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'
Page BS • The Daily ~tine!

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 4. 2005

.

'

Extra weight may
be factor in fatal
boat crash, A2

Bulls send -Curry to Knicks _Stoudemire signs five-year extension

DEERFIELD. Ill. (AP) -. Curry to miss the final 13 games
Eddy Curry refused tn take a of the regular &gt;eason and the
DNA test to determine if he has a playo ffs. ~
serious heart problem, sn the
Several prominent ca rdioloChicago Bulls· cut ties . with the gists cleared Curry to play, but
center and seni him to the New Barry Maron, a world-reJ\QWned
York Knick s.
specialist in hypertroph ic car.The Bulls ·also dealt veteran diomyopathy, s~gested the
center Antonio Davi s to the DNA test.
· Knic ks for forward s Tim
"Think about · what's ·at s take~
Thomas, .Michael Sweetney and here." Alan Milstein , Curry's
Jermaine Jackso n Oti Monday attorney, told the Associated
ni ght. Several draft picks were Pr~ss recently. '·A s far ~s DNA
also involved in the trade , te sting. we're jost at the beginaccording
to an
Eas.lern ning ·o f that universe. Pretty
Conference executive who spoke soon. t_hough . we'll know
on the coJ)dition of anonymity.
whether someone is predisposed
Bulls general manager John to cancer. alcoholism, obesity,
Paxson. had warned I 0 days ear- baldness and who knows what ·
lier that a showdown with Curry else. ·
was looming , and he didn't hide
"Hand that information to an
his frustration Monday.
employer." he added. ''and imagIn making the announcement. ine the implications. If the NBA
Paxson didn't specify· what were to get away with it, what
Chicago got in return and did not about everyone else in this cotmfield questions. Bt1t the trade was try looki'ng for a job."
expected to be finali zed Tu esday.
Paxson, speaking to reporters
"All we can say right now is dt1ring the team 's media day,'said
we traded Eddy to the Knicks," he resents the notion that the
Bulls public re lati ons director Bull s had an ulterior motive ;
Sebrina Brewster · said- Monday they simply did not want a situation sirrilar to those of former
night.
Knicks spokesman Jonat han Bosto[\1 Ce ltics guard Reggie
Supranowitz said · the team · Lewis or Loyola Mary mount star
declined comment on Paxson's Hank Gathers - players with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
announcement.
. The B'uHs had insisted that who collapsed and died .
Paxson said the Bulls had
Curry take a DNA test to determine whet-her he's susceptible to offered Curry $400,000 annually
a P-Otentially fatal heart problem. for the next 50 vears if he failed
cu'rl\y, who missed the final 13 the g~netic 'test."There have been a lot of
g~mes of the regular season and
the playoffs after experiencing th ings that have been said and
an irreg.ular heartbeat; balked. implied about me and 'this ·organization and how we've tried to
saying it violated his privacy.
"I would never put a player on handle Eddy 's situation," Paxson
the floor in a Chicago Bulls uni- ' sa id. "I take great offense to
form if I didn't do everything in many of the points of view that
my power to find out- all the have been out there.''
information that was available,"
Curry's agent Leon Rose did
Paxson said. "You can debate , not return call s seeking comment
genetic testing 'til you ' re blue in Monday.
the face. But from what I know, Curry played a major role as
from what I've learned over the the Bulls won 47 games and
last six months, that test could reached the playoffs for the first
have helped us determine the time since 1998
when
best course of action.'·
Mi chael Jordan and Scottie
The 22-year-o\d Curry, drafted Pippen led them to their sixth
out of Thornwood High School NBA title . .
in South Holland, Ill., averaged a
"I)'s tough ," said power forcareer-high 16.1 points in his ward Tyson Chandler, who refourth NBA season.
· signed with the Bulls .for six
The standoff stemmed from a· years during the offseason. "''m
benign arrhythmia that caused sad to sec him go."

PHOENIX (AP)- ~month shy of
his. 23rd binhday. Amare Stoudemire
has achieved the wealth that goes to
the few ·at the very top of their sp011.
Now he's out prove that he's worth it.
Ama£ingly agile, with a sweet
jumper to go with his monster jams,
Stoudemire signed a live-year conI ract extension with the Phoenix Suns
on Mond;ty. The deal is worth about
$73 million. \~comes shortly'after he
-inked a lucrative endorsement contraot with Nike.
'
''I' ve just been working . on my
game the whole summer to try to take
t'f, to the top." Stoudemire sa id . "This
has been a $ 100 million summer for
me, so I'm very pruudofthat. I'm just
looking forward to .bringing the
championship home ri ght here in
Phoenix ."
·
The dear is the maximum allowed
under the NBA collective barg'aining
agreement for the forward who
jurnpeu from high school .to stardom.
The exact ligures won't be known
until next year's salary cap is set,
Suns president Bryan Colangelo said.
The extension kicks in after this
season and has an opt-out clause after
the 2009- I 0 season.
"What I' vc achie ved now is something .that I always figured I would as
a kid," Stoudemire s;ud. ''I've had that
type of determination since 1 was a
youngster playing ·around the playgrounds, getting dirty after school."
He signed the contract as the Suns ·
gathereu for media day preceding the
start of their training camp in Tucson
on Tuesday.
The 6-foot-1 0, 245-pound power
forward played ot!l of position at center and dominated opponents last season tor the high-scoring, fast-breaking Suns.
Stoudemire averaged 26 points per
game,' fi ftlj-best in the league, as a key
member of a Phoenix team that won
an NBA-best 62 games.
"It's huge tor the franchise," said
Steve Nash, Stoudemire's teammate
and last season's MVP. "He's the cornerstone ofthis franchise."
Stoudemire, tl1e No. 9 pick in the
2002 draft, won the Rookie of the
Year award over Yao Ming il!' 200203 and ~as i1nproved each-season. He
averaged just under 30 points a game
in last year's playoffs - 37 ;lgainst
Tim Duncan in the Western
Conference finals.
The Suns never have won an NBA
title.
Stoudemire is one 'of basketball's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. :J6

WEDNESDAY. OCTO HER 5, 2005

www.myd:oil)st' ntinl'l .&lt;·om

Flu vaccinations delayed, senior health fair canceled. for-now

SPORTS

"

ics and health fair will both
be rescheduled as ,~oon as the
tlu · immunizations
are
POMEROY -The Meigs received by the health departCounty Health Department '~ ment from ODH.
flu shot clinics and the Meig.&gt;
'·'There is no .reason to be
County Senior Center's panicked,"
ODH
health fair has been canceled Spokesperson
Kristopher
due to a delay in the shipment Weiss said. "We don't have
of flu vaccinations to the any reason to believe that
Ohio Department of Health we ' re nut going to get what
(ODH).
we ordered."
·
· However, the flu shot clinODH has ordered 240,000
BY BETH SERGENT
8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Southern on to state.
SeePageB1
AP photo
Phoenix Suns forward Amare Stoodemire grins as he answers a reporters'
question during a news conference announcing his signing a five-year contract extensiion with the team on Monday in Phoenix.

great success stories. He was 12 when
his father died, and his mother was in
and out of jail. His older brother is in
federitl prison. But Stoudemire never
has been in trouble.
"My main thing is I just stay ·
focused on my all-time goals, and
that's to become a rule model for my
fami ly and also become the best basketball player I can be," he said.
Moments after he saw the then \9year-o\d work out before the 2002
draft, Suns chairman Jerry Colangelo
told fellow team officials "this is our
guy."
,"Someone asked me a shon time
ago, 'You know, Amare 's accomplished so much. What do you think
his upside is?"' the elder Colangelo
said Monday. "And I said, 'If xou recognize how far he's come in hJS game,
you combine God-given talent with a
work ethic that is terrific and a hean
to be the very best, I don' t know how
liigh is high."'
.
The long-term contract should keep
him in Phoenix at least five more
years.
Stoudemire said he's a better player
now than he was at the end of last season "as far as understanding the game
of basketball, opening up and just

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working on differ~nt ski lls on the
offensive end and being more focused
on defense."
Someone asked about repons he
has developed a 3-point shot.
"We're ~oing to keep that a secret
right now, ' he said with a big smile.
"We're trying to surprise guys with
that. You ' re ·trying to put our arsenal
out. '~'

·

Stoudemire was given input into the
changes the team made, and he likes
them, especially the acquisition of
K.un Thomas from the New York
Knicks to help on the defensive load
inside. He believes the team will be
better, despite the departure of Joe
Johnson and Quentin Richardson ..
"We have guys that can score and
still put up the same amount of points
we put up last year, and also defend a
lot better;" Stoudemire said.
Coach Mike D' Antoni expects the
big contract to have no effeCt on
Stdudemire's work ethic or-attitude.
"I think he really wants to be the
best player to ever play the game,"
D' Antoni .said.' "He set that goal for
himself maybe when he was 10 years
old. I don't know. But he came in with
that attitude ~ and whatever we've
asked as coaches, he's done." ··

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OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert Banks, 52

INSIDE
• Festival plans moving
_ ~head. See Page A3
• Foothills Art Festival
to be held in Jackson.
See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS .
• Law You Can Use.
See Page AS

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INDEX
2 SEcrtONS -

A3 r

Classifieds

B4·6 .

8880 UNITED LANE
.ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-:3279 I (800) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER; OH 43130
(7fl0) 653-2827 I (800) 710.:~921 (TOLL FREE)

plex has undergone extensive
renovation. New central heating and cooling eq uipment
have been installed, the interior has been redesigned to

accomnlodate the business accessible from the rear
offices and there is plenty of where the main entrance is
storage space for school now located. All of the. parkrecord s.
Please see Salisbury, AS
The building is handicap

Association·
donates to local
.
.
hurricane volunteer effort

GIANT TUBERS

Members voted to donate $250
'toward the cost of personal
hygiene kits containing toothbrushes, wasi1cloths and other
items, which were .. assembled by
Ferman and Rae Moore and Jean
Craig. An additional $·250 from
the fund was set aside for additional kits in the event they are
needed.
· The . l\Ssociation also donated
$500 toWard efforts of Team Jesus,
a local group of C hristi~n volunteers, for building materials. Team
Jes.us, made up of Meigs County

MIDDLEPORT - A new
program b~ginning later this
month at the- Unjversity of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center will allow students to
earn their business degree by
attending class just one day a
week. ·
The Weekend Col\ege program' to be offered at the
Meigs Center, in Piketon and
on the main campus at Rio
Grande, is designed to assist
students over the ' age of 23
earn an associate or bachelor
. degree in business management without ·a long trip 10
the college campus, and without spending hours a week in
the traditional classroom.
An open house informational session about the
Weekend College program
will 6e offered at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the center, on
Mill -Street in Middleport.
According to Gina Pines,
director of the Meigs Center,
the program will allow stl)·
Please see Rio Meigs, A~

Man claims he was
robbed by gang
.STAFF REPORT·
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

APPLE GROVE - A
Leiart Township man told
Sheriff Rubert Beegle he was
robbed Monday evening by a
gang of young men wearing
pillowpses over their heads. ·
Please see Donates, AS
. Beegle said he and deputies
are continuing an investigation into a complaint tiled by
Lester Shultz. of Ohio 124,
sole owners of the business at 195
Racine. Shultz reported he
Upper River Ro~d in Gallipolis.
was approached by a young
"We think we can make a differ- ·
male at hi s re sidence early
ence with this move," Sang s;;id.
Monday evening, who said
"We think our custoiners will be
he had run out of ga,s while
very happy."
riding a four wheeler ·near
Phy s i~a\ changes, such as new
Apple Grove .
Shultz said he drove the
signage, is going up this week at
the dealership, which began as a
man
to his four wheeler, and
Charlene Hoeftlchjphoto
when
the man returned (o the
Volkswagen agency under Don Now that's one big sweet potato. It's a Carol ina
Watts' ownership in July 1970..
. Ruby grown in the garden of Bill and Minnie Thornton vehicle after retrieiving the
The decision to own the dealer- on their Danville farm . This one weighed 3.66 key to hi s four wheeler, he '
pounds, enough to feed a large family.
Please see Owners, AS ·"
Please see Rc;'bbery, AS

Sang family now dealership's sole owners
Bv KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRI8UNE .COM

B7

GALLiPOLIS - What had been
a long-cherished .goal for John.
Sang and his family has become
. Editorials
A4 reality.
.
Effective Sept. 1•. Turnpike of
Obituaries()
As Gallipolis, the tri-county area's
B Section Ford Motor Co. dealership,
Sports
became John Sang Ford-LincolnAS Mercury. Sang bought out his partWeather
. ners in the Turopike venture.
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing C~. allowing he and his family to be

Dear Abby

Cha~ene ·Hoeftlch/photo

,

New windows are going in at the Salisbury building as the renovation finishes up a!'id Meigs
Local School District administrative staff prepares to move in.

16 PAGES

Calendars
Comics

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

'

BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- Mon~y
donated to. a hurricane relief fund
establi shed · by
Middleport
Con;ununity Association is alreaay
at '~fOrk .helping those who · lost
everything f'n Hurricane Katrina.
At Tuesday's monthly meeting
of the association, Sally Lambert,
who is coordinating the fundraising efforts on behalf of the group,
reported a balance of $1 ,950 in the
relief fund . Donations into the
· account are sti ll being accepted at
any Peoples Bank location.

'• 'l7 HP' Kohler• Comma~

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

POMEROY . - The last
phase of the $432,000 renovation. of the old Salisbury
Elementary School into
administrative offices for the
Meigs Local School District
is nearing completion and a
move into the building has
tentatively been set for the
weekend of Oct. 14.
Within a week all 34 of the
windows in the building will
have been replaced, a move
to conserve heating and cooling. All of the interior work
as well as necessary exterior
changes has been completed.
The entire ~project has
been paid' for with the bal-.
ance of funds generated by
the permanent improvements levy which went off
the tax ballot last December.
For many years the district
has operated from rented
second-floor offices in the
Pomeroy
Municipal
Building paying $500 a
month rent plus utilities.
The move into a district-'
owned building became an
option when the Salisbury
building was vac~ted as stu- .
dents went to the new elementary .school near Rutland.
The new district office com-

BY BRIAN J, REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• 44" side discharae

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BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ZERO INTEREST AND ZERO PAYMENTS FOR o MONTHS"

Z·FORCE" 44

tlu vaccinations (rom a priWei\s said that local health and vacdnate crowds at the
vate manufacturer. So far ·departments that purcha.se health fairs and those consid- ·
ODH has received approxi- their · vaccinations through erect "at high risk."
mately ~ quarter of thQse ODH were informed of !he
Jl:leigs County has ~o far
240,000 vaccinations .· •
delay to allow them lime 'to . received none of its 1000 flu
Weiss said the problem lays reschedule health fairs tnat · ·vaccinations t'rorh ODH
on the manufacturer's end a~ often held in. conju,nction ·. according to Sherry Weese,
but what that problem is wnh flu va~c.1natton s.
• Meigs
County
Health .
exactly remains to be se,en.
Wetss satd ODH wanted to Department's director of
He added that a statement be able to· send the health nursing.
about the situation is current- departm~nt thm full 01der ot
After receiving ODH's
ly being drafted to local vaccrnatton s as opposed to a
'
health departments.
panial
order
to
accommodate
Please
see Delayed, AS .·
..

Sal.isbury building renovation·nears completion Rio Meigs

...

ZERO INTEREST AND ZERO PAYMENTS FORo MONTHS "

•

Foundation celebrates
milestones with
governor, guests, A6 ·

A3

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• 0 rtXJvc' f-'• (e- 1\:ruo· ·o:'a prr~P• il'&lt;' '"' t, Cr&gt;~cr il'~ "'a ..,.,-, '•l•&lt;·s ':e ~t-1 ~elup an: hdr ~8 h&lt;~-se~ m~y ll•' -l~C t Gl'l ~r-~ "'·af ,a-¥ 'lAce•-:, \ Jt,e··.• I&lt;.J I ,-.,l~·c ~-a~dOoi&lt;ly
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The Daily sentinel ·

NATION

"

PageA2
Wednesday, October 5,

BY CANDICE CHOI

Sunday during a one-hour
sightseeing tour.
At a news conference late
LAKE GEORGE, N.Y.- Tuesday, the acting chairman
Just days before a tour boat of
the
National
capsized in the Adirondack Transportation Safety Board
Mountains, killing 20 elderly said investigators would con·
people, the Coast Guard duct tests Wednesday to sec
,began rethinking its .passen- how The Ethan Allen would
ger-weight calculations to have handled at various
take into account Americans' speeds while carrying its
expanding waistlines .
maximum load of 50 people
·· At the time it tlipped over•. using a 160-pound-per-pas- ,
the 38-foot Ethan Allen was senger calculation.
just under its capacity of 48
The test also will explain
passengers - a figure that what might have happened if
was arrived at by usi ng a. the weight suddenly shifted
New York standard that to one side, a possible cause
~ssumes a 150-pound aver- of the accident.
age for each roan, woman and
Acting NTSB Chairman
child, authorities said. The Mark Roscnkcr also said the
U.S. Coast Guard stand&lt;ird 39-year-old boat had modifi. assumes a· 140-pound aver- . cations that would&gt;have made
age· for each person.
· it heavier. Among them, ·a
lnvestigahm looking into canvas canopy was replaced
the accident have said that with a wood-and-Fiberglas
too much weight may have design, a larger ~ngine was
been a factor and suggested installed, and seven · lead
those standards may have to bricks for ballast were placed
be
revised . · because in the bow, probably to keep
Americans are getting heav -' the boat balanced after the
ier - something' the Coast larger engine was installed.
Guard recognized well before
The NTSB will do the tests
the tragedy.
on The Ethan Allen 's twin sis. ''We ate looking at that and ter boat, The de Champlain, ·
we know that if you look in what Rosenker called "a
around at average people, very scientilic road test."
jiOU kno'A' this is not an accu"We're going to learn a
rate average to · be · using," lot," he said.
said Coast Guard spokes- . Roseiiker said four passengers · interviewed Tuesday
woman Angela McArdle .
The disdosure from the told investigators the winCoast Guard in Washington dows on the boat were open
came as di vet's combed the when it flipped·, helpi_ng some
bottom of Lake George for to escape.
the belongings of the elderly
An examination of the boat .
-passengers tossed into the also found no automatic bilge
water and e~perts e~amined pump in "the Ethan Allen,
t~e boat for clues to why it meaning a · pilot or crew
overturned on a calm, clear . member would have to man-

., .

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PRESS WRITER

AP Photo

A second diver with the Scuba Unit of the Warren County Sheriff's department jumps into Lake
George on Tuesday, at Lake George , N.Y., at the site where the tour boat Ethan Allen sank on
Sunday killing 20 people. The sheriff said that the divers were looking ·for articles that went
down with the boat.
ually pump out water.
Finally, Rosenker said a
" human factor" test would
study the actions of the boat's .
captain in the 72 hours leading up to the accident. ·
Earlier, police · said the
boat's operator, Shoreline
Cruises, could face a fine of
$25 to $100 for failing to
have a second crew member
on board to aid the 74-yearold ·captain, Richard Paris. A
state inspector determined in
May the boat needed two
·
crew members.
"You could imagine the
things that could go :vrong,"

said state police Maj. Gerald .
Meyer. "There may be times
when someone may need to
attend to someone while the
ve·s sel was-being operated."
The state on Monday night
suspended the operating certificates for all five of
Shoreline's boais.
Other· gfJvernment regulators also are changing standards to adapt to heavier
Americans. Following a
.c ommuter. plane crash that
killed 21 people in 2003 in
North Carolina, the Federal
Adm1nistration
Aviation
raised its. summertime weight

average from 160 pounds per
person to 174, ·including
carry-on baggage.
·
McArdle said the Coast
Guard awarded a contract
just a few weeks ago to a
research firm to ·detem1ine
how increasing the average
weight per passenger ·would
affect vesse Is around the
United States.
McArdle said the Coast
Guard knew the w~ight
requirement has been outdated
for some time, but did not
move on the issue until the
National
Transportation
Safety Board warned about the

By CAIN BURDEAU

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW ORLEANS- Mayor
Ray Nagin said Tuesday the
city is laying off as many as
ings, but they remain near the 3,000 employees - or about
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATED P~ESS WRITER
lowest of his presidency.
half its workforce -' because
Despite the pollsand recent of .the financial damage
:WASHINGTON
grumbling about his ~erfor- . inflicted on New Orleans by
J)resident Bush, sumng mance ·
from
some Hurricane Katrina.
debate on the worrisome pos- Republicans, Bush insisted
Nagin announced with
·Sibility of a bird flu pandem- he still had "plenty" of politi''great
sadness" that he had
k, suggested dispatching cal capital tha,t he would
been
unable
to find the money
:American troops to enforce spend getting lawmakers to
ke-ep
the
workers on the
to
-quarantines in any areas with go along with his proposed
payroll.
outbreaks of the killer virus.
budget cuts, Iraq strategy;
He said only non-essential
Bush asserted aggressive proposals to add to U.S. oil
,action could be needed to refining .capacity and desire
prevent a potentially crip- for a reauthorization of the
' 1Jiing U.S. outbreak of a bird anti-terror Patriot Act.
·:tlu strain that is sweeping
He called for quick confir1:hrough Asian poultry and mation of his nomination of
&lt;lltausing experts to fear it White House counsel Harriet
could become the next deadly Miers to replace Justice
:pandemic. Citing concern Sandra Day O'Connor on the
:that state and local authorities Supreme Court..
.
might be unable to contain
On Katrina, Bush said the
and deal with such an out- federal effort to help evacbreak, Bush asked Congress uees and local communities ·
to give l!i'm the authority to · remains uneven.
&lt;!.all in the military.
He praised his administra. - The president has already tion's success at handing out
.indicated he wants to give the $2,000 in immediate cash
•
~ed forces lhe lead respon- assistance to some storm vic~ibility
for
conducting tims and in resolving bureausearch-and-rescue operations cratic hurdles that had impedand sending in supplies after ed the removal of the Gulf
massive natural disasters and Coast's huge debris piles. But
lerrorist attacks - a notion he said the government could
:that could require a change in "probably do a better job"
jaw and that even some in the arranging for temporary
:Pentagon have reacted to housing for displaced people
skeptically. The idea raised and needed to be u·p to the
the startling-to-some image task of retraining people to
. of soldiers cordoning off fill new jobs.
communities hit by disease.
Responding to fiscal con"The president ought to servatives' sticker shock at
'have all ... assets on the table · the costs of rebuilding the
lo be able to deal with some- Gulf Coast, · Bush called for
:thing this signifiGant" Bush "even deeper reductions in
:sai\1 during a 5.5 minute ques - the mandatory spending protion-and-answer session with grams than are already
reporters in the sun-splashed planned" to pay for it.
Rose Garden.
On other topics:
· Dr: Irwin Rcdlener, associate
• Bush said the White
=&lt;lean of Columbia Univetsity's House has begun ihe search
:Mailman School of Public for a replacement for Federal
:Health and director of its Reserve Board Chairman
National Center for Disaster Alan Greenspan, who retires ·
Preparedness, called the presi- in January, but he hasn' t see·n :
dent's suggestion an "extraor- names yet.
I'
.' .dinadly draconian measure"
• He. acknowledged the pub1hat would be unnecessary if lic had a "diminished •
•
~e nation had built the capa. appetite" for overhauling '
bility for rapid vaccine produc- Social Security, a top priority
-tion, ensured a large supply of earlier this year that was in
anti-virals like Tamiflu, and trouble before Katrina hit and
.dot allowed the degmdation of has nearly completely fallen
off Congress' radar since then.
¢le public health system.
.
• Bush said he wa~ "disap. : "The translation of this is
;martial law in the Un.ited pointed, frankly, in the vote I
.States," Redlener;.said.
got in the African-American
&gt; It was the president's first community" in November
"[{Ill-fledged news conference after trying hard to bring it up
over four months, as the from the 9 percent h.e ·got in
White House hopes to regain 4000. · Bush won II percent
.momentum lost amid sky- of the black vote in 2004, and
:high gasoline prices, a rising the poor federal response to
:death roll in Iraq , and a Katrina's mostly poor and
ilawed response to Hurricane black victims has led many to
l&lt;atrina. Bush has seen a question Republicans ' hopes
small rise in hi s approval rat - of doing better next time.

workers will be laid off and about a month ago.
that no tiretighters or police
The ·mayor said the move
will save about $5 million to
will be among those let go.
"I wish I didn 't have to do $8 million of the city's
this. I wish we had the.money, . monthly payroJ.I of $20 milthe resources to keep these lion. The layoffs will take
people," Nagin said. "The place over the next two
problem we have is we have· weeks.
ne revenue streRms."
"We talked to local banks
Nagin described the layoffs and other financial instituas "pretty permanent" and lions and we are just not able
said that the city will work to put together the financing
with the Federal Emergency necessary to continue to
Management Agency to noli- maintain City Hall'.s staffing
fy municipal employees who at its -current levels," the
fled the city in the aftermath mayor said.
of · Katrina, which struck
Meanwhile,
form.e r

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· Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 6
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
VFW Ladies Auxiliary of
9053 will meet at 7 p.m. at
the hall.
Friday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Chapter #74, PERI,
II :45 a.m. luncheon meeting,
Meigs County Senior Center.
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart and
State Senator Joy Padgett are
speakers. Call 992-2161 for
lunch reservations by Oct. 6 .
Saturday, Oct. 8
COOLVILLE- Octoberfest
at Coolville Volunteer Firt;
bepartment. Food, entertainment, Chinese auction, drawings. Vendors are welcome.
Parade at I0 a.m. Contact Lee
Was1\bum, 667-6891.
POMEROY Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the America
Revolution, will meet at I
p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy
Library. Nancy Grueser,
Meigs County audjtor, will
be the speaker..

President Clinton met with
dozens of New Orleans-area
evacuees staying at a shelter
in Baton Rouge's convention cenlt;r. And officials
ended their door-to-door
swee p for corpses
in
Louisiana with the death toll
Tuesday at 972 - far fewer
thai} the I 0,000 the maver
had feared at one polni.
Mississippi's Katrina death
toll was 221.
A company hired by the
state to remove bodies will
remain on call if any others
are found.
·

·Church events
Wednesday, Oct. 5
MIDDLEPORT' - Revival
services at Middleport Church
of the Nazarene, General
. Hartinger Parkway through

'

JACKSON -About a hundred tri-state artists are
expected to exhibit at the
·upcoming Foothills . Art
·Festival to beheld Oct. 14,16
:in the Lodge at Canter's Cave
4-H Camp, 5 miles north of
Jackson, off Route 35.
,
. Or:ganized by Southern Hills
· Arts Council, the Festival will
showcase approximately 500
. works of art. Sands Hill Coal
:Company and OSCO Industries
haye provided $1,210 in .cash
prizes to be-awarded.
Children can exercise their
creativity with four hours of
. free
arts activities on
. Saturday and Sunday, compli:ments of National City Bank.
·Oak Hill Banks is sponsoring
live classical music. Sean
Ferguson wili play acoustic
. guitar from 2 to 4 p.m. on

Place rour Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
G~llipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

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Skidmore birthday,,

Birthdays

Saturday and The Brighton
Trio will play chamber music
on Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m.
State Farm Insurance agent
Dan Dailey is . sponsoring a
Picf!ic . Under The Poplars .
with live contemporary music
on Saturday from 5 to 7 p.m.
with those attending to take
their own food or purchase a
box lunch .. Other sponsors
tffe Adena Health System and
Cotner &amp; Cooley, CPA.
The festival offers work in
oils, acrylics, pastels, drawing, prints, mixed media, photography, watercolors, and a
broad mnge of three dimensional pursuits . from noon to
2 p.m. on Saturday and
Sunday, youngsters are invited to climb the stairs to the
mezzanine and try their own
hand at cre~ting art. Teachers

·~·
IC -

will help instruct them.
' Canter 's Cave is nestled
deep into a hollow·and offer&gt;
the public lots of hiking trails.
After enjoying tlje artwork,
&gt;~isitors are ~elcome to s~rap
on their hiking boots and push
off into unspoiled forested
hills and dales. · '
The festival is open to the
public from I0 a.m. to 7 p.m.
on Friday, Oct. 18 and
Saturday, Oct. 19. On .Sunday,
Oct. 20, the festival is open
from noon u·ntil 5 p.m. There
is no admission ·charge .
Canter's Cave 's staff is in
charge, of concessions. Parking
is ample. The Lodge is handi- .
capped accessible. For more
information, call Southern
Hills at 740-286-6355 or email
at shac@ zoomnet.

The University Medical Associates pediatric physicians,
from left, Aridrew W Wapner, D.O., Celeste N, Wallace, D.O.,
C. Thomas Clark, D.O., and Karen Montgomery-Reagan, D.O.,
are available for appointments at our clinic.

I

Question: I recently suf- go back within a fe~ months back ,your original duties. They
fered what my doctor said was of your heart attack. It usually · may treat you almost as an
. a mild to moderate heart takes six to eight weeks for invalid. These people are cling· attack. What will my life be scar tissue to form over your ing to an untrue stereotype that
· like after I recover from this healing heart, and your doctor heart attacks always leave peo:frightening experience? How may give you the okay to ple feeble . If you encounter
long will thai take? Do people , return to work - at least on a such people, your recovery and
who have had a heart attack part-time basis - toward the retumto your old self will evenusually return to their old jobs? end of this time period.
· tually change their perceptions.
Answer: While I understand
During your firs·t few days
· Fortunate ly, most people
. your describing this as a "fright- back.at work, your doctor may today treat h~art a~tack
: ening experience," there is instruct )'OU to take your pulse patients with compassion,
..good news about the recovery at certam times during your without being cpndescendphao;e that you are in now. As a workday, or may ask you to ing. Like a person with a brogeneml rule, with proper med- wear a monitor to determine ken leg, odds are that you'll
ical supervision, a person can how well you respond to oo- soo n be up and active again .
usually resume most of his or the-job stress. Your physician
Family Medicine® is a
. her normal activities after suf- also may suggest ways you weekly co/um11. To submit
. fering a heart attack. It may be can reduce stress at the work- questio11s, H&gt;rile to Martha A.
· necessary, of course, to lose place and put your rest breaks Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
of
weight, eat a healthier diet, or to good use .
of
phy
sicians
send
A
lot
.~ive up smoking, but these are
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
rrnportant things to do for any- their heart attack patients back . Box llO, Athens, Ohio 45701,
body who is not living a healthy to work on a gradual basis, or via e-mail to readerques·
lifestyle. I want to emphasize, tirst for just a few hours a day, tions@familymedicillenews.o
: though, that most heart attack inEreasing over the course of rg. Medical information in
· patients can return to their jobs, several months until they can this column is provided as an
· social activities and family life. work full time. It's important educatio11al service only. It
It's important that you dis- that. your boss be on your side. does not replace the judgment
cuss questions such as when Brief him or her on your con- of your personal physician,
you can go back to work .with dition and explain any changes who should be relied on to
your doctor. Tell him or her in your doctor thinks might be diagnose and recommend
treatme11t for any medical
. detail exactly what .you do at necessary in your d~tie s.
On the other hand, you may conditiotts. Past columns are
: work. Explain any physical or
emotional stress involved. For find your employer or your co- ayailable onli11e a{www.fam: most jobs, you can probably ,workers are afmid to give you ilymedicinenews.org.

~alhpoli~ ia![p ~rtbune The Daily Sentinel ~otnt ~lea~ant !egt~ter!

v

Festival plans moving -ahead

After heart attack, resumption of normal activitie~ is the rule .

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Wednesday, Octobers, 2oos

DEAR ABBY: Eleven years
~ake s me feel guilty for it. I employment, and have lei'
Sunday. Rev. Harold Massey ago, my 7-year-old son,
go
home for two hours every free time to bbsess about you .
evangelist. Services at 7 p.m. Nicholas, was · shot in ·a
day
at lun_ch and he picks a Please encourage him to do it.
Wednesday through Saturday, botched robbery in Italy. His
fight with me. He cpnstantly
DEAR ABB.Y: Six years
9:30a.m. Sunday school, 10:30 organs were donated to ~even
me
at
work
to
ask
if
I
am
calls
ago,
my mcce gave me an
a.m. morning worship and 6:30 Italian citizens. S(nce that time,
cheating on him .
antique,
table. It was in ver)'
p.m. Sunday evening service . . donation mtes in Italy have
Dear
real:
Abby,
I
am
working!
I
poor
c(mdition.
I restored .u
Friday, Oct. 7
tripled and thousands of people .
Abby
ly war to be with Liam, but I and used it until I moved into
RACINE
Weekend - many of them children can't tee! sad mUI hurt' allthe a small er ho me last vcar,
meeting through Sunday at are alive who would have died.
time because I have a family when I gave it to my daughte)·
Red Brush Church of Christ
Through its annual Holiday
to support. Please tel I me who has more room .
. on Bash an Road. Meeting s Resolution Campaign, the
how I can ni ce ly tell Liam to
My niece saw it, and noyv
.on Friday and Saturday will National Kidney Foundation
donation in Italy. That you stop being a jerk. - MIXED she's "demanding" that my
be held at 7 p.m. and on is urging Americans to contook the pain of losing your UP IN MAINE
daughter give it back. Can we
Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6 apm. sider the ultimate holiday gift
son and turned it into someDEAR MIXED UP: Uam be forced to return it'' ~
Speaker will be Guy Mallory idea - organ donation, the
thing positive is inspiring.
isn't a "jerk." He's nut work- MRS. C., MOUNT PLEASof Winter Garden, Fla.
gift of life. By simply signing · Please, readers, take a in g, probably fee]s .Jike less of ANT S.C.
Sunday, Oct. 9
a donor card or enrolling in a moment and consider the a man for it, doesn't feel he
DEAR MRS. C.: Not in my
RUTLAND
state donor registry, we can importance of organ donation. deserves you, and is de spe r- book. Unless the table was
Homecoming will be held at do for the United States what Discuss it with your families ately insecure. Was he always
given to you with the cle~r
the Rutland Church of Christ . Nicholas' story did for Italy.
because it is they who will this way - or did it start after understand ing that if you didn.'t
with worship service al· 10:30
Abb¥, I hope you will join me have the final say. For more he stopped working?
need it would be retumed to her,
a.m., a carry-in dinner at in urging your readers to sign information or to receive a free
If it's the former, then your then it was a gift and not a loan.
noon with meat, drinks and ~ donor cards, and give those in donor card, .contact the
"fabulous" guy is showing And once a giti is given, it is the
tableware provided, . and an - need of the gift of life a new ·National ·Kidney Foundation
classic signs of . being an property of the recipient to do
afternoon service at 2 p.m. beginning. - REG GREEN, by calling toll-free (XOO) 622- · abuser, a proble.m that wi II
with as she (or he) wishes.
with music by Dayspring.
LACANADA, CALIF.
9010, or visitwww.kidney.org only escalate, and y!Ju need to
Dear Abby is ;,ritten by
POMEROY - " The Rock
DEAR REG: I'm ple;lsed and click on ''Transplantation." . gel away from him. If it's the Abigail Va11 Burell, also
Springs United Methodist to do so, I remember reading
DEAR
ABBY:
My 1atter, then he needs to get out known as Jeanne Phillips, atld
Church on old Route 33, will newspaper accounts of the boyfriend, "Liam," is a fabu- of the house, if only to volunwas foullded by her moth~r,
be hosting the southern gospel courageous way you dealt lous guy. We get along great teer some of his ·free time.
Pauline
Phillips. Write Dear
quartet, Believer's · Voice of with your son's tragic. death, - as long as I don ' tleave the That way he will contribute to
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com
Columbus, at the 10 a.m. ser- and the difference it made in house. I am the only one something, possibly meet
or P.O. Box 69440, U/8
vice. Sunday school for all ages the attitude toward organ working right now, and he people who ca n give him Angeles, CA 90069.
at the church are held at 9 a.m.
REEDSVILLLE .- Music
by "Just in Time,'' 7 p.m.,
Reedsville United Methodist
Church.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - A and local organizations, like·
POMER0Y - The Foret' parade at noon will kick off the scouts and 4-H clubs will
EVERGREEN - Sunday,
Run United Methodist Church Tuppers
18 at 4 p.m., family and
Sept.
Plains
Harvest be doing fundraisers. There is
congregation will celebrate Festival on Oct. I 5 and entries no charge to set up but those friends gathered at Bob and
homecoming/rally day with for boih the parade an&amp; doing so are to take their own Penny Ratliff's shelterhouse
worship at 9 a.m., Sunday craft~rs who· would like to set tables.
in Evergreen to celebrate the
school at 10 a.m. and a qrry- up are now being accepted.
of their · greatoccasion
Demonstrations bv the fire
in dinner. pi 12:30 p.m. In the
Lamar Lyons of the Tuppers deJ)anmem, and Irom the nephew Mason Christopher
afternoon .there will be special Plains Fire Department is han- Meig s
County
sheriff's Skidmore's fi.rst birthday.
music by Joann Robinson and dling registrations for the office, along with live mu siMason is the son of Amy
Roy Jenkins, speaking by the parade and encourages partici- cal entertainment and carni- and Christopher Skidmore.
Rev, Bob Davis, director of pation by area residents, orga- val games for the kids will be
John Deere was the birthJackson Area Ministries and a nizations and businesses. He featured during the afternoon, day theme, Celebrating the
· time for the observance of the
big day with Mason were his
said the lineup will be in the Lyons said. .
.
church's history.
Weather and business per- mommy and daddy, Nana
industrial ~ark and then the
Monday, Oct. 10 .
parade wtll . m-:r~h . north mitting,
Medflight
and Vickie Hauldren, Papaw Ron Mason: Christopher Skidmore.
'
REEDSVILLE-· Revival at
through town, fmtshmg at HealthNet will be in with Phalin, Mama Judy Scherer. Olivia Marie Ratliff, aunt
Eden United Brethren Church, State Route 7 and Vanderhoof · their helicopters. A military
Granny Becky ami Papaw Jay Kay Higley. special friends
7 p.m. each evening, with Rev.
Road
.
near
.
the
VFW.
helicopter
will
al~o be on the Riepenhoff. Maw Vivian and Jackie Jone s and Shane
Charles Martindale officiating.
Parttctpants Will then be In VII- grounds. D"uring the after- great-grandpa Bob Grant, Whobrey.
•
Special music nightly.
ed back to the -~re d~partment noon, the tire department will great au,nt Esther Roberts,
Those sending gifts were
:were the festtytlies wtll be tak· host an open house showing cousins Margie Layne, Leigh cousin Betty Skidmore, Aunt
mf. place dunng the afternoon. purchases made with last Ann and Phil .Hollingshead, Cissy and cousins Lauren and
There has never bee!! a year's Fire Act grant award.
Kelly and best friend, cousin · Hunter Riepenholl
festival for the community of
Thursday, Oct. 13
CHESTER
-Thelma Tuppers Plains," said Lyons,
Hayes will celebrate her 93rd "and we ' re hoping to make it
birthday on Oct. 13. Cards may ·an annual event." Crafters,
·be sent to 48238 S.R. 248, concession vendors, and busiLong Bottom, Ohio 45743.
nesses will have booths set up

,FAMILY MEDICINE

m

PageA3

Foothills Art Festival to be held.in Jackson

Reach 3 Counties

1

Donation of sons organs turns tragedy into triun;p~

Wednesday, Oct. 5
ALFRED Orange
Township J'rustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Follrod.
CHESTER
- . Chester
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting, 7 · p.m,,
Chester Town Hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local School Board
special session; 6 p.m., to
approve negotiated contract
with OAPSE.
-Sc ipio
PAGE VILLE
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town HaiL
Tuesday, Oct. II
POMEROY- The Bedford
Towuship Trustees will meet at
7 p.m. at the townhall.

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·Community_Calendar
Public meetings

problem following the sinking
of a wa.~r taxi in· the Baltimore
harbor that killed five people
ir 2004. Asked why the Coast
Guard did not move' more
quickly on the weight-per-person calculation, McArdle said:
" It ' has such wide-ranging
implications. You need to
address tl\e economic impact
on the industry, looking at the
scope. It's not something
where we can just say, 'Now
passenger ferries must carry
20 fewer people."'
McArdle said it was too
early to say when a new regulatiOn would be drawn up· or
what the new weight standard
· might be.
Investigators believe a combination.of factor&gt; could have
contributed to the Ethan Allen
tragedy, including a large
wake created by another boat,
a sudden shift of passengers'
· weight on the boat's benchstyle seats, and the overall
weigh t of the passengers.
The 47 passengers · were
se nior
citizens
.fr6m
Michigan and Ohio who had
come East to see the changing fall color.s.
The investigation continued Tuesday with a .sclteduled interview of the captain
and the examination of the
Ethan Allen in a nearby airplane hangar.
· Rich Morin, a professional
sc uba diver who helped raise ·
.the boat Monday, said when
he saw the boat underwater,
"there didn't appear to be any
damage at all."
Of the 27 people brought to
Glens Falls Hospital after the
capsizing, four remained hospitali.zed Tuesday. · ·

Bush says U.S. troops New Orleans mayor announces up to 3,000 layoffs
might be needed to help
.stop bird flu-pandemic
'

BY THE BEND

2005

Extra weight may be factor in fatal boat crash; divers search lake
A~SOCIATED

The Daily Sentinel

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• Gastroenterology ond Internal Medicine ·
Offite hours on TuesdoYI

• Pediatrics

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Offite hours on Monday\, Wednesdays and Frido)'l' ·

• Geriatric ond Internal Metlicine
Office hours on MondoVI

• Podiatry ond Podiatric Surgery
Offite hours on se&lt;ond ond fourlh Soturdoys

• Obstetrics ond Gynecology
Office hours on TuesdoYI ond Thursdays

o:ontN"Ess ~
HEALTH SYSTEM

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 5, 2005
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The Daily Sentinel

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Sometimes it' is black and while
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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(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 make no taw 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.
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PageA4

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Tl:le First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S ' VIEW

Frustrated
Questions bond costs proposal
·Dear Editor:
. I am very frustrated that our Meigs County Commissioners
expect the taxpayers to fund the bond costs for a new hospi-

tal.
. I do not 'understand why the idle Veterans facility is no
longer able to be used when the commissioners have been trying to coun various medical providers to run that facility for
the past two to three years.
The new. grant money cenainly could have gone a long way
to fund such services they are wanting to have available. With
the recent distinction of having the highest unemployment
rate in the state, I fail to see !he need for a new fancy facility
which we . will obviously have a difficult time paying for. I
would rather see my money keeping our sheriff deputies at
full staff and keeping our community safe.
·O'Bleness Memorial Hospital is certainly getting a great
deal to run the building we will be paying for with our hardearned dollars. I can't help but·wonder what kind of deal the
commi ssioners are receiving personally for this arrangement.
The commissioners should be concerned about the needs of
the county instead of which one of them gets their picture or
·
quote in the newspaper.•
· Darren Hayes
Pomeroy

When recently asked about
his state's parental-notification ballot initiative thai
would prohibit minor-age
girls from getting abortions
without a parent's knowledge, .Califomia Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger replied : "I
have a daughter. I wouldn't
want to have someone take
my daughter to a hospital for
an abonion or somethinl! and
not tell me. I would kilt: him
if they do that."
•
Now that's refreshingl
Hold on; hold on. Bifore
you run off, I'm not Slamming "choicers" this we.ek,
~nd J'm·not lauding "lifers."
This isn't th'e debate about
whether you or I began at
Day 1 or at 24 weeks. And,
mind you, I'm not endorsing
murder here - and the governor later clarified he.
wouldn't actuillly kill the
hypothetical person. But that
was a totally normal Dad
reaction he had (a fact that,
as a good politician, was
surely
not
lost
on
Schwarzenegger). You can
be on any side of the abortion debate (the Terminator
wants. it legal) and have that
healthy gut instinct.
The Schwarzenegger reaction came in somewhat stark
contrast to some other recent·
parenting news. September
was a bad month for motherhood, at least on the news
wires.
A New·York mother decided it was time for her 13year-old daughter, and her
14-year-old female friend, to
each "have sex and get it
over with."
Mom got a hotel room , hit

~ednesday,

October 5, 2005

Obituaries

Delayed
from PageA1

Robert Banks

some healthy thoughts bn bad behavior. There are menthat California mother.
tal-health issues in a lot of
These Motherhood Hall of these cases, obviously, but
Shame stories are obviously · regard less, a society can and
not the norm. We know that . mu st say loud and clear:
because they still make "That 's · wrong. That's evil.
Kathryn
headlines. And for that, at That can never happen
Lopez
least, we can be grateful again." Instead, wh,en Yates
though it doesn't help Eliza murdered her children, folks
Jan e or the . most likel y at the National Organization
messed-up kitls of thefr for . Women and others
the mall 'with the kids, and sexed-up mamas. It's the day rushed to. her defense.
Instead of making excuses
found an 18- and 19-year-old we stop finding these stories
who'd do the dirty deed with extraordinary or· are not out- and defending crimes, we
the ,girls. Mom was in the . raged when we'll be diag- should make sure we all
. hotel room with them during nosed with a fatal cultural have our heads on straight
th e loss of innocence malady.
about the preciousness of
(though, it's a safe bet this
When you put these recent human life. Because there is
woman's daughter lost that cases beside some other no greater gift.
long ago).
/'
aghinst-a11-that-is-good-andAgain: Obviously, in all
In Colorado, wa!lting to be right'and-natural stories like ihese shameful, criminal sto~ "Nol mo~f of a teen boy the case of Andrea Yates, · ries , there is ·a necessary dis(making up,' she told police, , ,w ho infamously drowned cussion to be had about prefor her own outsider days in her five children in a bath- vention. In most, if not all of
hi gh sc hool) 41-year-old tub, and New Jersey teens these cases, there were sick
Silvia Johnson is accused of Amy Grossberg and Brian people involved who clearly
boozing and drugging-it up Peterson ,who almost 10 needed some kind of help.
at parties at her hou se with years ago tossed their aRpar- But when a terribl~ deed has
· teenagers - and having sex ently beaten-to-death newwith some of the boys in born (he had suffered multi- been done , they also need
attendance at these regular pie sk ull fractures) in the punishment. And despite the
dumpster, you get the feeling . virtues of forgiveness, there
bashes.
On the West Coast, there's that we do have something to is a place for unwavering
th e tragic case of young worry about_ beyond indi- societal condemnation. You
can stiII love the sinner .and
E.liza Jane. Her mother, v1'd ua 1 cases.
The
dumpster
.
story
has
condemn the sin. But we've
Christine Maggiore, is HIV
positive and insists that the rt:peated itself enough that got to do the latter in each
virus doesn.'t cause AIDS. So there are now drop-off slots . and every one of these despishe has taken no medication, at hospitals and other toea- cable cases. It will say somehas had children, breastfed, lions for mothers to abandon thing shameful about us the
and kept the kids away from their living babies. I'm all day we don't see that- the
for doing whatever it takes to day your instinct isn't to
.reputable doctors.
And now 3-year-old Eliza give a kid a chance at life. have an "Arhnuld-like" Dad
Jane is dead. Though thi s but it's a di sturbing per- kind of reaction . .
(Kathryn Lopez is the ediMother of the Year is disput- ceived necessity.
lt's
disturbing
.
to
realize
tor
of National Review
ing il, the . coroner's report
(www,nationalresays the toddler died of· that the instinct for some· Online
AIDS-related pneumonia.
supposedly
thoughtful, view.com). She can be conI
bet
Arnold sophisticated types ·is often tacted at k/opez@nationalreSchwarzenegger would ~ave' !0 defend and accommodale view.com.)

RACINE- Rol:ieit Banks, 52;Racine. passed away on Oct.
3, 2005. at his residence .
·•
He was hom in Warrep, on Jan. 10, I 953, son of the. late
Clair Banks and Alice Root Riblett. He was employed as a
truck driver. .
He is survived by sons: Raben Banks, Jr. , Gallipolis;
Jonathan (Yvonne) Banks, Akron ; Joey Banks, Akron; sister.
Gloria (David) Barner, Pomeroy; and brothers:, Ronald
Riblett. Akron, andJerry Banks, Akron. ·
Services will be held at I p .m. on Saturday, Oct. 8; 2005, at
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Burial will be
in Ch'ester Cemetery. Friends may call on Saturday, Oct. 8,
from II a.m. u~tiltime of service at I p.m.

Local Briefs
Church to make apple butter
POMEROY - .The Rock Springs United Methodist Church
will be making apple butter Saturday, Oct. 8, and again on
· Saturday. Oct. 15. It will be sold for $5 a quan or $2.75 a pint.
Orders may be placed by calling Louise Radford at 992-5218
or Nancy Radford at 992-3912.

Book signings by Meigs author
POMEROY - Meigs author and Wahama language arts
teacher Michele Starcher will be signing copies of her book
''The Ornery Angel" from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., Oct. 12 at the New
Haven Library, and from II a.m, to I p.m. , Oct. I 5 at Will as
Bible Book Store in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Copies of "The
Ornery Angel" are available at Willas Bible Book Store and
Hartwell House.

Book sale s~t ··
POMEROY - The semi-annual book sale of the Friends of
the Meigs County Library will be held Thursday and Friday at
the Pomeroy Library. Hours of the sale will be from 9 a.m to
4p .m .

Issue boil advisory
POMEROY - Leading Creek Conservancy District ha s
issued a boil advisory for customers on Wagner Lane, Ohio
143 from Ohio 7 to Smith R.un Road and adjacent roads and
Laurel Cliff Road and adjacent road s, due to a water leak on
Wagner Road.

ALBANY. Oasis Therapeutic Foster Care Network, Ohio
681, will hold a Chinese auction·' o benefit Christmas for foster youth at noon on Saturday at Lake Snowden. ·

Offer health fair
TUPPERS PLAINS - Amazing Grace Church in Tuppers
Plains will host a health fair from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Oct. 15.
Immunizations and health screenings will be offered by
Holzer Clinic.
The Women's Care Center will offer !Jelp and information
about services and Dave cleland will offer information about
the church's food pantry and holiday baskets.
The fair is free and open to the public. The church is located.on Ohio 681 across from the tire station.

Today is Wednesday, Oct. 5, the 278th day of 2005. There are
87 days left in the year. .
Today's Highlight in History:
' On Oct. 5, 1947, President Truman delivered the first televised
White House· address.
~ On this date:
- In 1830, the 21st president of the United States, Chester
Arthur, was born in Fairfield, Vt.
In 1892, the Dalton Gang, notorious for its train robberies,
was practically wiped out while attempting to rob a pair of banks
in Coffeyville, Kan.
·
In 1921, the World Series was broadcast on radio for the first
time.
'
· In 1941 , former Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis ..,...
the first Jewish member of the nation's highest court - died in
Washington, D.C., at age 84.
In 1953, Earl Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief justice of
the United States, succeeding Fred M: Vinson.
Thought for Today: "The role of a do-gooder is not what
actors call a. fat part." - Margaret Halsey, American writer
(1910-1997).

For the Record

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. . Complaints
MIDDLEPORT- Big Bend Youth Football League reponed to Mi.ddlepon Police Department that the announcer's
stand had been entered at the football stadium. Two Polk
Audio Atrium 45 public address speakers were taken.
Roger Dent reported the theft of $400 from Wayne 's
Place.
Julia Cross reported that someone had put plastic wrap
around her vehicle.

.

Sentenced

· Letters tp the editor are welcome . They should be less than
J(JO words. All/etters are subject to i!tlting, must be signed,
~nd include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentfnel.
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¥orrectlon Polley
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Ct:~arlene

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POMEROY -Ryan K. Marshall was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to one year each on counts of
receiving stolen property and breaking and enterting. The sentences were ordered to be served consecutively with a previous one-year sentence.
After completion of 30 day s in prison. Marshall will be
allowed judicial .release under the Community Corrections
program. He was given credit for 188 days served in jail.

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

26 Weeks ........ . ...'107.t0
52 Weeks .... . ... . • . .'2t4.2t

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Lecif well enough alone

.

We have been stuck
behind Mr. and Mrs. Leaf
Looker for 45 minutes. Sue
and I are on our way ho me
from the grocery store; they
are on vacation. It's nice to
Jim
be on vacation, to not have a
Mullen
worry in the world, to take
the time to smell the roses.
to wander wherever the
wind blows you, to be awed
by the wonder of narure,~to Foliage Connoisseur'?
drink in the majestic beauty . J'he:r, say beauty is in the
of this country, to slow down eye of the beholder, and I
and admire every new vista . guess I'll be holding about
in brilliant, flaming colors.
'20 giant leaf bags before the
But why do you have to do day is through. If I ever get
it front of us?
home . The leaf, lovers ahead
"Let's ram them," Sue of us are now stuck bellind
said .
leaf-lovers who are even
I'm not sure she knew she slower fhan they were.
was thinking aloud, but she Where do th ese drivers
had read my mind. Stupid come from that have never
nature. Dumb beauty. We've seen leaves before? If they
got things to do. It must be live within driving distance,
swell to have the time to they must _have their own
look at dead leaves, but I've leaves.
got gutters to clean, bulbs to
Oh. you want to see them
plant, patio furniture to stow at their peak? Nothing but
away for the winter, storm lhe best for you. Two days
windows to install. Most of before peak, who wants to
all I've gtit a lawn full of see that? Why even leave the
beautiful leaves to rake. Not house? Two days after peak?
so beautiful _when they're What kind of chump would
knee deep on your .front want to look at leaves two
lawn, are they, Mt. and Mrs. days after they peak2 What a

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colossal waste of time. It our eyes, making sure this
would be like going to a isn't some leaf-peeping
museum and finding the trick, that sud&lt;Je)ll y and
Rembrandt is out being without warning they'll
cleaned. Why even go at all? change their minds and
The rest oflhe paintings are swerve back in front of us at
just a bunch of Van Dykes, 20 miles per hour, we 'get a
Turners and Titians. I can glimpse of the far-off ·hills: .
see junk like that at home.
It was as if a bright red
Or maybe our leaves are
different from ' their leaves. "sunset and a thick gold dawn
Our leaves turn red and yel- had come together and
low, maybe theirs turn pink dropped to the ground so we
with· purple polka dots. cou ld see what they look
C'mon people, they're just like up close. Our jaws
leaves. If you look at them dropped, we slowed down
close up they ' re dirty, spot- and followed the leaf-peepted, misshapen, full of bugs, ers into the overlook.
and not very pretty at all . Is
The "tourists" were from
yellow a better color tha!T the next town. TheY. didn't
green? Is red a better color know why, but they 'd decidthan green') I think green can ed to take the day off and
hold its own with all. the drive around. We decided to
other colors, I don't think we take the rest of the day off,
have to get all that excited too. The storm windows
about leaves turning brown cou ld wait; who wants to
and f.alling off the trees.
· clean gutters on a day like
Whoa! What's this? The
this anyway? I may not rake
leafer; have their right blinker on. Finally! Praise· the the leaves at all this year.
(Jim Mullen is the author of
Lord! That's right, I forgot.
there's an overlook up "It Takes a Village Idiot:
ahead. Yes, get off the road C omplicming the Simple
and take your · leaf-peeping Life" and "Baby :r First
Tattoo. " You can reach him ar
friends with you .
As we follow them with jinr_mu//en@myway.cnm)
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Rio Meigs
from PageA1
dents to attend two classes
per
semester · at
the
Middleport center, from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m .. and take an
online course offering per
semester.
The associate _degree in
bu siness management · ha s
been offered at the Rio Meigs
Center. but students have
b'een required to invest more
classroom time than will be
required
through
the
Weekend College course.
"This program is ideal for
older stude nts who have
dreamed of earning their
degree but who might not be
able to invest the time in
attending class throughout
the week," Pines said. "With
the hi gh cost of gasoline, the
program will also help .save
the expense, of traveling to
classes."
The program will require
students to attend class yearround in a cohon settingthe same group of students
will begin and complete the
cours~ offerings together.

notice about the delay yesterday the Meigs County
Health Department canceled
flu shot clinics on Oct. 14,
17 and 18,
Weese reiterated that all of
these flu shot clinics will be
rescheduled once the I 000.
vaccinations are received.
One of those clinics was
scheduled in conjunction ·
with the Meigs County
Senior Citilens Health Fair.
Meigs
Senior
Center
Spokesperson Diana Coates
said that due to the ·delay in
flu vaccinations the decision
was made to cancel the health
fair, for now.
"We're playing it by ear,"
said Coates about waiting on
the tlu vaccinations to arrive
so that the health fair can be
rescheduled.
When those vaccinations are
received remains to be seen.
Weiss seemed to think most
health departments would
have some or all of their vaccinations by late October or
early November. He added
that mid-October through
December is normally the time
for flu vaccinations.

Salisbury
from PageA1

Plan benefit auction

TODAY IN HISTORY

The Daily Sentinel • Page As .

www.mydailysentinel.com

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"We hope that others will
also participate," Pines said,
"We want to open the classes
up to those who wish to take
advantage ·of Saturday course
otrerings."
. "That opportunity is perfect for working adults. with
· full schedules and family
commitments who want to
earn their college degree,"
Pines said:
Pines said the open house
on Thursday will also provide
information
from
admissions and fi nancial
aid staff. and a · listing ~f
courses required for the
program.
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ing is located in the back of
the building with two
entrance and exit lanes leading from the highway. Paving
of the area was completed
last week. The roadway,
canopy and steps leading up
to the building in the front
have been removed and that
area has been filled, graded
and seeded.
The building will be
equipped with new furniture
and shelving which is arriving daily, according to treasurer Mark Rhonemus. The
furniture in the current headquarters is expected to be

Beth Sergent;photo

Last year long lines like this one accompanied fl u shot clinics in the area due to a feared shortage of vaccine. Th is year the Ohio Department of Health's shipment of flu vact;ine has been
delayed by the manufacturer t~ough ODH is. confident they will receive their entire orde( of
240,000 vaccinations in time for flu vaccination season. As a result of the delay flu shot clinics have been canceled by the health department in Meigs County but will be rescheduled.
In l'yteigs County the first
to be vaccinated with the
health department's shipment of vaccine will · be
those in the high risk 'catego-

ry such as the elderly (cla'S ified as 65 and older). chil dren six to 23 monrh:,
women who will be pregnant
during llu season. children

purchased by another educational service group.
Rhonemu s said
some
. records which had been in
storage Qn the third floor of
their current location have
already been moved to the
building, but there are many
things that can't be moved
until all the furnishings and
equipment are in place .
"When we make the move,
we have to be able to transact
business right away," said
Rllonemus.
· As for Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, which
has been m·eeting in the
kitchen and gymnasium for
more than a year, there will
be no change. The legionnaires will continue meeting
there.

Donates
from PageA1
men, is now constru cting
temporary hou sin g for hurricane victims and providing
other relief in Waveland.
Miss. and New Orleans, La .
The group spends all donations directly on items needed for their relief efforts.
according to Association
President Don Vau ghan, Jr.
'"By donating to Team
Jesus, we know where the
funds are going and we know
the funds will be used to
directly help those aftected,"
Vaughan said.
In other business. the association donated $1.000

Robbery

from PageA1

from PageA1

ship, which employs 42 people, allows Sang and his son
Brad, the business's general
manager, the opportunity to
pursue their own image and
institute
practices
they
believe
will
be
fully
embraced by their customers.
"It has always been· my
desire to own· it;'' John Sang
said. "Brad has worked here
for 14 years, nine of them as
general manager. With those
developments, we decided to
Kevin K•ll!/photo
perfect the buyout, become John Sang, right, points out to his son Brad how the Turnpike
the sole owners and create designation . is removed from the dealership they operate .in
our own corporate image.
Gallipolis on Tuesday. The dealership will now be known as
"We want to expand on John Sang Ford-Lincoln-Mercury and new signage · is being
what we do and make it bet- installed by Charleston Plasterers. Charleston. W.Va.
ter," he added.
Sole ownership gives the
That arrangement continFord welcomed the Sangs'
Sangs the chance to pursue decision to become sole own- ued until 1983. when Sang
an integrity pricing policy in ers, so much so that actual began a new partnership with
selling Ford product, and approval of the change from another Turnpik~ agency
once the sale is made, follow the automaker came in two owner and it became a Fordit up with the high level of days, although it took about a Lincoln-Mercury dealership.
quality service the dealership month to follow Ford proce"We felt our future was
has become known for over dures in making the switch
with Ford-Lincoln-Mercury,
the years .
and register the name change so we relinquished our other
."It's alway s been our phi- with Ohio officials.
franchi ses for what we
losophy to have well-trained
The journey to get to where · beJieve is the best' direc tion ·
people," John Sang said. "We he's at now began for' ·John
have
a
Ford
Master Sang when he joined Don we can go," John Sang said.
"We' re excited to be here,"
Technician who's fitth in the Watts' staff in 1971. He
nation in our service depan~ became the dealership's sales he added. "We· ve been here 34
ment. What he's accom- manager in 1973, and thre~ years and we look to be here
plished with our help is a years later. when Watts for another 34 years. happy to
demon stration of our com- decided to get out of the busi- serve the tri-state area."
. mitment to that training. and
"None .o f this would ha ve
ness, Sang bought the agency
we certainly intend to continbeen
possible witho4t the
.with 'some partners. The busi ue with that effort.
ne ss eventually became an continued support from our
"All of our sale$ staff are
American Motors/Jeep d'al- loyal customer base." John
ceqified by Ford Motor Co.,"
Sang said.
·
he said . "In addition. all of ership.
our parts. and servi.ce staff
·-J
.,...···········~--:··
~.......:2itrr.
,~
~ ....
have factory certification
along with several years of
experience in the automotive
field. "
(A Fitness Center for Men &amp; Women)
The dealership installed a
Opening Monday, OCTOBER 3rd!
major expansion of its serHours:
vice center, which opened in
Mon-Fri: 6:30am - 9:00pm ; Sat: 8 am - 1 pm
January 2000 to better serve
Ifynu'\'e tried to .tone up. ger in shape, or lost' weight
its customers.
:IJ. and can 't seem totlo iron yourou ·rr.
:... ·
fUN! :
Let u,·
Molil'llTf ~au!

...........

THE BODY SHOP- GO FIGURE!

~~~~~~~A~&amp;A6A.AA66AAAAAAA~~-~

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!,
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toward downtown revitalization efforts under the direction of the leadership team
working on downtown revitalization .
The funds will be used to
purchase ne'w planters for
seasonal !lowers. and person- ·
alized Middlepon tlags.
Middlepon merchants will
hold a Moonlight Madness
shopping promolion from .6
to 9 p.m. on Oct. 31. In addition to extended shopping
})ours and sa les, the associ&lt;~­
tion 's holiday committee is
finalizing plans for . other
events for the eve ning;
Vaughan said.
· A holiday tour of homes
was tentatively se t for Dec.
I 0; and is being organized by
Ferman and Rae Moore.

Owners

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

::•

two years old and up and
adults who have chro ni c
conditi o ns aggravated by
influenza such as diabetes,
asthma, etc.

was accompanied by three
others, all wearing pillowcases over their heads.
One of the subjects tried to
get Schultz's ignition key
through the passe nger-side
door, he said, and he pulled
the pillowcase off the subject's head. He said he then
got out of hi s car and
engaged in a struggle with
the men before they !led.
Upon his arrival home,
Schultz said, he realjzed. his
wallet arid' $260 was missing.

Keeping
Meigs County
·informed
The Daily Sentinel
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Ravenswood, WV
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MEIGS CARPET
::•
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PageA6

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

Foundation celebrates milestones With governor, guests

AP Photo

University of Colorado Professor John Hall , left, shakes hands
with Tanya Zelevinsky as she and other students congratulate
Hall for winning the Nobel Prize in physics at the university in
Boulder, Colo., on Tuesday.
·

Two Americans, German
share Nobel physics prize
BY MATT CRENSON
. AP NATIONAL WRITER

Two Americans and a
German won the Nobel .Prize
in physics Tuesday for optics
r~search that is improving the
accuracy of such preci sion
instruments as GPS locators,
atomic clocks and navigation
~ystems.

Americans John L. Hall and
Roy J. Glauber shared the
prize with Theodor W.
Haensch of Germany. Glauber,
80, of Harvard University. took
half of the $1.3 million awiird
for sho\Ving how the quantum
nature of light can affect its
behavior. His insights led to
the work of Hall, 71, a professor at the University of
Colorado, and Haensch, 63. of
the . - Ludwig-MaximilianUniversitaet in Munich. Ha)l
·and Haensch will share the
other half of the prize.
·Glauber thought it was a
joke when the phone jolted
him awake early Tuesday and
a man with a Swedish accent
!old he had .won the Nobel
Prize. He recognized the
voice as a scientist he knows
and thought it was a prank.
"I could scarcely believe
:him," he said. ''But there was
:something very per&gt;uasive
:about
.
,, that hour of the mornmg.
:. Until Glauber published his
Clleories· in 1963, scientists
:g.Jsmissed the idea that quan:tqm theory, which was devel·oped to describe the behavior
:pf particles, had any applica:tion to light. But Glauber
!hawed that certain types of

.

light - including lasers could only be fully understood using quantum .methods, which treat light as individual packets of energy
rather than continuous waves.
"His results are fundamental
for our .modem .understanding
of the behavior of light," said
Sune Svanberg, chairman of the
Nobel Committee for Physics.
Researchers have used
Glauber's insights to create
exotic lasers and devices that
hold· tiny samples in place
with the pressure of photons.
More recently, the possibility
has arisen of building computers that use light, rather
than electricity, to do their
calculations.
Hall and Haensch built on
Glauber's discovery by developing a means of measuring
the frequency of a laser beam
to a precision of one part in a
thqusand*illion. With that
ability, scientists can build optical clocks that keep time more
accurately than existing atomic
devices. They can also improve
the precision of distance measurements accordingly.
"This in tum will allow bet-.
ter GPS systems, better space
navigation and improved control of astronomical· telescope
arrays," the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences noted
in awarding the prize.
The research could also be
useful in creating better digital animation. "Eveniually, we may be
able to enjoy three-dimensional holographic movies,"
Haensch said.

NELSONVILLE - With
Gov. Bob Taft in attendance,
the
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio marked the
fifth anniversary of its founding with a gala celebration and
several major announcements
These included a grant
award of $48.000 to ATCO
Inc . in support of Passion
Works Studio; the achievement of $1 million in total
grants made since its founding; unveiled the foundation's
"I'm
.a
Child
· of
Appalachia"(tm) campaign to
promote greater access and
success of the re gion's young
people in post secondary education; and named three distingui shed honorees whose
stories of success and commitment to education w'ill
faunch the foundation's "''m
a Child of Appalachia"{tm)
promotion: Dr. Nancy Lusk
Zimpher, a Gallia County
native and the first woman
president of the University of
Cincinnati; Robert L. "Bob"
Evans, nationally ,recognized
restaurateur and founder of
Bob Evans Farms Inc., and .,
Submitted photo
Mike Brooks, president and The Foundation for Appalachian Ohio has surpassed $1million in grants distributed. From left
chief executive officer of the are FAO Board Vice Chair Ron Strickmaker, FAO Board Chair Marianne CampbelL Gov. Bob Taft
Nelsonville-based
Rocky and FAO President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie Lilly.
Shoes &amp; Boots Inc.
The event was held on the "There are a lot of great ideas without ~evelopmental dis- Foundation for Appalachian
· Ohio introduced the campaign
campus of Ohio . University in southeastern Ohio, a lot of • abilities.
Leslie ~lly, president and by announcing the first three
with the . first lady of Ohio wonderful projects and a lot
need
chief
exec tive officer of the honorees of the campaign:
of
organizations
that
Univer~ity and foundation
not
Foundati
· for Appalachian Marianne
help,
but
often
there's
Campbell,
trustee Deborah Mi::Davis
things
Ohio
noted,'
"This
is
a
waterenough
capital
to
get
Foundation
for
Appalachian
serving as official hostess for
shed moment for the founda- Ohio board chair, noted,
the • evening.
Marianne started.
"So, the foundation is help- tion. We've served the regioQ "These honorees are , role
Campbell, chairperson of the
ing
to perform that role," he for more than live years and models and positive examples
foundation's board of trustees
added.
have given back to our region of what access to quality eduand Gallia County resident,
was
State
Sen.
the
S I million received by the cational opportunities can do
Also
present
served as mistress of cereJoy
Padgett
of
Ohio's
20h
foundation
to promote philan- in the lives o'f Appalachian
monies.
Dr.
Roderick
McDavis, president of Ohio District, and funding board thropy throughout the region. Ohioans.
"In these uncertain .economUniversity, wel comed and member of the Foundation for Grant dollars distributed by
Appalachian
Ohio..
the
foundation
with
the
supic
times, access to educational
introduced Gov. · Bob. ·Taft. ·
While
reflecting
on
the
past
port
of
our
donors
have
resultopportunities has never been
Taft
made · introdUctory
remarks before the 100-plus five years of progress, Padgett ed in grants in all 29 counties more important to the ecogathering of education, busi- said, "The Foundation for of Appalachian Ohio and nomic future of our region's
children,"
and
ness and community leaders Appalachian Ohio is truly a these dollars create access to families
gift
to
the
region."
educational
opportumt1es,
Campbell added. "The founand elected ofticials.
The evening's celebration promote economic develop- dation will work with donors
Mrs. McDavis welcomed
guests and noted, "Because so included' the Foundation for ment, increase charitable and, others throughout the
many have contributed so Appalachian Ohio's presenta- capacity, and result in an region to provide. those needmuch to th~ success of the t1?n of a grant m the amo~nt ·improved quality of life for ed opportunities."
For more information or to
foundation, and others care as of $48,000 .to ATCO/Pa~s10n Appalachian Ohio.
"It's an exciting milestone establish a fund , contact the
we do about Appalachian Works Studio representatives.
Th1s check, the fmal pay- to reach and there is so much Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio, it was most fitting that
ment
of .a three-year grant to more to do," Lilly added.
Ohio at (740) 753-1111 or
among our region's friends
the
studio,
surpassed
the
$1
The
celebration
concluded
visit the foundation's website
and supporiers we celebrated,
commemorated, and gave million mark in total grants with the unveiling of the 'Tm www.appalachianohio.org.
The
Foundation
for
thanks ·to all who have d1stnbuted by the foundatiOn A Child of Appalachia"(tm)
29
counties
of
campaign
that
will
promote
throughout
the
Appalachian
Ohio
is
a
worked tirelessly and given
the
·
reg1on.
Pa
ssiOn
_Works
increased
access
to
post-secregional community fouildamost graciously to support the
Studio 1s a non-profit that ondary educational opportu- tiQn and 50/(c)(J) public
mission of the foundation."
Citing t~e foundation's suc- supports . . collaboration nities for students of all ages charity serving ,the 29 councess in . matching in private between artists, wtth and in Appalachian Ohio. The ties Q{ Appalachian Ohio.
dollars the $1 million grant
made b~ the state during his
administration, Taft said,

.

·-

~DIET:

Don't let toddlers follow bad eating
:habits
of grown-ups, heart association
~arns
.
.
.

•

Bv JAMIE STENGLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

lines, which are endorsed by
the American · Academy of
Pediatrics, also recommend
children 2 and older get an
hour of exercise a day.
Dr. Barbara Dennison, who
helped draw up the guidelines and is associate professor of clinical pediatrics at
Columbia UniversL\y, said
that IO'percent of 2-year-olds
are overweight, doubling the
rate from the mid-1970s.
"The whole idea of a nutritionally balanced diet has
been compromised," said Dr.
Samuel S. Gidding. another
adviser on the AHA recqmmendations and professor of
pediatric cardiology . at
Jefferson Medical College in
Philadelphia. " I think that
fast foods have become rather than being discretionary choices - the main
stop for meaJs."
He.said that 30 to 50 years

: . DALLAS - As toddlers
begin eating "grown-up"
:food, they may a! so develop
grown-up eating habits tike too much junk food and
too few vegetables, warn
.doctors who'· want parents to
·ch,ange their ways.
. Within the childhood obe:sity· outbreak is an increasing
ilumber of overweig_ht 2year-olds, according to pediatrics experts. In an effort to
address the problem , the
:American Heart Associat·ion
;is offering this advice to par·ents: Children 2 and old~r
:~hould eat mostly fruits and
·vegetables, whole grains,
low-fat and non-fat dairy
products, beans. fish and lean
:meat.
: · "These guidelines are not
:that different from what you
:as a parent should be followIng," said Lona Sandon, a
oietitian and assistant professor at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center
·in Dallas .. "Kids will follow
:the example of the!r parents
:if the example is there."·
:: Of course, in a n'lJ_ion
·where dinner often coifles
!rom a takeout window. keepi:ng kids healthy may require
:a:t:hange by adults.
: :"We've gotten away from
;]l!fparing . foods at home,''
-Sandon sa1d. "We are eatmg
-roods that are much higher in
fat and calories and larger '
portion sizes. We've gotten
.away from physical activity.''
: :The new recommendations
:fQr infants, children and ado·Iesccnts revise the heart asso..;i-ation 's · 1982 sta tement.
Since then, more and more
ehildren have been falling "
iilto the overweight or obese
. c~tegory. The updated guide-

'

ago, foods that were nutritiona! were considered "kids'
foods." Now, he said, kids'
foods are viewed as sweets,
snacks or so-called comfort
foods.
The·heart association notes
that by the time kids are 19 to
24 months, french fries are
the most commonly eaten
vegetable. Experts say that as
jars of baby food packed with
fruits and vegetables give
way to solid foods, nutritious
food i~ often bypassed for
whatever is easiest.
The heart association guidelines urge parents not to give
up if their kids at first reject
healthy food. Experts say it
can take up to I0 tries for a
child to accept a new food.
Said Dr. Nancy Krebs, cochair of the tasR force on obesity for
the America
ACademy of Pediatrics~ "It
takes a bit of persistence."

.

The Daily Sentinel

ARoUND THE WORLD

Saturday, Oct. 8th, . Pomeroy Parking Lot

Mnt @II am. Leave @12 Noon
· Benefits The Needy Children
of Meigs County

$10.00/ Per Person ·

2005

Bv MIGUEL HERNANDEZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv ANTONIO CASTANEDA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VERACRUZ, Mexico HADITHA, Iraq - U.S.
Hurricane Stan slammed into
troops pushed through streets
Mexico's Gulf coast Tuesday,
sown with bombs Tue,day in
forcing authorities to close
their biggest operation thi s
one .of the nation's busiest
year in western Iraq , see-king
ports and spawning related
. to retake three Euphrates
storms across the region that
River towns from al-Qaida
left a! least 66 people dead,
insurgents. At least five U.S.
most from landslides in El
service members have been
Salvador.
killed in the fighting.
Stan, which whipped up
Operation River Gate
max~mum sustained winds of
launched at the start of the
80 mph before weakening to
holy month of Ramadan a tropical storm, caine ashore
was the second U.S. offenalong a sparsely populated
sive in a week in Anbar
stretch of coastline south of
province, near the Syrian borVeracruz, a major po'rt 185
der. AI-Qaida in Iraq called
miles ·east of Mexico City.
for intensified attacks on U.S.
The storm's outer· bands
and Iraqi forces during the
·.swiped the , city, knocking
Muslim period of fasting,
down trees and !loading lowwhich started Tuesday for the
lying neighborhoods, authornation's Sunois.
ities said. State officials said
Blasts from U.S. warplanes
four people were injured,
and heiicopters lit up the sky
includin~a child, but gave no
during the fighting, aimed at
details.
.
putting down Sunni-led
All three of Mexico's Gulf
insurgents intensifying their
coast crude-oil loading ports
campaign of violence ahead
were c lased Tuesdtiy as a preof an Oct. 15 vote on Iraq's
caution, authorities said, but
new constitution.
the shutdowns were not
As with the earlier U.S.
expecied to affect oil prices.
offensive - code named Iraq
Meteorologists said Stan
F;ist - it appeared many
was driving separate storms·
fighters may have slipped
across Central Ame rica and
. away beforehand.
AP photo
southern Mexico, provoking
On the political front, U.S.
flooding and landslides. A man uses a bucket to get water out of his home in one of and U.N. officials were trySome 49 people had been the neighborhoods of the jlijff clty of Veracruz, Mexico on ing to avert a Sunni Arab
killed during two days of Tuesday. Hurricane Stan slammed into Mexico's Gulf coast boycott of the referendum.
tlooding in El Salvador, before quickly weakening to a tropical storm Tuesday, forcing which would deeply underInterior Secretary Rene authorities to close one of the nation's busiest ports and thou- mine the validity of a constiFigueroa said Tuesday night. sands of residents abandoned their homes and stayed in tution Washington hopes will
in some of the 2,000 shelters set up all along the coastline.
Nine , people died
· unite Iraq's faction s and
Nicaragua, including six peoweaken the insurgency.
Criollo said the storm's nearby nuclear power plant
ple
believed
to
be
Officials met Tuesday with
Ecuadorean migrants killed rapid approach had caught had readied the facility for Shiite and Kurdish leaders to
many beach dwellers by sur- the category I hurricane 's , persuade them to reverse the
when their boat ran ashore.
strung l'linds and · rains. Shiite-led government's lastFour deaths were reported prise.
"We knew it would be Flooding . washed out at least minute change to voting rules
in Honduras and three in
Guatemala. In Costa Rica, a strong and the tide high, but one major ·highway.
ahead of the Oct. 15 vote.
Some 38,000 people aban- Sunday's change makes · it
36-year-old woman was we didn't think it would
kille~hen her hom~ was come this quick," he said. doned their homes statewide . almost impossible for minorb~ri
.y- a landslide early "They advised us, but they and stayed in some of the ity Sunnis to reject the consti2,000 shelters set up all along tution - all guaranteeing its
could have done it sooner."
Tues · .
·
Rain was falling Tuesday the coastline. ·
In Mexico's southern state
The closed crude-oil load- passage.
of Chiapas, a river over- in much of Central America,
Sunni Arab leaders have
flowed its banks and roared forcing thousands from their ing ports· - Coatzacoalcos, opposed the draft constitution
of homes. Among those evacu- Dos Bocas and Cayo Areas
through
the
city
Tapachula, carrying away ated were residents of San - handle · most , of the 1.8
ramshackle homes of wood Salvad.or's Santa Tecla neigh- million barrels a day of crude
borhood, where an earth-· bil exported by state-owned
and metal.
Chiapas Gov. Pablo Salazar quake-triggered landslide in oil . monopoly Petroleos.
said four people were missing January 200 I killed some Mexicanos, or Pemex.
and could have been swept 500 people.
. Five exploratory oil platOfficials have worried the forms also were evacuated,
away. He said 600 families
had been evacuated from mountain running alongside but so far the storm had not
homes around Tapachula, the neighborhood might .col- affected the company's pronear the Guatemalan border. lapse again with heavy rains · duction of 3.4 million barrels
a day of crude oil, Mexico's
Three bridges in the area were or another quake. ·
and
Honduras · and Mexico Communications
.destroyed by floodwaters.
"Sadly, we know it's going offered to send ·aid to El Transportatio~ Department
said, Pemex ts the world's
to keep raining," Salazar Salvador, if needed . .
In the southern state of third-lar~est oil producer, and
said.
At Chachalacas beach, 20 Oaxaca, also affected by most of 1ts exports are sent to
miles north . of Veracruz, heavy rains and Wind, offi- the United States.
Before reaching the Gulf,
Celestino Criollo stru~gled cials opened 950 shelters and
amid rising winds and mter- were keeping an eye on 80 Stan raced across the Yucatan
mittent rains to clea:r equip- communities considered to peninsula on Sunday. buffet' 111~ the region with wind and
ment from his beach-side, be vulnerable.
...
ram , but apparently causing
In
Veracruz,
schools
can' seilfood
thatched-roof
no
major
damage.
celed classes and officials at a
restaurant.

all along. but the United
States wants them to participate in the vote.
Late Monday and early
Tuesday. some 2,500 U.S.
troops along with Iraqi forces
launched their operation with
a powerful air assault on
Haditha, Haqlaniya h . a'nd
Parwana , about 140 ·miles
northwest of Bagh'dad.
Dozens of he Iicopters
streamed toward the Euphrates
towns in a phalanx, seen by an
Associated Press reporter.
"Rockets fired by choppers
flashed in the pre-dawn darkness, followed by explosions
and arches of trdcer tire.
At least twice, illuminating
flares
went
up
over
Haqlaniyah - a sign u:s.
troops were f1ghting insurgents on the grou nd.
American warplanes struck
bridges to prevent al-Qaida in
Iraq fighters from escaping
the towns, but arriving troops
encountered dozens of roadside bombs on main avenues.
apparently in anticipatjon of
the operation, Manne com. manders said.
.
A single .roadside bomb in
Haqlaniyah on Monday
killed three U.S. se rvice
members, apparently among
the first ground ·troops to
move in .
U.S. snipers took positions
on rooftops in Haqlaniyah as
troops with loudspeakers
ordered residents to stay
inside. witne sses said .
In Haditha. mosque loudspeakers urged residents to
confront the Americans, but
Marines said they encountered little rcsiswnce.
"Some of them may have
· gotten away. But those that
.are here , we'll get them," said
Capt. Shannon Neller, of New
York, commander of Lima
Company in 3rd Battalion, 1st
Marine Regiment.
Troops were concentrating
on "systematically clearing"
Haditha by doing house-tohouse searches and locating

bombs planted around tow1i
Neller said.
"A lot. of the locals we ·met
were very helpful, and a lilt
pointed out insurgents or
those who had been helping
'them," Neller said. At least
II people were detained.
The earlier U.S. offensive
began Saturday, 93 miles
upriver by the Syrian border,
and continued Tuesday in tile
towns of Sadah, Karabi lah
and Rumana . A boQ1b killed~
Marine in Karabilah, the first
casualty of that operation.
At least 41 ' insurge nts have
been killed in Iraqi Fist, the
U.S. military said. But many
fighters appeared to have !led
before the assault. with the
militar.y reporti ng no major
engageme nts T~esday.
The deaths in the two operations, along with that of a
so ldier shot in the western
town of Taqaddum. raised to
at least 1.940 the number of
U.S, service members who
have died since the begi nning
of the Iraq war in March
2003. according to im
Associated Press count.
Operation River Gate was
notable for the strongest participation this year by Iraqi ·
troops - U.S. commanders
said hundreds were involved
- · at a time of deep concern·s
about their readiness.
The simultaneous strikes
appeared aimed at breaking
.two insurgent strong points.
The small. isolated towns
. near the border have been
used as way stations for for~
eign fighters joining the tight.
Haditha is also an "an impor.tant crossroads" for ai-Qaida
smuggling of fighters and .
weapons, the 111ilitary said.
Together, the Hadi tha area
towns form a larger population center- with more than
I00.000 residents - where
militants have been openiting
almost free ly after driving
out Iraqi ·security forces with
a series of bloody attacks earlier this year.

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Residents find their way across a flooded street in Fuzhou after the passage of Typhoon
Longwang, southeastern China's Fujian prqvince, Monday. China said 59 of its s~ldiers were
washed away by raging floodwaters sparked by Typhoon Longwang, and lhe country s pres1dent
.called for an all-out search, state media reported Tuesday.

.

China's death toll from typhoon rises to 50

Al)l.:e(iClfl ()..1,\)"ld11C A~ l:~H~~~ nnd th~ Oh,,) ().;u-,.lJ~mh 1.: A~ x 1;1 ri, 10 .

Dr. W11lbce L-;acc"'-p:io.'l new rot.ien~ :1t University M~'&lt;lic..tl A!'Rxi;!t~
P;rrhl ,bd! in Atht'A'\ {i4J) J9)·2444nndat the Mt:i~i-·k\lu~;tl Clu1ic,
I Ert~rMI;'Oli ''ft~l Dr.' to T'nmL..'fll'!, 1740}W.~915~.

Bv STEPHANIE HOO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I'

Party, Bike Games &amp; Camping Available
Jordan's Campgrou11d
(Laurel Ro;d-Mrigs County)

Wednesday, October's,

·Hurricane Stan slams into Mexico's Gulf
U.S. ririlitary in Iraq launches second .
coast, dozens killed in Central America offensive 'in week against al-Qaida insurgent~

·~ I S .

oy

.PageA7

O'BLENESS

BEIJING - Emergency
workers found 50 bodies and
were searching for dozens of
people mi ssi ng after Typhoon
Longwang slammed iJltO .
southeastern China and
unleashed raging floods. state
media reported Tuesday.
Among the missing were
59 members of a paramilitary
police brigade swept away in·
Fujian province Sunday mght
after the typhoon came
ashore with 74 mph winds,
state media said.

•(~

HEALTH SYSTfM .

•
'

....

'

· -~

. ··- .
~

."' ..

,

The missmg paramilitary
otficers, members of China's
arl"ed force in charge of
domestic security, were in a
training school barracks
'when they were washed
away, state medi~ said.
President
Hu
Jintao
ordered that no efforts be
spared to searc h for th em.
\tate newspapers reported.
By late Tuesday, emergency worker&gt; had retrieved
50 bodies in Fujian, China
Central Television reported.
The typhoon also killed at
leastone person on the island
.'

of Taiwan before hitting
mainland China.
The typhoon, whose name
'mean s "Dragon King" in
Chinese. was downgraded
Monday to a tropical storm, but
not before raining havoc on
low-lying coastal areas. It was
raining lightly in parts of Fujian
on Tuesday. and top wind
speeds had slowed to 45 mph.
the local weather bureau said. ·
Authorities evacuated more
than 500,000 people ahead of
the storm, which also forced
boats to return to harbor and
closed touri st sites.
·

'

.

·
'

~nd

cheeses

Patio Dining ·
Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Bucket specials every Friday and Saturday

Coming Soon
Ivy Hi!l Gift Baskets
Specialty Gift Baskets for all occasions

,. &lt;.

�J

.

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.

Page AS

·· OHIO

i

The Paily Sentinel

OHSAA Computer ratings, Page'si
Ohio AP Football Poll, Page 82 .
Guillen: 'C hoke was a joke, Page 83
MLB Playoffs, Page 84

Wednesday, October 5, 2005 ·

Prosecutor: Deatfi of infant left in car appears accidental Local Weather
ATHENS (AP) - A man
who left his 8-month-old son
In his car while he worked a
· 10-hour shift apparently did
so accid&gt;ntally, a prosecutor
s~id .

Athens County Prosecutor
C. David Warren said the
death of Evan Winkemverder
'"does not appear to be intentional."
\

' .
The infant died Thursday ' Went to work as general Warren said.
after his father . found him in manager of the Ohio
Preliminary results from an
the car and took him to University Inn, according to autepsy showed significant
O'Bleness
Memorial a
police
report. dehydration, Athens County
'Hospital. Athens police did Temperatures were in the Coroner Scott Jenkinson
not release details of the 'case 70s Thursday.
said.
.until Monday. No charges
Police Capt. Tom Pyle
Jeffrey and Mary Jo
have been filed . .
declined further commen t Winkenwerder, of Albany, do
Jeffrey Winkenwerder, 32, Tl!esday. A · grand jury will not have a listed telephone
apparently forgot ·tha{ Evan review the case when police ·, number and could not be.
was in the back seat when he complete their investigation, reached for comment.

Today's Forecast
' Forecast tor Wedneeday,pct. 5

CNP Schedul-=

Totildo•
85' 162'

and high school viusn.y sportmg events involving

Dayton •
84' 163'

b---..

*Columbua
85' 161 °

~

Volleyball
South Gallia at aves. 5:30p.m.
.
GaHia Academy at Logan, 5:15 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valle"~. 5:30 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 5:55 p.m.
Eastern at Federal HOCking, 6 p.m.

Soccer
OVCS al Gallia Academy, 5:30 p.m.
A:Jint Pleasan~ at Spnng Valley, 5 p.m.
College VoUeybalt
Rio Grand_e s;~t Central State. 7 p.m.

~ Po.Wmouth•
.

84' 161 ' '

WVA

Friday's aames
Football
Jackson at Gallia Academy
Waharna at SOuth Galtia
River Valley at Rock Hill
Meigs at NelsonviUe-York
Federal Hocking at East~rn
Southern at Miller
Point Pleasant at Poca
Harts at Hann'an
College Cross County
. .
Rio at AII..Qhio Championship, 2 p.m.

02005
Clovdy

~
Partly 'C___)
Cloudy

~
,

Thst""""
. r·

~orms

/ 1 1 1,..

. Showers

~··
, · ,

·. . .

\ I &gt;

\

W

Flurries
Ice
0'"-..
, . ... 0'-....
~

Rain

/r ./ 1 ,

•

•

•••• •

. Snow

~

·

: ::::

, Weather Underground • ~p

Wednesday... Mostly sunny
in the morning ... Then becoming partly cloudy. Patchy
dense fog in the morning.
Highs in the mid 80s. East
winds
around
5
mph ... Becoming south around
5 mph· in the afternoon.
Wednesday

mostly cloudy. A 20 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the lower 80s. South winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
west in the afternoon.

Thursday

night... Partly

Volleyball
Gallla
Academy/Nelsonville-York
Eastern, 11 a.m.
ACSI DistriCts, TBA

.

Kroger - 20.13
Ltd. -19.94
NSC-40.22
Oak Hill Financial - 29.86
OVB -25.15
.
BBT- 38.41
Peoples- 27.15
Pepsico - . 56.53
Premier - . 13.20
Rockwell - 53.24
Rocky BQOts - 29.6.8
RD Shell - 62.80
SBC- 23.96,
Sears - 125.21
Wai-Mart - 43.85
Wendy's - 46.72
Worthington - 21.05
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Now Welcoming NeW Patients at
The Meigs Medical Clinic
113 East Memorial Dr.,
Our
provide care for girls and
women childhood through menopause.
We accept most health insurance and
offer a· sliding scale based on income.

Call For Appointment

740-992-9158

L·:.:;we~

~nabla.lo

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Seafood Buffet

at

CHESHIRE - Non-conference woes continued for
River Valley volleyball
Tuesday during its 21-25, 2225,
13-25
loss
to
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League member Jackson.
The Lady Raiders, which
are a perfect 8-0 in Ohio
Valley Conference play this
season, fell to 8-7 overall following the setback to the
Iron ladies.
The· Silver and Black battled through II ties and three
lead changes during the first
game, and trailed 21-22 head ed down the stretch. JHS ( 136) ran of three straight points
to secure the four-point win.
RVHS responded with a
12-7 run to open game two ,
and also held · a four-point
lead at I 8-14, but Jackson
rallied back to tie the game at
22 apiece.
Jackson stole momentum
with the next three points for
a two-games-to-none lead.
River Valley held a brief 3,
2 , lead in game th"ree, but
Jackson went on a 23-10 rally
to claim the triumph.
Carman Waugh paced the
Raiders with eight points and
Kari McFann was close
behind with seven .
Beth Payne led the net
attack with 12 kills, while
Andrea Flint · chipped in

(740) 446-2342,

ext 33

bsherman@ mydailytribuna.c;om

· Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext . 23
bwaHers @mydailytribune.com

'WIDER

r Prep Go1f ...:.... Division Ill. Sout heast ·District
. .

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

All-You-Can-Eat

STAFF REPORT

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

s,.,rt •.. st•.v

Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(304) 6 75 - ~ 333 . ext. 19
lcrum@mydailyregislei.COm

Submitted photo

Pictured ab6ve are members of the Southern Tornado golf team after winnipg the Division Ill Southeast District golf championship. In front from left are J~cob Hunter, Brad Crouch, John Bentz and .coach Mick Winebrenner. In back Row are Bryan
Harris, Josh Smith,·Aiex Halley and Patrick Nease.

Southern wins district goH titl~

Compensation

BS HERMAN@MYOAilYTR IBlJ NE. COM

. ASHVILLE- Tornadoes
are more powerful in Central
Ohio, where the land is flat.
Apparently, the same· holds
true in the golf world - at
least it was Monday at
Cook's Creek Golf Course .

The Southern Tornadoes,
playing the
unfamiliar
Columbus-area course. continued their postseason path
of destruction and earned
their first-ever trip to the
state tournament by winning
the Division Ill . Southeast
District championship.
Coach
·
Mick

Winebrenner's Tornadoes,
who shot a winning score of
334, will head north again
Oct.l4-15 to Foxfire Golf
Club in search of the
schoors first-ever state title.
"They are looking forward
to it." said Winebrenner.
"I'm sure they will be up for
the challenge.''

'

Southern was three shots
runner-up
clear
of
Portsmouth Clay, which
earned the only other fullteam berth. The top two
teams , plus two indiviquals
not on an advancing team
get 19 move on: Tri- Valley

Please see District. Bl

ovcs

wins 13th
straight

Lady·Eagles ground
Miller in three games
STAFF REPORT
• night over Waterford.
SPORTSo&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Brittany Bissell, who
had 15 assists and a kill,
TUPPERS · PLAINS led the way with 10 points.
Eastern kept pace atop the Jillian Brannon and Darcy
Tri- Valley
Conference Winebrenner added eight
Hocking Division volley- apiece followed by six
Katie
Hayman,
ball standi"ngs with an easy from
three-game victory over Kelsey Holter with five ~
visiting Miller on Tue~day._ ·and Erin Weber' chipped in
T~e Lady Eagles. who three .
were upset las: Thursday
Eastern was 68-for- 72
by county nva Southern, · serving on the night.
rebounded well and won
.
.
the match by scores of 25Wmebrenner had II k11ls
16. 25-18 and 25-15 .
and five each from Weber
Eastern ( 14-3) improved and Hayman . Defensi~ely,
to 6- 1 in the .league and Weber blocked four sp1kes
Brad Sherman/photo
still sit atop the standings and Ha.yman two.
Eastern's
Katie
Hayman,
right,
slams
a
sp
ike past a Miller
Eastern is at Federal
with the Lady Tornadoes.
defender
Thursda
y
in
Tuppers
Plains
.
who wa' al so a winner last Hocking Thursday.

.

• SPQfU lnjllrics
• Molllnsnnc:r.o.
• Swnt da)· appt.

l:leen missing

_,

• Get closer to Ufe
• All-around rellab!Uty
• East to wear and care for

.

499 Richland Avenue ..
Athens, Ohio45701 '
740·594-6333. l-800-451-9806

CAll TODAY FOR A. FREE DEMONSTRATION!
•

.

1

· •

Bv BRAD SHERMAN

8 SHERMAN@MYOAILYTR IBU NE ,COM

GALLIPOLIS - OVC has
had no problems with the
OVC this season.

0 h i

Hussell

0

Valley
Christian
improved to
5-Q against
teams fr-om
the
Ohio
Valley
·conference
following a
straight
games volleyball victo-

Piease see OVCS, Bl

'"·-.. . .

At Pltt1111 Valley H•pllal, we Willi to show how mud\ wt truly Cft~ Dbout our ~'Oilllnlll\lty. In ~
~'OIIabonlllon with Ihe MtJp COIIDI)' CbaMbtr or COMIDfi'Ct, PVH will rrovide fRtE flnt ~ld kits to "II
'-'
locel churches &amp; S)'IID&amp;ll8UilJ·In Melts County upon request (whll• sHppllu lml).
·
Thill i! our w11y of Stlyina "n•all Yo11" tO!' ,mtlki"' us yoor healthcm provider of choi~-e.
F11r mllre intl,nnatlan or 10 lfl'llll811 1 time Ill pick·up 11 tlrst aid kit for your w"'Nilltll~n. plet\Se call.
(740) 991-SOOS.

· • Hear what you've

.
. ' 304-273-5321,;;;
St
Ravenswood, WV
(

~

'

Bv BRAD SHE"MAN

WELLSTON Mei~s
needed four games, . but Its
overall volleyball record is
back to .500
a f t e r
Tuesday's
25-14, 2515, 23-25,
25-22 victory
over
Wellston in
Tri-Valley
Conference
0 h I 0
Division
.action.
The Lady
Marauders
improved to
8-8 overall
with the tri'
umph
and
moved to 4-3
in TVC Ohio
action.
MHS was
88-of-97 at
Burton
the service
line and ha&lt;l
,four players with double.digit
point nights .
Joey Haning and Sam Cole
led the Maroon and Gold
with 13 points apiet:e. Cole
also led the way with 12 kills,
and Haning added a teamhigh 19 assists to the win.
Leslie Preece chipped in 12
points and five kills. while
Amy Barr finished with II
points. Brittany Hysell had
seven kills and seven points
for Meigs, and Amber Burton
contributed eight kills. Barr
and Haning also had two kills
apiece.
Meigs claimed a sweep following its 25-9, 26-24 win in
the jtlnior varsity tilt.
Meigs returns to action
Thursday when · it hosts
Belpre in another pivotal.
TVC Ohio showdown. ·Gall\e
time at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium is slated for 6
p.m.

CLEARER SOUND

Member ol Amerialfl Acadrt"Y
. &lt;I Medical Acupur&lt;ture

RaveDSwood
gdroprattic Center

Marauders
net win
at Wellston
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Raiders
fall to
Jackson

E-mail 7 spor~@mydail ysef1tinel .'com

v.r wv Chin..1f1actk: Society

Please see Tames, Bl

College SOCcer

Fax -1-740-446-3008

&lt;lnruprd&lt;lor ol'.ll&gt;! )"' I~

the first time since the mid1990's.
Kristiina Williams l~d the
Lady 'Does with 20 points
and put an exclamation point ·
on the Southern win by serving up II points and five
aces in the finale. Bethany
Riffle had a great tloor game
and sixteen points. while .
Kasie Sellers tallied II ·
points, Whitney Riffle added
10 points. and Amber Hill

Mt. V8rnon Nazarene at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.
CoHege Volleyball
Ohio DominK;an/Tiffin at Rio Grande, 11
a.m.

Contact Information

loorderpatto dilhH

RACINE - Maintaining
a pace that could earn them
at least a share of ·the TriValley Conference Hocking
Division title, the · Southern
Lady Tornadoes tamed the
Waterford Wildcats in three
sets to claim the match.
The win for the Lady
Tornadoes ( 12-3) was its
eighth in-a-row am! helped
avenge an early season non-

·league loss
Roma Sayre
to
the ·
praised her
Wildcats in
club for a
Waterford.
great effort,
So uthern
and
was
won the ruba g a .i n
ber match of
emphasized
the
three
the impor- .
game series .
tant of team.
25-15, 25 Southern is
""""""" 18, and 25n
o
w
· . Williams
10.
Riffle •· involved in
Balance
one of its
·once again was the key to longest winning streaks, l::ist
Southern 's success. Coach ·.week defeating Eastern for

Point Pleasant at Nicholas County, 1 p.m.
ACSI Districts, TBA
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Nicholas County, 11 a.m.

Plean see Raiders, Bl

Sensations

.

Soccer

night... Mostly

·Local Stocks
ACI...., 66.98
AEP -40.25
Akzo-43.89
Ashland Inc. - 55.95
AT&amp;T -1g.76
BLI-11.12
Bob Evans - 22.76
BorgWarner - 56
CENl( - 21.63
Champion - 4.25
Charming Shops - 10.62
City Holding - . 35.17
·
Col- 47.84
DG -18.63
·DuPont- 38.52
Federal Mogul - .65
USB- 27.57
Gannett - .68.38
General Electric - 32.85
GKNLY- 5.20
Harley Davidson -' 47.73
JPM- 33.60

.

· Saturdav's games

cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the upper 40s.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mosily cloudy and
much cooler with highs in the
lower 60s.

cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
Southeast winds around 5 mph.
·Timrsday... Partly cloudy in
the morning .. .Then becoming

3D DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

• Mcdiaw

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Thursdav'a games

!

Southern tames Waterford in straight gam~s
BY ScoTT WoLFE

College Soccer •

Rio Grande at Charleston, 7 p.m.

Tax

- • Acupunchut

Hannan ar Sherman, 6 p.m.

'h

Cincinnati
• 86' I 62'

assets. This is because after
A.: Income that is paid to a to individuals and estates will
your death, the trust becomes trust beneficiary in the cur- apply to tbe Ohio Income Tax
end of 2004. Aowever, as irr,e vocable (meaning it can- rent year will be reported on on Trusts.
, part of a tax reform b11l effec- not be revoked, or cancelled) the personal income tax
tive July I, 2005, the tax is and you, the grantor, no return of the beneficiary.
Q.: Should, I be concerned
back. This time, it's perma- longer own ~he assets. The Income that is not paid to a with the Ohio Income Tax on
nent. The law now requires income generated by the trust beneficiary, but rather kept in Trusts?
many trusts to file and pay assets must be reported on an, the trust, .will generally trigA.: ·Yes.· The Ohio Income ·
Ohio im;ome tax.
· _income tax return. If the ger the requirement to file a Tax on Trusts has been re·
. • inwme is paid to a trust ben- separate . income tax return enacted as a permanent part
Q,: I have created a revo_- efic1ary. such as a child or for the trust. The types of of Ohio's tax siructure.
cable living trust .for estate grandchild, then the benefi- income held in a trust that Therefore, you should ask a
planninr, purposes. Will I ciary will report .the income may be taxable are certain qualified professional to
have to file a separate tax on his or her personal income business income; capital review your tfJISt to deter~eturn and pay income tax un
tax return.
gains on the sale ·of assets; · mine if you must file a trust
the income from the assets in
dividends and interest.
tax return under this law.
the trust because of this law?
Q.: What rypes of Trusts
; A.: In most cases, no. hav~ ro pay Ohio's in~ome ·
Q.: 1 have an irrevocable
Law You Can Use is a
Generally, you will report tax. .
·.
·.
_ trust that will be filling a se'l- weekly consumer ·legal
income from a revocable
A .. The most. common
r·
. type - arate income tax return
informatior) column providtrust (one that can be revoked ?f trust that th1s law 1mpacts under this law. Musr the trust' ed by the. Ohio State Bar
or canceled) on your personal IS one that. files a separate pay quarterly estimated tax Association (OSBA). This
income tax return, so yvu will federal mcome tax return. payments?
article was prepared by
not have to file a. separate tax Trustees report trust mcome
A. Yes In ord r t
o'd
.. . ·
. e 0 av 1 Timothy J Semro, a Sylvania
return for the trust. You must to the IRS on Form 1041. If
report the income from the the trust files a separate fed- penalties and Interest , _the attorney practicing in the
trust on your personal income era! return, and is also con- trust must make quarterly area of estate planning ·and
tax return because you, as the nected with Ohio in some payments . on or before the probate with the law firm of
:•grantor" or creator of the way, it generally must file an 15th
ol
Apnl,
June , La Valley, La Valley, Todak &amp;
trust, are considered the Ohio return. For example, the S~ptember and Jan.uary. Schaefer Co., LP.A. Articles
owner of the trust's assets ..As trust must file a separate . SI!!Ce the law was re-enacted appearing in this column are
the owner of the assets, you Ohio income tax return if the mid":a~ through 2005, m~ny intended to provide broad,
generally are responsiblo for trust resides in Ohio (geneml- practitiOners. are resummg general infor111ation about
reporting and paying the ly, a trust "resides" in Ohio if quarterly .estimated tax pay- the law. For in/ormation
taxes on any income they the grantor lived in Ohio ments With the September ~bout_~ variety of legal top·
res, VISit the;OSBA Web s1te
generate. .
when the assets were trans- payment.
at www. oh iobar. org.
After your d!!ath, a trustee ferred to the trust and there is
Q.: Whar are the tax rates Before applying this inforwill be responsible for paying an Ohio beneficiary), or if the
for
the Ohio Incom e
on mation to a specific legal
taxes on your trust's income. trust earns or receives income
Tmsrs
.'
problem, readers are urged
If the trust provisions allow in Ohio or has winnings from
A.: The same income tax . to seek advice from · an
the trust to accumulate the
Ohio
Lottery
'·
income each year but do not . Commission or - has some brackets and rates that &lt;apply attorney.
require it to pay the income ·other tlosc connection wifh .
to any beneficiary that year, Ohio.
then the trustee generally
must file a separate return for
Q.: Whm type of income is
the trust to pay tax on the taxed !J.y the Ohio Trust
income generated by the trust Income tax ? ·

Auto Accidents Workers'

Volleyball

'

Women's College Soccer

Ohio's tem~rary income

lOyrH~p&lt;ril:fll.&lt;

Wednesday's oames

Salem International at Rio Grande, 4:30 pm

tax on trusts expired at the

&amp;w'dof
F(Jensi' Professilllllls

teams from Gallla, Meigs and Mason co~t1 es

Youngstown • .
83' 161'

b--..
~

Ohio's incqme ·tax on·trusts is .here . to .stay .

Mem~r cll\merican

Prep VollEyball -:- Tri-Valley Conferfince

GALLIPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming collega

Mansfield •
85' 160'

BY ANDREW •
WELSH-HUGGINS

LAW YOU CAN . USE

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

MIC;H

Lieutenant gQvemof to lead.trade missi9n to Chin~

'

City/Region
High I Low temps

~

•

made a speech on economic..
development .
.
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
Former · Gov. · George
Voinovich led a 17-day trade
COLUMBUS Ohio's
mission to China in 1995.
lieutenant governor, the
CurreQtly, Ohio has three
state's top economic developChinese-owned companies
ment official, wi II lead a
employing 275 workers,
trade .mission to China in
according to the state Office
December in hopes of boostof Strategic Research.
ing 'prospects for state
Ohio exports to China
rts . and· luring ,Chinese
totaled $934 million last year,
pames to m vest here.
·
in .tontrast to 2000 when
Gov. Bruce Johnson
exports were less than $300
will visit three Chinese cities
million;
during the welklong 'trip, the
By contrast, Jap;m has
state'.s second ·major trade
more than 300 companies in
mission this f-all. Gov. Bob
Ohio employing 70,000 peoTaft leaves for a trip to
ple . Last year, Ohio exports
Europe next week . .
to Japan totaled $1.3 billion.
Johnson, also • state deve)Johnson said he also will
ppment director, will lead a
raise the Issue of intelfectual
~mall delegation of business, .
.
AP Photo · property rights with Chinese
education and government Ohio Lt. Gov. Bruce Johnson waits to be interviewed outside officials and urge further
officials to the cities of Representative Hall at' the Ohio State 'House following Gov. efforts to combat the probBeijing,
Shanghai · and Bob Taft's State of the State address Tuesday, . Feb, 8, in lem, which can include-piratWuhan. Wuhan is the capital
Columbus. Johnson, the state's top economic development ed copies of movies and
of Hubei province, Ohio's
official, will lead a trade mission to China in December in music albums.
sister province in China.
"China has got a problem
The goal is to find fast- hopes of boosting prospects for state expo(ts and luring with that," he said.
growing Chinese companies Chinese companies to invest here.
The opportunities are huge
interested in expanding to
for Ohio if it signs enough
Ohio and to find export
"It' s just wishful thinking " bond issue in November to, deals with large companies
opportunitie~ for Ohio com- that that com~etition is going pay for bridge, road and other and starts a strong . relationpanjes, Johnson said.
. to go away,' Johnson told infrastructure improvements ship that continues, said
Johnson said the model is The Associated Press on around the state.
Douglas Adie, an Ohio
the "state's successful rela- . Tuesday. "The question is, . , Past trade missions taken University economist.
tionship wit,h Japan, which knowing our competitors, by Taft have included Japan,
To do that, the state must
-··includes . three Honda plants, learning about their ad van- Taiwan, Mexico .and South lay the groundwork now for
other smaller companies ana tages and disadvantages, and America.
the visit and makes sure state
markets for Oliio products.
then exploiting that to the
This is the first major trade officials are meeting with the
China's booming economy benefit of working Ohioans." mission to Chiria led by a right business people and
and the country's increasing
Johnson, 45, a Republican state development director. In government leaders, he said.
power in the marketplace appointed by Taft in January, October 1999-, former direc- · He also questioned why
makes such outreae!J critical, also is leading the governor's tor Lee Johnson went to Johnson and not Taft was
Johnson said.
efforts to pass a $2 billion Hubei Province where he making the trip.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

I

.

PLEASANT

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailyseptinel.com

•

~OHSAA computer r~ngs
OO.UMBUS (AP)- Here arethethlrcl week· (5--1) 6.7500. 8. Hillsboro (5-1) 6.7166. 9,
lyfOOtbaH computer ratings trom the Ohio High Jackson {4·2) 8.5000. 10, Sl. Bernard Roger
Scl1ool AU&gt;Ietlc Association. Ratings are by Bacon (3-3) 7.0500.
division and r~lon with record and average
~level points per game (top eight t9ams In

z.

DIVISION IV
Region 13--1, Young. Mooney (6·0) 12.6646.
.2, Akron Manchester (6-0)9.5166. 3. Akron St.
Vlncent·SI.Mary {4•2) 8.3-160 4, Ganett:MI-.
Garfield (5-t) 8.1000. 5, Orrville(:!-3)7.7000.

tyndi'Jurst Brush (5•1) 13.9500. 3, Cle,
,D itnvll!e (6-0) 13.8633-. 4, Lakewood St.

6. ZoarviHe Tusc. Valley (&amp;-1) 7.6890. 7, Cant.
Cent. Cath. (4-2) 7.4666. 8, Cadiz Harrison

ear::h region advance to regional quarterfinal$):

•
DIVISION I
Region t-1 . Solon (6·0) 14.9333.

Edward {5.()113.2030. 5, North Olmsted (5-1) Cent. (5-tl 7.4213. 9, Young. Ureuline (3-3)

lgna~us ( 4~2) 10.2936.
7, Cieve. l&lt;ennedy (5--1) 9.4293. 8, Euclid (3'-3)
8.2196. 9, Shaker ~IS. (3-3) 7.5586. 10,

6.4500. 10, Brooklyn {4·2) 6.0123.

)) 12.5166. 4. Findlay (5--l) 12.4500. 5, Groen
!1 .6 166. 6, Cant McKinley (6-0)
-'41.5473. 7, Sylvania North11lew (5· 1) 10.5000.
'8, N. Canton Hoover {5·1) 10.3080. 9, Mass.
~ackson (5-1) 10.0166. 10. . Hudson (4·2)

LaGrange Keystone (4-2) 7.9578. ·9, Bellville
Clear Fork (4·2) 7.9333. 10, W. Milton Milton·
Union ( 5~ 1) 7.3666.
Region 15-1, Bellaire (6·0) 15.3086. 2,
Ironton (5-1 ) 12.8000. 3. Piketon {6-0) 9 .3353.

~. Hijl!ard Davidson (6·0) 13.31 66. 3,
)Yestervilte South (EHl 11.2333. 4. lancaster
~4-2) 10.5666. 5, Dublin Coffman (3-3)
-.0.4500. 6, Newark (5·1) 9.9333. 7, Cols.
'Brookhaven (5·1} 9 .1833. 8, Logan (4-2)
).9166 9, H~ilarcl Darby (5·11 8 0000 tO,
Cols. Wtletstone (4 ~2 ) 4833.
Region4-1, Cin. St. Xavler{S·O) 17.7333. 2, '
Centerville (6-Q) 16.6333. 3, Cin. Glen Este (8·

8.0166. 7, lron1on Rock Hill (5-t) 7.9666. 8, St
Clairsville (S.. 1) 7.7886. 9, Williamsport
Westfall (4-2} 7.7333. 10, Chill. Zane Trace (5~

12.0666. 6, Cteve. St.

~

Region 14-1, Ottawa-Glandorf {6..0).14.1000.

2. Coldwater (6-o) 11 .4000. 3, Huron (6-(J)
Eastlake North (3-3) 6.4000.
10.5166. 4, Tontogany 01&amp;ego (6·0) 10.4500.
Region Z-1. Tol. St. John's (6·0) 16.6666. 2, 5,,Marion Elgin (6·1) 9.0333. 6, Elyria Catholic
M.... Washington (EHl)ll!.1030. 3, Elyria (5· (S:t) 8.5666. 7 , Rosslord {H) 6.2313. 8,

~5·1}

9.5500.
4, Portsmouth Wesl (5·1) 9.0653. 5. Heath (5·
Region 3--1., Gahanna Lincoln (6·0)16.8166. II 9.0333. 6, Byesville M~adowbrook (5-1)

a

0)14.2166. 4, Cin. LaSalle

(!H)

1) 7.3333.
Region 16-1, Germantown Valley View (6..(]}

11.4500. 2 (tie), Clarksville Cllnton-Messlo (5'
1), Monroe Lemon-Monroe (5·1) 9.8500. 4,
Cin.· Wyomlng (4·2) 8.1833. 5, Cln. Madeira
{4~2) 7.5333. 6 1 ~la in City Jonathon Alder (5·1)

13.7600, 5, 7.2666. 7, Blanchester (4·2) 8.6166. 8, Ham.

Huber His. Wayn'e (5·1) 13.0686. 6, Cin.
Moeller (4.-2) 12,3500. 7, Clayton Northmont

Badin (3-3) 5.9333. 9, Dayton Oakwood (4-2}

5.8666. 10, Slehop FenWick (3-3) 5.8500.

•

Massillon on the verge of adding to its lore
'

Bv RusTY MILLER

Eafle Bruce in 1964.
yards passing and four TDs:
ASSOCIATED PRESs
The Tigers aren't out of the and Justin Kryling caughl 20
woods yet. Archrival Canton passes for 168 yards and 2
McKinley is also 6-0. The last TDs and lame~ Copus was
Massillon Washington has time both reams were perfect 32-of-54 ~ssmg for_ 319
a storied history bul has going intu their annual show· . yards, but . ccom b sll 11 1ost
become little more than a
3
L be B
footnote since Ohio started ·down was Bruce's f1rst year 7-20 to 1 rty- enton.
GETTING
DEFEN·
deciding its champions on the at Massillon, in 1964.
field..
8 TO PASSES: Ada's Zac . S~VE: For the secon~ time
-1 Dysert tied a state record by ·thts season the West Lafayette
h
Th T. .
. e tgers own 1 em~ throwing eigbl ' touchdown Ridgewood defense had live
vtctones ?f any school m t .e asses in a 55-30 victory over interceptions in a 17-6 win
state and '.nnumerable mytht- . ~aulding, tying the mark over Magnolia Sandy V~lley,
cal sta~e and nauonal tlt~es, ·shared by Findlav's Ben w1th Jan-ad Grove grabbmg a
but ha\e _never won a pia) off Roethlisberger ( 1999) and pair lo give him the school 's
crown besmce the19Jl0
Glenville's career mark with 15; and
72stseason Cleveland
system gan m · · .
Tavares Bolden (1996). Youngsto\"n Liberty (6-0)
. That may be cha~gmg, Dysert completed 25 of 31 for recovered · srx fumbles and
JUdgmg from Saturdays 29- 417 yards. Ben Staley had blocked a punt and a tield
26 wm over. m1ghty nine receptions for-178 yards, goalm a 35-0 v1ctory over
Cleveland St. lgnattus.
mcludmg TDs of 24 and -65 , Leavtttsburg LaBrae.
Massillon also outscored yards for Ada (2-4).
MuLTIpURPOSE:
St. lgnattus l5·0 m the fo~rth
MORE AIR THRILLS: DerriCk Berberick retumed a
quarter, sconng the wmmng Btandon Portales threw tor punt 59 yards tor a score and
touchdQwn on a 5'yard run 496 yards and seven TDs _ caught TD passes of 65 and
by backup q':'llfterback and .Lakeside Danbwy need" 80 yards in Bellevue's 63-0
Shawo Wetsend wtth_ 10 sec- ~d every one of them _ in a romp over Galion; Mansfield
onds lett. It w~s the ftrst ume 5J-50 win at Ecton: Dover's Semor's Dante Davis had 383
the Tigers led 1~ the game .and Perci Garner threw" tor 463 all-purpose yards and scored
ended a stnng of etght yards and six TDs with no all seve~ of the Tygers: touch·
stratght losses to the mterceptions in a 52-21 wirl downs m a 47-37 .wm over
Wtldcats.
over I?reviously unbeaten Orrville, rushing for 251
Louisville yards and six TDs, catching
The victory moved ftrst- Cambndge;
year head coach Tom Stacy's remained unbeaten by over- live passes for 132 yards and
record to 6-0, making him the coming .a 21-0 fourth-quarter a TD and intercepting
tirst coach at the school to deticit to win in overtime, Orrville's ftnal pass to seal
win his first six games since thanks to Drew Kuhn's 328 the win.

(5·1) 12.2633. 8, Cin. Coler~n (5-I) 11 .6513.
LlbSrty Twp. Lakota E. (4·2) 11.4500. 10.
DIVISION V
Lebanlll1 (5-1) 11 .3166.
Aegk&gt;n 17-1, W. SOlem NW (6-0) 10.1500. 2.
Warr~n Kennedy {5-1 ) 9.3000. 3, Smithville (ti·
DIVISION II
0) 9.0000. 4, N. Lima $. Range (6-0)8.6633.
Aegion 5-1, Maple Hts. (6·0) 14.5333. 2, 5, Columbiana Crestview (5·1) 7.5166. 6, New
Tallmadge (6-11114.4500. 3. Parma Normandy Middletown Springfield {5·1) 7.2000. 7.
(6-ll) 1~ .4665. 4, Willoughby South (6-ll) Barnesville 14·2) 7.0626. 8, W. Lalayette
12.7666. 5. Olmoted Folio (5·1) 10.9666. 6, Ridgewood 5·1) 6.9933. 9, Lisbon David
Chagrin Falls Kenston (4·2) 10.3600. 7, Akron .Anderson {S-1) 6.9500. 10, Louisville Aquinas
Hoban (5·1 110.3453. 8, Ma~ield (4-2) 8.9333. (5·1) 6.4916.
9, Twinsburg (4-2) 8.8333. 10, Lakelldo (4-2) Region 111-1. Hamler Patrick Henry (6.0)
B 7833
·
11.2666. 2. Bucyrus Wynforcl (6-0) 9•7500. 3,
R'eglon. 6-1, Avon Lake (6-ll) t8,tB33. 2, Findlay Uberty·Benton (EHl) 6.6500. 4, Gatea
Lewis Center Olentqy 115'1) 12.6333. 3, L.odi Milia Gilmour Acad. (6-0) 6.0673. 5; Convoy
Cloverlaal (5·1) 12.2665. 4, Olenlangy Liberty Creatvlew (6-(J) 7.2833. 6, .Bloomd.aiO'
(6-0)10.8500. 5. ~hland {4-2) 1.0.0000. 6, Tol. . Elmwood (4-2) 7.2066. 7, Castalia M_orgarCent Cath. (15'1) 9.9500. 7, Tol. Rogers (4-2) (3-3) 7.0166. 8 (tie), Havlland\Voyno Trace (fl.
9.4333. 8, Mens. Madison (4-2) 9.1833. 9, 0), Collins Western Reserve (5·1) 6.9168.10,
Sylvania SOuthview (5·1) 6.8333. 10, Grafton Rocky River Luth. W.(4-2) 8.0000.
J,Mdview (4-2) 7.9333.
Region 19-t, ColO. Ready (6-0) 12.5333. 2,
J'legion 7-t. Loulovllle (6·0) .16.0833. _2. Howard E. Knox (EHl) 11.1666. 3, 'Grandview
COLUMBUS . (AP) -· Dola Hardin
Canfield (fl.O) IM126. 3, New Philadelphia HIS. (5·1) 9.4110. 4, Lucasville V~ley (5·1)
(6-0) 12.1333. 4. Dublin Scioto (4-2) 10.9500. 8.7196. 5, Wheelersburg (4-2) 8.6666. 6, Northem became the third team to hold
5, Cols. Waltereon (5·1) 10.8713. 8, Amonde·tlearcreek (3-3) 7.4668. 7, Stewort . the No. I spot in Division VI when it
Pickerington High School C (4-2) 9.5000. 7, · federal Hocking (4-2) 7.2763. 8, Frankfort joined Cincinnati St. Xavier, Avon
Cols. Marion Franklin (S..I) 8.8920. 6, Cols. Adena (4-217.2666, 9, Johnstown--Monroe (5Lake, Mentor Lake Catholic,
Beechcroft (4-2) 8.4168. 9, Alliance (4-2) t) 7.1166. 10, Glouster Trimble (6-0)7.0623.
'II
8.3833. tO, Dublin Jerome (4-2) 7.9000.
Region 2G-t, Cln. Hlllo ChrtsUan Acad. (6.()) v.oungstown M.ooney an d"
versa1 es as
Region 8-1, Spring~ro (6-0) 15.2166. 2, 11 .5833. 2, Harmony Community School (B.O)
the top teams in the fourth weekly
Cin. Mt Healthy (6·0) 14.D1S6. 3, Wash. CH 11 .0000. 3, Veraames (6-D) 10.4666. 4, Anna
. h h J
Miami Trace (4·2) 10.4293. 4, l&lt;lngs Mills ,(6-ll) 9.5000. 5, Leos Creal&lt; E. Clinton (&amp;-1) ASSOC13te d Press Sta te hlg
J&lt;ings (5--1) 10.2500. 5, Trenton Eclgewood (fl. 8.9633. 6, Lima Cont. Cath. (S..t) 8.6633. 7, football poll released Tuesday. SC OO
0) 9.8333. 6, Wilmington (4-2) 9A666. 7, Arcanum (6-ll) 6.7333. 8, Merion Ploosent (4Last week's top team in Divjsion VI,
Bellbrook (5·1) 8.2000. 6, MI. Orab Woetem 2). 6.6186. 9, Reading (4·2) 6.6000. 10,
Brown (4-2)7.6000..9,,Cin:Winton WOOds (4- BlutftOn (5·1) 6.35QO.
SteUbeOVI'IIe Cath0 J'IC Centra,I W3S N0.
'2) 7.4666. 10, Trolwood·Medllon (3·31
) for a week but dropped tO fouJ1h with
. 7.2000.
DIVISION VI
Region 21-1 . Columbiana (6-ll) 11.5500. 2. a 29-15 loss to Warren JFK. Unbeaten
DIVISION Ill
Shlub. Coth. Cont. (5-1) 9.616(!. 3. -Clove. Dola Hardin 'Northern took over the
Region 9-1, Mentor Lake Cath. (6-lll Cuya. HIS. (5·1) 8.7333. 4, Mineral Ridge (5-1) lead, with Mechanicsbu~ second and
15.7423, 2, Aurora (5-I) 13.0666. 3, Parma 7.6333. 5, Lowellville (3-3) 5.6500. 6, Da~oo
HIS. Holy Name ' (&amp;-1) 11 .5043. 4, Akron (3·3) 5.5333. 7, L_,ia (4-2) 5.4roo. 8, Delphos St. John's O. I the first
Buchtel (4-2) 9.1666. 5, Young. Uberty (6·01 .Wellsville (3-3) 5.4333. . 9, Thompll&lt;ln two weeks of the balloting - in third
9.0273. 6, Revanna· SE (5' II 8.6333. 7, Ledgemont (5'1) 5.1QOO. 10, East Canton (3Place.
Mantua Crestwood (4-2) 7.3333. 8, R~htield 3) 4.5333. .
Revere (3-3) 7.1000. 9, Hubbarcl (4-2) 6.8333. ~ion 22-1. Bascom HopewelH.ouCIOn (11The top ftve teams in the big-school
10. Cuya Falls Woloh JoeuH (3-31 6.7833.
0) 10.0666. 2, Uberty Ctr. (5-1) 8.5500.· 3, division remained unchanged from 3
Region IG-1, Napoleon {6·0) 13.2000. 2. Monroeville {4-2) 8.0666. 4, Norwalk St. Paul
Archbishop Allor (&amp;-1) 11.6666. 3, Spring. (4·2) 6.8166. ·s. Sycamore Mohawk (S..t) week ago, with St. X followed by
Snowneb (5·1) 11 .8500. 4, Clyde (5-t) 6.6833. 8, Columbus Grove (5-1) 6.3333. 7, N. Cleve1and Glenville's Tarblooders,
11.55()0. 5, St. Morya Memorial (S..I) 10.0166. Baltimore (5·1) 6.0000. 8, Crestline .(4-.2)
Jl. Eaton (S..t) 8.7188. 7, Kenton (4-2) 7.7633. 5.9333. 9, S1 Mery Conttal Cotholi!l (4-2)
Canton
McKinley,
Massillon
8, Sandusky Perkins (4-2) 7.4500. 9, lipp City 5.6000. 10. Tol. Ottawa Hills (4·215.3500.
Washington and .Lakewood St.
"tippecanoe (4-21 7.3633. 10. Urbana (4·11 Region .23--1, ·Lane. Fil!lher C.ath. (5l:1)
Edward.
)'.1040. . .
9.3666. 2, Hannibal River (5-1) 6.8560. 3,
.Region 11~1. Steubenville (6·0) 16,5206. 2, Newllil&lt; Cath. (15-1), 7.5500. 4, Willow Wood
The closest race for the top spot is in
,Nowerk Licking·Valley (~) 15.9666. 3, New Symmes Valley (4-215.5666. 5, Shadyside (4· Division III, where Mentor Lake
Concord-John'Gionn (6-ll) 13.0666. 4, Canal 2) 5.4()63. e, Caldwell 13·3) 5.2996. 7,
fuiiOit N.W: (5-1) 13.0333. 5, Medina Buckeye Sttasburg-Franklln (4-2) 5.0166. B, Milford Ctr. Catholic holds an eight-point edge on
(6-Q) 10.6660. 6, Dover (4·21 9.0666. 7, Fairbanks (5-1) 4.8660. 9, Bellloville (3·3)
Steubenville.
cambridge (5·11 8.9283. ~. Salem (5·11 4.3010. 10, Crown City s. Gollla (4.Z)
A statewide panel of sports writers
a.n93. 9, Shelby (0:2) 6.4000. 10. eeloil 4.1003.
and
broadcasters votes in the 59th
)Va.t Brernm (:1-3) 7.65to.
f'egion 24--1 , Mechanicsburg (t1.Q) 13.1586.
-~legion 12-1, Cin. Indian Hill (fl.O) 11.4500. 2.
2, Dole Hardin Northern (6-Q) e.9500. 3,
annual poll, which continues to the
(;ols. DeSeles (4·2) 10.3500. 3, Gall. Gallla Spring. Cmh. Cent. (5-t) 8.8333. 4, Delphos
threshold of the playoffs on Nov. I.
1ocad. (a-t) 10.0800. 4, Thomvillo Sheridan St. John's (5·1) 7.1833. 5, Covington (5·1)
Here'&gt; the latest balloting, broken
1&lt;~-2) 9.9666. 5, Now Albany (EHl) 9.4166. 6, 5.9500. 6, Waynesfield-Goshen (5·1) 5.7446.
~n . Toll (5-t) 9.2470. 7, Circleville Logan Elm
7. Maria Stein Marion Local (4-2) 5.3500. 8,
down by OHSAA divisions , with won~.

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

BIG YARDAGE: Morgan
Williams
of
Canton
McKinley has 1,010 yards
and is averaging 13.1 yards
~er carry: Barnesville's
dd H'
h
· d 178
r1 y mes as came
04
d W;
times for I. 7 yar s; arren
G. Harding
broke
a four·
1 ·
ak ·th
4?
game osmg stre WI a -·
7 victory over Youngstown
Ursuline as Dan Herron ran
for 27J yards and live TDs;
Salem's J.J . Johnson ran 37
limes for 241 yards and three .
TDs in a 27-7 wm over Niles
McKinley, giving him 1,180
yards and 16 TDs so far;
Bobby Doyle ran for 240
yards and four TDs in
Chardon's 42-28 victory over
Eastlake North; Cincinnati
Winton
Woods'
Hosea
Simpson ran for 234 yards
and three TDs but his •team
losl 42-28 to Anderson;
Norwood
QB _- ~dam
R e~no lds rushed tor 228
yards and two TDs and threw
. tor three TDs in a 36-15 win
over Ltttle Mtami ; and a
week after rushmg for under
I00 yards, St. Marys
Memorial rebounded as
Koby Frye rushed for 231
yards and older brother Bo
added 139 in a 28-20 wm
over Van Wert.

2005 ~P High School Football Poll .

District

guys will definitely be
ready. and I'm sure they
can't wait."

from Page Bl.
:Conference foe Ty Barrett of
Trimble was one of those.
Southern has advanced
.individual golfers to stare in
the past , but it 's the first trip
_as a team. The last time ·a
·Southern team, in any sport,
·made a state tournament
. :was in 1982 for boys basletball.
" It is a big accomplishment for us," Winebrenner
admitted. "I'm sure these

ovcs

from PageBl

(
:added seven.
· Haley
Drayer
led
:waterford with nine points.
Williams went 20-20 serv·
ing with six aces, 20-22 s~ik·
ing, and had slx ktlls .
-Whitney Wolfe-Riffle was
:23-28 setting, 6-7 spiking,
I 7-19 passing and 10-1 0
·serving with an ace. Eylem
Gurbuzer had 15-15 kills and
three kills, while Ashley
Robie was 2-3 serving, 6-7
spiking, and three blocks .
Bethany Riffle was 13-13
-serving, 27-31 setting, and
:11.13 passing; while Jenny
Warner had a good spiking
night with 24-25 with two

1. Gin. St.

Xavier (23) 6-0

2, Cia. Glenville (8) 6-0
3, Cen. McKinley (3) 6·0
4, MassHion washington (3) s-o
5. Lakewood St Edward 5-0
6, Centerville (216-0
7, Cin. Colerain 5-1
8, Tol. St John:s 6-0
9, Gahanna Lincoln 6-0
10, Solon 6-0

~2

1, Youngs. Mooney {21) 6·0

305
272
263

185
169
166
134
99
42

2. Coldwaler (7)6·0
~.Bellaire (5) 6·0
4, Germantown Valley View (1} 6-0
5, Akr. Manchesler (216-0
6, Onawa-Giandorl6·0
7, Huron (1) 6-0
8, Ironton 5·1
9, Tontogany Otsego 6·0
10, Akr. SVSM 4·2
.
.

348
~14

286
230
199
176
168
128
91
37

Others receiving 12 or rnore points: 11, Cle. St
Ignatius 31 . 12, Hilliard Davidson 25. 13, Cin. Glen Este

Other&amp; receiving 12 or more points : 11, Piketon (1)
30. 12, Clarksvil le Cllnton-Massie 22. 13, Can. Cent.

15.

Cath. (1)

DIVISION 11
1, Avon Lske (27)6-0
2, Tallmadge (2) s-o
3. Springboro (316·0
4, Louisville 1116.0
5, Canfield (1)6·0
6, Maple Hts. (1) 6·0

7, Cols. wa•erson 11 )5·1

Cadiz Harrison Cent. 13 .
DIVISION v
'
1, Versailles (26)6-0
333
2, Cols. Ready (6) 6-0
304
3, Hamler PatriCk Henry 1116-0
254
4, smnhville 1216-o
24t

368
267
257

. 278

207

,,94

131

5, N. LimaS. Range 6·0
6, Anna 6-0

172
145

CLEVELAND (AP) General
manager
Mark
Shapiro has promised the
ln(Iians will make their best
moneyball pitch to right-han. der Kevin Millwood.
They can only hope it's high
enough.
Still stinsing from the club's
. disafpoin\mg collapse in the
ftna week of the regular season, Shapiro said Tuesday that
the Indians will offer a multiyear contract to Millwood, the·
A.L's ERA champion who is
eligible for free agency following the World Series.
In his first season with
Cleveland, Millwood, who
signed a one-year, $7.25 million deal last winter, shrugged
off a lack of run support and
provided invaluable leadership to the Indians, who finished with 93 wins but missed
the playoffs by going 1-6
· down the stretch.
"We will make a very col11petitive offer to Kevin
Millwood," Shapiro said, "We
will step beyond our comfort
zone."

Shapiro's pledge was a bit
surprising smce Cleveland's
track record for re-signing its
own high-profile free agents is
abysmal, and because the
mid-market club has been
operating under a tight budget. In recent years, the
Indians have been outbid by
other teams for . sluggers
Manny Ramirez and · Jim
Thome.
·
But . Shapiro anticipates
Cleveland's payroll - $42
million in 2005 - rising next
season and he expects owner
Larry Dolan to allow him to
make a legitimate run at the
30-year-old Millwood, who
has a .history of shoulder and
elbow problems but made 30
starts this season and became
the ftrst A.L pitcher to win the

ERA title with a
losing record
since 1923.
Shapiro ,
i I
though, understands
free
~
age n cy ' s
fragility better
than anyone, and that even the
best inlention s can be undermined. .
"The reality is that you're
putting yourself at the whim
of one team that may put an
entirely different value on him
and has an entirely different
threshold for rjsk. Anytime
you enter free agency, there is
no unequivocal 'We're going
to get this guy.' In free agency,
there is some level of uncertainty.''
As for Millwood, Shapiro
says both sides are already in
agreement.
"Do I think he wants to sign
back here 0 Yes," Shapiro satd.
"Does he like it here? Yes. Do
we have immense apprecialion for what he can do on and
off the fteld? Absolutely. Will
we pay a lot for more years
than we' re comfortable in?
Yes·.
"Will all those lead to us
gettin~ a deal done? ·1 don't
know.'
During his exit meeting
with Millwood, Shapiro
expressed his gratitude to the
veteran, who used some of the
knowledge he absorbed while
pitching with Greg Maddux
and John Smoltz in Atlanta to
mentor Indians starters C.C.
Sabathia and Cliff Lee.
"His (Millwood's) impact
will not be a short-term
impact," Shapiro said. "His
impact will be one that is felt
by our pitchers for a long time
to come and their whole
careers. In talking to Cliff and
C.C., they learned-it. They got
it."

Last week, Millwood said
he and agent Scott Boras will
seek at lea ~t a three-year deal.
The Indians are willing to give
him one, but Shapiro said he
has not discussed any tinancia! limits with Millwood .Shapiro hopes to have a resolution between the end of the
Series and Thanksgiving,
On other matters:
- Shapiro praised closer
Bob Wickman, a potential free
agent who tied for the league
lead with 45 saves. Wickman
is contemplating retirement
again, and if he does come
back, it may not be with.
Cleveland.
" He had an exceptional season, beyond any expectation
·that we could have held for
him," Shapiro said. "He did a
great job for us. Now I have to
sort through his desire to play,
our tinancial parameters and
what it's going to lake to sign
Kevin Millwood."
-Shapiro said Cleveland's
season - a 25-game improve. ment from 2003 - shouldn' t
be judged by the clu)l's staggenng fini sh.
"lhis team deserves to be
viewed in light of its accomplishments, which were many
mstead of its shortcomings
which were brief and few," he
said.
- Unlike manager Eric
Wedge, who steadfastly
refused to say his players
· caved into the pressure in the.
season's final days, Shapiro
said the lndiaris'- overall lack
of experience doomed them.
"It's a hard game to play·
when you're tight," he said.
"Very hard."
. - Of Cleveland's many
positives this season, Shapiro
singled out Sabathia, who was
6-9 in July and being booed
by Indians fans before finishing 15-10.

a, Findlay Liberty·Benton (1) 6·0
9, Bucyrus Wynford 6·0

1D2
78

Grace.Christian rallies past Rebels
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

t07

9. Cin. Hills 6-0

76

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Howard E.
Knox 57. 121 W. Salem NW (1) 54. 13, Warren JFK 34.
14. Cin. Harmony 30. 15, Glouster Trimble (1) 22. 16,
Cqlumbi~_na Crestview (1) 20. 17, lisbon David
Anderson 15. 18, Johnstown-Monroe q.

DIVI,SION VI
DIVISION Ill
1, Dola Hare!in Northern (20) 6·0
318
1, Mentor LaKe Cath. (23) 6·0
356.
2. Mechanicsburg (6) 6-0
. 280
2, Steubenville (12) 6-0
348
3. Delphos St. John's (4) 5·1
245
3, Newark Licking Valley (1) 6·0
279
4, Steubenville Cath. Cent. (4) 5-1
244
199
5, Columbiana (3) 6-0 ,
234
4,' Cin. Indian Hill 6-Q
5, Napoleon6-0·
194
6, NewarkCath. 5-1
194
6. KetteringARer (1} 5-1
154
7, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (1)6-0
156
7, Cots. DeSates 4·2
104
a, Spring. Cath. Cent. 5-1
128
8, St. Marys Memorial 5-1
73
9, lancaster Fishe r Cath . (1) 5-1
127
9, New Concord John Glenn 6-0
72
10, Maria S1ein Marton Local4-2
48
10, Parma His. Holy Name 5-1
51
Others reCeiving 12 or more points: 11, Cle.
others receiving 12 or more.poln1s: 11. Canal Fulton .. Cuyahoga Hts. 31. 12 , Liberty Center 29. 13, Columbus
NW 40 .. 12, New Albany 39. 13, Dover 3.2. 14, Grove 12.

kills, and 11-13 passing.
Amber Hill was 7-7 serving
with two aces and Selena
Spencer was 5-5 serving and
14-16 passing.
Waterford took the early
. lead in the first game and led
9-7 until Williams gave the
hosts a 12-9 lead on four
straight serves. · Southern
never relinquished the lead.
Williams and Warner had
good nights at the net.
Southern took a 2-0 lead in
·
the ·secopd game, but Haley
Drayer gave Waterford a 5·2
advantage. Southern slowly
worked its way back to the
top and tied the score at 12- .
12 on a Williams serve.
Waterford regained the lead
and after traded side-outs thegame was tied at 17-17.
Amber Hill gave Southern a
21-17 advantage and the

•

The Daily Sentinel'_ • Page 83

Tribe·will offer Millwood new deal

15. 14,

7, Gates Mills Gilmour 6·0

a, Trenton Edgewood (1) 6·0
104
9, New Philadillphia {1) 6-o
66
10. Cin. Mt. Healthy 6·0
33
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Willoughby
SoutO 28. 12, Olmsted Falls 23. 13, Akr. Hoban (1) 22.
14, Powell Olentangy UbertY 20. 15 (tie). Pickerington
Central, Copley, Lodi Clollerleaf 18. 18, Parma
Normandy 11. 19, Lewis Center Olentangy 14. 20,
Dublin Scioto 1.2.

www.mydailysentinel.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. One night after defeating
Rock Hill in come-frombehind fashion, South Gallia
volleyball found itself on the
other side of · the spectrum
Tue'sday in a closely-contested 25-3, 25-6, 22·25, 22-25,
13- 15 setback to Grace
Christian.

· The Lady Rebels (6-1 1)
jumped out to a quick two·
game lead, but the Lady
Patriots rallieq wi!" back~toback 22-25 YtCI?nes, settmg
up the dramattc !male.
Despite a solid SGHS tin·
ish, Grace went on to claim
.
the victory.
Jessica Cantrell led the
Rebels with 28 points, 21
assisls and eight aces, while
Jillian Swain had a game-high

30 kills . Cantrell also had
eight kills iq the loss.
Niki Fulks had 13 kills for
't he guests, and Megan
Delaney also chipped in a
pair
·
. •
~outh Galha returns to
actton Thursday when 1t traYels to Galhpohs to battle wtth
Ohio Valley Christian School. Game time is slated for 5:30
p.m.

going to make it to state,"
explained . Winebrenner.
"When the kids .found out
that they finished first, it
just put them on cloud nine.
They were really excited."
Chesapeake (353) was
third in the eight-team field
followed by Manchester
(354), Fairfield (359),
Adena (364 ), North Adams
(374) and Southeastern

Brad Crouch shot an 80 to
pace Southern followed by
Patrick Johnson's 81 and an
83 by freshman Bryan
Harri s., All three golfers
carded 39 on the front nine.
" but Crouch shot an excellent 41 coming in to post the
team-low score.
Jacob .Hunter fired a (377).
Southern will have a week
round of 90 to round-out the
winner 's scoring. Josh ·ro hone its skills before
Smith finished with a 95 . . challeng-ing the Players
"Most of them knew com- Club course ·at Fox fire next
· ing off 18 that we were Frid~y and Saturday.

by scores of 25-16. 25-15 and
25-12.
Julie Hussell led Ohio
Valley
Christian with 15
from PageBl
points on perfect 17-for-17
serving . Kristi Davis was
ry over visiting Fairland next with 10 points followed
Wednesday.
by Megan sheets with seven
The Lady Defenders won and four each by Sarah
for the 13th straight time and l;lurleson
and
Heather
improved to 16- 1 on the sea· · Wagner. Kalee Edmonds .
son with their latest victory chipped in three.
'
- which: cam~ rather easily . Andrea VanMeter, A~nee ,

Tames

lost record and total points and tirst- Cambridge 24 t5, Medina Buckeye (t) 23. 16, Aurora
'
· . ·
20... 17 Youngs . Ltbe~ 17. 18 (t1e), Spnng. Shawnee,
place votes m parentheses:
Akl. B~chteiiUOitle). Gallipolis Gelllo(t) t5, Clyde
DIVISION 1
DIVISION IV

· \Vednesday, October 5, 2005

.
AP Photoflhe Lorain Journal, David Richard
Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen gestures to Cleveland Indians fans and Tribe ma·s·
cot Slider during a pitching change in the sixth inning Sunday 1n Cleveland.
·

Guillen: Choke sign was just...,a joke

CHICAGO (AP)
White Sox manager Ozzie
Guillen said he didn't mean
to offend the Indians or
their fans with hi s choking
gesture during Sunday's
regular-seaso n finale in
Cleveland.
Guillen was "playing
around with fans" when he
wrapped his hand s around
hi s neck during a pitching
change in the sixth inning.
"We joked almost all the
game." he said · Tuesday
before lhe opener of
Chicago's first-round play·
off series against Boston.
"And all of a sudden the

mascot does the sign, and
all of a sudden I put my
hands like that. And all of a
sudden everybody in the
nation thought I was telling
the fans to choke. I respect
this game and respect the
Cleveland Indians."
After building a 15-game
lead in the AL Cenlral. the
White Sox held off a
charge by Cleveland over
lhe final two months and
won the division by six.
They swe pt three games
against the Indian s la st
weekend, including a 3-1
victory on Sunday.
"It was one lady and six

guys sittin g next to me, and
we were just pla.)'i~g
around all ga me ," Gutlle~
said. "And (if) th ey take ii
the wrong way, ihat's fine.
I know the las1 couple ol·
days I slept pretty goqd
about it hecau se - I don'.t
have anything in my con~ .
science 10 make · me f~d
guilty about it."
·
· Guillen
prai sed
the
Indians and rheir fans, saf
ing, '' I· never saw anybody
lose a game and ge l . a
·standing ovation .... They
made the Cleveland fan~
really exci ted . They made
baseha.J.I great 10 .watch.''

Werllrun your classified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4· Wheeler,
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which is delivered to 17,000 homes.Ir you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just call
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just call prior to the end of 251!ays
aild we'll extend your ad ·another 25 days.

Carman, Cara Sandell also
saw action and contributed to
the winners' latest triumph .
Jay Jarvis filled in for
OVCS head coach Tracey
Sisson, who was on a missions trip.
OVCS plays host to Sou~
Gallia Thursday. It will oe
the third and final meeting
of the year between the
Galli a County schools.
hosts held on for the wjn.
The second game was a
real character builder for the
Tornadoes, who have found
that pressure is not what it
was early in the year. The
Lady Tornadoes have seen
their confidence level grow
1 Day Ad:.
3 Day Ad.:
thwug!louJ the season, and
that confidence sizzled as
$7.00 - 15 wofds or less
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Bethany Riffle iced the
game. 25-18.
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d f
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arne
rom 1 etr ear ler
battles with the 'Does,
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Waterford's declawing con·
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. .
AdvertiSing! •
tinued when Williams led off
the final game with a string
.
of eight straight points imd
five aces; Everything went
.
.
Southern s way the remam·
~oi-nt ~leasant
der of the match as Southern
claimed the 25-10 win. .
'
Southern travels to Mtller ~
Thursday.
, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ
.
~
i
f

+

·
.

··~---------------__;_

+

$1 ·6

®allipohs 11Bailp m:rib.une
l\egtster
The Daily Sentinel

.

_________________

I

Bryan Walters/photo
:The River Valley duo of Kari McFann (1) and Beth l;&gt;ayne, right. attempt to block the spike
:attempt of Jackson's Brittany Logan during Tuesday's match in Chesh)re.

Raiders
fromPageBI
seven kills to the setback.
· Brooke Taylor contributed
five kills, Kirsten Carter
added three and Lauren Bing
had a pair of kills for the
hosts.
Brittany Logan led Jackson
:with 12 kills and nine digs ,
·while Jenni1ynn Martin

adde'iJ 21 assists and two aces
to the victory.
.
River Valley didn't come
away empty-handed, as both
the junior varsity and fresh·
men teams scored victories.
The junior varsity Raiders
captured a 25-11, 21-25, 15· 7
victory. Amanda Mullins had
'nine points for RVHS and
Kayla Smith added eight.
Rac hel Walburn chipped in ·
seven kills to the win.
RVHS also scored a 25-10.

24-26. 15-6 win in the fre shmen coolest.
. Linsey Stover led the way
with nine points, while Tara
Workman added eight lo the
triumph.·
,
River Valley returns to
OVC action Thursday when
it hosts Coal Grove. A win
against the Home.ts would
clinch the Lady Raiders'
fourth straight Ohio Valley
Conference crown. Game
time is slated for 5:30 p.m.

***You must call prior-to the end.of initiai2S day period to extend.
***I.imited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of 50 days) ·
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�•
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

•W WW .mydailysentinel.com

Cardinals fly past San Diego Chicago whitewashes Red Sox
· ST. LOUIS (AP) - Reggie
Sanders, Chris Carpenter and
lhe St. Loui s Cardinals looked
~e1y bit like the best team in
~seball - even with a shaky
e nding.
San Diego played as poorly
as 1ts record suggests fOJ' most
of the day. And now, ~ith ace
pitcher Jake Peavy out for the
~slseason with a broken rib,
llle Padres m1ght be over1hatc hed.
,
· Sanders hit a gnmd slam and
set an NL div1s ion series record
with s1x RB!s, Carpenter
Qitched six scoreless inning s
aefore bemg pulled as a precaulion and the Cardmals built a
\lig lead and held off the Padres
~::;;Tuesday in Game l.
~' li's huge," Sanders ~aid.
" ut alone getting one RBI in a
vkek, you get s1x in one day
iil)d especially under postseason
pressure. It's a great day.
: .''But it's not over, we've got a
lOng way logo."
Facing a ream thai won the
West despiie an 82-80 record,
the Cardinals who Jed the
majors with I00 wins
QPened an 8-0 cushton in the
fifth inning against Peavy. He
pitched with an injury that
worsened in the third and was
taken to a hospital after lasting
only 4 1-3 inmngs.
An MRI showed one broken
nb on his right side and the possibility of a second break. A
Padres spokesman said the
injury would take four to stx
weeks to heal.
"He felt something on his
right side," manager Bruce
Bochy said. "He said he felt it
dunng the course of the game."
. Peavy thinks he might have
bruised his ribs during a celebratory scmm on the field after
the Padres clinched the NL
West on Wednesday. He satd
the injury was probably warsened when he caught a spike on
the rubber on a wild pitch in the
lhird that didn'i even make it to
the dirt.
"I thought I had bruised ribs,
I .never imagined 11 would be
this," Peavy smd. "It's weird.
It's been a ltttle bothersome but
it was nothing we thought
would get in my way
"I knew it was pretty bad
when I came out of the game. "
Even w;ihout Peavy, the
pesky Padres weren't done.
They scored once in the sevetith, added another run in the
eighth and then gol right back
into it in the ninth. San Diego
scored three times and loaded

the bases with two outs before
closer Jason
lsnnghausen
struck out Ramon Hernandez.
" We' re playin~ a tough
team," Sanders satd. "As you
can see, they fought to the last
out."
Mark Mulder will oppose
San Diego's Pedro Astacio on
Thursday in Game 2 of the bestof-five senes.
Jim Edmonds helped St.
Louis with a home run, double
and single. Eric Young had a
pinch-hit homer in the eighth
for San Diego and an RBI
groundout in the mnth.
Manager Tony La Russa's
team won for the fifth time in
six NLDS openers. That
includes a victory in 1996 when
the Cardinals swept ~e Padres.
The 37-year-old Sanders was
on pace for the fir.;t 30-homer,
30-sieal season of his career
before missmg 54 games after
breaking his nght leg in an outfield collision with Edmonds in
nud-July. Sanders rediscovered
his stroke in the final week of
the re)lular season, driving m 10
runs m the last six games and
homering three times in the
final four.
· Against Peavy. Sanders ' had
both of the key hits. His two-run
single off the glove of diving
first baseman Mark Sweeney
put the Cardinals ahead 4-0 in
the third, and his grand slam
into the left-field seat~ on a 3-0
fastball chased Peavy in the
fifth.
Carpenter was 21-5 with a
2.83 ERA, the ace the Cardinals
lacked in the playoffs last fall
when they wen: swept in the
World Series by the Red Sox.
But he struggled in the final
month, with a 9 .14 ERA in his
final four outings, and said he
lost moltvation after the
Cardinals clinched the Central
with two weeks to spare.
"It feels nice to get zeros and
Ret a win," Carpenter said.
'You go out there to execute
pitches and gtve your team a
chance to win and I was able to
do it all day."
The Padres saw the dominant
Carpenter again. He allowed
only three singles while benefiting from three double plays
from the team that led the
mf\iors.
"Our key ts to make him
throw pitches and get him oul of
there,' San Die~o·s Ryan
Klesko said. "He pttched him· self out of a couple of jams."
Carpenter's biggest battle
was with the weather. It was an

unseasonably warm 84 degrees
at gametime and 86 when he
experienced crampmg in his
right hand while warming up
before the
seventh.
The
Cardmals said dehydralion
caused the problem and took
him out as a precaution.
Carpenter said his fingers
started . cramping when he put
on his battmg glove before
strikinjl out in the sixth. He also
said hts hamstrings and calves
were &lt;;:nunping.
"It only happened twice,"
Carpenter satd. "But the~
weren't going to take a chance. '
Peavy appeared to be the
Padres' best shot at postseason
success after going 13-7 with a
2.88 ERA - only five points
behind Carpenter - and leading the NL with 216 strikeouts
But he couldn't make 11 through
the tjfth, h1s second-shortest
outing of the season, and gave
up eight runs on eight hits
The Padres had been pl&lt;lnning to pitch Peavy m Game 4
on Sunday in San Diego on regular rest 1f the series goes thai
far. Now, the likely slarter is
Adam Eaton, who had been
slotted for Game 5.
The Cardinals got to Peavy
immediately. With one out m
the flfst, Edmonds hit his II th
career postseason homer to the
oppos1te field to give St. Louis
the lead.
Five straighi batters reached
safely with one out in the third
as the Cardinals scored three
more times. The wild pitch that
worsened
Peavy's
inJqry
allowed one run to score and
Sanders' infield hit drove in two
more.
In the fifth, four straight
Cardinals reached with one out.
Edmonds began the rally with a
sharp grounder off Peavy's
'Albert Pujols smgled and
Walker walked lo set up
ers' grand slam
The Padres had 13 hits, bur
eight came in the last lwo
innings.
"1 think anytime you're down
eight runs and you end up getting the winmng run at the plate,
I think that shows a loi of character and heart of the club,"
Bochy said. "They were battling to the end."
Khalil Greene had a sacrifice
fly off Cardinals reliever Brad
Thompson in the seventh and
Young homered off Randy
Flores to start the eighth. Mark
Loretta and Brian Gtles had
RBI singles in the ninlh.

~

'
CHICAGO (A P ) The
wmning soc ks came from the
Wh1te Sox. Now, maybe 1t's
their turn lo end a long
championship drought.
A.J. P1erLynski homered
twice,' Paul Kunerko, Juan
Unbe
and
even
Scott
Pod sedn1k also connected,
and Chicago scored five
times in the ' firs1 lljlling
Thesday en route to a 14-2
rout of the World Series
· champion Red Sox m their
playoff opener.
Jo se Contrcms pitcljed
effectively mto the e;ghth
mning. endmg
Basion 's
eight-game postseason winning streak that carried the
team to its first tille in 86
years la st season.
The While Sox hope tQ end
a drought that's even longer,
daimg way back to the days
of Shoeless Joe Jackson and
their most recent World
Series crown in 1917, the
las t time they won any playoff series at all.
One sign in the stand s
summed up hopes on the
South Side:
"2004: Their Sox : 2005:
Our Sox ."
Then aga1n, Boston ha s
done
fine
ovcrcommg
October def1c1ts. The Red
,Sox rall;ed from 3-0 down to
beat the New York Yankee s
in the AL championshi~
series last year before sweeping St Louis in the World
Senes for their tirst tille
since 1918.
Game 2 m the best-of-live
senes is Wednesday al U.S .
Cellular
F1eld
with
Chicago's Mark Buehrle facing Boston's Dav;d Wells.
The Wh1te Sox got ihei r
first playoff victory since
1993 with a stunning display
of power.
Pierzyn s ki 's
three-1 u n
homer off Matt · Clement
capped
Chicago's
firs tmning outburst and sent a
raucous,
• lowel-waving
crowd of 40,717 into delirium.
Konerko added a solo shot
in the thirt.l and Uribe a tworun dnve to finish Clement
in ihe fourth. Podsednik ,
Chicago's speedy leadoff hit ter who didn't have a homer
all season, hit a three-run
shot off Jerem1 Gonzalez in
the s1xth. P1erzynsk1 con-

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AP photo
Chicago White Sox· batter Juan Uribe (5) IS congratulated at
homeplate by teammate A.J . P1erzynsk1 (12) 1n the fourth
mning of Game 1 of the American League Division Senes
agamst the Boston Red Sox in Chicago. Unbe had a home
'
run and Plerzynsk1 had two home runs in the 14-2 w1n.
nected agam m the eighth.
Contreras , who was 2-4
with an II .67 ERA ll1 h;s
career against the Red Sox ,
allowed e;ght hits and two
runs in 7 2-3 inmngs m h1s
flfst playoff start.
Clement, who lost three of
h1s tinal five regular-season
starts, struggled with his
control al the outset, hitting
Podsednik and Jermaine Dye
with pitches.
Podsednik stole th1rd and
atier Konerko sent a long
dnve to lefl that was foul, he
put the White Sox ahead
with an RBI grounder to
third.
Carl Everett followed with
a
single
before Aaron
Rowand sent an RBI single
over shortstop for a 2-0 lead
The din increased moments
later when P1erzynski , a veteran of playoff games with
Mmnesota, lined h1s threerun homer lo left-center.
• Trot Nixon singled in the
fourth and, after Jason
Varitek dropped down a bunt
for anoiher hit, Chicago third
baseman Joe Crede kicked
the ball as he was trymg to
p;ck 11 up and both runners
advanced on the error.

Contreras, who tied teammate Freddy Garcia with an
AL-leading 20 wild piiches
this season, unleashed another as Nixon scored. Kevin
Millar followed with a double lo right and the Red Sox
were seemingly back in the
game at 6 -2.
.
· But Chicago second baseman Tadahito Ighuchi made
a heads-up play on Bill
Mueller's grounder, making
a rare throw from second to
third to cut down Millar and
douse the rally.
And after Pierzynski doubled to start the fourth, Uribe
drove a pitch over the fence
in left, giving the White Sox
a six-run cushion and finishing Clemeni's miserable day
after just 3 1-3 innings.
Uribe had an RBI single in
the SIXth before Podsednik
connected.
Pierzynski hit . his second
homer off Bronson Arroyo.
He is the second White Sox
player to homer twice in a
postseason game, joining
Ted Kluszewski, who htt two
against the Dodgers in Game
I of the 1959~orld Series.
Pinch-hitter Willie Harris
added an RBI single in the
e1ghth.

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ANNouNCThiENfS
1

Harnsonvllle Presbyter1an
church
soc1al
room
Saturday, October 8th ,
2005, 9 00 A.M to 4 00 PM
Sponsorer Lend·A·Hand
6veryone welcome

As of Sep1ember 30, 2005 1
will not be Respons•ble for
any Debts other then my
own Ronald L L1vm ston
GIVEAWAY

Yard and Garage Sale 4
m11es out 143 Pomeroy Oct
2 free kittens to good home 6·7-8 10 00-4 00 Wood
7 weeks old Call (740)441· and Gas Cook Stove Glass
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Ware, lots of m1sc
2 sets bird breed1ng cages
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Good for F1nches, Parakeets Hysell Run Road, October
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5 males, 2 female cats &amp; kit·

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NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealad proposals for
tho renovation of the
old
Middleport
Railroad
Depot,
Village of Middleport,
Meigs County, Ohio
will be received by
lhe Meigs County
Commissioners

at

their office at the
Courthouse,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1:00
P.M.,
until
Thursday, October 27,
2005 and then at 1:15
P.fll., at oald office
opened and read
aloud for the follow·
lng;

Renovation of the old
l.llddleport Railroad
Depot In the Village of
'Which
Middleport

Commissioners,

Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohlo-45769Phona
1740-9922895. Adaposlt of o
will
ba
dollars
required for each set

of
opaclllcatlons.
Plans available for
Inspection at the
Meigs County Grants
E.
Office,
117
Memorial Drive, Suite
7, Pomeroy, Ohio,

betwean 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
Each bid muat be
accompanied
by
eHher a bid bond In

Commissioners

an amount of 100% ol

tained In this bid

tho bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Melga
Count'/

Involves mechanical,
electrical and general
contract
work.

Commlsolonel'll or by
certified
check,

Specifications provided In bid packet.

tor of credit upon o
solvent bank In lhe
amount of not 1811
than 1p% of the bid
amount In favor of tho
aforesaid
Melgo

Specifications,

and

bid forms may be
secured at the office
of

Meigs

County

County
Commissioners. Bid
ahall
be
Bonda
accompanied
by
Proof of Authority of
the olllclal or agent
signing the bond.
Bide ahall be sealad
and markad as Bid for
Middleport Railroad
Depot Project and
mailed or delivered
to:
County
Malgs

cashiera check, or tat-

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

PHARMACIST
(Full- Time)

accepting re s umes for a Full · Tune·
Pharmac1s1 BS Pharmacy, Pharm D.
Pharmacy or Ph . D Pharmacy from
accrediled college or umvers ity. WV S1a1e
Pharmacist Ltcemure. Two years pharmacist
experience preferred. Hospital experience
l&gt;relerred.
Excellenl sa lary, holiday s, heallh

msurance smgle/fam1ly plan. dental plan,
life 1nsurance. vacatJon. long-term d1 sabihty
and retirement
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Human Resources

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1414.
AAIEOE

requirements

con-

Davenport,

Prealdant
Malgs
County
Comm issioners.
(10) 5, 7,12
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
TRACTORS

CON·

Sealed proposals for

the Construc.tlon of
two (2) doors and the
purchase and Installation of replacement

windows

for

tho

Racine
Museum/Cross Mill

Davis-Bacon

Pro)oct,
Racine,
Meigs County Ohio
will be received by
the Meigs County
Commissioners
at
their office at the

Wagea, various Insur-

Courthouse,

ance requlrementl,
various equal oppor-

tunity provlalono, and
the raqulrement for a
payment. bond and

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until
1:00
P.M.,
Thursday, October 27,
2005 and then at 1:15
P.M. at said office

performance bond for

opened

1110% Of the contact
price, No bidder may
withdraw hlo bid withIn thirty (30) days
·after the actual date
of the opening thor•
of. The Malga County
Commlaalonera
I'IIHI'VI the right to
reJect any or all bl~.

aloud lor lhe followIng:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

packet, particularly to

the Federal Labor
Standarda Provisions
and

and

read

VInyl
replacement
windows to be pur·

chasad and lnstallad
In the building (27
windows total), and
the Construction of
two owing doors from
material provided on

·

Pleasant Valley Husp1tal IS currently

www pvalley.org

Courthouse,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Attention Dl bidders
Ia called to all Dl the

Mlck

site. Specifications
provided In bid packat.
Specifications, and
bid forms may be
secured at the oHice

of Meigs County
Commissioners,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769Phone
1740-992, 2895. A deposit of 0
be
dollars
will
required for each set
of plans and specifi-

insurance.

$7.'25/hr. Send resume to:

Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or e-mail to: beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 10/12/05.
Pr.e-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer

l"l&gt;••nr~

%~

I

reject any or all bids.

Mlck
Davenport,
President,
Meigs
County

on

~
' ).

/

Commisslonara.

{10) 5, 10, 12

()

•
•

SAVINGS

ance requirements ,
·various equal oppor·
tunlty provisions, and
the requirement for a

payment bond and
perlormanca bond lor
100% of the contract
price. No bidder may
withdraw his bid with·
In thirty (30) days
after the actual data
of the opening there·

of. Tho Meigs County

r

•

~

YARDSAUGALUPOLIS

5 tam•ly yard sale Baby
clothes, toys, adult clothmg,
household goods, m1sc
1766 Graham SchOol Ad
Fn/Sat t0/7·1018, 9am ·
5pm

0

mp

Found Male huntmg Hound
Bob Evans Farm area
(740)446·1716

dOg,

4 fam1 ly yard sale Thurs·Fn,
4466 SA 554, Chesh1re
Adult, children &amp; baby
clothes baby furmture,
Home lnlenor, treadmill,
toys &amp; lots of m1sc.

Commluloners
reserve the right to

""
:::::
'

Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either, a bid bond In
an amount of 1DO% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
c o- u n t y
Commissioners 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 favor of the
aforesaid
Malgs
County
Commissioners. Bid
Bond shall be accompanied by. Proof of
Authority of the offl·
clal or agent signing
the bond. Bids shall
be sealed and marked
as Bid for Baclne
Museum/Cross Mill
ProJect and mailed or
delivered to:Melgo
County

Commissioners,
Positjon available to assist - Courthouse,
an individual with mental retardaPomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders
tion who resides in the Meigs
Is called to all of tho
County area; 35.5 hrs; 11 pm Fri. requirements
contained
In
this
·
bid
7:30 am Mon; sleep-over required.
packet, particularly to
Must have high school diploma or
the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions
GED, valid driver's license, three
and
Davis-Bacon
years good driving experience and
Wages, various Insurautomobile

v._.ur

cations.

WANTED:

adequate

lluo

700 Second ms1de 4 lam1·
lies Somelhmg for dvery·
one, clothes, furnllure
Thursday, Fr•day &amp; Saturday
Estate Sale Oct 7·8, 9·4,
1259 SaHord School Rd
Large yard sale Oct 5th thru
8th 1 2 miles out Route 218

&lt;
www.comics.com

:::&gt;
&lt;Cl2005 by NEA, Inc.

r

4

YARD SALE·

'Ptl.\tERO\'~

I
.

Anderson's paho sale·
Friday Oct 7th &amp; Sat Oct
8th, 9am-5pm St At 124 at
Pine Grove Ad , tools to
Tupperware
Coolv1lle Head Start Center
IS Closlng 25696 Wilson
Street m Coolv111e. Fr1day,
October
7th,
1Oam·
3pm=Hvge Salel • Toys.
. games, shelves, tables.
chau;s. outdoor eqUipment,
ferlCe computers. numerous
other 1tems available No
Early Sales
Garage Sale. Long Bonom,
Ohio S A124 Pottery. craft
Items, hoatmg
1tems.
Thursday and Fnday 9·00
to 5:00, Oct 6th and 7th

Southern Elementary Fall
Carmval mv1tes you to attend
B. 5 9pm B' space $1
(supply own table) for more 1nfo
949-4222 ext 1129

Oct.

Giant Yard Sale Minersville
off It 124 and on Weichtown
Road Oct 4.. ? •vass~ W11l
last as long as s1gns are out

o.oo

Squire Parsons Trio
Aiverbend Arts Council
290 North 2nd , Middleport

Oct. 7th

· In Concert at

Cheshire Baptist Church
October 7th
at 7:00pm
Pastor Steve Little
Welcomes All!!!

YARD SM.E-

Pr. PuA.'lANJ'

tens Mercerville area
Phone {740)256·1092 or cell
4 Fam•ly Yard Sale Fnday
phone (7401339·2917
October 7th North of Mason,
9 ADORABLE 5 112 week WV at F1elds Tra1ter Park
old mixed breed puppies to
good home (740)388·9956 Communlty·Sale Gunvllle
Free Kittens Call Joyce Ridge Oct"7·8 From Pornt
Pleasant At2·North to At87
Carter at 740·992·6762
go 6/m1les FoiiQw s1gns
Free pupp1es 112 Rottw1eler
To good home Call (cell) Garage Sale, Oct 6 &amp; 7,
Aa•n or sh1ne Corner, of
(740)578·1055
F1rst &amp; Adams Sts • Mason,
M1x breed pupp1eS. part Lab \NV
and part Cocker Span1el all r=:--~----,
block (7401446·6233
WANIID

r

Multi tamdy yard sale Oct
&amp;-7·8 10 00 to 4 00 Hysell
Run Aqad and Corner of
'rwp Road 175 Home •nte·
nor, table and chatrs. Baby
Bed, h1gh chair. small and
big clothes, and other m1sc
Ra1n or Sh1ne 815 Johns
Rd , Racine. Thurs 6th, &amp;
Fn 7th, B·? children's
clothes. Joys, hOusewares
ttc, everythmg pnced
cheap!
TupPers' Pla1ns St. Paul U M
Church Basement Sale
October 7··9am to 7pm ,
October 8··9am to 2pm
Clothing, books d•shes, fur·
nlture m1sc

Word Ads

pjsplay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

All Dleplay: :12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play : 1:00
Thur•day for Sundaye

In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

ur.

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL-'
added to your classified ads
lm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 5011 for small
$1.00 for large

v~:~:~::::~. ~t-~O•A•'s•H•F.l- :•W-ANJID•B•e•s•!d•eplnt L,r.to•LI•C ~•N•S•E•~•S•:mw•C•IA•L_,JI ~::ksp: :=llo~ L,~•:•.•rl.enc" ~.i:i i:il:Doi :·~ :•:•h•go•odpl ~:::::::::::::· :::~~E~~::Ionr~.'- Aio~i ei l:i ~i ini l

\\\111\1 I \II \ I \

r

lwright@ic.net
Public Notices In Noe..,.,spaJ:JCrs .
Rl~o~;,h(

l\egister
(304) 675-1333

Found Dalmat1an Camp
Conley Area (304)675·2201

Vour Right. Ito Kno_.-. Dcl!vcrcd

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ass1stants lnterv1ews Are
Now Be1ng ConductEKJ For
CNA &amp; ReSident ASSIStant
Pos1hons II You Are A
Car.ng,
EnthusiastiC,
Dependable Person Then
We Want You To Jo.n Our
Team Come On Over &amp;
Check Us Out• You'll Be
Glad You D1d• Competitive
CNA
Wages,
Pa•d
Vacations Pa1d Meals
Many Other Benef1ts
Ravenswood Care Center
i 1i 3 Washmgton Street
A
avenswood. wv (Across
c;,,..M., B ld
A1 2 N lh
~ r ge
or ,
Last BuSiness On Right)
Aelerences ReqUifed

WORKER
Overbrook Aehab•lltai!On
Center IS now acceptrng
resumes lor the poSition ol
Director at Soc1al Serv~c,es
The qualllled candidate
must be a LSW possessing
strong verbal and written
,
commumca I10n
s k111 s
' d Med1care an d
Med1ca•,
MOS knowledge Long term
care experience preferred
but not requJred Qualified
candidates may send
resumes to Charla Brown·
McGuire,
AN
LNHA
Admmlstrator 333 Page
Street, Middleport. Ohio
45760, EOE

Center 1s lookmg for decbcat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nurs•ng Ass•stants,
Compet1t1ve wages, health
and dental benefitS, and
401K available We take
pnde In our faCility and reSI·
dents and need great team
1
1o JOin us 11 you have
payers
these quaiiC&amp;Ions
11 1
1
pease
I
Aoc ksprIngs
app y to
Rehabrhtat1cn Center, 36759
Rockspnngs
Road,
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769
Extendlcare
Health
SeP/ICes, Inc 11 an equal
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace
diversity, MIF ON

Local construct•on company
now hmng carpenters
COL Dnvers w111ing to dnve w/expe r1ence
only,
for local ready·m•x.c;:oncrete (740)742·2623, 740·416·
company Experience Is 0599
preferred but not necessary
Driver must be Willing to do LPN Carreer Opportunity
pre-ma1nten81'1Cf1 on trucks Make a difference and 10m a
&amp; equlpmenl, yard work &amp; caring team•
Echomg
other miscellaneous chores Meadows IS an MRDD faCiliE&gt;cperlence operatmg equip· ty offenng residents out·
ment &amp; e&gt;ctra skills such as standing nursing care We
weld1ng a plus
currently have an LPN
Call (3041937-3410
even1ng pos1t10n available
Wages start at $13 50 per
-------TO BUY
Dnvers Great Pay, Benefits, hour Apply m person
Echoing Meadows, 319 W
Bonuses.
hOme·Timel Un1on , Athens, Ohto 45701
Absolule Top Dollar· us Reg•onal runs 1yr Tanker
Silver and Gold Cmns, OR 2yrs Tractor Tra1ler Exp 740·594·3541
Proolsets. Gold Amgs. Pre· Martm Transport 866·293· LPN needed, full ·t•me,
1935
US
Currency, 7435
Monday·Fnday, day shttt, no
Solitaire Diamonds· M TS
weekends, no holidays
Co.n Shop, 151 Second For a 11m1ted t1me make 50% Apply at 936 St. At 160, Service Technician and
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·446· sell1ng Avon Call (740)446· Gallipolis '740)446-9620.
Tralneee, local growmg
2842
company established m
3358
Med• Home Health Agency, 1954 IS seeking serv1ce
l'll'ljn'll\1
Inc seek1ng a fulH1me AN technrc1ans and tramees
..,1 In I( I\
Front desk, m•dmght shift Pat1ent Care Coordinator for Compe11v1tes wages and
Shift differential pay Apply 1n Gallipolis, Ohio and sur· benefits w1th advancement
person at Hol1day Inn
roundmg area
Dulles opportunities tor motivated
mclude esta~llsh1ng and md1v1duals A vanety of
Gazette 1 day Delivery ma1nta•nmg open lmes of positiOns and different sk11i
Sunday only Route, cover· commumcat1on w1th area levels are neodod Desired
.ng, Gallipolis Ferry, Apple pl1ys•c•ans and health care qualificatiOns Include C 0 L
Grove,
Glenwood Crab lacllltles 1n tlie deUvery of license , mechanrcal apt1·
LEARN
Creek &amp; Jerrys Run Call Home Heal1h Serv1ces ~e , tude, electromc apt1tude,
TO
(800)982·6397 ext 1787 offer a compet1t1ve salary computer skills. we!dmg and
and benefrt package lor lull cutt1ng skills Please send
Leave Message
DRIVE
t1me E 0 E Please send resume to PO Box 569,
resume to Audrey Farley, Poca, WV 25159 or FAX to
GRAND OPENING
• 1110 EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Chmcal Manager, 352 (304)755·3169 EEO
'Fl.lLL TWE CLASSES
Do you have a p1ck·up Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
' COL ffiA. INING
truck?
Then work for us• OH 45631
SubStitute, Early Education
' FINANCING AoVAoiLABLE
$150 to $300 cash pa1d
• JOB PLACEM ENT
Station Preschool Program
• ENROLLING NOW
darly Call (740)441 ·7711 or OhiO Valley Home Health, Send Resume to 2122
(740)645·3963 EZ Meat for Inc hmng Full and Part Time Jefferson Ave Pt Pleasant
an lnteMew
AN's Compet111ve wages.
ALLIANCE
m1leage
and benefits lnclud- WANTED Part·time poSitron
TRACTOR TRAILER
mg
health
.nsurance Apply ava•lable to assist lndiVIdl,l·
Home Health Care of SE
TRAir-41NG CENTERS
at
1480
Jackson P1ke. als with mental retardation
WYTHEVILLE VA..
Oh1o IS currently hirmg
Home
Healtl'l
Aides GallipoliS or phone toll free at a group home 1n B1dwell
35 hrs/wk 3 30·9 30pm
Competitive wages Call 1·866·441·1393
1 -800-334-1 203
-::-:-...,-...,.--..,:-...,.--:Thurs.
3·10pm Fri. 9am·6pm
740·682·1222
OhiO Valley Wireless IS Sat, 9am-8pm Sun Hlgh
seeking enthus1ast1c sales.. school dtploma!GE.£&gt; vahd
100 WORKERS NEE OED
persons !hal enJoy workmg dnver's license and three
d.
Assemble crafts
wood Items
!nloC•s•on
Management w1th people m the oommum· years good dr1V1ng ellperlTo $4BO/wk
Corp IS currently accepting cat•on mdus!ry
Wages ence reqUired 57 25/hr Pre·
Matenals prOIIIded
appl1cat1ons for Full·'rlme Include salary plus salis employment Drug Testmg
Free 1nformat10n pkg 24Hr •'Dayshlft poSitions (B~·Sp) , based .comm1ss1on Please Send resume to Buckeye
g01 .428.4649
Full·T1me evemng pos•l!ons call 740·508·0211
tc Commumty Serv1ces. PO
and Pari· T1me Day posl· arrange an Interview
Box 604 , Jackson, OH
An E:occellent way to earn Irons Oual1tied applicants
45640 ot e-mail to ~
should be stable, highly Paramedics &amp; EMT's serv@vahoo com. Deadline
money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645 mol1vated md•vrduals With needed Apply at 1354 for applicants 10112105
good commumcat10n sk1lls Jackson P1ke, Galhpohs
Equa l
Opportumty
Are you lookrng for a change We offer a lull benefits pack·
EmplOyer
HEALTH
m your nurs1ng? Full-!1me age and 401K No prev1ous PART·TIME
AN needed for grow 1ng e)(perlence Is necessary We COORDINATOR·RN for 50
~
~ON
hOrne health
agency are the protess1onaf d1ffer· Me1gs County Board of .
Flexrble scheduling, compel· ence 1n teleserv1ces and Mental Retardat iOn and .L,_..;liiiiiiilili-,;,.,1
1t1ve wages with benefitS need great team players to Developmental Disabilities Concealed P1stol Ctass
Call toll free 1·866 ·368· JOin us• interested cand•· Weekends and Hol1days ottt October 8, 9 00 am VFW
dates please call 1·fJ77-463 · Part·t•me JOb wrth full·t•me Mason WV Ph (740)843·
1100
6247 ext 2454 or apply benef•ta 1nctuc:Mg hospital· 5555, Cell (740)416·3329
AVONI All Areas• To Buy or online www mfOCJS!On com 1Za!lon, dental v1s1on and
Sell Shirley Spears, 30~·
11te Work three week days Galllpolll C81'Mr Coilaga
675-14:29.
(8am4pm) per week w1lh (Careers Close To Home)
Ulstnct urcuiRtJOn Is there anyone In the students and adults w1th Call Today• 740-446·4367 ,
Pome roy/Middleport area developmental diSabilities,
1·eoo.:214·0452
Sales Manager
look1ng for full t1me work? lmplementrpg a comprehEm· WNW Qali ~IIIC8rsercotlega com
AesponsJbilltes mcl udE Are you looking for better s1ve health and delegated AcereOoled Memoor Acclediti'liJ
ectu1ting and tra1nmg o than
m•nlmum nurs1ng program Must be- a Coooc;ol for l~ndenl College•
amers, customer serv•c wages?Pnmary schedule IS Reg1stered Nurse currently ~nd School• 12748
nd meeting sales goals 1 Monday·Fnday 8am·5pm · licensed m the State of
you have a pos111ve attr Must have valid dr1vers Ohlo Preferred quahf1ca·
ude, are a self-starter license and dependable t1ons, e~penence 1n public
nd a team player, w vehicle M1.1st be familiar with health nursing, exper1ence
would l1ke to talk to you Me1gs County
DIRECT TV 3 room With
work1ng w1th children and T1vo
FREE 145 channe ls
~ust be dependable anc
Send resumes mdudlng adults w•th developmental only $39 00 per month Ask
ave reliable transports
references to CLA Box 2 drsab1ht1es Send resume by
ion Pos1ho n offers al cio Pomeroy Dally Sentinel. october 12 2005 to how 10 gel FREE HBO'
and nome entertainp&gt;mpany benefitS 1nclud
PO Box 729,
MCBMRDD, i310 Cafteton MAX,
ment system. cansoo.s 23•
ng haalth, dental, VISIOn
Pomeroy OH 45769
Street
PO Box 307, ,
7556 for details
ndlife rnsu rance, 401 k
Syracuse. Oh•o 45779
r,;rr-::::.;::::::::0~--.,
a•d vacat1on and person
180
WANTED
I tla.ys Please sen
Local of11ce (Me1gs Co) We are look1ng for an outgo- 1
.
To Do
esume to·
seeking mot1vated person lng, energetic person to
Paul Barker
for staff pos1Uon Must pos- work part t1me In our busy Computer Repalf and
Clrculallon Manager
sess ability to work With pub· ch•ropractlc clinic Please Troubleshoot. Web Des.gn,
Ohio Valley Publlsl'llng lie and leal'n new Skills hand-deliver
resumes Networking, Programming,
825 Tntrd Ave
Basic math and computer between, 9am and Spm, Build New Systems , Restore
Galllpollt, Ohio 45631
skills necessar'y 1JSend Tuesday through Thursday Windows V1rus Removal.
Oramall to
resume to Da11y Sentinel, Back To Health ChiropractiC, Certified Phone 11740.992.
pbarktrOmydallytrl·
PO Box 729-3 Pomeroy 750 F1rs1 Avenue. Gallipolis 2395
bune.com
Phone (7401446·7460
OhiO 45769
DriVII'I Needed :

1:

L.,-------,J

References will take care of
Elderly Call tor more details
(304)895·3918
Georges Portable Sawm•ll
don't haul your Logs to the
Mill JUS! call 304·675-1957
Now accepllng benmmng
v
Plano Students call
at
'(304)675•1559 between
Sam . 2.30pm Mon·Fn

r

~iii~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.

10

Bl.lSINESS

~--OProimJN-iiiiiiiiiiiiiTYiio.-1

Make FREE Phone Calls to
any phone and make big
money g1vmg away Free
Long Distance Phone
Service IVlsh
www MyAdCalls com/2 t 550
and
www AdCalls com/21550

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?

No Fee Unless We Wml
1·888-582·3345
IH\110..1\11

HoM!o:';
n&gt;KSALE
112 Pleasant Street 3
BeeS room 1 1f2 Baths,
Family Room, O.n1ng Room,
Full Basement. Storage
Bldg, Garage New Central
An Cond, New Wmdows
(304)675-4034
4 year old Colon1at on 3
acres Approx 1 900 sq ft 3
bedroom . 2 baths, 2. car
garage Master bedroom Is
28x24 Wllh a JaCUZZI tub
$120,000 (740)446·7029

Att•nllonl
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs lor you to buy your
hOme Instead of rent•ng
• 100"/i. t1nanc•ng
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
_ Locators
(7401367-0000
'-..::.:CCC..::.:.CCC..----,
Bi·level house 4bdrm, Jbth
LA . FA klI chen. OR • Wn"h 9
kn
aCre • · large Pallo &amp; dec 1
country
5125.000
(740)742·3142
'...:_::.c_::_.c...:_:_ _ _:cHorse lovers parad•se
approximately 70 acres
w/new log home 3br, 2ba
16x32 inground pool, 24x40
garage, 156&gt;c66 horse barn
42x80 barn, w/40x100 shed,
28x50 barn, wtall new fence
Approx1ma1e 1ncome of
$10,000 per month on a
St Rt .. $463,000 (740}645·
0870
·

Gl
--

0

1987

......

mobile home very good
cond1110n , well mamtalned
SB ,900 OBO (740)446·
3423

l ocal company offering ' NO
OOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting
· 100% f1nanong
• Less than penect credit
accepted
p
· ayment could be the
same as ren1
Mor 1gage
Locaors
1
1740)367-0000

Allreateatateadvllftlalng 1996 doublewlde 24x52 on
In lhla newapaper Ia
1/2 acre, 3BR 2 bath large
aublect to lhe Ftdtral
LA, new carpetllmoleum
Fair Houalng Acl ot 1968
new 50 yr old root 3 large
whlcl"l make• It Illegal to
' storage bulldmg Too many
advertiM"any
prefarence, limitation or ame01!1eS to list Must see to
dlacrtmlnatlon baaecl on appreciate Located m
race, color, religion, ...
Fan1and or Galha Co school For rent 1 bedroom 1 bath
famlllalatatua Of national d1stnct $97.500 (740)256· tully renovated all appll·
ances
$500/monlh
orlglh, or any Intention to 1426
$500/depos•t
Call
(740)446·
m8ka any auch
1996. 16xBO Skyline Spruce 3481
preference,
limitation
or
dl 1crimlnation."
R1dge Supreme, 3BR 2BA,
vinyl s1d1ng sh1ngled roof, House for Rent Pt Pleasarit
Thl• newspaper will not
and heat pump All kitchen $375 (304)675 5540 or
knowingly accept
appliances mcluded Very (304)675·4024 ask tor
advenlaementalor rul
N•cetlmmedate Possess1on Nancy Homestead Realty
estate which Is in
W1ll need moved Call 740· Broker
vlol.t1on of the law. Our
441·5862, leave message
readers are hereby
Middleport 701 Beech St ,' 2
Informed '"'at all
2000 Clayton 16x80 38R bedroom
unfurn•shed
dwelllnga advertised in
vinyl/shingle, $ t 7 500 Quail hOUSe, depOSit preVIOUS
Creek Park Call (304)372· r E~nta l references no pets,
thluewsPIIper are
available on an equ&amp;l
2179 or 1·800-439·2179
1(40)992·0165
'
oppor1unlty bun.
16x80 3BA,
Oakwood
-'========~ 2000,
Many extras
2BA, NIC&amp;~ clean 3BR, HUO
approved 1n Pt. Pit Dep and
Country settmg 1n Galha S26 000 (740)441)..2570
Ref. req d No pets
County• 3 bedrooms, 2
baths , llreplace $89,000 2001 14x50 Clayton 2BR (740)446·9358
1BA, excellent cond1t1on
(740)709·1166
1985 short bed Chevy, ve, Stop ren t1ng Buy 4 bedroom
Forecrosi.Jre 4BR , only 4/(4, excellent cond1t10n Call home $15000 For llst.ngs
$15 000 For hsllngs 1=all (740)245·9497
800·391·5228 ext 1709
8()()..391·5228 ext F254
5 Home s unde r $10 000 Three Bed Room House 1n
Will
W1ll deliver {740)385·7671 Pomeroy for Rent
House tor sale .n Rutland ,
accept HUD $475 00 Call;
$25,000 f1rm, out of flood B2 Fleetwood mob1le home ·740·388·0435
14x70 Must ba moved
area call (740)742-21361
$8 000 (740)256 6496
MOBILE HOI\I!o:';:
NEW 3 BADM $1299
H)K Jb.~vr . •
Great
Used
1994
t4x70,
3
DOWN
Bedroom, 2 Bath Includes
$229 00 MONTH
Bedroom house Newly
heat pump Call (740)385·
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
remodeled 1ns1de &amp; out All
2434
HOMES
UlihlieS paid $450 QQ p61'
NITRO, WV 304· 755·5885 New 3 BR Home Only month Also Newer 2 bed·
New all bnck 2BA, 2BA 2 $189/mo lf1cludl!s ale deliv- room tra•ler w1th electr•c
car garage m Rio Grande ery and sef up (740)385· central heat &amp; a1r $425 00
per month Call 740·243·
Call (740)446·2927 or 4367
1740)339·0365
NICe, Used 14x6~ 2 5811
·Bedroom
Only $4995 Call
NEW BANK REPOS
bedroom,
AJC
2
(740)385·0698
•
ONLY 3 LEFT
porchlawnmg very mea, 10
ASSUME LOW MONTHLY Schultz L1m1ted Add1t1on Ga ll1pohs No pets Ca~
PAYMENTS
t9B9 In excellent cond11i0n , (740)446·2003 or {740)44.6·
OWNER FINANCING
fully lurn 1shed Mov1ng 1409
AVAILABLE
$22 000 Call (740)446
3 bedroom Tra1ter 1n Leta'rt,
304-755 5566
6743 after 6pm
WV lor Rent All Electnc
New loghome 3Br, 2Ba, Trailer lor Sale
2000 $350 month 5250 dep0(;1t
wl16x32 1nground pool, Clayton 16 X 70 3 bed· {304)BB2·2859
24x40 garage on approx 1 5 room-·2 bath ·--central a•r··
acres, $269,000 {740)645· porches. $23.000 740.992· 3Br Relndg &amp; Stove Washe1
&amp; Dryer mcluded (304)576•
0870
5972
2934
•
No Down Payment Less
FARMS
than perlect cred1! 0 K FNe
Beaut1ful nver v1ew 1n
n&gt;KSALE
mmules
!rom
Holzer
l'ianauga !dear for 1·2 pep·
Hpsp1tal Th ree Bedrooms·
Concession Tra1ler pie No pets, please
·One Bath Level lot Newly 2002
Double Basket Deep·lryer Apphca!Jons be1ng take,n
remodeled 740·41&amp;3130 Tub Style; Deep Fryer for Call (740)441--C)181
Funnel Cakes makes B at F(lr rent 2 bedroom mobile
OAKWOOO HOMES OF
once
Large Gnddle home at 402 Polecat Ad
NrTRO,WV
Freezer, Aelndg NC, 3 $425trnonth $425/depos•t,
SUPERSTORE
complete S1nks plus Hand reference
OFFERINO CLAYTON,
required
FLEETWOOD, GILES MHE wash Station Excellent (740)446-4107
Condi!Jon 304 675-4092
AND OAKWOOD
LOWEST PRICES BEST
Immaculate 28A, 2 baltl
l..&lt;m; &amp;
SERVICE GUARANTEED
mobile
home for rent 1n the
At:IIM(,t;
country
$400/month
DRIVE A UTILE- SAVE A
(614)595·7773 or (B00)79B
LOT
9 t/2 acres wtth 2Bx32 barn 4686
304·755·5885
5 acres w1th (2) tratler hook
PRICE REDUCED to u s Call 740 25£- 1922
Mob1le home s1te s lf1
$85,000 1401 Cedar St
Counlry Homes S~1ade
Meadowbrook
Add
3
$130 mo (740)385-4019
'Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bath,Corner
NICe 2 br 2 bath , w/appli·
lot new Root. mova-m con·
drhon , new Carpet and Aeat-Eatate Wanted·Local ances &amp; new carpet, 5375
Floonng, Storage BUJid1ng, person lOOking tor a home to plus ullh!ISS 3 br 2 bath,
Fenced m Back Yard buy All cash Me•gs or garden tub w/d hOokup,
(304 )773·5254 or 1304)593· Gallia No double-w•de or $450 plus ut1tr118s &amp; secur1ty,
modular 740.·416·3130
(740)992·7680 or 740-415•
4135
3311 cell
·
IH\1\I "\

t

AI'ARf\lbVTS

r16

HJRlbNf

HOlJSf.S

FOR RENT
Three Rental Properhes for ·--i.iliioiiiilii.-rl
Sale Duplex . Keach With 3h 1 Br House and 3 !;J&lt;
n. House
Bt'R, UR, D/R, •tchen, bat tor Rent call (304}675-2441
&amp; porch, House- 3 B/A UA between 9am·2pm
K•tchen Bath Cottage-BrA • - - - - - - - - K1tchen, Bath
Rental 2 bedroom house, 1 5 bath,
rncome tor atl three·Approx 1n town Utilities mcludea m
$1 ,000/per month Pnce for rent (740)379-2303
all three·-$70 000 Locate- 2 or 3 bedroom house' also
104·106 7th Street Po1nt
1 space · ph .
Pleasant (304)675·2495 Bus•nes s!oHce
7.40-4 16·5547 (740)992
l'la~ill:a~r-7::"..00:-.:.p-m_':':'_ _.., 3702
L12D MOBII.E HOMES
- - - - ---,--C"
~--mil SALE
5 rooms &amp; bath stt '16 &amp;
rv
relnQerator no p~ls 50
Ol ive St $350 month
12x60 w1th addJI1on good (7 40)4413·3945
conditiOn, w1th heat pump
Totatly ramodafed
and porches S5 000 Call
Interior!
(740)388-0157
3 bedroom house central
2000 14X70 Oakwood 3bd heat &amp; a1r. washer/dryer
2ba , CIA, can rent lot or hook·up, fenced yard stor·
move (740)388-8513 (days) age bldg $475 per month
rent (7~0 ) 441·1 111
(740)388·8017 (even•ngs)

&amp;
2 BR
apt
Water/sewer/trash
pd.
$325/month &amp; S4001mont"
(7 40)446-4734 or (740)367:
7746 or (7401367·7015

-1-,-n-d-:
2-,-,-:d-ro-om--ap_a_rt·
ments furrushad and unfur·
mshed secur1ty deposit
reowred no pets 740·992.
2218
1 bedroom apartment bY
War-Man 1n Galhpohs.
5425/month ut1ht1es 1nclutf
ed $150/depos•t (7401245S555
1700 sq It apartment
Located downtown No pets.
carl (740)44 1-1124
1BAW/O hoq{uP etectroc oi
gas , no pets $290 plus
depOSit
(740)441 ·1 t84:
(7401441-01 94

'I

�!lage B6 • The Daily Sentinel

r
2

I"r'"!d;;;;;,;;H,;;OUSEHO;;;;;;;;_- -Jl-., r ·VEGh'TABI£'i
Filum;
1
I
&amp;

APAKIMENTS

.

. •UK RllNr

bedroom

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

www.mydai lysentinel.com

Guous

apartment

Racine, very nice. clean .
$425 per month plus
dt1llosit. no pets, references
required
740-441-0110.
(,740)992·5174

Home

Phillip
Alder

..\II\1'-IOih.

Appliance

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
j :

'

WV. Now accepting applications lor Hud-Subsidized.
one Bedroom Apts.· Utilities

"Whe~e

.R&gt;ben L1!1111101 ll

Call

c..o.n,r

aodl""tla&lt;"ll~

,.,..,_

- -

(304)B82-3 121 ' available lor
Senior and Disabled People.
E.H.O

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulaville Pike. WasherS,
$100 :
Dryers
$100,
Refrigerators $100· $150.
All guaranteed. Couches,
dinettes, chests and more. 1994 Buick lesabre. Higll
24 'JC32' 3 stall garage for. miles, loaded. leather. great
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· rent- storage only, $150! mo condition, runs great Asking
ED &amp; AFFORDABLEI
on State Roule 7. (740)446· $2 ,000 080. (740)388·
4782 Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 11 - 0140,
(M·S)
Townhouse
apartments.
3
andior small houses FOR "",....;.._ _ _ _ __,
_ 1996 Nissan Serltra 135,000
Ao ... "'""'""lliS
nJ'HI\ll.

Fcir

rent 1 bedroom Apt. or
2nd floor in Point Pleasant. Buy
or sell
Riverine
Call (3040675-8880 after Antiques. 1124 East Main
5pm
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,
For rent 2 bedroom apt. in owner
Kanauga $425 per mo. $42S I540
Qeposit. relerence required .
1\'bscFJLANt-::OUS
('!'401446·4107.
l\1ERCHAI'JD~E
Brand new pool healef,
:250,0008TU . New cost
$1.695, sell lor $1,350. Call
(740) 446·2927 or (740)339·
0365.
For Sate Refinished Anlique
Table . Caption Chair, tour
side Chairs, $200 firm.
(304)675-1765
:::..:.:...:.._:.._____

PElts.

~~~~al7:;:;;~~~~~5 ~tilllies ~::i.r~~~~:n&amp; ::a~~~t ~~
8()(}537 9528.

hospitar
Water/sewer
included. No pets. Deposit
required .
$595/month.
(740)44 1·1184, (740)44&gt;·

30x50)(10Ft only $6,995
Painted Metal, Slider Free
937 78 0293
deliVery, call (
) 9Sportscreh TX350 Treadmill,

1985 .Ford truck F150 6
' cylinder, automatic, good
body. runs. $900. (740)4469742.

0194

with

Pulse/Calorie/

256-1227.

'--=-------ded-

SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
"ALL ELECTRIC
·CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE. REF., .
"DISHWASHER
:GA RBAGE DISPOSAL
'WINO BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
"WATER , SEWAGE , &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882· 3017

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BR ..
Applications
are
taken
Monday th ru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No. · is (304)675E.H.O

'

5&amp;0£

I

'
'·

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Ver'l Spacious.
2 Bedrooms . C/A, 1 1/ 2
Bath; Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio. Start $385/Mo.
No Pets,
Lease
Plus
Security Deposit Required 1
(740)367·7086 .
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for wailing
6sl tor Hud-subsized. 1- br,
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

t

. Downtown Office Space- 5
rOom suite $650/mo: 1 room
ollice- S225/ mo .. 2 rOom
suite $2501mo Secur ity
deposit requ ired . YoU pay
utilities. All spaces very nice.
El.evator Call (740)446-3644
·
for appointment.

Used very tittle, in

e)(c~llent

condition , has rubber ' antistatic mat, cost over $300,
will sell for $.150 · alSo have

Cab, wl tt'lird door, tully
loaded, Tal1oe · cover and
· I'
$11 500
II
spray m mer.
·
ca
(304) 751-7378 "
:.,.;...:.__:.,..._ _ _ _ _
1999 Ford Ranger PU, ext.
cab, XLT, loaded, 60,000
miles, see ~ 14 Vinton Ave.
(740)446·1082.

a Treadle Singer Sewmg
Machine in excellent condilion, belt is broken but I have
it so you can find the right
replacement
Old schOol
rlesk, the kind with the seat 9 3 Nissan Truck 4 X 4 , 5
in front of desk, ttl is desk spti!ed, Ai'r, 150K, runs e)(cel.
s29 oo.OO 740_74 2. 2tl62
came from '!he Qld Letart
Grade School.
In great ~25
4X4
shape, with some etching on
FoR SALE
the top from former students. Call (740)256-6198
1990 Ford Fl50, 4ll4 , AJC,
arter Spm, Mon-Fri.
standard cab, long bed, lair
Two year old Water Softener. condition , $2500. (740)742Original cost was $800. Will
1900
sa lt for S200.0Q. Water Promade in the USA. 740-992- 1997 Ford Ranger XLT, auto,

4re:CLFS

P60

I

1·

ACCISSORIE&lt;;

I
.

For Sale 350 Turbo, newly
rebuilt. w/lork convert. &amp; 750
R4 long tail, good condition,

CAMPERS &amp;
MOlOR HOMES
1995 StarClaft tigtltweight
truck camper. Used 4 times,

____

let me do it for you

Sx10,'10xl0,
lOxlS, 10x20,
10 30
x

TO
./

52 Historical

records

·

,

,~

'~
'

TOO MANY

P~OPLt

(Commercial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awmngs, Degreasihg of
. Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailets,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum bright~ning. · .
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Truck1ng C.ompan1e~.

~
/O-S

BARNEY

i~------,~------~
~

THESE PILLS '·WILL HALP LUI&lt;EY'S
BURSITIS, BUT LEMME KNOW IF
THEY CAUSE DROWSINESS !!

· LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commerci&lt;ll and Residential~
.
· Mowin_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming, AeratiOn, FertilizatiOn,
. Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

!
I

.__..;..,I A~--L...
v-DO YOU r\1&gt;-1/( ~01'\CI'il.II\IG"'

frenchcityhomes.com

I Cf&gt;..~ TNt..( FO\&lt;:.

1-\1&gt;-\/E YOU Ti':.IEt&gt;"'
OUK 1'\EA"'il.QI&gt;.f'?

.11'1\'&gt;IGt:STI0\':1

Jeff

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONS'l'RUC'l'ION

liNIA'S PAINTJIG
WH~

MUST I

THE.

~UFFE~

Free Esti.mates
"Insured"

INDIGNITY OF

S tTTLN&amp; NExT TO

IMPORTS
Athens

G\NA?

~OME

roT"A.Ll-Y

LRR.ELEVANT TA~6EWT.

-

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

740 742 2293
* leave a message
~

•

Hill's Self
Storage
29870 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

81·5'~),0'

..

· to.10'x30'
..
Hours

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1/14/1 mo. pd

YOUNG'S .

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
•New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 1: Gutters
• VInyl S~lng - &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
We do It all except
tumace work '

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv 11:16725
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Year• Local Ex rlence

MANlEY'S
SELF STORAGE

"Middleport's only
Self·Storage'

MYIIS TilE &amp;ElliCE
Insured
Free Estimate~
Sen1or Citizen Discount
30 Yrs. Experience

74o-992·2621 or

740-416-4902·~

- - -- -- .-..·- .. ---------·
,.

GUUPQ!.!S

4151, Sttond'Awt~~t

Wai;Mart

l'laza

JoAnne Siders
(304) 675·3400

..

David Siders
·Gemologist

Diane McVey

(740) 446-3283

Y.A..CCC·A
Owiii'UIIhllciA

..

•

•

ROBERT
BISSELl
CONSTIUCnON

4 y rs (lf Reliahle Servit.:c
Lucal)

G&amp;R SANITATION
J35fd Bailey Run Rd ..

• New Homes

Pomcro , OH

• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service ·
• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICJU NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO IJCENSE # 38244

JACKSON

ATHENS

232 Hnroo Stmt

275 Well UDStrtd

PEANUTS

· Fri. a:»-Spm
.'illudayl!y.\pfllllll!ltli

~!ob

n•l l'!I-JS71

C;:&gt;

741-912-lm
Stop &amp; Compare
H 'i c/,' 1/auling

and
F.u ·ul'(t/iu g
ll11l111"" r· ,\ 1\.r\ kh•w ,\
lr !ll l.iu ;c "~"~"'in·'

740·367·0544
740·367-0536

"'l' tHir "i1 'It' ll I
lu..,taiL11i1111. 1 o~1u l
l1·:1 riu ~. l'u111l -.. l! ,, uli"
... ilt''· IJriH 11-11~ .
t .iuu· .. 1oorlt". (,r ;nd.
-.,, nd . lop,,il. I ill dirt
;r ml •rii&gt;H
I 1&lt;1 I 1 -., II' I \II "'

Please adopt from the ·
Meigs.County !log Pound

ond ma~ q fr~endjorh fe.

740-992·3779

r"i.JII•') ') ~ . \..1~11

•Norweqion elk hound'
· Yellow obs &amp;relriever

l'mllrP•I. I lhi• •

got you

CQ
,.., '"V"'-1""\/. "'

Triumpb 12% sweel horse teed

$5.50150 lb. bag
48% Soybean Meal 113.25/100 lb bag

Cob Meal with T.M. Salt
$6.50/100 lb bag
Mushroom compost tautk only)

The Ariel· Dater Hall

1(- '?411&lt;14 p~ Se-ri4!
Cousin Ed's Farm. Puppet. Show, Nov 13 ·
The Magic of lhe Caoplingers Jan. 21
Cartoon Headouarters Returns. Ma~ch. 18
Rainbow fjsh Stage 1\~usical for Kids May 13
Bo" Oftll't Hrs 11·2 M-F Also 5-8 Thes &amp; Thurs

· Germoo shepard &amp;collie

Call B.D. Const.

mixes

ror all your humc
repair ne~ds. roofing.

• Walker coon hoond

sidir'lg, add-ons,

· Beagle mixes
II.J.NI C\ITE PUPPIE~

remodeling etc .•
free htimotcs
(740) '192·2979

SUNSHINE CLUB
AND M&lt; VJAUU

IS~OO)A~

I

i

I

GARFIELD
ELLEN; l JUST WANTED
YOU TO KNOW .. . I ALREADI,l
HAVI! A 17ATE FOR FRIDAY!

426 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

. . ll!ave

mes..,u e

HOME

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

BA l iM LUMBER

s

VfCORATING HfAlXJUARTfRS"
2400 Easlern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740!446· 1711
114 Mile North

Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, ,WV 25260

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Tile Sti11g Orll Of
Hard Work!"
Mid· Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
. St. Rt. 124 Chesler 985-3301

j

~~~~~~ · ~~~~~~ t·\:..:;:::~~==-.:::=~==:...~,...J

Ohio 45769

A!!~~

y: .!:'\ c .

~

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ¥

EXCUSE ME, CHARLIE BROWN..
WI-IAT WERE YOU SA'm-IG?

~:t:t:=l:=tl!

17·17·17 • $275 ton (bulk only)
12"~

11M NOT VOUR
SWEET BASBOO!!

AND T14EN NEXT YEAR I
TI41NK OV~ TEAM CAN ..

~

Gene Arms/0\nterOperator 740-992-3174
"' Weekly Trash Scr\'icc
Mun~ y

(749)446.7619

Gallipolis, OH

Pt. Pleasant, WV

(Keep Yom

~ Moo . Thill, 1: 3(1.~1

mixes ,.

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
991-3194
or 991·6635

I:.Lol'..r.

DILES HEARING CE\TER
Main Street

Call .Gary Stanley

Pass

Dbl.

Pass

+7

~·

'···t!;:1!:!'::::::::::::--==~==
";; GRIZZWELLS

!=RAI'\\(.LY,

r m\~\(. 11117

H~ 'REALITY
~\H

RtAL~ZE

I

1 Urgoot
message
2 lnd.lgo plant
3 Scholarly

org.
21
4 Deed he..,..
5 Part of mpg 22
6 Table
23
eKtender
24
7 Wrist bone
8 MHz part
26
9 Game or
27
season

Privata's
41 Tiger tooth
word
42 Hall a cab
Misfortunes 44 Revival
-fixe
shout
Cleopatra 's 45 ExcaeOOd
river
thellmH
Sheik
46 Muscle
quivers
colleague
Theta
47 Fruit drink
follower
48 Tw6-tlmer ·
28 Low card
49 A Min

opener

10 Channel·

surf

11 Penny12 Rosemary
or bay
17 Of great
antiquity
19 casual wear
20 Mountaineer's toOl
(2 wds.)

30 Signs on
32 Yellow
Pages

America

host
51 Dot In the

Seine

36 Rolk:all vota
39 Ryder Cup

sport
40 "This
can't be
happening I"
(2wds.)

Many bridge players are conforMists, following - more often than not. inaccurately - the canons of the ,game. For
example, cover an honor with an honor.
That really ought to read: Cover the las t of
touching honors, and only then when it
might gain your side a trick.
This deal OCCllrred during a pair event. in
·which overtricks were vitaL Over East's
one-no-trump overc~ll . South's two-club
response was Stayman (a popular agreement in the tournament world). His two·
Mart rebid showed ~5 (or 4-5) in the
East took dummy's diamond jack with his
queen , cashed his two top clubs and
spade ace, then tned to take the diamond
ace,· but declarer ruffed.
Now Sollth wanted to play the' trump suit
without loss. Since East was alrea(!y
known to have 17 points outside hearts,
West clearly had the heart .queen. BIJl
. now many hearts did he h_ave? Gl.lessing
· that he did not have queeo·doubleton.
declarer led his heart jack. When Wesl
Played low smoothly, South let the jack
run. The n declarer Orew trumps ancl
claimed ·a' valuable overtrick, his hand ~
being high.
West had covered the heart jack with the
queen, declarer Would have had to guess
to win with, dummy's King and to cash tne
ace to drop East's 10. But if West had
started with 0·10-K, South would have ·
had to return to his nand. then play a
heart to dummy's eight.
Try to make declarer guess what to do.

~

A.S USUA.L, SHE
AVOIDED THE I~5UE
• BY GOiNG OFF ·o N

;,\uuol Mr... fl!i~l

•

Pass

\~

Rates

References
Aval'lable

Pass

East
lr\T

~ Astro-

CONTRACTING
•,Prompt &amp; quality

•

2•

North
l.
2 •

DOWN

majors.

j
r
•

GENERAL

work

West

conclusion

makers."

All~ illY lNG TO
60 BAC~.

POWER WASHING

Pomeroy, Ohio

• •Affordable

Q 6

12 Kitchen
gadget
13 Up and
aboul
14 Juice sourte
15 Rain hard
16 Tricycle
rider
18 LAX
regulqtors
19 Raj headquarters
21 Pigs
25 Trickery
29 Antiseptic
31 Shark
hitchhike&lt;
33 Retrieve a
trout .
(2 wds.)
34 Teased
35 Proper
37 ER pictures
(hyph,)
38 Anack
on a castle
40 Slightly
gamy
43 -Paulo
44 Whodunit

53 Sheep's coot
54 Kind of bag
55 Comes to a

In' "The Neurotic's Noteboo~," Mignon
McLaughlin wrote: "Every society honors
Its live conformists and its dead trouble-

Tti~ Tyi~NTY·flllST C~NTUilY---

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Janet .leiTers
33795Hiland Road

MlTJORCYCI.flil
4 Wm·.L·I L'u•s

02 Harley Davidson, Ultra
Carv1n 2yrs old, t 2 Channel Class1c. low mrtes, excellent
powered miJCer wlspeaker condition (304)895-3825
stahds 4 speakers. 2 monitors . 3 m1kes, and assorled 2002 Honda Aecon ES
cables,
$1 100
firm . 250cc, ATV. excellent condi!IOn $2200 (304 )675·1444
(740)742· 1900
.:__

Phone
(740) 992-5'232

Storage·

$4.500:' (740)245-9 109 or
~

I NSTR! IMI:Nrs

_____

Tate the PAIN
out cf PAINTING!

4

. Should you cover
or not cover?

Tti~Y'I~t TMil1N6 I&gt;OwN TtiAT lllii&gt;G~

Designed to 'Heat Your Home
and Your Hot Water!

High and "

both Transmissions (304)
675-3000 leave messa e

2002 Kia Sedona Van,
loaded, all power, sunroof,
warranty, 50.025m i. new
tires , e.~ecellent reduced to
$11 ,9001080
(304)6755253

J

D

300 CC,

Amo PAKIS &amp;

1998 Oodge Grand Caravan
ES, Wh ite, Tan leather, quad
seats , rear A!C , New tires,
loaded,
$4 ,900
080.
(740)44Hl 135

~936

•·
J···c·l
1" u:o• n

·

Bucket Truck

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883

,..-

A K 9 7

Opentng lead :

TRI·STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

~=;;;:;;;::;;;;;;:~
Excellent condition. $2000.
STANLEY TREE
4 0.;,.9;.9;,;2;.·7.;5.;5~
7·.7 --~-,
TRIMMING &amp;

r

~23.,.'.,6-le_•_,~
• ~m_.,_,_•;.g•-·..
. - , ·f741

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trin\
• Stump Grinding

South

29

ATV, tow hours, gun rae~.

r

rro

-- --

E350 "Bus"

J~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

r

or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encou rage
new
Dusiness .
Call
(740)446·4425 or (740)446·

._

•

Ocalcr: North
Vulnerable: East·West

""'"'

.I!J

10 2

+ A Q 10

•

JONES'

•

•

t.KJ1 09!l

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNJNG
FURNACE

. M I ,IlCUIY

1995

1994
Astro

:~z~r-·--~-------,

CKC Jack Russell Tamer
pupp1es. $125, 2 females
(740 )256 _1652 .
For Lease: Office or reta il '--- ' - -- - - -- spaces in very good condi- Rat' Terrier miJC puppies. 6
tlon Downtown Gallipol iS. wks, 3F, 1M , $50 each.
Approx. 1600 s~. tt each. t (740)379-9098 . (740)379'-

Gallipolis Retaill0ff 1ce bulld1(1Q, oeaullful coUntry set·
ting ; 4,000 sq tt (finished);
heal and water mcluded .S
neqollable. (740!367·7435.

LINCOLN '

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furlaw miles. very clean . must nished Established 1975.
1
see, (740)742-3020, 740- Call
)
Hrs. (
_
740 446
24
BUilDING
992-3394
==::c.--:-:-:-::--- 0870, Rogers Basement
__
SUPPI.Jt:S
1998 Ellplorer, Eddie Bauer, Waterprooling.
loaded, runs &amp; looks great.
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
Books $6,200 will sell
windows , lintels, etc. Claude
$4,000/0BO (304)576·2607
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
2004 F-150 Lariat crew cab,
Call 740·245-5121 .
black with chrome, 4ll4 ..
DAVIDSON METAL
leather, TonealJ cover. low
ROOFING
miles, loaded, e)(tra clean ,
"18 Colors
too much to list. $28,000
•3oyr. warranty in writing
(614}595-7773 or 1-BOO·
"Professional Installation
798-4686.
'
• Free Estimates
99 Ford F-350 XLT, 4x4, 7.3
. 740-596-2909
liter power str0k8 diesel, 6
~..--..;...,._ _ __, speed, manual transmis'PF_;rs
sian , regular cab, loaded
FOR SAI..E
with atl qptions. gooseneck
-hitch. reese hitch, alum.
1 Female Pit Bull, currently rims . alum. toolbo)(, e)(haust
plays with poodles. obeys brakes on motor, to man'/
B)(Cellent. Also selling poe- extras to list, 100,000 miles,
e)(ce llent shape , $17,000,
riles. (740):J67·7429
(7 40)591 · 8975
AKC
Re~istered
lab's
Yellow &amp; Black (304)6757652
AKC Registered Pitt Bull, 6
mth 0 ~• house broke. good
080
w/kids.
SJGQ.
1740 1441 "7711 · · &lt;740 ) 645 "
3963

•

5 :l

tj

. J 9653
• 3

"""

451 Seco nd Aw nue
....,.IIU'I'O'
....
P.O. Bo.11. 351) ·
._,........,
Gallipu li ~. OH 45631-0JSIJ _
..
Ph: H00-392-1209 or740-446-]64J

Ohio

937-362-4775, 95 Kawasaki Lakota

~-c:::c:-::--:--:-=-· Timei Speed and Distance. 1998 Chevy Z71. e~&lt;ten
NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
·
NOW LEASING'.

fiJ-

69.900 - - - - ' - - - -080. 2004 H.D. Suparglide, fuel
injected. only 2300 mites
1970 Chevy truck 26ft. steel $12,000. Daytime (740)4469416, evening (740)441tilt bed. with wench. eqU1pment hauler. $1,500. 740- 1724.
937-605·3581.

Samftml

The Wiseman Agency. Inc.

4

1

South

f

,
2002 Yellow Honda 300 EX
NEW AND USED STEEL
4 Wheeler. like New. Great
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr, Condition.
Low Hours· For
Concrel~. Angle, auto, 2We1, 5.4L, VB, bedcov- (milage}. 740-992·7522.
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel er, 6CO player, sunroof. $2,700.00
good co ndition.
mileS,
$14,500
(304)288-3335

lo.\11H""I
!omur)

v. ww. wJ~cmanagcncy.com

RJR SAL~:

ss

,k..

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring•M

I·L«J

New 2BR apts. in town. All Grating
For
Drains.
&amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
electric , water/sewer/tras h Drl"eways
•
included , • C/A,
2 5 rent Scrap Metals Open Monday,
plus deposit. No pets •.ues d ay, Wednesday &amp;
F .day 8 430pm Closed
(740)441·118.4 , {740)44 1- n · am- :
·
0194
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
740 44 7300
- - - - - - - - - Sunday. &lt; ) 6New
2 bedroom
Privatebig location
closeapt
to
Pole Barns Blowout

oiS!mla~

www. holzerclinic.com

2001 Cavalier ~ dr. Z-24.
Cold air, auto. fu ll power
78,000 miles, $2,500 080.
93 Chevy S-20 COnversion
van. TVNCR, auto, looks
perfect,
runs
perfect

(740)TR256u·1CKS652.

lll!omur)

It's the Auto/Home Discount with special
reduced rates if both car and home are
insun;d with State Auto. Find out how
much your ~avings can be ....:-.,

2000 K1a Sephia. 4 door.'
automatic, 27mpg, 72,000
miles, good condition. $800
in brakes, tillers, tires, Delts
etc. tupeup. Will take trade.
Asking
$3,600
080.
(740)44!:9378

·ro::·

CW~IItl'

~ H~LZER CLINIC

8:.1::2::8:..
. - - -- - 1997 Saturn SL2. 4 door, 5
speed, tealher, power, atuminum
wheels,
86,000
miles, very good condition.
$2850. 740•992,·7584.

lor
SateSeasoned
(740)742-7004
Opportunities .
Good
Firewood (107.000
miles $2.500 080.
74 0)446·0171.
Middleport North Fourth
Avenue, 2 room elliciency,
JET
· 86 white Sundance: 6'5,000
no
Deposit &amp; previous
AERATION MOTORS
miles, runs good, AJC, $900

hoD S•w

State Auto offers
something special

l · mi1B!i,20wners,goodcondi·
, lion, 52,800 firm. (740)388-

Q7

•

Licensed in Ohio and WV

f~

-East
• A BS

•

.

!dril ~mo

4 3
K 8
J 9 8
4 2

Q
A
K
J

... 10 8 53

1701 Jefferson Blvd.
·
Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-2630 !"!! E3 ~

BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Qrlve !rom $344 to $442.
Walk to.shop &amp; movies.·Call
740-446-2568.
Equal
~using Opportunily.

N. 3rd Ave.. Middleport, 2
bedroom unfurnished apartmant. no .pets. deposit &amp;
previous rer1tal references.
(140)992-0165

!llooLHnb!
I.UM

ll!oO fOrm!

AT

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom aparllilenls at Village
and
Riverside
Manor
Apartments in Middleport
From $295-5444. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing

f...

im&lt;tH"""I Ja,

APART·

Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms
&amp; bath. Clean, ref. &amp; dep.
required. No pets. (740)446·
1519

Cirl f.S•w

C.Omr

· included. Based on 30 % of

45783

740-667-0700 • 740-843-5264

Quality,O•mpassion A11d l11tegrity Come 111gether"

10·05·05

West
• 12

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Melt •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

Crow·Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

available now
RiVeroend Apts. New Haven

+

•

Tuppers Plains, OH

50447 Tornado Rd.
~olo~Y
Racine, OH
To List!
740-949- 1183

AP.artment

•
•

41800 SR #7

'~' M

r

home

flower
Nort

terrier

48 Yodeler's
50 Clear •

10 Summer

EQIJIPMENT

.

RENT. Call (740)441-1111
tor application &amp; inlormatlon.

1 Hang
around
5 Like nice
grapes

FAIIM

Warehouse

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.0Q Each
· ':Red ':Ro~ .greenlwuse

MENTS

.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
.
ACROSS

I \lnl..,ll'l'lli "'

Racine_740-247·4292

BEAUTIFUL

The Daily Sentinel •. Page B1
BRIDGE

Grown Tomatoes,

deposit, and references
requ1red.
Third Street ,

Income.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Field Run. you pick $5 per
0

2 ~edroom apt. $295 .00 per
li.enth, plus utilities. plus

adjusted

Wednesday, October 5, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Graph

-'lllrtllde.v:

Thu,..day, Oct. 6, 2005
By Bern lee Bede Oso1
Your enterprising qualities will be .
enhanced and easily activated in the yeer
ahead atl becadse your awareness lacul·
ties could be heightened consider~J,bly.
However, in order to mak.e the· most ol
them, you must not scatter your ellorJs. '
' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) -Avoid getting
yourself involved in activities today with
friends that they can well afford but you
can't. There's no way that 'JOll would be
able to enjoy yourself worrying about what
it co~.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)- Should you
find yoursett having to deal with someone
who is rather unpleasant todav. do not let
this person's bet1avior influence you to
react in a sim ilar manner. Be above it alt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Chances are you 'll be witting to 'work hard
today, but just because you give all you
can to !he task Cloesn't mean you shoutdo
take total credit lor it when others are also
working hard on 11
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Emotionally based relationships may be
difficult to handle today, so make sure your
aCtions are no! those o f an irrational person trying to release his/her pressures
and tensions on others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb ..19) - You're r1ot
apt to get !he support from others today .•
'· you were expecting unless' you can offer
some definite advantages 1n it tor them .
Don't be selfish wilh the fruits ot !he labor.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) , - Don't
expect io get that whiCh you hope to ga1n
today if you leave too many of the imporlanllactors up to chance. Intellectual con·
sideralions will wor~ . a rabbit's fool won't.
ARIES (March 2 1·Aprll 19) - Money mat·
ters are important, bullry not to put material considerations above friendship today.
II you do so, and ShOuld financial th1ngs
not work out. you could also end up being
minus a pal.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - lmporlant
relationships will require tactful handling
today, even With those wirh whom you usuaii'J get along well. Keep your temper rn
· chec~ should you start to get hot under the
collar.
GEMINI tMay 21-June 20) - Usually.
Geminis are ellceptionally good at juggling
two Slluations slmu ttaneOusi'J, and you
m1ght depend on th is today. However, it's
apt to be even 100 muctt lor you, and you
could tail.
'
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22 ) - lt's always
risky to take financial risks in ~.Jnlamiliar
areas, but , should an adventurous friend
encourage 1you to do so, you may throw
caution to the wind and reckleasl.y tOss
your funds away.
LEO (Jui'J 23-Aug. 22) - Be careful not to
disappoint loved ones toda'J who are
counting on you to dO sorrtething important tor tnem just because a tun activity
came along , You'lllet them down terr ibly.
.VIRGO (AuQ. 23-Sept. 22) -It's been uld
that '111e Is what happens while we're busy
atandlnw. around ma~ l no plans." The race
Ia 1ptto go to the 'IWift tOday. so don't take
too much time vacillating over what to do.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
\Aiebritv Cip!lar IJY!llograms are creale(nrom auolaMns by famous people. past and Ol!&amp;an1
Eacll lttner .n 111e c,pner sb'lds lor anoltler

7'Dd8y's c!u9: Dequals M

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PGERSPGE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Who rises from his prayer a better man, hi s prayel
answered."- George Meredith

is

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WOII
IAII ,

- - - - - ltlhl ~r ClAY ~. 'OIIAN

1..rronge lotltro ol tho
0.four
ocromb~d -cb be·

low 1o form "'" ~mplt 'II'Ordo.

KALBE
3

. A colleague ooce mwed. "What if

our errol'S were published daily like
llhal of a player'/"
10/~IIIS

CRIBAF

0

l'n J
,$
..

"

PRINT NUMIIIR!O

lfTTEil'IN SQUARES

Q ANI
UNSCIIIMel! lOR
WE~

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Comploto lh• chucklo quottd
by fU ll ~ In lite mlul7-d1
you dmlop "!" wtp No. holow.

12• ,ll

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I

.

,

•

•

•

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I I I I Ill I I

SCRAMLETS ANSW!RS 10/4105
Shriil- Limbo - Rural- Basket - RUBJl!SH
"A wcanl mind and a vacant lo~" a teacher told bi3
Class in earnest. "both will coUect RUBBISH

•

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUPTONUTZ
ll c •S1'01'1'~ 1 0&lt;tl ~y~~A 11'11: -~(VOo

-Ptn~ . I'IM

�'· · Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

,

'

' W,ww.mydailysentinel.com

.

'

·Wednesday, Octobers, 2005

Niners promote No. 1 pick Smith to starting QB
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --'- Just
four games into Alex Smith's career,
the NFL's first overall draft pick is
now the San Francisco 49ers' main
man.
Smith was named the 49ers' starting quarterback Tuesday, ascending
to the job after four games as Tim
Rattay's backup - and just two
days after his first NFL completions.
Smith will make his first start
Sunday against Peyton Manning and
the Indianapolis Colts at Candlestick
Park. The former Utah star played in
two of the 49ers' tirst four games,
mopping up in losses to Philadelphia
and Arizona.
But his practice performances and
.the 49ers' overall offensive ineptitude during their 1-3 start convinced
coach Mike Nolan to demote Rattay
in favor of the 2 1-year-old rookie
with the strong arm and big potential.

SpaceShipOne donated to
Smithsonian as symbol of
the new space age, A2

"! like the look in Alex's eye," n't draft·Aiex to just sit him on the important not to be "wishy-washy" Tuesday.

Nolan said. "I've always said that
the intangibles are the things I like
about Alex. I've maintained confidence in him."
Rattay completed 57.7 percent of
his passes this season for 677 yards,
five touchdowns and six interceptions. He .compiled impressive statistics in a season-opening win over
St. ,Louis and a last-minute loss to
Dallas.
But. the 49~rs· · offense has been
mostly terrible, with stark deticienci.es, in time of possession, total
yards ( 1,989-995) and points (13276) - and Rattay has been shaky
and indecisive in the fourth quarter,
when San Francisco has been
outscored 48-0.
"Tim has handled everything very
well, but at this time in the process,
I believe it's time to get Alex in the
game," Nolan said. "At 1-3, we did-

bench. At 1-3, I believe we need to
begin to utilize him."
The 49ers managed just 168 total
yards in last Sunday's 31-14 loss to
Arizona in Mexico City. San
Francisco's offense was shut out by
the Cardinals. thougli Smith went 6of-10 for 34 yards after Rattay was
pulled in the fourth quarter.
Smith was· the 49ers' starter in
their first two exhibition games, but
he struggled to move the offense.
His throws frequently were hurried
and inaccurate, and he sti ll was
learning the intricacies of tire West
Coast offense.
Nolan gave -the starting job to
Rattay, Jeff Garcia's longtime backup who had an jmpressive preseason. The seventh-round draft pick
started nine games in 2004 while
recovering from three injuries.
At the time, Nolan said it was

Ditch convinced Leyland
will turn Tigers around
DETROIT (AP) - Mike
his one-sea- like Tony La Russa and
Ilitch has been the one conson stint with Bobby Cox, that's the type of
stant during the Detroit
the Rockies. category Jim Leyland is in,'\
Tigers' streak of 12 straight
"I didn't Dombrowski said.
As a three-sport prep star in
losing seasons.
attack
the
The team's owner has
manager's ?errysburg, · Ohio, Leyland
worked with four general
job the way grew up rooting for the Tigers
managers,· and on . Tuesday,
you have to," · in the middle of DetroitLeyland said. Cleveland territory. His first
hired his seventh manager.
Ilitch is confident Jim
"When you 18 years in professional base·
Leyland is the differencerun a ball- ball, starting in 1964, were in
maker his once-proud franLeyland
club, there the Tigers' farm system- six
chise desperately needs.
arc . egos as a.player, one as a coach and
"When you get an opportu- involved and little fires you II as a manager.
·
nity to work with a person have to put out. I got to the . While Sparky Anderson
that has won a World Series point where L didn't do it. I was Detroit's manager,
and a lot of division champi- wasn't a good manager."
. Leyland left to coach third
onships and is highly respectLeyland said that after base with the Chicago White
ed," Ilitch said, "you don't burning out in Colorado, he's · sox in 1982.
have to be very smart to rec- passionate about 'restoring
"The last thing I wanted to
ognize that you have a good pride in his managerial career. do is leave the Detroit Tigers.
baseball man."
'T always missed the com- I didn't know anything else,"
,Detroit signed Leyland to a petition, but the last couple of Leyland said. "It just wasn't
tl)ree-year contract to replace years - and this stuck in my my time, and they had a guy
manager Alan Trammell, who craw a little bit - I did not by the IJame of Sparky
was fired a day earlier after want my managerial career to Anderson."
~
three seasons. Tigers presi- end like,that,'' he .said.
If the Tigers are granted
dent and general manager
Dombrowski decided to fire permission to speak with
Dave Dombrowski, who was Trammell last month, and he them, Leyland said he would
hired in 2001, has two years knew Leyland would be on !.ike to add former Pittsburgh
left on his deal.
his short list if he had enough managers Lloyd McClendon .
"There's no room for any e~ergy for the job after they and Gene Lamont to his
excuses now~" he said. "I worked together in Florida.
coaching staff in Detroit.
don't see any reaSQn why we
"He was excited like a Boy
The Tigers have won four
can't improve significantly." Scout when he was talking championships in nine World
Leyland was Florida's man- about him as a person who Series appearances, but
ager when the Marlins won cou.td get the job done," Ilitch haven' t won a division title
the 1997 World Series. and he said.
since 19i7 or a World Series
\11aS a two-time NL manager
During interviews Monday since 1984.
of the year in Pittsburgh.
night and Tuesday morning, , They finished this season
Since quitting his last man- Dombrowski saw and heard 71-91, with one fewer win
aging job six years ago in what he needed to from thall;ihey had last year.
Colorado, the 60-year-old · Leyland.
II4Jl.h 'seemingly hasn't
Leyland was a major league ''He has the fire back in his done much other than hire·
scout for the St. Louis belly .that he needs to be sue- and tire people to try to tum
Cardinals.
cessful,'' Dombrowski said.
his baseball team atound.
Leyland ranks 'sixth among
" I made some bad decisions
While that job allowed him
to spend time with his family actjve managers with I ,069 on hiring, but I think we made
in Pittsburgh, it didn't erase victories over his 14 seasons. a .!)OOd decision this time," he
the bad memories he had for
"When I talk about people satd.

with the decision so Rattay could
play without fear. But after three
straight dismal performances by San
Francisco's offense, Nolan made a
1
change anyway.
Though Smith was a second~
stringer in September, he got nearly
as much practice time as Rattay. The
natural zip on Smith's practice
throws is obvious, and his mobility
a~ a former spread-option quarterback with the Utes is something
Rattay can't match.
"He's been well-prepared every
week," Nolan said. "That's one of
the things that's impressed me. I've
watched that, and he's prepared
from that standpoint. If he ~ets hit
hard or makes a mistake, tt's not
very often that he C{)mes back and
does the same thing."
Smith didn't return a call to his
cell phone. \he 49ers had the day off

Smith doesn't get an easy assignmelit in his debut against the unbeaten &lt;;:olts. Starting left tackle Jonas
Jennings is unlikely to play with a
torn labrum in his shoulder- which
means Indianapolis defensive end
Dwight Freeney will probably go
against backup Anthony Clement,
who was embarras.sed by Arizona's
Bertrand Barry last Sunday.
"There's always gameplan things
that you take into consideration, and
that will be one of .them,'' Nolan
acknowledged. "I believe everyone
who plays Indianapolis addresses
the Freeney issue, and that will be
attended to. I believe it's the right
time. I don't get too much into bas- ·
ing the right time on the opponent."

at
•

"I feel, no question, it's on ·
the right track. 1 also feel that
there's a disappointment that
it didn't work out," Hart said.
"It's a disappointment l have ·
to carry with me."
· Rangers owner Tom Hicks
was adamant that Hart decided to retire, and wasn't
pushed out.
."This is something that has
been openly talked about 'on
a very planned basis," Hicks
said. "John Hart did resign,
period."
Daniels was targeted as a
likely successor last year
soon after Hicks, with the
help of manager Buck
Showalter, persuaded Hart to
stay through 2005, a season
longer than his original contract.
·
"J.D. is a special talent. He
has a brilliant baseball mind.
You get to know him, you'll
see why I made the decision," Hicks said. ''There are
some other young general
managers out there in the
game today. They' ve had
new
success
with
a
approach."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
•

;;o l ' I.NTS • \'ol. ;;;;, No .:\~

TllliRSilAY , O('TOHE K 11 , :.!.005

• High school foolball
previews. See Page 81

on staff after two layoffs his offi~e after midnight or .I
\vere issued in August and a.m. will hear an automated
September and a se~retary message referring them to the
POMEROY -The Meigs handling
administrative Pomeroy Police Depat1ment.
County Sheriff's Office is duties. Five other deputies The Pomeroy P.D. will then
now closed during the are now laid off and wi ll 'dispatch Beegle or an on-c:ill
overnight hours. but Sheriff remain so until the new year, deputy to the s~cne "·' needRobert. Beegle said he or a Beegle. said Wednesday. He ed . Beegle .said.
·
deputy will ·be on -call to will handle rhe dispatch desk
"The office will operate
answer emergenctcs.
at his office two days a week
this way throu gh the end of
Beegle · will . attempt to himselil and will answer the year,"' Beegle sai\1. "By
operate his department with overnight calls as they arise . cutting tosrs in thi s manner
the five deputies remaining
Beegle said those who call now, I will be able to provide
'

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MY~AILYSENTINEL . COM

~oman's 'h~ng

BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED@ MY DAILYS ENTINEL.C OM

POMEROY
Linda
Losey of Baltimore. Md. has
!raveled over 3,000 miles on
horsehack, lived · out of her
backpack and endured thunder~torms, hail and the ravages of Hurricane Katrina Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@M~DAI LYSENTINEL.COM
all to honor the memory ' of
her late son .
Losey visited Pomeroy
· MIDDLEPORT
-A
Wednesday as the guest of pumpkin carving contest 11&gt;
Kathy Bush of Darwin. who planned for the MiddlepoP!
treated Losey to lunch and a Community Association'j;
walk around town. They annual Moonlight MadnesS
share a love of horses and the event on Oct. 3 I.
·
paitHhat comes from losing a
Participating Middleport
loved one.
merchants will be open fro)ll
A freelance writer and 6 to 9 p.m. for the evening
graphic designer by trade. event. and the pumpkin carvLosey began what she ~ails ing contest is open tq all chilher "healing JOurney" on April dren in grades K through 5.
7 in California. with two hors- Chi ldren are encouraged to
es. a tent and camping sup- carve their own pumpkin, and
plies. and fO&lt;)d for the trip. bring them to the "T" for
She has traveled across the judging th.at night. Cash
American west and mid-west, prizes of $20 will be awarded
and expects to be back home to the preitiest, scariest and
in Maryland next month.
funniest e ~try in three age
Above: Linda Losey of
Losev travels abolll 20 miles groups: Kindergarten and
Baltimore, Md .. second
a day, at three miles per hour. first grade, second and third
from left, is pictured with
She rides one horse. while the grade and fourth and fifth
Kathy Bush and her family, other carries he r gear.
grade . A people's choice
who hosted her on a
She's making the trip to entry will also be chosen and
Wednesday visit to
fulfill . a dream she shared
Pomeroy. Losey is making
with her son. Sam. who was Please see Moonlight. A5
a cross-country trip on
ki lled last year in a farming
horseback in honor of her
accident at the a2e of I0. Sam
late son, who dreamed of
lom?:Cd to travel cross-counsuch a trip.
try ' on horseback. to raise
funds for horse rescue proBrian J. Reed/ photo
jects. a uruse he shared with
hi s mother. When he died last
Left: Linda Losey is pictured with the two horses . year. Losey . decided to ·see
who are accompanying her the dream through.
"We had begun to map out
on her coast-to-coast jourour
trip when Sam died,"
ney across the country,
Losey
said yesterday. "It has
Rocky and Val.
Submitted photo
Please see Journey, AS
BY PAUL DARST

INSIDE
• UMW women hear
about school funding.
See Page A3
• Retired teachers hear
from Chamber director.
See Page A3
• Alfred UMW sends
gifts to Festival of Sharing.

See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Family Medicine.
See Page AS
• Farmers Bank
reception to honor Wood.
See ·Page AS

Cheshire
annexation
becomes
official today

Curse still carries over for White Sox

•

side of the city has remained
barren of championships since
191 7:
"Lousy teams," Guillen
said, on ly he chose an adjecrive way on the other side of
lousy. Looking up to see a
reporter's exasperated grin,
Guillen volunteered to help
out. He pointe'd to the notebook and said, "Just put down
'bleep.' It's OK. Lots of things
I say in the paper have bleeps
in them."
Apparently, that's not the
only place. Chicago coach
-Joey Cora, like Guillen a former White Sox . player, was
preparing to hit some practice
groundballs when someone
asked what he knew about the
curse. He paused and looked ·
around. checking to see if
Guillen was within ear~hot.
"I don't know nothing about
any curse on this team," he
said. ''The only reason I know
about the Red Sox or the Cubs
is because I was home watching the playoffs on TV last
year and they made a big deal
on TV.
"The curse we've got to
worry about is the curse of
Manny Ramirez. And David
Ortiz," . he added. "Not
Shoeless Joe Jackson."
Chicago
starter
Jose
Contreras did his part for eight
innings , 'snapping Ramirez's
17-game postseason hitting
streak and limiting the damage Ortiz could provide with a
pair of hits. His job, in turn,
was made a lot easier when
the White Sox piled up five ·
runs in the first inning.
Nearly as satisfying as their
performance on the field, at

least from Guillen's point of
view, must have been the performance in the locker room .
afterward. The manager has
done everything possible to
squelch any talk about being a
team of destiny, and this team
sounded loath to get ahead of
itself.
"It's nice when you get a
game like this, but we've
played enough of the other
ones to not expect 'this," first
baseman Paul Konerko said.
"I · don't think we really felt
comfortable until we were up
eight, 10 runs."
There were precious few
students of history on either
side, but Guillen was among
the few who knew the White
Sox beat the Dodgers 11-0 in
Game I of the 1959 World
Series before getting swept.
And anybody whose memory
extends back even one season
remembered how Boston lost
Game 3 of last year's ALCS to
the Yankees by a 19-8 score
and then won eight straight
and their first World Series
since 1918.
"They didn't go out there
saying; 'Lei's find a way to
end the 86-year curse:' Jt'.s .a
good story line," Red Sox
general manager Thea Epstein
said, "but it doesn't carry over
between the lilies."
The manager who first said
momentum is only as good as
the next day's pitcher did not
believe in hexes, and like
Guillen, he wasn't about to let
his ballplayers believe in
them, either. Still, every step,
even a baby step closer to that
elusive title makes the temptation tougher to resi$t.

at ' least some coverage remaining deputies . will·
through the end of die year, cover two shifts per day.
rather than keeping a full with one man at the dispatch
staff for part of the year and de sk and another on the
having none at all for the !at- road. Last month. Beegle
tcr part."
said he would need an. addi·'Providing limited cover- tiona! $20.000 in order to
age for the rest of the year is complete the year with eight'
better fur the public than pro- . deputies on the job. That
viding cor)lplcte coverage funding. he said. would have
now and none at all later this to come from another county
vear.
source, rather than his own
· Be egle said he and the appropriation.

journey' leads to·Pomeroy Moonlight
Madness
plans
finalized.

WEATHER

CHICAGO (AP)- A curse
is a terrible thing to waste:
The Red Sox milked theirs
for 86 years before throwing
the Bambino under the bus.
The Cubs still run theirs as a
profitable little side business.
They like to pretend they've
been jinxed by a billy goat, a
black cat, and lately, a guy
who picked an inopportune
moment to do some ·souvenir
'hunting.
The White Sox curse,
though, comes with a better
back story than either. They
didn't just sell their best player or cross paths with ornery
house pets. They threw the
1919 World Series.
· If there are baseball gods,
the Black Sox scandal is pre'
cisely the kind of thing that
would really . tick them off.
And even if there aren't, the
story should be good for some
motivational mileage.
"I saw the movie, 'Eight
Men Out,"' White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. "It was
great."
· This was Tuesday afternoon, several hours before his
team would clobber the Red
Sox 14-2 in their playoff
opener. But at the moment, the
last thing Guillen wanted was
anyone to confuse his favorable review with an endorsement of curses, hexes, jinxes,
bad luck or anything .of the
sort.
Earlier this season, he dismissed the supposed curses in
Boston and the north side of
Chicago in terms that can't be
reprinted here. And he was no
tnore breezr. nor less romantic, explainmg why the south

"''" ·"') cl:oit"''"l""'l. '·""'

Beegle ceases overnight.operation to save funds

SPORTS

Daniels becomes youngest GM
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) 2001. He took an entry-level
-As a kid, Jon Daniels used job with the Rangers the next
to read the transactions to see year, and was promoted to
how teams were being built assistant general manager in
before he even looked at the 2004.
box scores.
"As I got in the business
Now he'll be the one mak- world and did some things, I
ing the moves for the Texas thought if l'm going to comRangers as the youngest gen- mit myself to something, ·I 'm
eral manager in major league going to commit myself to
history;
something I love," Daniels
John
Hart
resigned said. "I hope to ke·ep moving
Tuesday after a disappointing forward with this club... The
four-year stint that failed to last four years have been a
get the Rangers back into the · whirlwind learning curve for
playoffs. He was replaced by me."
Daniels, who at 28 years, 41
Hart's resignation came
days, was about ro months two days after the Rangers
yo.unger than Thea Epstein finished 79-83, their third
when he became Boston's losing season in four years
GM on Nov. 25, 2002.
under Hart and their fifth
"It didn't take me long to since winning their last AL
realize my future wasn't West title in 1999. He will
going to be o0n the tield," remain a team consultant.
Daniel s said. "So this is what
Cleveland won six division
I have aspired to for quite a titles and twice went to the
while."
World Series under Hart
Two years after graduating through 200 I. But the
from Cornell University with ·Rangers contended just once
a degree in applied econom- during Hart's .tenure, in 2004
ics and management, Daniels when they were 89-73 and
worked under OM Dan finished just three games out
O'Dowd in Colorado in of tirst.

Hundreds mark
anniversary of Wright
brothers' flight, A7

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•

Local teens selected for
leadership conference

Detail• on Page At!

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFUOH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
NASCAR
Places to go
Sports
Weather

16 PAGES

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
B8
A6
B Section
AS

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publislling Co.

POMEROY - Two Meigs
Middle School students have
been selected to attend the
National Young Leaders
State Conference (NYLSCJ
to be held Oct. 26-30. at the
Renaissance Hotel in down- ~
town Columbus.
Darby Gilmore and Jacpb
Riffle, both eighth graders,
were nominated by their
teacher, Carol Evans, to take
part in the uniqlte leadership
development which has as its
theme
"Courageous
Leadership.'' Gilmore is the
son of Roger and Mary

Gilmore of Pomeroy and
Riffle is the son of Matthew
and Kristi Rifne of Pomeroy.
Both are honor students at
Meigs Middle School.
In her evaluation of the
youths, Evans said "Both
boys have · demonstrated

Please see Teens, AS

Ch~rtene Hoeftl~h / photo

About three times a year Meigs High School hosts a vis1t from
the American Red Cross bfoodmobile. It was there this week
and 28 units of blood were collected , most donated by students. Registration of donors was h a ~dled by students in the'
nu rsing program. Here Red Cross nurses prepare to accept
blood froni Zach English .

316 Jrd. S/111~ Rt. 2I]JNIII
Pt. Plltua~ WY JSSSO

304-675·5888
Toll Free1·877-675·5888

LINCOLN

•
'

)~

CHESHIRE - Leaders of
the village of Cheshire let out
a collective sigh of relief this
•morning.
Today. the village's annex·
ation of 393.7 acres of land
became official. more than
doubling it in size.
"We're excited- we can
let Out a long breath· now,"
said April Stinson, fiscal officer for the vi II age.
The vipagc nearly died
three
years ago after
American Electric Power,
-.owner of the nearby Gen.
Jame s M. Gavin Power Plant,
offered residents a buyout of
their property. AEP made the
oiler after years of conflict
over emissions from the plant.
About 90 percent of the·
property owners accepted the
offer. That left Cheshire with
a population of about 20 .

Please see Cheshire, AS

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