng to bs such as plantmg an d mulch1ng
FREE ESTIMATES • (iUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

1-

~.r.~s-·FOR·TR·UCKS·SA!Jl
__...l r M~uwO\~ I

Cocker Spamel pupp1es
Call (74())388.()401

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Storage

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Uncond1tiol'\al llfet1me gua r·
1997
Plymouth
Grand antee Local references fu r·
AKC reg 1stered 10 weeks
Voyager White 2 sl drs n1shed Esta blished 1975
old Female
Pomeraman
good cond . runs good Call 24 Hrs {740) 446puppy. Shots. Wormed
$.1,500 OBO Call (740~41· 087.0 Rogers Basement
Parltally House framed
0712
Waterproofing
$300 (304)882-3236

\

(Com merc 1 ~l .tn d Re s ld l'ntl~ t)

Mobile Homes Houses Log Homes, Decks Dr1vt&gt;ways,
Sid ew alks, Gas Stat1on Aw nm g~ Degreasmg of
Equ1pment, Boats, Campers Tractor Tra ders
Dump TrU cks pi!1 1f1 111lg or sta1 nmg of \ OUr deck
or log home, Alummum bnghten111 g
Spe ctcd rates to. Tw ckmg and Dump TrLJ Cklllg Compan1e)

WINDOW SUPER SALE

R1

7\

IlECfRICAL NEEDS,
• MOBILE HOME

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY

• ROOF • PAINT
Omo LICEIISE # 38244

740·3~7-0544

740·367-0536
P~ adopt from

the

Meogs CoiJity DfMot.lld
and ~~u triend or hfe

NORTHUP DODGE

7&gt;10·992·3

252 Upper River Road • Gallipc;-lis
740-446·0842 • 949·1155 Evenmgs

· Norw'9Jon elkhalllll

• Yel0w ~bs &amp;r&lt;1ne ..r ·
mtxes

•6&lt;rrriJn shepard &amp;colloe

ADVERTISE

mtxes

· Wolker coon hot.lld
• !(oqle mox!S

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

IMm C\lT1: P\I!'PIES!

AKC Reg Beagles, Lelll()(l
1995 Ntssan Ouest Van .
Patch, $150 7 wks old $2,500 080 (304)576-2934
(30o4)576-2241

Submit Resume 10
Pleasant Va lley Home Heallh
lOll V1and S1reet
·Pt. Pleasanl , WV 25550
Or fax 10 304-675· 7401

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517-6881
POWER WASHING

Blgh and Dry

Ctass1c, w/match1ng Tra1ler
2002 Olds Alero S1lver, 4
&amp; many E•tras $12,900
door, VS CD, all power, arr, OBO (304)458·1666
remote entry. 72,000 m11es
$5 BOO (740)388·0332
1994 Honda Shadow 1100
95 Cad1llac Eldorado ETC, Drag p1pes extra chrome
12,500 miles {740)441 Northstar low m1les
99 Suburban 2WD. LS 1501 after 5 00
package {740)446-1810

r

Owner Jeff St ethem

msured wllh Slate Au10 Fmu out how
much your sav mg' can be.

t 990 Honda 250 XA Dirt
B1ke
All ongmal
Runs
great Ask1ng $950 0Q 740·
2001 Neon 'automatiC a1r
416·541 0
cond1t1onmg, 82,000 miles,
$2,500 OBO (740)2561652
1992 Harley Davidson Ullra

..,
1997 Ford Ranger XLT
P•ckup,
Steps1de
bed .
89,000 Miles. AJC, ~
Player 5 speed manual
transmiSSIOn, Very good
COndition $3 200 (304)6751849 after 4 30

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

It's lhe Aulo/Home D1scount wo lh speual
reduced ra1es 1f hoth car and home dre

2002 HO Sofla1l Deuce
many Blltras 1nclud1ng w1de
For Sale 1991 Dodge t1re, chrome Python P1pes
Dynasty $1 ,400 or . best 7 000 miles (740)446-2815
offer (740)388 9149

10 Week old AKC Cocker
Span1el Pupp1as
but1
blpck
bufl&amp;wh!te
whlle&amp;black.
buff&amp;black
Mother and Father on prop·
arty
Sh ots
wormed
declawed
$350 00 F1rm
740-992-7371

Bucket Truck

Owner Operated

Let me do 1t for youl

t 998 HondiJ 300EX looks
good. runs great no trade
$1,300, (74())992·5617

Pleasant Valley Home Health
Positions Available

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

State Auto offers
soml'thing special

t 991 Bu•ck Skyhawk 4dr
4cyl aLJto, a1r. lilt. 97k new
t1restbrakes
$1 ,050
(740)446-4999 or (740)4466352
1993 Grand Pnx SE White
2DR, Leather Seats runs
good body needs work
$300 (304)882-3236

Tree Service

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rider-Push-Weedeating

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Goons

45783

Home • 'Autq • life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

DeSigned to Beat Your Home
and Your Hoi Wa1er'

I

Mobile · home saes 1n Gallipolis Retail/Office build·
BLIIIDING
SUPPUE'i
Country Homes, Shade tng beautiful coLJntry setting, 4,d00 sq fl {hn1shed),
$130 mo (74())385-4019
heat and water 1ncluded S Block, bnck sewer ptpes,
Trailer lot. 2 5 miles out negottable . (740)367-7435
' wmOOws, lintels, etc ClaLJde
Ne1gliborl)o0d Ad
Call
W1nters R1o Grande, OH
(740)446· 1685
Call 740-245-5 121 .
APAIIThiEI\'IS

r

and Financial Services

$500 DemonstratiOn Bonus-

Twin A1&gt;1ers Tower IS acceptMF.R&lt;J-IANDL~E
1ng applications for waitmg
hst lor HLJd-subslzed. 1- br,
JET
apartment call 675· 6679
AERATION MOTORS
1996 Chevy Beretta, V6,
EHO
Repa1red, New &amp; Aebu1ltln aLJtomallc, A!C rLJns loo~s
Stock Cal l Ron Evans, 1- good, good gas mileage
SPACE
Bidwell area , remodeled ,
800•537.9528
$2,200 OBO (740)441·
FOR Rmr
clean, 2BR 1BA, $375/mo ,
0914
deposll reqwed no pets
(304)576-4037 after 8pm
Downtown Othce Space· 5 JLJkt commercial sewing 1996 Ford Taurus au10. a1r
For re nt m New Haven. room suite $650/mo, 1 room machme L1ke ne w mns power seats, powers Win
neWly remodeled 3 bedroom off1ce- $225/mo 2 room greal 5400 (740)446·3438 dows, power door locks
$1,650 (740)446·1104
mobile hOme, ale , tully fur· su1te $250/mo Secur!tY
n1shed, 1ncludes diShwash- depoSit reqwed You pay KlaLJs 33 Bulb Tanmng Bed
2000 K1a Seph1a 4 dOOr,
er, w/d, miCro &amp; TV, cable ut1httes All spaces very mce $700 00 740-247-2727
Call
(740)446
-3644
Elevator
awom a!IC, 27mpg, 72,000
hookups 1n all bedrooms. all
NEW AND USED STEEL
miles good cond1hon $800
uttlll1es Palt;lmcludmg cable. lor apPointment
Steel Beams, Ptpe Rebar
In brakes, filters, tires belts
$115 each per week lor 2 For Lease Otf•co or relall For
Concrete
Angle.
renters $100 each per week spaces tn very good cond1· Channel , Flat Bar, Steel etc luneup W1ll lake trade
Askmg
$4300
OBO
lor 3 rent ers (330)336-5708 t1on Downtown Gallipolis Grating
For
Dra1ns.
(740)441 9378
or 330-464·9424
Drrveways
&amp;
Walkways
L&amp;L
Approx 1600 sq fl each 1
Immaculate 2BR 2 bath , or 2 baths Lease pnde Scrap Metals Open Monday 2001 Chevy Cavalier 2 dr 4
mob•le home lor rent 1n the negot1able to encourage Tuesday Wednesday &amp; cyl
5/sp
great mpg,
bus1ness
Call Fnday, 8am-4 30pm Closed 24,600K
country
$400/month new
black, clean
Satmday
&amp; $3 950 (740)379-2748
(614)595-7773 or (800)798 (740}446·4425 or {740)446- ThLJrsday,
SLJnday (740)44&amp;--7300
3936
4686

Beautllul river vtew m
Kanauga Ideal for 1-2 peopie
No pels
ploase
Applications being taken
Call (740)441 -018 1

Rocky Hupp Insurance

I \1\\ ·' 1, \ fl lll \ I I IIII

Skaggs Appliances 76 Vme Let us demo a John Deere Z
S~IJi17.
40..;).44~6·7,;.39,.;8_ __, Trak or X Series AII·Whoel
Steer on your lawn and
SPOKllNG
rece1ve an e•tra $500 oft our
••••llliiiii;;,•_.l already discounted pnces
Llm1ted
t1me
offer
'Browning Sweet 16 $650,
Carmichael Equipment' Inc
Aemmgton 11 -48 16ga
$250, Remington 870 12ga
Wlngmaster 2brls $350 2·
Remmgtol"l 1100 t 2ga
Franchi 4BAL 12ga $450,
S&amp;W 19 357 s~brl $400,
S&amp;W 29 44mag 6"brt $425,
Romantan Al(47 75rd drum 1965 MUitlng F11tback
4-30rd chp $400 Davts Rangoon Red ederlor, black
38spl derrmger chrome mtenor 6 cycle. 3 speed, air
conditiOning rad1o good
$140 (740)446·2905
driver Rust free AZ car
~emmgton R1fle. MOdel 700, Pnce $t9,000 00
Hill's
Cal • 223. Butt Barrell , Bt· ·Automotive Class1c Car
Pod Scope , Lammated Restorati on &amp; Parts, Inc.
Stock, like new $500 F1rm 29670
Bashan
Road,
(304 )675-2902
Racme, Oh1o 45771 Phone
740-949·2217
Webs1te
www hlllsresto com

304-675-7400 •

Foreclosure 7BR SBA onty For Rent Trailer Lot. $75 8
S18 000 For listings call month (304}675-4874
800·39 1-5228 ext F254
At 2 N 3br Full SIZe
Basement au Bnc1c 1 Car
Garage
3 br 2 ba Sm gle Car
Garage Camp Conley Area
(3041895-3129

OOWN PAYMENT• programs for you to buy your
home Instead ol rentmg
• I 00% f1n anc1ng
• Less than perfect cred1t
aecepted
• Payment could be the
eame as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(74())36 ].()000

r:

Hauling
Service

Repairs
Parts

Att~ntlonl
Local company offenng "NO

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifledads
(.~
Jm
· Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large·

Display Ads

Warehou11e

740-742-2455

3br, HOLJSe Ac $4 00 a
month plus Utilities, Ref No
Pets (304 )675 _4874

Oecultir~

I \I&lt;' I ' ' 11'111 ._
A II \I.., IIH h

Equipment
LLC.

3 ~A . 1 5BA, 2story remodeled hoLJse Excellent toea·
lion In town Close to
schools No pets (740)446·
1162

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992·2157

Two litters Beagle Pups,
some reg1stered, some not,
some lemon&amp;Whlta Good
Huntmg Bloodline (304)675·
3508

·Morris ·

heat, $375 a Month $400
deposit 740·698-6783

3Regtster

.

20&lt;

3 Br hoLJse 1n Pomeroy, gas

Sentinel

Appliance

I'EI

FOR SAIL

In , Henderson. WV
Pre·
owned appticanes startmg at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty
we do ser\IICO won.. on all 0'4 Fln~~nclng IDI' liP to 36
Make and Models (304)675· months on John' Deere
Anything Hauled
7999
Compact and 5000 Senes
• Metal,
Tractors wtth John Deere
APART_ , Ktrby G6 2000 sweepe~ Credn approval Check them
BEAUTIFUL
• Appliances,
BUDGET ~uns great, all attachments out• Carm1chael Equ1pment
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT JACKSON tnclud1ng shampoo attach- Inc {740)446-2412
• Cars,
ment, $200 . (740)367-7630
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
• Garage Metal
John Deere 10 f1 No T1l Dr1ll
Dnve from $344 to $442 Mollohan Carpet
Clark
lor
Rent
Carmichael
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call Chapel Road, Porter, Oh10
Call
' Equal (740)446-7444 1·877-830· Equipment (740}446·2412
740 446-2568
Housmg Opportunity
740-742-2595
9162 Free Estimates, Easy
John O.ere Commercial ':::;:::;:::::~
f1nanclng,
90
days
same
es
Clean 2 bedroom apt stove,
Workalte
Product• r
relnd , water, trash Included cash Vtsa/ Master Card Compacl Exca,alors/Skld
Rent 5300 depoSit requtred Dnve· a- 11n1e save slot
Steersffractor
Loader
(740)446·7620, (740)44 1· Thompsons Appliance &amp; Backhoe on stock Check ou1
:98
::7
:.:2::__ _ _ _ _----:o Aepalr-675·7388 For sale, our rental rates Great
ava1lable
•
automa tiC flnancmg
CONVENIENTLY LOCAf- re-conditiOned
Equopmanl
Inc
Carmichael
washers &amp; dryers. re fngeraEO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
•
gas and electnc 17401446·2412
Townhouse
apartments, tors
andior small houses FOR ranges, a1r condrtiOners and
POLE BUILDINGS
•
AENT Call (740)441- II t 1 wnnger washers W1tl do ·Any Slyle
·Any
Size
•
Service .
for applfCaiiOn &amp; 1nformat1on repe1rs on major bmnds 1n
;Custom Bum to 111 your
shop or Ell your home
for Farm Eqmpmentneeds
Furmsh&amp;d upstairs 3 rooms
'FREE
EStimates
Used
Furniture
&amp;
Applian
ce
&amp; bath. Clean. ref &amp; dep
Trucks Dozers
740-596-2909
requ1red No pets (740)446· Store, · 130 BLJiavllle Ptke
•
SpCCJalty
• Clutches
1519
- - ' - - - - - - - - Gallipoli s OH 40% off all Your PreSlar Tra1ler Dealer
• Brakes
and 2 bed· k1ng manress sets Hrs 11·3 C
h
E
Graclou. llvlnn
arm1c ae 1 qu1pment 1nc.
• 1
M
7 4 0 1 64 7 82
____ _ _ (740)446·2412
room apartments at Village _·____~

2BA, 1BA, 541 Roush Lane.
Cheshtre , Ohio No pets
S450/mo $450 deposit
(740)367-7412 leave mas
sage

(;alli.ll County OH

Goolli

1BR WID hookup, etectnc or
gas , no pets ' $290 plus
deposit
(740)339-0362
(740)441 1184
--- ' - - -- - - 2 bedroom 1 bath, water
pa1d $350 month $350
secunty
depos11
Call
(740)446·3481
'--'--'---'-- - -- 3 &amp; 2 BA apts Close to
Hotzer
hospttal
WI D
hookups,
water/sewer
mcluded
Startmg
at
$450/mont h,
depos1t
reqwed No pets ('740)441 1184

FOR IbM

CLASSIFIE

r:1

r~:~l r.r~~a~H~OU&gt;mOUJ..;_.;;;..=-;,

I \. I ' I ..

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• Referen ces
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"

Cali Garr Stanley
740· 741-2293
• Leave a message

Hill's Self
Storage

BAUI\1 LUMBER

29670 Ba snan Road

Scorpion Tractors

Ra c1 ne O h10
45771

" Tal.:ur:.: Tilt' SllltJ.: OUI Of
1/ard nur k.1''

740·949-2217

•

;\1Jd '-; 1/c'-1 \\ hed l lll\c" T i aClU!

S~S'x10'

\ \ llh

10 10'x30'

7( 1h p

K 11 b ot~l

En g llll'"

BAUM LUMBER

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00PM
, '4

J tlh 11 &amp;

~--.~

pa

St. Kt. 12-1

Chc~tl' r

9H5-330
., 1

�•
,

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

• www.mydallysentinel.com

Page 86 .• The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, September 6, 2005
-ALLEY OOP·-

ALLEY ,OQPBRIDGE
ACROSS

1 Vague
5 " Nova"
networl&lt;
8 Bill,
for short
11 Nautical
position
12 Clumsy
vessels
14 Rain slicker
15 Pitch
16 Means
ot shipping
17 Spring mo.
18 Toolh type
20...Fain- traces
22 Famous
cathedral
town
23 . Slapstick
missiles
24 Cattle
movers
27 Finger-paint
29 Craw's call
30 Some.lottery

I
n~t-05-1'-l

•

8 3

•

Q 10 5 3
9 i 6

•
"-KJ 74'
East
w~st
. K t 07654 • J • g

•

J

.

•

9' 7 4

t Ak854

tQJ!0 32

•

,..(j !f 2

8

.
,3.. ,••.

South · ·
• AQ2
. AKR62

-

,... ,\QIO~, :)

Dealer: South

Vulnerable: Eust-Wt' st
West

Pass

North

Pass

Opening lead:

BARNEY
rD--ID_0_A~B~R~IcN~G~~~I~T~H~O~U~G~H~T~IT~W~U~Z~ 'j r,D~A~NG~-=-~l~H~A~T~E~~==--::~~~~=l
YORE TURN, SO I
BRUNG .TH'

SAMMICI&gt;IES

i
!

WHEN TH' FISH
EAT BETTER'N US

~7--,.--r--, '·:,.-,-.-,I l

I

Il
........:....;;......, !
THE BORN LOSER
"'l

r,

lo.N 01'\IC.r-.L

1'\i ;:_r-.,GC 7

1LLUSION 7

P'

R.l G\-\\ ! ~1\\D 1&gt;0 'IOU K!--lO'N
WI-\~T IT':&gt; C.I&gt;-LLEI) WI-IE.i'-1
~O t'&lt;\WN.IC. TRit.S TO
IN "' t'&lt;\ilt:t&gt;-GE. 7

I

·r HE.

Kl"\l .L 'r

C:JC.l

SNIM

[~"'"

WORI&lt;ERS THAT MN:..E

IH£- BUIL DERC:,
TH E_
i'LUM.g(:{.;.-:,1 THE TRU CK

. OR.IVt:RS ! ...
~--------,1/(:

"\

PEANUTS

SUNSHINE CLUB
II*- Sl'flJAT\0/0 IS.
Gcrf/IJG RtDI(LJli)US.

E'L!JN
\.

.

C 200S Hi&gt;w• Scr.,_;er Dis! by

!'4E~.

'

lr&gt;e

GARFIELD
CA'f5!

1'AKEI
1'P.Kt:l
1'AKEI

G-IVE!
GIV61
G-IVE I

..1 _[_
GRIZZWELLS

EAR

,&gt; 1•--[J
·,)
'i,....~
I
·'

'
-... 'llirllxlilr:

SCORPIO (Oct 2 4 -Nov. 22) OIU
contacts arc likely to pr ove to b e more .
fortunate tor you todny concerning
yoUr private afta1rs than would newer
acquaintances, so dofi'l be so rondy
to jump ship. Stick wilh good pals .
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23-Dec 2 1) - II
rnay not be the wisest thing to rock
the boat iuday i11 situations that are
presently running smooth l y. Lady
Luck will repeat her favors 1n tt10se
stondy son~ you've- already charted
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan , 19) This could bo a significa nt dny fo r you
where your arrnitions and goa ls are
con"cerned . If you have something in
th8 mill , try 1'0 solidity 11 loctay whil e
Dame Fortune is sm1ling on y ou .
AQUARIUS (Jan &lt;W· Fel&gt;. 19) - Fresh opportun iti es '11{111 be revcalt~d to
you today if you broadan your per·
spective a bit. Take a new long-range
view o f situations instead ul co nt;en·
truting only on the immedia te.
PISCES (Feb. 20 ·M a l cl1 20) Signals from a sit uation tl1a1 hns
causod you groot concern previously
may rear Its head again today_
However, now you will be able to tu rn
those negative indicAtors into sorne·
thing positivE?
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - Today
coUld mark a turn ing poin t in con d1·
lions that have an .e ffect upon yo ur
perSonal relat1on.sh1ps w1th Others .
Tho tide is shifting in a tavorallle
direction and bnng y ou loy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Don 't
hesitate today to step 1n and assumo
a m ore direct 'contrd ovor the man·
agement of a ma" e·;.· relat1ng t o your
.work or career By doing so; you'll
illfure your chanceS: for a good o ut·
c&amp;ne.
GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20) It's Ia
your advantage' to think about e 11larg·
ing your range ol socia l contac t s and
in1ere sts. Then~·s no baUer tirno than
to day to seek out new groups and/or
actlvllies in which to participate.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) - Thing~
around the house that are in nocd ol
replacement o r ropan should bA
attended to as soo n as possibtA.
Tho~e berge1ns tor wh1eh you would
like to get can be toLJnd today
L t:O (July 2:::1- Aug . j22) - A chu ngA 11~
your mind set and!o1 consc oous11es'f
Is sl irnng wi thin you toc.Jay Which
could alfecl your relal1on ships with
thos e aroun(l you , but U wilt be to you r
liking and set you more a.t ease .

HINT ..

... YOU

55
56

green
57 Switch
position.•
58 Eur. a~rhne
59 Burned up
the road

•

19 Paclno and 36 Virgil he"\

Unser
'21 R6blns'
beaks
24 t11tarast
Sarcasllo
am I.
retort .
25 (&gt;o, teaml
Pickling
26 To be
ingredient
In debt
None
27 - mater
Gave
28 Jacques·
a holler
. pal
Turn aside
3D Drag along
Lingerie
31 P.O.
buy
·
service
Comedy
32 Dues payer,
routine
tor short
Reflection
33 Voice
Scruffs
an opinion
TV adjuncts
35 Grass
(&gt;oof ·
fungus
(2 wds.l

'2

3
4

payouts

5

6

34 Word

39 Root
,.
vegetable'
40 Kayaks' kin

41 Warning

devtee

Q

~

•

42 Urgent "
requests ;
43 Indiana -..
44 Floor
•
for good .•

45 Hy.ys.

47

•·

Ambush ·:

South

48 Reductio~&gt;
51 Dlstlncl ':
period
"
53 River
!

2 NT

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Of CO~\o\ ...\I.A\.H
~';1.,\\b, ..

~ :\o·/

~~~~

(\~

~·

JC~fp

Llff EY.CITING ••• ASIC
AIOIJT OIJfl VAfliAIL~ flAn.
INTfllfST ·ONLY M0/lTGA6fS.

'
_,

Today·s clue: Pequals H

LSG ' USOBP5M

NW

AIBNRXSGSIBS. "

F.

DOYUSIB5

P'l\ r-IE.W NR FRE~t.N.EIZ-1 \:S"'1

POZS

GP5AU

lNG

THE BORN LOSER

K ·L

· Uf.I~CE:\'-ITE-1)! .

D5 Z 5 D

Pfl-lt.to~ .1-\0W. DO YOU KNOW I\':;-.,
WOIZKIN.G~

XS GS U

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ ·wall Disney was my parenlal conscience, and my
step·parenl was the TV

set' -

l"' t' ert

1 Gob
of'hnhtMgun
2 Tone
3 NW atate
4 Exasperates
5 Geography
abbr.
6 -premium
7 Careless
pedestrian
8 Fish part
9 Coldly
10 Hurt at
Pamplona
14 Rorem and

23 Uncouth
24 He wrote

"Picnic"
25 Brawl&amp;

29· Small-time ·

47

Stage

direction

50 Common
phrase

52 Mexican lad
53 11th-grade

exam

(hyph.l
56 Day
30 Newt
ot the wk.
32 ClairvoyiWlte 58 Molecular
35 What we
biology

have

topic

36 Indigo plant 59 Give the

Bea~y

19 Philippines
volcano

37 Put cargo
go-ahead
.aboard
50 Vane dlr.
42 Corrida cry
43 - 'Paulo ,
Brazil
45 Carpentry
tool
46 Annuls

The problem is even more complicated in
a pa1r event. where overtricks are so
Important. {Your results are compared
with !hose of the other pairs who held
your cards. You receive one point for each .
pair you outscore- whether by 10 points
or by 1,000- and half a point for a tie .)
Here. the diamond·lour lead permtts
South to lake the iirst 11 tricks : lour
sp~des, six hearts and one diamond. .
Jame s Rosenbloom of New York City
selected the club two for his opening
salvo. East, Jo Morse of West Palm
Beach , Fla .. won with her ace and swiftly
shiftep to the diamond queen , declarer
cove ring with the king . West took the trick
with his ace and cashed the diamond
jack. West knew that South had the dia·
mond 10 left because East would either
have led the six !rom Q-10·6 or dropped
the 10 on the second round. So, We st
reverted to clubs. giving the defender s
the first five tricks and a near·top.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
, by Luis Campos

Celebri~ Cipher cryptograms ;ve (!eatea !rom 11uolahons by larnb\JS p!Ople, past ana "p1esenl
·
Each letlel 1111he Cipher ~lands 101 a110!t1er
Today·s clue· N equals U

" E

ZRJP

HZP

ARO,

HX

TPAH

E

ZRJP

SROW

ACEMU."

XM

HEUPL

RH

HZ P

CXXKA '

TLEHEAZ

HZRH

APPM

EA
HEUPL

MEOWFRNA ,
JEOHXLO

X YP M

have not yet reached their level ol incompetence." - Laurence

won

lUll,

When school let out,

low to lo· ,., 'r·J&lt; ,..o•O•

11111

What did they do?

They shook your hand,
They smiled and said:

Can you perhap5 recall? ·

"We11 see you kids next faiW

Rut f11li;

How come w.e're hearing

Unless my eyes deceive,
Is sixteen days away.

"Welcome back~
On :;uch a summer day?

W•dne•day, Sept. 7, 2005
•1

••

•'

PEANUTS
W~EN

VOl! DIE AND 60 TO

NO, T14E'r' PICK YOV UP
IN A GOLDEN CHARIOT ..

I-lEAVEN. DO T~E'r' TAKE '(OV
TfiERE IN A SCHOOL SUS ?

Blazon. Lowly · Viper· Yonder · WORLD go BY .
~'
1was getting upset with my friend's driving. She told me that
shi drove the kigal speed limit and wached the WORLD 90:-_
BY.
'

SILVER, IF '(Oll

COME IN SECOND

SUNSHINE CLUB ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

ta:l&lt;, FR~. ISIV''f

11-!ATCW/vWJ

VJIL&lt;;()I...J OIV A
BICYCLE'!

BRAVC)I

RiOKULOJS .
A MAIJ111AT

'

OlD

'·'

•,_
'

~ GARFIELD
YOLI17 THINK HE'D NEYER
SEEN A HAIRBAL..L..
SCRAPBOOK BEFORE

1'HAT'5
171!\GrUS'fiNC:.!

!

SOUP TO NUTZ

0

0

By Bernice· Be de Oaol
Your desires to make 1! big in life could
ca use you to not be able to distinguish
between real opportunities and wishful
thinking in the year ahead. Whichever you
choose Will be reflected in the re sults
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22) - It's very
unlike you, yet for some reason known
Only to yoursell you could allempt to get
others to take on responsibilities or tasks
ass1gned to you . If they do them w'tong ,
you'll be bjamed
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c t. 23) - Usually you
attempt to walk that fine line between
e~travagance and prudence, butloday it's
highly likely that you might blow aU caution
to the wind and spend loolishly and wild ly.
SCORPIO (Oct ~ 24 - Nov. 22)- Should you
encounter s.ome resistance 1n gomg alter a
goal today. Instead of pushing forward
more vigorously you 'll throw in lhe towel
and totally stack all all effort. Reverse that.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - II
you 're not caretul . thiS could be one ot
those days when you may create big prob·
\ems for yoursell by respond1ng or acting
without ttunkiny . Be your ·own best friend,
not your worst enemy
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Assess
your tlnances realistically today and spend
accordmgly. Th1S 1s one ol tt\ose limes
when you sl1ould res1st 9xtravagant
spending, no ma."er how badly you want
something .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. 19 ) - Be
exlremely care tul how yOu behave in the
presence of others. aspec1ally important
people who co uld have an eNect on your
career. A poor performance w111 tarn1sh
your image tor som·e t1me.
·
PISCES tFeb. "20-March 20) - tt is v1tel
today that you temper your grandiose
schemes w1th at least a: smattering at realIsm. Unless you slnve to r.namta1n a sens•·
~e perspective on things. you're dest1ned
to fall.
ARIES !March 21·April 19) - Bus1ness or
commerc1a1 proposals presented to you
today coukl have sqme hidden stnngs
attached." so be very careful about pro·
ceedmg. Don "! rpake any impulsive cteals
or comm11ment s.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - Although
you are a pretty good 1udge of th1ngs . 11
~ould be a maJor miSlake lo make a JUdg·
menl call today regarding an ir!lportant
matter which you haven't had ti,me to thor·
oughty lnvestigale.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - This could
be one at those days where you spend
more elfort on hnd1ng excuses to procras·
· tmate than s1mply doong what needs
cto1ng_ Use yoU! bnlliant mmd for mak1_ng
the JOb eas1er.
CANCER (June 21·JUiy 22) - Today you
must not only gLJard agamst your own
e,:travagant tendenc1es, but also those tor
whom you ca re greatly Th1s oe rson could
mvo lve you 111 someth1ng lnvOious and
expensive
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) - You may have to
establi sh some proorrt"ies tQday. so that
w.hat you '(Ia you'll nave time to do pr ope l·
iy rather than Etttempt1ng TO do SO lnUdl
that you can't g1ve adequate !1me to any·
th rng

Ma~:;e

Rtorro~• lerttrs of
0 fol''
&amp;erombltd word•

'lbu PUFF...

CReePS ME OLlT. ..

...,

tht

ba·
low to form lour almp!t word1 .

I

SURREB

I I I I' I

I

I' I I I 1·
CROTH

;

I

C Y.A U C 1..::"
•_
1

Sign hanging tn Classroom:
"The Objec1 01 Teaching Children Is To Enable Them To Get
I
'-::~~=;:.:;:, Along Witho~: The··-·-··-"

l I I I

r

l"""T:.S...:ly..:C:.r-U...:Rr-::E,.,-il

IIII

hr:-1

ft Comol••• '"' &lt;hv&lt;llo o.otod

miu•ns~

v

b-..· llllin' lr lhP
words
1-....L.-.1.-.J.L......J...- ' - - ' y~ de-wtlop f·o,. S'tP No. 3 btlo..

e
A

PIINI NUM!!REO lETlERS
II&lt; IH£5! SOU~R£5
UNSC14Mtllf· l(ITUS TO

~GET ANSW[I

I

SCAAM-LnS ANSWERS 1 ~ •- o' s

.Jobber· Nudge- Rough· Trusty· YOU 'RE NOT
II you stand '" front of the refrigerator wondering
whether you're hungry or not- YOU'RE NOT.

ARLO &amp; J.ANIS

,, .

fH,t..tE:.E.EE-E:U,..

/I
/,(

_/._~

_

l,y .

'

DaNCiNG BEaR aLwaYs

.

WOlD

SOUP TO NUTZ
I BeLieve '!Her

J. Peter

TN-T DAILY
PUUIII

_BIG NATE

~'"'

UJOUL\'

CotT&gt;e-ons

22 Chief cook

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -·work is accomplished by !hose employees who

of

,r-JO m~l fl tl

39 Born as
40- salad
41 Areplace
tools
44 Eliminate
45 Broad st

Ste11en ,Spielberg

'::~':t:~r
S©R!\'M-~t!fS"
'
- lclit•d Itt (lAY I '0UAN
0 ln••r
due
wp •rl t
t.Dm:JnP,III

21

opened with a weak two· bid , showing SllC
decent diamonds and 6·10 high ·card
• pomls
This c;leal arose during the von Zedtwitz
L1fe Master Pairs at the Summer
Nationals in Atlanta last July.
Agalf!SI no-trump. lead fourth-highest
from your longest and strongest. So the
saying goes, but shou ld .you still do that
when declarer has a stopper in your suit?
Perhaps. Maybe you can get your suit
established, then ·regain the· lead before
declarer has run for home. PerhaPs not.
Yol! might be giving declarer his contractfulfilling trick.
·

.'

by Luis Campos

DOWN

Look at only the West hand. What would
you lead against three no·trump? You

Celeb1ity CipMr crypt!X]IMT!S are aeatlld ltorn QUJtations ~ tamws peooie. past aM presefll.
Eactllett!r •n the Clph/JI slai\6S 101-ai'IOihet

TPN

n"ewborn

38 Retainers

To lead fourth best
or not fourth best?

GRAMP't', HOW
TH' GRASS
GREENER
ON TH'
OTHER
SIDE
OF TH'
FENCE ?

5RXDNL55V

All pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

GPNV5

3 NT

-

of o threat
(2 wds.l
31 Border
33 Variety
34 Farm

· Opening lead: ?'

:BARNEY

OBBNRXOAVPSM

torts

bottom

!H.

AV

Pa11s

Not working
ShongrHa
Gun lobby
Wallet
stutters
Theater
sign
Moaat
to begin with
66 Chass win

22 Brisk
25 Zany
26 F....lc meas.
27 Vandal
28 End

J tO 7 3

North · East
2¥
Pass

Paolacholce

SUppositions

handle

8 7

West
2t

Fleur-de· - ·
Walkway
Wore
Seed caoe

20 Like many

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

FlllST NATIONAL- lfANIC

" TN U H

currency
18 Pitcher •

t K tO 7
•

n .11

.

K 9 8 2

.AKQJ94
• 9 5
• 5
East
West
• tO 7 6 4
• Q
• )0 6 3
• 52
t AJ8432
• Q6
"-A Q 9 8
"- K 8 42
South
6AJ53

,.

'MONTY

DOWN

1

1 OIH~..(J5

North

IU S.

OKAY I
6ET T~E

qfs

AstroGraph

Tuesday, Sapt. 6, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol ;-G reeter recog nition in your chosen
field o f endeavo r is in th e mi'! klng for
you in the year ahead II you haven't
been able to gain prest1ge 1n areas in
wh ich you're presently 1nvolved. c 1r·
cumstomcos may taka you etsewhe1e.
VIRGO (Aug: 23·Sep t. 22) - A fina n·
cia ! swing could take place ~ ~ th1s
time. bringing you better compensa ·
lion and rewards for protec ts or enter·
p rlses on which you work . The re tum s
could even start comi ng in today.
LIBRA
(Sept
23-0cl
?3 1
Conditions which h!'IVA held beck the
fulfillment of personal goals could be
alleviated beginning today. \nsle?l d ot
to ~:&gt;sing in the lowel , new hope will
give you more momentum and impe· ·

1

H-lf": f"O \Nl

54

ACROSS · 48
49
1 Buzz
51
5 -Mahal
53
8 Rock-band 54
booking
55
57
11 Garman
· tmpon
61
12 KLMdatum 62
13 PC Image 1 63
15 Flnollzod
agrooment 64
16 Sunbeam
17 Former
65
Italian

Phillip
Alder

using a predetermined scale. Usually the
management "playerS do poorly, Out this
year, aided by some excellent slam 'bid·
ding, they wori all three malches.
This deal arose in one of the matches
between managers and directors. At the
other table, the first round of bidding was
the same. but then South contented him·
self with a jump to four hearts.
Jay Baum, the A.C.B.L. cl1ief executive

G

1 ~w:. c.uuNTRY 6REA.T 1

LA\3o..IK

52

to Include
Slillexlsl
Two fives
tor - Sheik,
usually
Bleachers
shout
Withered
Hardy

finders
'7
37 Body
·
of water
8
38 MHz ,parl
9
39 Tasly
10
41 Made cloth • 13
· . 43 Wedge In

tit justified a leap to six hearts
Each West led the diamond ace. Both
declarers ruffed. drew trL.Imps, ran the
clubs, p1tching a spade from ·the board.
and trumped one spade loser. Their 12
tricks were one spade,· five hea rts , five
clubs and the' spade ruff on the board.
The management team gained 11 imps.
To paraphrase an old Saymg. 11 is"n't
always a case of those who can. do , and
those who cannot ,.manage.

"'1

l I •, A CE LLBI&lt;AltON OF

l

49

50

(2 wds.l

offlcei, evaluated his hand betler, making
what partner would assume wns a help·
suit game·try in clubs. But when North .
Marketing Director Linda Granell. could
jump to four hearts, Showing values in
hearts and clubs, Baum knew the double

.

wkr-,\ l:'l

+A

44 Out of-

This year's Sumrl')er North American
Bridge· Championships of the Amencan
Contract Bridge league, commonly
known as the Summer Nationals. were
held last July in Atlanta. But before the
official hostilities commenced, there was
the ·annual team-Qf-four matcll between
the A.C.B.L. Management (one team)
and its Board of Directors (three teams) .
Each team contains two pairs, playing
North-South ·at one table and East-We st
at the other. The net result on each deal
Is converfed to international match points

Hfre-

P'

Pal"s
Pass

They who manage
can also play

JRS
P'AY TA&gt;&lt;f.&gt;
TH ' WORMS,
LUI&lt;E'Y ?

~ast

Pass

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

46 Falls

Phillip
Alder

North

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

He )'leveR laL\&lt;'S .. He DaNce
WIT&gt;-\ NO MUSIC aND He's NOT
we&lt;lRiNG 8 NY fai•HS .. I TeLL
YOJ He G11&gt;\0S Me &gt;II G11f~la!l's;'

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Reds fall ~hort of Brewers on Labor Day ·
CINCINNATI (AP) ' Geoff Jenkins' · sore back
doesn't hurt when he swings,
just when he runs. Five
swi ngs were all he rieeded to
carry
the
Milwaukee
Brewers .on' Monday night.
Jenkin s tied his career high
with five hits and scored the
go-ahead run in the eighth
inning to back the efficient
pitchi ng ofTomo Ohka as the
·Brewers beat .the Cincinnati
. Reds 6-1.
" It won't get any worse.''
said Jenkins, who had two
doubles and an RBI while
personally outhitting the
Reds 5-4. " It doesn't hurt
when I hit o r throw. It onl y
,hurts ·•hen I run or occasion ally get out in front. It \ as
bad as it's ~een for the pitSL
few weeks. but I' II make it
through the season."
With the score Lied at I and
one out in the eighth. the
Brewers loaded the ba ses
against re liever Matt Belisle
(3-7) on sing les by Jenkins
and Wes ·Helms and a walk to
Dam ian Miller. With the
AP photo .
Cinc innati infield at double
play depth. JJ . Hardy Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Rickie Weeks, top,
bounced a single th roug h the . jumps over Cinc1nnati Reds' Edwin Encarnacion as Weeks
hole into left field to drive in completes a double play on a ground ball hit by Ryan Freel durJenkins with the g0-a head ing the seventh inning Monday in Cinci.nnati.
run.
ing away from 0 ur ri·ght-h&lt;ln- great game , too."
' , Kent Merck,er replaced cters ." Narron said. ·Tm sure,
·'Brandon was outst.andBelisle and gave up an with a lot of outs early in the ing," Narron said . " lt 's a
almost identical run -scoring count. guys were thinking shame to waste that kind of
single to pinch -hitter Jeff they were getti-ng good pitch- effort."
Cirillo. Brady Clark hit into a es .and just missing th'em."
Carlos Lee and Jenkins hit
double play to end the
Rookie Dana Eveland consecutive doubles with one
in ning.
. pitched the last two innings out in the fourth · to give
Jenkins had five hits for the for his first career save.
Milwaukee a 1-0 lead. Lee
thi rd time in his career. secThe fi fth-pl ace Reds fell 24 extended his hitting streak to
ond thi s season.
1/2 games behind Central eight games with his 'ground Ohka
( I 0-7).
who Division-leading St. Louis. rule double, a bloop down
improved to 4-1 with tWo no- Ci nc innati has 25 games left. the right-field line that
Reds starter · Brandon bounced into the stands.
decisions in his last seven
starts, needed 74 pitches to Claussen, who had won five
Adam Dunn tied the game'
ge t ·throu gi) his seven consecutive decisions before in the bottom of the fourth
· innings. allowing three hits losing 10-0 at Houston last with a one-out homer to right
and one run with six mike- Wednesday, gave up seven on the first pitch. It was hi s
outs.
hits and one run with six 36th of the season and first in
Narron . sa id the Red s strikeouts and two walks in 30 at-bats since Aug. 26. It
couldn ' t get anything ' goi ng · seven mmngs.
also broke a tie with Ken
against Ohka.
" My job is to make sure I Griffey Jr. for the team lead.
" He got a lot of outs early give our team a chance to
Mi Iwaukee added three
i'n the count. It looked like he · win." Claussen said. " I felt runs in the ninth on doubles
had pretty good movement . like I did that. f have to tip by Lee and Jenkins and a
His slider or cutter was mov- my cap to Ohka. He pitched a pa ssed ball.

Indians close to AL Wildcard
lead with 2-0 win over-Detroit
DETROIT (AP). - Scott
Elarton was able to throw his
fastball where he wanted to,
and that made all the difference.
He won for the first time in
more than a month, allowing
rour hits in 6 1-3 innings as
the Cleveland Indians beat the
Detroit Tigers 2-0 Monday
and pulled within 1 1-12 games
of the AL wild-card lead.
Jose Hernandez homered to
help send Detroit to its fifth
strai ght loss. The Tigers
haven' t scored in 19 innings.
Elarton (8-7) walked two
and struck out six, combining
with two relievers on an eighthitter. He had been 0-2 in five
starts since Aug. 2.
"I think the main thing is
that I finally got my command
back today," he said. "I was
able to locate my fastball."
Bob Wickman pitched the
ninth for his 36th save in 41
opportunities, getting pinchhitler Chris Shelton to ground
into a game-ending double
play with runners on first and
second. Shelton nearly won
the 'game on the previous
pitch, hitting a foul ball into
the seats near the pole in right
· •
field.
"It was a good pitch (fastball, .low and away), "
Wickman said. "That was the
only thing .... If I got beat on
it, I would've just got beat."
IVWl Rodriguez had three
hits, and Carlos Pena added
two for the Tigers.
The only hits Elarton gave
up were Rodriguez's two-out
double in the first inning,
Pena's infield single with one
out in the fifth, Rodrigu~z's
two-out single in the sixth and
Pena's one-out single in the
seventh.
"He (Elarton) pounded the
strike zone consistently,"
Detroit
manager
Alan
Trammell said. "The last couple of days we've been trying
as a team to work a little
more. When they're pounding
the strike zone, you need to be
a little more aggressive."
The last hit chased Elarton

5254 COMPACT 'TRACTOR

'233/MONl'H
SJ61/MONTH

ATT~

SOLD -TII.Y

'183/MONlli
0% lor 3b
1

AP phol9
Cleveland Indians starter .Scott Elarton pitches against the
Detroit Tigers in the second inning on Monday in Detroit
Elarton (8-7) won for the first time in more than a month,
allowing four hits in 6 1/3 Innings as the Indians beat the
Detroit Tigers 2-0
in favor of Bob Howry, who games we haven 't scored any
got Placido Polanco to tly out. runs. But that's going to
Curt1s Granderson then sm- change.
·
gied off the right-field wall.
"We've got a good otlense.
moving Pena to third. But You can expect us to score
omar Infante popped out to runs. But there's going to be
end the inning.
days wh~re even the best hitHowry "
allowed ung teams are goin'g to get
Rodriguez's third · hit of the shut out."
.
·
game and walked Dmitri
Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in
Young in the eighth. He then the first on consecutive sinallowed a two-out infield sin- gles by Grady Sizemore,
gle to Craig Monroe, but Coco Crisp . and Jhonny
Rodriguez rounded third base Peralta.
tOO far and was tagged out by , Hernandez led off the fifth
first baseman Hemandez.
with hi s sixth· home run of the
, "Pudge was thinking I was season to make it 2-0.
going to tlrst base and he kept
Notes: Peralta's first-inning
running," Hernandez said. RBI single broke an 0-for-16
"That's how we got hitn at slump . ... Rodriguez tumbled
third base."
over the railing and into .the
1213)
Clevelancl
dugout while chasMike Maroth (
allowed two runs and five hits ing a foul by Aaron Boone in
in six innings. walking one the second inning and was
and striking out six.
·
caughi by Indians' hitting
"I've been getting a lot of coach Derek Shelton. ...
runs. They've been scoring a Granderson. playing center
lot of runs for tne. They . field, robbed Pemlta of a
picked me up several times," heme run in the third by leapMaroth said. "This is just one ing above the left-center field
garne. Obviously the past two fence and catching hi s drive.

• 25 HI" KaWasaki" engine
• Hydrostatic four-whHI drive
• Standard 3-point hitch
with floatins poshion .

• 28 HI" c.terpi\1_. diesel engine
• Po11irak" On-Demand
' four-whe.t drive.
• 725 \b. loader lift capacity

• 18 HP' Kal1ler" Cornnand"
Pro v-Twin OHV qint
• Froot-~ fully independent•
susp~Mton

• Push-button controls .

'208/MONlli

V-Twio OHV ensine
• 60" Comnend Cut System·
• Three-yeer limited warranty••

0% for 36 months'* V1S1I your local relatler today.

J.

_submitted to Ohio newspapers. "U.S .. EPA is devoting
considerable resources to an
POMEROY - The Ohio 'expedited review of C8..
Environmental
Protection Since C8 has. been found in
Agency will rely on the U.S. the environment in several
EPA to determine a "safe"
level of C8. in water sup- states, a national approach
plies, Ohio EPA Director makes sense."
Joseph P. Koncelik said.
C8 originates from the
"EPA has greater expertise DuPont Washjngton Work s
in this area than we do, plant
near
Parkersburg,
including their National W.Va. has been detected in
Science Advisory Board, a four Ohio water systems,
panel of national experts," including Tuppers Plains"
Koncelik said . in a column . Chester and Pomeroy Village
BY BRIAN

. • Gallipolis Invitational
held. See Page 81

• 25 HP' K.Wasaki"

WIDE TRACK

\\ 1.11'\\ Sll .\\ . Sll'' ll \lilt R --, ~ oo : ,

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•'

INSIDE
• Rehnquist's body lies in
repose; Bush to speak at
conservative chief justice's
funeral Wednesday.
See Page A2
• Con:Jpletes Marine
training.
See Page A3 .
• Haymans hold reunion.
~Page A3
• Trial set for one of two
murder suspects.
See Page AS
• Pomeroy traffic accidents. ·
See Page AS ·
• Community college
leader hopes to teach
Leno a lesson.
See Page AS
• Talabani says Saddam
has confessed to.crimes
committed by his regime.
See Page AS
• Saudi forces overrun
villa where Islamic
militants holed up.
SeePage AS
• Stocks surge on declining
oil prices; Dow up 141.
SeePageA7
• Weaver reunion held.
SeePage AS
• Awarded Eagles
Scholarships.
SeePage AS

I

Brian J. Reed/photo

..

Carla King of ,Peoples Bank accepted the first donation of $500, from Middleport Community Association President Donald
Vaughan, Jr., and Sally Lambert, who is in charge of an association-led fund drive for victims of Hurricane Katrina. Peoples Ba~k
offices will accept donations to the fund until at least Oct. 4.

Community Association leads hurricanefund drive
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

-The
MIDDLEPORT
Middieport
Community
Association will .lead a local
fundraising effort to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Meeting Tuesday at Peoples
Bank, the association .voted to
establish an open account
through the bank for donations
to assist those who have lost
virtually everything as the

result of last week's hurricane.
The association also voted to
open the account with a $500
donation from the group's
· treasury.
Donations may be made
payable 10 the Katrina Fund at
any Peoples Bank location.
including those in Middleport.
Pomeroy.
and
Rutland.
Association President Don
Vaughan, Jr. sai~ the associ ation has not yet decided which
organization will receive the

1B30 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) 6$3-2827 I (BOO) 710-192f (TOLL FREE)
'

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Detail• on Page AS

INDEX
2 SE.CilONS -

Calendars

16 PAGF.S

A3
B4-6

Classifieds
Comics

B7

ufar Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4

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Sports

·as rated by engrne -n anu 1ac.Ur€· (J.t:199-21-S8t.7::-1

AB

Weather

,£) 2005 Ohio Valley Publi.liihins Co.

•

local contributions, but said it
will likely be the Salvation ·
Army or another reputal;&gt;le .
charity. The association will
decide at its Oct. 4 meeting
where the f'unds will go.
Earlier this year. through a
similar fundraising program,
the Community Association
collected over $2,000 for
UNICEF's efforts to help the
victims of the Tsunami in Asia.
Community
Association
. me'rber Sally Lambert . of

Peoples Insurance will coord-inate the fundrai si ng effort on
behalf of the organization . She
also was in charge of the
rs'unami rel ief drive in January.
. Other business
The Community Association
also voted to donate $300 to
the Village of Middleport for
expenses relating to the · past
season at the Middlepon Pool.
The pool operation has strug'
Please see Drive, AS

Racine ·unseals bids for water treatment plant
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BBBO UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-3279 I (BOO) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE) ..

·a , a precau tionary s t ~ p to
protect puhl ic health
DuPont has &lt;dread) agreed
to finan ce a program prtl\'iding . bottled ll'ater to c!Jstomers of the Little Hocking
\Vater A-. ~oL· i ation. which
ha' the hi glte, t lewis or C8
detected in Ohi o. While the
le veh there are also below
the curre nt act ion level. the
Ohio EPA belicve.s it · "prudent'' lor l'Ustomers in Little
Hocki ng to use bottled
water. Konecilik said .

take s.teps to limit their own
exposure.''
A panel of national experts
.commissioned by the State
of West Virginia recommended a preliminary action.
level of 150 partsper billion.
All of the detections of C8
in Ohio waler systems ha ve
been far less than that. but.
Konecelik said , a' more
information about . C8 ha s
become available, U.S. EPA
will review the data and may
lower that recommenda tion

BY DIANE POTTORFF
OPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

BY BEtH SERGENT

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

systems in Meigs County in
levels not considered harmful by water system officials
in relation to DuPont's own
safe standard. However,
while DuPont has established
its own safe level of the
chemical, the EPA has not.
'"The presence of C8 does
not necessarily mean it is
harmful." Konecelik said.
"The key question is what
level of CR should cause
government officials to take
action, or lea(l citizens to

.

Fonner
Wahama coach
pleads guilty to
sexual assault

WEATHER

ALLPOWJ:R EQUIPMENT

" " " ·""'''•ih ·" ·"'""'' ·"""

:pirector:
Ohio EPA to rely on federal agency for C8 standards
.
.

SPORTS

months: VISrt your local retar\er today.

· TANK• M60-KW

timetable for draining
New Orleans, A2

..

.1 " I· I ;"lOIS • \ol. .1·1· '\o . 10

0% for 36 months ~ Visit your local retailer today.

BIG COUNTRY 4X2 UV

· ·Bill boosts ethanol,
bio-diesel, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

0% for 36 months~ Vtsi1 your local retatler today.

6284 COMPACT TRACTOR

•
an uncertain

RACINE Last night
inside. council's chambers at
the
Racine
Municipal
Building most of the chairs
were taken by contractors who
had arrived to ·hear how their
bids stacked up against their
competitors with the prize
being the village's new water
treatmem plant.
Clerk-Treasurer
David
Spencer read the bids for
Divisions A, B, C. D and E for
the project which is water
tran s.m i ssio n/distri but ion
(line wo.rk), water storage
facilities (lhe tank:), water
treatment plant (the building),
well field improvements
(electrical). and telemetry:
If Racine decides to go
with last night's lowest bids
,with no alternates that total
would come to $1,977,182.
This would leave $302,182
that the village would have to
borrow to complete the project ,
which last year had an estimated cost of $1.759,900.
The figure of $1,759,900
excludes the well field reha-

.

POINT
PLEASANT,
· W.Va. - Lon~time Wahama
High School ~ teacher and
. baseball coach Gordon·
Spencer will be sentenced in
December aft er pleading
guilty Tuesday to cha rges of
sexual abuse while at the ·
school.
For more than a year.
Trooper First Class John
Black. assisted by TFC Brent
Keefer, investigated allegation s that Spencer, 54. of
Hartfon.L had been sexually ·
abu sing several &lt;tudents at
WHS. according to Keefer.
Spencer entered into a plea ,
agreement with Special
Prosecutor Jim Young of.
Wavne County in Mason
County
Circuli
Court
Tuesday . on two counts of
third-degre e sexual a&gt;Sault
and one count of third-degree
sexHal abuse.
~
He will be sentenced Dec.
13 in front of Mason County
Judge David Nibert.
Spencer's attorney. Matt
Clark. ' said he had no comment on the proceedings.
The incident s that Spencer
was charged with occurred
between the years of 198790. Keefer said.· All of the
victims wae students at
WHS but most were not in
his classes.
Because of tile statute of
limitati ons. onlv li1·e of the
former students· cases could
be heard. he said. An estimated five tu I0 victims came
forward during the inve,tigation.
~
,.
~
It is all eged that one of the
victims 11 as a special needs
student .
When word Qet; l&gt;ut about
the case. Kc~fcr said th e
detachment cou ld recei1·e
telephone. calh from other
,-ictim s.
.
"I wouldn't be surprised."
he said ahout the potential for

tract which will lock in current
prices despite Hurricane
Katrina and rising fu el costs.
Racine Council will review
and possibly vote on which
bids to accept at their next
meeti'ng ":hich has yet to be
determined. Howe\'er. decisions on the bids will be made
this month according to ,
MavorJ.ScottHi\1.
~
Council was , cheJulcd to
. meet in regular 'c" ion toni ght
. but only Councilmen Greg
Taylor and Gary Freeman
were present.
Hill hopes th at construct ion
will begin on the pbnt in midOctober.
Bob Allen. field a£cnt with
Ohio Rural Co~nmunitv
the
. Beth Serjlent/ Ph&lt;&gt;to
Members of Racine Village Council and Mayor J. Scott Hill dis- Assistance Program was pn!cuss bids that were received for the village's new water treat- sent for the meeting arld said
ment plant which is due to begin construction in mid-October. he believes everything i, on
The bids were unsealed by Clerk-Treasurer David Spencer last track to break ground 0n the
plant as scheduled . .-" lien
night and will be voted on by council this month.
believes a big part of sta) ing '
on course de,pite the ri 'c in
bilitation project.
cost estimate . Due to this. material s i' the fu nrlin e that
To date the village has been Division I;l., well field has been lined up .
~
promised $1,675,000 in grant improvements I electrical.
"I was surprised at the gl'ant
· will have to be re-bid by law.
funding for the plant.
The bids are good for 60 to
Last night's bids come in
Please see ,P lant. AS
558 ,582 over the engineer's 90 days depending on the con 1

•

'

more Yictims.

During rhc im·cstigation,
Keefer said he shared the
inYestigatJ\'e dUties with
Black. who i' now an agent
with the .- \knh,&gt;L Tobacco
and Firearms and ' lationed in
Loui,vilk . K1·.
Ac·corJ ii1{ to Dr. Larry
Pa rson s. ~~ ~" o n County
S ~ ll&lt;H' I'
su perintendent.
Spenl'Cr ' olun tari ly retired
aml , urremkrcd hi s teaching
certifi catt' wi thin the last
\'t."ar.

"He surrendered his certificate to the ltatc and provided
the papc'rwork for hi s retiremem:· P ar~on~ s'aitl.
With the investigation
completed. Parsons said that
the school board ,:ooperated
with the state poli~e while
thev conducted interviews ·
11 ith former stude.nt s and
~tall .

"The ' tuJents involved are
no11 adu lts ·and live away
from here and are living their
liws in other states," Parsons
said . .. And the others who
Please see Coach, AS

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