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                  <text>· Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.Thundering Herd Notes

Marshall women's
hoops team picked to
finish fourth inC-USA

I

HUNTINGTON, W Va.
(AP) - Marshall has been
picked to finish fourth in the
Conference USA Preseason
Women's Basketball Poll.
Fellow con.ference newcomer Rice was selected to
win the 2005-2006 regular
season title .
Rice is coming off its most
successful season ever, finishing with a 24-9 overa ll
record, a Western Athletic
Conference cham pion ship
and a berth in the NCAA
tournament.
Owls forward Lauren
Neaves , who led the team in
scoring and rebounding, was
selected as the conference
11reseason player of the year.
. Houston finished second
in the preseason coaches
poll. SMU was third, while
~arshall and Tulsa fini shed
fourth and fifth. UCF was

sixth, followed by
Southern
M i s s ,
Memphi s,
Tula ne.
UAB. UTEP and
E a s t
Carolina.
Marshall ·
finished last season with a
19-10 record and its firstever
Mid-Ameri can
· Conference East Division
championship and advanced
to the MAC semifinals.
The Thundering Herd
women ieturns four starters
and eight letter winners ,
including Sikeetha ShepardHall , who led the team with
' 15 .2 points per game, and
Crystai.Champion, who had
a team-be st 7.9 rebounds per
game.

Wednesday, October 19.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

BALCO founder Conte sentenced to s·months
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Victor Conte was sentenced to four months in
prison and four months'
home confinement Tuesday
for hi s · role as the master-.
mind in a sch.eme to provide
pro athletes with undetectable banned drugs.
Conte, who ne gotiated a
plea deal with federal prosecutors, started the Bay Area
·Laboratory Co-Operative.
The lab, according
court
records. cou nted dozens of
prominent athletes among its
clien1s, including bli.Seball's
Barry Bonds and Jason
Giambi and Olympic track
and field star Marion .Jones.
Greg · Anderson, Bond s'
trainer and friend since
childhood, was sentenced to
three months behind bars and
three months in home con· finement after pleading
guilty to money laundering
and a steroid d.istribution

to

Conte

charge.
J a m e s
Va Ie n t e ,
B A L C 0 's
vtce president,
was
sentenced to
probation
after J?leading gUilty to
red u ce d
charges of
steroid dis-

tribution.
. Outside the courthouse,
Conte read a stateme nt saying he wanted 'to rid the
sporting world of steroids.
"I' vc decided to direct rny
knowledge, experience and
determination toward mak: '
ing .sports more honorable
for the athletes and fans,"
Conte said .
The case prompted pro
sports to stiffen steroid polictes and thrust performanceenhancing · drugs into the

spotlight. THG, a steroid
Meanwhile, officials are
uncovered in the investiga- taking aim at the alleged
lion, is now banneq through- BALCO suppliers.
out sports.
Last month, federal agents
Conte pleaded guilty in raided a laboratory in
July to money laundering Champaign, Ill ., headed by
and a steroid distribution Patrick Arnold, who's known
charge; dozen s of counts for introducing the steroid
were dropped as part of his prec ursor androstenedione in
plea deal. Anderson and the United States. Andro
Conte, who remain free on came to public attention in
bond , are scheduled to sur- 1998 when Mark McGwire
render to prison authorities said ·he used it when breakDec. I.
·mg .th e stng
· 1e-season home
U.S. Attorney Kevin Ryan run record..
•
.
in San Francisco has said the
d
plea deals, which some antiCourt records suggeste
doping officials have criti- Arnold supplied BALCO
cized as too lenient, were with THG, which was know'n
spurred in part by weak as "the clear."
steroid laws and by the fact
The two dozen or so aththat some of the chemicals letes who appeared heforc a
were not banned at the time . grand jury in 2003, including
Track
coach
Remi Bonds, Giambi and Jones,
Korchemny, the fourth and . were not targets of the
final defendant in the case, is steroid probe . They were
expected to get probation at a granted · immunity
, in
later sentencing date.
exchange for their testimony.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vul. :) 5 . No. ·r'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• High school football
previews. See Page 81

MIDDLEPORT - · Meigs
County Farm Bureau members endorsed 22 resolutions
relating to county, state and
national issues of importance
·and elected trustees for 2006
at the organization's annual
meeting Tuesday evening. ·
The annual dinner and business meeting was held at the

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP)- A former high school
football star and West
Virginia player has been sentenced to 18 months in prison .
for assaulting a federal officer.
Todd Allen Robinson, 33,
of Clendenln bit a U.S. marshal on the arm in April while
trying to escape from the marshal and a Kanawha County
sheriff's deputy.
After Robinson was captured, he kicked out the window of a federal vehicle,
police said. He had been a
fugitive after failing to show
up for an August 1994 hearing on charges he violated his
probation.
Robinson agreed in July'to
plead guilty to assaulting the
·U.S. marshal. In return, the
government agreed to drop
the destruction of federal
property charge. He will
spend three years on supervi.sed release after completing

his jail term.
.
At the time of hi s arrest,
Robinson was wanted for
state charges of nonpayment
of child support, obstructing
an officer, fleeing on foot,
tleeing in a vehicle, driving
on a revokeu license for driving under the ·influence ,
reckless driving, battery and
some minor traftic violations.
He also faced two other fleeing charges, three speeding
charges and six counts of
worthless checks.
. Robinson was an all-state
lineman for Capital High
School in Charleston. He
received a football scholarship to West Virginia
University, where he was
kicked off the· team in 1990
after two runcins with the law.
He later was booted from
West Virginia Tech's football
team for punching another
player and attacking a coach
shortly after joining that team
in 1993 .

""" · m~d a il~-.·,tind mm

:!0, :!00,)

ment of emergency room facilities in the county, and a resoJu c
tion urgi ng county officials to .
operate within their budgets.
On the state level, memhers
. endorseu resolutions urging
enforcement and "forceful
action·· to enforce drug laws, in
order to alleviate the drug
problem in the country and the
community, and to enforce
laws regulating underage sales
of alcohol and tobacco prod"

.

ucts. The bureau memhers also
encouraged state . ofticials io
take corrective action on river
and creek -bank erosion. which
threatens the _state highways in
the comnlllnity. encouraged
the Ohio Department of
Transportation to install a trat~
lie control devi&lt;;c at the junction of Qhio 7 and Ohio 124, to
"ensure the safety of the children on school buses and all
motorists."

The organization endorsed
a resolution in support of the
government's worldwide
war on terror, encouraged ·
the U.S. Army Corps · of
Engineers to stabilize and
sec ure erod ing areas along
the Ohio River. and a measure promoting the use of
renewable fue ls, such as
ethanol and bio-diesel fuel

Please see

Bur~u.

AS

•

MAKE ADIFFERENCE DAY :AUCTION SATURDAY Syracuse
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENT INEL.COM

POMEROY - The second
annual Mukc A Difference
Day Auction will begin at 10
a.m. on Saturday at the Meigs
County Senior Center to raise
enough money to keep the
Me&lt;!IS on Wheels program
rolling and other services at
the Center funded.
The Meals on Wheels program needs to rai se $4,000 in
matching funds for a grant
that will assist in purchasing
a new delivery truck .
Last year the Meals on
Wheel s drivers delivered
40,000 rrieals to 210 homebound reside nts in Meigs
County.
With no increased funding
despite increased need, other
programs at the Center will
also directly benefit from the
money raised.
··
Bidders will have a chance
to purchase a variety of items
including a 1994. seven passenger. all-wheel
dri,ve
'Dodge Minivan owned by the
Center and used for medical
transportation of seniors. The
van has 117,000 miles on it

Page AS
• Tracey Renea Salser
Riggenbach, 35
• Louisa Toppins, 63
• Genevieve Wood, 79

INSIDE
-

--

• Community art
days to be observed.
See Page A3
• Losers recognized at
TOPS. See Page AS
. • Election Day dinner
planned. See Page AS
• Ohio to lose money
on prescription drug
program, official says.
See Page AS

WEATHER

Council sets
trick-or-treat
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Meigs band qualifies
for state finals

Dotatlo on Page A6

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

and the furthest it has been
driven is to Parkersburg,
W.Va.
If quill . covers are more
your style, bidders can take a
chance on getting an original
· by Racine resident Delores
Cleland.
Cleland's quilt cover is 106
inches by 90 inches and con.tains l ,080 cotton circles that '
she. has hand sewn. The circles resemble yo-yo's and she
calls it a "yo-yo spread" that
can be placed on top of a bed
cover for decoration.
Cleland, 83, has been
sewing most of her life and
sewing quilts for nearly 45
years. She does custom quilt
work for clients and for herself and her family. She often
' donates her work to auctions
like the one this Saturday and
. those in Racine &lt;.luring various fcsti v&lt;)!&gt;.
"I hate to part with them
all," she' laughed about the
work and maternal care she
puts into her craft.
Cleland, who sews everyday, takes ptide in her work
· as if. she is showing off her
Please see Auction, AS

SYRACUSE -Syracuse
trick-or-treaters can go door
to door for goodies from 6
p.m . to 7 p.m. on Thursday,
Oct. 27.
The date was set at the
recent meeting of Syracuse
Village Council.
Side-streets will be blocked
Off similar to last year to protect trick -or-treaters from
oncoming traffic . Some
~ouncil members also personally donated money for
candy from the village that
will be passed out to children
on Oct. 27.
Also discussed at the recent
meeting a pay raise for Street
Superintendent Mi!:-e Ralston.
Ral ston requested a pay
raise of either a $1 or 75 cents
per hour, and a $400 clothing
allowance .
·Ralston said he had not
had a raise in two years. The
minutes of the Nov. 6, 2003
council meeting reflect that
Ralston was approved for a
Top left: Racine resident Delores Cleland is
50 ~ent per hour raise which
known for her quilting work wh ich she often
becam e effective Jan. I,
donates to auctions-for good causes like th is
2004. Ralston 's pay from the
Saturday's seco'nd annual Make A Difference
village is currently $444
Day Auction at the Meigs County Senior
paid from the vi II age\ street
Center. Cleland has donated this handmade
fund and $296 paid from the
Wiiter department on a biquilt cover to the auction to raise money for a
weekly basis .
new Meals on Wheel's truck.
Council passed a motion to
Beth Sergent/ photo
give Ralston a $1 per hour
Left: A 1994, seven passenger, all-wheel drive . raise beginning Jan. l, 2006
but this raise must also be
Dodge Minivan owned by the Meigs Senior
approved
by the water
Center and used for medical transport of
seniors will be auctioned off at th is Saturday's department.
Ral ston was also approved
Make A Difference Day Auction. Jimmy
to
receive comp time for
Cummins and Meigs County Council on Aging
attending
council meetings
Executive Director Beth Shaver are pictured .
Charlen~ Hoeflleh/photo
Please see Syr;~cuse, AS

OBITUARIES

2 SECTIONS -

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Country. We are expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and saleswomen. No Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
strong initiative.

Middleport Masonic Temple,
with dinner served by the Order
of Eastern Star Chapter 255.
President David King presided
over the busines·s meeting.
Among the endorsements
approved by the Farm Bureau
were a resolution encouraging
· county officials to expedite the
establishment of a 911 emergency system, whi.ch will
appear on \he November ballot,
one supporting the establish-

•

..

Ex-WVU football star
sentenced in assault

' llll i RSil\) , Ill lOIII· I{

Farm Bureau members address 22 resolutions at annual meeting

SPORTS

Marshall hoops ·picked
last in C-USA poll
HUNTINGTON , W.Va .
(AP)- Marshall's men' s basketball team has been
picked to finish last in the
league in its inaugural season in Conference USA.
Memphis is ihe unanimous preseason favorite to ment appearan~es, . was
win the 2005-2006 regular- selected to finish se.;ond in
season crown , with the the conference.
Tigers' Rodney Carney
Houston was picked third
picked by league coaches as and U-TEP fourth. Rice and
preseason player of the UCF were picked to finish
year.
· in a tie for fifth place, foiMemphis is coming off its lowed by SMU, Southern
fifth straight postseason Miss, Tulsa, East Carolina
appearance in fi ve years, and Tulane. Marshall was
having advanced to .the NIT 12th.
semifinals last spring.
The ·Thundering Herd fin UAB, which has made ished last season with a 6back-to-back NCAA tourna- 22 record.
·

Icenhower to perfonn
at Ariel Sunday, A7 ·

Boating season ·
ending soon, A6

16 PAGES

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
BS

As
A7
B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Puhll&lt;ihlng Co.

POMEROY -The Meigs Marauder Marching
Band has qualified to compete in the Ohio Music.
Educators Association's state finals.
During. the recent Marietta band-competition, the
Marauders received .a superior rating to qualify.
This marks the 16th con sec uti ve state qvalification
for the band program at Meigs High School.
The band will celebrate senior night at halftime
at · Friday night's Meigs-Vinton game on Bob
. Roberts Field, and then will present its 2005 competition show "The Music of Paul Simon" during a
post-game performance.
The last competitive outing for the Marauders
will be held Oct. 29 at the tri-state marching festival to be held . at Marshall University in
Huntington, W. Va. Meigs is scheduled to perform
at4:30 p.m. ·
Toney Dingess is director of the band.

• Patentiallncome 40-60k
• 401 K Retirement Plan
• WOrk At The 11 Dealership • Health Insurance
Call To Schedule An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822·0417. 372-2844
475 South"'Ourch Slreet • Ripley, wv 25271

'

~
·~

·"'

'

'

...

. .

~

•

•

�•

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily. Sentinel

Thursday, October 20,

The Daily Sentinel

2005

.

.

.Community Calendar

Hurricane Wilma lashes Caribbean coastline as it churns toward Florida
Bv FREDDY CUEVAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SAN
PEDRO
SULA,
Honduras - Hurricane Wilma
rapidly strengthened into one
of the Americas' most intense
storms ever and lashed
Caribbean
.coastlines
Wednesday, forcing tourists to
flee as it threatened to slam into
Cancun and southern Florida.
The monstrous Category 5
storm forced thousands of
people to evacuate low-lying
areas in a 600-mile swath covering Cuba, Belize, Honduras,
Jamaica, Haiti and .the
Cayman Islands, officials said.
At least 13 deaths have been
blamed on Wilma this week,
including a man who drowned
Wednesday while trying to
cross a river that overtlowed
its banks in southern Haiti.
.Forecasters said Wilma has
the potential . to make an
extremely damaging impact in
a season that has already seen
devastarion from Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita. With its center still over open water, the
storm's sustained winds were
near 160 mph Wednesday
night, yet down 'from 175 mph
earlier in the day.
.
The National Hurricane
Center
Director
Max
Mayfield said Wilma could
reach the Florida Keys
Saturday, possibly toward the
evening.
Visitors
were
ordered out of the .Florida
Keys even as schools closed:·
The White House, stung by
criticism that . it had not
responded quickly enough to

·

.
· •·

AP Photo

tn preparation for Hurricane Wilma, Emilio Muguira, of ·Plantation, Fla., loads up on plywood to board up his home Wednesday
at a home . improvement store in Davie, Fla.
Katrina, promised to, stay on
top of the situation. "We are
closely monitoring w.llat is an
extremely dangerous storm,"
said White House spokesman
Scott McClellan. "People
should take this hurricane
very seriously."

Tourists packed Cancun's
airport even though skies
were still partly sunny, looking for .flights home or to
other resorts. MTV postponed its . Video Music
Awards Latin America ceremony, originally scheduled

for Thursday at a seaside yeah, that was the clincher
park south of the resort town. right there," he said. "It was
Mark Carara cut his family's time tor us to go."
John Hyndman, a 59-yearvacation short by two days and
tried to get on a standby flight . old electrician from Ottawa
home to Colorado Springs, said his hotel had asked guests
Colo. "You hear it was the to leave. "I think people are
biggest storm on record, and more panicked jus( about

New figures push death toll from South
Asian quake to more than 79,000

Drug provt'S remarkably effective against early breast cancer
Bv JEFF DONN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A drug that targets only diseased cells has proved astonishingly effective against an
aggressive form of early
breast cancer - a longsought breakthrough that has
docto,rs talking about curing
thousands of women each
year in this country alone.
The drug. Herceptin, is
already used for advanced
cancer. But in three studies
involving thousands of
women with early.-stage disease, it cut the risk of a
.
relapse in half.
Several experts used words
like "revolutionary," "stunning" and "jaw-dropping" to
describe the findings .
"In 1991, I didn't know
that we would cure breast
cancer, and in 2005, I'm convinced we have," exulted Dr.
Jo Anne Zujewski, head of
(:)reast cancer therapeutics at
the government's National
Cancer Institute.
However, an official at
the
A·merican
Cancer
Society warned that it is far
too early to suggest this
amounts to a cure, since the
women studied were fol lowed for only three years
at the most.
Moreover, Herceptin is
only for the.estimated 20 percent of breast cancer cases in

In the ·f irst study, 220
which tumors chum out too
much Of a protein known as women undergoing standard
HER2. Even then, tile drug therapy for a year either
developed breast cancer
does not help everyone.
be
.
again, showed other kinds
Still, Herceptin could
the biggest thing in cancer of tumors, or died. Only 127
drugs since research a decade did when Herceptin was
ago demonstrated the extra- added.
ordinary effectiveness of
The two other studies, part·
tamoxifen, another medicine ly funded by Genentech,
that transformed the treat- reached similar findings in
ment of the disease by hom- their combined results. At
ing in on cancer cells· but three years, patients on
sparing healthy ones. ·
Herceptin showed a disease· Herceptin,
made
by free survival rate that' was 12
Genentech, appears to have percenta~e points higher than
"changed'''6ne of the most without It. ·
The government approved
worrisome kinds of cancers
into one that may have a rela- the · drug in 1998 for
tively good prognosis," said advanced breast cancer that
Dr. Ed Romond of the has already spread within the
University of Kentucky.
body. But early-stage cases
He was one of the are much more common.
researchers who reported
Many doctors are already
findings from three Herceptin embracing the drug for such
studies Thursday in The New women, cancer experts say,
England Journal of Medicine. because details of the ,three
One was an international . studies were first publicized
'study
sponsored
by last spring at a medical conHerceptin's European mar- ference.
keter, Roche. The others were
"The strength of the eviNorth American •studies dence is so overwhelming at
sponsored by the National · this point that it. would be
Cancer Institute.
·
almost impossible to withThe researchers followed a hold this drug from the
total of more than 6,500 appropriate
group
of
women with early-stage patients," said Dr. Gabriel
Women Hortobagyi, of the University
breast
cancer.
received Herceptin along of Texas, who is presidentwith the standard treatments, elect of the American Society
and of Clinical Oncology.
including
surgery
Genentech intends to apply
chemotherapy.

what a hurricane can do," he
said. "It can be very scary."
Quintana Roo state, where
Cancun is located, announced
that hundreds of schools
would be closed Thursday
and Friday, and mariy will be
prepared to serve as sh.;,lters
for expected evacuations.
Floridians braced for the
storm by boarding up windows and stocking up on supplies, although forecasters at
the hurricane center said the
forward wotion of the storm
appeared to be . slowing,
which could cause tr to eventually weaken.
Predictions differed on the
hurricane's path and how
strong it would be whe~ it
reaches U.S. shores. Though
some weakening w'as expected
by Thursday, the "potential for
large loss of life is with its,"
said Max Mayfield, director of
the U.S. hurricane center.
'This is one of those cases
where we have a tremendous
amount of uncertainty," ·said
Mayfield. Referring to Wilma's
explosive two-day growth
from a tropical storm to a
Category 5 hurricane, Mayfield
said "this is one of the rnost
perplexing storms we have had
to deal with" this year.
At 8 p.m. EDT, Wilma ·was
centered about 270 miles
southeast ofCozumel, Mexico,
and 450 miles south-southwest
of Key West. It was moving .
west -northwest near 7 mph.
with some wobbles, forecasters said. The storm is expected
to veer more to the northwest
over the next 24 hours.

to the U.S. government to
add early-stage cancer use to
Herceptin 's label , spokeswoman Colleen Wilson said.
But doctors are already free
to . prescribe the drug for
early breast cancer on their
own authority.
About 200,000 women are
diagnosed with breast cancer each year in this country,
and 40,000 die. About
30,000 American women
will probably be taking
Herceptin for breast cancer
· within a couple of years,
curing perhaps 7,000 who
would otherwise relapse,
some doctors predicted.
However, doctors cautioned that some women get
better without Herceptin.
especially when there is little evidence that the cancer
is spreading within the
breast. Also, a small number
taking the drug suffer heart
,
failure.
A year of Herceptin could
cost 548,000 even at wholesale prices.
.
Tamoxifen has the same
kind of benefit as Herceptin
- a 50 percent reduction in
risk - but works against
another large class of cancer
cases known as estrogenpositive. ·

Bv MATIHEW
PENNINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BALAKOT, Pakistan The death toll soared to
79,000 Wednesday from
South Asia's mammoth earthquake, following a survey of
one of the two hardest-hit
Pakistani regions - making
it one of the deadliest quakes
in modern times.
More aftershocks rattle!!
the region, sending up huge
clouds of dust from steepsided mountain valleys
where villages lie in pieces.
During a helicopter tour of
the ruins, the president
promised new, quake-ready
hollses for the homeless.
_ In remote mountains, a
sieady flow of injured villagers continued to seek medical attention. Many had
infected wounds, untreated
since the Oct. 8 temblor, and
had to rely on relatives to
carry them for hours on foot
to makeshift clinics.
More than 60 helicopters
were dropping relief supplies, and mule trains were
pushing into areas where no
helicopters can land.
"Many people out there, we

are not going to get to in time,"
said Rob Holden, the U.N. dis.aster coordinator in Pakistan's
part of Kashmir. "Some people who have injuries don't
· have a chance of survival."
At the United Nations,
Secretary-General Kofi Annan
warned that with · winter
approaching a second "massive
wave of death" in Pakistan's
quake areas unless the international community immediately
increases the relief eft'ort.
"This is a huge, hu~e disaster," Annan said. "It 1s a race
against time to save the lives
of these people."
"I would hope' that the
international community will
·respond and those with
capacity will . do everything
possible to work with us and
work with the Pakistani government," he said.
Eleven days after the 7.6magnitude quake, the full
scale of the disaster is becoming apparent. A hl!licopter trip
through tlie badly hit Neelum
and Kaghan Valleys showed
flattened homes on mountainsides and roads blocked by
boulders, trees and earth.
Moving only on foot, people
were· fashioning· new path·
ways over landslides.

Get rea:ty for winter a1d higher energy em~

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

ATHENS - ARTS I West, will include live and recorded
the new community arts facil- music, Visual .art, crafts, perity at 132 West State St:, will · formance ari, culinary art,
celebrate its first annual spoken word and other enter"ARToberfest" this weekend. tainers, such 'a s stilt-walkers
On both nights Saturday and magicians. The event is
and Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m., aimed toward all ages and will
community members, col- be a family-oriented addition
." lege students, OU alumni, or alternative to the weekend's
·. and others in town for home- homecoming
events.
coming weekend can stop by Organized by Bryan Wallick
and be entertained by local and Constance Gabbard, the
and regional artists while entertainment was selected
checking out the center's. after community members
new renovations.
·
were invited to submit ideas
The community art days for art samples and acts.

• Setyourth~Jmost!to68degrees
• Mclle r&lt;Jre nahing blocks arms
• ~ yourw.t~J hsa-bE!ween 120-140degrees

Dr. Asha resides in Athens with her husband Dr. U.M. Raju, and

1••:
I:

t~wo

children: She is a graduate of Grandhi Medical College in India, and completed
her internal medicine residency at Mount Cannel Health System in Columbus.

'
-·-- ·----

Dr. Asha's practice is located at
HEALTH FIRST CARE CENTER, 510 West Union St., Suite B, in Athens.
Call (740) 592-9642 to schedule an appointment of for more infonnation.

--

•

-~
O'BLENESS l~
•

:

Subscribe

DEAR ABBY: "Lost in San
Mateo" asked how she
should deal with her longtime
friend, "Heather." The two of
them had been drinking, and
Heather, wht. was . driving,
got into.-a car accident. Now
Heather "efuses to discuss the
accident, and "Lost" asked
. you, "Don't you think I'm the
victim?" ·
Altllough you counseled
"Lost" well in bow to deal
with her friend, you failed to
point out her own responsibility in that accident.
Although Heather was at the
wheel, they were both
responsible for not arranging
their outing to include a designated driver. Therefore ,
they should equally share the
blame for what .happened.
In my opinion, not starting out the night with a
clear plan of who would
remain sober was a ·mistake
made by both of them . OFTEN THE DESIGNATED DRIVER, WINTERS,
CALIF.
DE:AR
DESIGNATED
DRlV.ER: That's true. (And
it's ao all- too-common mistake.) You are one of many
readers who felt that "Lost"
had a hand in her own fate.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: "Lost"
refers to herself as a "victim."
She is only the victim of her
own stupidity' She was drunk
and got into a car with another drunk, so she's just ·as
guilty as her friend. The other
girl feels guilty. That's the
reason she didn't come to
visit. Would yoO want to look
at your busted-up · friend
while . you had no visible
injuries? · The . anger · that
"Lost" is feeljng is only

Dear
Abby

because she got hurt and her
friend didn 't. - SEEN IT
BEFORE, YUKON, OKLA.
DEAR ABBY: "Lost" got
into the car. She was willing
to let her friend shoulder the
responsibility of driving, and
now claims she was too
drunk to know how smashed
her friend was. Baloney! If
that is the case, she ·should
allow her friend to use the
same" excuse. What would
have happened if "Lost" had
not been injured? Would .she
have helped with the fines,
jail time, damaged car or
raised insurance rates? Her
friend probably does feel
guilty, but there were two
"victims" here, and both are
equally to blame. Now
"Lost" is willing to e·nd a 20year friendship because she
can't own up to her own part
in all of this? Some.friend 1 TIRED OF EXCUSES,
HELENA, MONT.
DEAR ABBY: Rather than
being angry and resentful
against her friend, "Lost in
San Mateo" should thank the
Lord that she's still alive and
vow not to get herself into
that situation again. A,
responsible adult does not
allow herself to become incapacitated. No one forced
alcohol down her throat
against her wi II.
l am an ER nurse. We see

these drunk party girb all the
time , and it's typi cal for
everything to be someone
else's fault. What they fail to
tealize is that when the y
become that impaired. they
are prime targets not only for
car &lt;kcidehts. bul for ,·arjm:kers, purse th ieves. date
rapists, and worse.
Those two got by easy this
time. I hope they regard it as
·a wake-up call' ~ SHER ·
RILL IN SAN JOSE, CALIF.
DEAR ABBY: Both gi rls
should take u hard look in the
mirror and admit their ow n
guilt. Theyvare both lucky to
be alive and that no innocent
people were maimed or killed
because of their fooli shne ss.
-RECOVERiNG IN MIN·
· NESOTA
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buret!, also
known a.· Jeanne .PIIillips,
and was fotmded by Iter
mother, Pauline Phillip .•.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.wm ·or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A nge/es, CA
90069.

Friday, Oct. 27
LONG BOTTOM - lnzy
Newell will observe her 80th
birthday Oct. 27. Cards may
be sent to her at 44545 S.R.
248, Long Bottom, 45743.
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY
. Mary
Wingett of Syracuse will be
95 on Oc.t. 31. Cards may be
• InStant Messag.r.g · K1ap ~our buddy list\
sent to her at the Rock
• tO a-malladdi'111fll wilh Wabmalll
Springs Rehab Center, 36759
• FREE Technica l Support
Rock
Springs
Road,
• Custom Start Page · News, Weather &amp; more!
Pomeroy, 45769.
Wednesday, Nov. 2
( Surf up to 6X lasterO
, just 'J more
MASON
Violet
Sign Up Online! www .LocaiNet.com
Millhone, retired Tuppers
Call Today&amp;· Savel
Plains Elementary School
teacher, now· residing ' wit~
her daughter in Mason, W.
Rehable Internet A c cess Smce 1994
Va .. will celebrate, her 95th
birthday on Nov. 2. Cards • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. • • • • • • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
may besent to. at Box 287 , •
•
••
Mason. W. Va. 25260.

••
•
••

•
"We hope to display art :
from elementary .art cl~sses · •
and would like this to become •
an annual community art •
event for the family," said
Emily Prince, events coordinator
for
ARTSIWest.
ARToberfest will give Athens
residents a chance to see what
their creative neighbors are
up to, and will show OU students some of their off-campus arts opportunities. The
event is open to everyone and
free, though donations are
always accepted.

-------

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If you would like to become a Hospice volunteer please contact the PVH
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992-2155

HEALTH SYSTEM

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.Birthdays

Keepi·ng
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County
informed
The Daily
Sentinel

.

POMEROY -Alcoholics
Anonymous, 7 p.m., dosed
12 and 12 study, Sacred Heart
Church.
Earthen
RUTLAND Vessels will sing at the 7 p.m.
service of the Rutland
Fre~will Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT - · Ash
· Street Smith Sisters, Cindy,
Linda and Brenda and
Tammy Black Taylor. There
will be a potluck dinner at I
p.m . and services start at 2
p.m. Jeff Smith is new pastor
of the church.
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming with
9:30a.m Sunday school, dinner from II a.m to I p.m.
afternoon singing at I p.m.
with Day Spring ,Singers, and
other special singers. To
reach the church turri left off
Route 33 onto County Road
18, Kingsburg, go about three
miles.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Whether the proposal is order to allow the cuts to take
:state has pulled back on revised or scrapped entirely · effect Jan. I.
·plans for a 30 percent cur in has not been decided.
Jobs and Family Services
The agency has been imple- must trim Medicaid spending
the pay of self-employed
licensed practical nurses who menting numerous cost-cut- by $2.3 billion to keep
provide in-home care to dis- ting measures ,to blunt soaring growth of the program to 4
abled Ohioans.
·costs of the state Medicaid percent this year as pre~ The move is in response to program, which provides scribed by the Legislature in
:a flood of complaints to the health insurance to more than the two-year state budget
:Department of Jobs and 2 million poor and disabled · adopted in June.
: Family Services from LPNs Ohioans.
The pay cut wa~ projected
. and the families they serve.
·The agency was poised to to .save an estimated $8 mii"Based on the input we submit the proposal this lion a year in state and feder: received during various pub· month
to
the
Joint al money.
: lie meetings, we are revisiting Com!lJittee on Agency Rule
Complaining families were
:the initial LPN rate proposal," Review, a legislative panel concerned that LPNs would
:agency spokesman Jon Allen · that must approve · such find other work if the pay cut
administrative changes, in was implemented.
: said Tuesday.·

AEPOhioaoooffaubudgEt p&amp;)llllEJit p~.
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2005

State postpones pay cut for self-employed nurses

r'

from age 15 to adu It hood.

Thursday, October 20,

Both friends share blame for drunk-driving crash

Community art days to be observed

•

The O'Bleness Health System welcomes Asha Yellamraju to ou.r Health First
Care Center. Dr. Asha is availahle to care for the health care needs of patients

•

RUTLAND - Revival at
the Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church,
Rutland,
with
Evangelist Phil Newton, 7
p.m. each evening through
Thursday, Oct. 20
Oct.
30.
POMEROY - · Alcoholics
LETART FALLS - · The
Anonymous, 7 p.m., open
Christian
Film "The Burning
Heart
meeting, . Sacred
Hell"
will
be shown on largeChurch.
Pomeroy- screen television at the Jim
RACINE
Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM. O'Brien Farms on Adams
. 7:30 p.m. at the hall . Road in Lelart Falls at 7 p. m:
Free admission and refreshRefreshments.
RACINE
Racine ments following. New Life
American Legion 602, 6:30 Ministries will sponsor the
event. ·
p.m. Meal to follow.
Saturday, Oct 22 ·
RACINE -· Ohio River
DANVILLE - Danville
Producers meeting, 7 p.m. in
of Christ servi·ces, 7
Church
the VoAg room at Southern
p.m
Saturday,
6 p.m. Sunday
. High School.
with Rev. Denver Hill.
Saturday, Oct. 22
MIDDLEPORT ·
POMEROY -Alcoholics
Eternity
sings at Middleport
Anonymou~, 8 p.m., closed
of
the Nazarene, 7
Church
· Big Book study, Sacred Heart
p.m. Refreshments.
: ChLirch.
RUTLAND . -Second
Sunday, Oct 23
Annual
Fall Harvest Gospel
- MIDDLEPORT
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30 · Sing, hosted by Brian and
p.m., open discussion, Cross Family Connections, 6 to II
Pointe Apartments rec room . p.m. on Friday and noon until
ll)iunight
on
Saturday,
Thesday, Oct. 25
. MIDDLEPORT -Special Rutland Civic Center. More
· meeting of Middlepon Lodge than 25 area gospel groups
· #363 F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m., for scheduled to perform. Silent
. work
in
the
Entered auction, door prizes, concesApprentice degree. All Masons sions.
Sunday, Oct 23
.welcome. Refreshments.
POMEROY - ·Holy Hour
RACINE - Racine Area
and
Benediction, 4 p.m.,
Commuinity Organization
Sacred
Heart Church.
· will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Star
ATHENS -Year of the
-Mill Park buildng. Potluck.
Eucharist
celebration ·at Sl.
Wednesday, Oct. 26
Paul
and
Christ the King
POMEROY- Republican
University
Catholic cllurchbean dinner with serving to
begin at 6 p.m. at the Senior es. Bishop R. Daniel Conlon
Citizens 'Center. Bean and will celebrate It a.m. Mass at
vegetable soup, chili, and hot St. Paul. Procession of the
Blessed Sacrament to Christ
, dogs.
the King . Private prayer and
adoration at Christ the King
until 2 p.m. Rosary Group
from Sacred .Heart Pomeroy
Friday, Oct. 21
will lead the Rosary at I :30
POMEROY - .Rosary and p.m. Lunch available with
· Benediction, 7 p.m., Sacred reservations through Sacred
. Heart Church.
Heart at 992-5898.

Asha Yellamraju, M.D., Internal Medicine

'v\e'vecll heerd energy oosts will rise this wint~J.
AEP Ohio has tips to keep yw energy bills do.vn:

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�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4
Thursday, October 20,

Thursday, October 20; 2005

2005

Obituaries

Democratic think tank mixes ideas with Bush-bashing

producing some arresting and sumption (now 20 million
Behind a sulfurous tog of
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
politically attractive ideas that barrels a day) by 2.5 million
ami-Bush diatribes, there is a
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (7.40J 992-2157
Democratic new-idea factory
could help the Democratic barrels by 2012, mostly by
www.mydallysentlnel.com
operating at the Center for
Party move ·pa1t its penchant converting agricultural wastes
American Progress (CAP).
for negativism and offer a and grasses to ethanol.
It's ridiculous that CAP
new vision for the country.
Another plan would relieve
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Mort9fl
A key one is tax refonn that
labels itself a "nonpartisan"
f th ·
0
Kondraeke
would
raise
$500
billion
more
U.S.
auto
companies
etr
· thigk, tank. It's manned
Jim Freeland
revenue
over
10
years
than
health
insurance
burdens
in ,
almost
exclusively . by
Publisher
under present Bush policy, return for investments in
Democrats. It was created
cui taxes for 70 percent of hybrid technology.
and is headed by Bill
Charlene Hoeflich
One rap on the CAP is that,
Clinton's high-energy tonner question, "OK, what's your households and make the tax
General Manager-News Editor
code simpler and more fair.
for all the ex-Clinton people
White House chief of staff, alternative to Bush policy'!"
Of course, Korb and
John Podesta.
The plan, fashioned by for- around, it's developed few
And practically every pro· Kalulis devote(( half their mer Edwards aide Robert pioneering, "third way" ideas
.
.
nouncemenl it makes, even report to denouncing Bush. Gordon and Ph.D. John Irons, such as C!in(on's welf!;lfe
Congress shall make no law respecting an
on the ideas front, is couched And Podesta recently joined includes taxing all income •. . reform.
the Democratic claque declar· · whether from labor or investin anti-Bush vituperation.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
One exception might be in
ing
Iraq
a
"quagmire."
For
instarlce,
a
thoughtful
ments,
at
the
same
rates;
.
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Podesta founded the CAP reducing the number of tax education policy, where a
CAP report proposing a new
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
U.S. national security strategy . in October 2003, arguing that brackets from six ·to three; plan written by Gordon sugcalled !'Integrated Power" Democrats needed an altema- eliminating employee-paid gests merit pay for teachers
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
says in its executive summary tive to the GOP's ideas facto· payroll taxes; and significant- - an idea loathed by the
the Government for a redress ofgrievances. ·
Education
that because of President ries, the Heritage Foundation ly raising taxes tor the well- National ·
Bush, "our military is weaker. and the American Enterprise ·off.
, Association - as well as val·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
many of our historic alliances . Institute (AEI). In just · two
Republicans will surely untary national academic
are frayed, our Treasury is years, he's built the CAP into howl at the idea that those standards, lengthening the
depleted, Osama Bin Laden a $15 million-a-year opera- who earn more than $120,000 school day and school year
remains at large and our tar- tion wi th I 00 employees, a year would pay the top tax and rigorous assessment. The
nished reputation abroad has including 50-odd senior ofti. rate of 39.6 percent and that
Today is Thursday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 2005.
diminished our caP,llcity to cials an9 experts who pro· capital gains and dividends plan was praised by the con·
could be taxed at that rate servative
Thomas
B.
duce reports and critiques.
There are 72 days left in 'the year.
exercise momlleadec;hip."
Foundation,
Jennifer Palmieri, the instead of the current 15 per, Fordham
Today's Highlight in History: .
That could have J:ten said
On Oct. 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas
cent.
although
it
does
not
go so far .
CAP's
spokeswoman
and
for·
by Sen. John Kerry, ~-Mass. ,
MacArthur stepped ashore a! Leyte in the Philippines, 2 · in 2&lt;Xl4 or on any afternoon mer press -secretary of the
· Irons and Gordon say, how· as to recommend tuition
1/2 years after he'd said, "! shall return."
·
' by House Minority : Leader presidential campaign of for· ever, that with payroll taxes· vouchers that could liberate
. On this date:
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. In mer Sen. John Edwards. D· eliminated, most taxpayers in poor children from nonperIn 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase. '
fact, it was written by N.C., said, "We are ideologi· the 5100,000 to $200,000 forming schools.
In 1892, the city of Chicago dedicated the World's
Lawrence Korb, a befense cal, but we're not partisan. income · range would have
The CAP also has interest·
Columbian Exposition.
·
Department official in the We arc liberal. We lean to the their taxes cut and only those ing, if predictable, ideas for
In 1903, a joint commission ruled in favor of the
first Reagan administration left the way Heritage and AEI making more than $200,000
de 1
United States in a boundary dispute between the District
lean to the right. But we don '1 would have their taxes raised, post-Hurricane Katrina ve ·
and
the
CAP's
main
claim
to
of Alaska and Canada.
bipartisanship, and former say, 'Vote for this candidate with the biggest increases opment of the Gulf Coast,
In 1944. the Yugoslav cities of. Belgrade and Dubrovnik
going to those who earn more including massive employClinton White House aide or againsl that one."'
were liberated during World War II.
than $1 million.
ment of local residents (at
That's
true,
but
the
CAP
is
Bob
Boorstin.~
In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committe~
certainly
politically
edgier
The
CAP
also
has
a
plan
prevailing
union wage mtes,
The report ad~ocates a for.
opened hearings into alleged Communist influence and
eign policy that combines than Heritage, AEI or that for· tor universal health insurance, of course), with built-in job
infiltration within the American motion picture industry.
"hard" military power - an mer locus of Democrats-in- drafted by former Clinton · training and efforts to scaner
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert
the
Brookings White House aide Jeanne low-income housing throughincrease of 86,000 active duty exile,
Hoover, died in New York at age 90.
personnel and a doubling of Institution. None of them . Lambrew, that· would ls.nit out communities.
In 1967, seven men \Vere convicted in Meridian, Miss.,
Special
Forces - with more spends anywhere · near as together existing government
of violating the civil rights of three murdered civil rights
Podesta · believes that
attention to "soft" power, much energy denouncing the and private plans and give the Katrina marks a "tectonic
workers.
In 1968, fQrmer tirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy married
including alliance-building, adversary as the CAP does.
uninsured and businesses the
option
of joining the Federal shift" for U.S. politics, reveal·
And,
the
CAP's
most
visi·
Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
and
dismanpoverty-fighting
Employee
Health Benetit sys- ing "the bankruptcy of con·
In 1973, in the so-called "Saturday Night Massacre,"
ble single product, "·Progress
tling nuclear arsenals.
servative ideology and the
special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dismissed
The report also rules out Report," a daily e-mail, is tem.
and Auorney General Elliot L. Richardson and Deputy
The federal government government it has produced"
Bush's "discredited doctrine nearly I00 percent devoted to
Attorney General William B. Ruckelshaus resigned.
of preventive war," as in Iraq, · talking points that shred Bush would relieve employers of and creating an opportunity
In 1979, the John F. Kennedy Library was dedicated in
but does threaten "decisive and other Republicans.
insurance costs for preventive for "a new progressive moveBoston. ·
"Progress Report" is any care. Low-income · people ment" to assert itself. He
military action" if Iran. and
Five years ago: An Israeli-Palestinian truce brokered · by
North Korea were to export project of the CAP's would get ·an insurance sub- means to give "progressives"
President Clinton collapsed in a hail of gunfire, with
501(c)(4) political "educa- sidy. The total cost would be . _ read "liberals" - the
nuclear weapons.
Israeli troops killing nine Palestinians and wounding ()7.
Kotb and Brian Katulis, tion" arm, the Progress $ 100 billion to $160 billion a ideas to do the job, as the
Egyptian-born Ali Mohamed, a U.'S. citizen who.'d served
another former Clinton aide, · Action Fund, that Podesta year, financed with a new CAP stokes them with lots of
in the Army, pleaded guilty in New York to helping plan
recently published a plan for says accounts foronly 15 per· value-added tax of 3 percent
the deadly U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa in 1998 that
phased total withdrawal cent of the CAP's total bud- or 4 percent, with food and invective agaiilst the enemy.
killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.
(Morton Kondracke is
("redeployment") from Iraq get. The CAP itself is a medicine exempted.
One year ago: A U.S. Army staff sergeant, Ivan "Chip"
501(c)(3)
tax-deductible
char·
The
CAP
also
has
an
enerexecutive
editor of Roll Call,
by
tlie
end
of
2007
an
idea
Frederick, pleaded guilty to abusing Iraqi detainees at Abu
ity.
. gy-independence
plan the newspaper of Capitol
that gives Democrats a
Ghraib prison. (Frederick was sentenced to eight years in
To its credit, tl)e CAP is designed to cut U.S. oil con- Hill.)
responsible answer to the
prison.) Just three outs from getting swept in the AL
championship series three nights earlier, the Boston Red
· Sox fi~ally beat the New York Yankees, winning G3)lle 7
in a 10-3. shocker to become the first major Iea~ue team
to overcome a 3-0 postseason series deficit. ABC
announced it was dropping the Miss America beauty
pageant (it was later picked up by cable country musical
With
everybody
in
said.
trustful of the U.S. intellinetwork CMT).
Washington anticipating dra1 wonder what · they're · gence community, against
Thought for Today: "Eve~body's private motto: It's betmatic,
possibly
melodramatputting
in the water coolers professional military and
ter to be popular than right.'- Mark Twain (1835-1910).
. ic, developments it) the
up on West 43rd Street. It intelligence officers who
Valerie Plame CIA leaks
wasn't a whistleblower case fear the hawks are shaping
LETTERS
THE
investigation, it's worth
at
all. It was the exact oppo· intelligence analyses to sup-·
Gene
it
reveals
noticing
what
site.: the most powerful pe6· port their case for invading
EDITOR
Lyons
about the appalling state of
pie in the United States Iraq."
American political journalLetters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
using the press to damage a
In an earlier article with
ism.
whistleblower by endanger- John Walcott, the authors
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
As
one
with
first-hand
.
his wife - somethi11g quoted an anonymous offiing
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let·
experience of the odd blend
even
the Mob 'won't do. ·
cia! who said, "analysts at
into the memory hole to
ters will be published. Letters should be · iri good taste,
of arrogance, high-handed- keep it going.
Indeed, it's intriguing to · the working level in the
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to-orga·
ness and sheer professional
speculate
that Joe Wilson, intelligence community are ·
Editors appeared to protect.
nizcllions and individuals will not be accepted for publication.
incompetence in high places themselves by failing to outspoken critic of pre-war feeling very strong pressure
at The New York Times, learn basic facts; also by act- propaganda about Iraq's from the Pentagon to cook
very little in . that newspa- ing as if the newspaper was, nuclear weapons programs, the intelligence books."
per's. coverage of self-dra- by definition, beyond criti- wasn't the leak's main tar- · Nobody they interviewed
matizing reporter Judith cism and above reproach. get. White ·House .appa- disagreed.
Letters to the editor dealing with issues on the Nov. 8, elec·
Miller S!Jrprises me. ,
See, maybe that's the story
The essence of it was: ratchiks . may have been
tion ballot will be accepted until 5 p.m. on Monday, Ocr, 31.
Shocking yes, surprising "We' re The New York more leery of Valerie Plame, · Scooter and the country-club
No letters on the election will be published after Wednesday,
no.
a specialist in nuclear prolif· toughs in the White House
Times , and you're not."
Nov. 2.
In one very limited sense,
Hopefully, Judith Miller's eration, and her CIA col· really feared . What's more,
the Times' eight-year infatu· public pratfall has taught leagues.
it was always there to be
ation with WhiJewater was them something. A True
Here's why: In an inter- written, but not by Judith
even odder than irs naive Believer, she apprenticed view, "Little Miss Run Miller or other Washington
boosterism about , Iraq's herself to neoconservative Amok," as Miller dubbed courtier/journalists · who
mythical WMDs. ~o state dogmatists in the Bush herself due to her ability to pride themselves more ,on
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Member: The Associated Press and the
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blanks, and the Whitewater ing Saddam Hussein's imag· weapons."
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One month ••••••••.•• '10.27
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(one with Joe Conason), I'll the spring of 2003 , her 1f your sources are wrong, picious . .
One year ...... . ... ..•t 23.24
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spare you a rehash. ·
The real shame is that
Dally .... , .............50'
White House pals appeared you are wrong. ·1 did the best
Reporter; Be1h Sergent Ext 13
Senior Citizen rates
·
What surprised me was to think they could count on job that I could."
absent an aggressive prose·
One month .. , ... . .....'9.24
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13 Weeks . .
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weren' t treated as rivals, but again, off-again, refusal to Landay. It detailed a "bitter Lyons is a national maga·
26 Weeks . ............'64.20
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before
Special feud over secret intelli- zine award winner and co·
52 Weeks ........... .'127.11
E·mall;
apprenticecj themselves to Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald's gence" between the CIA and aurhor of "The Hunting of
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Melgo County
Starr.'s leak-o-matic prosecu- grand jury. editor Bill Keller Bush
administration . the President" (Sf. Martin's
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26 Weeks . . .. . . . .....'107.10
"
I
wish
it
had..-been
a
clear·
life
of
its
own.
Even
di
spos"The
dispute,"
they
wrote
Lyons at genelyons@sbc·
52 Weeks . . .
. . .'214.21
www.mydallysenlinel.com
cut
whistlcblower
case,"
he
itive facts could be pitched
. " pits hardliners long dis- global.net.)

Tracey Renea Salser Riggenbach
SYRACUSE - Tracey .Renea Salser ·Riggenbach, 35,
Syracuse, passed away at 5:47\l.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2005
at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.
She was born on Aug. 20, 1970 in Gallipolis. She was the
daughter of Cora Ann Hubbard Feliy, Syracuse, and Charles
Salser of Pomeroy.
· She was a 1988 graduate of Marietta High School and was
a homemaker and attended Racine United Methodis.t Church.
Besides her parents she is survi~ed by her step-father,
aob Felty; two daughters, Krystle Nicole Marler and
Natalie Brooke Marler; two sisters, Kimberly (Jerry)
Johnson of Waverly, W Va., and Shawnee Faith (David)
Han'sen of Marietta; maternal grandfather Oris Hubbard of
Syracuse; nieces and nephews, Jessica Johnson, Nicholas
Johnson, Jason Greene, and Garrett Qualls; and a great
niece, Brianna Greene.
·
.She was preceded in death by her hal( sister, Rebecca
Ackerman; two nephews, Keith Greene. aiid Cody Pugh;
maternal grandmother, Leona Mae Hubbard; paternal grand·
father, Anthony Salser and paternal grandmother, Eva Salser
Shields; and several aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2005
at Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine . Officiating will be Rev.
Kerry Wood. Interment will be at the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on
Friday, Oct. 21 at Cremeens Funeral Home.

The Daily Sentinel

•

to reduce foreign fuel
dependem;y.
Gary Michael of Racine was
elected trustee for Chester,
Olive and Orange Townships,
George Holter for Lebanon,
Letart and Sutton Townships,
Jeff Warner for Bedford,
Salisbury
and
Scipio
Townships, and Steve Morris
for Columbia, Rutland and
Salem Townships. Warner was
elected to serve as delegate to
the 2006 state convention.
Secretary Wilma Parker and
Treasurer Jack Carsey deliv·
ered reports, which were
approved, and Jeff Warner of
Jeff Warner Insurance, local
Nationwide agent, presented
information about benefits of
B~an J. Reed/)lhotos
Farm Bureau membership.
These
members
of
the
Meigs
County
Farm
Bureau
were
recogni&lt;ed
for
long-time
membership
Vicki Powell of Gallia County,
Tues9ay
evening's
annual
meeting:
Front,.
Barbara
Mora,
Charles
Bush,
Ben
Reed,
repre·
at
the state trustee for the area,
also spoke to the.membership. senting Farmers ·Bank and Savings Co., Mary Kay Yost, Wilma Parker, Pauline Adkins, and Nellie
Long-time Farm Bureau Michael. Back, Don Mora, Edward and Peggy Gibbs, Roy Holter, Pau.l R.eed of Farmers Bank,
members were honored, and .Harry Holter, Susari Sheppard, Howard Parker, R~x Shenefield, Sam Michael. and Sherry
new members were recognized. Robinson, Jan Knapp and Joan Wolfe of Peoples Bank.

Recognized for long-time
membership in th'e Meigs
County Farm Bureau were:
Evelyn Hollon, Carol Adams,
Mary King, Doris Ballard, Leo
Morris and Deibert Smith .
Back, Limy Hollon, Charles
Frecker, who presented gifts,
Dean Barnitz, Ralph Ballard,
Wilma Davidson and Mary
Davidson.

Auction

Deaths

'

.

from PageA1

Louisa Toppins
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -Louisa Jane Edwards
Toppins, 63, of Deer Park, Tex., died Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2005.
Arrangements are unqer the direction of Crow-Husse!l
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., and will be
announced when c0 mpleted.

Local Briefs
Rain cancels event
RACINE-. A halloween party planned by John Brogan for
senior citizens to be held from 2 to 8 p.m. Saturday at his
Eagle Ridge Road home will be canceled if it rains. Brogan
said he lacks shelters on his property.

Plan food drive
POMEROY- Girl Scout Troop 1208 is hosting and invit·
ing area organizations includin~ Boy Scouts and 4-H clubs
and all area Girl Scouts to partictpate in the Big Bend Service
Unit's annual Food Drive.
The troop will host a game day from l to 3 p.m. on Nov. 19
that will feature crafts and other games at God's NET. A fee of
$3 will cover craft supplies and a_patch.
Information and registration are available by calling Jerrena
Ebersbach at 992· 7747 or Shirley Cogar at 992-2668 before
Nov. 5. The person who collects the most non-perishable food
items will receive a prize.

TO

,•

from PageA1

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Genevieve Lucille Wood, 79, New
Haven, W.Va., went to be with the Lord and her beloved husband, Elmer Emq Wood and daughter Dianna Sue VanMeter
on October 14, 2005 at her daughter's residence.
She was born on Nov. I0, 1925, in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
daughter of the late William and Freda Bates Holley. She was
a housewife. ·
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law Melodie Ann
Wood Leach, and Steve Reeves of Mason, W.Va.; sons and
daughters-in-laws, Chuck (Susie) Wood of California, John
(Darlene) Wood of Columbus, Steve (Parkanna) Wood of
Texas, son-in-law, Duane Van Meter of Culloden, W.Va. 16
grandchildren a tid 27 great grandchildren.
A memorial service will be helq at I p.m. on Saturday, Oct.
22, 2005, at New Haven United ,Methodist Church witli Rev.
. Greg Blair ofticiating.
There will be no calling hours. Friends may e-mail condolences to fogelsongtucker@myway.com.
.

(Little Miss Run Amok'·

For the Record
Complaints

I

POMEROY- Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle report,
ed the following complaints filed with his office:
• John "Doc" Rose, Bashan. Road, reported that sometime
durin~ the night on Tuesday, someone drove in his hayfield,
spinnmg in circles and causing damage.
• William Snyder, Portland, re.J&gt;Orted that his garage had
been entered and a jump starter unit and a pair of new jumper
cables were stolen.
·
• A Racine-area resident received a phone call asking for
bank account information. Beegle urged all residents to keep
bank account numbers private and not to provide them to telephone callers.

.

.

Losers recognized at TOPS
COOLVILLE -Pat Hall
was named weekly best
weight-loss
winner
at
Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter
#OH
2013,
Coolville. There were 20
members present.
· ·
Pat Snedden was recognized for her six straight

weeks
of
weight-loss.
Snedden also presented a con·
tinuing program on Attitude
Adjustment. The group meets
every Tuesday at Torch
Baptist Church . Weigh -in is
from 5:15 to 6:15 p.m . with a
meeting at 6:30. For information, call Snedden at 662 2633 or attend a-free meeting.

Election Day dinner planned
SALEM CENTER - The
Salem Township Volunteer
Fire Department Firebelles
well be serving a soup luncheon on Election Day at the
fire house.
Plans were made to have
chili, vegetable, bean and
chicken-noodle soups a~ong
with sloppy joes, hot dogs,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Bureau

Genevieve Ludlle Wood

TODAY IN HISTORY

Election letter advisory

www .mydaUysentinel.com

and pie. Serving will be from
II a.m. to 6 p.m.
have
The
Firebelles
endorsed the renewals of the
Salem
Township
Fire
Protectio~ Levy and the
Meigs .County Tuberculosis
Levy. Emergency phone
number stickers will be available during the lunch .

children, and yes, like most
parents she does have a
favorite done in a Broken
Star pattern.
Cleland and' her late husband Frank helped found the
Racine Area Community
Organization and she tries to
carry on the tradition of giving back to the community by
donating her work to good
causes, like this Saturday's
auction.

Syracuse
from PageA1
retroactive to when Mayor
Eric Cunningham become
mayor.
In the April 14, 2004 council minutes former Mayor
Mony Wood asked Ralston to
attend council meetings and
then to take off during the
week to make up for that
comp time and meeting attendance.
Donna
. Councilwoman
Peterson brought up that
Clerk-Treasurer
Sharon
Cottrill was supposed to
receive a raise last April and
did not get it.
Cottrill's last pay raise from
the village is reflected in the
minutes from the Sept. 4,
2003 council meeting, showing a pay increase of $50 a
month, effective Jan. I, 2004.
Minutes from the May 3,
2004 council meeting reflect
that Cottrill received a $100
raise from the water board,
effective Jan. I, 2005.
Cottrill's current pay is
$700 a month paid from the
village 's general fund for her
dutie s as village clerk and
$850 a month paid from the
Syracuse Board of Public

Saine (but · not all) of the
• other
unique items up for bid
this Saturday will·be. an Ohio
State University football ·
signed by head football coach
Jim Tressel, Longaberger baskets, glassware, kids toys,
homemade crafts, je\velry,
china sets, books, rototiller,
furniture, hide-a-bed, baby
items, compound bow, United
Fund dolls, antique dresser
and antique baby cradle.
Drawings will be held for a
209-magnum,
.50-caliber
muzzle loader with fiber
optic sight, and a rocking
chair from Cracker Barrel
Affairs for her duties in the
water department.
No motion was made to
give Cottrill a pay raise.
Cunningham said he had
been in touch with the insurance adjuster for Tye
Brinager
and
Son's
Greenhouses about damage
done to a fire hose from the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department during a fire at
the greenhouse. Cunningham
asked Syracuse Assistant Fire
Chief Bill Roush to draft a
letter about the damage to the
adjuster. The village has a
$500 insurance deductible.
Peterson asked Village
Grants Administrator Rick
Chancey about checking into
grants to · cover playground
equipment. Chancey also
reported that Community
Development Block Grant
money would not be awarded
until spring 2006 for possible
village projects.
.
In regards to golf carts
being driven in the village,
Syracuse Police Chief Kevin
. Dugan stated that the carts
must be inspected, have
lights and be licensed by him.
C~ncil agreed to have the
oil ·changed and purchase
new tires for the village pickup. T\le four tires will cost
$418 .64 to be paid from .the
street fuod.

Restaurants. Tickets for .the
drawings are $1 each or $6
for five tickets. A 50/50 cash
drawing will also be offered.
Items for the auction were
donated by local businesses
and individuals. Cash donations have also been made by
the public. Donated items for
the auction are still being
excepted.
,"Every little bit helps,"
·Ohio Retired and Senior
Volunteer Program Director
and auction coordinator
Diana Coates said. ··we
appreciate all the help we get
from the community."

"The auction is very impor·
tant because we put so many
miles on those Meals on
Wheels trucks in a year's time
and sometimes tlbt truck dri·
ver is the only person a client
sees all day." Coates a&lt;.lded.
The auction will take place
rain or shine . If the sun shines
it will take place in fron t of
the senior center and those
attending are welcome to
bring lawn chairs to enjoy the
atmosphere and food that will
be for sale. If it rains the auc·
tion will be held inside.
The auctioneer will be Dan
Smith.

Council agreed to pay $90 ' Counci l accepted the lowfor a tarp for the salt shed.
est bid from auditing firm
Council agreed to go · Da)estra, Barr &amp; Scherer•.
ahead with purchasing up to CPAs, Inc. to do the vi llage's
$5700 worth of black top. for standard audit for tiscal year
repairs to Roy Jones Road . 2004-05. The bid was $8,000.
The village is receiving Council was required to
Federal
,
Emergency choose from a list of auditors
Management Agency money supplied by the Ohio Auditor
for the repairs.
of State's Otfice.
Money was advanced to
Peterson informed resi·
the pool fund to pay bills for derits to be mindful of their
the year instead of paying vehicles because she had
theni out of the general fund. recently heard of some veh i·
Council was advised on this cle break-ins. , ·
advance by tile state auditor's
This article was based on
oftice. The money wi ll be the unapproved minutes from
used to open and close the the recent meeling which will
pool to check for damages either be approved or amend·
froin flooding and to keep ed at the next meeting of
maintenance records to be council at 7 p.m. on Nov. 3 at
turned into FEMA.
village hall. Due to a family
A motion was passed to emergency, Clerk-Treasurer
pay the police cruiser pay- Sharon Cottrill was unable to
ment
from
the
Law attend . the meeting and
Enforcement Trust Fund per Peterson and Councilwoman
c~he village solicitor's advice.
Jennifer Hatfield took the
Council vo'iced their sup- minutes.
port of State Issue I.
All members of council
Political signs were also were present for the meeting.
discussed and it was Also in attet)d ance were
announced that none are per- Ralston. Dugan, Chancey and
mitted on village property.
Roush.
,

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE
In compliance with provisions of Section
5721.03 of the Revised Code of the State of
Ohio, there will be published on November
11th and November 18, 2005, in this newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the
description of the property as it appears on the
tax list, the name of the person in whose name
the property is listed, the amount of taxes and
penalties due and unpaid.
Each person charged with real property taxes
and penalties may pay the full amount of taxes
at the Meigs County Treasurer's Office by 4:00
p.m. on November 2, 2005, to avoid
publication.
To avoid additional interest charged on
December 1st, a taxpayer may enter into a written agreement with the county Treasurer to pay
one-fifth (1 /5) of the delinquent taxes.
Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Auditor

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Thursday, October 20,

2005

Local Weather
Today's Forecast
Forecast lor Thursday, Oct 20

City/Region

High I Low temps

Toledo•
54" 141 "

Mansfield•·
53' I 43"

Youngstown • 54° 142°. ·r

~

Pf\

t.__:)

/I / / I

Cincinnati
• 60" I 48"

6
Charleno. Hoeflich/ photos
It's been fun but it's about to end_:_ this year's boating on the Ohio River. that is . This week several residents like David and
Chnst1 Heff (above left] of Texas Road, Pomeroy; put their boat in the river so they could take a final ride before the weather
changes. Meanwhile others, like Bill and Lisa Quickel (above right) of Pomeroy, who had already taken their bmlt out were busy
steering their dock onto a trailer to be moved to its storage place for the winter. The dock has been at their summer camp
site along the Ohio s1nce early spring.

©2005
Thundersimms
.~

".

~,

'i~
Ice
-e ~~~ Flumes (:~",:)
'
'
.,,
~
··
·
~
' \~~"'/:~''\&lt;
•••••••

::D

..

Aa1n

•

*

.

Snow

We~ther

Ohio to lose money on prescription drug p~gram, official_says
Bv CARRIE
.SPENCER GHOSE

• believes .the 'W"Ong caJcu]alions are being used:
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Some stales found out
Friday they wilt pay less than
COLUMBUS- Ohio will expected, such as Ohio, and
pay less than it thought, but some will pay . more: ·s aid
still end up losing money on Elaine Ryan , deputy director
the new Medicare prescrip- of the American Public
tion drirg benefit for the aged Human Services Association,
poor, a state welfar,e offici til the trade group for state weifare agencies: And those paysaid Wednesday.
The new \1edicare plan ments could go up more if
reverses the traditional sys- 'huge numbers of new
tem of states buying medica- enrollees are attracted by the
tions for low,income resi- drug benefit.
dents and getting rebates
The plan was for the states
from the federal government. . to pay because the program
Now the federal government . would save them money, but
provides . the drugs but states
including
.Ohio,
charges the states.
California an.d Michigan
Ohio will pay about $35 have complained that the formillion more than it would mula will not be based on
have buying drugs itself in what the federal government
the 12 months stanirig in July pays. Instead, ·. Congress
2006. the first full slate bud- based the payments on costs
get year under the new plari, in 2003- before those states
said Barbara Edwards, state negotiated multimillion-dolMedicaid director. In March, Jar discounts.
Lobbying by the states to
Edwards had e&gt;timated the
loss at $55 million.
change the formula didn't
"lt moved in the right work, Ryan said.
direction for Ohio," Edwards
Ohio is seeing rebates of
. said. but the state sti II up tn 34 percent on pre-

scriplions this yea·L :
decrease by a certain percentBecause some of .those age over time, but at the same
rebates take a .while to col- time increase fur inflation.
· lect, the state expects a $25 States are worried that both
miilion benefit the first six the original numbers and
months after the program intlation rate are too high, so
begins in January, Edwards they won't· see any savings,
said. That leaves a total loss Ryan said.
of $10 million for the two"It makes kind of a. flawed
year budget, compared with estimate worse," she said.
the current drug,buying plan.
There's not much Ohio can
The federal Centers for do except keep asking its
Medicare and Medicaid Congressional delegation to
Services notifieu Ohio on change the formula. Edwartls
Friday of · its per-person ' said. "We've got a bill and
ra1es. The state calculated it we've got to pay it''
must pay $147 million in the
The expected $55 million
first six months of2006, less cost for 2007 was built into
. than the $155 million pre: the state budget, amid heated ·
dieted, and $320 million in debates over budget cuts to '
the full 2007 butlget year, services such as Medicaid
$20 million less than esti- coverage .for single parents
mateo earlier.
and adult dental benefits.
The state expects to make
The per-person rates set on
the . payments for about Friday don ' t mean there's a
200,000 Ohi{)ans who .are on· sudden $20 million windfall,
both Medicare, the federal said Tim Keen, assistant state
insurance program for those budget director.
65 and older, and Medicaid,
"One element of the equathe state-federal insurance tion we have, but there are
program for the poor and still factors that will affect ·
disabled.
the total cost of this proThe payments are meant to gram," he s_aid.

Thur~·day... Partly

· cloudy
with a slight cha'nce of showers in the morning .. .Then
mostly cloudy with a chance
of showers in the afternoon.
Much cooler with highs in the
lower 60s. Northeast winds 5
to I 0 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
·
Thursday night... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
in the evening ... Then rain
likely after midnight. Lows in
the upper 40s. Northeast
winds S to I 0 mph. Chance of
rain 70 percent.
Friday... Rain in the morning ... Then rain likely in the
afternoon. Highs in the upper
50s. Northeast winds 5 to I 0
mph ... Becoming southeast in
the afternoon.
Friday 11ight... Rain likely.
Lows in the upper 40s.
Nor1hw'est winds Sto .IO mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.

Bv CARRIE
SPENCER GHOSE
' ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - A b'ill banning human cloning and limit-ing stem cell research appears
to be dead fur now in the Ohio
House, House Spe?ker Jon
Husted said Wetl[!esuay.
Majority Republicans discussed the bill at length
Tuesday night and . decided
there are too ma~y questions
about how the bill w_u uld
affect science.
·'We do not have sufficient
support . among Republicans
to pass the bill," Husted, a
Dayton-area
Republican,
said. The GOP controls the
H.ouse 60-39 . and. the SO
votes needed to pass would
be "unlikely'' unless several
Democrats· defected from
their caucus, he said.
Democrat s are united in
opposing the bill , said Rep.
Chris Redlem, of Port Clinton,
the tor House Democrat.
. Scientists say stem cells col-

lected from embryos, which
can become any type of tissue
in the body, hold hope for
cures to any number of diseases. But the research raises
an etliical quandary because
the embryos - nearly all of
them donated by couples who
don't need their extra frozen
embryos after successful in
vitro fertilization - no longer
can develop into babies. ·
Under the bill , state money
only . could go toward
r~search on about 22 existing
sets of embryonic stem cells
created before August 200 I,
which are the only ones
approved far federal funding
by President Bush. It would
ban cloning for makirig both
babies and tissues for
research and disease treatment. A federal cloning ban
· failed in 2003 because of that
research cloning por1ion.
Recent research indicates it
could be possible to create new
stem cells without destroying
embryos, which would . make
both sides happy, Husted said,

COLUMBUS (AP)
School boards are promising
to defeat a coalition of teachers' unions and pension funds
that wants to increase contributions from teachers and
their ' employers toward
health care benefits for
- retirees.
Theteachers' group, led by
the
Stale
Teachers
Retirement System of Ohio,
has scheduled meetings in 14
Cities starting next week to
discuss legislation that Would
raise such contributions 2.5
percent over five years.
"We will go public and
start a war no one wants to
fight ," said· John Brandt,
executive director of .the
Ohio
School
BoardsAssociation.
Teachers now contribute I0
percent of their salaries into
the state's second-largest

DuPont-

3·7.91

Federal Mogul - .5
· USB- 28.72
Gannett - 64.58
General Electric - 34.41
GKNLY - 4.850
Harley Davidson - 49.62
JPM -34.73
Kroger- 19 ..99

Underground • AP

Saturday ... Cloudy.

Rain
likely in the morning ... Then a
chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the upper
50s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows
around 40.

Sunday
a11d Suuday
uighi... Mostly clouuy with a
10 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 50s. Lows in
the upper 30s. ·
Mouday... Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the tower 50s.

Monday
night
aud
Tuesday... Partly cloudy with
a 30 percent chance of show"
ers. Lows in the upper 30s.
Highs in the lower 50s.

Tuesday

· night

Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com·

Microllber

Stadonary·Sofa fl. Recliner

29.50
OVB- 25.14
BBT- 40.76
Peoples. - 26. 7§
Pepsico - 58.13
Premier - 13.05
Rockwell - 52.64
Rocky Boots - '24.85
RD Shell - 62.80
SBC--' 22.41
Sears - 121.64
Wai-Mart- 45.99
Wendy's - 28.72
Worthington - 19.67
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided .by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Ga111polls.

Sentinel

www .mvdailvsentinel.com
-......

.....

Saturday, October 29
9:00a.m.- Noon

Heart health can be fun for all ages. Join us at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital fl1r educational seminars, screenings, information about heart
disease, nutrition, exercise, rehabilitation and healthy lifestyle choices.

·craft show
set in Ironton
.on Saturday Icenhower to

concert·

IRONTON - The Ironton
Co-Operative
tlub
is
announcing its fall craft show
Saturday, Oct. 22 from 9 a.m .
to 4 p.m. at the Ironton High
School Sports Center (gymnaGALLIPOLIS -The Ariel
sium) at Seventh Avenue and
Dater Hall is proud to
Ellison Street.
This year will be a one-day - announce it' s upcoming conevent where crafters from cert, "Dwight Icenhower around the region will have An Afternoon With Elvis",
their goods on display and for scheduled for at 3 p.m.
_
sale. Admission at the door is Sunday.
$2
·
. Dwight
Icenhower
is
A bake sale -and- cafe will nationally-known Elvis !ribbe available- for those who ute artist, and is returning to
come hungry. But if it's· the Ariel for another exciting
browsing you seek, there will performance.
be plenty to see. .
Icenhower, from Meigs
. Among the many crafts, art County. continues to gain
· students from Jront_on High. popularity - and notoriety for
School will have their work his outstanding physical and
on display for friendly com- vocal portrayal of Elvis
petitton. ·
Presley. ·
·
Also, back by popular
Tickets · are available for
_demand is the "win a basket" $12 and $10.
drawing of baskets put to~ethLimited VIP tickets are
er and donated by indivrdual available for $15. Guests
co-op members.
wishing to purchase tickets
· The highlight of the event for this special event may
will be licensed auctioneer contact the Ariel - Dater Hall
and 30-year antique expert by
calling
(740)446Porky Nichols who will .do ARTS(2787).
appraisals of items for only
Tickets may be purchased
$1. He is the owner of White in advance by visiting The
- Eagle Auction Co.
Ariel - Dater Hall at 426 .2nd ·
All proceeds from admis- Avenue, Gallipolis.
sion, bake sale, basket drawBox Office hours are 11
ings, appraisals and the rent a.rn.-2 p.m. Monday through
from crafter booths will go Friday.
Tickets may also be purtoward the · Ironton CoOperative Club's fund,raising chased at the door one hour .
efforts to support education in prior to showtime, while supthe Ironton area.
plies last.

set Nov. 5
Ray
GALLIPOLIS
Fowler, maestro of the Ohio
Valley Symphoi1y based at
the Ariel-Dater Hall, 426
Second Ave .. Gallipolis, has
declared that the symphony's .
second concert of the 200506 season will be Doctor's
Night.
The . concert will
be
Saturday. Nov. 5 at 8 p.m.
At the very beginning, doctors not onlv made financial
contributions _as a group and
individuallv, but also contributed hands-on· work to
prepare the Ariel for its grand
opening in 1989.
The Ariel can now seat 465
guests. Fowler has extended
an invitation not only to doctors and Gal lipolis residents,
but to all who enJOY high
quality ropular symphonic
mUSIC.

-'Art of the Ancients' on display at area museum
PORTSMOUTI:f The ans to be the "golden age" of ritual of pipe smoking to
dlstant past will come alive as Native American prehistory.
evoke the life force and spirit
visitors cross the bridge in
Starting more than 3,000 -of the animal in both social
time to "Art of the Ancients: years ago and lasting about and sacred ceremonies.
The Ohio Valley," the I ,500 years, these ancient cuiAnother section of the
Southern Ohio Museum's , lures prospered throughout exhibit consists of hunting
new permanent exhibition of southern Ohio and northern tools and displays of status,
10,000 Native American arti- Kentucky, settling primarily such as . projectile points and
facts ranging ·from I ,500 to along the streams and rivers spears, in addition to banner8,000 years old. .
feeding the Ohio River. stones and birdstones of more
Depicting the rich unwritten While many details about the elaborate designs intended to
story of the ancient native peo- Adena and Hopewell people identify specific family .clans
pie known as the Mound remain unknown, articles they or to endow the hunters with
. Builders, the objects in the crafted from stone, bone, shell spiritual powr during rituals.
exhibition have .been. donated · and other durable materials
Social and group activites
. to the Museum by Madeline managed to survive to offer of the Adena and Hopewell
Wertz in honor of her husband, important clues about the are represented by tools used
William V. Wertz, and in mem- lives of their creators.
in farming and clearning
ory of her father-in-law,
The exhibition begins with land, shaping other tools and
· Charles Y. Wertz, who began items demonstrating the status preparing food. Outstanding
. the collection in the late 1880s. or identity of individuals and examples of clay vessels are
Downtown Portsmouth, site families in the Adena and part of a section featuring
· of the Southern Ohio Museum Hopewell societies, including o~jects crafted for. playing
and the new exhibit, sits on jewelry made of shell, river games, making music and
the former location of numer- ,stones, cannel coal, animal conducting ceremonies.
ous prehistoric mounds, and bones, teeth and claws; gorget
"The
Southern
Ohio
the artifacts are almost entire- masks, pendants and b~r Museum is deeply grateful to
ly from ancient village sites of amulets.
Madeline Wertz for her donathe .Ohio River Valley: They
The Wertz Collection also tion of the collection . which
evidence
all
the offers remarkable examples· enables these ancient objects to
Moundbuilder societies from of pipes created by the ancient be reconnected to the land
Early Archaic to Fort Ancient, cultures,
highlighted
by from which they came,
with outstanding examples impressive
effigy
pipes respectfully installed in a
from the Adena and Hopewell carved in the image of birds gallery located or1 that land to
groups, often considered by and animals to represent a · represent the impressive legacy
archaelolgisls and art hisrori- family or clan and used in a of the first people to call it

POMEROY
On
Wednesday October 26th, the
&gt;'Nina" ,
a
replica
of
Columbus' favorite ship will
.
open in Pomemy.
The sl:tip will be docked at the
Pomeroy Riverfront Boat Dock, .
238 West Main 'St, until her
departure early morning Oct 31 :
The ship arrives on Tuesday
and will have a private viewing of the ship for .the metlia
after docking.
Built completely by hand

without the use of power
tools, Archaeology magazine
called the ship "the most histori cally correct Columbus
replica ever built ." The craftsmanship of construction arid
the detail s in the rigging make
it a truly fa scinating visit back
to the age of Discovery.
The Nina was used in the
production of the film "1492"
starring Gerartl Depardieu
and directed by Ridley Scott.
The Nina was built in Bahia,

Brazil . by the Columbus
Foundation which is based in
the British Virgin Islands.
The ship has been touring
continuallv since 1992 as a
"sailing niuse111n" for the pmpose of educating the ~ublic
&lt;trid school children on the
"Caravel," a Portuguese ship
used by Columbu s and many
early explorers to discover the
world.
·
While in port,· the general
public are invited to vi sit the

0
Get M(wing with Ronald M~DonaiJ

A limited number of FREE cholesterol s~reenin g

Free T-shirts while supplies last

Anyone altentling the concert can purchase a ticket for
$20 and can bring six guests
for free. Anyone wishing to
obtai.n a subscription for all Of
the three remaining concerts .
on the schedule pays $60 for
adults, $54 for' seniors and
$30 for students.
·
Tickets must be purchased
by Nov. I. The symphony can
be contacted by calling 446.
2787.

Dwight Icenhower

healthcare professionals

at the Castrop Center

be av ailable

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

SS Ht:.1pit&amp;l Dri~t, Atii.Mt, OH 4J70l-2l01

, (740) 593 -5~ j I • www.ob le.ne~\.IJrg

200!i

'Doctor's
Night'

'An Mternoon With Elvis'

home," said Museum Director
Sara Johnson. "The exhibit
enables visitors to see "the real
thing' instead of book illustrations and offers an exciting
educational and historical
experience for all ages."
Port~mouth artist Will Reader
painted an exhibit scene of longago hills and the river. Dr. Gary
Wheeler, art historian and Native
American scholar, served as
· research consultant to the museurn for the exhibition project,
while Vernon Tiedge acted as the
Wertz family representative.
Portsmouth native Brian Sieling,
now director of exhibit design at
the Newseum in Washington,
developed the design concept for
the show, Gina Chabot of
Tanner and Stone Architects
designed the exhibit cases.
The Southern Ohio Museum
is located at 825 Gallia St.,
Portsmouth. Galleries are
open from 10 a.m. to S p.m.
Tuesday through Friday, and
from I to 5 p.m. on Saturdays.
Admission is $1 for students
and children and $2 for adults
except on Fridays, when it is
free. Admission is always free
to museum members. Further
information is available by
telephonii1g (740) 354-5629.

Mike Speck Trio

MIKE SPECK TRIO
PERFORMING LOCALLY

ship for a walk-aboard selfguid&gt;d tour e¥ery day of the
week. ·
The charges are $5 for
adults, $4 for Seniors and $3
for . students ages S- 18.
Chii&lt;Jren 4 and under are Free.
No Reservations necessary.
The ship will be open every
day from 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Teachers wishing to schedrlie
a 30 minute guided tour should -.
call the Meigs County Tourism
board at (740) 992-22:\9.

POINT PLEASANT - The
Mike Speck Trio will be performing m 7 p.m. Friday, Oct.
28 at New Horc Bihle Bartist
Church. located at ,, Robinson
St. in Point Pleasant.
For more than :10 year,.
Mik e and Faye Speck have
been ministering to ri)e
church through music and the
prcachctl word. Th ey have
sharcd the realily of Jesus and

Come On Over To BOB'S ...

fi[J Presentations by heart specialist and

certificates (complete lipid panel) will
th~ day of the event

Thursdav. October 20.

,,,,.,,

'Nina' docked in Pomeroy until Oct: 31

Ltd. -19.49
NSC- 39.30
Oak Hill F.Inancial -

and

· Wed11esday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s. Highs
in the mid 50s.

The Daily Sentinel

public retirement system.
Employers such as school
boards and colleges contribute 14 percent.
Brandt said increases are .
unnecessary. But officials
from the retirement system
say its 115,000 retirees have
had to shoulder more of their
health care costs; which have
increased by about I 0 percent
a year since 2000. The system's 213,000 active mem- ,
bers aren't prepared for the
costs they' II face upon retirement, either, spokeswoman
Laura Ecklar said.
Most of the state' s retirement systems are contributing the maximum amount to
retirees.
The coalition will meet with
teachers through Nov. 17. It
will go forward with a legislative proposal only if it has
. strong support, Ecklar.said.

Local Stocks
ACI- 72.01
AEP -. 36.91
Akzo- 43.65
Ashland Inc. - 52.45
AT&amp;T -18.35
BLI-11.45
Bob Evans - 22.39
BorgWarner - 56.64
CENX- 21.40
Champion - 4.25
Charming Shops - 11.00
City Holdi!lg- 34.11
Col- 48.39
DG -19.31

.. ~. ~ ..
~ .....

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Speaker: House bill limiting School boards girding for fight
stem cell research lacks support from teachers over benefits

" '..

peiform at
Ariel Sunday

Dayton•~

59° I 45°

-Page A7 • The. Daily

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile North
· Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
Mason, WV 25260
Phone 13041 773·5323
2400 Eastern Ave:
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

FALL ·DECORATING
HEADQUARTERS

•STRAW· PUMPKINS
'

• GOURDS • FODDER

His power to change lives
throughout North and South
America, Canada, Europe and
the Middle East. Churches,
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.

For more information
ahour rh e rrio. l'isir rheir Web
sire ar "'"'"'-lllikespeckmin· i.nries. com.

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~ .

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www.holzer.org

Bl

The Daily Sentinel.

INSIDE
The Extra Point, Page B2
OVP Leaders, Page B2
Southern looks for upset of Tomcats, Page B2
Area league standings, Page B3

Thursday,Ck1ober20,2005

OVP .SchedulE

Prep Football -

Week 9

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcomin~ ooll&amp;ge
and h1gh school vars1ty sport1ng event&amp; Involving

Eastern looks to tame Wildcats

teams from GaUia, Meigs and Mason countlas.

,

Thurt;dav's game

•

Point Pleasant vs. Ravenswood
Sissonville), 6 p.m.
Volleyball
River Valley at Trimble, 6 p.m.
College Volleyball
Central State at Rio Grande. 7 p.m.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS®MYDAIL'ITRIBUNE.COM

BoyoSoc:cer
(at

TUPPERS PLAINS Eight
Eastern
football
seniors will celebrate Senior
Night Friday when the
Eagles host Waterford in TriValley Conference Hocking
Division action.
Brvce Honaker, Nick
Kuh~, Terry . Durst, Lucas
Grueser, Michael Cranston.
Levi
Clagg,
Brandon
Goeglein and Brandon Batey
will m11ke their tina! appear-

fr!dav's gamea
Football
Gallia Academy at logan
Guyan Valley at Soutt) Gallia
RiYer Valley at Fairland
Vinton County at Meigs
Water1ord at Eastern
Southern at Trimble
Pont Pleasant at James Monroe
Tolsia at Waha.ma
Woman's Collage Soccer
Rio Grande at Bluefield College, 4 p.m.

ance at
E a s t
S h ll d e
R i v e r
Stadium
for
the.
Green .
B Ia c k
and White, and Eastern collectivcly will look to send
those upperclassmen o ut in
style with the team's first
win of the seaso n.
East.ern (0-8, 0·3 TVC
Hocking) is . coming off .a
. heartbreakin g last-min ute

12-61oss to Miller last week,
but there -..:ere signs of
encouragement to come out
of that win.
The Eagles outgained the
Falcons 160-94 in total
offense and held the MHs'
rushing attack to 47 yards on
37 attempts. It was also the
lowest poi Ill total that
Eastern has held an opponent
to all year long.
The Eagles also had all of
its· yardage on the ground,
. Please see Eastern, Bl

Salurdav's garhas
Cross Country .
0-11/D-IU Southeast District meet at Rio
Grande. 1:30 p.m.
ToumamentYolleyball
Gallia A.cademy vs. Waverly (at Wellston
High School). TBA
Riwr Valley vs. Westfall (at Vinton County
High School). TBA
.
Southern vs. Waterford (at Athens High
SChool). TBA
Eastern vs. Miller (at Athens High School),
TBA
. College Soccer
Rio Grande at Urbana, 1 p.m.

Women's College Soccer
Akl Grande at Brescia CoUege, 7 p.m.

.

URG ~oftball
to ·host winter
indoor league

Most of your.time
fighting cancer
shouldn't be spent
driving your car.

: RIO GRANDE The
University .of Rio Grande
Softball program is bringing
back
the

~d~onr \~n:
•

Fighting cancer can be the most trying period in one's life. Driving an hour or
more for cancer care that you can trust shouldn't have to happen.
.
Now you don't have to.
At the Holzer Center for Cancer Care, we have brought to the
community the most high-tech equipment available today.
The Center now has the Linear Accelerator which was the third of its kind installed
in the United States. The Linear Ac&lt;;elerator uses radiation technology
to create high energy x-rays that can be shaped to match a patient's
tumor. This technology allows tumor cells to be pinpointed and destroyed,
while greatly reducing the number of "good" cells affected by the radiation.
In addition to this wonderful new technology, the Center also has the honor ·
of having Dr. ]ames Ungerleider lead a team of cancer-:fighting
physicians. Dr. Ungerleider previously served as Chief of Staff at the
Arthur James Cancer Hospital and Research Institute in Columbus, Ohio.
The experience Dr. Ungerleider brings to our area is second-to-none, and his
dedication proves that the Holzer Center for Cancer Care will go the extra
mile when taking care of you and your loved ones.

• ball league
for a third
IS'
consecutive
•
• year.
The
2006 Winter
Indoor Softball League runs
from Jan. 8-Feb. · 19 at the
Lyne Center on the campus
of the University of Rio
Grande.
All games will be either
se.yen innings or l hour and
l S minutes. All players will
be in the batting order
unless a player chooses not
to hit. All hitters will start
with a l-1 count.
Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association
(OHSAA) rules will be followed with the exception of
the re-entry rule. There is a
possibility that . the league
may employ an unlimited
re-entry into the game on
defense.
The teams wi II be cQached
by members of the Rio
Grande softball team and
will consist of I 0 players.
with eight on defen se.
Players will be iss ued aTshirt, but must provide the
remainder &lt;if their uniform.
All games will be played
on Sunday afternoons.
The deadline for signup is
November 19.
For additional i1lformation or to register contact
Rio Grande head softball
coach David Pyles at (740)
245-7490 or (304) 675-7492
or e-mail: dpyles@rio.edu
or contact graduate assistant
Denita Robin son at (740)
245-7490 or e-mail: robinson @cora.rio.edu.

Bryan WallersiOVP file

Meigs tailback Jared Casey makes a run during Friday's Tri~
Valley Conference Ohio Division contest with Alexander.
Casey and the Marauders host Vinton County Friday at Bob
Roberts Field on Senior Night

Meigs hosts .Vikings
on Senior Night .
BY lARRY CHUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POMEROY -It has been
said that the past has a way
of repeating itself, and for
the Meigs Marauders, that
fact is a little to real this season.
Meigs (5-3) has started the
season playing the exact
same schedule as last season
- winning and losing to the
same schools as last year as
welL With that in mind, the
Marauders should be very
cautious against Vinton
County (2-6) this weekend.
Last season the Vikings
gave Meigs its fourth loss of
the season, something the
Marauders are hoping to
avoid ~ this year. The good
news, however, is that
Vinton County is a much
different team this year than
the one that posted an 8-3
record and qualitied for the
state tournament in 2004.
Meigs is also looking to ·

correct a downslide. After
starting the season 4-1 with
their only loss to probable
playoff
bound
Gallia
Academy, the Marauders
have now lost two of their
last three and needed four
quarters of football to beat
Alexander last week.
Now the .task is taking
down a deceiving Vinton
County team which may not
be as bad as its record
implies as the Vikings have
faced a tough schedule and
are now staring at a two
game win streak after starting the season wi.th six
straight losses.
The biggest problem for
the Viking·s thi s season is
their lack off otlense as the
team has failed to score
many points on the year. In
fact, Vinton County only
managed to score nine
touchdowns in their first six
games with Meigs putting
Please see Metes. Bl

• •

Hope ... Closer to You.

"~HOLZER

HOLZER
CLINIC -·
Athens

Charleston

Baby Fair .•Saturday, October 22, 2005 ·•10 a.m. to 2 p.m.• •Krodel Clubhouse .

Medical Excellence.
LocalCaring:
Jackson

. Lawrence .

Metgs

,.

Pt Pfeasanr

,

9!9

"t .

. featured presentations by PVH professionaJ·s &amp; members of the medical staff
. -Informational booths &amp; demonstrations of child safety products
· -Door prizes. rdrcshmcnts &amp; much more!

Center for

With over 100 board certified physicians,
9 convenient locations, and 28 medical
specialties, Holzer Clinic is close to you.
The region's best healthcare is right here.

You've Got The Cutest Baby Facet
· 'intant. maternity &amp;child fashi on show

Trust •

Holzer Clinic is Close~to You ...

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

~ CANCER CARE

. James. 5. Ungerleider, MD
Medical Director of the ·
Holzer Center for Cancer Care

1.800.821.3860
.
.

.

Holzer Clinic is Close to You ...
Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meigs Pojnt Pleasant

•

I

�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 20,

2005

Blue Devils, Logan playing for SEOAL crown

Expanded Glance
Southeastern Ohio
Gallla Ac.ademy
logan
Athans
Jackson
MarieUa

1-2

t-2

Warren

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOl FOOTBAll GAMES

~thletlc

SEDAL
W-L PF
3-0 110
3·0 77
1·2 45

0-3.

Last week
Logan 42, Athens 18
Gallia Academy 48, Warren 7
Jackson 33, Mariette 21

League

ALL
PF
PA
257 112
153 155
185 273
50
55
5-3
153 99
67
66
1-7 102 212
37
103
1-7 108 239
Frlday·a games
Athens at Marietta
Gallia Academy at logan
Jackson at Warren
PA
24
36
102

W-L
7·1
6-'2
3-5

Ohio Valley Conference
W·L
3-0
3-0
2·1
1-2

· Chesapeake
Rock Hill .
Coal Grove ·
South Point
Fairland ·
River Valley

().3
().3

Last week

Brad Sherman

Bryan Walters
Sporrs Wmt·r

Larry Crum
Spurts Wntl'r

' Brian Billings
Gener.li M.ut;te:n

Rt·\.·ord : 70-10

R efUrd: 0 1-l lJ

Re cord: -llJ-J I

OVP Sport~ Editor
Re,ord: (d - 19
last Week: 7-3
(winners in h2hi)

(wi ntll'r~ in h2lQ)

Gal!ia Acadenw
at Lo~an

Gama Academy
,1( Lng:111

Vinton County
at Mci~

Vimon Co unry
at .Mli.p

La~ t \V~:l·k:

PoUlt Pleasant

at lames Monroe

Jt

H- 2

l)omt l'kt ~ant
lames Monro&amp;

L1 ~t

Week. K-2

L.tst Wct·k: H- 2
(winn_cr !i in h!ilil)

(winnen in bold)

. Gallja Academy

Ga llia Academy

at Ln~:m

Vimon

Cuum~·

at

Charlie Shepherd

Sracey Brewer

Pag!nator
R.ecord: 60-20

Dave Harris
Ad. Repre5enative
Record: 63-17

Tim Maloney

SutrWriter·
Record: 6&amp;- 1-1
last Week : H-1

News Editor
Record: 59,-21

Paginator

JefF Lanham
Rio Grande AD

Record: 51-29

Record: 57-23

Las t Week: 7-3
(wiD.ners in h.rud)

last Week: 7-3
(winners in .hQld)

last Week:: a·-2

Last Week: 7-3
(winners in h2.ld)

Lasr Week : 7-3

.11 Lo~an

Gama AC8demy
at Logm

Gallia Academy
at Logm

Vimott County
:tt MriiJ-

Vinton County
'&lt;It Meigs

(winners in ,.biD.d) .
Gallia Academy

l.n~ :111

Vinton COLmrv

.ttM!tlp · .

:tt~

Poi1Jt P lc.t ~,mt
at lames Monroe

Ian McNemar

Pojnt Pleasant
dt JdmL·~

Monro..:

.Lt

Point Plca~Jnt
lames Monroe

(wi nners in lliilii)
Gama Academy

• Vimon County
&lt;It

G;d!ia

at Log-J.n

"'
:l[

Vtnton County

&gt;&lt;:l!ki&amp;!

Mri&amp;s.

Point Pleasallt
at lames Mgnroe

Point PleolSmt
at Jamn Monroe

Point Jllcasant
at lames Monroe

ltiver v~llcy
at fairland

~t

Fairland

Waterford
Eastern

Southern

Point ·Picasaut
~t

lames MonrQe

RiwrV.11l cy
at fajdand

River V:1llcy
at Fajr!and

RtvcrValley
at Fairland

at Fairland

RiverValleJ
at Fajdap

River Valley
at. Fairland

River Valley
at Fairland

Waterford
;~t Eastcrn

Waterford

Waterford
Jt E:mt•rn

Waterford
.Lt Eastt·rn

Wah•rford

Waterford

Waterford
at Eastern

Waterford
at Eastern

Warerford

at Eastern

Waterford
at Eastern

Southern
at Trjmhlt

Southern
at Trjmhle

Somhcrn
at Trjmb!e

Sout her n
at Trhnble

Southern
M Irjmble

Southern
at Trjmble

So\1thern
at Trjmble

Southern
at Trimble

Southern
at Trimble

Tolsia nt
Wah am a

12hii at

Wabama

· at
Wah am a

at fajrland

J!

Tolsia at

Tolsia

Wahama

GuyanVaUJt

at Soull\ G

Eastern

Jt

Wahama

Toisi&lt;l at

ltock Hill at
Chesapeake

Rock Hm at
C l1 esapeake

Winfield
at llutlJio

Winfield
Bull1lu

Winfield
.tt BuOJiu

,lt

J(

;lt

GuyJn Vall._')'
at S21)j;h Gallia

Ro ck PHil a~
Che5apeake

Eastern

Sou!hcrn

at Trjmble
Tol~ia

Tolsia at
Wahama ,

C u ~~Jn V,Jlley
· ~~ South Gama

ia

at EJ&gt;tcrn

at

Wah a rna
Jt

Guyan V;.~ ll ey

Gyyan Valier

S0t1th Gallia

at South Gallta

Rock Hill !It
Chesapeake ·

Winfield
UuflJ!o

Wjnfie(d
.11 Buf[tlo

Wahama

Jt

GuvaoVaUev
South Gallia

;It

Rock Hill at
Chesapeake

Rock Hill at
Cbeaapeake

Wiuficld
at B..Rflil.2

Wjnfield

at Buffalo

Federal Hocking
Miller
Trimble

River Valley .

RjyerVallcy

R_iverVallry

Hill

Rgck

Hm at

Wayne

C:ht•sJpcake

Winfield
Herbert Hoover

\Vintield

Winfield
at ~

•t

Logan
Pt. Pleasant
Poca
Sissonville

i!l!lhll!

P_revious Champions- 200 I: Butch Cooper--- 2002: Butch Cooper--- 2003: Brad Sherman --- 2004: Brad Sherman.

Eastern
fromPageBl
with over half coming from
Jordan Pierce.
Waterford (5-3, 2-1 ), on the
other hand, had little trouble
with Southern last week in an
impressive 49-7 victory.
In that triumph, the
Wildcats jumped out to a 310 halftime lead and never

Meigs

Alexander 24-6 and Belpre
·14-7.
The Vikings are led by
fromPage~l
quarterback Ryan Stewarl
and running back Max
up six touchdowns just last Learning who have · both
helped the team improve ov~
week.
Despite the lack off offense the past couple weeks.
Meigs on the other hand is
from · the Vikes to start the
trying
to put together another
season, Vinton County ha"
slowly improved over their winning streak to end the sealast two weeks, be ali ng son behind the legs .of Jared
I

si ve Iine at center.
Waterford is currently lith
in the Division VI, Region
23 pi ayoff hunt, and is also
one ~ame behind Federal
Hocktng in · the TVC
Hock!ng chase. WHS will
also be playing Fed Hock in
Week 10, so the possibility
of looking ahead is present.
Waterford is outscoring its
opponents 186-100 this season.
Kick-off is slated for 7:30
p.m.

Casey, who is near 1,000 three touchdowns with his
yards on the season at 945 ·top receiver being Jared
with II touchdowns. He is Casey 144 yards and a touchjoined by David Poole with down .
536 yards and Josh Buzzard
Friday's match should be
with 275 to complete a trio of interesting as both try to
dangerous running backs on break out and put up a solid
the Marauders ground attack, ending to the 2005 football
When needed, Meigs has season . The game between
shown il can go to the air on Meigs and Vinton County is
the arm of Aaron Story who slated for a 7:30 kickoff at
has thrown for 335 yards and Bob Roberts Field ..

•

Lasiwaek
Hannan 18, G. Backley 13
Hamlin 12, South Gallia 6

GALLIPOLIS - OVP Leaders is· a list of the top offensive high school .football per·
formers in the tri-county area. Playa~ ' statistics are compiled by Ohio Valley Publishing
sports writers anct may not match numbers compiled by their respective teams.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

looked back.
Bradley Lang (5-10, 166)
WHS ended up with 222 completed
four-of-eight
rushing yards and 362 total .attempts for 140 yards i11 the
yards of offense in the win. win. Derek Hoge (6-), 170)
with Jason Sampson (6-foot- led the WHS receivers with
1. 181 pounds) rushing for three catches for 122 yards
129 yards on 23 carries and and a score.
two scores to secure the 42Jeri cho Pugh (5 ~ 9. 153)
point win.
also had a pair of touchThe junior also became downs in the win. Jared
only the second Waterford Jenks (5-9, 180) and Gary
rusher 10 surpass the I,000- Tornes (6-1. 191 ) also had a
yard mark, joining Danny score apiece.
Doebereiner.
Jared Sampson (5- 10, 158)
Waterford
quarterback returns to lead a solid offen-

South Gallla ,
Wahama
Hannan
'

OVP Leaders (thru Week 8) - - - -

had two key interceptions ..Both came
from junior outside linebacker Grady
Rushing
Dalzell. :rhat was a major momentum
Player
Yards AH.
TO
Jared Casey (M}
945
156
11
shift in that game. something SHS hopes
RACINE - · This week the Southern
Bernie Fulks (SG)
735
126
8
:;;,;;;;joti , ij can find in its defensive backfield, a
Tornadoes (2-6) hit the road to Trimble
Alan Dye (H)
6
717
131
Terry Durst (E)
663
120
3
unit led by Wes Riffle, Josh Pape, and
for a match-up that has become a bitter
Butch Marnhout (S)
667
116
4
Butch
Marnhout.
rivalry over the years. In most cases .
623
'100
5
Curt Waugh (SG)
Dave Poole (M)
536
69
3
Trimble .has come home the victor, but
Trimble ~apitalized on a Federal
Travis Riffle (PP)
462
66
5
the game is always an all-out war. Game
Hocking turnover with Dave Clark
Dustin Winters (GA)'
430
79
9
time is at 7:30 p.m. at Tomcat Stadium
recovering a fumble. QB Anthony
Kris Gibbs (W)
385
49
3
Warner !PP)
378
90
5
in Glouster.
Dixon called his own number on a quar- , Brandon
Chris Edwards (RV)
319
65
3
terback sweep and followed a block by
Last week Federal Hocking rolled to
Seth Haner (GA)
309
69
4
305
48
5
. tailback Trent !'loll for . a 25-,yard gain . Jayme Haggerty (GA)
a dramatic 13-12 victory over previousWeston Counts {S)
276
63
3
Two
plays
later.
Dixon
scored
frorn
one
ly-unbeaten Trimble (7-1 ). The loss
Josh Buzzard (M)
275
29
7
274.
60
0
yard out to cut the deficit to 13-12, !ale Jordan Pierce (E)
snapped Trimble's 13-game regular-seaBryce Honaker (E)
226
44
2
in last week's game.
son win streak, dating back to the fourt h
Brenton Clark (W)
220
50
·2
week of the 2004 season.
Nott led the Tomcats into the red zone,
Passing
connecting with Chaz Mohler on passes
The one thing Southern doesn't want
Player
Yards Cqmp. Att. TD
of 20 yards and 41 yards. Dixon and
is a pack of angry, hungry Tomcals.
Jeff Golden (GA)
12?.5 74
127 13
48
120 7
Brenton Clark (W)
665
· Noll are ' the top Trimble offensive
Hoping the Tomcats are still in the
Bryan Morrow (RV)
518
40
79
1
threats. Nou paced Trimble with 75
'"stunned" mode, the Tornadoes are
James Casto (PP)
4
396
28
55
yards on 20 carries, including a threeSeth Williamson (SG) 377
ready to conquer.
.
29
86
5
Jordan Pierce (E)
46
23
352
3
vard
touchdown
run
for
the
Tomcats.
Southern hopes to find some of the
Ap.ron Story (M)
24
41
3
335
Both
have
had
several
·I
0(}
yard
games
Josh Pape (S)
same holes Federal Hocking found in
18
42 . 5
284
Brandon Warner {PP) 206
12
44
2
thi s season. Sometimes Kevin Simons
the Trimble defense. Offensively,
Cory Shaffer (E}
192
13
35
2
gets lhe call and is a talented back-up.
Federal wor~horse tailback Tyler Jarvis
Mohler, Noll, Mall Christman, and · Receiving
rushed for 147 yards on 26 carries, and
Player
Yards Rec .
TO
Barrett are the leading receivers, howeva one-yard touchdown. A.J. Smith comJayme Haggerty (GA)
570
27
5
er, Trimble is primarily a running team.
plimented Jarvis with 33 yards on II
22
Chase Ord (W)
444
5
Bryan Walters/photo
5
Shaphen Robinson (GA) 402
18
Southern's Butch Marnhout had 104
' carries. including an inside counter that
Michael Cordell (RV)
348
22
1
Southern
running
back
Weston
Counts
(
4
7)
resulted in a 29-yard touchdown run.
yards on 18 carries last week against
Travis Riffle WP)
18
306
2
Ryan Henry (AV)
236
21
1
Southern Coach Bob Grueser and the makes a run during Friday's 49-7 loss to Waterford, Jesse McKnight was 12-41,
10 .
214
Dustin McCombs {SG)
3
Waterford.
Counts
and
the
'Does
will
look
Counls
was
4-14.
One
pass
and
Weston
Southern coach ing staff ha ve been
Buddy Young (S)
7
1
189
for no yards was completed to Cody . Terry Durst {E)
169
13
0
watching miles of tape, analyzing and to knock off Trimble Friday in Glouster.
Bryce Honaker (E)
10
154
2
Patterson. Both Josh Pape and Jesse
re-analyzing some of the . success
10
Brandon Fowler (W)
149
1
Grueser knows the logistics of the McKnight had 45 return yards. All three
Federal had against Trimble. Don 'I be
144
Jared Casey (M)
11
1
surprised.ifa counter or two isn't mixed . mauer as well. Playing in Trimble is .Southern runners have to be on top of Chris McCoy (GA)
12
135
2
'3
Ty Wayland (M)
100
1
into the Southern offense.
tough, very tough. B11l he remains ~au- their games against Trimble. and addiWill Slone (PP)
7
96
3
Coach Gruescr said, "Overall, we · tiously optim istic !hat the Tornadoes can tionally the line must do its job in a con10
2
Derrick Beaver (SG)
89
Derek Young (E)
5
1
83
played a good game against Federal make a good showing; perhaps pulling sistent manner. If success is to come, it
Josh Buzzard (M)
77
6
3
7.
Hocking. Actually, we played a great . off what would be a maJOr upset.
must.
Krls Gibbs (W)
75
0
·second half. Looking back on the sueR1ght now,Tnmble IS out of a play-off
Jesse McKnight , Ryan Donaldson,
cess they (Federal) have had against berlh ~nd lrymg to get back tn. A los s to and Mike Brown each had eight tackles,
other tough opponents , I would say that Southern would be a devastatmg one- Darin Teaford and Buddy Young had ·
our effort looks that much better. That's two punch tor the Tomcats. · But what a .seven each, and R.J. Leach five.
why I think if we play ball and get our sweel win it would be for Southern.
If Southern takes its "A" game on the
kids t&lt;i believe, that we have a good
Last week Trimble had trouble throw- road. lhe Tomcats could be in for a sur· .
chance against Trimble."
tng the ball. Defensively. the Lancers prise.

ALL
W-L PF
5·3 192
2-6 84
4-4
193
4·4 199
5·3 212
2-6 138
W·L
6·2

161
156
151
185
179

PF
149
44

PA
89
162
72
100
339
163

26
58

45
26

2-6
7-1

2-1
0-3
0-3

89
18
13

21
84

5-3
0-8

219
186
86

2-6

74

88

PA
123

Friday's games
f

Wellston at Alexander
Belpre at Nelsonville· York
Vinton County at Meigs
Waterford at Eastern
Miller at Federal Hocking
Southern at Tnmble

CARDINAL
W·L PF
4·0 207
4·1
130
3-1 ' 128
3-2

10~

3-2

82

2-3

63

0·6

60

PA
78
94

51
79
107
11 2
192

ALL
W-L PF
7-0 322
5·2 164
6·1 . 264
5·3 190
3-5
3-5

127
118

0-7

60

PA
91
116
90
166
210
164
220

Non-League

newspapers
'L

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Friday's games
Rock Hill at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at South Point
I River VaHey at Fairland

Last week
Frklay's games
Point Pleasant 7, Ravenswood 3 1 Point Pleasant at James Monroe
Logan 33, Sissonville 14
' Bluefield at Herbert Hoover
Winfield 35, Poca 6
Logan at Mount View
Wayne 44, Tolsia 7
Wayne at Poca
Sissonvi~e at Shady Springs
I Winfield at BuffakJ

Catch all the results
in your local

Southern looks for upset of Tomcats

PA
149
105
178
195
282
296

Cardinal Conference

:Jt South Gama

Jt

31
71
46
128
109

PF
167
293
251
174
170
70

"

Guy.m Valley

Gt1yan Valleb
South Ga ja

24

ALL

2-1
2·1

Last week
Meigs 42. Alexander 35
Vinton CoiSlty 14, Belpre 7
Nelsonvili&amp;Yor:k 27. Wellston 7
Miler 12, Eastern 6 Federal Hocking 13, Trimble 12
Waterford 49, Southern 7

Tolsia at
Wahama

Jt

W-L
5·3
7~ 1
6-2
4·4
1·7
1·7

Ohlc Dlvialon
TVC
W·L PF PA
3-0 61
20
2·1
44 . 34
2·1 92
52
1·2 46
62
1-2 61
85
0-3 41
92
Hoddng Division ·
W·L PF PA
3·0 78
18

Nelsonville-Yor1o;.
Vinton County
Wellston
Belpre
,Meigs
Alexander

Gallia Academy
·
&lt;~t Logan

A c ;.~d~· my

PA

Tri·Vattey Conference

(wi nn ers in lwW)

Vinton County

M.tial

Chesapeake 15, Coal Grove 12
Rock Hill 4B, Fairland 25
South Point 30, Rfver Valley 0

OVC
PF
56
125
99
48
75
6

_The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

W·L
4·4
3-4

ALL
PF PA
162 176
137 130

1·7·

70 . 291

Friday's games
Tolsia at Wahama
Guyan valley at South Gallia

that won't b.e an easy task
against a Gallia Academy
team that will be back at full
LOGAN - Either Gallia strength for the first time in
Academy or Logan has been two weeks.
part of every Southeastern
Junior
athlete
Jayme
Ohio Athletic League football Haggerty, who has 1,041 alltitle since 1998, and during purpose yards, missed last
that span, the winner of their week's 48-7 thrashin~ of
a_nnual en~ounter has finished Warren, and also had to s1t out
on top.
one quarter in a 20-10 win
This year will be no ~ excep- over Jackson two weeks back.
tion.
He' II be back in the starting
And ·as the league's facelift line-up, as will four others
draws nigh, Friday's champi· who missed time because of
onship showdown between illness.
two of the league's founding
"Everybody is good to go,
fathers will appropriately help everybody's healthy and
close a chapter in the 80-year- f!Obody has to sit out any
old history of the SEOAL.
quarters (for missing practice)
Kick-off is set for 7:30p.m. this week, unlike the last two
on the hilltop.
weeks," Bokovitz ·explained.
The Blue Devils and · "We think !hat the virus is
Chieftains, who shared the behind us."
.
title last season, have each
The return of Haggerty
won their first three league restores, to its full explosivetilts and Friday's winner will ness, an offense that posts 335
take the title outright - bar- yards on average each game.
ring a big upset in Week 10.
Sophomore
quarterback
"It's a big game, it 's Logan, Jeff Golden has thrown for
and we've had some historx mpre than 1,200 yards and 13
with them over the years; ' touchdowns on the season.
said Gallia Academy ·coach H'aggerty lias caught 570
Matt Bokovitz, who was yards and five scores while
guided his club to at least a Shaphen Robinson has hauled
share of the league title in in 402 yards and Chris
· each of his first three seasons . McCoy 135.
at the helm. "There's a lot of
Dustin Winters paces the
bragging rights and commu- Gallia Academy running
nity pride at stake."
game with 430 yards on 79
There are also important carries and nine touchdowns.
playoff points up for grabs; Seth Haner.has gained 309
especially
for
Gallia yards.
Academy, which 'can likely
Kevin Call (5-foot-9, 180
sew up a home playoff date pounds) leads a Logan ground
with a vict~ry.
.
game that is grinding out 206
Bokovnz s club enters the yards per game; the senior
fray with a 7-1 record and is running back has amassed
~ ruled second in Division lll, I ,060 yards and eight touchRegion 12. The top four teams downs this season. Fullback
host games in Week II.
Justin Coakley (5-~. 190)
Logan, at 6-2 overall, faces complements the running
a situation not so rosy, as the game and has 529 yards this
Chiefs need to win out and get year.
.
some help to sneak in. The
"They've been good at
Hocking Countians are cur- breaking tackles all season,
rently 12th in a tough-as-nails we want to limit how many
Division I, Region Ill.
times they do that to us."
A win Friday would give Bokovitz said of Logan's two
Logan a significant boost, bu_t main rushers.
Bv BRAD SHERMAN ·

8SHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE coM

Clearing the way for the
tandem is a big offensive line
that includes center Nick
Amyx (6-5 , 205), guards
Jesse Wilson (5-10, 245) and
Bryce Bumgardner (5-8, 240)
and tackles Bruce Lehman (63, 290) and Jon Spohn (5-11,
275).
'"We want to be physical
because they're a physical
teant," Bokovitz stated, "'and
be able to match up with their
offensive line and not get
blown off the ball and then be
able to tackle their two running backs."
Logan, a run-first type
team, is expected to work a lol
out of the Power-! formation
and try to pound out yards
against lhe smaller, but fast.
Gallia Academy defense.
"'We've got a contingency
plan for that: We'.ve got a couple surpri ses set for them
when they try to run the football,'' admitted Bokovitz. "On
Friday night when people see
us play, they're going to see
we're playing just slightly different and we hope it creates
havoc for (Logan).
"We're going to try and
speed the tempo of the game
up on defense, and gel after
them pretty good."
When the Chiefs do pass,
quarterback Mi~hael Angle
(5-9, 165), who has completed 34-of:SJ passes for 447
yards 'with four touchdowns
and picks apiece, will do the
honors. Receivers Lucas
Wright (5-10, 160) and Nick
Walter (5-10, 165) have been
his favorite targets .
Stopping the run game and
forcing Angle to put the ball
in the air is a priority for the
Blue Devil defense.
"If we get them in a situ ation where they have to throw
the football, we feel like
we've done our job,"
Bokovitz said. "'We think
we'll match up with their
passing game pretty well.
They kind of let you know
when they're going to throw it

by formation: when they do
that, we're going lobe silling.
ready for it."
Gallia Academy\ Winle".
McCoy and Todd Saunden.
have all picked off a pair of
passes each this season.
Gallia Academy leads the
all-times series 36-34-1. but
Logan has taken six of the l&lt;ist
eight including last season's
43-13 triumph al Memorial
Field.
When the league splits into
two divisions of five teams
each next season, the two will
not meet annua ll y. Gallia
Academy , wi ll part of the
new-look South Division ,
while Logan wi ll compete in
the North .
The Devils and Chiertains
could meet in back-to"back
years, but will mostly play on
an every -other-year basis.
Gallia Academv won its last
trip to Logan. a 41 -23 victory \
in 2003. But los! three straight
on the reservation prior to
that.
Bokovitz said he's expecting a huge congregation of
Blue Devil funs lo make lhe
trip to support hi s club, which
has been the case lhe entire
season.
··on behalf of the leam and
the co~ching staff. I'd like lo
!hank the sludenl body and
the fans thai have been very
vocal this year. Thai 12th man
has meant a lotio us." he said.
"We're going to ~ turn that
field into our field when we
get up !here. as many people
as we'll have there and as
crazy as our st udent body wil l
be."
But he doesn't think !hat the
location of the game wi ll he a
. great f~1ctor: instead. it' II be
the destre of the 22 player' on
the field.
·•J don't know if home field
advantage was. a whole grea t
big deal to do wilh il. I th ink il
comes down to who ,·omes
out and plays their guh out
and who wams ilthe worst."

·White Falcons face
Rebels host Guyan Valley on Senior Night
.Tolsia on homecoming
STAFF ,REPORT

SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Returning regulars in the Rebel
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
backfield include impressive
~nior runninjf backs · B.J.
MASON,
W.Va.
vans (6-2 21 ) and Andrew
·
: Following an open date in its Banti (5-9 200).
Senior Adam Perry (6-0
· schedule, coach Ed Cromley's
· Wahama White Falcon foot- 175), junior Darin Parsley (5-5
. ball II returns to action Friday 131) or junior Michael Ramey
· evening for a 2005 homecom- (5-10 190) will get the call at
ing encounter against the visit- quarterback with junior Nick
· ing Tolsia Rebels.
· Dillion (5-8 185) rounding out
Both teams will enter the the Tolsia backfield. The
· t t b ttr
f
receivers are expected to be
7 30
: p.m. cones a mg or comrrrised of senior Aaron
· the chance to extend its respee·
tive gridiron campaigns into Wei man (5-7 160), junior
· the post season although on Brandon Stacy (5-9 180) or
: opposite 'ends of the spectrum. stlphomore Kenny Muncy (6-2
Tolsia, at 4-3 on the year, is 220) with a pair of sophomores
currently ranked 13th among rounding oul the front line in
• Class AA circles and will like- Jordan Moore (6-4 222) and
.; ly require a couple of wins Brandon Sturgell (6-1 225).
Wahama is comin·g off an
against Wahama, Winfield or
· Chapmanville in its three impressive 32-12 win over
. remaining outings to qualify South Gallia before having a
week off lo mend several nag: for the 16-team playoff field.
The White Falcons on the ging injuries that have accu. other hand is 3-4 on•the season mulated throughout the first
: and is currently rated a distant seven ~eeks of the 2005 grid .
.
28th among Class A playoff campatgn. . . .
Jut:nor Kris G1bbs .. desp1te
hopefuls. The Mason County
squad must capture at least two m1s~mg the South G~llta affatr.
: of its last three contests at retams h1s team rush~ng leader
· home
against
Tolsia, ~ role w1th 385 yards m49 .carParkersburg . Catholic or nes. Brenton Clark has p1cked
. Moorefield if the Bend Area u~ 220 yards on the ground
team is to harbor even a remote wnh Derek Veazy ( 179),
- opportunity at a fifth consecu- Nathan Stafford ( 141) a~d
·
1 ff
Brandon Fowler (87) all w1thm
;tJVe P ~yo appearance.
striking distance of the top
; Tols1a, wnh etghth year spot. Fowle.r accepted the
~coach Ore~ Waller at the challenge in Gibbs' absence
.helm. ts look. mg to retum;lo the against South Gallia and fm:P?st season for the fifth ume. m ished with 86 yards in seven
:SIX years after fimshmg 17th carries while Veazy added 79
, and narrowly rn1ssmg out_ on yards on the ground in 12 tries
:~e seaso~.endmg playoff held with both runners scoring
• m 2004. We lost a couple of touchdowns
;g~mes we s~ouldn't have,''_ Clark has' completed 48 of
: satd Waller. We lost ~ lot of 119 passes on the season for
: players ,from last year s team 765 yards with seven touch; but we ve ¥.ot qmte a few downs and seven interceptions.
• semors back.
Chase Ord is the Bend Area
:. The Rebels lost six starters teams leading receiver with 22
' from that 6-4 team but have receptions for 444 yards and
- found sufficient replacements five scores. Fowler has 10
in defeating Webster County catches for 149 yards and a
• (27-6), Sherman (28·0), 16th touchdown.
: ranked Matewan (40-14) and
Defensively Clay Roush,
. lOth rated Mount Vtew (28- Justin Bell Nathan Stafford
; 20). Tolsia h.as fallen l&lt;? a pair and Rudy Ward have stood out
·of Oh1o foes m Rock Htll (22- for the White Falcorts with
: 7) and Fairland (27-13) in. Brent Jones, Jamie Davis,
addition to succumbing to lop Jordon Roush, Justin Roush,
, ranked Wayne by a 44-7 score. Gabe Rousli and Nathan
: The Wayne County II 1s aver- Dingey also making their pres, agmg 21.4 pomts per game ence knDwn on the l~rf
;offensively while giving up throughout the firs! seven
• 19.0 points per contest to the games of the 2005 ~ season.
~opposition .
Ord has picked off six enemy
Returning starters include passe; on the year while Clay
senior linemen Timmy Evans Roush has recovered four
(6- 1 226) and Chris Waller (5- opponents fumbles with each
:9 187) alo11g with junior center sehior player returning a
;Josh Trogdlon (5-9 194). turnover for a touchdown.
Bv GARY CLARK

casey

Int.
5
7

3
2
9

6
2

2

1

4

Golden

Haggerty

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I

MERCERVILLE- The state of West
Virginia boasts a slogan that claims it is
wild and wonderful.
·
Soulh Gallia football has found the
Mountaineer State to be pretty wild. but it
hasn 't been too wonderful.
The Rebels, who started the season with
a 4-1 record,look to end a three-game losins skid against West Virginia schools
Fnday when it hosts Guy an Valley in their
2005 season finale at Rebel Stadmm.
SGHS (44) still has a slim chance of
making the Division VI playoffs, currently sitting 13th in Region 23, and a win this
week would help keep the Red and Gold

in postseason contention.
A victory would make for a winninll
home season for South Gallia, and 11
would also tie the school record for \\/ins
in a season with five.
· The Wildcats (5-2) are also in a playoff
hunt, currently sitting in 19th in the Class
A ratings. The top 16 teams advance in
the West Virginia postseason.
These two programs have a pair of
common opponents in 2005, Buffalo and
Hamlin. They also have something else in
common concerning those two adversaries, a pair of losses.
B1,1ffalo defeated GVHS 52-12 back in
Week I, and Hamlin fended off the
Wildcats 14-6 back in Week 4.
South Gallia fell to Buffalo 36- 12 in

Week 6 and lost a heanbreakcr las! week
to Hamlin 12-6.
Guyan Valley is outscoring ils nppunenls 174-101 on the se:tsun, ami '""
shown consistency over lhe last three
weeks with three straight efforts of Jt.
points, all wins.
Back to lead the Wilcat offense is second-year signal caller Brandon Frazier,
tailback Ken 'Chubby' Nelson, wingback
Corey Foster and tight end Cody Nelson.
GVHS won last year's contest 24-0 and
leads the all-time series 7-1 .
Eight seniors. Seth Williamson. Curt
Wauj;h. Bernie Fulks, Josh Wright, Brian
Lew1s, Wes Clary. Roben Coury and Josh
Skidmore, will also be making !heir home
finale at Rebel Stadium.

.
Point heads to unbeaten James Monroe
.

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

LINDSIDE, W.Va.
When you are playing a
schedule as tough as Point
Pleasant, the schedule should
be ·enough of a pain, but add
in soine injuries to key players a week before traveling
near! y three hours to the
backyard of the No. 3 team in
the state and you have a situation that is tough to
describe.
"You take all that into con·
sideration and playing in

their backyard. it is going to
be a tough challenge, but at
least at this time &lt;if the year,
even when you are 3-5. the
kids have got something to
play for,'' said Point Pleasant
head coach Steve Safforq.
Maybe a ""challenge" is tO
weak of a word to describe it.
The Big Blacks (3-5) will
.take two straight exciting
wins decided in the final
moments to ·Monroe County
where they will face the
Mavericks (7-0). who's high
scoring offense is producing
nearly 40 points per game.

-

.

Friday's game against
James Monroe will mark the
fifth time this season they
have played a team in the
top- I 0 in the state rattkings
and inakes the six th team
they have played that is in the
hunt for the post season.
Point will end the season
against yet another state
power in current No. 4
Herbert Hoover next Friday.
Adding lo lhe daunting
task, Point Pleasant will be
playing without its second
leading rusher Brandon
Warner and top linebacker

.

Chris Casey. Wamer had 378
yards and five touchdowns
and had a big game again st
Poca two weeks ago before
further injuring a stress fr~c­
ture last week against
Ravenswood.
The loss of Casey will hinder a defense which has been
improving
each
week,
capped off las! week when
they held a very high scoring
Ravnswood team without a
touchdown, including a
goalline stop in lhe finall)No
minutes to give the Big
Blacks the 7-3 win~

Saturday, October 29
9:00a.m. - Noon

Heart health can be fun for all ages. Join us at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital for educational seminars,screenings, information about heart
disease, nutrition, exercise, rehabilitation and healthy lifestyle d10i ce;.

f!)

Presentations by heart specialist and
healrhcare professionals

f!)

Get Moving with Ronald McDonald
at the Ca~trop Center .

f!) A limited number of FREE cholesterol screening
certificates (complete lipid panel) will be available
the day of the event

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

~j ~

OrM. Ati!Ms, OH 4!101~1]02

(140) 593·5551 • www. obkO(t.~ cq

Free T-shirts while supplies last

•

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Thursday, October 20, 2005

River Valley squares off with high-flying Dragons
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE CO M

PROCTORVILLE ~ ·.River Valley defensive .backs
and linebackers could have a
busy Friday.
That's because the Raiders,
who are seeking to snap a
seven-game losing skid, will
travel down Ohio 7 to face
pass- happy Fairland.
Fairland's dink and dump
passing attac k produces some
of the most lofty statistics in

Southeastern Ohio, but
unfortunately
for
the
Dragons. it hasn' t translated
into much success in the win
column . .
Both teams have struggled
this football season and enter
with identical 1-7 records but one will earn that elusive
second victory and first in the
Ohio Valley Conference.
Kick-off is slated for 7:30
p.m.
Even after the loss of Mike
Hill to graduation, Fairland's

,passi ng game has n't missed a
beat with senior Rich Staggs
(5-foot-11, 155 pounds) at
the controls. Staggs has
thrown for 200 yards or more
in six of his last seven games,
including a 400-yard ge m
last week.
Staggs has piled up I ,977
~ard s, 15 touchdowns and 15·
mterceptions thi s season; he
chucks the ball 28 times per
game on average.
His favorite target is Sam
Huff (6-0, 160), who has

caught 55 balls for 857 yards
including 24 1 yards in last
week's loss to Rock Hill.
Speedy . Josh Johnson (5-7,
135) has been a good compliment by catching 417 yards
worth of passes.
While the passi ng ga me
posts impressive numbers. it
alone hasn' t been enough for
consistent success. Fairland
has put up big numbers while
losing four . straight, and its
only victory came in Week 4
over tiny Tol sia, W.Va.

One reason for the woes
has been the Dragons' running game, or rack thereof.
The Law rence Countians
don't run the football much.
Their most accompli shed
back is Adam Fuller, who has
498 yards on the year, but
he'll sit out Friday's tilt with
a knee injury.
Fuller was also a dangerous
part of Fairland's vaunted
passing game. Filling in for
the ve rsatile back will · be
Travis Cardwell (5-5 , 180).

m:ribune - Sentinel - 1\e ster
CLASSIFIED .

Al so out for Fairland is
defe nsive
back/receiver
Nolan Love (5-8. 160)
The Raiders wi II counter
with their big line and will
try to keep the high-flying
offense on the sideline.
River Valley saw the return
of its leading rusher, Chris
·Edwards, last week. He ran
for 64 yards on 15 totes in his
return from a broken fibula
and has amassed 319 yards
on 65 rushes and three touch- ·
downs.

r..u;. County. OH

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

Houston blasts Cards, headed to World Series White Sox and Astros
put futility behind

ST. LOUIS (AP)- On this majors with 100 wins. It also
wild night of celebration, the was the final game at Busch,
Houston Astros owed it all to scheduled for demolition to
Roy Oswalt.
make room for the city's new
He took their dreams, hopes ballpark.
After the final out, St. Louis
and gritty resolve and pitched
his teammates into their first fans stood and applauded,
World Series, beating the St. then chanted "Let's Go
Louis
Cardinals
5-l Cardinals!" The video board
Wednesday night wifh help played highlights of great
from Craig Biggio.
"Cardinals
players
and
" Coming off a crushing loss moments at Busch Stadium,
in Game 5 of the NL champi- featuring Ozzie Smith, Mark
onship series at home on McGwire and even broadcastAlbert Pujols' stunning er Jack Buck.
homer, the stubborn Astros
The Astros won this
refused to be shaken. They rematch in six games after
jumped to an early lead losing last year in Game 7 at
behind Biggio and Jason Busch Stadium. Thanks to
Lane. got perhaps a little help Oswalt, it didn't go that far
from the umpires and watched this time.
Oswalt shut down St. Louis
Roger Clemens did his pan,
fo r seven innings in earning Andy Pettitte did, too - and
the series MVP award.
Astros stalwans Biggio and
Now that this wild-card Jeff Bagwell finally fulfilled
team has its first NL pennant, their delicious dream of winthe Astros will travel to· ning a pennant together.
Chicago take on the AL chamSo while the Fall Classic is
pion White Sox in the World headed to the Windy City for
Series, which begins Saturday the first time since 1959,
night.
Texas will get its. frrst crack
Cameras flashed all over ever. Folks in the Lone Star
Busch Stadium as Dan State like things big, and it
Wheeler got Yadier Molina on doesn't get any bigger than
a tlyball for the final out.
this in baseball.
NL champions for the frrst
Get ready for "Dee!? in the
time in their 44-season histo- Heart of Texas" dunng the
ry, the Astros rushed to the seventh-inning stretch.
mound to celebrate, bouncing
In baseball-mad St. Louis,
in unison before heading to the Busch era ended in bitter
the clubhouse for what was disappointment.
sure to be a more raucous
Swept by Boston in the
party.
2004 World Series and deterHouston had been 0-5 with mined to avenge that defeat,
a chance to.clinch the NLCS. the Cardinals were unable to
This time, the Astros would capture a second consecutive
not· be denied.
pennant.
For St. Louis , . the loss
St. Louis is still waiting for
marked the end of the season its first World Series champifo r the 1eam that led the onship since 1982.

Born in !962 as the Colt
.45s, the Astros didn' t make
the r.Iayoffs until 1980 and
didn t win a postseason series
until last year.
Nolan Ryan, J.R. Richard
and Mike Scott highlighted
some stingy pitching staffs the
called
the
mammoth
Astrodome · home, but they
couldn' t carry Houston to a·
pennant.
Not until Pettine and
Clemens came home to join
Oswalt in a stellar rotation did
the Astros get over the hump.
And on the night it clinched
the NLCS, Houston didn' t
even need to use Brad Lidge,
the All-Star closer who gave
up Pujols' two-out homer in
the ninth inning Monday
night that sent the series !&gt;lack
to St. Louis.
'
The Astros were one strike
from their first World Series
before David Eckstein 's single staned the rally in Game
5. Lidge had been voted MVP
late in Game 5 before he gave
up Pujols' prodigious shot.
Several other teams that
squandered terrific chances to
. clinch a postseason series
·never recovered: the 1986
California Angels, the 1986
Boston Red Sox, the 2003
Chicago Cubs and the 2004
New York Yankees, to name a
few.
Oswalt, who also beat Mark
Mulder in Game 2 at Busch
Stadium, gave up only three
hits and struck out six,
improving to 4-0 in his postseason career.
By
closing
it
out
Wednesday night, the ·Astros
gave themselves a choice of
Clemens or Pettitte to stan

Game I of the · World Series
on fu II rest.
The Astros became the first
team to win a pennant after
dropping 15 games under
.500 since 1914 Boston
Braves. Now, they'll take aim
on something else: trying to
become the fourth straight
wild-card team to win the
championship.
Of course. no game in this
postseason would be complete without a disputed call
by an umptre.
With the Cardinals trailing
3-0 in the fifth , Mark
Grudzielanck was hit by a
pitch and Molina singled for
their first hit. Oswalt knocked
down Abraham Nunez's
comebackcr and threw wide
to second, where Adam ·
Everett made a lunging grab
and tried to tag Molina•. who
jumped back in an effort to
dodge the shortstop' s glove.
Second base ump Greg
Gibson initially spread his
arms - perhaps signaling
safe, perhaps just to show that
Everett was off the bag. Then
Gibson made two emphatic
out calls, apparently ruling
that Everett tagged Molina.
Replays appeared to show
that Everett missed the tag,
and St. Louis manager Tony
La Russa argu~d briefly to no
avml. During an m-game TV
interview, La Russa said the
umpire told him there had
been a tag.
Instead of having the bases
loaded with none out, the
Cardinals had runners at the
comers with one out. Pinchhitter John Rodriguez hit a
sacrifice tly and Eckstein
struck out, ending the inning.

CHICAGO (AP) - When
Chicago last hosted the World
Series back in 1959, there
were just 16 teams, no divisions, no wild cards, no designated hitters and no
Houston Astros.
Windy City vs. Bayou City.
Deep dish pizza vs. Texas
barbecue .
They have one historic
theme in common: decades of
futility.
And one current trait that
got them to where they are:
deep S\arting pitching .
"I only saw the White Sox
play three games. I don ' t
know their team very well,"
Houston manager Phil Garner
said after the Astros beat St.
Loui s 5·1 on Wednesday
nigl)t to win the NL pennant.
"(' d just as soon not watch
them any more, they look
pretty good."
Houston
wasn' t even
awarded.a franchise until Oct.
17, 1960: At that owners'
meeting, which happened to
take place in Chicago, it
would have been hard to envision that the club's first NL
pennant wouldn 't come for 45
years - bui then again, the
team's first name was the
Houston Colt .45s. The club
wouldn 't become the Astros
until 1965, when it moved
into the Astrodome. thE socalled eighth wonder of the
.world.
Both teams' current ballparks have had .more names
than pennant winners.
Houston moved in 2000 to

1\egister
{304) 675"-1333.

Enron Field, which became
Astros Field in February 2002
after the trading company got ·
into financial trouble. Then a
juicy deal was signed in June
2002, and the stadium was
renamed Minute Maid Park.
Chicago moved in 1991
from the old Comiskey Park,
its home since 1910, to the
adjacent new Comiskey Park,
which in 2003 became U.S.
Cellular Field.
And the two ballparks hosted the Ali,Star game in consecutive years: Chicago in
2003, followed by Houston.
For four straight seasons,
from .1997-2000, the teams
met in interleague play, with
the White Sox winning seven
of 12. But they haven't met
smce.
Now they' ll share baseball's October spotlight.
"I've never played in that
ballpark," Houston's Lance
Berkman said. "It's going to
be fun ."
Chicago, which hasn't won
the title since 1917, won the
AL pennant Sunday against
the Los Angeles Angels and is
coming off the best postseason performance by starting
pitchers in nearly half a century, with Mark Buehrle, Jon
Garland, Freddy Garcia and
Jose Contreras throwing consecutive complete games
against the Los Angeles
Angels. Not since the !956
New York Yankees strung
together five straight had a
team pitched four in a row in
a postseason series.

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

r

&lt;Full-Time)

Notice of Election on

($0.05) lor eoeh one

Tax Levy In Excess of

hundred dollars of

Ten

valuation, lor live (5)
yeers. Tho Polio lor
Code, ·
Sections said Election will
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, open at 6:30 o'clock
5705.25. Notice Is A.M. and remaln open
hereby given that In
until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
pursuance
ol
a of said day. By order
Resolution of the of the Board of
Board of County Elections, ol Melgo
Commissioners of the CoUI)ty, Ohio. John N.
County of Meigs" lhle, Chairperson.
Pomeroy,
Ohio, Rita
D.
Smith,
passed on the 18th Director. Dated Sept.
day of August, 2005 5,2006
there will be submit· (10) 13, 20,27
Limitation.

Mill

Revised

ted to a vote of the

pepple of said oubdl·

Public Notice

vision at a General

Election to be held In
the County of Meigs
Ohio, at the regular
places

of

voting

therein, on the 8th day

or November, 2005,

the queatlon of levy-

Ing a tax, In excne of

tho ten milt llmltltlon
lor tho benefit of
Meigs County lor tho
purpoat of providing
care,

maintenance,

treatment and hoapl-

lallzatlon of rtsldenla
of Melgl County who
are oullerlng from

The Home Notional
Bank will auction the
following ltoma on
Seturdey, October 22,
2005 II 10:00 o.m. II
tho bank'a parking tot:
2000 Honda CBR800
motor
cycle
JH2PC3!08YM1 05478
1882 Chevy CMT 400
KI&amp;DO
Truck
2QCEK19HON11&amp;300
4

Ire IOid, II

of

porl of luberculoats
clinics. Said tax being
a rentwtl of a tax of
·112 mill at a rata not

axcHdlng 112 milia

for each one dollar of

valuation,

which

Rimfire
Rifle Shoot
Racine Gun Club
1 pm
Sunday,

Pharmacist Licensure. Two years pharmacist
experience preferred. Ho spital experience

preferred.
•
Excellent salary, holidays. health
insurance single/family plan, dental plan,
life msurance, vacatiUn, long-term disability

and retirement.

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2510 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1414.
www.pvalley.org
AAIEOE ·

October 23rd

KIT Be CARLYLE

lwrlghtGic.-..:n:at:..-----~

female mixed puppies
free to good home, 2-3
months old, very lovable and
adorable
Call
Yvonne
{7401709·6557. {740)388·

&amp; Sat. Oct. 22nd 9am-5pm.
Moving sale- Thins must be
sold. Furntture, men 's &amp;
women's clothing, toys, dishes, bed lu"'ens, electromcs
Free Kinens 3 female Bwks and miscellaneous items.
old, litter trained, &amp; wormed
Moving
sale·
Tools,
{304)675·2663
weedeeter, clothes, check it
Free Kittens to Good Home out 54 Lila Or. 1 m11e north
?40-843-5268,
roadside rest Sat ~ 0/22.

efu~Y~l.EI

Free to good home, female
Beagle, fnendly, spayed.
vacc1nated, good with children Please call (740)245·
2420 June Street, Syracuse;
5186.
Thursday, October 20, from
Giveaway· Kittens to good 10-4 Power tools; some
home, wormed . (740)446- hand tools. table and 6
chairs: 2 nice 2s• ladles
9279
bicycles,
e)(erclse btke ,
Kittens To Good Hamel
other misc. items.
740-843-5268.

on your home del.i vered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it wit.h a
copy of your photo ID.

Homes for Sale ............................................ 310

HouHhold 00oda ....................................... S10
Houaea lor Rent ............................ ,............. 410
In Memorlam ......,..........................:.............. 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; oarden Equlpmant ........................ &amp;80
Ltvtatock......................................................830
L.oat end Found ........................................... 080
L.ota I Acruge ............................................ 350
Mlecellaneoua.............................................. l70
Mlecellanaoua Merchendlae ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repatr ........................... :........aao
Mobile Homaalor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homea lor Sale ................................320
Maney to Lo1n ............................................. 220
Motorcyctoa &amp; 4 WhHtera ....,......................740

:

'

\

'·

I

Mall or drop off thlo coupon along
with a copy of your photo tD to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Galllpollo, aH 45631

www.comlcs.com

1 1uu.o

GAlLII'Ous

German Sh epherd , father
Border Colli e, 5 males, 2
females.
{7401645·1209.
{740)446·1735

Senior Discount*

Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

----------------------- ... ---- ..
I

Dally In-Column: .1:00 p.m..
Monday-Friday for I"•ertlon
In Next:
Paper
"~:~::=-~~~~~:~~~~~~·
1;00 p.m.
;iii
Paper

All Dl•play: l:Z Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To

• All

~WANJll)

Mualcallnatrumonta ................................... 570
Peraonota ..................................................... oos
Palo lor Sale ....................... .,., ..................... 580
Plumbing I Hoatlng .................................... 820
Proleulonat Sarvlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...............................160
Raal Eatota Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoo Ia lnotructlon ..................................... 1&amp;0
Seed , Pllnt &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sltuetlona Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'a lor Sola.............................................. 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatery ................................................... 870
vans For Sale...............................................,730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. lBO
Wantld to Rant. ........................................... 470
Yard Sale· Galllpolla .................................... 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Plaaaent ................................ 076
I

{p,.

.Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
• ·
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Thun:day for Sundav•

ads must be prepaid'

110
11

IIFLPWANJID

ws

~ Irl'l'tllio-...;;:~;...,;;.;;;;~
1~1\ll'\l\11

HOMFS
·-..iFOoiiiiRiiSiiAiiLiil:-.,.1

LPN---Appllca~lons

. Are Concealed P1slol Class Nov
Being Accepted For A PT 5, 2005, s·oo am . VFW •
Coo lville Road R ain -or- tor local ready-mlx-concrele LPN Competitive Starting Mason WV. Ph. (740)843· 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath wtth
F1replace in Rio Grande, 8
Shine
company. Expenence IS
Pay, Pa1d Vacation, Pa1d 5555,
preferred but not necessary. Meals, Discounts, And - : - - - - - - - - acres m/1 , 40x60 barn,
Huge Winter Carlf&gt;Ort Sate
Dnver must be w1lhng to cto Insurance
Ava11a01e Gallipolis Career College $125.000. {740)709·1166
Od . 19to0ct.22, B.OOAM- pre-maintenance on trucks Interested Applicants May (Careers Close To Home}
-dark?
29081 Bradbury &amp; eqUipment, yard work &amp; Apply
Dally
9-4
Ca ll Todayl 74Q-446-4367, 3 SA. 2 112 Bath, 81 Level, 2
Car Garage, Barn Appro)(
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other miscellaneous chores. Ravenswood Care Center,
1-800-214-0452
2 acres $120,000 (304)682·
Experience operabng equip- 1113
Washington
St , _._.galllpollscareeroollege corn
WA!ImD
8227 or (304)882-2890
ment &amp; extra skills such as Ravenswood,
WV. Acc:redlted Memb er Aceredll1ng
Coorn:ll lor lodepende~t CoNege&amp;
weldmg a plus
(304 )273-9236
Fax. al'ld Schools 127•6
4 year old Colontal on 3
·
Call (304 )937-3410
References Reqlured .
acres. Approx . 1,900 sq. ft 3
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
bedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
Sliver and Gold Cams, Earn $100 plus free p!Ctures Med1 Home Health Agency,
garage Master bedroom IS
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs, Pre- in one day. Invite your Inc seeking a full-t1me RN
1935
U S.
Currency, lr1ends to your home for a Patient Care Coordinator for Charlie Hawk will be at 28x24 with a jaci.Jzzi ltJb
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. glamour picture party. Call Galllpolts, Ohio and sur- Hawk Ad . Junk Store, $120.000 {740)446·7029
Com Shop, 151 Second (740)525-4163 for inlorma- roundmg
area .
Duties Athens ,
. several
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446- :t•o::.n::___ _ _ __ _
include estebll sh1ng and Wednesdays 12 .fl also
2
__84_2_·- - - - - - For a 11m1 ted hme make 50% mamtammg open lines of Pomeroy Barn behind Ewing
Home
several
Buy.ng black walnuts, 12tt selhng A110n . Call (740)446- communication with area Funeral
phySICians and health care Fndays 12 -6, (740) 378• 6262
per pound after 11ulllng. call ~33=5:::
8:..._ _ _ _ __
lac1lities in the del1 very of or740-412-5349
(740)698-6060, buytng until
Green Acres
Home Health ServiCeS We - - - - - - - - - 7BR. 5BA. Foreclosure. only
~N=o':_·:_15=th:_·_ _ _ __
Regional Canter, Inc.
oiler a compet1t1ve salary DIRECT TV 3 room with · $18,000 Fo r listings call
I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
Has an Immediate
and benefit package for full Tl\10 FREE 145 channels 800·391·5228 e)(t. F254
'
5004
opening for: Vocational time. E.O.E. Please send only $39.00 per month. Ask
resume to AI.Jijrey Farley, how to get FREE HBO.
Attention!
Activities Assistant
I \ 11 '1 0\ \II\ I
Cllmcal
Manager,
352 MAX. and home entertatn- Local company offenng "NO
Job Requirements:
"AYMENT"
'&gt; I In II I ..,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, men! system. Call 800-523- DOWN r .
pro·
Htgh School diploma or
QH
45631
755
for
detailS.
grams
lor
you to bi.Jy your
6
GED eqlllvalent
1
home mstead of rent1ng .
Va lid Drivers Ucense
Pollee
Dept
Is
WAN11l&gt;
•
100% flnanc1ng
Middleport
1
Expenence worktng w1th
To
less than peliect credit
MR/DD ~dults desired 40 accept1ng appliCations for a .
pollee
officer.
·
Call
Chief
·
·
accepted
hrs per week w1\h vanous
Bruce Swift at740·992·6424 A
• Payment could be· th e
hours
fter Life···LaP.TOp Sales &amp;
fer
information.
Service
PC
&amp;
Mac
Repair
&amp;
same
as rent .
Send retume or
service 740·992-1525.
Mortgage
Loca tors
LEARN
lntereelletter lo:
Need Exp. Cosmotologist
(740)367·0000
Green Acre• Rel)lonal and Nail Tech to work in new
Care 01ver m your Home,
Center, Inc.
shop.
Localton's great. No heavy lifting, excellent Beautilul br1ck home on
Attention: Human
wooded 101. 3br, 1 5ba , 2
Sooth rental only Serious References
May leave
Recourae OHice
ltreplaces. 2 decks, porch
mqwres only. Good workmg message (304 )67 5-1996
P.O. Box 240
and sunroom, hardwood
• ~0 O:~EA IEN CE NECESSARY
environment. Send resumes
'FULL·TIME CLASSES
Lenge, wv 25537
floors and carpet Must see,
Computer
Repair
and
to
CLA
Box
555,
c/o
'COL TRAINING
Fax: 304-762-2882
• FIN~CING AVAilABLE
d
Gallipolis Tribune, P:O. Box Troubleshoot. Web Oes1gn, $145.600 {740)446·6676
Email:
' JOB Pl.ACEMENT
Networking, Programming,
469, Gallipolis OH 45631
• ENROLLING NO/ol
garcOdiracway.com
Butld New Systems, Restore
EOE
Now Hiring Safe Drivers Windows. Virus Removal.
Apply tn Person at yo1.1r local Certtfled Phonet740·'992·
ALLIANCE
In-Home Careg1vers.
Domino's Must be ave'r 18 2395
TRACTOR-TRAILER
In-home services agency is
TRAINING CENTERS
currently
accepting Overbrook Center is current- Georges Portable Sawmill,
WYTHEVILLE, VA
Caregivers for the Pt. ly accepting appliCations for don~ haul your logs to the
"
Pleasant, Glenwood, New Nurs1ng ASSIStant Classes. Mill JUSt call304-675-1957
1-800-334-1203 Haven, and Mason area. The classes will be October
www a tia r1tlra~tortrl ltar com
OPA and Ftrst A1d tralnmg a 25-November 13 Classes House Cleamng Services or
100 WORKERS N.EEDED plus. You can apply 1n per- will be held durin~ the day s1t1ing with Elderly in their
son @ Mason County Action with some classes dt.Jnng home Call (304)895-3217
All real eelate adver11slng
Assemble crafts,
In thie newepaper I•
Group, Inc.
In-Home the e\lening hours. Class to leave message or lor
wood Items
subject to the Federal
22
1
Main
Street,
Servtces
Information
days
Wtll
vary
Monday
To $480/Wk
Fair Hou1lng Ac:t ol1968
PO BO)( 441 , Pt Pleasant, Sunday. A sci ~ dule will be
Materials provided
11'\\t 1\1
which makee It illegal to
WV
25550
or
pho
ne
available at the front office.
Free mformat1on p~g 24Hr
advertise "any
(304)675·3300
·
Mon&lt;)ay
Space IS limited. All Inter·
80 1-428-4649
preference, limltallon or
through Fr1day a.oo am to ested application at 333
dltcrlnMn•Hon based on
An E)(cellent way to earn 4.00 pm
Page Street, Middleport,
race, eott&gt;t\ religion, •ex
money The New Avon.
l1ml1lal status or national
Is there anyone 1n the OH NO Fthone CALLS
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
origin, or any Intention to
Pomeroy/Middleporl area _PL_E_A_s_
E_!- - - - make any such
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or looktng lor full ttme work?
Overbrook Center is current·
preferenc1, limitation or
...,..._ GetPa1dto
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- Are you look1ng for beHer
ly accepting applica110ns for
dlacrlmlnatlon."
than
m1nlmum wages?
675-1429
a Ful l Time RN Supervisor.
Hunt &amp; F1Shltfll!!
Pnmary
sc hedule
Is ThiS IS a 7PM to 7AM shift.
This newspaper wm not
Beat.Jtlctan
urn your passion tnlo
Monday-Friday 8am-5pm
knowingly aeeept
All interested apphcants
HAl A STYLI ST
Call
Jt
us1ness
Must have valid drivers should p1ck up an applicaadvenlaementl tor real
Wanted lor oi.Jr Jackson
304
576-2707
license and dependable
ettate which Is In
tion at 333 Page Street,
Salon Hourly plus upscale
vehtcle Must be fam~1ar with Middleport, Oh For add•·
vtotatlon of the law. Our
commission. Christine's Hair
reeder• 1re hereby
Meigs County.
t1onal mformat10n please
&amp; Tanntng 1-800-488-5727,
lnforrn.d·lh•l all
HIO VALLEY PUBUSH
Send resumes Including
contact' Holl1e Bumgarner;
{740)2 88·3249
dw•lllnit advtrtlted In
NG CO. recommends tha
references to.: CLA Box 2 Overbro ok
StaH
thl• newspaper ere
ou do business with peo
BUFFALO WV, Plant clean· c/o F'omeroy Da1ly Sentinel, Development Coordinator lit
av•llable on an equal
le you know, and NOY t
ing job llJII, 40hr weekJ-t
P.O Bo)( 729,
992·6472.
end money through th
overt1me, good pay &amp; e)(cel·
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
lent
benefit
package _:_L:;
IC_:E:_N~SE:_D::.:_:S_:O=Cf.:A:;L_ Paramedics &amp; EMT'a all until you have lrwest1
ated the offerln .
EVEN ING SHIFT Immediate
WORKER
,
needed. Apply at 1354
Country settmg in Gallla
openings prev•ous Floor Overbroolo;
Rehabilitation Jackson Pike, Oalllpohs.
Countyl 3 bedrooms. 2
e)(perlence "strip/wax. &amp; bull"
baths, llreplace. $89 ,000
MONEY
a real pltJs. 1-866-768-6309 Center Is now accepting Patriot EMS seeking FT/PT
(740)709- 1166
roLoAN
OR 1·304-768-3559
resumes for the position of EMrs &amp; Paramedics. Afte r
;;;,;.,:;;,~~~=~·it Director of Social Services Introductory period EMT's
House tor Sale 3 bedroorr.
asn1er wltn experence The qualified csndldate make
up
to
$10/hr.,
lull size dry basemen!
pply
~'~~'~&amp;Se&amp;slng
C In person, Thomm must be a LSW ,....
Paramedics up to $ 12lh r.
Great Neighborhood, corner
DO· lt Center, Gallipolis, s1rong verbal and wrinen
lot right In town Take a look,
100% mediCal Insurance,
tOOt Kenny Ct (right beh1nd
~H~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;~ communic ation ' skill s. prescription card, paJd days
Med1cald, Medicare and off &amp; vacation, retirement,
Jr. High SChOol) ShOwn by
! Ul•lrl&lt;l urculltlon
MDS knowledge Long term paid training. All vehicles low
Appt. 184.500 {3040675·
Salel 1\lanagtr
care experience preferred mileage. new equipment.
3123 or (304)~75·0032
Aespons lbllltes lnclud
but not required. Qualified For
more
Information
NEW 3 BADM $1299
ecruttlng end training o candidates
may
send wWw.patrlotems .com or call
OOWN
Parrlers, customer eervlc
rest.J mes to: Charla Brown· (740)532·2222.
$229 00 MONTH
meet1ng sales goals. I McGuire,
AN
LNHA,
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
~u have 8 posltfve ani
Administrator 333 Page Registered Nurse/Licensed
HOMES
ude, are 8 sett-startef
Street, Middleport, Ohio
Social worker
NITRO, WV 304-755-5885
t...
,.,, 45760. EOE
Mason
County
Action
,..nd e team player w,
New all brick 28R, 2BA, 2
like to talk to you
Local dental office seeking Group,
Inc
'"n'
Services
is
accepting
U.l b. d.p.nd.bl• •""
an entl'tutlasllc indl\lidua 1 to
car ga~ge In A1o GranOe
'-a·va
retta••a
\ranepor\a
Call
(7 40)446 ·2927
or
r·~
Ul
tra in as a clinical dental rest.Jmee lor s Registered
Jon . Po.ll'·on olfars 81
{740)339·0365.
assistant Must have,gener- Nurse or
lo Licensed Social ~~~;~:&lt;l.
'-mpany benefits lnclud
Worker r a case managar-u•
al offlc~ skills, compu ler
"t
dl
NEW BANK REPOS
ng health, dental, vision skillS and 8 desire to deval- men 1 poan on on 1 par em
anroourocernonoiJI
ONLY 3 LEFT
l..ndllfe
lnsura"ce.
401
k
baala.
Must
have
current
I"''
,
op
dental
knowl edge
rb 1
11
ASSUME
LOW MONTHLY
8
~a id vacation, and person Please send a hand Wrl"en
cense
trong o.;e
PAYME NTS.
l.t deys. Please son
and written communication
I"' '
note lndtcaling your tnterest s' Ills a must. ualift ad can- ~·~!"""----..,
OWNER FINANCING
.'ume
end resume to P.O. be)( 704,
AVAILABLE
Poul ao-rker
d1datas may send resume to
PROF'fSSIONAL
._
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.
..
Co
A 1
. 304-755·5566
Circulallon Manager
Mason
unty
ct on
SDn'ICD

I

Females, 1 Male, Rabbit October 22, 9am-? 1175
Beaglei Pug M1x, 2 months _Ke::.'::.'_..
Ad
:_______
old. (740)256-9256
Garage &amp; yard sale- 220
aweek old pupp1es, 'mother Debbie Or Friday, Oct. 21st

a

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - -

~
C 2005 by NEA, Inc.

SALE·

5 puppies to giveaway 4 years, 1 day only. Saturday,

Address - - - - - - - - - - -

!o-~

v.nn

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
,tlnnouncement ............................................ 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent .............................·......440
Auction and Flea Marl&lt;et. ............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repelr ..................................................770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 71 0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Buatnen and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty................................. 210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equlpment ................................... 78D
Carda ol Tllanka .......................................... OIO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcat/Ralrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Ren\. .................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ..........................................610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale............................,........................... 585
For S81e or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables..................................... sao
Furnished Rooma ........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Giveaway ......................................., ..............040
Happy Ada....................................................050
H1y &amp; Graln ..................................................540
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovomenta ...............,...................810

Subscriber's Name - - - - - - -

I

r

gallon gas water heater $4 00 bag sale, Fnday, 4025
Works f1ne In gopd condi- Jackson Pike, Rodney Ohio.
tion. (740)245·9782 alter
Antiques , furniture, dish
6pm
washer, toys, lots of junk.
4 puppies about 2 ,months 3632 Sate Route 850,
1!2 Red Healer. 1/2 lad ~1;:
01::20:.:·2::3:.__ _ _ _ _
0{3_..04_:1_67_5_~2_0_23_ _ _ _ , B•g Yard Sale. tst time 1n 5

Ia Whlf'tl

-..

S

30

The Daily Sentinel
6unba!f tlime• -6enttnel

amounte to five centa

y

:;:;ARD:;:ALE::~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

DISPlay Ads

Iefu=y~IIIIO
~

-

•otnt •leasant 1\.egh~ter

Ia, with no warrantlu
axpreaud or Implied.
For 1n appointment to
- . collll49·221 0, oak
lor Sheila. '
DS01810 (10) 19, 20,
21

1

2

4§alUpoH• mail~ Gtrihune

0

contracted, af)d aup-

commlaalonera

D. Pharmacy from

accredited college or univers1ty. WV State

1894 Chevy CK1 Truck
IQCEKUK2RE138&amp;3

Malgo County have

tats with which the

Pharmacy or Ph

so, you qu

.

Tha Home National
Bonk roaervoa the
right to reject any and
all blda. All vehlclu

tuberculoala at haapl·

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal is currently
accepting resumes for a Full-Time
Pharmacist. BS. Pharmacy, Pharm. D.

~

1 cute ~lnen, very lovable, all Valley Friendly- Please call
black in color, 9wks old. 740 245-5186.
{740)44Hl135

· or olde·r~

PHARMACIST

GJVEAW~Y

Word Ads

· - - - - - - · Female Beagle round by Garage Sale Friday· Oct
Drivers Needed:
'
Ohio Va lley Bank 1n Spring 21st. 1 mile oH 681 EaSI out . COL Dnvers w1lllng lo dn11e

·Are yOU

0

PUBLIC
NOTICES
the

Help Wanted

r

\\\()1 \(I \II \I"

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

r

10

Rl '\ I \I ..,

HoMFS
nJRSAI.E

Newly remodeled, 3 or 4
bedrooms. central a1r. full
basement, hardwoorl ll oors ,.
delached garage, large cov·
ered pat10, fen ced back
yard, close to schools, Point
$69 500
Pleasant
(740)709- I 382

ro~

i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;
tO

1180

L-------.J

Do

·

ITT$
TO

DRIVE

,----=----,
.

-

•NOTICE•

L,.,.;•;:P::;po;;:.•:::u::;nl;:ly,.:b;•":;:;;"·-J
.,.-------:c-.,--

r

o;

r

~nd

::....:.:.:.::..:=~--- I't:~~:~:~~'"',

t--~co; uld

In-home~~!:;::

wv

a

to..

Ohio Valley Publllhlng
825.Tnlrd An
Galllpolll, Ohio 45631
Oremalllo
pblrkerOmydlliytrlbune.eom

s

LPN
needed, tull· t•me,
Monday-Friday. day shin, no
weekends , no holidays.
Apply at 936 St. At 160,
Gallipolis. (740)446-9620.

Group, Inc.
In-Home
Services 221 Ma1n Street.
PO Box 44 t PI Plea$8nl ,
V'N 25550. For additional
lntcrmatlon, please contae1
Jennifer Thomas, AN or LIN
Part t1me lloor tech po!llt1on Templeton. AN 0675-3300
ava tlable. App ro:. 25·30
Envelope SMiers earn
hours per week. Please Wo rk C home. Earn $45()..
money workmg at home.
Call 24 hr for detatls 972· applyatScenic HIIIsNurslng $1 ,500 monthly part lime,
Cente r. 311 Bud~: Atdge $2,000·$4,500 fu ll time
504·2690.
Road , Bn:1well , Ohio
www.OurAnswer.com

No Down Payment Less
than perfect credit O.K Five
m1nutes
I rom . Holzer
Hospital Three Bedrooms·One Bath. Level tot Newly
remodeled. 7 40-416-3 130
PRICE
RED UC ED
to
$8 .
Cedar St.
5 000
1401
3
Meadowbrook
Add
Bedroom, l 1/2 Bath Corne r
lot. new Roof. move-1n condthon. new ca, pel end
Fl oonng, Storage Bwld1ng,
Fenced tn Back Ya rd
(304)773·5254 or (304)593·
4135
-------Three Rental Properttes for
S I
D I
h th 3
a e·
up ex, eac WI
B1R, UA, DIR , Kitchen, bath
&amp; porch. House- 3 SIR, UR,
Kttchen , Bath Cottage-S/A,
Kitchen, Bath.
Rental
tn come lor aU three-Approx.
$1,000/per month Pr1ce lor
ell three .. $70,000 locate 104· 106 71h Street Pomll
Pleasant
(304)675-2 495
after 7 00 pm

M&lt; 11111.1: HflMFS
I'OR SALE

r

to

Hou=
~~

·-..illOiliiiRiiRFOiii:I'ITiioo-,.1
-,
1 Br House and 3 Br House
lor Rent call (304)675-2441
between 9am·2pm

2 story, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath,
w1th
Kitchen
Relrtgerator/Stove, LA . DR,
Uhhty Roorn , LP Gas Heat,
Approx 7 mites out l incoln
P1ke S400imo mctudes
$~00
deposit.
water
References
ReqUired '
(740)256·1106 or {740)645·
6573
2BR wtlh garage- 1st A~e
Great r1ver vtew $500 plus
depostt
&amp;
re fer ences.
{740)446· 1079.
3 bedroom, 2 bath hOuse,
Sill Ave , Galhpolts, $500
renl
1 bedroom, 1 bath house,
5th Ave. G~a~•t 1po,.IS $200 rent.
1 bedroom 1 balh house
Rio Grande: $300 rent
,
.
d
{
7401 446·
0 epoSII reqLJtre
2422
__
· _ _ _ _ __
s rooms &amp; bath, stove &amp;
iefngerator, no pets 50
Ohve St . S350 mollth.
(740)446·3945
'---'------6 rooms &amp; bath. stove,
refr1g $400/mo
No pets
Aecenlly remode led 644
Second Avo (740)446-0332
8am·5pm
---''-A- -- - - 1 1. •
Henton
Local company olfer ~~g NO
OOWN PAYMENT
programs for you to buy your
home Instead ol rentmg
• HID% financing
• Less than perfect credtt
accepted
• Payment could be the

1987 2bd, 1ba, Clayton same as rent.
locators.
' mobtl e home very good Mortgage
7
4
condttion, well matntatned, ,t _ _0J_36_7_·000
_ o_ _ __

$8 900

060.

(740)446- For rent 2 bed room. 1 bath
tully renovated , all ap.pll
ances,
$475/month,
1989, 1 4~~:70 trailer. $12,000 $475/deposil Call (740)446Heat pump. porch, every- 3481 .
thmg included Must move
Call after 7pm. (740)388- For rent 2 story home 3BA.
A!C, , $500/month, $500
8375
depOSit 0 40)446 -3481
199516x80 Fleetwood, 3bd,
House lor Rent $400 a
2ba on t 3 acres. 815 Clark
month plus u111 $200 dep
Chapel Ad Call (740)367rei
requ1red. No Pets
7187
\304)675-4874
3423

1996 Sk.yltne 281160, 3BR,
2BA . hreplace. cath edral
cetl1ng, $35,000 (740)7091166
200t t4x50 Clayton 2BR .
1BA. excellent condt t1on
1985 short bed Chevy, VB,
4x4, e11cellent condttton Call
(740)245·9497

Middleport 701 Beech St , 2
bed10om
unfurntshed
hOI.ISe, depOSit , previOUS
rer1tal references. no pels,
(740)992-0165
Small 2 Bedroom, no pets,
WID hookup
$350 DO
month
$300.00 deposit

304-nJ-9192.

2002 Clayton only 5142 per Stop renttng Buy 4 bedroom
month. will dehver (740)385- foreclosure $15,000. For l1st·
ings 800-391 -5228 ext. 1709
4367
:-G-,.-.,-,-,-ed-9-:9-:.S:-&lt;-yl""'on-e

~~~~~~ · g~i~~~srht~~;~· ~:~.

Totally remodeled
int~rlorl

3 bedroom hot.Jse, central
(740 )
_9621
heat &amp; air, weeher/dryer
385
hook-up, lanced yard, star·
New t 6 w'lde only S190 per age bldg $475 per rponth
rent. (740)441-1111 .
month Vtnyl S1d1ng, Shtngle
Roof &amp; Oa11very (740)385· Two &amp; three bedroom tn
7671
Pomeroy and Syracuse
New 16)(76 3 bedroom/.2
balh Minutes from Athens
Must sell. Move In today Call
(740)385·2434
Tra11er lor Sale.
2000
Clayton. 16 X. 70. 3 bedroom--2 batt1--central air-porches. $23.000. 740·9925972 .

r

r M~~~~

{740)992·3702 o' 4 I 8·5547

1

2BR moblle home tor rent
$.325/d eposit $3251rent plus
utt.lll tes On Poleca t Ad
(740)446·4107 or /740)446·
2707.

2BR mobile nome 1or rent
$325/depos,\ $325/rent plus
~--o1AiiliiCiiRFAiiliiGiiEI.
.
utlll1tes On Pclecal Ad
-( 740~446·41 07 Ot (740)44684 5 acres 6 miles sotJth ol 2707
Oak Hill. Wayne Natwnet
Forest borders It on 3 Stdes 3Br Refnclg &amp; Stove,Washer
&amp; Dryer 1ncluded (304)576·
(740)682·7318 attar 6pm
2934

L&lt;Jrs &amp;

-.J

~eauUtul home Stle :Almost
2 acres with wooded raVIne
-3 miles frOm Holzer 'Msptlal
Water &amp; electric. $27.500
(740)446·1663 leave mas·
sage

-B-ea-,-,,,-,,- "-ve r view in
KanauQa Ideal tor 1-2 peopie
No pets , please .
ApphcR ttons be 1ng taken
·------·
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
Call (74own·0181
TURNED DOWN ON
NITRO, WV
---'------SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
SUPERSTORE
Lots lor sate close to Green
No Fee Unless we Wln l
Rt:AL ES!"An;
OFFERIN(l CLAYTON .
acres, Lesage WV, 2 br
1•888 •582 -334 5
FLEETWOOD. GILES . MHE
WA~TIJJ
Mob1 le Home for Rent
AN D OAKWOOD
Cu ll oden, wv (304 )576·
LOWEST PRICES .· BEST Reti-Ealtte Wanted-Loca l 2642
SERVICE.GUARANTEED person lookmg lor a home to
DRIVE A LITILE ·SAVE A buy All cash
Meigs or Mobtle hOme silas In
LOT
Gallie No double·w1de or Country Homes, Shade
$130 mo (740)385·4019
304-755-5885
modular 740 .. 416·3 130

r--:..:::;:;.:;::-;::..:::..--,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

I

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

__

~,r Aeoil~i R!i-i RO il f!'lil~ios_.l

r

APAR1111ENfS
IURRENT

1r

1
&amp;
2
BR
ap1. Tw1n Rivers Tower Is acceptWater/sewer/trash
pd . ing appli_cations tor wBiting
~25/month &amp; $400/month list lor Hud-subsized. 1- br.
(740)446-4734 or (740)367- apartment. call 675-6679
7746 or (740)367-7015
EHO

i

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Si&gt;AO:
ments. rurnished and unfurFOR JbNr
nished, secutlt)l deposit L~--..;,iiii,;,;;iiiii;.,_.J
required, no pets 740-992Downtown Office Space- 5
2218.
room surte $650/mo; 1 room
1 Bedroom , Nicely furnishect offrce- 5225/mo.; 2 room
apartment. quiet area, 1 suite :5250/mo. Security
adult. $500/mo. (740)446- deposit reqtJired. You pijy
utilities. All spaces very nrce.
4782
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
1 BR W/0 hookup, electric o r tor appointment.
gaS, ·no pets. $299 plus ,
deposit.
(740)441-1184, For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condi·
(740)441-0194
tion. Downtown Gallipolis.
2
bedroom
apartment Appro~~: _ 1600 sq_ It each . 1
Racine, very n•ce. clean , or 2 baths. Lease price
S4.25 per month plus negotrable to encourage
deposit , no pars. references new
business.
Call
required ,
740-441-0110, (740)446-4425 or (740)446(740)992·5174
3936.

i
I

Riverbend Apts. New Haven
WV. Now accepting applications tor Hud-Subsidized,
one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
included. Based on 30% of
adjusted Income
Call
(304)882-3121 available for
Senior and Oisabled People.
E.H.O

Phillip
Alder

Hometown
Catering

AJJID&gt;
FOR SALE

:;

BEAUTIFUL

~=~~~~

APART·

·J=~~~~~

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive ' from $ 344 to $4 42 _
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568.
Housing Opportunity_

Equa I

Beautiful, 2 bedroom, 1600
an d deco ratd 2nd flo
1ment 57
e
or apar
,
·
G 11· 1·
C OlJr I S1·• m
a rpo IS .
Spacious living &amp; dining
rooms_ New appliances; 1

•.:.Q . r1 res1ore d

Buy
or sell.
Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
.on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,

MlscFLIANI&lt;::OUS

~fERCHANilJSii:

01 S- 10 PU $3,895; 01
Qodge Neon $3,895; 00 S10 Blazer $4.695: 00 Kla
Sephia $2.600; 99 Pont. Gr.
Pri)o; $1,900; DO Dodge
Durango 55,995; 95 GMC
Sonoma , 4x4 $2,000; 9a
Jeep Cherokee $3.200; 99

Catering Selections

1999 &amp; 1998 Sunlires; 1998
and two 1999 s\turns; 1998
Honda Odyssey van , SBK
$S,SS 5 ; 2000 Impala, 89 K
ss.egs; 1994 GMC Jimmy
4x4, 4 D, $t ,9as. Others In
stock. 3monthsJ3 ,000 mile
warranty on most vehicles.
Cook Motors, 328 Jackson

Fax

112 baths; storage space;
rear deck loc s~ncing.
HVAC. $600 per month plus
utilities. Security and key
deposit.
No
pets.
References
required
(740)446'4425 or (740)446·
393 6.
·

AJC.

Dauld R. Deal
Director /licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Assoc.

2 4

r

New 2BR apts. in town . All
electric, water/ sewer/trash
included. CIA , $525 rent
plus deposit. No pets
(740)441-1164. i 740)441 0194
NEW_ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE!APTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
•All ELECTRIC
·cENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE, REF..
''DISHWASHER
*GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
•CEILING FANS
"WATER, SEWAGE, &amp;,
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017

Pl8asant \/alley A~rtment
. Are now taking Applications
for 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BR. .
Applicat ions
are taken
Morr day rhru Fripay. from
9.00 A..M -4 PM. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
' Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Ph one No. IS (304 )6755S06. E.H.O
Tara
Townhouse
Apar tments. Very Spacro us
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patro. Start $385/Mo.
No
Pet s, Lease Pl us
Security Oeposrt Aequrred
(7&lt;0)367-7086

•

PETs

d04)675-7652

r
~

4x4
FOR

SAJE

Golden
Beautiful AKC
Retriever pups, parents on
premises, 1st shots &amp; 1997 Ranger XL,T. 4.0, autowormed $200 {740)256· matic, SOK, clean. Runs and
1084
drives great.
$6995.00.
740-742-3020 or 740.992CKC Female Jack Russell
3394.
Terrier puppy tor sale, $125.
(740)256·1652.
1998 E~~:plorer, Eddie BatJer,
Full blooded Lab puppies, loaded, runs &amp; looks great
no papers, parent s on prem- BookS $6,200 will sell
$4,0001080 (304)576·2007
ises S50 (304)576-2634

C~r

udfm.~a

oo.l ll..tlr.

WrniaiiLHorub1

~

( 304

167S-6000
~=1:4:0:1:K:a:n:a:w:h:a:·
:s:t.:::Pt=:·:P:Ie:a:s:a:=n:=t~
J

~HOLZER CLINIC
Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'"

;:=======~;:;:;;;:;;:::;:;;::;=~

r

V.w;

L_ _..;ICiiOiiRiiOISiiAiiLE;;,_..I

Plush, full size 1993 luxury
van .
Great
condition.
Mechanic owned. Buill-in
SOI&amp;r recharging system.
77,400 . miles. Must see.
$5,995. Call John (740)446-·
9961
.

~1111'

,. •

South
1 1\'T

'"

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
· • Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

.

4 ~~~~CLfSI

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Chrysler motor, CQVer. new
trailer, $2720. (740)441 9282

A~~J · I

•

CJ7- Wrangler hard tOp with
full doors, S450. 2-J 10 or 20
radiators $75/each. 2 CJ
hoods $75/each. CJ roH bar
$175. CJ7 tub-repairable.
$300. 740 446-8726.

CAMI'IlliS &amp;

cotton

45

feed sack !
COihl' :1ee usl
!:;;:::;:::::;;:;;::~

11 h · d D
I 3D IJ
U

TREE

TRIMMING&amp;:
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
Prompt &amp; quality

,

work

Affordable Rates
References
Available
• Free Estimates
•
•

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740.,742 ..2]93
* Leave a message

SAVINGS

--=-----=--

l.l,t:;~ .1

Le: me do 1: fer youl

•

~~~~o~~~-~~~~AL-~~~~~--~
THE BORN LOSER

j_ ~1:£.1&gt;1-- ~E..W I'NR Of BUJE""'l
j(f&gt;,N~,

PLU\":&gt;l'O-!

~') \f\(1!.[ »1'(\f\\1¥&gt; L.005ER1\\~

P\&lt;E.f'e:.r&lt;: OUI':.
TI&gt;RC.~l) 0~ RE.L"-Xe.\&gt; F\1 ?

. P"WOULD '{()U

F-ELt-.:1£1)-!tP.,'{ Po, IR~OU\l\ZE.l)

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

···'""
. ~~
··~.·..··n:r;
'"'.
·~ .,\~

~· ~ :'

.

Athens

Licensed &amp; Insured

(740) 992-0167

~ ID· LI~COLN .MIRCURY
Gallipolis, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICDON
• New Homes
·Garages

• Complete

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service

Remodeling

140·892-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

• fOR ALL YOUR
ELECI'RJCAL NEEDS.

PEANUTS

1815
F-150 414

11. . .......
...
IIIR.IMIIIIS
11,1117 40-446-9800

~
•

~~to\;.!:'S
•Wliaot ,l)i/4
1

.£104W

Hoqrs
7:00 AM • 8:00

PM

::;;;:;:;;:;;~'~";"~'~m~•·;""~
1

REPAIRS
• ROOF t PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

YOUNG'S

WIITEII
S'fUHliE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

OF BOATS,

CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

FAIRGROUNDS

97 Beech Street

For mofe info. call

Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20

Advertise in
this space
for $26
per month.

• CARPENTRY

Nov. 12,

2005

9:00AM· 11 :00

•

• Room Addition• lc
Remodlllng
• NIW Gerl;tl
• Et.ctrlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Roatlng &amp; Gutterl
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pelntlng
• Patio end Porch Decks

We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill.

7 40-985·4372

RATS~

I MI55£:D
THE

·Whole Corn $6.35/100
·Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed
$5.50150
·12% Cattle Feed $7.301100
·Black Oil SunHower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else?
35537 St

Rl

7N ¥

A~!~
The
.. Ariel- Dater Hall
~E.-u:
Dwjght Icenhower. Oct. 2.3

.

1 JUS\ 60T AN INVIIA1l00
1? A FIFTI£1l1

8 Customs
charge

9

Whodunit

name
40 KGB
11 Sonic-boom
occupant
maker
39 Just
counterpart
12 Parroted
42 Ecol.
heavenly
13 Mosquito- 41 Stadiums
bureau

Aphorism sounds a lil11e like aphid, an
insect lhaf enjoys sucking juice from
plants. Bridge aphorisms enJOY eating
away at tricks for players who put too
much faith in them. In this deal. which
aphorism did West follow ·thai cost his
side points?
·
Stayman is great whl!n you find a 4-4
major·suit fit and that is the best strain
But when you do not fii'ld a fit and end in
no-trump, you have only given free information to the defenders. Stayman is valuable, though , because it also takes the
role of showing some major-minor hands.
West led the spade king , top ot his three
touching honors. When declarer let him
hold the trick. West continued with a low
spade, but South played low from the
dummy again , permitting East to win with _
his 10. Now Eash had to shift, giving
declar8r time to Knock out the he~rt ace
and collect an overtrick.
by
Top of touching honors is a fine-aphorism
Celebntv Ciphertf'jplograms Bftl crea:ed !rom r;ruo\allons f1t lamoos people, pa$1 and present.
most of the time. But against a no-trump
.
Each letter in !he Cipllar stards 101 anolher
contract, If you are leading a suit In wlllch
Taday's clue:· Cequals D
an opponeni has length, you should lead
"DYHJI
OU
ISU
BTXVHDU
JTI
IT
low, no! an honor, hoping partner has sufficient in the suit to make the lead a sucDRFU
XL ,
UF. UJ
ISTXOS
R
I~RJM
cess and to avoid bloCking the suit.
Here, if West leads the spade seven at
trick one, he defeats ~he contract.
Rl
RG
STLUYUGG."
HCORVHY
Whether declarer rises wilh dummy's ace
(hopicg to block lhe suil) or ducks il to
BSUGIUV
K.
JRORlW
East's 10 (hoping to cut West out of the .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Thy fale is the common fate of all, / Into each lila
game), lhe defenders score four spades
some rain must tall, I Some days must be dark artd dreary." - Longfellow
and one heart.

Luis Campos

AstroGraph
-·'lllrthdiiY:

'~~:t~' $@~o{llA- "£~~· ....
WOII

14l~ol

lr, . CU.Y I . POUAN

Ol:earrono•

ltntt• o' the
lour IC!Qmblecl """'' be
low ·II&gt; fom lour ~mplo wor.d1

I

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

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

DRIHEN

I I 1~ I ,

t

l •ll'll .I

1 CHlWT

We watched as a

friend receive&lt;'
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Make a
his
degr~e
.
Someone
commented
concerted effort to clear up any obligation
you have on the books today, whether it is
nrt
financial or physical. 11 you try to sweep
lhc .......
things under the .rug, conditions will only
gel worse
·
H• l(JII)l
SAG ITTARIU S (Nov. 23-DI'lc_ 21) - Be
ft Complere tno cnucklo quolod
carelul today that you don't dwell too heavf 1
V by fiJIIr~9 In tht mluln~ warda
ily on ly upon the negative siOe of issues
'--.1-...1..-l-..J.-..L..-J VOIJ tJ....,.t-fM from 1Jt0 No. ~ b,e/ow.
that arise. AU problems -have allernatiyes.
but you'll never lind tkle answers if you
don't look lor the good.
PRINT NUMBERED LETIERS IN
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.-Jan. 19) - Plan
.
THESE SQUAR!S
your day with an eye on reality. Taking on
more than you can comfortably manage
UNSCRAMBLE AaOVE LETTERS
will prove sell-defeating and frustrating. Be
TO GET ANSWEI
sensible pertaining to tasks you want to
perform .
AOUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 - Think
SCRAML!TS ANSWERS 10/19/0
ca refully belore accepting any last minute
social lnv1tation you m;ght get today.
Instead of enjoying yoursell and being
Mybrother·in-law worked long and bard to be
rBiaxed, you might fee l guilty about cl1angtltat
is
'lng your plans.
butaMARATI10N.
•
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Your nervous system may be mo re on the edge
·today than you realize. so guard against a
tendency toward being unreasonably
demanding or overbearing. when dealing
wilh the family.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Stormy
debates can be avoided today by keeping
your opin1ons to yourself concerning
Issues about which you feel strongly. Don't
allow your emotions to distort your control
and logic.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - lt's very
Important that you remain very businesslikg in all ol your commerc1al dealings
today, especially if you find yourself
involved with an unfamiliar person. Insist
upon venHcation .
GEMIN I (May 21-June 20)- Avoid sssocia\lons today with individuals who have
caused you problems in the past. Nothing
has changed and your chances of being
placed In an awkward position again are
great.
CANCER (June 2t-July 22)- You might
be laced with limitations regard ing your
treedom of action today, owing to something you prev1ously neglected to lake Care
ol. You' ll get a second chance to ctear 11 up. ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- II you are dlasatlslled by the way something Is being handied In a social sltualion today, try not to
react In a manner which wo uld spoil the tun
tor everyone Including yourself. Be above it

That the grealeslscholnu
Always

sut(ess usually not a sprint

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,.

RWJial.~-­

.,

'
GARFIELD
YOU'P HAVE 1"0 5L.OW 1"HE

COMIC &amp;TR:IP WAY

ro s.:e 1"HA1"

Box Office Hrs"'l -2 M-F Also .S-8 "1\Jcs &amp;, Thun

Scorpion Tractors

L___~!!t.ii

Pass

successful. lie sys

The Haunted Ariel Theatre. Oct. 27 .JJ
Ohio Valley Symohony. Nov. S

"Middleporfs only
Self-Storage"

Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason. WV 25260

All pass

$

ZAMBONI •.

SUNSHINE CLUB

Ohio 45769

BAU!Vl LUMBER

114 Mile North

2 t\
3 NT

28 Get hitched 53 200 fins .
quick
55 Historian's
31 Sapporo
word
sash
56 Tiny taste
· 33 Turkish
57 USN officer
ofllclal
35 Sandbox

Walker- Ebony- Tight- Tandrnt -- MARATiiOH

Shade River AG Service, Inc

Now A vailablc At

(740\446· 1711

Pa!:!S
Pass

6 - Aires
1 Stomach
muscles

I I Tll. -16

EM6ARRA!i51N6
RIDING TI-lE

BUS.!

got you

992-3194
or 992-6635

(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

East

c X EsE s

IT'5

• MOBILE HOME

Hill's Self
Storage

~o1·th

add-on
32 Fete
34 Borscht
veggle
36 Groovy
37 Machine
toolh
38 Tramp

1 Capp and
Jolson
2 Authorize
, gras
3 Llvy 's hello
type
49 Rain
4 Is stinky
27 Track
protector
5 Deserves
competitor 51 Total

SCOR~IO

Gene Arms/Owner·
Operator 740-992-3!74
•Weekl y Trash Service
4 yrs o f Reliable Ser\'ICt:
(KL!C Jl Ynur Money Local)
G&amp;R SANITATION
33561 Bailey Run Rd ...
Pomero. OH

19

44 High notes
type
46 Paying
Minty quaff
attention
Oust
47 Words
Haul along
of surprise
Indent key 48 Pate de-

20
22
23
25 Antenna

sub~ct.

SCHOOL

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

26 Positive
Junglrau or
Eiger
3D Coble

29

well during thi s cycle.
LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. 23) ~ Keep the
mood of your listeners in mind today and
do not expound upon topics about which
you may feel strongly but lhey could care
less. At the lirst sign of a yawn, change the

W£&gt;J!EI%..
• Additions • Remodeling
* Roofing/Siding
* Plumbing/Electrical

DOWN

court

By Bemlce Bede Oaol
'four best chances lor success in the yeAr
ahead is apt to come through enterprises
where you are free to catl all the shots
~ourself . Alth ough you like partnership
arrangements , thoy might not work out so

IMPORTS

Insured
Fret" Estimates

17 Curtain

attire

Friday, Oct. 21, 2005

David Lewis
740-992-6971 ·

Owner

leellng
58 Tornado
warnings
59 Border
remark
60 Dueler's
21 Adored one
sword
. 23 Formal
61 Prevents
24 Drag lnlo

Opening lead: • K

. .

25 Years Experience

Chuck Wolfe

JO 3

• 973
t .J 9 fl 5
t$. .I Ill H 7

West

G

· BIG NATE

.

~nLJ.¢~W:"r~l

MAINTENANCE

54 Funny

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.,___.f

£EWJS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Ta~e

2400 Eastern Ave.

Classifieds!

i

"-'.---11

!

''Taki11g Tile Sting Out OJ

Shop the

1&gt;15GUISiN'

YORE VOICE BETTER !! .

DAN BURKE

~:;;;;;;;:;;;::~
STANLEY

NEXT TIME, TRY

J

Designed to Heat Your Home
. and Your Hot Water!

Pomeroy, Ohio

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

on

MY WAY!!

'j.

..-::-1::-,.-,,...,., r--1 !

OUTSIDE
WOODBURNING
FURNACE

for the guilts,
Unde,rground, civil

·31' travel trailer 16' pow-er

e.

FETCH MY SAG,
NURSE--I'M ON

'

..

MOTOR Ho:&gt;IES

slide, ductea heat, AJC,
queen BA, twin bunks,
Can assume lot at
steeps
River
Edgecampground
amenities) $16,000.

Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
(740) 416-4604

BARNEY

H~
i(I\ Z.

10x30
..
,I anet J euers
Hiland
Road
33795

7 ~12 rt. V·Hull Seastar
Fiberglass
boat. · 85HP

DiiUowner

.
Mobile Homes, House5, Lag Homes, Decks, _~rrveWays,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreas_rng of
Equipment, Boats,_ Campers, Tractor-Trarlers,
Dump Trucks, paintrng or staining· of you~ deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
.
Special rate:s to Truckin and Dump Trucking Companies.
LAWN
RE DIV I N
(Commercial and Residenti11l)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well a~ small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulchrng.
FREE ESTIMATI!S • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

!

O
5xl0, tOxt ,
10xl5, 10x20,

1987 Four Winns Liberator,
22', great boat, $5,500, call
for details (740)416-4248

POWER WASHIN!i
(Commercial and Res1dential)

(740)591·4348

Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years
experience

i

Offi&lt;e: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (7~0) 517-6883

cooling
Ed

(740) 992·5232

L---noiiiilRioSii"ALI:iiiiii.-or!·

Get A Jump

UMON~

24hr Emergency
Service

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Free

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner: Jeff Stethem

~'HMJI&amp;M

New shipment of
neece panels~ 100%

Phone

j

FUR SA!£

FOflf

30 Yrs. Exp. •

740-992·3673

IV• g.

2004 Kawasaki 700 Prairie

__

Point Pleasant. WV
(~)675-2630 ~ El ~

grinder

Karl Kraus, an Ausirian satirist, wrote .
"An aphorism can never be the whole
truth ; it is either a half-truth or a truth-anda-hall."

OH

S'•a•a~·-

Suzuki wD Vinson
4
2003
500· ATV with 34 miles
$4900.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
(740)4462412 -

••

Jeff"""" Blvd.

Inside

16 New pet,
maybe
t 8 Sill!
19 Witty

e·ridge aphorisms
eat away at truth

L•lon H"'l

~ .....

wur &amp; gmnnic

-----.
2003 Honda 250 EX $750 in
aftermarket parts. Excellent
condition. $2.500. _
(740)7096235 ·

.F=

1701

.....

•

signal

along

Mill End Fabrics
Machine Quilting
Mi~dleport,

Q 65
East

45 Rod on the

6 Ordered
47 Again and
· 10 Flood ·
again
barriers
50 Part
t 2 Hair color
of a lleet
14 Has the con 52 Hero
t 5 Spice
sandwich

·Dealer: South
Vulnerable : East-West

.JONES'

f&lt;00111 '""'

uli&lt;rnUrJ

..,..r... ·

*Heating &amp;

www.holzerclinic.com

86 Toyota PJU, 4x4, 4cyl.
130.000 original miles, 5
BASEMENT
speed. $1 ,700 (304)576·
WATERPROOFING
4195
Uncondi!ional lifetime guar_ _ _.:..._ _ _ _ __
Pomeriain puppy, male. 96 Jeep Cherot'\ee , 4 wheel antee. Local references lurAKC . $350, (740)696-1085
drive. automatic, $2,200 nished . Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446080. Call (740)256-1652.
I \H\1 " ' 1'1'1 II -..
0870, Rogers Basement
,\ I I\ I \ 14 H 1._
VANS
Waterprooling.

1993 Plymoutn 1/oyager, 7
passenger
van .
Good
16' Tra11er. Duel A~ete $800 st1ape, 25 mp~. $2.000
080. 1740)441-.1417 after
(304 )458-1615
5pm.
John oe·e re Commercial
Workllte
Products. 1997
Plymouth
Grand
Compact Excavators/SKid Voyager White 2 sl. drs.,
Steers/Tractor
loader good c:ond ., runs good .
Backhoe m stock. Check $3.500 OBO. Call(740)441 oul our rental rlltes! Great 07t2.
f1nancmg
ava ilable.
Carmichael Equrpment. Inc. 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
ES, Wh rle, Tan leather, quad
{740)446-2412
sea ls, rear NC. New trres .
Now's me trme to buy a new loaded,
$4 ,200
080
John Deere! Oo/• Fhted (740)441-0 135
Financing available now at
Carm iqt1aet Equrpment on 1~9 Chevrolet Venture
new Compact Utility &amp; 5000 Extended Van ; Olue 82.000
Serres Jol"ln Deere trac!Ors miles; great condition : one
fo r 36 rn ontf1s 1 (740}446- owner; $8,500: (740)367241 :?
74 35. (740)339-3955.

r.J•..

Adria
tmr

cim•oor

llliU....(o.{l'l'

U.O&lt;df....

Affordable Services

Min-Schnauger
pu~pies ,
AKC , 2 males black/silver, 1
black
mate,
$400; 1
Yorkshire Terrier, AKC, male,
3 lbs, $600; parti croam

r

R;.. L. h111!!00 u
· I.AK!.atr

Caring. Professional

•

Clock

sound
1 Danger

South
• 65
• K Q J lO
• K8 2
olo A K 32

David, Donna &amp; Brad Des/.

"--------,.1

&amp; bath. Clean , ref. &amp; dep. Seasoned Firewood mostly 1985 Ford truck F 150
6
required. No pets. (740)446- o:~ $40 load (304)576- c')llinder, automatic, good
15,9
\hi
body, runs. $900. l740J446Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedBUILDING
9742.
room apartments at Village
SUPPLIES
1992 GMC 78,000 miles,
Manor
and
Riverside
loaded. automatic. ext. cab,
Apanments in Middleport. Block, brick, sewer pipes. no rust. $ ,
3 500 OBO.
From $295-$444. Call 740- windows, lintels, etc. Claude
(740)446-2098.
992-5064. Equal Housing Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Opportunities.
Galt 740-?45-5121 .
2001 Dodge Ram 1500·
4X4, Quad Cab, B'Bed,
Moc:lern 1 bedroom apt.
54,000 miles, new tires,
(740)446·0390.
~
IURSAI£
extended factory warranty,
N. 3rd Ave., Middleport. 2
loaded. $15,000.00. 740·
bedroom unfurnished apart· 2 AKC male Beagles $75 992-2459 or 740-591-2635.
ment, no pets. depos·it &amp; each (304)882·2972
Also. 1994 F150 Ext.Cab,
previous rental references, _A_K_C--R-e-gi-st-e-re-d--L-ab-'s 8FT. Bed, 162,300 miles
(740)992 -0165
Yellow &amp; Black $150 $2000.00

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.
"Where QIUllil_v,CompauiiJ1f And llilegrily Comf! lf,gcthtr"

"FAMILY OWNED"

I

Gall1polls
Ferry Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
34 1
(740)446- 8
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; mites. new tires. runs great,
.
$1 .000.(740)441-0931.
Furntshed
upstairs. 3 rooms Sundey. (740 )446-7300
.

MONTY

way is your nest egg going?
NOT SURE? CALL TODAY?

1

ATV, Automatic, 68 miles,
excellent
cOndition
(304)575-2914 or (304)674·
2044
01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr, _
A_tt_e_n _llo
_n_ d_e_e_r _ h
_uc-it-te_r_sL
b d
auto, 5.4 , V8, e cover, Get $800 oft our already low
6CD player, sunroof, good price on new John Deere
condition, 71.000 miles,
f d ·1
Buck. ATV's. Call or etat s
18/2 1mpg, $14,000 080. Carmichael Equipment, lnc.
.
(740)446 2412
1304)288-3335.
•
• Dodge
D·50
70,000
BoATS
&amp;
MOTOHS 1·
1985

I

i

4

A Q 1.0 3

West
.KQJ 72
¥ A tl 6 5
• 74

OH

992-5976

$2700 080. (740)256- 1233. 2003 Kawasaki Ninja 636.
2001 ChRVV Cavalier Z24. Excellent Condition, Silver,
--,
Af1er market exhaust. 4,000
79,000 miles, runs like new,
'Is s
'5300
OBO
looks great. $2,200 090. mr '
-tJ
_0171
(740)379·2133 leave mes17401446
sage/ ask for Clint.

JET
85 Cheivy Cavalier for sale
AERATION MOTORS
(304)675-1506
·
Aeparred, New &amp; Rebuilt In
.k e new , Low m1·1eage
Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans, 1_ L 1
2003 2 door C av Ill ar, •~an,
800-537·9528.
Tilt-Wheei/AC/Cruise$8,000
- - - - - - - - - Back
Window
Defrost
New and Used Furnaces. (304)675-8644
Installation
available.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- (740)44 1-2667.
[115
TRucKS
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
FUR SAU
Townhouse
apartments. NEW AND USED STEEL
and/or small houses FOR Sleet Beams, Pipe Rebar
AENT. . Call 174o)44t-1111 For
Concrete,
Angle.
·s 1
C
I Fl
B
for application &amp;-information.
hanna·
at
ar.
tee
Grating
For
Drains,
For rent: Condo wlriver view DriveWays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
3BR, 2BA, finished base- Scrap Metals Open Monday,
ment, water/sewer paid, Tuesd ay, Wednesday &amp;

Middleport,

'

t

... !I 4

mea[ Jrr,Une"~'"[
n rome
U-- :..rl.C

"LI

licensed

Equipment. Over 80 Chairs,
Tables. Kitchen Equipment.
80quan Hobart mixer &amp;
more.
(304)430-3413,
(304)593-3220. (304)675·
"235 (evenings)

and Financial Services
Box 189
Middleport, OH 45769 /

Phone (740). 992·3471

~~,.,40.--------.

$700 fi rm 1999 Monte Carlo, 3 _1 VS,
~~%::5-1165
Robert 90,000 miles, all power.
black. excellent condition .
Firewood for Sale (304)675- $5, 500. (740)379-903B.
4475
2000 Dodge Neon, 4 cyl.,
Good , used
Restaurant auto, AJC, 100,000 miles,

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Deli &amp;. Full Service
405 Pearl Street •

10-2()-05

• 4,

by
Hometown Market

16FT Trailer Dual A)(les titled Pike, (?40)446-0103.
and

North
• A98 4

$500! . Police impounds
carS/trucks
from 5500.
Listing. 800-391-5227 Ext
C546.

_o_1_4o_._______

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS ' 43

:1 -99-4:...,B-u-~k:--:L_e_sa_b_re-.-H~I-:gh

"---·A·I'ffi-QU&amp;&lt;i
___,.~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

11~\\..,l'(ll~t\ IIO \

3 rooms and bath. All utilities Zap Tournament grade paint
paid. Downstarrs, no pets, balls. 2,000 per boK, $25 . miles, loaded, leather, great
$450/mo. 4f) Olive St.
condition, runs great. Asking
(740)446-3945.
'740 441-1417 alter 5 m.
$2,000 oeo. (740 )386Apartment available now

www.mydailysentinel.com

Baby donkeys- Males &amp;
female . (740)446- 1158.
--------Re~istered Angus bulls and ·
heifers, 40 . years of A.l.
breeding. Slate Run Farm,
www. slater unfar m .com
(740)266-5395.

Dodge Stratus
Pomeroy-Offrce or Retail Ford Ranger
Space. newly remodeled. Chev. ex. cab
(740)992-3702 or 416·5547 Ford Winds1ar

r

I

BRIDGE

o

'

I

Thursday, Octaber 20, 2005
ALLEY OOP

LIVFSTOCK

$1,600: 99
$2,200; 99
$6,895; 98
S1,BSO: 98
52 200 99
voyager
'
'
Storage Rentals tor Boats, Ply
Dodge Avenger $2,500; 93
Campers. Cars. Mason Co. Chev. 1 1on u1ili1y $2,000.
2 Bedroom apt. $295.00 per FairgrotJnds At 62 $8 a foot
e &amp; Auto Sales ·
month. plus utilrties, plus (304)675·8463
Hwy. 160 N.
deposit, and. references
(740)446-6665.
\II IH II\ '\Ill ... I
required.
Third Street,
A.icme. 740-247-4292.
1987 Volvo $1.500. 1995
HousF.Hoi.JJ
Chevy $4,500 very good
2 BR. washer dryer hookup,
Gooos
condition (304}675·7217
heat pump!AC.
t BR cabin. heat pump, also Crosley washer/dryer set 1969 Chev. Bre1ta. Run
storage building. (740)286- $1 00 lor both. , (7 40)379good. ssoo oeo: 1s91
22_40 or (740)441-011 7.
Boniviile $300 080 needs
2930.
fuel pump. 740-992-3457.
2BR
apt.
tor
rent Thompsons Appliance &amp;
$42Sldeposit, $42Slrent plus Aepair-675-7388. For sale, 1989 Ford Club Wagon XLT,
utilities.
In
Kanauga. re-conditioned
automatic aeK miles. well maintained. (740)446-4107 or (740)446- washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- $2830. 1995 Ford Crown
2707.
•
tors. gas and electric Victoria LX . 130K miles.
3 &amp; 2 BR apts. Close to rang es, air conditioners. and good condition, $2430.
Holzer
hospital.
W/D wringer washers. Will do (7 40)441-9282
. 'water/Sewer repairs on majol"' brands in
hooku-ps,
1993' Cadillac DeVille, 4.9Starling • at shOp 'or at your home.
included.
VB, 59,000 miles, all
$450/month,
deposit
options, leather. new tires.
SroKllNG
required . No pets. (740)441maroon
$5,000
firm .
Goo~
1184, (740)441·0194
(740)645-0626.

2 Bedroom Apartment. WID
Hook-up. Water , Trash,
·Sewer
Paid.
$375/ mo.
(740)367-7746. (740)3677015

Thursday, October 20, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel.com

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satisfy your
today,
it may
require
VIRGO
(Aug.goalS
23-Sept.
22)In order
to
changmljl your dlrecllon or modus operandi. Be prepared to do wh&amp;tever ia necas. sary and you should be able to achieve
success

--

SOUP TO NUTZ
SoME 5a'llk8T BaD

6EHaiJIOR IS ,1\JST' a
SID li:JR ATIEilf\ON ..

Hard \tnrk !"
Mid-Site 4 Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

I&lt;IDS \.tJOULO

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OVER BEtNG IGNORED .

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PRB\SED 1&amp;-IQN FllN!SHE.D,
BtJT PREFER A..lNISi-WeNr

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 20, 2005

==

Emergency Guide
inside today's Sentinel

Astros and White Sox
odd men in, Bt

Ill&gt; If you have a question or a comment, wrlte: NASCAR This Week,'C/o The Gaston Gazette. PO. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

BUSCH SERIES

Race: Sopway 500
Where: Martinsville (Va. )
Speedway (.526 mile) , 500
laps/263 miles.
When: Sunday, Oct. 23
last year's winner: Jimmie

'

I

..

at LMS and fifth in six tries.
The victory left Johnson tied

Race: Sam's Town 250
Where: Memphis (Tenn.) Mowith Tony Stewart for first in
tors ports Park (. 75 mile),
the points standings, 11 250 laps/187.5 miles.
ahead of Greg Biffle. The at- When: Saturday, Oct. 22
trition was almost random In · Last year's winner: Martin
Johnson
nature, and at one point,
Truex Jr.
Qualifying record: Ryan New-' there were pit-road observers Qualifying rec~rd: Jeff
man, Dodge, 97.043 mph, openly calling for NASCAR of- Green, Chevrolet, 120.267
Oct. 22, 2004.
ficials tO bring the debacle to
mph, Oct. 28. 2000.
Race record: Jeff Gordon, a premature halt. The inability Race record: Kevin Harvick,
Chevrolet, 82.223 mph, of Goodyear's racing tires to Chevrolet, 92.352 mph, Oct.
Sept. 22, 1996.
perform adequately in con29,2000.
Last week: Winners have c~rt with the 1.5-mile track's Last week: Ryan Newman.
been reference·d as "sur- 1ev1gated racing .surface was who doesn't compete · in
vivors" before, but never was the stock-car racing equiva- every Busch Series race, has
the term more appropriate ' lent of an epidemic. The walls

than in the UAW·GM Quality were rattling throughout the
500, where quality was hardly Interminable night as one tire
thtt

~

~:lS~
lri·Goo&lt;lyearspeeds
cook!,

Dollar General 300 at Lowe's
Motor Speedway.

Last year's winner: Jamie

McMurray
Qualifying record : Mike
Bliss, Ford, 94.275 mph,
April 16. 1999.
Race record: Jon Wood,
Ford, 72.069 mph, Oct. 18,
2003.
Last race: Todd Bodine drove
a Toyota to victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on
Sept. 24, holding off Ted
Musgrave, In a Dodge, by
.297 of a second . Chevy driv-

·

tire manuused the
~t~at had been
.May .,lace, 'when
alSll-~'n P(oblems.
lveekend for
H.A.
!(led ' .
'1 by

I

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

E
R

Kevin
·Harvlck

Harvick was angry after compet·
is the biggest joke in racing that I've
ever seen , with tires going down,
·and it's just

.

WliO ' S I-lOT
AND WHO S NOl

..

terrible,~

he fumed after

the Cup race: "Everybodi saw it
coming last night (Busch race) and I ·
was out there, not willing ... but just
knowing that at any time the tires :

· were going to go. It's pretty disgust·
ing and pretty embarrassing for our
sport." Asked if anything could be.
done, Harvick safd, ~Yeah, throw the

checkered flag and get the hell oui·
of here."

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Harvick's
sentiments were commonplace, but
few were willing to express them so

frankly. Candor is one or Harvick's"
more notable attributes:
~

FAN T I P S

;'I&gt; Two ,drivers, Tony Stewart and

;.;¢h8se..

s
u
s

ing in crash-filled Busch Series and
Nextel Cup races at the track. ~ThiS

After stel._ racing career, '
Ard falling on hard times
Sam Ard, whose career was cut

short by injury in 1984, is one or
John Clark!NASCAR This Week

Both Elliott Sadler, left, and Tony Stewart, right, were knocked out of contention In Sabtrday's race because of Ura problems.

Bad tires at Lowe's Motor Speedway make Chase a race again
By Monte Dutton

comeback mode for the second year in

NASCAR This Week

a row.

When the race began, Stewart was
CONCORD, N.C. - .The UAW·GM 224 points ahead of toth place. By
· Quality 500 gave the Chase for the night's end, the difference between
Nextel Cup its firsi thorough cleans· Stewart's total, 5,684, and Kurt
ing. Lowe's Motor Speedway turned Busch's, 5,460, was down to 142.
the competition upside down,
When a tire blows out, particularly
drenched the dirty spots in Wisk and in the turns, it's almost impossible not
roared into spin cycle.
to hit anything. Stewart managed to
Unlike freshly washed clothes, how- minimize the damage with his split·
ever, this race wasn't pretty.
second reaction, and as a result, his
Jimmie Johnson will be remem· Chevrolet was able to limp home in
bered as the winner, but the trophy · 25th place, eight laps behind Johnson.
should read "survivor."
Rusty Wallace and Matt Kenseth had
Three times the race leader took a similar problems. They finished on eihard right into the !.S-mile track's ther side of Stewart, Wallace in 24th
·walls, each time as a result of tires and Kenseth 26th.
.
suddenly exploding. The most signifi·
''We did the best with what we had,"
cant of these surprises struck down said Stewart with a shrug. "We had
Tony Stewart and his 75-point lead in the fastest car. I was listening to a stat
the Chase. Now Stewart is tied with Zippy (crew chief Greg Zipadelli) was
Johnson, who could be roaring into tell~ng me - 42 out of 43 cars had tire

'

&amp; Supply

Co.

approves the plan. Oct. II
marked the deadline for written replies "' testimony in
the case, and Rennie said
AEP hopes the PUCO will
render a decision on the company\ plan for cost recovery
by the end of the year.
AEP announced lhis summer it had begun site work al
the 1,200-acre Lebanon
Township property, including core drillings artd ~nvi-

ronm ental asse ssments that the project stays on schedwi II be necessary during the ule .:· Rennie said. "If and
permit proces.s that lies when the permit ·is issued,
ahead. The work that will AEP wants to hit the ground
now begin om siting lhe running. H we don't start
transmission lines is a con· now, we ' II be monlhs
linuation of that advance behind."
work.
Jeff Momme, the manager
"Much of the work that' s
of
transmission line projects
now u~derway, including
for
AEP, said two transmiswork at the site and the planning for tmnsmission lines sion lines are planned to
will help AEP ensure that
Please see AEP, As

LMS

Kevin Harvk:k vs.
Lowe's Motor Speedway

occurred.

~

transmission lines to serve
the proposed $1 billion plant.
The 'power company is .
awaiting a decision from the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio on a proposed plan
to recover costs associated
with construction of the
plant, and AEP Spokesman
Jeff Rennie said the prelimi·
nar) work now underway
will help ·keep the project on
schedule if the PUCO

v

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

-~.· crashed.as a direct result of t1re
;: failure, and the problems weren't
,~ just at the frOnt of the pack.
:".-The Busch Series race at LMS
;,'.. was plagued by a record number
-: ot caution flags. The yellow flag .
:i:- waved 14 times. and there
·: would've been a 15th had not
· ·•Ryan Newman already crossed
;! .the finish line when the fin aI

r•

REED

POMEROY - American
Electric Power has begun
preliminary work on locating
transmission lines for its proposed Great Bend power
plant.
."
AEP announced Thursday
morning it has begun preliminary work _on locating the
preferred routes for two

FEUD OF THE WEEK

~ ,.,. Three tirnes, race ·leade.rs

' ' David
Strenime,
blamed
: ; 'NASCAR emergency measures
; ;::tor their blown tires. Bot~ said
'. their tires were fine until oHi·
: ( clals forced them to use a man·~ 'datea tfre·pressure level, and
ithen tires exploced on the first
'i'.run
... . with the·changes In place.
; 'f"A year ~go, Johnson's LMS vic·
/:.!4ory began a streak of three
!;\ ~ralgbt and four out of five.
!Pt$111,_he wound up falling eight
;t~lnts shy of Kurt Busch In the

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSE~TINEL.COM

er David Starr fmished third.

the rough edges. The
!:f1Pt-ocie'sl wofked too well, appar·
~:,,Qpt!Y. The irack will be repaved
h111rirc p.e Qffseason. ·
·
;';i.Wittl NBC bowing out of the
~ OO!Itract·negotlatlons, It looks
. as If the 2007 Cup TV rights will
: be split between Fox and
· , ABC/ESPN. There could be
: : chiin1es next year' If NBC oHi·
: · ctals decide to pass up the final
~- ,)'ear of th§,existlng contract and
:)"NASCAR Is willing to go along.
:-• )I11Jmle Johnson's fourth
•:;' straight victory at Lowe's Motor
; c·speedway followed a similar
,;· course. As in the Coca -Cola ·
: ' 600, Johnson took advantage of
•: extraordinarily high attrition to
; seize the victory after many oth;1ers feil by the wayside.

;.

BY BRIAN

•Redwomen
defeat Gentral State.
See Page 81

to

~.~sh

AEP considers transmission routes for proposed Great Bend plant

SPORTS

been ground

I

I

·

a primary virtue. Jimmie John- after another popped like
son came home from this war bubble gum and one car after
with his fourth straight victory another skidded into barriers.

won the past five he's'entered . The latest was the

Race: Kroger 200
Where: Martinsville IVa.)
Speedway 1.526 mi le), 200
laps/105.2 miles.
When: Saturday, Oct. 22

problems- so welcome to the wonderful world of racing. It was just a
weird night."
· Perhaps that's one of racing's al·
lures: weird nights.·
Not every week, though.
The Lowe's Motor Speedway event
had an effect on this year's Chase similana the 2004 race in Hampton, Ga.
(Atlanta Motor Speedway), when the
main contenders at the time - Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon and Kurt
Busch- wound up 33rd, 34th and 42nd,
respectively. Those three had entered
that race with an edge similar to Stew"
art's before Charlotte. Their problems
had the effect of putting almost everyone back in the race, at least for a time.
Will the Chase be rearranged again?
Stay tuned.

the finest drivers ever to c.ompe.te
in what is now kn.own as the Busch"'

Series. Ard and his family have re. cently encountered additional hard..
ships. The legendary driver has"

. Page AS
. • Louisa Toppins, 63

INSIDE
• New pastor
· commissioning
ceremonieS? ~nQU{IC:..e~.,

· see flage '142

..

• O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital to offer
health screenings.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
•. O'Bieness offers
breastleeding class.
See Page A10

tile-

I

•

, -.
;·,:-~ ·., · ....... __ ,. ._ . -,
• Chi..,.;ne l\oeftl•ch/pho1to
. _.,. . a:,· ..a;.. ~.;, '~" .... ~ ·~~
AI. Dettwiller:'third from left. is this year's" tv~eigs County Urrlted' F'und drive
rman. George
Hawley, president, thanks Dettwiller for accepting the challenge as' agency recipient representatives, from the left, Diana Coates of the . Meigs County Council on Aging, Hilda Stotts of
Serenity House, and Sue Maison, a board member, look on.

year's goal of $12,000 was
met and expressed his appreciation -to the volunteers who
gave of their time and effort.

disease, and hiS wife, Jo, is:gradually losing her eyesight due to a de,

Southern,first district to partner
with OU for online classes

- WEAmER

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

generative disease. Fans and
friends have set up a fund to assist

the Ards, and donations may be
sent to: Sam Ard Care Fund, Ac·
count #68212-03, Caro lina Trust
Federal Cred it Union, RO. Box
780004, Myrtle Beach, S.C.
29578.

LEGENDS AND LORE

Female drivers would be
nothing new for NASCAR
This may come as a surprise, but .
female drivers are hardly new to

NASCAR Sara Christian started 13th
and finished 14th in the very first
NASCAR-sanctioned, "Strictly Stock"
race in Charlotte , N.C ., on J u ~e 19,
1949. L'ouise Smith competed in the
Daytona Beach , ~a. Ethel Rock Mobley- sister of famous brothers Tim,
Fonty and Bob - was also in the
field at the so-called beach/road
course and finished 11th.

'

The theme of "give local" other sources including hurriwas emphasized in a general- cane relief. Hawley encourly poor economy where . aged the funded agencies to
' gmng
. to so many
money IS
Please see Fund, AS

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners hope
to have a new economic
development director in place
by the end of the year.
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport has been overseeing the economic: development operation with- help
from a secretary, since commissioners terminated a contract with Michael Gulliver
over a month ago. He said the
commissioners have not yet
begun to solicit applicants for
the position, but have been
receiving applications and
resumes. ~
Annie
Chapman,
a
Pomeroy merchant, met with
commissioners to encourage
a requirement that ,any econGJmic development director
and tourism director hired be
required to live in the county.
Please see Director, AS

'

been diagnosed with Alzheimer's

second one, three weeks later in

Contact Monte Dutton
at hmdutfonSO@aol.com

. OBITUARIES

POMEROY- With a goal
of $12,000 the Meigs County
United Fund kicked off its
2006 fund raising campaign
at a breakfast held Thursday
morning at the Senior
Citizens Center.
AI Dettwill~ of Dettwiller
Lumber w·as named campaign chairman, reports were
given from several agencies
receiving funding, and plans
for increasing donations were
discussed at the meeting conducted by president George
Hawley.
Hawley read a list of this
year's recipients and recognized representatives present
including the Meigs .County
Humane Society, God's Net,
Riverbend Arts Council,
Holzer Hospice, Community
Action Agency, Serenity
House, . Meigs
Count,¥Council on· Aging and
Meigs County Historical
Society. He noted that checks
will be mailed to the agencies
funded .• Several representa·
lives spoke of the importance
of the United Fund gift to the
programs they carry out.
Hawley noted that last ·

Details on Page A10

INDEX
2 SEcrtONS -

20 PAGES

Buckeye Edition
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B10
A10

B6-8
B9
A2

A4
A6-7
A2

As
B Section
A10

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE' Southern
Local School District is the
first school district in
Southeaslern Ohio lo part :
ner with Ohio University
and Apex, an online· learning services company, 10
offer an online cUrriculum
te students.
B~an J. Reed/photo
Scott Robison from OU's
Officers of the new Middleport Development Group are Paul College of Education is the
Reed, right, president, Do.nna Hartson·, treasurer, · Brenda liai son for the program which
Phalin, vice president, and Susan Baker, secretary. They .will - is part of OU President
work with 11 board members and other members to coordi- Roderick McDavis' goal of
nate the village's downtown development project.
reaching out to local school
districts 10 better serve stu· •
dent needs.
Robison recently assisted
10 Southern High School studen~s in the technical aspects·
of the program with Apex
By BRIAN J. REED
and officers to forge ahead un and helped them • complete
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO~
· beautification and economic the enrolling process which
re-development of downtown . required a $50 processing
MIDDLEPORT - A 15- Middleport. Mayor Sandy fee. This fee is incorporated
member board of directors lannarelli appoinled the first into the price of each class
.will iead Middleport's down- leadership group in May. which has a total tuition cost
town re-development pro- 2004, and the Middleport of $325 per course.
jlfam, as the. search for fund- D,evelopment Group orgaIf the student receives an A
in the course OU will be p_ay- .
mg begins.
nized yesterday will continue ing $75 towards the luition
Meeting Thursday morn- tile
efforts after the work or a fee while the Southern Local
ing, a group leading the revifacilitator
is finished.
talization effort chose a new
School Dislricl will pay
name and elected directors
Please see Group. AS
S250-. If a student receives a.

Middleport Development
Group forms, elects officers

Beth sercont/photo

Southern High School Sophomore Casey Douche! attempts to
access her Apex online class with the help of Scott Robison
from Ohio University's College of Education. Southern is the first
district in Sout~eastern Ohio to partner with OU for an onllne
curriculum offered thro~gh Apex, an online learning service.
B in the course the studenl
contributes $50 toward&gt;
tuition. a c requires $100
from the student ir1 tuitio~

and aD results in $150. If a
student receives an F. or an
incomplete lhis resulls in the
student paying the balance of
the tuition.

Southern High School
Principal Mark Miller helped
bring the program lo the dis·
trict upon the request of
Southern
Superintendent
Robert Grueser and the
·approval of the Southern
Local School Board.
Please see Southern, AS

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