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GARDENING

PageD6
S~day, October 9, 2005

.Arctic tundra is anything but empty for autumn visitors
BY DEAN FOSDICK

~ounterparts. Picking the tart

through deep snow, guided
fruit, however, is stoop labor. unerringly by their strong
Better to kneel or lie prone as sense of smell .
KIANA,
Alaska.
you gather berries by the
The tundra's color show
Crimson comes early to the handful to snack on immedi- isn't altogether an autumnal
Arctic. The tundra seldom ately or freeze or dry for the display.
draws visitors strictly on the pancakes, pies, marittades
"The bloom in spring is
strength of its fall colors, but and preserves to come later.
amazing. . .. You have large
the horizon-to-horizon dis"They're a little sweeter. flowers relative to their
. play is· a visual feast for the F"rost lrr ds to develop the (plant) size,". Spencer says.
fortunate few waitin g !"or the "'gars, .. &gt;ays Page Spencer, a "They burst into bloom right
caribou to arrive or who are Nntional Park Service ecolo- away as they come out of the
here picking berrie,.
gist based in Anchorage. snow. After a brief period o~
This abundant land along "These are superior to the bloomin&amp;, they move immethe Kobuk River. sustains a ones in the Lower 48. More diately into the berry stage.'
variety of users. but primarily intense. Their taste and color And then the fall colors you
lnupiat Eskimos dependent is richer. They're really the saw and the whole thing is
upon the caribou. The Arctic ling·onberries
of over in a couple of months.
deer migrate southward in Scandinavia."
"They tend to. store starchbands of two to -200 or more
Blueberries are well past es below ground level so
in late summer and early fall. their prime by the end of come spring they have a big
· This time of year, the clus- September. Wrinkled rem- burst of food. The load lip
ters of aspen and birch trees nants dangle from the bushes their roots again during the ·
lining the Kobuk Valley like globular Christmas orna- short summer."
greet the dawn with· shim- ments, falling easily to the
Tundra plants are difficult
mering
yellow
leaves. · ground whe~ touched. · Rose to transplant and develop
Conifers provide a blue- · hips or the fruit of the wild unless you can provide them t
gr-een backdrop for the rose are a favored trail food with similar habitat - ample
grassy tussocks, , mosses, of people living in the north- moisture. long hours of sunsedges and bushes also com- ern latitudes. With the seeds light.
mon to the tundra.
removed, they can be
"They're not . easily transMany of the smaller plants processed into juices, jellies, ferable. TIJey don't do well
lie close to the ground; taking · syrups and wines, among 1 when rrioved ot tossed
what warmth they can from other things.
around,"
Spencer says.
the thin soils overlaying the
"They're an incredible "These wild shrubs aren't
permafrost. Temperatures fall source of vitamin C," really available through nurs- .
frequently to 60 degrees Spencer says. "My mother eries, either. The best thing to
below zero in w,inter. The sun used to say three rose hips do is come to Alaska and see
doesn't climb above the hori- were the same (in vitamin them for yourself."
zon for weeks.
value) as eating an orange."
September and October are
Add the salmonberries that
Recommended readiRg:
the waning months for also grow thick on the tundra "Alaska Wild Berry Guide
berries. Most of the bearber- and you have the makings for and Cookbook," by the ediries are gone but the plant's a variety of cookbooks.
tors of Alaska Magazine.
leathery leaves have turned a
"There are a half-dozen or List price: $14.95.
deep scarlet. They make col- more rich berry plants here,"·
orful combinations alongside Spencer says. "People also
On the Net:
the orange-brown leaves of use the early willow leaves
For more about the Kobuk
low-bush cranberries and and the roots of plants they River Valley and tundra colcrimson blueberry bushes. gather for starch in the ors. see this National Park
No human decorator fashions spring . Other leaves they use Service Web site:
a more attractive centerpiece. for the greens."
·
http://www2.nature.nps.gov/
Cranberries gathered in the
Many of the lichens that geology!parkslnoaalindex.c.fm.
Arctic or near-Arctic have a support the browsing caribou
taste all their own - some are moi st and bright green.
You can · contact Dean
say superior to that of their But soon the animals will be Fosdick
at
bog-grown,
domesticated pawing for dry patches deanjosdick@netscape.net.
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

•

.
.
.
. M~
Ron Boor of Tyler County weighs his pumpkin in at 1,085 pounds Wednesday, in the largest
pumpkin competition, a tradition of the Milton Pumpkin Festival, at West Virginia Pumpkin Park
· in Milton, W.Va.
·
••

PRIZE PUMPKIN TIPS
SCALE AT 1,085 POUNDS
. .

MILTON. W.Va. (AP)- It
took five men and a fo rklift to
get Ron and Sue Boor's prize
pumpkin onto the scale at the
West
Virginia
Pumpkin
Festi~al. The verdict: 1.0~5
pounds, a record for the event.
"They told me I shouldn't
have grown it so big," Ron
Boor sa id.
Boor and his wife raised
the pumpkin in Tyler County,
a three-hour drive from
Milton.
The have toiled in their

pumpkin patch since May.
The couple .installed an irrigation system and shade tent,
attended gardening seminars
and watered pumpkins endless ly. At the prize pumpkin's
peak growth, it grew about 35
pounds·a night and. consumed
about 200 gallons of water
per day.
"I say it's worse than raising a baby," Sue Boor said.
The Boo.rs have raised
large pumpkins since 1990.
Their previous record was .

•

at

ne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CE'\ J"S • \'ol. ;,;,. No. :19

MONil.\Y, OCTOBER to, 2005

""" ·"')&lt;l.,il"'""'i•u·J., ..,,,

SPORTS

Appalachian sch:olars program created, benefits Meigs

• Penn State edges
. Buckeyes. See Page B.1

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY

CHARLENE !10EFLICH

·

the 29 ~unties of Appalachian
Ohio who plan to attend Ohio
University. Efforts seeking out
students who qualify to
receive awards through the
new program are currently
underway, Leslie Lilly, president and CEO of the
F'oundation for Appalachian
Ohio, said Ftjday.
Lilly and Ohio University
Roderick
J.
President
McDavis described the pro-

gram as one where graduates
of Appalachian schoo l districts who demonstrate enthusiasm, motivation to succeed,
academic achievement and
financial need, will.be able to
get" needed assistance.
"Leaders in Appalachian
Ohio know and understand
greater access to educational
opportunity can make a profocind difference in the economic future of our citizens

and region. Helping our
region's st udents overcome
barriers and create access to
educational opportunities is
the work of many hands and
many partners. And there is
no better place to start that
process than right here with
the world class educational
resources of our region's tlagship university and its associated campuses," said Lilly.
"Ohio University recog -

nizes its unique position in and
responsibility to south£~§tem
Ohio," added McDavis, noting
that all six Ohio University
campuses will [!articipate in
the program.
The Appalachian Scholars
Program is an unprecedented
partnership between Ohio
University
and
the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio. who are working

·Meigs rumounces .homecoming festivities

Ward appeals
rape convictions

ATHENS - Students in
Meigs and Gallia counties are
among those who will benefit
from a scholars program
being established by The
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio and Ohio University.
The program is a needbased - scholarship program
open to high school students in

BY

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

BY BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

0BOUARIES
Page A5
• Roy Miller, 90

-INSI:DK,
• Meigs County Girl Scout
Diar;. See Page A2
• Garden club members
leam about gourds.
See Page A3
• Grant awarded to
develop histor; education
in Meigs. See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5

WEATHER .

POMEROY- A variety of
activities leadin~ up to hornecoming festivities Friday
night will begin Wednesday
at Meigs High School.
Candidates for homecom. ing queen have been selected
and include Miranda Young,
Brittney Jacks, Ashley Cook,
Ashley Samar, and Kay Ia
· McCarthy. The 2005 queen
will
be · announced
in
pregame . ceremonies
at
Friday night's football game.
Wednesday will be team
logo day with a powderpuff
football game to take place
on the school field . after
school. Thursday is "support
our troops" day, and Friday is
maroon and gold day .with a
pep rally.
The annual homecoming
parade and bon fire will take
place at 7 p.m. Thursday
night. The parade will form
at the Rock Springs fairgrounds and move to the
high school where there will
be free food and drinks, and
donations will be accepted
for hurriqane relief.
Chadene· Hoeftlch/photo
Another activity taking
Candidates
for
the
2005
Meigs
High
School
homecoming
queen
are
from
the left, Miranda
place will include a yearbook
signing party from 4 to 6 p.m. Young, Brittney Jacks, Ashley Cook, Ashley Samar and Kayla McCarthy. Announcement of this
Graduates who have already . year's queen will be made in pregame ceremonies at Friday night's football game on Bob
·
picked up their books are Roberts Field.
encouraged to bring them
back
for the
signing. display of memorabilia from . information on the Meigs dance will be held at the
·schoo l from 9to midnight on
Yearbooks will be on sale at the schools prior to consoli- Local School District.
$45 each and there will be a dation along with current
The annual homeco ming Saturday.

Church grateful for
blessing of donated land
BY BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HEMLOCK GROVE -· .The
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
celebrated its !39th Homecoming
on Oct. 2 but before that celebra'
tion the minds of congregation
members were troubled by surrounded acreage being purchased
2 SECriONS - t6 PAGES
by a new landowner, essential
Calendars
making them landlocked.
The new landowner was .Bruner
Classifieds
B4-6 Land
.Company of Byesville, a
Comics
B7 real estate company which is
described as a family-owned busi.
ness. Diana Bruner-Steele of
Dear Abby
Gallipolis coordinates sales in
Editorials
A4 Southeastern Ohio for her father
and brother, who are the propri·
Obituaries
As etors and who also are church dea- ·
in the Byesville Church of
B Section cons
Sports
Christ.
The Hemlock Grove Christian
AS
Weather
Church sits on property donated by
the Hoyt Family. The congregation
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing ·Qi.
Detatlt on Page A8

INDEX

A3

A3

EPA ESTIMATED
34MPG
HIGHWAY!tl

lEASE FIR

CISHIICK
FROM TOYITI'

·Mo.

Please see Scholars, AS

.

...

710 pounds.
"Our goal was originally to
raise a 1,000-pound pumpkin, but now that we've done
that, we just have to shoot
higher," Sue Boor said.
The festival's l 0 largest
pumpkins will. be auctioned
Sunday, with proceeds benetiling local scholarships. The
Boors' pumpkin wi II .be
carved into a jack-o' -lantern
and delivered to the winning
bidder. Its seeds will sell for
about $25 each

Guatemala declares
landslide areas
cemeteries, A6

EHS Homecoming
· Court,As

· POMEROY -A Rutland
man sente nced last month to
54 years in prison on charges
he raped his niece has
appealed the conviction.
Raymond Ward filed his
appeal with the Fourth
· District Court of Appeals on
Thursday, through his attor. ney Charles Knight of
Pomeroy. Ward is now in
prison after his sentencing
earlier this month on six
rape counts by Judge D.
Dean Evans of Gallia
County, who .heard Ward's
case by assignment.
Ward was convicted on the
charges in a June jury trial, but
was acquitted on four other
rape charges and a charge o(
corrupting another with drugs.
Another trial involving a second alleged victim ended in a
mistrial in July after a jury
deadlocked. Those charges
contain two counts of unlawful sex ual conduct with a
min or, involving_ two additional victims. They will be
retried on Nov. 30.
Ward's earlier request for a
retrial on the charges for
which he was convicted was
based on allegatations that
school records concealed by
the stale at trial proved the
alleged victim was in school

· Please see Ward, AS

The prayers of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church were answered
with a donation of onequarter ·acre of land
from Bruner Land
Company of Byesville.
The donation kept the
' 139-year old church
from· being landlocked
and maintained convenient parking for elderly
parishioners. Pictured
are (from left) Jack
· Welker, church deacon
and superintendent,
Diana Bruner-Steele,
Bruner Land Co"rnpany,
Greg McCall, church
trustee and deacon .

only owned a portion of the actual
building site and three feet around
the struct ure which originally
accommodated pas·sage of a horse
and buggy.
The idea of relocating the church
was entertai ned and the convenient·
parking for elderly attendees was
·
threatened.
In an age of corporate greed ahd
nameless, faceless corporations,
congregations members were not
sure what to expect when they
approached the Bruner Land
Company about donating some
-land in close proximity to the
church.
Church trustee and deacon Greg
McCall expressed the congregation's concern to Bruner Land
Compa~nyrepresentati~es and the
request or the donated "land was
grarue , increasing the church's lot
by approximately one-quarter acre.

Submitted photb

Please see Church, AS

MOS.

DUE AT SIGNING"

Holzer Clinic is Close to You. • •

DUE AT SIGNING INClUDES: $1360 DOWN PAYMENT+ SO SECURIIY DEPOSIT t 52391ST MONTH PAYMENT t $400 ACQUISffiON fEE. lAX, TAGS AND INSURANCE ARE EXTRA.

'

Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meigs Point Pleasant

,

.

•

,.

�' .

The Daily Sentinel

LOCAL . , S -TATE

.,

'

•'
'-.

the center followed by a trip
to a local dairy farm.

requirements for the Sign and Girls then discussed specific
SYRACUSE Paytyn
an activity sheet for the girls examples of each of the lines
Faith
Tucker,
daughter
of
to fill out and bring back next of the Girl Scout Law to help
week to share. This activity them better understand and pric and Tamara Hayman
Southern Junior
Tucker, celebrated her first
will be done again in May to Jearn it.
Troop 1204
see how much the girls have
The meeting concluded birthday on Sept. 14 with an
Hawaiian
luau.
Guests
Southern Junior Troop changed. Girls decided .to with the G.S. Circle, singing
1204 meets every other earn the dance badge. for "Day is Done" and the Girl attended in Hawaiian attire.
Monday · at the Syracuse requirem ent number one for Scout squeeze. The next Paytyn is the granddaughter
meeting will be an investi- of Dan and faith Hayman of
Community Center. Shirley the Sign.
Nut
forms
and
info
,were
ture/
re-dedication ceremony . Syracuse and Paul Ticker
Cogar is leader. The first
of wheeling, W. Va. and
meeting for the new year at gone over and the girls did on Oct. 10.
some
role
playing
on
selling
Kathy
Cavanaugh
of
the Syracuse Community
To
end
the
meeting
the
nut
s.
Reedsville Junior
Middleburg, Fla.
Center was Sept. 19. The
Paytyn Faith Tucker
troop will be meeting weekly• girls went outside to play a
Troop 1042
5 to 7 p.m. on Mondays. We game.
· had six girls present: Abby
The troop _ will hold our
Southern Brownie
Atkins , Brittany Cogar,
next meeting from 6 to 7:30
Megan McGee,
Kimmy
Troop 1120
p.m. on Oct. 10 at the
POMEROY - . The 33rd Jean Wood , secretary-treasurDeaver, Rachel Payne ·and
Reedsville Church of Christ
Wood
reunion was held er. The neid reunion was set
Anna Cundiff.
The troop meets every and invite any girl who 9-11
We iue hoping for more to other Monday at the Syracuse (or fourth to sixth grade} and recently at the home of for Sept. 10: Traveling the
join and we need moms also. Community Center. Leaders would like to be a Girl Scout Deloris, David and Cyndi farthest to attend were Gail
King.
·
and
Joe . Milligan
of
Girls decidec;l on the Sign of are Debi King, Dawna to attend.
David King had prayer after Indianapolis. Others atterid.the Stars to work on this year. Arnold, Tina Roush, a[\d Patti
This will be a parent meetwhich
the group enjoyed a ing were .Jean and Norman
Next week we hope to decide Dunn.
Ing also.
picnic
.lunch
. Cyndi King won Wood, Ronnie Wood, Dav1d
on what badges and activities
Sept. JO was busy with 10
a game prize, Gail Milligan and Cyndi King , Stephen,
we want to do to earn this girls participatinll in the Fall
Reedsville Cadette
Sign.
Festival in Ractne, and 20
the door prize, and other prize Philip and Liz King, Deloris
Troop 1254
Dues was set at 50 cents a girls participating in the
winners were Ronnie Wood, King , Bobby Arnold, Alan
meeting , new girls will Hawaiian Luau later that day
The troop will hold its next Ralph Coleman, David King, Holiday, and Jimmie Cumins
decide on their troop crest at the Syracuse Community
meeting from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Marlene Colemn. and Bobby of Pomeroy: Dale Hoffman
next week. The leader Center.
Arnold;
of Athens: and Marlene and
reiJlinded new girls that a
The first- Brownie meeting on Oct. 10 at the Reedsville
New
officers
elected
wereColeman
of
Ralph
three-ring binder anq a tote was held Sept. 12, at the Church of Christ and invite David King. president, and Cplumbus.
any girl who ages II to 17
bag would be .needed for the Syracuse Community Center,
new year: Officers will be with 26 girls in attendance ..' and would li)&lt;:e to be a Girl
elected next week and nut Girl s went outside for the Scout to attend.
This will be a parent meetsales information will be dis- tlag ceremony with Pledge of
ing also.
cussed. A small craft was Allegiance, followed by the
made and Brittany Cogar Girl Scout Promise, and disBig Bend Cadette
served the refreshments.
cuss ion of the Girl Scout
Troop 1208
On Sept. 26, the second Law. New girls were h~lped
ATHENS O' Bleness to do in the case of an airway
meeting was held at the by second and third year
Memorial Hospital in Athens obstruction or choking. Upon
The troop meets every · will offer a Cardiopulmonary successful completion of the
Community Center. Six girls Brownies, to earn the Girl
were in attendance. There Scour Ways Try-it. Girls other Sunday at various Resuscitation (CPR) course course, participants receive a
were four girls in the parade earned this by learning the places. Leaders are Jerrena Wednesday, Oct. 19, from card to confirm that they
Saturday: Abby Atkins, · Girl Scout handshake, quiet Ebersbach, Dawn Romines, 6:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. in
attended and completed the
Brittany Cogar, Kimmy sign, friendship circle and and Shirley Cogar.
O'Bleness' Lower Level · course.
For the first meeting,_we
Deaver, and Megan McGee.
squeeze, and discussion . of
room 010.
To register for the course,
New . officers were elected what ' the GS motto " Be pre- met on Sept. 11. We disThis
American
Safety
&amp;
visit
O'Bieness' community
·
and they will serve for the pared" means. ,
cussed plans for the upcomHealth
Institute
course
teachotflce. The course
relations
next three months. Elected
Girls also enjoyed s'mores ing Halloween overnighter as
were President Brittany for their snack.
• well as _set the dues for $3 per es participants the skills fee of $15 per · person is
needed to administer CPR to payable with registration.
Cogar, Vice President Sarah
·Eighteen Brownies attend- month.
adults,
children and infants. The fee is waived for anyone
Eakins, Secetary/PR, Tara ed the Sternwheel Riverfest
Our next meeting will be
Participants
also learn how to unable to pay. For more
Eakins, dues and attendance, Parad.e Sept. 24 in Pomeroy.
held from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Abby Atkins, and a new
Twenty-four girls were in October 16 at the Pomeroy recognize a life-threatening information, call O'Bleness'
emergency, how to provide community relations depart.office of Activity Director attendance Sept . 26, for the Municipal Park.
will be Rachel Payne . Her job second Brownie meeting .
All area girls II to 17 are basic life support, and what ment at (740) 592-9300.
will be to have a game or Detail s of the upcoming nut welcomed to join. For more
song ready for each meeting . sales and forms were dis- information please call 992The leader handed out the cussed with girls and parents. 7747 .

ASHTABULA (AP) Ashtabula · County, with
more covered brid~es · than
any other county m Ohio,
hopes to add another distinction: the longest wooden
covered bridge in the United
States.
Officials say the 600-foot
bridge could end up being the
cornerstone of a budding
to.urist economy, Ashtabula
County, located itt the northeast corner of the state, has
struggled for decades with
high unemplorment and the
loss of industnal jobs.
The design also features a
windowed walkway on top of
the two-lane bridge, which
should give pedestrians a ·
spectacular view of the
Ashtabula River valley.
"We knew we didn't want

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
to ·offer CPR training

LAND TRANSFERS POSTED

people walking inside the
bridge. That would be .too
dan~erous,"
said county
engmeer
Tim
Martin.
Elevators will be added to
make it handicap acce1sible.
Construction on the county's 17th covered bridge was
to have started two years ago
but got delayed while engi·neers sorted through some
environmental issues, Martin
said Saturday. .
Work is now scheduled to
begin next year and wrap up
in 2008. The span will
replace a dilapidated steelbeam bridge. Federal highway officials have pledged
$5 million toward construction costs.
The county celebrated its
heritage this past weekend
with the annual Covered

Bridge Festival,, and bus
tours bring people in rearround. But offic1als env1sion
the new bridge as a must-see
for bridge enthusiasts around
the country.
·
"You can't r,ut a dollar
value on that,' said Betty
Morrison, who has been
involved with the festival
program since its inception in
1986.
The bridge would surpass
the
nearby
228-foot
Harpersfield Bridge. as t~e
longest covered bndge tn
Ohio and the 460-foot
Connecticut River bridge
between Windsor, Vt., and
Cornish, N .H .. as the nation's
longest.
The county's hilly, wooded
terrain helped shape its
bridge heritage.

POMEROY
Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
posted the following transfers ·
At one point, Ashtabula in real estate:
County had - 62 covered
G. Keith Kennedy, V. Irene
bridges. Many were lost to Kennedy, to Ron Carr, Gretta
flooding, vandalism, fires Carr, deed, Olive.
and deterioration.
Charles D. Barrett, Jr.,
Modern covered bridges Darlene Gilliam, John P.
aren't just a way to connectto Gilliam, Patricia Wimbish,
yesteryear, Morrison · said.
Michael T. Wimbish, Jane
They're also more fractical.
Bartelt, Kathy J. Barrett, Lisa
Unlike .a stee bridge, R. Barrett, Robert Lee
which gets rusty with road .
Barrett, James Ray Barrett,
salt, a wooden bridge is preRobert B_arrett, to Marlene
·served by the salt, and its
Carpenter, deed, Rutland.
cover provides protection
, Marlene
Carpenter,
from the weather and bracing
Nathaniel Carpenter, to Lynn
for crosswinds, Martin said.
Searle, Carrie Searle, easeThe county has built four
covered bridges since the ment, Rutland.
Joyce J. Day, Joyce J.
early 1980s, all ofthem meetDowden,
Richard
· L.
ing modern safety codes.
Dowden,
to
Joyce
J.
Officials say the new bridge
Richard
L.
will be strong enough to Dowden,
Dowden
,
deed,
Village
of
accommodate tractor trailers
Middleport.
..
and fire engines.
. ' · ,, .
Vera Hupp Buchanan to
Cora Hill, Leonard ,, Hill ,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Charles K. Stewart, Vera L
Stewart , to Kenneth E.
Stewart , deed , Village of
The Flatwoods store is not Middleport.
o.wned by Homer Laughlin
Charlene Doczi to Andy 0.
but rather by the company's Doczi IV, deed, Rutland.
president, Joe, Wells, and four
Samuel J. Bennett . to
other Homer Laughhn share- Tuppers
Plains-Che ster
holders, Wells said.
Water District, right of way,
The plan is to open in mid- Scipio.
November, though that could
Steven E. Horner, · Larissa
be pushed back, Shreve said. L Horner, to TP-CWD, right
Homer Laughlin is not con- of way. Chester. ·
sidering any more retail
.Jan M . Kostival, Tamara L .
openings, Shreve said.
Kosti'!al , to TP-C WD, right
of way, Scipio.
· John A. Harden, Denise M.
Harden, to Denise M. Ford,
deed, Columbia.
Charlotte M. Erlewine to
"They told
me
his
Dinah
Marie Stewart, Gary
intestines were dying inside
Allen
Erlewine , Harold
of him ," Bole said.
Two days of treatments with Frances I;:rlewine, deed ,
antibiotios did not work, and Salem .
Dorothy June ·Davis to
the skin of Jason's belly turned
Wayne
E. Davi s, affidavit,
black.· He was transported to
·
Village
of
Middleport. ,
Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Kim D. Mitchell to James
Medical Center, where surgeons removed more than 90 B. Wolfe , sheriff's deed ,
percent of his intestine. .But Salisbury.
Kendall
M.
Lemley,
the disease was in his blood
Amanda Lemley, to Village
and he died Aug. 19.
. Bole 's attorney, Drake . of Middleport, deed , Village
Ebner, said he has requested of Middleport.
Rachel E. Jennings to
hospital medical records but
has not yet received them . If John R. Weeks, deed ,
there is reason to believe Salisbury.
proper infection control proDwight E. Logan, Sr.. to
cedures were not followed, Dwight Emerson Logan, Sr..
Shilo has up to a year to file a affidavit.
wrongful . death .lawsuit,
Terry M. Brewer to
Ebner said.
Leading Creek Conservancy

,Fiesta tableware to .be sold at outlet mall
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP)- The Homer Laughlin
China Co. is opening a Fiesta
tableware showroom at ail
outlet mall in Flatwoods.
The shop, to be called
Everything Fiesta, will go
into . a 5,000-square-foot
space in the Flatwoods
Factory
Outlet
Stores'
17,000-square-foot wing t1nished in July. ,

''Fiesta is such a draw, we
thought we'd go further
downstate to sell it," sa id
Homer Laughlin spoke-swoman Pat Shreve. The
outlet mall is next to
Interstate 79.
Only Fiestaware will be on
sale. The line of china is
Homer Laughlin's best seller.
Homer Laughlin employs
about I ,100 people at its

plant in Newell, in the
Northern Panhandle.
The company, which introduced its bright , bold art deco
Fiesta ware in 1936, has been
owned by the Wells and
Aaron familie s since 1897.
1-Jomer Laughlin products
are now sold online, m several department stores and at
the company's Newell headquarters . .

Hospital probe turns up no answers in deaths of preemies
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
hospital investigation fai·led
to find the origin of an intestinal disease that may have
contributed to the deaths of
two premature babies and
sickened five others.
University Hospital temporari~y closed it~ neonatal
mtenstve care umt to new
admissions last month after
discovering a cluster of
babies suffering from necrotizing enterocolitis. The disease inflames the lin ing of the
intestines and can cause stomach pain, diarrhea and fever.
A hospital probe did not
reveal any common cause
linking the cases, said Dr.
Vivek Narendran, medical
director of the neonatal unil.
The hospital checked for

•

..

~ ~ - - -~

PageA3

BY .THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 10,

2005

Wood reunion held

County seeks to build longest covered bridge in U.S.

'

...... .

Monday, October 10, 2005

First birthday
celebrated

MEIGS COUN1Y GIRL SCOUT DIARY
POMEROY -The fo llowing events are being
offered by Meigs County Girl
· Scouts:
•For
girls . 11-17,
Halloween Overnighter at the
Syracuse Community Center,
Oct. 28 and 29. Crafts suc h as
candle making, working with
leather and clay and setting
up for camp: Begins at 6
p.m. on Friday. Fee of $5 fo r
registered gid scouts: $15 for
non-registered
girls.
15.
Deadline
is Oct.
Information is available from
Jerrena Ebersbach at 9927747 after 4 p.m.
• Space Day will be held
Oct.
29
1t
Syracuse
Community Center. Girls
will work and ·earn their
space exploration badge. .
• Community Food Drive
· on Nov. · 19. sponsored by
Cadette/Senior Troop I 208.
Details will be announced at
a later date.
• Candy and nut sales begin
on Oct. 1 ami will end on Oct.
17. The nut chairmeti are
Tina Roush and Patti Dunn.
Southern Daisy Troop 1292
The troop meets every
other Monday at the Syracuse
. Community Center. Leaders
are Debi King and Dawna
Arnold.
On Sept. I 9, four. Daisy
girl scouts gathered at the
Syracuse
Community
Center for their first meeting. Each girl colored a
Daisy necklace with their
name on it. Girls then drew
and colored what each of the
three parts of the Girl Scout
Promise means to them (to
honor God, country, and
help all people). Girls then
sang "I'm A Dai sy Girl
Scout," and danced to the
songs "Y. M.C.A." and "We
Are Family,'' followed by
snack time and the Girl
Scout Sq~eeze to conclude.
Five Daisy girl scouts
marched in the Sternwheel
Riverfest Parade in Pomeroy
on Sept. 24.
The troop meet s every
other Monday. Oct. 17 will
be an investiture ceremony. at

PageA2

viruses and bacteria in infant
formula and stored breast
milk. Officials also ran tests on
infant blood arid stools, and
consulted with the Cincinnati
Health Department . and the
·federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
" It's very fnt'strating, but
mystery,"
it's
a
true
Narendran said.
Th e exact cause of the
infants ' deaths has not been
determined. The neonatal
_intensive care unit reopened
last week.
Studies show the disease,
also known as NEC, strikes
about one in 20 high-risk,
premature infmlls in neon ata l
mtensive care units, the hospital said.
poctors aren't sure how ihe

di sease is spread, but some
experts believe that the
immaturity of the mucous
membranes in the intestine s
can cause the disease.
In a typical year, University
Hospital will see 30 to 35
NEC cases, Narendran said.
· But Shilo Bole. the mother
of o ne of the babies who
died, said'she wants answers.
Her son, Jason Shelton, was
born Aug. 8 at University
Hospital , about 10 weeks earlier than hi s due date.
''He wa~ fine for the first
seven days," said Bole, 20, of
Cincinnati.
Then one night, a hospital
staff member told Bole that
her son was deathly ill and
mieht need a blood transfusion , Bole said.
~

.

District, right of way,
Salisbury. ·
Gloria Whaley to LCCD,
right of way, Rutland.
Michael Welsh, Johnni
Welsh, to LCCD, right of
way, Scipio.
Richard A. White, Lorie A.
Buckley, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Robert Bowles, Mary
Bowles, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Ronald P, Logan to LCCD,
right of way, Salisbury.
Gregory A. Robbins to
LCCD,
right of · way,
Salisbury.
Clarence Goble to LCCD,
right of way, Salisbury.
Rebecca J. Newell to·
LCCD,
right of way,
Sali sbury.
James E. Witherell, Jr. ,
Phyllis J. Witherell, to
LCCD, . right _of way,
Salisbury.
Jan\es E. Witherell, Helen
Witherell, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
·
Lloyd A. Haggy, · Joy se
Haggy, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Stuart W. Pullins, Susan K.
Pullins, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Wayn e Leifheit to LCCD,
right of way, Salisbury.
Foster J. Akers to LCCD,
ri ght of way, Salem.
Clarence E. Hayman to
LCCD,
right of way,
Salisbury .
Seldon J. Baker, Aladine J.
Baker, to LCCD , right of
way, Salisbury.
Michael · Dickerson to
LCCD.
right of way,
Salisbury.
Farie M. Cole to LCCD,
right of way, Salisbury.
John Harri son to LCCD,
right of way, Salisbury.
Thomas Ragan, Deni~e K.
Ragan, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Gilbert W. Corliss to
LCCD,
right
of way.
Salisbury.
Steve Hysell, Joyce Hysell ,
to LCCD, right of way,
Salisbury.
Danny R. White, Adell Lee
White, to LCCD, right of
way, Salisbury.
Kimberly Barnes, John
Barnes, to LCCD, right of
way, Rutland.
Judy J. Hutton, Kevin J.
Hutton·. to LCCD, right of
way. Rutland .

•

·-· ----~ -~ ·-· ---------------....JL-------------,.------'------------------=·~-

ATHENS - A classroom
course aimed at helping older
people to refresh · and
improve their driving skills is
being offered by O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital. .
The 55 ALIVE/MATURE
DRIVING program will be
given
Tuesday
and
Wednesday from 12:30 p:m.
to 4:30 p.m. in O'Bieness'
Lower · Level room 004.
Participants musi attend both
sessions. All drivers , especially those who are 50 years
old or older, are invited to
participate in the program.
· Developed
by
the
American Association .of
Retired Persons (AARP), 55
ALIVE/MATURE
DRIVING is a comprehensive

classroom refresher course
geared toward the specific
needs of drivers who are 50
years old or older. According
to AARP, the course helps
drivers update their driving
know ledge and . skills, pre:
vent tratlic crashes and violation's, and maint.ain mobility
and i'ndependence. As an
added bonus, those who complete the course may be eligible to receive a discount on
their auto insurance costs.
Wam&amp;ley
of
Alice
Pomeroy, AARP Diver
Safety Program, is the
instructor
for
55
ALIVE/MATURE
DRIVING. Wamsley will present
information
addressing
today 's driving challenges, .

such as: how to compensate
for changes in vision, hearing
and reaction .time; how to
handle problem situations
such as left turns, right-ofway, freeway traffic, trucks
and blind spots: what to do if
confronted by an aggressive
driver: when to use a ·car
phone; how medications may
affect driving; hl)w to properly u&amp;e anti-lock brakes, air
bags and safety belts: and
how to assess one's own and
others' abilities v1a a
"Personal Driving Capability
. Index." No tests are given.
The course is limited to 10
participants. To enroll in the
course, which has a $10
enrollment fee, call (740)
592-9337.

Garden club members learn about gourds

.
SYRACUSE- Everything
you'd ever want to know
about gourds was discus sed at
the Wildwood Garden Club's
recent meeting with Shirley
Hamm talking about planting,
harvesting, drying, cleaning
and painting gourds.
·
She demonstrated how to
cut off the edges of hard
gourd seeds before placing
them into water over night
before planting them, talked
about cross pollination and
how to prevent it by planting
the se~ds apart, and told of
how she placed a trellis running north to south and then
strung strings from the
ground up to the trellis on
which she trained the gourd
vines te grow. She said gourd
vines cim take up an .incredi· ble amount of space, so train.ing them to vine on a trellis
saves planting space.
According to Hamm, ·specific shapes of gourds can be
created to use in flower
arrangements. For instance.
she said if you want a long
gourd with -a twisting shape,
you can wrap the gourd
around · an old broom handle
and tie it with strings to irain ·
it to grow in that shape. ·
After the gourd vines -have
dried is the time to harvest
and dry the gourds leaving
some of the stem on the
gourd. To dry gourds, place
them on screening material
out .o f direct sun, so that air
can circulate around them. It
may take four or five months,
·she said, noting that mold will
form on them ' as they dry.
.

'

When they are completely
dry, the. seeds v.;_ill rattle in
them when they are shaken,
she said. •
Two cleanings are needed
to do the job properly, according to Ham!Jl. First, fill a pan
with water and some dishwashing
detergent.
Thoroughly scrub the gourds
with a stiff brush . For the second cleaning, wear a plastic
apron since you 'II be scrubbing the gourds with Clorox
and water to kill the mold.
After they are cleaned, set
them aside to dry.
Finally, the gourds are
ready to be painted , she said,
noting that she uses crafters'
acrylic paint to decorate the
gourds. You are only limited
to your imagination as to how
to paint and use the gourds. If
you are going to use them out~
side, be sure to coat them with
a clear, protective acryli~
spray,
she·
commented.
Hamm displayed an arrangement she had created using
painted red gourds~ zebra
grass, amaranthus, and globe
amaranths.
After sharing a potluck
meal, president Peggy Moore
distributed registration forms
for the
regional Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
fall meeting to be held at
Gallipolis on Oct. 22, 2005.
She said that a bird feeder is
nee'ded to take for a silent
auction at the regional meeting. Joy Bentley volunteered
to purchase the feeder.
Bentley distributed gardening calendars and the new

•

program books that she and
Hamm had prepared . . She
also asked for volunteers to
help weed the beds at the
Syracuse Park. .
Hamm,
Barbara Koker, and Moore
volunteered to help.
Moore announced that the
regional b9ard meeting would
be held on Oct. 8 at the
Chester United .Methodist
· Church, with a potluck · at
noon. The county meeting
will be held on Oct. 17 at the
Pomeroy library at 7 p.m.
Hamm read devotions entitled "Flowers" and Barbara
Koker presented "Npw is the
Time" to seed cover crops,
turn compost, divide peonies,
order spring bulbs, harvest
pumpkins, plant hardy evergreens, pull weeds before
going to seed, plant garden
mums, repot house plants,
aerate lawns, water' young
trees and shrubs during dry
periods, and water mums Irequently during the fall so the
roots will get well-established.
· Koker,· club treasurer,
announced that dues have
been sent to the county,
region, and state. Club mem bers signed a get-well card for
Ada Titus, who has not been
feeling well.· Others attending
were Sara Roush, Janet
Theiss, and Evelyn Hollon.
The next meeting will be an
open house at the Chester
Courthouse
at
I
p.m.
Thursday with guest lecturer
Frank Porter speaking on
native wildflowers. The publie is invited to attend.

Community .Calendar
Public meetings

ment at Lockbourne.

Clubs and
organizations

'

Monday, Oct. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m., Meigs County
Courthouse.
Thesday, Oct. 11 .
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
town hall.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30a.m., at office.
Wednesday, Oct. 12
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., conference room of
Meigs
County
Health
Department.
RUTLAND Rutland
vmage Council will meet at
6:30p.m. on council chambers.

School events
Thursday, Oct. 13
RACINE -Send off for
Southern High School Golf
Team, 10 a.m .. school parking lot. The team is competing in the state golf tourna-

Thesday, Oct. 11
RACINE
BethanyDorcas Sunshine Circle will
be held ill 7 p.m. at the
Bethany-Dorcas
United
Methodist Church. Silent
auction will be held. All area
women are invited to attend.
Thursday, Oct. 13
CHESTER ·- Wildwood
Garden Club will have an open
meeting at 1 p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse with Frd.llk Porter
to speak on native wildflowers.
The public is invited.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold its
. monthly stated meeting at7:30
p.m at the hall. Refreshments.

Church events
Monday, Oct. 10
MIDDLEPORT- Revival
services at Hope Baptist
Church in Middleport 7 p.m.

Birthdays
Wednesday, Oct.' 12
TUPPERS PLAINS Dorothy M. Warner will
observe her 89th birthday on
Oct. 12. Cards may be sent to
her at P.O. Box I 32. Tuppers
Plains, 45783.
Thursday, Oct. 13
CHESTER
- Thelma
Hayes will celebrate her 93rd
birthday on Oct. I 3. Cards may
be sent to 4823X S. R. 248,
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

In Celebration of Women
in Business Week
October 17-21st

The

Daily
Sentinel
iD're4edd·

{l!ie ·Women

_.o f

....;·

Monday, . Tuesday
and
Wednesday. Tim Stephens
will be the evangelist.
REEDSVILLE - Revival at
Eden United Brethren Church,
7 p.m. each evening, with Rev.
Charles Martindale officiating.
Special music nightly.
Thursday, Oct. 13
BIDWELL -Revival services will be held 7 p.m. Oct.
13, 14 and 15 at the Popar
Ridge Free Will Bapti st
Church. Harold Flanders of
Buffalo; W.Va. will be speaking and there will be special
singing each night.

.

Meigs County
This special section, publishing October 20th, is an excellent
opportunity for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote
their business and give their tips for success.

GountrY
F.
* Mashed Potatoes.,.
;··

'I

,.,

99

·l'c

* ole -Slaw .
coif

~

•.

228 West-Maia St.
•
~ Pomeroy,'()H

740-992-5432
..,·

. -&gt;

·Not just for women who own their own business, but for all the
women who are the. . back bone of local successful businesses.
'
(Each ad will have the same layout to give everyone equal
opportunity to tell their story.) .

Contact your Dally Sentinel
Representative Today!
Brenda Davis
740--992-2155 Ext. 16

Dave Harris
740-992·2155 Ext. 15

'

�'

.
I

'

J

The Daily Sentinel·

t

The Daily Sentinel

•

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·-'157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

'READER'S

.,

VIEW

Examine
f

Right wingm are Pharisees'

'''\.

.' .
~

'

Dear EdiJor:
A response to the Sept. 30 Weedy letter in which he de(ines
the tenn "ideologue" and suggests that he may be one of
them . Jumping Jupiter' Mercury and Uranus' Goofy and
Pluto' Bob. are you quite certain about that?
I detest the sanctimqnious pharisaic exclusionary hypocrisy
of the religious right and offer a plea for unity. Nevenheless,
the central diYisi,·e question remaineth: Which side hath the
greatest sin°
A close examination of the personal conduct of those on the
right Who pose as champions of morality tells the sad truth.
They don't bear close scrutiny. Suffering from several spiritual diseases of their own, they wear laurels far too heavy for
their brow. Most of those who deplored Slick Willie's conduct
the loudest were as bad if not worse than he.
Bill Bennett likes . to march around thumping his Book of
Yinues and head.for the crap tables. Luck be a lady tonight' .
And lastly, the right-wing television preachers live it up in ·
millionaire style on the contributions from their gullible flock
.and knowingly accept beer money from the right-wing Coors
Foundation to operate their Christian schools and colleges. ·
The next time Bob accuses those of us on the left of wanting to "er dicate morality from .the public square," I would like
for him identify the last right winger to exhibit conduct fit
for the ublic square.
.
s aiphas shouted in the judgment hall: "Behold the eviden e 1 What think ye?''
Jeff Fields
Syracuse

Page.M

OPINION

Monday, October 10, :zoos

A full nelson for Europe
Woot does the prospect of
Turkey joining the European
Union (EU) have tO' do with .
plans .to ~rect a statue commemorating
Nelson
Mandela
in
London 's
Diana
Trafalgar Square~
west
In lllt.lticulti patois, both
are "inclusive" acts. Thi s
means that they introduce
non- We stern elements (in
Turkey 's case, 70-plus mil· Lon d on
Ken
mayor
lion Muslims; in Mandela's Livingstone puts it, a
case, South Africa's anti- ··world square."
apanheid hero) into hisroriMeanwhile, the rest of the
cally Western milieus, such ·:world" (the non-Western
as Europe generally or nations about which· the
London sp.~cifically'. The We st is so assiduously
result is what is currently "inclusive") remain' strikknown
as
"diversity." ingly non-diverse - ethniContrary to definition, how- cally, religiously and culturever, diversity of the multi- ally. So when Livingstone
cultural kind actually means declares that a Mandela stmthat every place b~comes ue in Trafalgar Square
like any other. Or; rather, "would signify the peaceful
every
Western ' place transition " from British
becomes like any other Empire as symbolized by
Western place.
Lord Nelson "to a multiraand
multicultural
For example, when more cial
than a third of London world," what he' s really
schoolchildren speak one of talking about is the British
300 languages other than transition to a multiracial
English at home, and 43 and multicultural London.
percent of New York City
No statue is necessary· for
schoolchildren speak one of conllrmation of this cosmo170 languages other than reality, but Mandela 's likeEnglish at home, both cities ness is probably on its way.
have achieved an indistin- · · Opposition is we&lt;tk, bickerguishable "diversity." No ing only over where (not
longer singularly British or whether) the statue shoulo
singularly American, . they stand and other aesthetic
are interchangeably global. concerns. It seems as if there
Grouping Nelson Mandel a are no British cultural or hiswith !'loratio, Lord Nelson torical imperatives at issue
and several other British here, because there are no
military heroes in Trafalgar British cultural or historical
Square would have a simi- imperatives, period.
tar, if symbolic, effect. No
This new Battle of
longer would Trafalgar Trafalgar is a fitting backSquare conjure up the qui n- drop for what appears to be
!essence of British civiliza- the inevitable inclusion of
tion. It would be, as Turkey into the EU, a politi-

cal move with more than
political consequences. If
approved. Turkey. second in
EU populati.on only to
Germany. would bring its
tens· of millions of Muslims
into largely post-Christian,
secular European society;
with them comes a weighty
Islamic
influence
on
European affairs . This new
demographic mix would
inevitably hasten the transi- ·
tion, as Mr. Livingstone
might put it, of Europe to a
multicultural, multiracial
and - more peninent Islamized continent of
Eurabia.
·
Not that thi s salient point
is ever raised. "Europe can
either decide to become a
global actor or it can fence
itself off as a Christi:Jn
club,"
Turkish
Prime
Mini ster Recep Tayyip
Erdogan recently said, flipping the issue on its head
shortly before the EU voted
to . open membership talks
with Turkey. Particularly in
light of the EU's deliberate
omis~ion

of

"God"

or

"Christianity" in its 439page constitution, this was a
fairly obnoxious comment.
As a matter of fact, Turkey
has long "fenced itself off'
into such Islamic '"clubs" as
the Organization of the
Islamic Conference. It is a
signatory to the Cairo
Declaration cif Human
Rights in Islam, an Islamic
version of the ·United
Nation s'
Universal
·Declaration of Human
Rights that elevates sharia
(Islamic law) over universal
human rights, and declares
that the Muslim community 's role is to "guide"

humanity. That's more than
just clubby.
But· there was another
implication to the Thrkish
leader's words: that Western
identity is merely a tribal
expression of petty insularity. Free will, free conscience
- the evolution of individual liberty - is the gift of
Judea-Christian civilization,
and it is one that Islam has
never accepted. Tragically, it
is one that Westerners may
be throwing away: Britain's
foreign minister, Jack Straw,
was equally dismissive of
"so-called
Europe's
Christian· heritage," while
Britain's Lord Patten, a former EU official, pegged
oppositiqn to Turkish membership t.o "relics of
Christianity" -· a rather
nasty way to belittle natural
concern over a proposed
event one European mt'nister
has compared .to the fall of
the Berton Wall. ''To define
Europe today as though it
were an introverted, cohesive. medieval Christian
community is, I think, terrible," said Lord Patten; "and
it sends not only awful messages outside, but it actually
sends some pretty dubious
messages to the 12 million
or more Muslims who live
within the European Union."
Maybe what he means is
that to define Europe as
European is terrible. Better
to· rework it as one big
~'world square," an "inclusive" place of "diversity,"
where no one can tell Nelson
from Nelson.
(Diana West is a columnist
for The Washington Times.
She can be contacted via
dianawest@verizon.net.)

AMERICAN EVOLUTION ...

LETTERS TO THE
' EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
·addressinl!, issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The ·Daily Sentinel
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(USPs 213-960)

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is 10 be
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Deaths

TJlS Jlomecoming Court

Roy Miller
POMEROY - Roy Miller, 90, of Baum Addition Road,
· Pomeroy, died Sunday, Oct. 9, 2005 at his home. Funeral
arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

For the Record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY -Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Justin Michael Mays, 24,
Parkersburg, W.Va., and Amanda Leigh Northrup, 22, Long
Bottom; Jeremy Edward Hupp, 26, and Kimberly Lynn Sayre,
24, Long Bottom; .and Thomas Matthew Parker, 36, Long
Bottom, and Shannan Jean Lyons, 34, Long Bottom.

Foreclosures
· POMEROY -Actions for foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Centex Home Equity
Co., Lewisville, Tex., against James E. Sellers, Long
Bottom, and others. alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the amount of $56,876.21; Cit Group, Oklahoma
City, Okla .. against Denise D. Qualls, Middleport, and others, alleging default in the amount of $43,780.52; and
Wachovia Bank, West Palm Beach, Fla., against Denise
Smith, Pomeroy, and others, alleging default in the amount
of $41,913.33.
'
.
A foreclosure was granted to Wells Fargo Bank against
Darrell T. Young, and others.

Personal injury
POMEROY -A civil action alleging personal injury
was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
Maxine H. Holliday, Racine, against Robert D. Holliday,
Racine.

Highway Patrol
CARPENTER- A Pomeroy-area woman was injured in a
one-car accident Saturday on County Road 10 (Carpenter
Hill), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported..
·
.
Mindy K. Brinker, 30, 32649 B'ailey Run Road, was transported to O'Bleness Memoria] Hnspital, Athens, by the
Meigs County EMS following the 5:23p.m. crash, the patrol
reported.
.
·
Troopers said Brinker was southbound, 200 feet nonh .of
County Road 7 (Sidehill) when the car she drove went off the
right side of the road and struck an embankment.
The car had, non-functional damage, the repon said.

•••

Brian J. Reed/photo

The Eastern High School Homecoming Court was made up of, t~r, Samantha Parsons and Jered Russell, Shana Snyder and
james Will, Brittni Hensley and Derek Roush, Queen Jessica Hupp and Mark Guess, Hallie Brooks and Brian Castor, Brooke
Parker and Josh Marcinko, Morgan Burt and Jordan Kimes, and Sarah Martindale and. Michael Owen. Crown Bearer and Flower
Girl were Tyson Mills and Mattison Finlaw. .

Grant awarded to develop·history education in Meigs
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENT INEL.COM

POMEROY ~ A $1 million federal grant to the PerryHocking Educational Service
Center will enriCh history
education in Meigs and other
southeastern Ohio schools.
The
· Perry-Hocking
Educational Service Center
will work in conjunction with
Ohio University and the Ohio
Historical Society to take the
lead in creating and conducting what is being called the
THINK History project.
The . project will bring
together 96 teachers from 136

RACINE- Joseph A. Bush, I8, 36186 Ohio 143, Pomeroy,
was cited for failure to control by the patrol following a onecar accident Saturday on Ohio 124 near Racine.
Troopers said Bush was eastbound at8:45 a.m. when the car
CLEVELAND CAP) - An
he drove went off the right side of the road and struck a attorney for the parents who
guardrail. Bush told troopers he swerved to avoid collision kept some of their II specialwith a deer.
needs children in cages at
The car had disabling damage, troopers said.
night released photographs
•••
showing the kids laughing
SAi..EM CENTER -Erin L. Dickinson, 59, 37248 Salem and playing ·in a home full of
School Lot Road, Albany, was cited for failure to control by toys and gifts on holidays.
the patrol following a one-car accident on Com\.ty Road I
Attorney David Sherman
(Salem School Lot).
·
showed more than 20 photos
Troopers said Dickinson wa~ northbound, four-tenths of a to The Plain Dealer to illusmile south of Ohio 143, at 8:40 a.m. when she lost control of trate, he said, how allegations
the car in curve, slid off the left side of the road and struck a of neglect and abuse by his
guardrail post.
clients are unfounded.
· The car had functional damage, troopers said.
Michael and Sharen Gravelle
•••
of Wakeman in Huron County,
PORTLAND -Hoban R. Childress, 46, 45002 Forest Run who are white, adopted black
Road. Pomeroy, was cited for failure to control by the patrol youngsters with ailments such
following a one-car accident Saturday on Lebanon Township as autism; feral alcohol synRoad 139 (Lovett).
drome, HIV and pica. an eating
Troopers said Childress was southbound, three-tenths of a disorder in which children
mile nonh of County Road 55 (Ponland) at 6:24 a.m. when compulsively eat nonfood
the car he drove went off the left side of the road, striking an items such as din and rocks.
embankment and a fence.
Authorities say the couple
The driver attempted to continue on, went off the right side
of the road and came to rest in a ditch, the repon said.
The car had disabling damage, troopers said.

southeastern Ohio school districts for professional development in history education.
THINK History will introduce teachers. to regional
resources such ' as collections
and historic sites that connect
national themes to local history. The project, funded by a
three-year Teaching American
History grant of $993,095. is
designed to increase teachers'
. knowledge. understanding
and appreciation of traditional
American history through
access to and analysis of primary source material.
In the THINK History project, 32 teachers .each year .

will have the opportunity to Society's Teaching American
interact with Ohio University History projects receive a
faculty, OHS curators and membership to the Ohio
archivists and to visit historic Historical Society and are
sites to explore national, state · encouraged to visit Ohio ·
and local history.
·
Historical Society sites for
The school-year programs teaching some of the
will consists of four Saturday American history content to
seminars, four regional semi- their students .
nars at Ohio Historical
THINK History will reach
Society sites and OU region- teachers in the following
al campuses and a research southeustern Ohio counties:
day at the Ohio Historical · Meigs. Athens, Belmont ..
Center in Columbus. An Fairfield, Gallia, Guernsey.
intensive
conteni-based Hocking, Jackson . Lawrence ,
Summer Institute will follow Monroe,
Morgan ,
the seminars in June.
Mu skingum, Noble, Perry,
Teachers participating in Pickaway, Pike, Ross. Scioto,
each of the Ohio Hi storical Vinton and Washington .

Attorney says photos of caged children show they weren't ~bused

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct. I0, the 283rd day of 2005. There are
82 days left in the year. This is Columbus Day in the U.S., as
well as'Thanksgiving Day in Canada.
Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 10, 1845, the U.S.
Naval Academy opened in Annapolis,Md.
.
·
Today'S"Binhdays: Playwright Harold Pinter is 75. Actor Peter
Coyote is 63. Rock singer-musician Cyril Neville (The Neville
Brothers) is 57. Actress Jessica Harper is 56. Singer David Lee
Roth is 50. Country singer Tanya Tucker is 47. Actor Mario
Lopez is 32. Actress Jodi Lyn O'Keefe is 27. Singer Mya is 26.
Thought for Today: "The imperceptible process of age has
a point which, once passed, tannot be retraced. J·knew I had
passed that point and was retting old the day I noticed that all
the cops looked so young.' -· Harry Lewis Golden, American
author, editor and publisher (1903-1981 ).

Monday, October 10, 2005

How will Miers' obit begin?
When I watched Harriet
Miers this week at the press
conference to announGe her
nomination to the Supreme
Court. my first thought was
about her obituary.
Joan
I think a lot about obituarRyan
ies, mostly in regards to people who are still alive. I
often wonder, whfn I read
about or am witness to milestones in their lives,whether " life. But as 1 warch~d Miers
thts. ~til end up .beong thetr 'with President Bush this
deftntng descnptor, . the week, 1 wondered if hers
mevtta~le
. subofdm_ate was the kind of curb-jump.
. clause ·~ theor obot s ltrsl ing to be rooting for.
The Supreme Court is a
sentence. Jane Doe .. who
donated half her $53 ~noll ton high curb. panicularly for
lotte.ry wonnongs • to a someone who has never'
Burhngame anomal shelter, spent a minute as a judge .
dted Wednesday · ... John Though appointing nonDoe.'. who crealed .!he popu- judges is not unprecedented.
tar Creole Jones mystery and 1 cenainly would like to
. series, died Sunday... .
see a woman replace Sandra
Maybe Jane Doe bred Day O'Connor, installing
pnze-w.mnong
poodles Miers in a lifetime job on the
before she .won the lottery. ·Supreme Court strikes me as
Maybe J?hn Doe cracked a bit like granting tenure to
hogh-profol~ murder cases someone who has yet to
before. turnong hos attentron teach a single lesson.
to wntmg. But the. subse-.
Jesse Choper, Boa it Hall
~uent developments on th~tr law professor at University
lives el~owcd these earher of California, Berkeley, disaccomphshments off center agrees. Her inexperience, he
sta&amp;e.
.
.
.
says, could strengthen the
If Harnet Moers os con- court, though the narrowness
firmed, everythmg that has of her career- almost comdi stinguished her so far pletely in Texas and mostly
first woman presrdentof the in corporate law - is a legit- '
Texas Bar Assocoatoon , imate concern.
.
White House counsel- will
"I think it's a plus to have
be bust.ed down to walk-on someone from another walk
pans.
of life. in the profession , a
At age 60, Miers faces the different perspective, a diflovely possibility that the ferent knowledge base," he
most notable chapters in her said. " You want to get the
life are just beginning. a pos- right kind · of person , but
sibility I like to believe there 's been a goodly numcould be true for an y of us ber of justices who have not
-that on any given day our come with judicial experilives could jump the curb ence and did pretty well for
and hurtle off in some new, themselves." One of them
unexpected direction.
was the man · for whom
I love stories of rebirth and Choper served as a law
reinvention . especially when clerk. Earl Warren .
it arrives relatively late in
Still , Miers' background
•

makes her more ofa mystery. Coun for 20 years.
"No matter how bright she
than the usual nominees , no
matter how evasive and is, she's going to need a couclosed-mouth they might be. pie years to get·up to speed,"
We can't know. for example, Joondeph said.
I thought about what
until she already has the job
how she might apply her words might finish the subpersonal values to her legal ordinate clause of the first
decisions. If she believes in sentence of her obit if she is
the Bible's inerrancy, as confirmed.
does the church to which she
"Harriet
Miers,
the
has belonged for 20 years, Supreme Court justice who
might there be instances ... " - What? Helped overwhen she feels compelled to turn Roe vs. Wade? Was
place man's law behind best known for her staunch
God's? Will she .model her- defense of executive authorself after her close friend, ity? Di!tinguished herself
Texas Supreme Court Justice as a common-sense moderNat han Hecht, a strict con- ate and consensus-builder
servative whose writlen dis- on a conservative court?
sent s are ofte11 'laced with Could not overcome her
vicious personal attacks on inexperience and never
his fellow judges? Will her wrote a single memorable
judgment be colored by her decision?
Conservative Republicans
loyalty to Bush and his polilical views?
seem most worried about
"It's nut her lack of judi- Miers' closed slate of a
cial e~perience by itself, but career. Despite Bush's assurher luck of experience ·com- ances that he knows Miers'
bined ·with any other public · heart, conservatives want to
record." said Vic A mar, pro- hear from the nominee herfessor at Hastings Law · self that she \viii uphold their
School in San Francisco. agenda on abortion and stem
She wasn't a law professor, a · cells and gay marriage, B'ut
solicitor general, a senator they have set up the congres- as were other justices sional confinnation process
who vaulted onto the court -as evidenced by Robens'
without being judges first.
hearings - to !!llow nomi"It 's wrong tu call her a nees to evade direct answers
blank slate," Amar said. " It's to any question.
more accurate to call her a
The irony is. in having to
closed slate. It 's not that confirm Miers through a
nobody knows what she useless vetting process they
thinks, but the public does- set up themselves, conservan't."
lives could be .killing their
Brad Joondeph, who own hopes for a right-wing
teaches constitutional law at majority ·on the Supreme
Santa Clara University, isn't Court . ·
as concerned about Miers'
I volunteer to write the
inexperience ·as a judge, but obituary.
her inexperience in grap(Joan Rya11 is a columnist
piing with the questions the for the San Francisco
Supreme Court addresses. Chronicle. Se11d comments
New Chief Justice John to her;, mre of this newspaRoberts, by contrast, litigat- per or se11d her e-mqil at
ed ·cases before the Supreme joartryarl®~fchronicle.com.)

put some of the children in
homemade wooden cages -.
some with alarms - to sleep
and as punishment during the
day. The couple have denied
harming .the children, and no
charges have been filed.
"This case has been very
one-sided from the beginning." Sherman told the
newspaper for a story Sunday.
"There is absolutely no
basis of child abuse or
neglect," Sherman said.
"These a(e happy children."
The children, ages I to 14,
were taken from the Gravelles
last month and placed in foster homes. The state is invesligating the adoptions. including who placed children with
the family, whether rules were
followed and whe.ther Huron
County rt.sponded appropri-

ately once the cages were dis- · Sherman said the children
covered.
were not caged but kept in
Huron County Prosecutor "enclosures" built around
Russ Leffler satd a criminal bunk beds to stop them from
investigation continues . He doing things such as setting
declined comment on the fires, eating batteries and cutfamily photos.
ting themselves.
"It's not my intention to try . Huron County Sheriff Dick
a case in the newspaper," he Sutherland said the phosaid. "I am not engaged in a tographs reflect the conditions
witch hunt."
he saw in the house, about 50
Leffler has said he's waiting miles west of Cleveland. But
for psychological exams of he said some of the sleeping
the children before goin~ to a quarters haq mats rather than
grand jury. The children were mattresses.
not physically abused, but the
Sutherland said a photo
evaluations will determine can't tell the whole story.
whether they suffered emo- "You can't photograph the
tionally, he said.
smell," he said.
The photographs show
Sherman said odors in the
sleeping quarters with mat- house were caused by the
tresses and sensors that would childre.n urinating in heating
sound an alarm if a child vents, which he attributed to
opened the door.
their di sorders.

on behalf of the church 11'\Cmbership. " Most of our members have ties to the church
from PageA1
· via family ·and ·life-long.
attendance. We look forward
"We are thankful for to meeting our new neigh ·
Bruner Land Company's bors who join the community ·
respect for our place of wor- via the purchase of real
ship,"
Church
Board estate from this thoughtful
President Counney Sim said business."

requiring him to register in the
community upon his release.
Ward's wife. Terri. was sentenced last week to five years
. probation for her role in the~
case now under appeal. She
was charged with endangering
children and corrupti'ng another
with drugs, for allegedly prnviding marijuana to the viCtim.

Ward

Church

member of the . selection
committee; Other factors
included in 'the review
process are grade point averfromPageA1
age, class rank and standardtogether to accomplish a ized test scores.
"The Appalachian Scholars
stronger, more highly-travProgram
is a renewed comeled bridge between the
mitment
to widening the
region's communities and
Ohio University's vast educa- doors to an Ohio University
education for students from
tional resources.
Lilly
and
McDavis Appalachia," McDavis said."
explained that for each stu- By creating greater access to
dent selected, the program educational opportunities,
includes a four-year renew- Ohio University can make a
able scholarship, an annual profound ·difference in the
book stipend, and participa- quality of life and economic
tion in an annual leadership future for children . of
.
seminai. Those students also Appalachia."
In addition to Meigs and
will receive funding to attend
an approved professional Gallia Counties, other southconference in their junior· eastern Ohio counties where
years, internship opportuni- students qualify to panicipate
Athens,
Brown,
ties and technology and are
Hocking,
Jackson,
Lawrence,
research training.
Ohio
University alumni will men- Morgan, Muskingum, Noble,
tor students throughout their Perry, Pike, Ross, Scioto,
Vinton and Washington.
academic careers.
,
For more information or
To apply for the program,
to
establish a fund, contact
students must be admitted to
the
Foundation
for
Ohio Un[versity and demonstrate financial need by com- Appalachian Ohio at (740)
pleting the Free Application 753-11 J I or · visit the
website
for Federal Student Aid Foundation's
(FAFSA) by Feb. 15, 2006. www.appalachianohio .org .
The President's Office for The Foundation works with
University Diversity will donors and others to foster
then contact eligible stu- access to opportunity' for the
dents, who should then com- region's citizens through the
plete an application packet power of charitable giving .
including an essay and two It is headquartered on
letters . of recommendation. Nelsonville's historic Public
Eligible students will panici- Square in the heart of
pate in an interview with a Appalachian Ohio.

Scholars

.from Page A1
at the time the offenses were
said to have taken place.
At Ward's sentencing,
Evans classitied Ward as a
sexual predator for life.

HEALTH· FIRST

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•

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Our healthcare professionals are available hy appointment
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Ca ll (740) 592-9642 for:

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Audrius ·Ruksenas, M.D.
Internal Medicine
Margaret Tonkovich, C.N.P.
Family Practice
•

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'

The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA6
Monday, October 10,

ASSOCIATED PRESS"WRITER

1.

I

.
I

)

,I
)!

~I

GUATEMALA CITY Dozens of foreign tourists
fled devastated lakeside
Mayan towns on foot and by
helicopter
Sunday
as
Guatemalan oft1cials said
they would abandon communities buried by lands! ides and
· .declare them mass graveyards.
Villagers who had swarmed
over the vast mudslides with
shovels and axes digging for
hundreds of missing gave up
the effort Sunday, five days
after Hurricane Stan made
landfall on the Gulf of
Mexico coast, bringing torrenti al rains before weakening
to a tropical depression.
More ihan 640 people died
and hundreds more were
m1 ssmg
across
Central
America and southern Mexico
after a week of rains. In hardest-hit Guatemala, 519 bodies
had been recovered and
reburied. Some 338 were list. ed as missing.
· "Panabaj will no longer
exist." said Mayor ·Diego
Esquina; referring to the
Mayan lakeside hamlet in
Guatemala covered by a halfmile-w ide mudflow as much
· as 15 to 20 feet deep. "We are
askine that it be declared a
cemetery. We are tired. We no
longer know where to dig."
Many of the missing apparently will simply be declared

'

dead, and the ground they rest
in declllred hallowed ground.
About 160 bodies have been
recovered in Panabaj and
nearby towns, and most have
been buried in mass graves.
Vice President Eduardo
Stein said steps were being
taken to give towns "legal
permission to declare the
buried areas" as hallowed
ground . .
Attention turned to aiding
thousands of hungry or
injured survivors as helicopters - including U,S.
Blackhawks and Chinooks fanned out across Guatemala
to evacuate the wounded and
bring supplies to more than
I00 communities still cut off
by mudslides and flooding.
On Sunday, as aid workers
reached the most remote
areas, they learned that a
mudslide had buried a storm
shelter in the town of Tacana,
about 12 miles from the
,
.
AP Photo
Mexican border, where about
VIllagers
try
to
get
a
hand
on
the
food
being
distributed
by
the
Guatemalan
Army
in
the
flood100 peopie had taken refuge 1
ing
ravaged
communities
near
puerto
San
Jose,
Escuintla,
110
kilometers
(68
miles)
south
from rains and flooding.
Thirty -seven bodies . have of Guatemala City, in the aftermath of Hurricane Stan Sunday.
been dug from the shelter
Some communities along cotton blouses and broad mated 20 .Scandinavians
since the mudslide hit
Wednesday, and 52 people Guatemala's Pacific coast sashes to dig for mi ssing vic- trapped since mudslides cut
were still missing, said Jorge have been cut off for almost a tims, others hiked around off the area several days ago.
Hernandez of the country's week, and when aid heli- mud-choked roads or boarded About 50 more tourists were
civil defense agency. .
copters finally arrived on government helicopters in the hiking out of the lakeside
Thousands of hungry and 'Sunday. hungry and desperate second day of evacuatio~s town of Panajachel.
"We got about 400 (tourists)
injured survivors mobbed heli- villagers grabbed wildly at from the area around Lake
copters delivering the first · bags of flour, rice and sugar, Atitlan,
outlast night, and were expectfood aid to communities that
As some foreign tourists
Helicopters went to the ing more today," said Solomon
have been cut off from the out- worked shoulder to shoulder nearby town of San Andres Reyes of Guatemala's Tourism
side world for nearly a week. with Mayans in traditional Semetabaj to tly out an esti- Ministry.

In some areas the arrival of
the Guatemalan military only
complicated
matters.
Villagers in Panabaj refused
to allow in the army because .
of memories of a· 1990 massacre there during the country's 36-year civil war.
But U.S. military heli~opters from Joint Task force
Bravo based at Soto Cano Air
Base in Honduras joined the
rescue efforts with a halfdozen Blackhawk helicopters
and one Chinook transport
he Iicopter, running flights
throllgh dense clouds and
heavy fog.
"We' re still in search-andresclle mode," said Army
Maj. Boh Schmidt. "We're in
the saving life and limb
thought process."
The U.S. craft delivered
some medical supplies and
personnel and evacuated children needing medical care.
In El Salvador, authorities
reported 71 deaths from the
rains, after two people where
swept away by flood waters in
San Salvador on Saturday.
The rest of tbe dead were
scattered
throughout
Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa
Rica and southern Mexico.
Mexican President Vicente
fox
visited
devastated
Chiapas state Sunday as
floodwaters began to recede.
"The important thing is that
the worst is over," fox said.
"Now comes the reconstruction. u

Rescuers struggle to reach survivors as quake death toll rises
MUZAFFARABAD,
Pakistan (AP) - Rescuers
struggled to reach remote,
mountainous areas Sunday
after Pakistan's worst-ever
earthquake wiped out entire
villages , buried roads in rubble and knocked out electricity and water supplies. The
death toll stood at 20,000 and
was expected to rise.
In
this
devastated
Himalayan city, wounded
covered by shawls lay in the
'

street, and villagers used
The United Nations said
sledgehammers to break more than 2.5 million people
through the rubble of flat- need shelter after the magnitened schools and homes tude-7.6 earthquake along the
seeking survivors.
· Pakistan-India border. The
The quake collapsed the Office for the Coordination of
city's Islamabad · Public Humanitarian Relief said it
School. Soldiers with white · urgently needed 200,000 wineloth tied around their mouths terized tents.
and noses pulled a small girl's
President Gen.
Pervez
dust-covered body from the Musharraf complained of a
ruins. while the body of a boy shortage of helicopters needed
remained pi nne(! between to ferry in relief workers, food
heavy slabs of concrete.
and medical supplies, and

appealed for inter.national help.
In Washington, President
Bush said eight U.S. military
choppers were being moved
to help in rescue efforts, and
he promised financial assistance. India, which has fought
three wars with Pakistan, also
offered assistance,
did
Israel, which has ·no relations
with the Muslim nation.
"We are handling the worst
disaster in Pakistan's hi story."
chief army spokesman Maj.

as

Gen. Shaukat Sultan said.
The quake was felt across a
wide swath of South Asia from
central Afghanistan to western
Bangladesh. It swayed buildings in the capitals of three
nations. with the damage spanning at least 250 miles from
Jalalahad in Afghanistan to
Sri nagar in northern Indian territory. In Islamabad, a I 0-story
building collapsed, killing at
least 24 people
Late Sunday, helmeted res-

cuers found a survivor after
hearing his cries for help. The
thin man in a blue shirt, looking dazed, emerged on his
own with little help and stood
in front of a crowd of cheering
onlookers. One rescuer patted
his head, and the man waved
and pumped his fist in the air.
Pakist:ln said the death toll
ranged between 20,000 and
30.000. India reported more
than 600 dead, and Afghanistan
said four were killed.

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PageA7

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October to,

2005

Delphi bankruptcy could mean anew era for auto industry' unions
Bv DEE·ANN DURBIN
AP AUTO WRITER

ANN ARBOR. Mich. Delphi Corp.'s bankruptcy
could change the face of the
U.S. auto industry, ratchcting
up the pressure to produce
cheaper auto parts Overseas
and forcing unprecedented
cuts in tinion wages and benefits, industry analysts and
autoworkers said Sunday,
Delphi , the largest U.S, auto
supplier, filed for bankruptcy
Saturday and is expected to
slash jobs and wages and
close many of its 31 U.S.
plants as part of its reorganization. General Motors Corp.,
Delphi's largest customer and
former parent, said it might
have to assume up to $11 billion in retire'ment benefits for
Delphi's union-represented
employees.
.
But the ripple effects won't
end there. Delphi has 500 suppliers of its own who are waiting to see what kind of labor
agreement Delphi negotiates
with the United Auto Workers.
Once a leaner Delphi emerges
from bankruptcy, expected in
2007, its suppliers could face
added pressure to lower their
own costs through wage cuts
or increased use of overseas
labor.
"There's a great deal of concern among auto suppliets
about whether they can
remain profitable or survive
with union contracts," said
Jim Gillette, a supplier analyst
with CSM Worldwide. "If
Delphi's willing to force renegotiation through a bankruptcy filing, I suspect other suppliers would do the same."
Delphi's bankruptcy•. which
is expected to result in plant

closures and layoffs, is one of
the largest in U.S. history. The
Troy-based company has
50,000 U.S. employees.
Union members also are
watchitg closely. Tonyia
Young, a UAW member from
Anderson, Ind., has worked
for auto ~uppl'ier Guide Corp.
since 2002 and worries that
Guide will match changes in
Delphi's contracts because
Delphi has a plant nearby.
Guide, like Delphi, already
has a two-tier wage agreement that allows it to pay
newer hires like Young
around $15 per hour, $8 less
than its older hires.
In a letter sent to UAW
members last week, local
union leaders in Indiana said
Delphi wants to cut hourly
wages from $27to $10-$12,
slash vacation time and make
workers contribute more for
their own health care. The letter warned that cuts under a
bankruptcy judge could be
even worse.
Young said concessions at
supplier plants are part of a
growing pattern that · UAW
members need to confront
during Delphi 's restructuring.
"I , think Delphi workers
probably have no choice but
to strike," she said. "The corporation has filed bankruptcy
and they've kind of drawn the
line in the sand about what
they're willing to do. It seems
to me that any negotiation
between our leadership and
Delphi will not be very pro·
ductive."
But David Cole, chairman
of the Center for Automotive
Research, said the UAW wiil
have to move from a .confrontational mode to one· ·o r
collaboration if it's going to

-- - --- -

AP Photo

Delphi Corp. employees exit·the building Saturday in Flint, Mich. Delphi Corp., the nation's largest auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday, sending shock waves through a U.S. auto industry already weakened by high labor costs and falling market
share. Delphi's bankruptcy, which is expected to result in plant closures and layoffs, is one of the largest in U.S. history. The
company has 50,000 U.S. employees.

senting Delphi suppliers in than it currently has. and comthe bankruptcy proceedings, panies need to increase their
said Delphi could set a new. presence in emerging market s
model for the entire industry such as Asia.
by scaling back its hourly
"North America, Michi~an
work force and its U.S. manu- and Detroit are no longe r
facturing capacity and giving going to be the auto capital&gt;
lower wages and benefits to of the world. The auto capital
the workers that remain .
of the world is going global,"
· Such a change is sorely McTevia said.
needed, McTevia said,
Despite Delphi ',s troubles,
Autos and auto J?arts will Gillette said there's still a
always be made in the future for auto suppliers in the
United States for U.S. cus- U.S.
market.
Japanese,
refineries
hurt
by
Katrina
and
LOS ANGELES (AP) $2.91 a gallon nationwide.
tomers,
he
said,
.but
the
German and Korean automakRetail gas prices rose an aver- the price for midgrade was Rita have been gradually
country
needs
less
capacity
ers
are moving parts operaresuming
production.
age of 10 cents in the past two $3.0 1,. while premium-grade
weeks as Hurricane Rita idled hit $3.11.
All those factors should
.refineries along the Gulf
The average price of gas at help drive down prices soon,
' GR2000/GR21
·coast, squeezing production the pump had fallen an average Lundberg said.
.. • 20 HP, 2-Cylindar
capacity already hurt by 20 cents in the previous survey
"The uptick in price will not
Air-Cooled GasDiina Engme
Hurricane Katrina, according period before Rita slammed last," she said. "If nothing
'# • 21 HP, 3-Cylinder
~ Water~.Coolid Diesel Engine
to a nationwide survey .. into Texas and Louisiana.
interrupts oil supply and if no
'
• All Wheel Drive Traction
released Sunday.
Since
then,
gasoline new disaster affects gasoline
• Performance Pro 4f
, The weighted average price imports have increased and supply, then not only should
or 54" Mower Decks
for all thre.e grades rose to demand for gasoline has been gasoline prices be .falling near• Wrtl·tj'PI PTO Clutch
$2.93 agallon on Oct. 7, com- easing back some. And gas term, but they might continue
pared to the previous survey prices, which are about 92 falling for several weeks,"
two weeks earlier, ·said Trilby cents higher than they were a
Among the stations includ:Lundberg. who publishes the year ago, have caused many ed in the survey, the lowest
.semimonthly
Lundberg consumers to cut back. Crude price for unleaded regular
'Survey of 7.000 gas stations oil prices have also dipped was in Anchorage, Alaska, at
around the ~ountry.
slightly recently.
$2.65 a gallon. The highest
Self-serve regular averaged
Meanwhile, many of the was in Honolulu at $3.38.
survive. With Delphi 's bankruptcy, wages will be set by
the market, not by bargaining.
"The Delphi bankruptcy is a
real watershed point for the
UAW," Cole said. "The UAW
is virtuall:f powerless now:·
James McTevia, a restructuring expert who is repre-

Survey: Retail gas prices gained 10 cents nationwide

tions here so they can supply
their U.S. plan h. he said, and
while the y may not be unionized they often match union
wages.
Suppl ic r; who produce
parts that require a high level
of skill and training, stlc h as
precision pieces for fuel injectors. also face le~:-. competitive pres:-. ure from overseas,
he said.
"We do ha,·e a compet itive
advantage in very cnmplex,
precision cnmponcnts for the
.automobile." he sa id.

Four robotic vehicles.finish $2 million race

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PRIMM, Nev. (AP)- four
robotic · vehicles finished a
Pentagon-sponsored
race
&amp;cross the Mojave desert
Saturday and achieved a technological milestone by conquering steep drop-offs,
obstacles and tunnels over a
rugged 132-mile course without a single human command.
The vehicles, guided by
sophisticated software, gave
scientists hope thar robots
could one day wage battles
without endangering soldiers.
'The impossible has been
achieved," cried Stanford
University's Sebastian Thrun,
after the university 's customized Volkswagen crossed
first. Students cheered, hoist. ing Thrun atop their shoulders.
Also finishing was a con·
verted red Hummer named
HI ghlander and a Hum vee
called
Sandstorm
from
Carnegie Mellon University.
The Stanford robot dubbed
Stanley overtook the topseeded HIghlander at the
I 02-mile mark.
"I'm on ·top of the world."
said Carnegie Mellon robotics
professor William " Red"
Whittaker. who said a
mechanical glitch allowed
Stanley to pass HIghlander.
The sentimental favorite, a
ford Escape Hybrid by students in tvletarie. La.. was the
fourth vehicle to finish
Saturday. The team lost about
a week o( practice and some
lost their homes when
Hurricane Katrina blew into
the Gu lf Coast.
The Pentagon's Defense
Advanced Research Projects
Agency, or DARPA. plans to
award $2 million to the fastest

vehicle to cover the race in and dry.iake beds filled with
less than 10 hours. The tax- overhanging brush and manpayer-funded race was intend- made
obstacles.
The
ed to spur development of m~chines also must traverse a
robots that could be used on narrow 1.3- mile mountain
the battlefield without remote paS~; with a steep drop-off and
controls.
go through three tunnels
The race announcer did not designed to knock out their
immediately declare a winner GPS signals.
because 22 of the 23 robots
This year 's field was more
left the starting line at stag- competitive. Even before
gered times at dawn, racing Saturday's race, many teams
against the clock rather than . tested their vehicles in parts
each other. Stanley finished in of the Southwest desert under
race-like conditions including
less than 7 1/2 hours . ·
Race officials planned to . some that practiced on last
resume the race Sunday so the year's course from Barstow.
sole remaining vehicle, a ,Calif., to Primm.
mammoth six-wheel truck,
The vehicles were equipped
with the latest sensors. lasers,
could compete in daylight.
The
so-called
Grand ·cameras and radar that feed
Challenge race is part of the information
to ·. several
Pentagon's ·effort to cut the 'onboard computers . The
risk of casualties by fulfilling sophisticated
electronics
a congressional mandate to helped vehicles make intellihave a third of all military ge nt decisions such as distinground vehicles unmanned by · guishing a dangerous boulder
2015.
from a tumbleweed and calLast year's much-hyped culating whether a chasm is
inaugural robot race ended too deep to cross.
without a winner when all the
Cornell University's miliself-navigating vehicles broke tary light strike vehicle travdown shortly a{ter leaving the eled about nine miles when it
starting gate.
Carnegie failed to cross a bridge. Team
Mellon's Sandstorm chugged members were trying to figthe farthest at 7 112 miles,
ure out what went wrong.
Of.the 23 robots that com"We're at a loss." said
peted Saturday, 18 vehicles Ephrahim Garcia. a Cornell
failed to navigate the entire mechanical engineer. " It 's' a
132-mile course, but most disappointment."
still managed to beat The military currently has a
Sandstorm's mileage last small fleet . of autonomous
year.
ground vehicles Stationed in
The unmanned vehicles Iraq and Afghanistan . but the
must usc their computer machines arc remotely con brains and sensing devices to trolled by a soldier who usufollow a programmed route ally rides in the same convoy.
and '!Void hitting obstacles The Pentagon wants to elimi ,
that may doom their chances. nate the human factor and use
Vehicles have to drive on self- thinking robQtic vehic les
rough , winding · desert roads to ferry supplies in war zones .

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

NFL scores, Page B2
Martin wins at Kansas, Page B2
MLB playoff news, Page B3
Woods outlasts Daly, Page B8

Monday, October 10, 2005

Inflatable rats' future at labor demonstrations in question
CLEVELAND (AP) -An County, south of Cleveland. rats have become fixtures at
administrative judge's deciCuyahoga County Common union demonstrations. espesion might be poison for the Pleas Judge William Coyne cially those in the construeinflatable rats that labor orga- said the· inflatable rats were lion trades. Ai the Cleveland
nizations have been using for protected speech, "much like International Film Festival
more than a decade to demon- the term Hitler. Gestapo, this spring, protesters used a
strate at job sites employing skunk , scab." ·
rat to demonstrate against a
Dan Shields, left, of Laborers
non-union workers.
"And we all know that a decision · to use nonunion
Union Local #57 4 and John
The judge agreed with busi- scab is a coinmon term by managers instead of union ·
Fulkert of Laborers Union
ness owners that using the rat unions in their disputes with projectionists. A rat ·with a
Local #480 stand in front of
balloons constituted unlawful management," Coyne said.
sign that said "Jobs Not
a giant inflatable rat. Aug. 5,
picketing in two cases involv - The Laborers' Eastern Bush" was part of a protest
2004 as they picket out in
ihg the Laborers ' Eastern Region Organizing Fund has when President Bush spoke at
front of the Marion campus
Region Organizing Fund in appealed the decision in its two the Cleveland Convention
of Ohio State Universit¥
New York.
cases to the National Labor Center last year. .
along with about 15 other
But not every union memThe labor group argued that Relations Board. The board's
picketers. An administrative
the rats are used · to draw general
counsel,
Arthur · ber would mind if ·inflatable
judge in New York has ruled
allention from the public and Rosenfeld, has suggested the rats were no longer used in
that labor groups can't use ·
do not interfere with business ·board believes the rat balloons protests.
inflatable rat balloons to
at the job site.
provoke the same response as
"It gives a bad image of the
demonstrate at job sites that
Some Ohio union members traditional picketing.
trades," . said John Porada,
employ non-union workers.
say they think the rats should · "The court cases reflect that executive vice president of
The balloons have been used
be allowed.
the rat has made its claw the Construction Employers
for decades, and some union
· "We're hoping that people marks felt," · said Harley Association, a group made up
members in Ohio say the
come to . their senses," said Shaiken, a professor special- of more than 600 union conrats should be allowed.
Terry Joyce, secretary-trea- izing in labor at the tractors in northeast Ohio.
AP photo
surer of the Laborers Local University of California at
And.even if the rat is out31 0. which recently displayed · Berkel~.
Jawed , labor organizers say
a · 20-foot rat in downtown
The Operating Engineers
h
·
ld
·
.
Local 150. a union' that cov-. anot er amma1 cou spnng
I
d
be
Cleve an at a garage mg
up to replace it. Some protestrenovated.
ers parts of Illinois, Indiana ers have used a skunk, a goriiAn Ohio judge came to a and Iowa, still has a balloon it
different conclusion from the displayed· in the first known Ia or a cat holding a rat.
•
administrative judge in a use of the inflatable rat. It .--------------___.,.----------~--------------------,
case involving union carpen- was designed by friends of a
ters protesting a Discount union membe·r ·who worked
Drug
Mart
warehouse in the movie industry.
Medina · Since then , the inflatable
expansion
in

fNP .Schedule .
GALLIPaJS - A schedule of upcoiTWig ~
and hi!i1 school va!Siy &amp;pOftng IMM1Is irM:IIvlng

teams from Ganl11., MeigS !'ll'ld Ml'lson counti99 .

Mondav'• games
Volloybell
Minford/Fairland at Gallia Academy1 5 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 5:15p.m.

SOccer
Ohio Valley Christian at South Point, 5 p.m.

lftii1'Y) Qllllll
Volloyball
Federal Hocklng at Southern, 5:55p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Meigs at VInton County, 6 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 5:15p.m.
Souttl Gallia at Coal Grove, 5:30 p.m.
Otio ValleY Christian at Grace Christian,
D

S:~p.m.

··~

*Columbua
64YI51Y

~·
,

Volloybell
Harvlan at South Ga\lia, 5:30 p,m,

=-

Cloudy

Stloweft

Fll'ri"'

Rain

loo

Snow

Weatll• Un&lt;lorgrourd • AP

Columbus day... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of rain and
drizzle in the morning ... Then
a chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the mid
· 60s. North winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Monday night ... Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers in the evening . Lows
in the lower 50s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph in rhe
evening ... Becoming light and
variable. Chance of rain 20
percent. ·
Tuesday •.•,Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 60s. North

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. Joe Paterno's team is back to
where some thought the 78year-old · coach could no
longer take Penn State.
Back on top of the Big Ten
and back in the hunt for a
national title. ·
Michael Robinson and
Derrick William s· ran for
touchdowns · less than three
minutes apart in the second
quarter, and Paul Posluszny
and the Nittany Lions '
defense did the rest in a 17 -I 0
victory over No. 6 Ohio State
on Saturday night.
Win No. 349 for Paterno
was the type of victory some
thought was only in the past
for the second-winningest
coach in major college foot ball. The 16th-ranked Nittany
Lions (6-0, 3-0) hadn't beaten
a team so highly ranked since
knocking off No. 4 Arizona to
start the 1999 season.
·

Thyntdgy'• aaron
Volloybell
Nelsonville·York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5:55p.m.
Waterford at Eil.stern, 6 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5:30 p.m.
Marietta at Galtia ~my. 5:15p.m.
Ohio VBIIey Cl1ristian at Hannan, 6 p.m.

Rio Grande at Mt. Vernon Nazarene. 3:30
COllege Volleyl&gt;all
Mountain State at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
fdday' qomeo

Football
Warren at Gallla AcademY
South Gallia at Hamlin
River Yalley at South Point
Alei&lt;Bnder at Meigs
Eastern a1 Miller
Watertord at Solihern

Aavensv.ood at ~nt Pleasant

Greasier Backley Christian at Hannan
Collage Croas Counly
at Wilmington Invitational, 4:30p.m.

Mrtmr'e A'rMJ
Volleyball
Gallla Acacte,.,. at River Valley, 5:15p.m.
ACSI Regionals, TBA

, '

. .

Socc::er

ACSI Aeglonals, TBA

c-County
CNC Meet at RiVer Valley, 10 a.m.
College SOccer
Rio Grande at Malone, 1 p.m.
Women's Colllgo SOC:cer
Ria Grande at Malone1 TBA
College Volleyblll
UtbanwWalsh at Rio Grande, 11 a.m.

Redwomen lose
pair at home

Now You Can Take Fun
in AWhole New Direction.

wiiJds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows, in the lower
50s. Northeast winds? to 10
mph.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night. •• Mostly
cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Thursday and Thursday
night ... Mostly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 60s. Lows
in the upper 4Gs.
·
Friday ,(
through
Sunday•.• M!)stly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s. Lows
in the lower 50s.

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RJO GRANDE - It was
tough day for the University of
Rio Grande Redwomen volleyball team on Saturday. losing two tough matches to
Tiffin and Ohio Domini'an in
an
American
Mideast
Conference South Division trimatch at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Despite giving great effort,
Rio Grande (4-20, 0-9 AMCS)
could not deliver a victory in
either match: The first contest
saw Tiffin (14-14, 3-5 AMCS)
defeat the Redwomen in th!ee
games, 30-17, 30-18 and 30.15.
Senior ' outside
hitter
Lynnette Kiesling continued
her solid week of play as she
teamed with junior outside hitter Lindsay Uiton to pace the
Redwomen with eigbt kilts
each. Urton added nine digs on
defense.
·
Sophomore Iibera Jodi
Smith was all over the floor
defensively, tallying 29 digs to
lead the team. Junior setter
Jessica Veach posted 27 assists
and 14 digs. Freshman outside/middle hitter Jessica
Rodgers added II digs and fellow rookie Amanda Stevens
had 10 digs.
Rio will get another shot at
Tiflin, October 29, when the
Redwomen travel to. Tiffin for ·
a 2 p.m. match.
Tiffin
lost
to
Ohio
Dominican in the second
Please see Redwomen. B8

Contact Information
Fn- (740) 446·3000

E·mall- sportsCmydailysentlnel .com
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(304)675·1333. ext 19
Ierum@ mydailyreglster.com

•

assists.
Defensively for the Angels.
Close had 12 digs with
Cochran and Leslie adding II
and 10 respectively. Alexis
Geiger tallied three blocks.
Holter had a team-high
nine points in her Lady
Eagles' victory over the Lady
Buckeyes.
Winebrenner
Please see Sweeps. 81

Nittany Lions take a
bite out of Ohio State
"I've been as conservative
as I could in evaluating my
football team," Paterno said.
"I think we're a good football
team. I think we can be better."
On a chilly and damp ni'ght
- just perfect for a slugfest
between two of the Big Ten's
best defenses - Penn State
was out to prove that
Paterno's once powerful program could ·again compete
with the nation's elite after
winning just three conference
games the. past two seasons.
The Ninany Lions did more
than just hold their own
against the Buckeyes (3-2, II) and their vaunted defense,
ted by linebacker A.J. Hawk.
Penn State bested the team
considered the class of the
league and a Rose Bowl contender.
·
When Tamba Hali sacked
Troy Smith, knocked the ball
loose and it was recovered by
Scott Paxson with about a
Please see Buckeyes, 84

AP photo
Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith, right, fumb les the ball
as he is sacked by Penn State defensive tackle Tamba Hall.
left, during .the fourth ' quarter Saturday, in State College,
Pa. Penn State won, 17-10.

Redmen handle
MVNUathome

1G

Re d mEn l

Bv
MARK WiutAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBU~E

---~--- · socce r

C11y1Reglorl
High I loW temps

Ryann Leslie and Sarah
Cochran· scored six and 'five
respectively
for
Gallia
Academy.
In hitting, Winebrenner
paced the winners with five
'kills, Hay man had three,
Brannon two and Holter
added one. Felicia Close led
Gallia Academy with six
kills, her teammate Katie
Taylor helped out with five
'

soccer

64YI4'7Y

l\Y.

12-5 entering the honie
stretch.
In the win over DA, Erin
Weber scored 13 points and
added three kills and blocks
apie,e. Jillian Brannon and
Katie Hayman added five
points followed by four each
from Kelsey Holter and
Darcy Winebrenner. Brittany
Bissell, the assist leader with
nine, chipped in a point.

·

SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

Forecast for MoncifiJ, Oc:t10

,tlltiiiiOuth•
67Yl53Y

TUPPERS PLAINS ·Eastern needed just four
games to sweep a non-league
·volleyball tri-match with
guests Gallia Academy and
Nelsonville- York Saturday
afternoon.
The Lady Eagles beat

Gallia Academy 25-11 , 25-20
and ·posted a 25-23, 25-14
win over Nelsonville-York.
The Blue Angels didn't go
away empty-handed as they
salvaged a 25-23, 25-22 victory over N-Y.
With the pair of wins,
Eastern . upped its overall
record to 17-3 as the final
week of the regular season
begins. Gallia Academy is

Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Teays Valley
Christian, 3:30 p.m.
Women's Colllgo SOC:cor

Local Weather

·~

SHERMAN

Ohio Valley Christian at Grace Christian, 5
p.m.
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Charleston Catholic, 5::30
p.m.
Colllgo SOccer ·
Ria Grande at Cedarville, 7 p.m.

,'.1

'/.. __

BY BRAD

BSHERMANC!:i'MYDA.IL¥1RIBUNE .COM

Marietta at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.

·COLUMBUS (AP)
point lead over Columbus
Republican
Kenneth Mayor Michael Coleman.
Blackwell and Democrat Ted who had the support of 19 .
Strickland are the early lead- percent. Former state Rep.
ers among candidates battling Bryan Flannery was far
for their parties' 2006 guber- behind, with just 4 percent.
Primary elections are
natorial nominations. according to a new poll.
scheduled for May.
.
Blackwell, Ohio's secretary . The poll; conducted by mail
of state, was the choice between Sept. 22 and
among 32 percent of regis- Wednesday, is based on
tered
Republicans
who responses from I ,436 regisresponded to a mail poll by rered voters from across the
The Columbus· Dispatch. state. The margin of error for
Strickland, a U.S. congress- both intraparty matchups is
man from Lisbon, received 4.5 p~rcentage points. .,
the' support of22 percenf of
Blackwell also. held a narDemocrats.
row lead when all voters,
· the
526 regardless · of · party, were
Among
Repilblieans who responded', asked'· to choose ·among' the
Blackwell held a 14-point six
major
candidates.
lead ·over Attorney General However, the top five finis~­
Jim Petro, who had the sup- ers all fell within 5 point&amp; of ,
port of 18 percent. Auditor one another - and the total
Beuy Momgomery was third for each was dwarfed by the
with 16 percent.
. 40 percent of poll participants
Among the 558 Democrats who said they were undecidsurveyed, Strickland held a 3- ed. ·

Clnc:lnnllll
• 6'7YI51Y

Eastern sweep~ tri-match with GAHS, N-Y

SOccer

early leaders in primary races ·

'

MQnday, OctQber 10, 2005

•

Poll: Blackwell, Strickland

Tldii'S Flrecast

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

RIO GRANDE - The ------------~-. University of Rio Grande son.
Redmen soccer team, ranked
Senior mid-fielder John
No. 2 in the latest NAJA Top Carroll picked up the first of
25 rating, scored four goals three assists on the Heywood
in a span of 19 minutes in the goal. Rio added a second
second half to gain a 4-l win goal in the 73rd minute
over
Mount
Vernon when Carroll assisted sopho'
Nazarene on Saturday after- more mid-fielder Ryan
noon at Evan Davis Field.
The two teams played Baxter.
One minute later Rio put
through a steady drizzle the
entire contest and the condi- the game away on a goal
from senior mid-fielder Ben
tions; cut down on the effec- Calion.
That goal · marked
tiveit'ess of both teams.
Carroll's
third assist of the
After a scoreless first half,
Rio Grande (11-0, 3-0 game.
AMCS) began to click and
Mount Vernon Nazarene
finally got on the scoreboard f8~3..2, 2-2 AMCS) scored
in the 67th mmute when 1ts only goal of the game tn
sophomore forward Guy · the 76th mmute when Josh
Heywood rilled a shot past Van Pelt . made go~d on a
Mount Vernon Nazarene penalty ktck past R1o goal.
goalkeeper Jordan Knight. It keeJ?Cr Derek Talcott.
was the fourth goal of the
RIO closed out the sconng
week for Heywood and his Please see Redmen, 88
team-leading I Oth of the sea-

Bowling ,Green
·takes·down Bobcats .
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
- Omar Jacobs threw for
381 yards · and two touchdowns and B.J. Lane ran for
two scores in the second half
to help Bowling Green
defeat Ohio 38-14 on
Saturday.
Charles Sharon had 'rn
receptions for 185 yards and
a touchdown for the Falcons
(3-2, 2-0 Mid-Ameri'can
Conference), who have won
their last four meetings with
the Bobcats. Lane finished
with 93 yards on 17 carries.
· Austen Everson threw for
171 yards with two interceptions and Jordan Meyers
returned a blocked punt 15
yards for a score for Ohio
(2-3 , 1-1 ), which managed

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only 68 yards rushing.
Jacobs found Sharon for a
41-yard TO pass in the third
quarter to give the Falcons a
21 -7 lead. Jacobs has 19
touchdown passes thi s season after leading the nation
with 41 as a sophomore .
Everson's 2-yard TO run
.cut the l~ad to 21-14 but
Please see Bobcats, 84

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

•

Monday, October 10!2005

BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY MARK loNG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Houshmandzadeh
out with band rruury
. .
JACKSONVILLE-, Fla.
{AP) - Bengals receiver
T.J. Houshmandzadeh was
inactive Sunday ·ni¥,ht
· ,against '. the JacksonvJlle
Jaguars because of a hand
injury.
Houshmandzadeh, the
team's
second-leading
receiver behind Chad
Johnson, has 20 catches for
248 yards and a touchdown
Utis season: He injured his
Mnd last week against
lfol!S(!&gt;n, when . he ca11ght
~iglit

passes.for 10~ )(ari!S.

·

photo
Jacksonville Jaguars' Fred Taylor. right. looks for running room
in the fourth quarter as Cincinnati Bengals ·defender Anthony
Mitchell waits to make the tackle Sunday in Jacksonville, Fla.
AP

when Kyle Larson's long punt
was brought back because of
an illegal touching. Wrighster
caught the pass in the flat,
hurdled Deltha O'Neal at the
5 and trotted into the end
zone.
When Cincinnati . ' put
together a . decent ' drive
Johnson turned the _wrong
way on Palmer's deep pass
and couldn't get to iJ. But
Johnson and Palmer got into
it on the sideline, and coach
Marvin Lewis had to separate
them.
Larson's next punt was
blocked, and the Jags got the
b 11
h B
1 33
a
at t e
enga s
·
Scobee's 32-yard tield goal
made it I 0-0.
Scobee followed with the
51-yard field goal that made it
13-0.
Carson and Johnson, having
worked things out, hooked up
three tilnes on the next drive,
including the !~yarder for a
touchdown.
Johnson made good on his
promise of having something
special plarined if he scored
during Cincinnati's lone
appearance in prime time this
season. He beat Rashean
Mathis in the comer of the
end . zone, then performed
CPR on the football. He pretended to give it mouth-tomouth and three chest compressions.

CLEVELAND - On his
way out of Browns Stadium,
quarterback Trent Dilfer
seemed a little embarrassed as
he accepted a few compliments for playing a good
game.
"Yeah, thanks," Dilfer said
with a smile and more than ·a
hint of sarcasm. "1\vo nice
throws."
Two was all Cleveland
needed.
Dilfer connected with wide
receiver Antonio Bryant for
two touchdowns in a 38-second . span late in the fourth
quarter as the Cleveland
Browns rallied io a 20-10 victory over the sputtering
Chtcago Bears.
For nearly 57 minutes, the
Browns (2-2), who were without rookie wide receiver
Brayton Edwards, appeared
headed toward another tough
loss at home. But Dilfer, who
threw two interceptions in the
ftrst half and spent most of the
second preaching patience in
the huddle, carne through in
the clutch. ·
"It was ugly out there,"
Dilfer said. "I'll be the frrst to
admit it. Two plays is all we
made the whole day."
With the Browns trailing
I 0-6, Dilfer, making his IOOth
career start, hit Bryant for a
33-yard 'ID with 3:02left. The
· scoring strike was also the 33year-old Dilfer's IOOth career
TD pass.
"It took me longer to get
there than some guys," he
said.
No. 101 didn't take long at
all.
After Bears rookie quarterback Kyle Orton's fumble was
recovered by Chris Crocker,
Dilfer found Bryant on a similar route in the left comer, a
28-yarder that put the Browns
up by I0 with 2:24 remaining.
For Bryant, the two scoring
catches helped erase some
frustration from a ·loss in
Indianapolis two weeks ago,
when he couldn't haul in a
possible TD pass from Dilfer
10 the fourth quarter.
"I was antsy to do something," Bryant said. "I wanted
to make a play."
For Browns fans, the Dilfer-

BY MIKE HARRIS

BY ALAN ROBINSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

KANSAS CITY, Kan.
Mark Martin bounced back
from· a costly crash with a
dominating victory Sunday ·
at Kansas Speedway, keeping .the veteran racer's slim
championship hopes alive.
But to get the 35th victory
of his career and stay in the
hunt for the Nextel Cup,
Martin had to hold off his
teammates. A lot of them.
AP photo
Martin and teammate Greg Mark Martin waves to the. crowd at Kansas Speedway after
Biffle led Roush Racing's winning the NASCAR Banquet . 400 in Kansas City, Kan.,
sweep of the top three spots, Sunday. Martin drives by Jeff Gordon (24) and Brian Vickers
and Roush cars took four of (25). It was Martin's first win of the season.
the top .five. It was the 46- seventh in the standings, I I 3 time series runner-up tumyear-old Martin's first since points behind Stewart with blitig to ninth place , 138
Dover in June 2004.
six races left in the Chase.
points out of first.
But the last laugh ·might
"It probably puts us back
But Sunday's race was a
belong to Tony Stewart, who close," Martin said. "But it's bit of redemption for Martin . .
finished fourth and extended going to be a lot harder now who took the lead for the
his Chase lead from four than it was going to be if we first time with a two-tire stop
points to 75. It was Stewart's could have finished in the on lap 122 and wound up
15th top 10-finish in the last top I0 at Talladega."
leading three times for 139
16 races.
Martin credited the crew of laps.
Biffle, another of the 10
All five Roush drivers are
drivers in the 10-race Chase, his No. 6 -Ford with putting intheChasefieldandfourof
back in Victory Lane.
passed Stewart for second him
..1 want to win so bad ami them finished in the top I0,
place 30 laps from the end of
with
polewinner · Matt
the 267-\ap Banquet 400 and they believe in me," he said. Ken seth finishing : fifth.
went after Martin , cutting a "They made a winner out of Reigning Cup champion
lead of about 20 car-lengths an old man today.".
Kurt Busch, the fifth Roush
to lessthan half of that.
Martin's crash early in the driver. finished 14th.
But Martin was able to race Oct. 2 at Talladega
Stewart now leads . Ryan
maintain that lead to the end, Superspeedway relegated Newman, who fini sheq 23rd,
leading Biffle and Carl him to a 41st-place fini sh by 75 points. Newman
Edwards to the finish litie. and, worse, cost him valu- trailed by just four points
Martin jumped from ninth to able points, sending the four- heading into Sunday 's race.

Sweeps
from PageBl
added eight and Brannon
seven.
Winebrenner also had four
kills in the win with Brannon
tallying three and two apiece
for Weber and Hayman.
Weber also had four blocks in
the wi~ .r Bissell handejl out
SIX aSSIStS.
.
J
In Gallia Academy's win
over the Athens Countians,
Close had live points, seven
kills and 15 digs in an allaround strong effort. Cochran

.

BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

AP

photo

Cleveland Browns defensive back Chris Crocker (25)
poonces on a fumble by Chicago Beafs quarterback Kyle
Orton (18) in the fourth quarter Sunday in Cleveland. Two
plays later Browns quarterback Trent Diller threw a 28-yard
touchdown pa~s to Antonio Bryant in the Browns' 20-10 win.
to-Bryant hookups salvaged a pick practiced all week, but
dreary and dull afternoon. his arm became swollen fol:
Instead of witnessing another lowing the club's walkthrough ·
loss because of a last-second and he was admitted to the
field goal, controversial cl!ll or Cleveland Clinic.
idiotic play like Dwayne
Orton's 8-yard TD pass to
Rudd's mindless helmet toss Marc Edwards gave the Bears
in 2002, the dedicated fans a I0-6 lead in the third quarter.
went away with smiles.
But Cedric (lenson fumbled
Cleveland ~ust 15-35 at on· the Bears' next poss.ession
home since I
:
and they went three-and-au(
"It's awesome," Browns soon after. Still, Chicago led
offensive tackle Ryan Thcker by four when Adrian Peterson,
said. "It's good for the fans who replaced Jones, ran for 19.
and players. When you win at yards on 3rd-and-19·for a tlrst
home, everything is better. down with 7; 13 left.
Your kids behave better, you
Chicago's drive ·stalled; and
love your wife more and·even a punt appeared to pin the
the food tastes better."
Browns back at the 17. But a
The ~ears ( 1-3) were penalty forced the Bears to
undone by'costly mistakes and kick again, and punter Brad
an offense that couldn't get Maynard failed to get off
much going behind Orton, another good one as the
who went 16-for-26 for 117 Browns took over at the 46yards..
a 29-yard swing.
. Chicago running back
Dilfer took advantage of the
Thomas Jones rushed for 137
yards on 24 carries, but left tield position, hitting tight erid
midway through the fourth Aaron Shea for II yards
quarter ·with an injured right before hi s frrst TD pass to
Bryant. .
kn ee.
.
There was frustration ooz"We couldn't put it away,"
ing from every corner of the Bears coach Lovie Smith said.
Bears' locker room.
"We've got to lind a way to
1
'We have to stop thinking win ~ "
we're a good defense and start
Cleveland's Phil Dawson
stepPing up and do it," line. kicked tield goals of 19 and 44
backer Bnan Urlacher said: yards.
·
"1\vo plays killed us. No
Rookie Robbie Gould,
excuses."
signed by the Bears on
Edwards remained hospital- Saturday ·to replace injured
ized after surgery on Saturday kicker Doug Brien, kicked a
to treat an infection in his right 44-yarder and missed from
arm. The No. 3 overall draft 48.

Martin ·dominates in 'Cup victory Pitt gets Win over Bearcats
..'

also had a solid match with
six points, four kills and 10
digs.
Heather Withee scored ftve
points and handed · out four
assists for the ·Angels with
Taylor adding five helpers.
Geiger had four kills and
blocks
apiece,
Leslie
amassed five kills and Leslie
Niday had seven digs .
Gallia Academy plays in
. another tri-match tonight,
playing host to Minford and ·
Fairland. Eastern returns to
the Tri -Valley Conference
title chase Tuesday when
Trimble pays a visit.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Houston eliminates Braves Jn postseason record 18 innings

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

from there.
The defense's other key
stop came on fourth-and -! at
the Jags 39-yard line with
14:30 remaining.
Rudi
Johnson ran up the middle,
and John Henderson and
Marcus Stroud stuffed him for
no gain. The Jags then drove
26 yards to set up Scobee's
tina! field goal, which tied his
previous career long and the
franchise record. .
The Bengals used two long
passes from Palmer to rookie
Chris Henry to cut the lead to
23-20 with 5:16 remaining :
Palmer hit Henry down the
sideline for a 47-yard gain,
then hit the third-round draft
Pick across the middle two
plays later for a 25 -yard
score .
Aside from the tina! drive,
nearly everything went right
for the Bengals late. Very little ·went right for them early.
Cincinnati fell behind 13-0
before Chad Johnson caught a
14-yard TD pass frorn Palmer.
Cincinnati had a 69-yard punt
nullified by penalty, dropped
an interception, shanked a
punt and had another one
blocked- all in the first half.
The Jaguars had· great tield
possession following the miscues, helping them score a
touchdown and a field goal.
Leflwich found George
Wrighster for a 26-yard.scon:
after gaining about 40 'afds

www.mydailysentinel;com

.

Jaguars .too much for B.engals Browns rally to victory over Bears
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
The Cincinnati Bengals might
want to hold off making any
Super Bowl plans.
Byron Leftwich threw two
touchdowns, Fred Taylor ran
for a season~high 132 yards
and the Jacksonville Jaguars
handed the Bengals their first
loss of the season, 23-20
Sunday night.
Cincinnati started 4-0 for
the first time since 1988 the franchise's last Super
Bowl season - and entered
the game as one of the last
two undefeated teams in the
league.
But the Jaguars took advantage of good tield position
early and had two btg stops
late that left AFC SOLtlh rival
Indianapolis · as the lone
unbeaten.
Josh Scobee kicked three
tield goals, including a 51yarder in the second period
and a 53-yarder with 9:45 to
play that gave the Jaguars (32) a 10-point lead.
Jacksonville's defense held
on from there- barely.
The unit made two huge
·stops that kept Carson Palmer
from engineering.,.a dramatic
fourth-quarter comeback.
Bobby McCray knocked
the ball oUt of Palmer's hand
at the Jacksonville 45-yard
line with I ;28 to play. Akin
Ayodele, who dropped a possible interception the play
before, recovered it.
The Jags ran out the cloc~

Monday, October 10,2005

PITTSBURGH _
Six
games into a season that
couldn't have gone . much
worse for Pitt, new coach
Dave Wannstedt finally lost
h
i~~~~g~~g his players along
the sidelines after Cincinnati
scored its second touchdown
of the
third
quarter,
Wannstedt · must have been
trying to scare the lethargy
out of a team that began the
season ranked No. 23 but,
until Saturday, hadn't beaten
a maJor c~llege opponent.
Somethm~ m~st have ~
worked. Wtth thetr offens~
. not domg much, the Panthers
spectal teams set up o~e
touchdown wtth Gunn s
blocked punt. ~nd .scored on
Darrelle Rev1s ?9-yard )lUnt
return a.s Ptll s~otled
Cmcmnau s first game 10 the
Big East .Conference by winning 38-20.
The victory was' Pitt's frrst
against a major college
opponent - the only previous win was over Division IAA Youngstown State and came after the Panthers
(2-4, 1-1 Big East) were
upset by Ohio University
and Rutgers and outclassed
badly at home by Notre
Dame.
Pitt's offense was lethargic
again fn ·the frrst half - a

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with his receivers and with
getting adequate protection.
He tinished 14-of·32 for 175
yards and, with Pitt trying to
run down the clock in the
fourth quarter, twice lost fumbles as his protection collapsed. .
·
For Cincinnati (2-3, 0-1 ),
an offense I hat was 93rd
nationally in passing efficiency and 99th in scoring was
only slightly more productive
than it was in being held to 19
· ts ·111 'tt s prevtous
·
pom
l wo
games - . a 44-16 loss to
Miami (Ohio) and a 7-3 win
over Western Carolina.
Bradley Glatthaar ran for a
touchdown for the tifth consecutive game, a 4-yaroer
early in the third quarter set
up by Dustin Grutza's 56'
yard pass to Earnest Jackson.
Grutza also threw a 22-yard
scoring pass to · Jackson but,
other than those two completions, completed only seven
other passes.

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season-long problem for a
team that had · one of the ·
nation's best passing offenses
a year ago - until Tyler
Palko hit Greg Lee for a 44yard reception to set up one
of Josh Cununings' three
lield goals. Pitt led 16-0 at
halftime.
Palko also found Lee on a
0
I -yard scoring pass to start
the fourth quarter, after a
defensive game opened up in
the third quarter with each
team s.con'ng twt'ce. An",
u at
the · same time, caused
Wannstedt to open up along
the sidelines.
"We're glad to get the win,
don't get me wrong,"
Wannstedt said. "We'·ve got a
long way to go before we feel
good about ourselves here."
Palko, very productive over
the.second half of last season
with 17 touchdown passes
and two interceptions in his
tina! six games, again had
trouble regularly connecting

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Roger
. HOUSTON
' qemens and the Houston
Astros gave a . whole new
meaning to the word
"longevity." ·
The 43-year-old Rocket
came out of the bullpen to rescue the Astros and Chris
Burke ended the jongest postseason game in baseball history with a home run in the 18th
inning, lifting Houston over
the Atlanta Braves 7-6
Sunday and · into the NL
championship series.
The Braves took a five-run
lead into the eighth, and were
· d
d th' fi
potse to sen
IS ust-round
series back to Atlanta for a
d · ·
G
ectslve arne 5 Monday
Instead,'
Lance
night.
Berkman hit a grand slam in
the eighth and Brad Ausinus
tied Game 4 with a two-out
homer in the ninth barely
beyond Gold Glove center
fielder Andr.uw Jones' outstretched glove.
Then, at 6-all, the Braves
and Astros began the real
endurance test that wound up
lasting 5 hours, 50 minutes.
The previous longest postseason game also occurred · in
Houston - the New York
Mets clinched the 1986 NLCS
with a J6, inning win at the
Astrodome.
With Clemens pitching
three innings in his first relief
appearance since 1984 - . and
this time atoning for a poor
start in Game 2 - the Astros

advanced to play the St. Louis
Cardinals in the NLCS starting Wednesday night at Busch
Stadium.
It will be the tirst · NLCS
rematch since Pittsburgh and
Atlanta played in 1991-92.
Last October, the Cardinals
beat Clemens in Game 7,
denying the Astros their first
World Series appearance.
And it was another early
October exit for the Braves,
who have won an unprece- dented 14 straight division
titles but have just one World
Series crown to show for it.
The Astros eliminated Atlanta
last year.
The Braves wasted an early
grand slam by Adam
LaRoche. Berkman's shot
made this the first postseason
game ever with two slams.
.Burke entered the game in
. the lOth inning as a pi'nchrunner. He came up with one
out .in the 18th against rookie
Joey Devine, and launched a
drive over the left-tield wall.
Burke was mobbed his
teammates at the plate after
only the sixth series-~nding
home run in history, and the
tirst since Aaron Boone sent
the Yankees over Boston in
AP photo
the lith inning of Game 7 in Houston Astros' Chris Burke rounds the bases after hitting the
the 2003 ALCS.
game-winning home run off Atlanta Btttves relief pitcher Joey
Batting just before Burke. Devine in the bottom: of the. 18th in:ning in Game 4 of the
Clemens took a mighty swing Nattonal League Dlvtston Senes Sunday 1n Houston. Houston
· and missed . against Devine , won 7-6 and won the sertes 3 games ,to 1.
"I'm sure proud of the
before . striking out. Clemens sacrifice bunt after a leadoff
has never htt a home run tn
the majors.
walk by Craig Biggio. But guys," Clemen·s said ~ "It's
Clemens first entered the alter another .walk, Morgan been a lot of work for us. How
game as a pinch-hitter in the Ensberg grounded into an 'bout the Iii~?"
bottom of the 15th, and had a inning-ending double play.
Standing next to Clemens,

the 25-year-o\d Burke was pitching on three day, · re.,l,
beaming.
allowed the tlrst two hilters to
"I'm just glad I could do my reach in the eighth and was
part," Burke said. "It was pulled. Biggio reached on a
draining, mentally draining." fielder 's choice grounder and
"It was kind of a microcosm Scott
walked
be fore
of our season," Burke said. Berkman' s grand sl am, an
"Started out slow, finished opposite-field shot into the
strong."
seats in left.
The Astros started off 15-30
Farnsworth managed to pre·
before rallying to claim the serve the lead then . ge tting
wild-card spot, though they Morgan Ensberg on a &lt;:ailed
finished II games behind St. third · strike before Mike
Lamb's tlyball that ri ght fieldLouis in the NL Central. ·
About three hours before er Jeff Francoeur caught on
the game finally ·ended, the warning track. He dtdn 't
Ausmus hit his unlikely have the same success against
homer off Kyle Farnsworth . No. 8 hitter Ausmus an inning
In the eighth, Farnsworth - later.
the latest in a long line of
LaRoche hit a grand slam in
Atlanta relievers to fail in the the third off Astros starter
postseason - gave up the Brandon Backe. who loaded
grand slam to Berkman after the bases after walking two
replacing Tim Hudson.
batters and hitting another.
Ausmus, with just three Jones added a sacrifice tly to
homers in 134 regular-season put the Brave s up 5-0 in the
games, hit a ball that rico' tifth.
cheted off a column in leftBrian McCann , the rookie
cenier tield -just above the 'catcher whose three-run
yellow line signifying a home · homer ciff Cl emens was the
run. Had it hit about a foot big blow in Game 2. put the
more to the left, the ball Braves up 6-1 when he led off
would have still been in play the eighth with a homer.
and Ausmus held to a double. McCann grounded out leadThe Astros thought they had ing off the 17th in a rematch
anotner homer to win it in the against the future Hall of
lOth, but Luke Stott's drive Farner.
down the Ieft-tield line curled
Notes: There were 553 total
just left of the pole. The pitches. Clemens threw . the
crowd was already m a frenzy last 44 of · Houston 's 299
before realizing the ball had pit&lt;:hes .... Nicole Oswalt, the
been called foul TV wife of Astros pitcher and
replays conftrmed that it was. Game 3 winner Roy Oswalt.
Scott grounded out on the sang the national anthem
next pitch.
before Sunday's game and
Atlanta led 6·1 wlien "God Bless America" during
Hudson, the Game
loser the seventh-inning stretch.

Cardinals sweep Padres, a~vance to NL Championship
BY BERNIE WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

first
care.er
postseason
homer as the Cardinals
chasec:J former teammate
SAN DIEGO _ Reggie Wooqy Williams before he
Sanders and the St. Louis could get out of the second
Cardinals seem to be in a inning.
hurry to return to the World
Right-hander Matt Morri s,
Series, and they weren't who's been with
the
about to be slowed by the Cardinals since 1997 and is
San Diego Padres.
their longest-tenured player,
The Cardinals, baseball 's recovered from his late-seabest team in the regular sea- son struggles to hold the
son, brushed aside the Padres hitless for · 4 1-3
Padres just as almost' every- innings. With two on in the
body thought they would, .bottom of the ninth, Jason
winning 7-4 Saturday night lsringhausen struck out
for a three-game ·sweep of Brian Giles and retired Ryan
their first-round playoff Klesko on a comebacker to
series.
earn his I Oth career postsea"We' re just glad we have it son save.
over," Sanders said. "We
Sanders and Eckstein are
have a big series coming up the only Cardinals players
next. We're just . going to with World Series rings.
take a little time off and get Sanders won his with the
ourselves ready."
Arizona Diamondbacks in
The Cardinals made it to 200 I, and Eckstein with the
the World Series last year Angels the following .season.
before flopping in a four"I'm just going to keep
game sweep by the Boston working and go from there,"
Red Sox. St. Louis advances Sanders said.
to the NL championship
San
Diego
was
as
series for the fourth time in mediocre in this series as it
six years, and will have was in ·winning the woeful
·home-field
advantage NL West. The Padres never
against the winner of the · led, and their starting pitchHouston-Atlanta series. The ers lasted only 10 innings,
Astros lead 2-1 - they lost with a 13.50 ERA . San
to St. Louis in seven games Diego (82-80) entered the
in last yea('s NLCS.
playoffs with the worst winSanders drove in two more ning percentage.of a division
runs to set an NL division champion (.506) in a nonseries record with- I0, ·atid strike seas.on. Including this
little David Eckstein hit his series, they finished one

game under .500.
Other than a ninth-inning
rally · by the Padres that fell
short in Game I, this series
was like a bully kicking sand
in the face · of a 98-pound
weakling at the beach.
Sanders, who played for the
Padres in 1999, did the most
damage.
In Game I, he hit a grand
slam off ace Jake Peavy and
finished with an NL division
series-record six RBis, then
·drove in two more runs in
Game 2 ..
Saturday nig'ht, Sanders
stepped in against Williams
with the bases loaded and
two outs in the second, and
lined a 1-1 pitch into left
field for a 5-0 lead.
Four
batters
earlier,
Williams left an 85 mph
pitch over the middle of the
plate and Eckstein - the 5foot-7, 165-pound shortstop
- drove it over the left-field
fence for a two-run homer. It
was Eckstein's 24th career
postseason game . . He had
three hits and a walk.
Williams made four posiseason starts for -St. Louis
last year, including Game I
of the World Series, when he
allowed seven runs and eight
hits over 2 1-3 innings for a
no-decision in an 11-9 loss.
Williams was shaky from
the start of San Diego 's first
home-postseason game since
1998. Eckstein singled to

shallow left-center on the
second. pitch and scored on
Albert Pujols' double to
right-center with one out. ·
The Cardinals batted
around in the second. Morris
was aboard for Eckstein's
homer, then Williams loaded
the bases by allowing a double to Jim Edmonds, intentionally walking Pujols and
hitting Larry Walker with a
pitch on the right knee.
Sanders' double chased the
39-year-old right-hander.
Williams allowed five runs
and six hits in I 2-3 innings,
struck out l wo and walked
two .
Morris held San Diego to
two runs and five hits in six
innings, struck out four and
walked three. He began the
year 10-1 but ended the reg. ular season with a careerhigh
five-game
losing
streak, spanning seven
starts.
St. Louis took a 7-0 lead
on Yadier Moliml's two-run
single in the fifth. All-Star
closer Trevor Hoffman ·made
his first appearance of the
series for the Padres in the
ninth, but San Diego trailed
by three runs.
The Padres finally broke
through against Morris a
naif-inning later. Joe Randa
hit a one-out double and
scored on a single by pinchhitter Eric Young. Mark
Loretta singled in Young.

. AP photo
St. Louis Cardinals centerfielder Jim Edmonds robs San Diego
Padres' Khalil Greene of a hit during the fifth inning of Game 3
of the National League Division Series Saturday in San Diego.

Dave Roberts homered in
the seventh off Brad
Thompson, and Ramon
Hernandez connected in the
eighth
against
Julian
Tavarez.
"It got scary when you have
a good team like that and they
have a momentum shift,"
Sanders said.
Notes: This was the first

Yankees stay alive.in playoffs with win over Angels
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PREss

NEW YORK Derek
Jeter, Mariano Rivera and the
·New York Yankees are still
:arour\d _ by the slimmest of
· :mSI~~~footed catcher Jorge
Posada barely beat the tag for
the go-ahead run on Jeter's
.seventh-inning bouncer, and
:the New York Yankees
;scratched out a 3-2 vic~ory
·Sunday night over the Los
:Angeles Angels to force . a
decisive fifth game tn
California.
Pinch-hitter R~ben Sie.rra
·came through wtth a tymg
:single and, ~ith Yapkee
:Stadium rockmg, R1vera
:retired Vladimir Guerrero for
·the final out to finish off a
two-inning save as the
Yankees evened the best-of.five AL playoff series at two
;games apiece.
· After a rainout Saturday
:postponed Game 4, the teams
. must now tly crqss-country
overni~ht to play Monday tn
Anaheim at 8:15 p.m. EDT.
Both scheduled pitchers were
:already waiting out West -

Game I winner Mike
Mussina and Angels ace
Bartolo Colon .
Thanks to yet another New
York comeback, thi s firstround series is the only one to
5
go the distance in 200 . The
winner Monday faces the
Chicago White Sox in the AL
championship series.
It also means 37-year-old
Bernie Williams has at least
one more game left with the
Yankees. He can become a
free agent after this seasonhis 15th in New York.
Trying to knock New York
out of the playoffs for the second time in four seasons, the
• Angels built a 2-1 series lead
on airtight defense and a deep
bullpen .
This time, both betrayed
them.
With the Yankees trailing 2I, Robinson Cano reached on
an infield single to stait the
seventh and Posada drew a
one-out walk from losing
pitcher Scot Shields.
Sierra, balling for No. 9 hit'ter Bubba Crosby. grounded a
sharp sin'gle to ri ght and Cano
scored standmg up desptte a
strong throw from Guerrero,
leaving runners at the cor-

ners.
pitching on only. three days'
Jeter, at the center of so rest. After a no-decision in
many big moments for the Game 2, he was told Sunday
Yankees, topped a slow morning that he would need
bouncer to third, forcing to step in for scheduled
Chone Figgins to charge the starter Jarrod Washburn,
,
scratched because of a throat
ball.
Figgins, who made a cou- · infection and fever.
pie of outstanding defensive
As a rookie, Lackey started
plays earlier in the series, and won Game 7 of the 2002
bounced a wide throw to the World Series against San
plate, and the slow-footed Francisco on short rest·, and
Posada barely beat .it without his ca'p was sent to the Hall of
a slide. Catcher Bengie Fame.
Molina·argued the call, as did
He delivered another gutsy
Angels
manager
Mike performance before 56,226
Sciascia.
raucous fans .
Winning pitcher AI Leiter
After rain fell all weekend
got Darin Erstad to ground in the Big Apple, Game 4 was
into an inning-ending doub.le played under a clear sky on a
play in the seventh. With the crisp, 61-degree night.
Chacon retired his first nine
season on the line, Rivera got
six outs for his record 34th · bailers, striking out four, and
career postseason save and Guerrero's infield single with
second of the series.
two outs in the founh was the
Acquired from Colorado Angels' first hit.
for a pair of minor league
Lackey had the Yankees off
pitcl]ers in late July, Shawn balance,
too:·
Alex
Chacon was one of the fill-in Rodriguez' s bat slipped out
starters who helped savl! the of his hands and sailed into
Yankees down the stretch - the seats about halfway down
and he delivered again in hi s the left-field line after he
playoff debut.
swung and missed in the
While Chacon went · 10 third. The ri ght-hander held
days between starts, Los New York hitless until
Angel es' John Lackey was Posada's two-out . double in

the fifth.
Chacon finall~. faltered in
the sixth. Juan Rivera drew a
leadoff walk on four pitches
and advanced to second on
Steve Finley's sacrifice.
With two outs, Figgins.
who started tlie series 0-for11, lined an RBI double into
the right-field corner, and
Orlando Cabrera hit the next
pitch to right-center for consecutive doubles and a 2-0
lead.
Sheffield 's two-out RBI
single cut it to 2'1 in the bottom half, and Sciascia handed
the rest. of the game to his
normally steady bullpen .
Shields retired Hideki Matsui
to end the inning.
Lackey lasted'S 2-3 innings
- just as he' did for a nodectsion in Game 2 - and
allowed only · two hits. He
struck out six and walked
four.
Chacon gave up two runs
·)lnd four hits in 6 1-3 innings.
Williams, baseball's career
leader in postseason homers
(22) and RBls (80), received
a standing ovation before
each trip to the plate , with the
crowd chanting " Bernie'
Bernie!" He (lnished 0-for-4.

playoff game in Petco Park's
two-year history, and the first
postseason game in San
Diego since Gan1e 4 of the
1998 World Series, when the
New York Yankees completed
a sweep . . ,. San Diego has lost
seven straight post season
games . ... The Padres al so
were swept by the Cardinals
in the 1996 division series.

Mason CountY
Fair

••fall Prize

-.sash"Siblnlu. October 151h

•••n·&amp;:ooam
Yllh&amp;V8

.'S000Per ncket

304-77~·5696

304-675·4276
Need not be present ro win!

Entertainment

AII·U-Can·Eat Hog Roast
$50.00 Ticket · 1 Admission

and entered in drawings

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Rt. .62 North
Point Pleasant WV

t

�•

'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Edwards hospitalized with arm infection
CLEVELAND (APJ
lt was not •mmedtately has been makmg steady
Bro" ns rook tc wtde recetver known 11 Edwards has a staph progress Edwards m1ssed two
Bra) ion Edwards remamed mfectiOn Crennel sa1d doctors weeks of trammg camp before
hosp!t,Jhzed Sunday followmg don't yet know how long s1gnmg a five-year, $40 mtl·
surgery to treat an mfectlon m Edwards Jrught be s1dehned
han contract m August
h1s nght ann
Edwards d1dn't mention any
The Browns (2-2) w~o had
Edwards pract1ced all week problems w1th h1s arm to a bye last week, have had a
and Y&lt;as not h s ted on the reporters last "eek He wore a h1story of lllJUfles to top draft
team s lnJ ury report
lor protective sleeve over h1 s p1cks
Cleveland s game agrunst the elbow dunng practice
Quarterback Ttm Couch
Ch1cago Bears Browns coach
Edwards, who has yet to mtssed the tina! nme games of
Romeo Crennel smd the first- crack Cleveland's startmg h1s second season w1th a fracround draft p1 ck took part 1~ hneup has mne catches for tured thumb and was plagued
the
team 's
walkthrough 166 yards He scored on an SO- by elbow trouble dunng h1 s
S&lt;tturday
yard TD receptJOn m the lime 111 Cleveland Defensive
Afterward Edwards, who Browns' Sept 18 wm at Green end Courtney Browns mtssed
had cuts and scrapes on h1s Bay, the type of game-break- 33 games over five seasons
arm. noticed that 11 was mg play the club enVISIOned w1th assorted lllJUnes before
swollen a nd showed team doc- h1m making when they select bemg released m March
tors who admitted htm to the ed Edwards With the th1rd
T1ght end Kellen Wmslow
Cleveland Chmc
overall p1ck m Apnl 's draft
J r broke h1s ankle m Week 2 a
Edwards underwent a s urgiThe former M1ch1gan star year ago, and IS s1dellned th1s
cal pro~edure Saturday mght has been hsted as the club's season w1th mJunes sustamed
to have the mfectwn cleaned No 3 rece1ver, but Crennel m an offseason motorcycle
ou t, Crennel smd
sa1d last week that Edwards IllJUry

Bobcats
fromPageBl
Bowhng Green responded
wnh a I 0-play, 78-yard dnve
culmmatmg 11\ a !-yard scormg run by Lane
Nate Fry k1cked a 27-yard

Nlonday,Oktoberto,2oos

www.mydai)ysentinel.com

field goal and Lane had a 22yard touchdown run m the
fourth
quarter
tor
the
Falcons, who fimshed With
31 first downs and 573 yards
of offense
Bowhng Green's Steve
Sanders also had s1x recepllons for 82 yards and a
touchdown He recovered a

Sharon fumble m the e nd
zone m the second quarter to
g1ve the Falcons a 7-0 lead
PJ Pope rushed for 56
yards and a score for the
Falcons, who have won two
s tra~ght smce a 48-20 loss at
Bo1se State Jelam Jordan
also had two mtercept10ns for
the second strm,gh_\.Jl.l!llle

....

•

·Monday, October 10, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Blue Ja~kets edge Chicago
CHICAGO (AP) - Bryan
Berard had cause to celebrate
Ius return to Ch1cago on
Sunday mght
The Columbus delenseman
scored a second-penod goal ,
then set up Jody Shelley's
eventual game-wmner, and
the Blue Jackets held on to
defeat the Blackhawks 3-2 for
thetr first wm of the season
Berard played for Ch1cago
m 2003 04 but h1s contract
"asn t renewed followmg the
conclusiOn of the NHL loc kout He tell no remorse m
he lpmg beat the Blackhawks
who hke the Blue Jackets are
now I 2 0
' It defimtely puts a httle
extra sptce on 11, but It was
JUSt mce to get the first wm •
th a t 's the most 1mportant
thmg , Berard sa1d "It gets u s
on the nght track We have a
btg lour-game road tnp com1ng up"
Jod) Shelley and Jason
Chtmera also scored for
Columbus, wh1ch had JUSt
three goals 111 1ts first two
games Ch1mera had been
acqu1red m a trade from
Phoemx on Saturday He was
.tcqUJred along w1th Cale
Hulse and Mike Rupp for
Geoff Sanderson and T1m
Jackman

~ribune

CLASSIFIED

"Obv1ously the playe• per cut around defenseman Jassen
and
beat
sonnel movement of the last Cullimore
Khab1buhn
on
the
glove
s1de
lew days probably *ave us a
boost." Dems sa1d. Chimmy
Although the Blue Jackets
gave u s a huge boost on h1s JUmped out to an 8-0 shots
first s h1ft sconng a b1g goal advantage at the 8-mmute
and gettmg us gomg there "
m a rk, , ChiCa~o generated
Columbus coach Gerard chances late m the perwd
Gallant also was Impressed by thanks to three power plays
Ch1mera
Both teams had 12 shots after
' He gm here late last mght 20 mmutes
and played h1s first game w1th
Vorob1ev !ted 11 I all with
h1s n~w teammates," Gallant 4 41 left m the first
smd " He "as excited and the
After
Dems
stopped
guys were really happy for Vorob1ev ' s milia! shot from
1
htm
n ght wmg, Tyler Amason fed
'It (the trade) g1ves our
the rebound out from behmd
team a d1fferent outlook, a lot the net to Vdrob1ev, who
b1gger team "
scored from JUSt beyond the
Blackhawks rook1e Pavel
crease
Vorob1ev scored tw1ce for the
Berard gave Columbus a 2second stra1g ht game and
1
lead at 6 24 of the second
N1kola• Khab1buhn made 24
w1th
a screened power-play
saves Khab1buhn admitted
goal
from
the pomt
he' s not yet m the form he
Shelly
made
11 3-1 at 8 50 of
showed
m backstoppmg
Tampa Bay to the Stanley Cup the penod when he drove
unchecked to the net and
1n 20(}4
~
"Of the three games I've popped m a rebound of
playe d so far, I thought I felt Berard's shot from the pomt
Vorob1ev cut It to 3-2 w1th a
the best tomght,' Khab1buhn
power-play
goal at 5 32 of the
sa1d " Obvtously I'm not
thtrd
After
faking Dems to
close to where I want to be "
Chtmera gave the Blue the 1ce, he fired m a high shot
Jackets a 1-0 lead JUSt 4 31 m from the nght c1rcle
Columbus converted one of
A s he reached the Ch1cago
blue hne, Ch1mera took a long four power plays Ch1cago
pass from Manny Malhotra, went 1-for-8

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Offee-llo{,(/4-~
Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Buckeyes
fromPageBl
mmute and a half lett, all that
was left was for Robmson to
take a couple ol knees to kill
the clock
'It felt great," Hah sa1d or
h1s game-chnchmg sack
Now, for the f1rs t lime
s mce '99, Penn State IS a
player m the natwnal title
p1cture
Everyone feels that Penn
State 1s back," sa1d linebacker Dan Connor, who had
12 tackles and a sack "We're
back on the map "
Defen se was the lynchpm
of that ' 99 team w1th lme·
backer LaVar Arrmgton and
defens1ve end
Courtney
Brown prov1dmg the b1g

second half
· I don ' t thmk you can play
any
better
than
he
(Posluszny) played,' Paterno
sa1d
" He s
hke Shane
Conlan"
The Buckeyes had 230
total yards w1th Smtih passmg for 139
"Thmgs weren I c hckm g
for some reason,' Buckc)es
center N1ck Mangold sa1d "It
JUSt d1dn ' t seem hke we
could get two plays strung
together"
Penn State managed only
195 yards
Rob1nson
passed tor 78 and ran lor 52
" I haven t been around tor
much wmnmg, but 1t's defi
nllely a h1ghhght of my
career," Robmson, a fifth year se mor, sa1d of the wm
Ohto State was the highestranked opponent to VIS it State
College su)ce No 2 M1am1

played at Beaver StadiUm m
2001 H1gh-s takes games hke
th1s used to be common at
Penn State, but dunng lour
losmg seasons 111 the past five
years Happy Valley' s been
kmd of a sullen place
W1th the Nlttany Lwn s
back m the rank mgs and a
wm a way from havmg first
place m the B1g Ten all to
themselves the student body
was
re-energized
Some
camped out for a week m
what
was
dubbed
' Paternm 11le" around Beaver
Stadwm for the fu s t comeflfSt·servc scats
The Nlltany L1ons rew31d·
ed thetr patience with a performance worthy of Paterno 's
two champ1onsh1p teams In
return , the bouncmg crowd of
I 09,839 literally had the sta
diUm rockmg up and down
after Pe nn State scored two

TDs m a span of 2 33 to take
a 14 3 lead m the second
quarter
Willi a m s sped 13 yards
w1th a s1mple toss sweep for
a touchdown that gave Penn
State tis lirst lead
Moments later, Calvm
Lowry p1c ked off Smtih 's
pass and returned 11 36 yards
to the Oh1o State 2 On th1rd
and goal
from
the
I
Robmson scored on a keeper
wl(h 7 55 to go m the half
" We knew they •d come out
- wnh the atmosphere of the
game and electnc1ty m the a1r
- they'd come out ready to
play,' sa1d Hawk, who had
nme tackles, three for losses
" And we knew we had to
match that I thmk commg
out and giVIng up that early
touchdown hurt us a little

b!l •

The B uckcyes responded to

the Penn State defense and
the thunderous roars of the
cro"d w11h an 81-yard, 14play dn ve that Smith capped
with a 10-yard TO run an11
reach across the goal hne
wllh 33 seconds left m the
half
But that was Oh1o State's
one and only sustamed dnve
and the Buckeyes dropped to
17· 7 agamst Top 25 teams
under Tressel
The only sconng m the second half was Kevm Kelly's
41 yard field goal early m the
thud, wh1ch made 11 17-10
and "as the last t1me Oh10
State's defense would let the
N lita ny L10ns even threaten
to score
'I thought the defense was
absolutely superb," Paterno
sa1d ''There was a lot of press ure One mistake and 1t's the
enure ball game"

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NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Seated propoaats lor
the Construction of
two (2) doors and the
purchase and Instal·

Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611Phone
1740-992·
2895. A depoan o1 o
dotters
will
bi
required for each HI
of plana and speclll·
cations
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
ehher a bid bond In
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County

lat1on of replacement
wtndows for
the

Racine
Museum/Cross

Mill

Pro]ecl
Racine,
Me1gs County Ohio
will be received by
the Mergs County
CommiSSioners
at
the1r office at the
Courthouse,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attantlon of bidders
Ia called to ott of lhs
r•q¥lfJI'!lltnla contatnad 1n ' tHii bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions
and
Davla·Bacon

tng therein, on the 8th

ance requirements,
various equal oppor
tunlty provisions, and
1tte requirement for a

day

payment bond and
performance bond for
1OOo/o of the contract

Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
unttl
1 00
PM,

certified
check,
caahlera check, or let·

Thursday,

tar of credit upon a

than I 0% ol the bid

price No bidder may
withdraw his bid with·
In thirty (30) days
alter the actual date
oltha opening thereof The Malgo County

amount In favor of the

Commissioners

reserve the right to
re)ect any or all bide.
Mtck
Davenport,
Proatdent,
Melga

October

lowing

solvent bonk In the
amount of not less

replacement

aforesaid
Meigs
County

windows to be pur·

Commissioners Bid

chased and lnotallod
on lhe butldlng (27

Bond shalt be accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the offl·
clat or agent signing
lhe bond Bids shalt
be
sealed
and
marked as Bid for
Racine
Muaeum/Crooa Mill
Project and malted or
dottvored to Malga
County
Commissioners,
Courthouse,

Vinyl

wmdows total} and
the ConstructiOn of
two swmg doors from

material provided on
sUe Specifications
provided 1n bid packet
Speclr•catlons, and
b1d forms may be
secured at the oH1oe

of Meigs County
Commtssloners ,
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

CRITICAL CARE SERVICES
COORDINATOR
Pleasant Vallt::y Husp1tal ts currently
acceptrng resumes for a CniJcal Care

Sm rcc' CnoroJrn.o1or m 1hc ICCU and ER
Dcpanmems A mmrmum of 1hree years
cxperrence m an aculc care sellmg Prev1ous ,
managemcnt!supcrvtsory
expenence
m
elm teal serVICe areas tcqurred Graduale of a
'lhuol uf nursrng Curren! Wesl V1rgm1a
hccnsc BSN preferred
Flcx1ble scheduli ng exce llent sa lary
holtdays health msurance s mg le/fam•ly
plan dental plan , life insurance vacalrOn ,
lung 1cnn dJsab1hty and reuremem
Se nd resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
(304) 675-4340
www pvalley org
AAIEOE

'

County

Commissioners
(10) 5, 10,12

I

Public Notice
Notlca of Elecllon on
Tax Levy In Excesa of
the Ten Mitt Llmltallon
Revised
Coda,
Sections 3501 11 (G).
5705.19,
5705 25
Notice Is hereby
given that In pur·
suance

of

of

November,

2005, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the
benefll of Columbia
township for the purpose
of
Fore
Protecllon Said taK
being a replacement
of a lax of t mill at a
rate not exceeding 1

(ana) milts lor each
one dollar of valua
tlon, which amounts

to ten cents ($0 10)

excess of the ten mtll
limitation, for the
benefll of Lebanon
Township for the pur·
poae of malntalnmg
and operating ceme·
teries Satd tax being
(2) a replacement of
a tax oil mitt at a rate
not exceeding 1 (one)
mills for each one
dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten
cenls ($0.10) for each
one hundred dollars
of valuation for five
(5) years. The potts
for said Election witt
open at 6 30 o clock
8 m and remain operr
unlit 7 30 o clock PM
of aald day By order
of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio John
N lhta Chairperson
Rlla
D
Smllh ,
Director Dated Sept
5 2005
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31

for each one hundred
dollars of valuatton,
for five (5) years The

Polls lor said Election
will open al 6 30
o'clock AM
and
remain open unttl
7·30 o clock PM of
said day
By the
order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio John N
thte, Chairperson
Rita
D
Smith,
Director Dated Sept
5,2005
(10) 10,17, 24 31

a

Resolution of tho
Board of Township
Trustees
of
the
Township
ol
Columbia,
Albany,
Ohio, paoled on the

Notice of Elecllon on
Tax Levy In Excess of
the Ten Mill Llmltatron

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED:

Revised
Code,
Sections 350111 (G)
5705 19,
5705 25
Not1ce Is hereby
given that In pur·
suance
of
a
Resolution ol the
Board of TOYinshrp
Trustees
of the
Township ol Lebanon
Portland,
Ohio,
passed on the 28th
day of May, 2005,
there witt be submittad lo a vote by the
people of said subdl·
vtson at a General
Election to be held In
the Township of
Lebanon Ohio at the
regular places of vot·
mg !herein, on the 8th
day of November,
2005, lhe question of
levying a tax In

regular places of vat·

Wages, various lnaur·

Commissioners or by

27, 2005 and Ihen at
1 15 PM al said
off1ce opened and
read aloud for the fol·

6th day of June, 2005,
there will be submit·
ted to a vote of tho
people of said subdl·
vlsldn at a General
Election to be held In
the township
of
Columbia Ohio, at the

R . l g h t tc.Jo

Public Not1ce

I

PositiOn ava1 able to ass1st
an tndtvtdual With mental retarda
tton who re5tdes m the Me1gs
0 nty area; 35 5 hrs, 11 pm Fn •

Public Not1ce
Notice of Elect1on on
Tax Levy In Excess ol
the Ten Mill Llmltallon
Revised
Code,
Secllons 3501 11 (G)
5705 19,
5705 25
Notice Is hereby
given that In purauance
of
a
Resolullon ot the

7'30 am Mon; sleep-over requtred
Must have high school diploma or
GED, valtd driver's ltcense, three
years good drivmg expenence and
adequate
aUtOmObtle
InSUranCe.
$725/hr Send re~ume to
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. BJ)ll 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or e-matl to· beyecserv@yahoo com.

Board of Township

Trustees
of the
Township ol Rulland,
Rutland,
Ohio
passed on the 6th
day ol June, 2005,
there will be aubmlt·
led to a vole ol tho
people of said subdl·

Deadline for apphcants 10/12/05.
Pre-employment drug testtng
Equal Opportumty Employer

•

Y'J..-.. tlceo:s 1.-. f"'oole....,spa.pers~.-...-&gt;"""",. I&gt;~l•.,.,.c.-E&gt;:rl ~Agl.._t lll:WJ "Y"OO"._..- I&gt;OO"«:»r-

vtsion at a General
Election to be held In
lhe Townshtp of
Rutlqnd Ohio at the
regular places of vol·
ing therem, on the 8th
day ol November
2005, the question of
levying a lax In
&amp;Kcess of the len mill
limitation for the
benefit ol Rutland
Township for the purpose
of
Fire
Protection said tax

being A replacement
ol a tax of 1 mill at a
rate not exceeding 1
(one) mills for each
one dollar of valua
tlon, which amounls
to ten cents ($0 1D)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation
for five (5) years The
potts lor said Etactlon
woll open at 6 30
octock A M and
remam open until
7 30 o'clock PM ol
said day By order ol
the

Board

of

Electrons, of Meigs
County, Ohio John N
1hle, chairperson, Rita
0 Smtih Director,
daled Sept 5, 2005
(10) 10,17, 24 31 '
PubliC NotiCe
Notice of Electron on
Tax Levy m Excess of

the Ten M11t Lrmltallon
Revtsed
Code,
Sections 3501 11 (G),
5705 19,
5705 25
Notice

IS

hereby

given lhat In pur·
suance
of
a
Resolution of the
VIllage Council ol the
VIllage of Racine,
Racine, Ohio, passed
on lhe 20th day of
June 2005 there wilt
be submitted lo a
vote of the people of
sa1d subdivision al a
General Election to
be held In the VIllage
of Racine Ohio, at the
regular placls of vat·
lng thereon, on the 8th
day of Novembar,
2005, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the
benefit ol Racine
VIllage for the purpoae of Current
EKpenses

Said tax

being A replacement
of a tax ol2 mills al a
rate not exceeding 2
(lwo) mills for each

one dollar ot valuation which amounts
to

twenty

Public Not1ce
The annual election

of the Board of
Directors lor the
Meigs
County
Agricultural Society
will be held at the
Secretary a office at
the fairgrounds, on
Monday November 7
2005 The potts wlll be
open from 5 pm to 9
pm on Election Day
The election shall be

by ballot Ballot•
musl be marked with
an • X ' opposite the
name or It w111 not be
counted The casting

of votes for directors
by proxies are not
permiHed
Only Meigs County
residents
holding
membership llckets
tor at teasl 15 deys
before the date ol
election may vote
Members of the socl·
ely must declare their
candidacy for the
office of Director of
lhe Society by filing
with the secretary,
Debbie
Watson,
42455 Woods Road,
Coolville, Ohio 45723,
a petition signed by
10 or more members
of the society . who

are residents of
Meigs Counly al
least 7 deya before
the annual election of
directors Is held
Only regularly noml·
paled
candidates
who have met tho Ill·
lng raqu.remenl will

be eligible lor election as director
(10) 10, 17

Oead'~;,tU'

Dally ln·Column 1 00 P m
Monday·Frlday for Insertion
In Nert Day•• Paper
Swnday ln-Colwmn. 1 00 p.m
•rl•dav For Sunday• Paper

r

\II\

I \II'!

I"

~n

Sunday Display 1 00 p m
ThurSday for Sundays P••otor

2005

• ONLY $1 BO/per person
• Harrah s Cas1no
• Based on DOUBLE occupancy
• No s1ngle occupancy
• Pnvate Jet out of Charleston WV
• Leave at APPROXIMATELY 3 pm
on Fnday
• Return on Sunday at APPRO X
7pm
• Hosted by PVH Community
Relations
• Gladly accept cash checks &amp;
cred1t cards
• Make all checks payable to the
Pleasant Valley Hosptlat
Foundatton
• Call 9304) 675-4340, Ext 1326
For more mtormat1on or to make
reservation s

• LtmJied seats avatlablet Make
Re~rvat to ns Nowt • No refunds

LOOking For
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

$1 .00 for large

~~;;:;:-:~~§§:,:~~~~::=~~~~to
edit ra]Kt cancel any
1
reaponalble tor no more than coat the

ad at eny time Error' mu•t bll reported on the l1n1\ day of publication and
apa~ occupied by the error and onlythe firal •n•ert•on We ehall not be liable
ttl&amp; publlcetlon or om 111lon otan 11dvertlaement Corra&lt;:tlon wm be mada ln lhellr•tavallablfl edition • Boil numb&amp;r
Of

wlll be

i

\II \ I

..., , H\ It I . .,

~

MONF v

ru~

r

I

r

r

2842.

to

are

10 lhe Federal Fair
In violation ollhe

HoMF~
~~

"r

Housing Act cl
law

MoBn EHoMrs
~~

1968 • Thla

""""'..'I

Hou~t.'
~~

IO

~=======~ ~===~===~ ~lri99•6-16•,r8iri 0iiSri&lt;yiiloiiniiie;,S.pr•u~ce ~L•ar•g.-3•bir •iiHiiooiursei iioi.nirooP•o~'"'

GIVEAWAY

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sll'fer and Gold Coins
Proolseta Gold R1ngs Pre1935
US
Currency
SoiHalre Diamonds MT S
Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue Galltpolls 740-446

of

the

any 1o1e of expense that fl!lllulta from
are alway• confidential • Currant rata card appllea • AU reel eetate achtet'lllllmenll
accepla only help wanled ad1 meeting EOE at1ndlrde We will not
I

n

Atlanlic City Getaway
• November 4 2005 to November 6

Graphics 504 for small

Cook needed Apply •n per LPN C1rreer Opportunity Rockspr ngs Rehabllila110n
••NOTICE••
son at the Hohday Inn Make a difference and JOin a Cente,slookrnglorded&lt;eat
Galllpol s No phone calls canng team'
Echomg ed compassionate State
arrow Smart Contac
Meadows IS an MRDO fac1h Testect Nurs tng ASSIStants
please
he Oh10 DiviSIOn o
ty offenng residents out Compelll ve wages health
lnanctal lnslltui!On
rtu at on standing nurs ng care We and dental benefits ~nd
currently
have
an
LPN
401K
a11a
lable
We
take
fftce of Consume
LEA FIN
Sales Manager
even
ng
pos1tlon
a11a1lable
r
de
m our lacll1ty and res•
Halts
BEFORE you ref1
P
36-40 used good concrete
TO
espons1b11ites mclud Wages start at $13 50 per
bloc~s You Haul Away
c:lents
and
need
great
team
a
nee
your home o
ecru1tlng and 1raln1ng
DRIVE
hour
Apply In person players to JOin us II you have
btam
a
loan BEWAR
(740)446-0609
arners customer serv1c
Echomg Meadows 319 W these quahflcallons please
f requests for any tar
nd meeting sales goals I
Union Athens Ohio 45701 apply to Rocksprtngs
dvance payments o
Giveaway (2~ 4 month old
NO&amp;XPERIEI&gt;K:E NECESS.&amp;.RY
ou have a positive atti 740 594 3541
'HJI.l
TIME
ClASSES
Rehab1lttat10n Center 36759 oes or Insurance Cal
female Border Collie Mix
ude
are
a
sell-starter
• COL TRAINI'IO
Aockspnngs
Road
he OHice of Consume
pups Call (740)2561556
• FINANCING ,t,V.&amp;.ILABLE
nd a team player
LPN needed full t1me Pomeroy Oh10 45769
ffa 1rs toll free at 1 866
• JOB PLACEMENT
ould hke to talk to you
ENROUING NOW
Monday Fnday day shth no Extendtcare
Health
78-0003 to learn If th
Mix breed puppies part Lab
ust be dependable an weekends no holidays Serv ces Inc 1s an equal
ortgage broker o
and part COCker Spaniel ell
ave reliable transports Apply at 936 So Rl 160
1oyer I hat ender
opportuOity
emp
s properl
black t7401446-6233
ion Position offers al Ga!l1pohs (740)446 9620
ALUAt(CE
encourages
workplace
lcensed
(This
IS a publl
pany benefits tnclu
TRACTOR TRAILER
d vers1ty MIF ON
TRAINING CENTERS
ng heattn dental VISIOn
Medl H(j)me Health Agency
WYTHEVILLE VA
ndl 11e 1nsurance 40, k Inc seekmg a lullllnl8 AN RocKspnngs Aehab11 l!ai!On
a1d vacation and parson
Pauent care Coordinator for Center prov1des res1dents ~==~~~=~~
Found young Female
1·800-334·1203
I days Please sen
GallipOliS Ohio and sur wtth outstandmg nurs1ng e=
BasseH Hound bedside
alllanct!llctorllal• cum
esume to
rounding area
Dulles care and rehablllfatiOn serv
P.co.1:...~JONM.
PPMS call (304)675 6062 or
WORKERS
NEEDED
Paul
Barker
mclude
establishing
and
1ces
help1ng
them
return
to
a
L
__
..;;SER:;;;,;V;;I05-;.,_.J
Macon County An1ma1 100
Assemble
crafts
Circulation
Manager
ma1
nta1
nmg
open
hnes
of
hfe
ol
Independence
at
She~er
wood Items
Ohlo Valley Publllhlng commun1cat1on w1th area home We currently have
TURNED DOWN ON
To $480/Wk
825 Third Ave
physicians and health care opportunities for AN s at our SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Found Dalmatian Camp
Materials provided
Galll~lla. 0~~ 45631
facilities m the deliVery of ~~:~ty located 1n Pomeroy
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
Conla,Area-(304)67!5 220~ Free Information pkg 24 Hr
- r:.mayd~lyt 1
Home Health Sen11ces We We offer a COMPETITIVE
1 888 582 3345
P
m 1 r·
otter a compett1ve salary
801 -428-4 649
" YARD SALE
- - - - - - - - - ·--~b:;:uo;ne:;:;c;,;•m::;._ _. and benefit package lor full SALARY SCALE and excel ::,.,,._;--....,----..,
__
• An E~cellent way to eam
t me Eo E Please send lent benefit package and a .,r.O
For a lim1ted time make 50% resume 1o Audrey FarleY supportive work enwon
HOMES
money The New Awn
Cal Manlyn 304 882 2645 sallmtJ Avon Call (740)446 Chmcal Manager
352 ment lnteres1ed candidates L__..;FO~R~S,;:A;;I:;:F.-._..1
3358
Second A11enue Galllpolts PLEASE CALL SHELLEY
Are you looking for a change Gazette 1 day Delivery OH 45631
MECUM AT 740 992 6606 112 Pleasant Street 3
m your nursing? Ful11ime Sunday only Route cover .,.,..,.-,.----,.-,.-~ Ex1endtcare
Hea th Bedroom 1 1/2 Baths
Yard Sale 87 Locust St AN needed for growtng lng Gallipolis Ferry Apple Ohto Valley Home Health Serv1c;es Inc 1s an equa Famtly Room Dtmng Room
Octoi:Ser 7th &amp; 8th 9am home
health agency Grovp: Glenwood Crab Inc hmngFuUand PartT1me opportunity employer that Full Basemen1 Storage
4pm
Ae~lble schedul ng compel
AN s Compet1t111e wages encourages
workplace B dg Garage New Central
Call m1leage and benelits lnclud dtversity MIF ON
Air Cond New Windows
1tlve wages wLth benefits Creek &amp; Jerrys Run 1787
Call toll free 1 866 368 (S00) 982 6397 8111
ing health 1nsurance Apply r.::~11""-"::"_ _ _ _"'l ('04)675 4034
Fd S ~
Yard
sateSA n7Nayfirstaturuay
Lea•"'
ScHooLS
• -------Monday
house 1100
.... Message
at 1480 Jackson P1ke past
bowling
alley - - - - - - - - - Home HeBI1h Care of SE Gallipolis or phone tolllr.ee .__ _llmRiriiiiiiriurricnririiONiioJ-' 1995 Doublew1de 3b r 2ba
Something lof' everyone!
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or OhiO is currently hlrmg 1 866 441 1393
wlattac:hed
Garage
Sell Shirley Spears 304- Home
Health Aides - - ' - - - - - - - Concealed Pistol Class Breezeway &amp; Barn 1 56
4
n.-~y~~-~~6~_75:._14_2_9______ _c_o_m_p_•t-lll_v_e_•_•_g_•_•__c_all Ohio Valley Wireless IS Octo ber a 900 am VFW acres Sandhill Ad $72 000
.n »J.EAU rJl'WJIJLI!,. •
seeking enthusiastic sales Mason wv Ph (740)843 (304)895 3068
740 662 1222
BURGER KING
persons that enjoy working 5555 Cell (740 )416 3329
MANACIEMENT
3BR double garage Lll~ock
JnloCis1on
Management
w•th
people 1n the commun G Ill
8 Family yard sale Oct 3 &amp;
OPPORTUNrnES
C
C
.__
utlhly bldg
71 acre
1
4 9 00 to 5 00 Next to
Corp Is currently acceptmg catiOn Industry
Wages a po 11s areer o ""lr" Syracuse new roof $85 000
Easlern High School
applications for Full T1me Include salary plus sales (Careers Close To Home) (
or (
Aldii'IQ mower lawn sweepOayshlft pos1t1ons (Sa 5p) ba'sed commiSSion Please Call Todayl 740 446 4367 7401992 63 17 7401416
2786
8f rsfngerator BuiCk Station
Full Time evenmg pos1110ns call
740 508 0211 to
1 800 214 0452
Wagon
Beauty Shop
and Part Ttme Day pos1 arrange an mtervi8W
~gal pohscareercolegecom
Accred1led
Mcmtler Acc1ed 1 ng , . , . ,
tOn
1 s au.Ill1ed .ppl 1CaniS
Equop snow blade and
co,.~l 1o l......,..fltl8nt Colleges
·~ . .
~
h ld b
I bl
h hi ParamediCS &amp; EMT s ~·"""
blowerand
lotsmuch
of clothes
smotivated
ou
e •ndiVIc:luals
s a e •gw11hY needed Apply at 1354 •, ,, SchMiscaLANEquool
s 12748
S •
ilillii~llijl
items
more baby
170
good commumcat10n sktlls Jackson Pike Gallipolis
1
We seek career Oriented We offer a full benefits pack
1
Big Yard Sale 18 Depot 1ndrviduals who w1Hstrrve to age and 401K No prev1ous Part lime Optometnc
Street Rutland Friday Sat ach eve the best If\ customer experience ts necessary We Asslstan1 needeQ No expe OIRECT TV 3 room Wlfh
Mon and Tuesday New saliStaction and team work are the professional dtffer nence necessary Send Tlvo FREE 145 channels 4 year old Coton1a oo 3
and Used 740 742 2242
11 you have a de&amp;lre to be ence 10 teleservlces and resume to Pont F'leasant only $39 00 per month Ask acres Appro~~: 1 900 sq tt 3
successrulwlthagoaldnven need grealleam players to Eye Clinic 201A 6th Street
BO bedroom 2 baths 2 car
how to gel FREE H
Garage &amp; Tag Sale Dale and growing cdmpany we 101 n us! Interested candt Pomt Pleasan! WV 25550 MAX
and home Bntertaln garage Master bedroom s
Hart Racine October 5th oft health dental ltfe 1nsur dates please calli 877-463- Deadline 10 07-QS
28x24 With a Jacuzzi tub
9 5 Recliner hOliday deco
ment system Call800 523 $120 ooo (740)446 7029
d
54
I
ance prescription car 6247 e11t 24 cr app y PA-·TIME
HEA'TH n75'fi56~r;;;or~d~e::!la~&lt;ls;.;,._ __,
rations loveseat With twm •·
e program paid vaca
•-"··
L
COORDINATOR·RN
for 1100
WANJlll
bed exercise equ1p end ;~~ 401K anc:l manage online WWW JOMislon com
tables coffee tables fig ment apparel Advancement Is there anyone tn the Me1gs County Board of
to Do
area Mental Retardation and .__ _llliiiioiirii--r
urlnas lamps baskets lots from w1thln If you are Inter Pom.roylM"oddle~l
,.....
of 1m1sc bicycles linens ested m Gallipol s OhiO or looking tor full time work? WDeveklopdmentadl HDilsdabllitleHs After Life LapTop Sales &amp;
half of proceeds goes to C" -· 1 wv
1y Are you took•ng for bener ee en san o • ays o
area app than
m1mmum Part time job with full time Servce PC&amp;MacRepa1r&amp; - - - - - - - - Ed son Brace Memonal u8rtVSOn
In
person
the
Burger
King
wa-•?P•rmary
ochedule
•s bene!lts Including hospotal Servce 740 992 1525
Attention!
Scholarship Fund
restaurant located at the
,.,.......
OhiO RLVer Plaza Gallipolis Monday-Fnday Bam 5pm 1z:at10n dental VISIOn and Computer Reparr and Local company offenng NO
Large Yard Sale Monday or mall resume to Burger Must have vallc:l dnvers life Work three week days Troubleshoot Web Design DOWN PAYMENT" pro
Tuesday and Wednesday Kmg 65 Upper Arver Ad license and dependable (8am 4pm) per week wtth Network ng Programmmg grams for you to buy your
Beh 1nd MasoniC Lodge In Gallipolis OH 4563'J. or fax vehtele Must be famthar With students and adults with Bu td New Systems Restore home 1nstead of renting
Racine Clothing house 304 •529-ooss
Me1gsCounty
developmental dsab1ht1es Windows Vrus Removal • 10D% tmanc1ng
hold m1sc tots of plus s•ze - - - - - - - - - send resumes ncludtng lmplementmg a comprehen Cert 1fied Phone#740 992 • Less than perfect credit
and boys
Child Care needed m Appkt references to CLA Box 2 s1ve .heal1h and delegated 2395
accepted
Grove area Prefer Non c/o Pomeroy Daily Sent1nel nurSing program Must be a
• Payment could be the
R8 91St. red Nu's. Cur'enlly Exper1enced CNA With gOOd s ame as ren!
PO Box 729
N.. Haven Hts New Smoktng Individual to come
Locators
Imensed m lh e Sla1e OI References w1lllake ca'fe of Mor1gage
Haven
Yard Sale to my Residence Days
PomeJoy OH 45769
0Ctober6th Thursday 10 hours will vary
Call --'-'---"----- Ohio Preferred qu ahflca Elderly Call lor more dsta Is (740)367 0000
Nice Guns Stone 1ars (304 )576 2915 or (304)688· Library Page Shetve Items !tons expenence In public (304)895 3918
·:....2 :._..:_..:__ _ _ _
straighten
shelves
S5
16
hr
heallh
tence
BeautlfU new 4 bedroom
R
anllque furniture
lots _5_95_5_e_s_k_klr
__a_ve_n___
nurs1ng exper
Grl!w&amp;ld and Wagner old
8 16 hra
per week workmg with children and
pnva1e localton walk n clos
d tC&lt;i'NL!All&amp;L-JAL_ AjieiJIIIlldiJ&amp;!Dlnt Applications
available adults with de'llelopmental r10
fl~
ets master bath garden tub
~~~~:rs lOts of tools an Assistunts lnterv1ews Are Bossard Library 7 Spruce d1sab1lit1es Send resume by
(}ppoKilJNm
skylight 1replace pantry 1111
Now Baing Conducted For Street M F 8-9 Sat 9 S October 12
2005 to .__lllliiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiilirorr thermal Windows 2x6 walls
fancy woodwork 2 34 miles
October 3 and 4 Corner of CNA &amp; Resident AssistantSc~un.::...,HI..:...E:.O:.:.;..E____ MCBMRDO 1310 Carleton
PO Box 307 Make FREE Phone Calls to from Holzer (7 40)388 6228
Tornado Road arn:l Bashan Positions If You Are A local conslructiOn cornnanv1 Street
Canng
Enthuslaat•c
""' " Syracuse Ohio 45779
any phone and make btg (740)441 1424
Road Racine 9AM 5PM
~ bl ~
T.. - now hlnng carpenters
money gtvmg away Free
0 epo;n
.... a e n:r rson nun
Bllellel house 4bdrm 30th
We Want You To Jon Our wlexpertence
only
Position
Openmg
Clinical
Long
Otstance Phone LA FA kitchen OR w th 9
RuHand 1 112 miles N on Team Come On Owr &amp; &lt;74 0)742 2 623 74 0. 41 6 ASSIStants
for
Cns s Servtce VISit
New Lima Rd aometh1ng Check Us Out! You II Be 0599
Stab1Uzat on UM located Ln www urv•Y A"C
v aIIs co m72t550 acres large pare $&amp; deck n
lor everyone Oct 3rd &amp; 4th
and
country
125 000
Glad You Ddl CompetitiVe Local off 1ce (Me1gs Col Gallipolis OH Must be able
(7401742 3142
g?
Pa ld seeking motlva1ed person Io wor.." Bhlft wor".. week www AdCalls com/2 1550
Wages
CNA
Vacallons Pad Meals for s1att position Must pos ends and holidays H1gh
Three Rental Propert1es for
•NOTICE•
Many Other Benefits sesaabiMtytowork.wlthpub- School graduate or GED
Sale Dupex each w11h 3
Ravenswood Care Center lie and learn new ski !Is requ~red Valid Drillers j:JHIO VALLEY PU BLISH SIR lJR 0/R K1lchen bath
lNG CO recommends tha
Community·Sale Gunvllle 1113 Waahlngton Street Basic matn and computer License with the ab1l1ty to be ou do bus10ess W11h peo &amp; porch House 3 B/A UR
Ravenswood
WV
(Across
sklllt
necessary
Send
covered
on
Agency
s
Fleet
Kitchen Bath Conaga 8/R
Ridge Oct 7-8 From Point
le you know and NOT t K1tchen Bath
BlJGbil.
Bridge
At
2
North
resume
to
Dally
Sentinel
nsurance
plan
F1rst
Aid
and
Rente
Pleaaent Rt2 North 10 At87
end money 1hrough thE 1ncome for all three Approx
Laet
Businese
On
Right)
PO
Boll: 729 3 Pomeroy CPR required Posit on
6./mlles Follow si ns
Aelerences Aequlred
Ohio 45769
required direct care of rail until you have mlleStl S1 OOOiper month Puce for
WANIID
clients $6 67 per hour Send ated the offering.
all three $70 000 Locate
Wearelook1ngtoranoutgo- resumes to Manager of
104106 7th Street Potnt
IDBU\'

r

oddedtoyourclassifledods
Borders $3.00/per ad

1m

Publication

r

October 12 &amp; 13, 2005
7amto4pm
Pleasant Valley Hospttat
Matn Lobby Proceeds go to the
PVH

~

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• An ads musl be prepa1d'

Keyword • lnc!ude Complete
DMcrlptmn • Jncludl!l A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include f.'hone Number And Addre. . When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 D•y•

\\\01 \1 I

{p;.

Now you con hove borders and graphics

Display Ads

11

cents

($0 20) fqr each one
hundred dollars of
valuation for five (5)
years The Polls for
said Election wilt
open at 6 30 o'clock
A M and remain open
until 7 30 o,ctock PM
of sa1d day By order
of the Board of
Etecllons, of Meigs
County, Ohio John
N thte, Chairperson
Rota
D.
Smrlh
Director Dated Sept
5,2005
(10) 10, 17, 24,31

Word Ads

liiollt.----------A
,...------··
t:!ll!.
• Stlrt Your Ads With A

I

plays
Now 1ls Posluszny, Halt
and Connor leadmg the way
The Lwns bottled up the
two-way threat Smith and
took Oh10 State' s b1g-play
rece1vers, Ted Gutn Jr and
Santomo Holmes, out of the
game Not until the fmal
dnve d1d e1ther have a catch
over 20 yards
" Well, we got behmd m the
count and allowed them to
pm the1r ears back and they
d1d a good JOb w1th that,"
Ohio State coach Jtm Tressel
satd "When you're behmd
the count agamst a veteran
secondary and a veteran
front, you g1ve them a better
chance"
Posluszny had 14 tackles
and chased down Smith for a
10-yard loss with about five
mmutes left to help keep the
Buckeyes scoreless tn the

- Sentinel -

~~~~~~- n

part time In our busy
chiropractic cllmc Please
hand deliver
resumes
between 9am and 5pm
Tuesday through Thursday
Bactc: To Health Ch ropract c
750 First Avenue GallipoliS
Phone (74P)446 7460
work

-~

Woodland Cen1ers 3086
State Route 160 Ga.ll1po11s
Ohto 45631
Substitute Early Education
Station Preschool Program
Send Resume to 2122
Jefferson Ave pt Pleasant

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

1

All reel estate advertising
In thle newspaper Ia
eub~l to the F•dsr~~l
Fair Houalng Act ol1968
whk:h makeelt Illegal to
advertise any
preference, limitation Of
dlacrlmlnallon basad on
race color religion, aex
famlltal atalus or national
origin or any lnhtnllon to
make any such
preference
limitation Of
discrimination
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements
tor real
esta1e whtch la in
violation 01 the law Our
readers are hereby
informed that 11 11
dwellings advertlal!ld In
this newapaper are
available an en equal
o portunlty bans
Foreclosure 4 sR only
$15.000 For listings call
800 391 5228 ext F254
----~----

Horse lovers parad1se
approx1mately 70 acres
w/new log home 3bf 2ba
16x32 1nground pool 241140
garage 156x66 horse barn
421180 barn wl40~100 shed
281150 barn wlall new fence
Approximate mcome of
$10 000 per month on a
StAt $463000 (740)645
0870
---------

New all brck 2BR 2BA 2
car garage m A1o Grande
Call (740)446 2927 or
(740133 9 036 5
:___2~~:._____
NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 3 LEFT
ASSUME LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
OWNER FINANCING
AVA LABLE
304 755 5566
New toQhome 3Br 2Ba
wl161132 mground pool
24~~:40 garage on approx 1 5
acres $269 000 (740]645
0870

-------,--

No Down Payment Less
0K F
tha.n pertect credit
1ve
mmutes
from
Holzer
Hospital Three Bedrooms
One Bath Level ot Newly
remodeled 740 416 3130

Rodge Supreme 3BR 2BA
vmyl s•dmg sh1ngled roor
and heat pump All kitchen
appliances mcluded Very
N1ce lmmec:late Possess1011
w111 need moved c a11740
44 1 5862 leave message

Pleasanl lyr Lease No
Pets Secur1ty Depos I &amp;
References
reqUired
$450/month (304)675 4030
95

Great Used 1994 14x70 3
Bedroom 2 Bath ncludes
heat pump Call (740)385
2434
New 3 BR Home Only
$189/mo Includes ale dehv
ery and set up (740)3SS
4367

Totally remodeled

N1ce clean 3BR HUD
approved 1n Pt Pit Dep and
2000 Clayton 16xeo 3BA Ref req d No pets
V1nyllsh1ngle $17 500 Oua1l (740)446 9358
Creek Park Call (304)372 Stop rent1ng Buv 4 bedroom
2179 or 1 800 439 2179
hOme $15 000 For llstmgs
2000 16x80 Oakwood 800 391 5228 ex1 t709
Many extras 3BA 2BA t hree Bed Room House for
$26 000 (740)446 2570
Rent W n accept HUD
$475
00
Ca I 740 388
5 Homes under $10 000
W1ll deliver (740)385 767t 0435

N1ce Used 14~~:64 2
Bedroom Only $4995 Call
(740)385 0698
Tra ler ror Sale
2000
Clayton 16 X 70 3 bed
room 2 bath central BJr
porches $23 000 740 992
r,59:;71:'2---::----....,

i

FARMS

Interior!
3 bedroom house centra
hear &amp; a1r washer/dryer
hook up tenced yard stor
age bldg $475 per month
rent (740)441 111t

J"'D Momu: Holltf.S
fl)R

RENT

1 Bedroom house Newly
remodeled 1ns1de &amp; ou1 All
ut \Illes pa1d $450 00 per
month Also Newer 2 bed
room trailer With electnc
central heal &amp; atr $425 00
per month Call 740 243

5611

JoUR SALE
14x70 new carpet JUS!
·---iiiiiiiiiiliiroo_.l remodeled $425 month
$425 depos t (740}367
2002 ConcessiOn Tra ler 7762
(740)446 4060
Double Basket Deep fryer (740)367 7272
,1ub Sty!e Deep Fryer 1or - - ' - - - - - -A/C
Funnel Cakes makes 8 a1 2
bedroom
once
Large Griddle porch/awnmg very mce 1n
Freezer Retr dg AIC 3 Gal1pot1s No pets Call
complete S1nks plus Hand (740)4462003or (740)446
wash Stat on Excellen t 1409
cond1t10n 304 675 4092
-:---c:--:--&amp;c-:S--,W
-,---,h--,38r Aefndg adlove as er
1.AYrs &amp;
&amp; Dryer rnc ud
(304)576
ACRF.AGE
2934

9 112 acres With 28x32 barn
5 acres w th (2) tra1ter hook
u s Call 740 256 1922
RIAl Eh-rm

Beautiful rve r v ew m
Kanauga Ideal tor 1 2 peo
pie No pets please
ApphCfiiiOns be1ng taken
Call (740)441 0181

WANTFJI

For rent 2 bedroom mob le
home at 402 Po ecat Ad
Reai·Estate Wanted Local $425/month S425/deposlt
person look ng for a horne to relerence
requ1red
buy A cash Me1gs or (740)446 4107
Galha No double w1de or
lmmacu ate 2BR 2 bath
modular 740 416 3130
mob1le home for rent 1n the
IH \ I \I '-1
country
$400/mon1h
(6 14)595 7773 or (600)796
4666
HtiUSP.S

Mobile home s1tes n
Country Homes Shade
OAKWOOD
HOMES OF
TRO wv
2
Bedroom
Home $130mo (740)385 4019
s~!ERSTORE
$375/month References &amp; N1ce 2 br 2 bath wtappiJ
OFFERING CLAYTON
Oepos1t reqwed (304)675 ances &amp; new carpet $375
FLEETWOOD GI LES MHE 5576
plus ut1ht1es 3 br 2 bath
oc
- - - - - - - - - garden
tub wid hOokup
AND OAKW 0
01 3 bedroom house also $450 plus ut ht•es &amp; sec:t1nty
LOWEST PRICES BEST 2Bus1ness/olfiQe
space ph
SERVICE GUARANTEED 740 416 5547 (740)992 (740)992 7680 or 740 416
3311cell
DRIVE A UTILE SAVE A 3702
LOT
APAR'I'IIF ~IS
___3_0_4_7_55_ 56_6_5_ _ 3 bedroom house for rent 3
fl)K RFNI
Three Bedmom Two bath a.cres on nver n1ce house
Wllh two large Porches well dock tor boats $1 000
mamtalned Home Heat month $1 000 de pos1t 1 and 2 bedroom apart
Pump ( ~04)862 3346
(740)367 ns2 (740)446 ments lurn1shecl and unfur
mshed secunty depos t
4060 (740)367 7272
requ red no pets 740 992
Two Houses One w1th full
s•ze basemen! &amp; 3 ca• 3 Bedroom house for sell 2218
garage Garage has 1 stall Will rent month to month unl1l - - -- ---,.-:-'
w th mechan c pit Other sold $485 mo (740)446 1 bedroom apartment by
Wat Mart n Gall pols
house Rental hOuse w1th 4543
S42:J/month ut h11es nclud
large deck All na1ural gas
central a.lr Approll 5 acres 5' rooms &amp; bath stove &amp; eel $150/depOSit (740}245
All cleared With while pine &amp; refngerator no pets 50 5555
blue spruce p1nes Plus 2 out Oltve St $350 month 18R W1D hook-up electr.c or
(7 40)446 3945
bu1ld1ngs
All $135 000
gas no pets $290 plus
740-378 6325
depos t
(740)44t 1184
Anenhonl
l'ell.-~--~--., Local company alter ng NO (740\441 0194
MOBILE Ho•r~
~
DOWN PAYMENT pro
fOR SALE
Bedroom apr S295 00 per
grams for you to buy your 2month
pius ut1 I es plus
home mstead of renting
deposit and references
1971 12x65 Red man 3BA • 100% financing
Third Street
1 bath $2 000 (740)366 • Less tha[l per1ect cred1t requ red
Racme 740 247 4292
8449
accepted
* Payment could be the 2 bedroom 1 bath water
1996 doublew1de 24x52 on same as rent
pad $350 month $350
112 acre 3BR 2 bath large Mortgage
Locato1s securtly depos1t
Call
LA new carpeVhnoleum (740)367 0000
(740)446 3481
new 50 yr old roof 3 large :____:__ _ _ __ ,.-~ C:c:'--------,
storage bu1tdmg Too many For rent 1 bedroom 1 bath 2BA garage apt
10
amen1t1es lo hs1 Must see to tully renovated all appll Galhpohs WD hookup wm
S5001monlh dow AC no pets Ref &amp;
-m~~~ appreciate Located m ances
after 7 00 pm
Fa.~rfand or Galhe Co school $500 depos t Call (7401446 depas1t (740)446 2143
d stnct $97 500 (740)256 348 1
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
NEW 3 BR OM S1299
1426
House
tor
Rant
P1
Pleasant
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE I
DOWN
2000 14X70 Oakwood 3bd $375 (304)675 5540 or Townhouse apartments
$229 00 MONTH
2ba CIA can rent tot or (304 )675 4024 ask for and/or smal houses FOR
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
move (740)388 8513 (days) Nar'lcy Homestead Realty RENT Cal (740)441 1111
HOMES
Broker
tor appltcaM., &amp; ntormat1on
NITRO wv 304 755 5885 (740)388 8017 (e11enlngs)
FllRRfNI

�I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

r

Iro

~~s

H~~j)

3 &amp; 2 BR apts_ Close to
Holzer
hospital
W/0
hookups,
waterfsewer
included .
Startmg
at
$450/ month ,
deposit
required . No pets. (740)441·
1184. (740)441-0194

Moving sale· Washers $95:
dryers $95; GE elec!rlc
range$ t 25; Frigidaire refrig ·
erator almond 1n color $150;
Kenmore upright freezer
$175: chest freezer $175;
couch $75; table &amp; cha1rs
$100. table &amp; chairs $40
3 rooms arid bath. All utilities
Skaggs Appliances
paid. Downsta1rs. no pets.
as of Oct 1
$450fmo. 46 Olive St.
1216 Eastern Ave .
(740)446-3945.
(740 )446' 7398 ·
Apartment available • now
Riverbend Apls . New Haven
WV. No~ accepting applications for Hud-Subsidlzed.
one Bedroom Apts . U!llities
incl uded Based on 30% ot
adju s ted Income .
c ·all
(304 )882·3 121 available for
Senior and Disabled People ..
E.H,O

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale, '
re-condiiiOned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. relrigerators , gas af1d electric
ranges. air conditioners. and
wringer washers Will ' do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

FARM

~

Phillip
Alder

Galfre $1 ,800, 4FT Drum
Mower {304)674-0007

•Any Style

·Any Size
'Custom Built to lil your

'FREE Estimates
740-596-~09

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

AlJIUol

FOR SALE

copdilion, runs great Asking
090.

(7401388-

' 140-992·3673

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
OCT. 8,2005
9:00 AM·12:00

fleece panels &amp; I 00%
cotton 45 "
for the guilts.

Underground. civPI
war &amp; gran ni e
feed sai:k!
Come .\'1'e us!

0140.
1996 Ni ssan Sentra 135,000
miles, 2 owners. good Condition, $2,800 firm . (740)388·

Middleport Nor!h Fourth
Avenue, 2 room efficiency,
no pels. Deposit &amp; previo us
rental' references. utilities
paid 740-992·0165
New 28R apts. in town. All
electric, water/sewer/trash
included, Ci A, $"525 rent
plus deposit
No pets
(740 )441- 1184, (740)441 0194

Racine, OH

To l.lst!

740-949- 1183

· Rolert L,~~""' II

740-985-4372

idrio "'"''
C~Jrr

1'&gt;111• l•M!r
Co-O•m

mrwr~ .~

udSPtl'ltlf!

miSt~Tmf!

1\'~~m E. Horns~~\

lu.\mHul'lll

Si11 F&lt;ml

CMhlltl'

lllll~n-{lu~

-

L&lt;&gt;'!.H ...I Jr.

CG-Otarr

""""Fn .

Ua!irdfnml

.l«ma~

m/111,

HOLZER_. CLINIC

It's 1he Auto/Home Discount with special
reduced rates if both car and home are
insured with Stale Auto. Find out how
much your savings _can be.
The WisermmAgt=ncy.'lnc. ~"

www. holze rclinic. com

~...~

-451 Sccm;d 1\vcnu'?

P.O. Box . 59
.
,,..,..,..,.;,..,
Ga! lipll ll s. OH 4.'i(,J I -03.'iiJ - " "

•

Ph: H(){)-.\ 92-! 209 11r 7411- 446 -:~Ml
www. w iscmanagcncy.eum

OF StiO~TAG~S,
lr.JT AT LeAST

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. owner. Ronnie Jones

Tti~~E'S ~NOIJGtf
rLAM~ TO

Free Eslimates

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

GO

Owner: Jeff Stethem

A~OIJND•

POWER WASHING
(Comml!ri:ial and Re5identi~l)
Mobile Hom es, Hou ses, Log Hom es, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, AIIJminum brightening.
..
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Tru cking Compames,

IT'S OFFICIAI.LY AUTUMN !!
LUREEN .JENl&lt;S DYED HER
HAIR

(Commercial t!fld Re5identi al)
Mowin$, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraytng of fence lines, l eaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting a.nd mulching.

BRIGHT RED !!

r--..-1

condition
$15,900.
(740)446-61 57 atter6pm.

Block, brick, sewer ·pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude 2004 F-150 Larial crew cab.
Winters , Rio Grande, OH black with ct1rome, 4x4.
Downtown Oflice Space- 5 Cal! 7 40-245-5121.
le~ther, Tonedau cover, low
m1 es, oacle , eJftra c1ean,
room SUite S650fmo; 1 room
too much to list. $28,000.
office- $225/mo. , 2 room
DAVIDSON METAL
Security
suite $250/mo
(614)595-7773 or 1-800ROOFING
deposit requi red_ You pay
796·4666.
"18 Colors
utilities_All spaces very nice.
"30yr. warranty in wriltng
99 Ford F-350 XL.T, 4x4, 7.3
Elevator. Call (740}446-3644
·professionall,nstal.latiori
liter power stroke diesel,
for appointmeht.
• Free Estimates
speed, manual transmisFor Leas"' Office or
740-596·2909
sion , regula r cob, loaded
wilh all op1ions, gooseneck
spaces in very good condihitch, reese hitch, alum.
lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
PE:Js
rims, alum. toolbox, exhaust
Appro:o; t 600 sq. 11. each. 1
FUR SALE
brak&amp;S on mo tor, to many
e p · e ·--iiiii.iiiiiliio-r
Or 2 ba1hs L
· eas
nc
·
extra s to list. 100,000 miles.
·
,. 1 1
nago tao 8 0 encourage 'AKC
Regtstered
l ab excellenl sha·p e , $17 ,000,
Call
new
bus'·ness ·
Pupp ies
Chocolate &amp; {74'0 )591·89?5
(740)446-4425
(740)446· ' Bla~k .
First
Shots
&amp; ~~,;_-~~~-~
3936.
Wormed , Parents on _Sile
VANS
$200 each (3041578-2222
OR ALE ·
Gallipolis Re1aii/Office build·
~
lnQ. beautiiiJI country set- -=--:::--::,.--.,---:-:-:.
- · hed); AKC Registered Lab 's 1997 Plymouth Grand
ling:
4,000 sq.tt. 11m1s
heat and water inclUded.$ Yellow &amp; BlacK (304)675· Voyager. Wh ite 2 sl. drs..
negotiable; (740)367-7435
76 5 2
goo d con d ., run S good .
$3,500 oao. call (7401441·
\II IU II \\Ht-..1
-GKC Registe red Golden 0712.

fOR RENT

1 1

W21FEf%..

r

F

THE BORN LOSER
I ·~e. GOT Tf.UZ.E£ 7'1
CL1 ENTS ON HOLD!

t&gt;Ot-&lt;'t WORR'&lt;, '"'~

HJ.\1&gt;.\':':&gt; Tf\E'. \Dt.P-., "'I
TI-\Of:lo\1'-PPLE?

CI-\\EF - I

P&lt;..~

DOIKG SOI&gt;\t:.\1-\ING.!

GET 5U~'( - DO
501/f.T1-\ING J

95 Kawasaki Lakota 300 CC
ATV. low hours, gun rElCk..
Excellent condiUon. $2000.
740-992·7557

r

CAMPERS &amp;
MaroR HoMES

.,

·-iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiiiorl
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Loca l references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
0870, Rogers
Waterproof ing.

Basement

L.,.;;,.iiiO:Oillll--,.1

Side Freezer &amp; Refrtgetor,
;iiiE'iifiiAiiBiii.fli
liio_.J
General Electnc- Range a
02 Harley Davidson, Ultra
Maytag. Heavy Duty Dryer Home Grown Tomatoes., Classic. loW ·rt~iles, excellent
and Kenmore Washer 740- Field Run , you p1ck $5 per condition (304)895~3825
992-3354.
bucket. {740)379-9110

(Keep YtM Mull\:)' l&lt;jl'.:al )
G&amp;R SANITATION
33561 Bailey Run Rd.,
' PomL·ro '. OH

•

Sizes i•t!1o•"''

r f.,t~ 10.~,

~

41

Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM

~==:::::::;::==!
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddHion•.
Remod•llng
• New Qaragu
• El.ctrlcat &amp; P1umbln9
• RoQfl"9 I aun•ra
• VInyl Siding 11 Palntlnll
• Pallo tnd Porch Otcks
WedoHallexcept

furnaj:e work

omeroy,
25 Yaus Local E• rlance

45 Croon

. of salad

46 Friend

27 Coastal
flyer .

47 Epoch
49 Last degree

28 Tlll'eeseater

opal

8 Lowest
point
9 Gallivant

30 Get lighter
32 Not prepaid

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ceietrii)•Cipher ~ptog·ams a1e Cl8at9d kom ~;~LJOta!IU's b~tamous pao~9 . past and ~1.

2: K-1 ), at least one hign hono• in each
major but no high club.
In six spades, Soulh wins with his heart
qtJeen, draws lrtJmps, and runs the
hearts, discarding clubs from his hand.
Then· he leads a club toward his king-

·

Each Jer,er 1n tne Clpllef slanils 11)1 another

Tpday·s clue. R eQuals C

" VE LB

G· M W E ,T 8 P .

OABDB ' P

"OELUKT

E0 0 B YF0

KMOAUKT

OBKKBPPBB

0 A BV . .

BVPB . "

. NUVYUE~P

OUPLP

TUGBP

XEW

BKBOTW ."

VB

R AU E 0

-'lllrtlldo!r:
SOMETIMES IN LIFE
'ltJU'~E

THE
MA't'SE
5EVENTH THEY
GAADE:
WANT
6\II.L'&gt;
50ME
S. l\~

Gene Arms/O"·nerOperwtor 740-992-3174

JUST 60T TO

•

COt1PMtiY'

740-992·3n9

•Norwegian elk hound

· Yel~w obs &amp;retriever

Remodeling

740-992-1611

·Whole Coin $6.35/100
·Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sweel Horse Feed
$5.50/50
·12% CaHie Feed $7.301100
·Black Oil Sunflower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

~t' fllil · ~-~~ h · tn

l n-..1:1ll :1 1iuu, l.a ml
l'•nuk llonl\
'\ it• ·~ . I ) ri • l '\1 :1.1 ~1 in u- -..t•• IH . l. r·;nd .
...; an d. lo p ~u i l. I ill d id
;n u l IIUII'l'
· ~eari m.:.

lf(U _ 1 " 11\1 \ 11 :-.
t7 JIII

1 J •I~-

1'&lt;~ nu ·ru1,

1-1 7 H

l lh i• •

MUST BE MILLIONS
OF PEOPLE ALL OVE~ THE
WORLD WJ.IO NEVE~ GET
AN'&lt; LOVE LETTERS ...

SUNSHINE CLUB

'tOO (Ak) FIIJ!"U'&lt; SPf..' ~.Will
1tl 'tUJR PHARNIA(IST
.

I

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ¥ Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NO MATTER
WHAT YOlJR
STYLE. ..

MANlETS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beecli Street
Middleport. OH

· German sh'Jl&lt;lrd &amp;collie

Call B.D. Const.

mr11es

for all ) 'Our home
rctJ&amp;ir needs. roofing,

• Walker coon hound
· Be~ogle mixes
MA~ ME I'UPPIESI

s idin ~,

udd-ons,

remodeling etc .•
free estimates

1740) 992-2979
leavC m cssa c

IOxiOx10x20
992-3194

'r£AH ' AIJD

~~EL'£

ASWEU

A~~

ami
f ·.'.\Tll l'llfillg
Hull!lnll'l' ,'\. IL1d, luw ,'\.
I ru d..i ti J! 'wn i n·~

T~E~E

got you

HicA\- 1/rw/iug

' • ROOF • PAINT
38244

Pleast adopt from the
Meigs County Dog Pound
and mQ~ a(nend'for life.

• Complete

Stop &amp; Compare

• CARPENTRY

740·367-0544
740·367·0536

ROBERT
BISSELL
·New Homes
• Garages

• fOR All YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
OHIO LICENSE #

MA.,co;.,.,.

CONSTRICTION

Cornerstone
Electrical
Sarvlca

I KNOW I'M NOT THE
ONLV PERSON WflO NEVER
6ET5 AN't' LOVE LETTERS ..

The Ariel· Dater Hall

?t- 'la•4'1

;:;+-- Se'Ue4/

Cousin Ed's Farm. Puppet Show, Nov 13
The Mueic of the Capplin&amp;ers Jan. 21

·~

GARFIELD
VOYOU

Curtoon H~:udouurters Re(urns. March. 18

eveN CARE?

Ruinbow Fish Stage Musical fur Kids May 13
BoK Office Hrs 11-2 M·F Also S-8 Tues &amp; Thun ·

426 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis,

ONLo,&gt; IF YOU
REMeM&amp;EREP
't:O &amp;UY THe

VONUTS

OH (740) 446·ARTS

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

Tue•day, Oct.11, 2005
By Bernice Bed• Oaof
In the year ahead, do evorythinO that !s
within your powe r to associa te with perso ns who are in th e forefront ol progresSive ventures. You'll be particularly lucky
teaming up with those who have £l' pioneering spirit.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It might be
extremely advanta.geous fo lij you to set
aside the cares ot lhe wOrKday world
today and lo.ke a well ·dttt
' rved recreational break. Do something Ufl and careless, or even lr1 volous.
,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Someone
who likes you ma.y glvo you a tip today on
a potentially profitable enterp rise_ Even
though you might be dubious. check It out,
beca use it could mean extra money in
your pocket.
'
SAGITTARIUS {N ov. 23-Dec . 2 1) - If you
can, try to keep your plans flex1ble and
adaptable tode',l- Tl1era's a good chance
ar&lt; une11pected op'porlunily niigt1t develop
and you' may want to be mobile enougll to
change caurse.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - This
could be Qf19 ol those days when you're
apt to enjoy your own ~ompany beller
tllan that of others. Think about finding
that cozy co(ner wllere you can escape
tram the noisy world .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) ~ Push all
doubts aside and don't be alr81d to take
o.n new projects or assignments today,
especially it tlley're presented by a person
with upbeat ideas. AI! should work ou t better then you thouQht.
PISCES (Feb 20-M arch 20) ~ Don't give
up on yoursell or what you believe in. Y04
have a specia l knack today lor turning losing situations Into winning ones, particularly where your work or ca reer is concerned.
(March
2 t -Apnl
19)
ARIES
Concentrate on what you lind to be your
grea test asse t today, which is likely to be
your ability to take the unworkable ideas
of others e.nd tre.nsform thorn in to some '
thing effe&lt;;:tive and uselul
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - U's imperative to keep your priorities jn order or you
coulel easily be sidetracked . MaKimum
atrort should be devoted today to maners
that enhance yQur security .and add to
your resources
GEMINI {May 21-Juna 20)- Don 't waste
lime today on what you belie¥€~ others
'may think at you . The only thing 'that is
importa(l1 is what you think of yourself_
Remember, sUccess Is the companion of
self-worth .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Although
overall cond1tions appear to be ratner
profitable for you today, you might not
receive an immedlatl'l return on that which
you are working on now. It could taKe a little time to come in ,
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Should y-ou fael
you need a cnanenge today to gel your
juices !lowing, turn to involVements which
have l'llements of friendly competi!IOn
that'll bring you pleasure inetead of dis·
ruplive ones
VtAtJO (Aug. 23-Sipl. 22) - This le a
go.od day to do thin~JIS around your house
today, especially 1f you're thinking about
entertaining. Your graclouaneas as a host
or hoetesa witt make a memorable lmpreaalon.

HAlJM LUMBER

"Middleport's only

Scorpion Tractors

I.F '-(bo CIND I Bbll-\ 148V~
ONE- amt_ aND W€ €'x -

''Taki11g The Sti11g Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Whed Drive Tractor
wi th 30hp &amp; 40hp .Kubota Engines

Ct-l3!'4GE 11-ieM, WE' Bc5rH

MYIIS TIU SIIIICI
lnsurEKI
Fr#e Estimates
Semor Citizen Discount
30 Yrs . E~~:perience
7ol0-992-2621 or
74~16-4902 (

2400 Eastern Ave .
(Across frorn KMart)
Gallipolis . Ohio 45631
(740) 446-17J j
1/ 4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge

Mason , .WV 25260

I

..:'~. "IINf

NUMtiEIED

~ t!T1EI3 IN 30UAIES

$

~~~~lEIOf I

I 1- I

ICRAM~ITI ANSWI!RS

l.l

IOntOS

Drcuny - Candy - lcrky - Native - CARRIED .
Onndpa always told Ul kids that it ..asn 't the load
that weigll«tu.t·dDWD bUI how it"" CARRIED.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
AIJD &amp;Ht-f&gt;II.IG.~ IIJ A
I'&gt;£.AU1"1FU~

f'ITCI.J,

11tU~Y fHIIO TiME.OFYt:AII
/',()1'He.2 ~TOR~'~ ADeAR,

BUT tF I

~ave

SN IDEa SND

't'oo f\aVE 8N IDEa SNP WE
E'XC~aNGE

THEM ...T&gt;IEN we

BoT&gt;! E~D UP W1Tt4 1Wo IPE.ISS.f'

STtLL eND UP WITR ONL.'l

o Ne aPPLE .. .

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt.

I •

SOUP TO NUTZ

or 992'-6635
Self-Stora1e"

more so. They depict reality as opposed to living il." - Carrie Fisher

AstroGraph

miKes

... THE
INEWSJDAPEf?
HAS
SOMETHING
~=~:--------~,1
FOR YO(]!!
1,.... MOTORC)'C~
4 \\!HEELERS

(740) 992-0167

0.!111 • .~......

29670 Bashan Road
·
Racine, Ohio '
4577 1
740-949·2217

wvo36m
p 992·6215
Ohio

• •

2002 Kia Sedona Van ,
loaded, all power, sunroof,
Wfilrranty, 50,025ml , new
tires. excellent reduced to
$11 ,900/0BO
(304)6755253

Diane McVey

*Week ly Ti"ash s~wice
4 yrs of Reliable Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Henders:a:~ou:: r·: : .INsrR•i o:M;i~~lSII~iiA'~~;~:::~ -:~ : :;: :_':;'-:74:-sg:_IS_5~:-9-~-:-9-~75~-0)767--37

Lo,--'•'f.1·x1

output
43 Remote
44 Haleakala's
.
isle

me. We immediately became

gtJ8$S?
Since .West 100 a singleton against a
small slam, he cannot have an ace. South
should rise with his club king_

PEANUTS

Licensed &amp; Insured

Hill's Self
Storage

1114J 1 mo. pd

wks. 3F, 1M. 550 e8ch. 1999 Chevrolet Venture
(740)379·9098. !740)379- Extend&amp;O van ; blue 62.000
2316 leave message.
miles; great condition; one

74Cl)7 42-1900
For Sale- Ta~re &amp; 4 Chairs, iiziif"'-""~"'--::--,
General Electric Side by :)tl}
FRI.Jrrs &amp;

I

-~

1995 Starcrall lightweight
truck camper. Used 4' ttmes,
$4,500 . {7 40)245- 9109 or
(740)441-7632.
- -- , - - - - -89 Pace Arrow 32 ~ 454
Chevy engine, tully loaded,
basement model, mint condition. 43k miles. $16,900.
(7401446-1977.

Rat TerriOI miK PL.lPRies. 6 , (740)441·0135

Carvin. 2yrs old, 12 Channel
powered mixer, w/speaker
stands. 4 speakers, 2 moni10rs. 3 ffiikes, and assorted
cables .
$1100
firm.

recipient
Pie pro

6 Found
a roost
7 Topaz or

35 Tho skinny
36 Fake
3B Make bread

jack. After East plays low, should declarer
put up the jack or the king, or is it a

DILES HEARING CE\TER

Chuck Wolfe
Owner
• Additions • Remodeling
• Roofing/Siding
• Plumbing/Electrical

S

•r'~~tol"""":'~----., Retriever puppies tor sale.
H OUSEHOLD
Have had first shots and 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
Goo~
wormed ·All female, $250. ES, White, Tan leather, quad
seats, rear A/C, New tires,
(740)388-8965.
loaded,
$5,500
OBO.

1

5

31 Gigantic
. bird of myth
33 Phyalqua
34 Fugue

Pllijli

detector .

less one-step bids; .in answer partner
described his exact hand. In !his deal,
one club shows 16-plus points. Then
North describes his hand, in order: lour-

'

MAINTENANCE

6 niir;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
riO IMPROVEMENTS
HOME

j

owned appllcanes start ng at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do service work on .all
Make and Models (304) 675·
7999

deity

l'USI!

grief
24 Standing
on
25 Jar tops
26 Kind

·

values, one of us wouk:l make meaning-

IMPORTS
Athens

-' -:900::::-:::--c::--,.--.,-:::;:-.
1997 Ford Ranger XLT, auto.
low mile s, very clef!n, must
see. (740 )742·3020, 740992-3394

Ta ra
TownhOuse
Apartmen ts, Very Spacious. ·
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 tf2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patio, Start $385/Mo
1996 EKplorer, Eddie Bauer,
No Pets. Lea"se Plus
loaded, runs &amp; looks great.
SeciJnty Depostt Required,
Books $6,200 will sell
(740)367-7086.
;c:-------'-:-- $4,0001090 (3041576-2607
Wood stove &amp; pipe $250.
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- (740)367-7762, (740) 446· 2002 Chevro let -Trail Blazer,
ing applications lor waiting 4060, (740)367·7272.
4x4, 52,000 miles, PW, POL,
list lor Hud-subsiz'ed. 1- br,
c ruise/tilt , AM/FM/CO! casapartment. call 675-.6679
BUILDINU
sBtte,, power sunroof, exc.

m

30 Man-goat

Pn~s

Pass

23

nis against each other. And we were regular bridge partners, using the Symmetric
Relay. When our side had game or slam

WHERE EXACTLY!

wv

Appliance

'I ¥

41 Over

ing. lron~ally, I got in but he did not. We

THAT's

L-----;:li;.,.,l

or

P&lt;HI!I

.

42 Smoke-

www

E~epress

org .

played Scrabble, Spile &amp; Malice and len-

'BIG NATE

i

rel~l

PatH&gt;

Skinner

l'u~.s

40 Violetlee!Hn

pleted the 1966 New Yo1k City marathon.
When h'e said that he was going to wn
aQain in 199.0, that needled me into enter-

BARNEY

LAWN CARE DIVISION .

""

SPACE

••
••

PHs.~

--ox
22 ''No way!'"

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "HollywQOd people are like everyone else. only

· P~e Barns Btowout
30x50x 10Ft only $6,995
1985 Ford tr!Jck F150 6
Painted Metal , Slider Free
cylincler. automatic, good
delivery, call (937)789-0293
body, tiJns. $901l (740)4469742.
Sportscratt TX350 Treadmill,
with
Pulse/Calori e! i99B Chevy Z71. &amp;Ktended
Time/Speed and Distance . Cab, Wfthird do or, IIJIIy
Used very little, In excelle nt loaded, Taho e cove r and
condition, has rubbar anti- spray in line r.'$11 ,500. call
stati c mat. cost pver $300, (3041 751-7378
E"'"" H"'--V O[llli-,1~"'1
w ill sell for $150. also have
a Treadle Singer Sewing 93 Niss&lt;;~.Q:· Truck 4X4. 5
Pleasant Valley Apartment Machine in excellent condi· speed,"'A:ir, 150K, runs excel
Are now taking Applications lion, belt is broken but I have $29(X).00 740·742·2662
for 2aR. 36 R &amp; 4BR .. it so you ca n find the right
4X4
Appl tcat'ions are
taken · replacement Old school
FOR SALE
Monday thru Friday, trom desk, the ~ind with the seat
9:00 A .M.-4 P.M .Oflice is in front of desk, this de~k
Located at lt 5t Evergreen came - fro m the old Letart 1996 Ford F 150, 4~&lt;4, - AIC,
Drive Point Pleasant,
G rade School.
In great sta ndard cab , long bed, fair
Phone No. is (304)675- shape, with some atc hing.on condition, $2500. (740)742·

t

Pa ~s

Pu.s l:i

38 Cpld War

'

(hyph.l

addresses
3 Hi or bye
4 Fortune

29 Cornelia-

Halter

20 Strong

good friends and remained so !or 34
years until he died on Sept 4. We worked
togelher on some books and edited each
olher's columns- he contributed to The
New York Times for 41 years. He com-

Paving Bri cks 3K6 brown
approx. 1200 $250 firm call
a f1er 5PI"!'! (304)675·5115

SUPPt.IF.~

P;u;s

Pa s~

t 1\1'

parlner and

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

Designed to Hem Your Home
and Your Hot \Vater!

r

P it liS

2

river

trees

I first met A!an Truscott in 1971 , when he
organized a trip to New York for m-t bridge

SPACIOUS

EHO

,.
I N'l'

1 Drop .
- - line

23 Tortilla dip
26 London's

A great friend ·
has passed away

· WEL£., wfVt GOT A l-OT

OUTSIDE
,WOODBURNING
FURNACE

th ~ top lrom former studen ts. Call (740)256-6198
after 5pm, Mon-FrL
- - -- - - - - Two year old Water Softener.
Orig inal cost was $800. Will
sell for $200 OQ_ Water Promade in the USA. 740-9923836.

Initials
East
Pass

PU.'!II!I

Pu.s s

19

DOWN

22 Canteen

:'llerth

••
""
••
,.

1t

adverb

up

master

2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;

5806. E.H.O

21 Mess things

Ill

Poet's

spades, at least 5·5 in the majors, dia·
mond shortage, 5-5-1 ·2, 1ive conlrols (A·

NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEA SING!

AVAILABLE
"ALL ELECTRI C
"CEN TRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE. REF..
"DISHWASHER
"GARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BUN OS
·cEILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE , &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
{304)882-3017

A ,J

34 P.urchases
35 Callous
Skip stones 37 Phlll~ team

10 Stately

period
55

plu s heans with 10-plus poiniS. lour-plus

New big 2 bedroom apt.
Private location close to
Water/sewer
hosp itaL
included . No pets_ Deposit
. required .
$595/month.
(740)441-1 184, ,(740)44 1·
0194

TOWNHOUSES

•

item

dispensers

Opening lead: ¥ 2

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

•

Pa!'ls

,.

F111rn! •

State Auto offers
something special

6 :1
9!1754
t K 75
... ? 10 ~

K Q J
Q6

We!i l

''"'
••
''"'
:J.

\lliXillr

Point ~easant, WV
(3041 675-1630 ~ E3 r.::-J

52 Dad's sister
53 Reduced
54 Distinct

•
.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Tree Service

·

·170 I Jefferson Blvd.

·

Medical Excellence.
Loc~l Caring'"

C.JIF. S&gt;!&amp;er

51 Realty ad

novel
17 Pack down
18 Frozen
dessert
20 Cash

of "The
Graduate"

range

4K.l 9Hr;

JONES'

"Whm&gt; Qualily,Comp6uioi! .4 nd lntexrll)' Comr 1l,gethtr"

16 Kipnng

Oop' s girl

15 Eurasian

Eas t

2

South

at sea
48 Water pipe
50 Bancroft

.. 5 2

•

740·843·526'4

47 Behind,

14

z

401

46 Lagoon

North
~ lO·lO·o5
. A I OD84
¥ A K J · 10 J

t Q98642
... ? 7 3
South

45760
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA •
K Rollov~rs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

Qow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

For mora into. call

~

1997 Saturn Sl2. 4 door, 5
speed, leather, power, aluminum
wheels, , 86.000
10'x16'x7' Green House. miles, very good condition.
while plastic sides. ·clear on 52850. 740-992-7584.
root, exhaust fan &amp; some
electric, $1 ,800, (740)742- 2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door,
4011
automatic, 27mpg, 72,000
mites: good condition. $800
Brand new pool heater, in brakes, filters, tires, belts
250,000BTU. New cost etc. tune up. Will take trade.
$3,600
OBO.
$1.695, sell for $1,350. Call Asking
(7401446·2927 or (7401339- (740)441·9378 ~
0365.
.
2001 Cavalier 2 dr. l-24
Cold air, auto, full power
Good Seasoned Firewood
78,000 miles, $2,500 080.
for Sale (740)742-7004
93 Chevy S-20 conversion
van. TV/VCR. auto, looks
JET
perlect,
runs
perfect
AE RATION MOTORS
107,000 miles $2,500 080.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebui lt In
(740)446-0171 .
Stock . Ca ll Ron Evans. 1800-537·9528.

Colors

i.tYOiiAOE

New shipmcn l of

1994 Buick Lesabre. High
miles, loaded, leather, great

5044 7 Tornado Rd.

WINYEii

Mill End Fabrics
Machine Quiltln_g
Middleport, OH

all

To Many

•

~~~~

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.00 .Each
&lt;:Red &lt;:Rose .9reenhouse

405 Pearl Street • Middleporl, OH
Pho ne (740) 992·347 J
Fax
992·5976

West
• 7 5

MONTY

Middleport, OH

Dell &amp;.. Full Service
Catering Selections

11( \ ' "'I'OUI \I HI\

$2,000

Box 189

' by
Hometown Market

needs.

miles.

sites

neighbcft'
13 MaH brew

'

and Financial Services

'"""'"'

43 ~Ps

part
12 Huron

.

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Hometown
Catering

POLE BUILDINGS

59,000

40 Nasty!

5 Vacuum

f

Answer to Previou!l Puzzle

41 An:heological

8 Reared

Kubota
BX2200. Power
steering, 4 WD, diesel, Cost
$10,000, new in 2002 Sale'
$7 ,000
133
hours
(740)388-0062.

10

39 Yes, to Argus

1 A lot

::-:-:-~-:::::=::--:::--

io~w ne~r·~·~---------, -:::::-:--:::-::--:--::
8128.
L::::::::;::::::~~::::::::::::~
I

Gracious'living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmentS at Village
Mano r
and
Riverside
Apartmenls 1n Middleport.
From 5295-$444 . Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

For rent 1 bedroom Apt. on 4782 Gallipolis, OH . Hrs. tt - (740)645-0626

For rent 2 bedroom apt in
sell.
RiVerine
Kanauga $425 per mo. $425 Buy or
depo sit re:terence required . Antiques, 1124 East Main
(740 )446-4107.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740 •
992·2~26 . Russ Moore,
Furn ished upstairs, 3 rooms
&amp; bath. Clea n. ref &amp; dap.
ML'iCELIANEOL~
requi red. No pets. (740)446 MERCHANDLI\•:
1519.
~-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-,.1

The Daily Sentinel·• Pag~ 87

www.rnydailyseniinel.com
BRIDGE

rent- storage only, $150/ mo options, leather, new tires .
on State Route 7. (740)446- maroon .
$5,000
firm.

~---A•NTI-Q10l!E'i
_ _....

Monday, October 10, 2005
ALLEYOOP

EQUIPMENT

24'x32' 3 stall garage lor VS,

r

Monday, October 10, 2005

,\. J I\ I ..,Jlll l&gt;.

Refrigerators $100- S150 C548.
All guaranteed. Gouches, -:-:::--c;;--::--,--::----,--:dinetles. chests and more. 1993 Cadillac DeVille, 4.9-

2nd floor in Point Pleasant. 3(M-SI
Gall (3040675 -8880 after
5pm

www.mydailysentinel.com

I \It\ I "I 1'1' 111..,

Used Furnilure Store, 130 $500! Police impounds
Bulaville PiKe Washers , cars/trucks fro m $500 .
$100,
Dr'yers
SIOO, listing. 800-391-5227 Ekt

BEAUTIFUL.
APART ·
MENTS
AT
BUOGET
PRICES AT JA.CKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
. Drive from $344 to $442.
WalK to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

,_

•

124 Chester 985-3301

..

'

'

·- ---- -- ---

---

..... ·-

~--

'

·'

�.

I
Woods outlasts Daly on missed putt in titanic battle
Page B_8 • The Daily Sentinel

Mo11day, October to, 2005

Do1Jo FERGUSON

Daly shot 69 and had two
chances to win. He missed a
16-foot birdie putt on the 18th
SAN FRANCISCO _ In a hole in regulation, then had a
birdie putt from 15 feet on the
phenomenal display of power second extra hqle that just
between golf's two biggest grazed the left side of the cup.
sluggers, Tiger Woods out-. Fans· scrambled to the next
lasted John Daly in the hole, none of them imagining
American
Express that Daly would miss from 3
Championship because of a feet.
3-foot putt.
" I feel so bad foi J.D.,"
Woods· made up two shots Woods said. "You never, ever
over the final three holes want to win a golf tournament
Sunday to. forc.e a playoff, like that."
then won on the second extra
But he' ll take it, along with
hole when Daly three-putted the $1.3 million prize that
for bogey from 15 feet on the pushed hi s season to over
16th, badly pulling his short $9.9 million and, with two
par putt.
tournaments left on his
It was a somber end to a schedu.le, gave him a shot 'at
riveting afternoon along the beating .the record set by
shores of Lake Merced, Vijay Singh a year ago.
Colin Montgomerie missed
where some 20,000 fans
crammed along the fairways birdie putts of 6 and I0 feet to
and cypress trees were treated , cost himself a chance for his
to 350-yard drives and drama first official victory on U.S.
rarely seen this side of a soil, but kept alive his hopes
major.
with a 12-foot ·birdie 011 the
Woods closed with a 2- l7th to get within one shot.
under 68 and won the
But he missed the 18th
American
Express green, chipped weakly and
Championship for the fourth took bogey for a 70 that left
time in six starts. He extend- him in a three-way tie for
ed his dominance in these third at 272 with Henrik
World Golf Championships. Stenson (68) and Sergio
winning his I Oth in I 9 events . . Garcia (69).
It was his sixth victory of
The 8-foot par putt Monty
the year, and given a bad missed on the last hole was
swing and ribs that had to be worth $159,500. Sljll , he
taped befor~ the final round. e"!'ned $353,666 to move past
thts was as tmpresstve as any. Mtchael Campbell atop the
BY

www.mydailysentinel.com

AssoCIATED PREss

Redwomen
from PageBl
match of the day, in four
games.
ODU (16"13, 7-1 AMCS)
and Rio Grande played close,
hard fought ,games with the
Panthers commg out on top in
three, 30-27, 30- I8 and 30-28.
Kiesling again stepped up
her play and led the
Redwomen in kills ·with 14.
Rodgers added 12with IS digs
and Urton talhed 10 wtth 13
digs. Rodgers also registered
three aces and three solo
blocks.

Stevens was all over the
floor as she posted eight kills
and I 8 digs. Veach handed out
41 assists and collected I 4
· digs. Smith, along with freshman Stephanie l,app, was on
the verge of double figures in
digs with nine each.
The · Redwomen missed
golden op~ortunities in the
flfSt and thtrd games .to gam
some momentum
which
could've changed the outcome. "There are times when
you cari't make an error," Rio
Grande head coach Patsy
Fields said. "There comes that
point where you've got to be
mature enough to know that 'I
can't make tpe error at this ..

photo
Tiger Woods, left, and John Daly shake hands after Woods
beat Daly in a sudden death playoff during the final round of
the American Express World Golf Championships at Harding
Park in San Francisco Sunday.
Order of Merit and is poised was the Masters, · which he
to win Europe's money title won with a birdie.
for the eighth him:
This time , he needed some
The other winner was help.
Harding Park, the municipal
Daly, who had never lost in
course with a $1.6 million two previous playoffs - won
makeover that proved to be a of those the British Open in
worthy test for the best play- 1995 at St. Andrews - was
ers in the world.
magnificent with every club
Woods and Daly shot I 0- except the putter. He lost his
under 270, and ooly 24 of the two-shot lead in regulation
7I players who started the when Woods birdied the 16th, ·
event hmshed under par.
and Daly three-putted from
It was the third time thi s 30 feet at No. 17, mi ssing a 5year Woods has rallied"'in the footer for par.
final round to win, and his
But the 3-footer was a stunsecond victory in a playoff to ner.
increase his career record to · "I know Tiger dido 't want
7-1 in extra holes. The other to win that way," Daly said.
AP

point' ."
"If we do then we're going
to pay for it and that's exactly
what· happened," Fields added.
"We played hard, we played
very, very hard, but there's
times you can't make an error
and if you c;fo. you're going to
lose.''
"So far we haven' t got past
that."
·
Rio Grande is 0-2 versus
Ohio Dominican this season.
Next up, the Redwomen will
face Mountain State, October
13, at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Game ·iime is set for 7 p.m.
Mountain State beat Rio
Grande. September I 7 in
Beckley, WV.

Redmen

"I didn't want to lose that
way. It' s very disappointing."
The crowd felt anything but
that.
Their loyalties were evenly
divided. and they about
screamed themselves hoarse
on the I 8th hole irt the playoff, the most daunting hole at
Harding Park that requires a
tee shot over Lake · Merced
and a row of cypress trees.
First came Woods . hammering away into , the blue
sk ies, the roar shaking the
gro unds when it · found the
middle of the fairway, then
rolled into the first cut. Next
up was Daly, a gri p and a rip,
then reaching' over to pick up
his cigarette as. the ball landed some I0 yards ahead of
Woods .
It was like that all day.
Hardinll Park was graced
with bnlliant blue skies
above and an endless supply
of thrill s below.·
Four of golf's most notable
figures ·Daly, Woods,
Moritgomerie and Garcia were locked in a four-way
battle really took shape on the
seventh hole.
Woods tried to drive the
~reen and went left the flag
mto the rough, leaving him
no shot until he threw up a
wedge out of ·the junk that
stopped a few inches from
going in for a tap-in birdie to
get within one of Daly.

.

so slippery that the guys
were struggling to keep their
footing," Morrissey said.
"Certamly
the same for both
fromPageBl
teams. but it seemed like we
were just a step off today."
when junior defensive back
"The conditiOns had a lot
Tony Griffiths fo~nd the to do with it, but I also think
back of the net in the 86th at times, particularly in the
minute. Junior mid-fielder first half and even 10- 15
Benn Hughes was credited minutes into the sel:ond half,
with the assist on the goal.
we just didn't have enough
Rio out-shot MVNU 8-3 numbers forward when
with a 5-2 edge in shots on you're talking about a team
goal.
that's sitting back in and
Rio Grande head coach defending against us,"
Scott Morrissey admitted Morrissey added. "We need
that the condi lions were a to rectify that."
factor in the plaY. on the · · Morrissey was not pleased
field. "It seemed hke it was with giving up the goal to the

In the final group behind
him, Garcia played it safe
with an iron off the tee, then
looked like a genius when he
holed out his wedge from 110
yards that spun hard into the
cup for eagle and a share of
the lead. Montgomerie made
a rare birdie putt and was
within one shot.
But it didn't take long for ,
Woods and Daly to separate
themselves.
Woods was three shots
behind and finding more
shade in the trees then sunshine on the fairways, but he
fired off three straight birdies,
the last OJle an approach from
205 yards into 3 feet to catch
Daly at .JO under.
Daly responded by chipping · in from 55 feet across
the 13th green for birdie. In
the group ahead, Woods'
went from rough-to-rough on
the 14th and couldn't recover,
making bogey to fall two
behind, and Daly again had
control.
Daly being Daly, it wasn't
that simple.
He had a two-shot lead with
three holes to play when
Woods hit a wedge that
stopped 4 feet away for birdie
on the 16th, and Daly threeputted the 17th.
For all his length, a short
putt cost him the lead.
Another one cost him the
tournament.
Cougars. "This has been the
story of our season, we give
away a penalty and I truly .
believe it's just a mistake on
our part," he said. "Instead
of clearing the ball when we
need to, we're trying to dribble out of the 18-yard box
· and then we have punished,
all year long for tt, we're
giving away, cheap, cheap
goals and we just have to
change that."
"I hope it happens sooner
than later."
Rio Grande will travel -to
Cedarville to challenge a .talented Yellow Jacket club on
Tuesday. Kick-off is set for
7 p.m.

'' "

Bush showcases progress
in New Orleans with fine
dining and overnight at
a luxury hotel, A6

OVCSshows
· goodwill toward
Katrina victims, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
" &lt;l( 'I • N 'I 'S

••

'

l

•

\ ' •I -~ N••
(

•

, ) , )

•

•

•

I''

It ii·Sil\\ ()( "IOBI ·. RJI ~
•

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Angels knock out
Yankees. See Page 81

POMEROY - · At last
night's meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council safety conditions for water department
employees sent into underground lift stations once again
was brought to the table by
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun.
At council's last theeting
Spaun was concerned that
workers were being sent into·
lift stations without the proper
safety equipment .to. detect
odorless but deadly ·~asses.
There are numerous lift stations throughout the village as
part of the village's sewer system. ·

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Roy Miller

INSIDE
• GenealogyFair set lor
Saturday. See Page A3
• DA past councilors
meet. ,See Page A3
• Mo&amp;imWoodmen to
have dinner et God's Net.
See Page A3
• MWA to hold potluck.
See PageA3
• Pomeroy Court News.
See PageA3
• Supreme Court
.
upholds visitation rights
for grandparents.
See Page AS ·

Detatto on Page A8

"""·""daih"'"'""'t .•·o"'
•

Spaun said since the last
council meeting when she ini tially brought up her concerrs.
village workers were sent
down into lift stations twice
'without what she considered
the pmper safety equipment.
1 Mayor John Musser told
$paun that he had spoken to
Village Administrator John
Anderson about her concerns.
Musser said Anderson. told
him that the control rooms.in
the lift stations have fresh air
pumped into the room that
goes all the way to the bottom
ofthe station where the men
work.
"For over 30 years village
employees have gqAe dqw n
into those lift !s tations,"

Musser saiu.
winch. air monitor and con"We've been damn luckv," fin ed space tra in ing amoqg
Spaun replied.
· · other requirements (or the
Spaun's son Shannon is a workers in lift stations.
village employee with th e
Spaun fe lt the water departwater department. Spaun said ment employees had none of
her son told her ~e has felt the OSHA requircmcllls.
overcome by fum es on ncca- . Spaun · tl1en became emosior :wh ile working in the lift tional when describing a situastations.
tion in Athens where two men
Spaun said she hall spoken were killed . in a lift swtinn
to Mike Rea with the Public . after being overcome with
Employee Risk Reduction fumes without th e proper
Program 'Service abou t the sit- equ ipment. She said the story
uat ion as she saw it. She said carne from Rea w ho wa\
Rea told her that the village investigating the incident.
was
in
violation
of
~·we·ve got ro do someOccupational Safety anu thing about it." Spaun said.
Health
Administration "ll's nut worth mens' lives."
(OS HA) regulations that
Musser ag reeU.
,- require a retrieval tripod .
Spaun ;rbu brought up that

there was confined space
training being held on Nov.
29-.10 for municipal workers
thollgh no decision was made
to
send workers from
Ponieroy.
· During public participation
resident Kenny Klein brought
up several i,sues one of which
was the old Pomeroy lunior
High School.
Klein :L&lt;ked council, "What
happened io the $35,000 set
aside for the removal of the
junior high0 "
"There wasn't uny money
earmarked for that. " Musser
replied.
Klein believed that $35,000

Please see Pomeroy, AS

Taft authorizes
•
help for winter ·
heat costs

. BY BRIAN J. REED
, BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY -Gov. Bob
Increases in Middleport's
Taft
has taken steps to prowater and sewer rates will
. vide state assistance to lowlikely wait until the new year,
incol11e hou sehold s in keepand the village will probably
ing·thei
r heat on this winter,
change. the way resi?ents pay
more state funds
providing
for their sewer servtce when
assistance,
for
heating
they increase rates.
increasing income eligibility
At Monday evening's regufor
heating assistance and
lar meeting of Middleport
educating
the public on how
Village Council, Becky Hays
save
on
heating costs.
to
of the village's 1;11gineering
Taft
announced'
Friday he
firm, Aoyd Browne· Group,
had authorized by executive .
presented information about a
order an additional $75 milnew sewer rate structure that
lion in Temporary Aid for
Council President Stephen
Needy · Families funds for a
Houchins _had requested she
new program that will supprepare. Council has eonsidplement the $I 00 m1lhon m
ered imposing a sewer rate
Home Energy Assistance
increase as provided by an
Program funds set aside to
·ordinance now in place, which .
assist low and moderatecalls for autom~tic water
inco me households with their
sewer rate hikes each ye;tr./1
Beth sergentjphoto
winter heating bills.
Council has held
Members from the River City Kids accept a $2,000 check from Hol ze r Meigs Cli111c for their
With
this
I 0-percent
upcoming musical "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." Pictured (from left) Lara Perrin, Rachel increase in the average benePlease see Sewer, AS , .·, Payne. Emma Perrin and Holzer Meigs Clinic Manager Diana Jeffers .
fits Ohioans received last
year, the program will provide an 'average of $430 per
·household to help pay heating bills thi s winter. Earlier,
Public
Utilities
the
Commission of Ohio issued a
winter reconnection order
requiring regulated gas and
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
BY BETH SERGENT
River City Kids to &gt;ponsor work with the Riv er Ci ty electric companie,, to allow
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM their upcomitJg , pnH.luction Kid&gt;," Holler Meigs C linic
customers to reconnect or
of
·' Chmlie
and
th e tvhrnauer Di·ana Jeffers sa ill. avoid ·disconnection hy payPOMEROY - Bend area,
POMEROY Holzer Chocolate Factory.''
"The do nat ion is a way tor ment of $175 or less and a
Clinic's
new
ad
campaign
residents who love barber-·
Jhe River City Kids are a the dinic to con tribut e to reconnection fee.
shop harmony will want to "Close to You" has come to junior version of the River the comrn uni1 y an~l we're
Tart has al so im:reased
attend the Johnny Appleseed Meigs County in the form City Pl aye rs theater trou pe all lookin g forward · to th e income eligibility from I 51
District (J AD) convention of Holzer Mei gs Clinic of Meigs County,
Please see Taft. AS
Plea'se see Holler, AS
and competition to be held donating $2,000 to the
"J.' m rea lly exc ited to
this weekend at the Clay
Center
in
downtown
Charleston.
At that event hosted by the
Kanawha Kordsmen, the ·
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
main focus of the competition will be to select the choGallia County now is home to
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
rus or choruses that will repa Mass Fatality Incident
resent JAD at the July County is now home to a new
Trailer, which can be used to
International Convention in unit that will re spond to mass
haul supplies to a major accidi sasters in sou thern Ohio
Indianapoli s.
dent scene. From left are
John
Anderson of and possibly beyond ,
County Commissioners'
On Wednesday, count y
Pomeroy, who sings with the
President Harold
Kanawha Kordsmen in both commissioners took posses'
Montgomery. Emergency .
chorus and quartet, describes sian of a Mass Fatality
Management Agency Dtrector
the upcoming event "as good Incident Trailer. which will
Mike Null. and
in the contest venue as .it be hou sed at the Gallia
Commissioners
David Smith
gets." He said "anyone who County Emergency Medical
and Fred Dee I.
goes will hear the best in the Services garage.
Paul Darst/ photo
"This is for fatalities. not
district since the choruses

Holzer Meigs Clinic donates
$2;000 to children's musical

Gallia County houses regional mass fatality unit

INDEX
2 SECTIONS _ . 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Weather

•

Middleport
sewer, water
hikes on hold

Kanawha
Kordsmen hosts
barbershop contest

WEAmER

Sports

:!OW,'

SAFElY OF POMEROY WATER DEPARTMENT- EMPLOYEES HOT TOPIC

SPORTS

Comics

•

B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Please see Contest. AS

Please see Fatality, AS

FORD· LINCOLN • MERCURY

-tit

LINCOLN

MERCURY

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