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                  <text>~ Pqe B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Augustt2,2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

aarke feels right at home
on a strange course, B1

···········~················· ·······,···········~·····························

2004SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

111111111 I l l 111111111

aeeee

111

aa.e

1 1 1 1-.1 I I I I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I l l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1

Phelps feefing that Olympic
'vi be~ as he begins historic quest
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press
A'IHENS, Greece - Michael Phelps
stopped by to check out the Olympic pool.
Suddenly, it all began to sink in.
Large stands towered over the water.
Flags from countries far and near flapped
in the breeze. The azure-tinted water
seemed to glisten even brighter thari usual. ·
Not just any· ol' swim meet; that's for

sure. ·
:•I sensed this sort ofvibe, even when we
were just drivin'g up," Phelps said
Wednesday. "Once I got in the p&lt;lol. I felt
even better."
This is the place where history -coul~ be
made, beginning Saturday. In the space of
a week, Phelps hopes to swim eight cliunt 'em - eight events. lf everything
goes according to plan, he'll become to
Marl&lt; Spitz wh·at Hank Aaron was to Babe
Ruth. the guy who took down one of
sports' most revered records. · ·
"I wouldn't say that anything is'impossible," said the 19-year-old Phelps. 'The
past few years, I wanted to keep my mind
open. I wanted to keep all my options
theye. In 1980, everyone said that no one
could beat the Russians. But the USA did
it. Nothing is impossible."
Before he can challenge SpitZ's record
of seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich
Games, Phelps must win his ftrst Olympic
medal. At his only previous Games, four
years ago in Sydney, he was a gangly high
school kid who finished fifth in his lone
event. For that reason, he keeps telling
everyone that one is the golden goal- not
seven.
"! came back from Sydney with nothing," Phelps said. "All along, I've been
saying one gold medal. I would not be disappointed with one. I don't want to think
about the rest._ That's my goal and I'm
sticlcing with it: one gold medal."
It's not a very persuasive argument.
Phelps will be an overwhelming favorite
ill three individual events, a medal contender in his other rwo. Then there's the
telays, long an American strong point and
!I chance for Phelps to win three more
medals.
: One gold medal won't be enough. Not
iiven close.
.
: Since Sydney, Phelps has maiured into
lllE man at the pool, which quickly
became apparent when USA Swimming
unfurled Its star power for the world's

Mystery
from Pa..9e 81
''I think .it adds to the suspense," Davis Love IIl said. "It
might be good for the experienced players because they sa~.
'Hey, we don't 1\now what s
~olng to happen, so we're just
going to go play and not have
any target score or expectations
in our bead.' Just go play and
do the best you can."
Then again, Love spoke at
length with his shrink to get
read~ for the week.
"I ve talked to Bob Rotella a
lot about that," he said. "How
do you approach an unknown
like this 7 no you throw par
;Jway? It is going to be an
unknown and a mental test."
• .The ottly easy part about the
wtek is ftnding a winner.
.
· :'1f I had to predict, it would
~ somebody that's been
~d a lot of big touma-

.

''
"

Garcia
from Page 81

· '"So many people !&gt;now my situation here. It
· has never been a secret," Garcia said.
· "Owens backed off his comment to Playboy
after the Eag~es' practice Tuesday, saying,

Winslow
fiOtn Page 81
\ilte he had fresh legs," Davis
quipped.
·
Winslow's teammates welcomed the 2 I -year-ol~ to
~p and said there would be
(Ill gmdges held because of
his holdout. He won' t .!let any
~ial
treatment either
because of his name or big
contract.
"All rookies get treated like
·peasants around here," defensive lineman Kenard Lang
gajd.
·• Quarterback 'Jeff Garcia,
who J?Ub!icly told Winslow to
put his teammates before his
salary, said there were no

are expected to unfold.
Mickelson finally has the
majors all figured out,
researching every course as· if
he were studying for a fmal .
exam. He played three practice
rounds at Whistling Straits l!15t
week, taking almost nine hours
to play one of them so he could
chart when to attack and who:re
not to miss.
No one can argue with the
results. He won the Masters for
' h\s breakthrough major. A
three-putt double bogey from 5
feet left him rwo shots behind
in the U.S. Open, and he
missed out of the British Open
playoff by.one shot.
'T m three shots away from
having the Grand Slam,"
Mickelson said. "I think "about
that, but I don't dwell on it. I' m
constantly thinking of how to
salvage a half a shfl! qere or ·
there. I've ~n able to do that
well this year, but had I been
able to do it just a little bit better, it could have been an
incredible year."

ATt-tE...._,S 2 0 0 4

Beneath the Olympics,
new subway system
doubles as showplace,
for ancient artifacts

ATHENS, Greece (AP) History runs deep in .Greece,
so when you start dipging for
a modern subway, it s hard to
stay focused on the preserit.
As Athens rushed to
expand its .subway system in
time for the Olympics, work
was repeatedly halted by the
of ruins and arti·discovery
·
facts. Tunneling for the
Monastiraki Square station,
inaugurated last year, was
· de(ayed for two years
because oi archaeological
Michael Phelps of the United States warms up prior to· a training sesssion at the
finds.
Olympic ~quatic Center for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens Wednesday. (AP)
But officials have managed
to
find a golden lining: Now
media.
he 's considered a lock for gold, while
some stations . double · as
Seven current or former world-record Malchow would gladly settle for a medal
museums, with artifacts
holders strolled on stage in an auditorium colored silver or bronze.
unearthed during construecrowded with hundreds of reporters and
"It's a little tough to watch -:;hen some- · tion displayed in glass cases
photographers. Phelps might as well have one ~es a~ay y~mr record, . Malchow ~ where they were found.
come alone. He was the one getting all the satd, but Mtchaelts a great guy.... Some
The result is that the subquestions until a slightly miffed moderator people might say he's takin!l away from ' way has become more than
rattled off the group's credentials, and the team and steahng the lunehght. But
just a. means of transportabasically demanded that the next query be that's not his doing. When we 're back on
tion. It's a destination.
offered up to someone not named Michael the bus, he's still j~st one of the g~ys.". ·
Evelyn· Ferreira, 45 , of
Phelps.
.
For now; Phelps 1s assured of swunmmg
Sacramento, Calif., was nearSo, three-time Olympian Amanda only one ~lay in Athens:. the 800 ~style.
ing the end of her three-week
Beard, does anyone on the U.S. team ever U.S. mens coach Eddte Reese mststed
visit to see the Olympics and
get ticked about Phelps getting all this Wednesday that he's sull trymg to dec1de
visit ljer mother's ·native
attention? ·
·
on who will swim the 400 medley and 400
country. Her aunt suggested
"He brings great recognition to our freestyle rela~s. though it's hard to imagshe sktp the museums .
sport," Beard said, managing a smile. ine him denymg Phelps at least a morning
"We've got a few more
"Michael is an amazing athlete. He swim in those events.
days left, so my aunt told· us
deserves all this attention."
Everyone who'swims a relay-even if
to come down here," s he
Publicly, at least, none of Phelps' team- it'sjust a preliminary - gets a medal if
said. "It's very cool."
mates has popped off about one swimmer thelf team fimshes m the top three m the
She stood with her husband
getting the star treatment: myriad endorse- evening final.
· . and two ·sons in the Syntagma
ments, countless magazine covers, a team
"I know of one person who will defi-.
Square station in central
of handlers, a hefty income. They seem [o nitely swim the medley final and one· perAthens, gazing at. a wall
realize that Phelps is raising the profile of son who wiU definitely swim the 400
encased in giant glass panes
a sport that · barely gets noticed in the freestyle final;" said Reese, who didn' t
to sljpw the layers of discovUnited Sta~ except for every four years. reveal his choices. "You're probably closeries made during the dig. "People keep askin~ questions about er to it right now," he told the media, "than
· gin g.
him," Tom Malchow satd. 'There's a lot of I am."
Near the top were the reminterest in him and a lot of interest in our
Phelps and rest of the U.S. swimmers
nants of a· water-supply syssport. That's OK. He's a great story, and will skip Friday's opening ceremony. He
tern from the Ottoman period.
that's helping get our sport out there."
doesn't want to waste energy marching
Beneath that were Byzantine
Malchow was Phelps' first victim, so to into the stadium when he's got the gruel- .
houses and Roman cemeterspeak.
ing 400 individual medley the next day. ·
ies, and finally, near the floor,
Four years ago, Malchow set a world
It could be the start of a long week. He's
an aqueduct from the 5th cenrecord and.won Olympic gold in the 200- ready to go. .
tury B.C.
.
meter butterfly. Six months after. Sydney,
"I've never felt this good going into a
The displays adorn an effi· Phelps took away the world record- and meet," Phelps said.
·
cient, modern subway station
he ha5n't looked back. Going into Athens,
Must be that Olympic vi be. .
that was inaugurated in 2000.

ments, and also has the total
package," .Love said. ~' You
don't have to hit it Ion&amp;, but
you have to hit it solidly m this
wind. You have to be a pretty
good shotmaker, and then
you're also going to have to
chip and putt and scramble
· really well."
Is that all?
'That's not asking much," he
said with a smile. "That's why
majors are hard to win."
Some of the answers will be
. available Thursday, when the
first round begins under a 30
percent threat of rain with
highs in the mid-60s. The fore. cast for the tournament is not
nearly reliable as the weather.
Woods was asked if there
was any one hole that concerned him.
_
"No," he said. ''There's 18 of
them."
That uncertainty is what
awaits the final major of the
year, wbere the course is a
greater focus than any one
player. Still, several story lines

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Since then, workers have
been adding new stations
periodically m a rush to ease
traffic and replace downtown
roads with cobblestone walkways in time for the .
Oly!llpics:
The newest leg of the subway now runs out to Athens'.
new suburban airport -.
which also houses an exhibition of pottery, jewelry and
marble unearthed during its
construction.
Some subway stations have
exhibits showing how the
discoveries were made. A
photo mural adorns a wall at
the Acropolis station showing
a tunnel. lined with ancient
Ull!S that ~orkers bore into
when they were digging.
In addition to the cross-section of earth, the .Syntagma
Square station features glass
cases holding urns, clay figurines and a piece of a 4th
century mosaic floor.
At 6, Christos Panagoulias
is already a veteran of the
exhibition. But he was little
the last time he came, so he
had to see it again.
Adjusting his Mickey
Mouse baseball cap, he rattied off facts about the art:i· facts on display, saying that
although he hasn't started
history in school yet, he reads
lots of books.
·
''I have a book that lists the
artifacts, and whatever you
see you have ·to check off,"
he said. "I've been here
before, but I didn't see all of
the pieces."
H1s
grandmother.
Constantina Pana?oulia, 58,
said she couldn t say no
when Christos begged her to
·take him.
"I feel moved when I see
this. I understand what the
ancient people were thinking," she said .. "I tell the children, 'Look what these peopie have done''"

·• • ll \. 1 "~·\ ,,1

.~\.,,' II

-

SPORTS
• Bobcats Prowling. See,
Page 81

...

llt ll•\\

\ l t . l ' , l t l.

!~ ~~~1

.

" " " ' "' ' l .• il

.. .~ .... 1 ... ...

Darwin-to-Athens portion ·of new highway on schedule
now 98 percent fini shed.
Restrictions and traffic pattern
chatrges continue to be in effect as
POMEROY - Even with a major construction .enters·i t~ late stages.
slip at the Darwin end, construction
The new eastbound ramp ex iting
on Phase 2 of the new U.S. Route 33 U.S. 50 onto U.S. 33 (to Pomeroysuper-two highway, from Darwin to Richland Avenue) is being mili zed as
Athens, is running close to schedule. part of a 1raffic pattern change resultCompletion is expected in late ing from progressing construction on
September or early October, and the the Darwin-Athens section . A 12-foot
work is currently 89 percent com-' width restriciion will remain in place.
plete, said Stephanie Filson, spokesA new traffic signal is also in operwoman for the Ohio Departmem of ation at the j unction of the new eastTransportation District I0.
bound U.S. 33 otT ramp (from U.S.
Less than ij mile of paving.remains 50) and Albany Road. The new sig
on Phase I, the Meigs County end of nal is located 500 feet west of an
the highway wliich Filson said . is existing signal at the junctian of
BY TIM MALONEY

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

-

1

Albany Road and Pomeroy Road
(existing U.S 33).
,An altered traffic pattern i&gt; also in
place at the junction of U.S. 33 and
State Route 68 1 in Darwin . Traftic is
now required to stop at thai junction .
U.S. 33 traflk 'will now use the newly
constructed bridge when traveling
thts route. The passing lanes in both
directions are closed just east of th is
pattern change. Molorists are advised
to exercise extreme o:aution when
approaching this area. Filson advisep.
In other areas of Meigs County.
ODOT announce s that State Route
124 (formerly Stale Route .'138) in
the Antiquity. area approximate ly 2.5.

miles east of RaCine, has been
reopened to tratlic in both directions.
Final resu rfaci ng has not heen completed however. and motorists are
advised to exercise caution when
traveling through the vicinity.
Meanwhile. State Route 338,
approximately three-quaners of a mile
upriver trom the Ravenswood Bridge,
has been closed as a result of a slip that
I has displaced pavement. The length of
the closure is undetermined, said
Filson. The following detour has been
posted for area motorists: the new U.S.
)3 {Ravenswood connector) to State
Route 124 back to State Route 338.

Bobcat caravan rolls through Pomeroy·

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Vera Belle Hayman

Abackhoe excavates outside the Pomeroy Church of Christ in
preparation for installing an elevator near the entrance to the
church which was founded in 1929
. . (Beth Sergent/photo)
.
.

INSIDE
.

• A Hunger fo~-More.
SeePageA2
• Two blue-blood
theologians switched
sides on belief in the
Bible's personal God.
See Page A2 ·
• Cheney criticizes Kerry's
call for 'more sensitive' war.
See PageA7

THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 2004
• MEIGS • EASftRN • SOUTHERN

WEATHER

*----

DetaHoonPaceA8

INDEX

.:

"My thin!! was I didn't say that he was ~ay.
Like I satd, the conversation and intervtew
was loose and from my .knowledge I'm not
sure if Jeff is gay or not."
Garcia l!'i!d Owens had a contentious relationship in S.an Francisco with the outspoken .
wide receiver often complaining that Garcia
didn't throw him the ball enough.
.
.
The 49ers released Garcia and ·traded
Owens to Philadelphia in the offseason.

hard feelings between the . to run routes, ·he knows how
to catch the football, and he
two.
.
."He said to me when he knows how to get .open,"
came in today, ' Are you Garcia said. "To understand
ready to get after it?'" Garcia what we are doing offensiverecalled. "I said, 'I've been ly, that is going to be his main
ready. Are you ready? Let's concern. I have no doubt that
go. Let's do this."'
he will be -able to catch up
Winslow said he was glad quickly."
Garcia urged him to get to
The Browns sacrificed a
second-round pick, trading
camp.
"Obviously; Jeff is a leader with Detroit to move up one
and he wants to win. I felt the spot in April's draft, to select
same way, but l,just wanted the former Miami star with
to get a fair market deal," he the sixth selection.
Lang, another Miami prodsaid.
The 6-foot-4, 250-pound uct, says Winslow is the latest
Winslow is expected to ope.n in a long line ' of outstanding
up the Browns' offense, with Hurricane tight ends.
h1s combination of size and
"From Bubba Franks, to
speed creati ng mismatches (Jeremy) Shockey, to him.
against linebackers and . He's the next great ·one. He
defensive backs.
has to earn it. I believe he
·
"Physically, he knows h6w will," Lang said.

Security cblef say•
Olympics protected, no
known threats, B4

2 SECnONS- t6 PAGES

~endars

Classifieds
Comics
· Dear Abby
~ditorials

-

A:3
Bs-6:
B7

A7

A4

Faith• Values

A2

Movies

As

- NASCAR
Obituaries
•

Sports
Weather

B8

As
B1

AB

Pomeroy Church of Christ
starts renovation project
Donations are responsible
for the construction that will
also include some new wiring
POMEROY - The scrip- although cosmetic improveture says, ''Where two or ments will be limi ted. Pastor
three are gathered together in Anthonv Morris wants to
my name there I am in the leave the church 's aesthetics
.midst of them." The Pomeroy intact thereby retaining the
Church of Christ, a gathering historic presence tlie building
place since 1929. has started has in the community. The ·
a project to .make it a· little church has one of the oldest
easier for ti1lks to gather.
stained glass windows in the
It has embarked on a reno- area.
vation project which includes
Pastor Morris returned
the installation of an elevator from active duty in Iraq in
to serve the handicapped and
Please see Chun:h, AS
elderly.
BY .BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Ohio University coach Brian Knorr, center, s igns an autograph for a young Bobcats football
f1;1n during the Bobcat Caravan's stop at Don Tate Motors Tuesday in Pomeroy. (Bryan
Walters/photo).
·
·

Pomeroy man gets fishing thrill
'

BY TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
John
Witherell never heard
"The
World's
about
Bigge st Whopper," th e
Junior Samples' story
about a record fi sh that
never made it to a scale.
· He did let his lifetimebest catch, a 25-lb. , 36inch shovelhead catfish,
get away. ·
·
But not before a few pictures.
Withere ll is the 2 1-year. old son of Dr. James and
or'
Jeannie
Witherell
41614 Starcher Road ,
Pomeroy. He is a junior
biology major at Ohio
University. He like s to
hunt, play basketball and
fish.
For as long as he can
remember, he 's been trying to catch the big Ohio
River catfish he knew was
in the pond on his family's
property.
"Probab ly since I was
the same weight as the fish
is," he sa id .
About I0 years ago, a
family friend pulled the
big catfish from th~ river
and stocked the Witherell
pond with it. This is the
first time !he fish has been

Meigs Board approves
full sports·staffing
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM.

John Witherell, 21. of Pomeroy. plants a kiss on the big
shovelhead catfjsh ~e·s been trying to catch out of his
father's pond since he was a child. After the kiss, the fish
went back into the pond . (Tim Maloney)
'
caught since then .
hooked the big fish. only
Three or . fo.ur time s. to W&lt;ttch him break the
Please see Thrill, A5
Wilherell belie"e' he

POMEROY - The Meigs
Local Board of Education has
decided not to cut staff from
the middle .and high school
athletic programs despite the
district's financial problems
which earlier resulted in cuts
of several academic positions.
That deci&gt;ion followed a
lively discussion hetwee nthe
board members and coaches
of the various sports at this
week's Board of Education
meeting.
the
Board
However,
approved the recommendation
of Superintendenl
William Buckley to retain the
same number of coachi ng
assistants as were used last
year. A mot ion made by
Roger Abbott and setonded
by Norman Humphreys.

board members, passed by a
vote of 3 for and 2 against.
Voting ."no" were board
members Victor Young and
Ron Logan.
For Mike Chancey, football
coach, Rick Chancey, Tyson
Lee and Derek Miller were
hired as a~sistant coaches, to
serve along with Ron Hill and
Rick Blaettnar, teachers who
had been hired on supplemental contracts earlier thts year.
For Carl Wolfe, boys varsity
basketball, Rick Ash and
Travis Abbott. teachers, had '
been . hired earlier this year.
· Mike Kennedy, cross country
coach. who has never had a
paid a'sistant, will continue'to
use a volunteer assistant.
Heather Hysell wa~ approved
at the meeting for that position.
Paul Brannon. girls varsity
Please see Board, A5

Look for the Holzer Medical Center 'Wei/ness Wagon " at the

Ole Car Club Show
Saturday, August 1 4
Ga,llipolls City Parle

ADVERTISING DEADLINE ·WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 2004 ~ 5:00P.M.

·

The Holzer Medical Center co:Omunity Health and Well ness Deportment will be there from

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

\ll:be 11\atl!' ~entinel

MEDICAL CENTER

·11 :30 am unlil 4:00 pm

Discover the Holze1· Difference

Free screenings, including non ·fosling cholesterol ond glucose will be provided,
,
os well os o variety of health information.
'

www.holzer.org

After fhe Show, be sure to stop by fhe
.
Neighbor He/pong Ne&gt;ghbor Uniled Way lvndrarser oo Court51reol in Gallipolis.

.

--- - -·

.

-- -·----~--------

..

1

�Friday, August 13, 2004

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

' Let's face it. Spintual
things are hard to discuss
with everyday words. In fac t.
they're not only hard to talk
about. they're hard to thtnk
Pastor
about! There are just some
Thom
things about fa1th and the
Mollohan
J(jngdom of God that make
us spram our brain muscles
when we really try to understand them.
As a result of Ollr difficulty
in understandmg such thmgs.
How sad then if we neglect
there is often a temptation for
us to assume that becau se the that1 for which we were creatspiritual realn1 1s so "spiritu- ed Remember that Je sus
al," it IS therefore unap- d1ed so that yo ur sin may be
proachable - that it i, too forg1ven and removed from
mysterious for us to under- you so that you may stand in
stand and cons'eque ntl y God\ presence without gu1lt
impossible for liS to experi- or ~ ha me.
If you ne ver trouble with
ence meaningfull y. '
goi
ng mto HI S presence, then
For example. we some•
you
cannot "come to know
times feel too intimidated to
God."
If you are not "coming
make prayer a practical pnprity in our lives 01 we dress it to know God" then you are
up with so much formalit y not rece1vmg eternal life
that It ceases to be gellu1ne (John 17 :3 1. If you are not
avallmg yourself o! eternal
prayer.
•·
On the other hand. the re 1s life. why d1d Je ~ us then d1e?
If we do not pray, we tnvialso a tempt at ion to someallze
the purpose of H1s suftimes take prayer too much
for granted and then fering and death. We also surapproach it tri tely (If we JendeJ the abundance of joys
approach it at all ). Prayer and comforts that Hts presmay seem.to us either lackmg ence affords us.
Prayer Js a stance and attiin any real benefit or IS,\ relitude
that we adopt s1gmfying
gious duty, a strict discipline
our
reliance
upon His love
with which we afll1ct ourand awesome power rather
selves.
But real prayer is ne1the1 of than the foolish alternatives
these things. First and fore - gtven by the world. It further
most, prayer 1s the act1v1ty of declares that we have the
a life which dwells in the strength and good will of
presence of God. It 1s quite Almighty God sustaining us
literally, "going into His pres- though the weight of the
ence" though we stlll stand world oppresses us.
PrJyer JS s1mple child-like
here on this solid earth in the
dependence
and devotion of
full light of the matenal
one
who
implicitly
trusts in
world.

BY PIISTOR

God. It IS a love song sent up
from a heart overflowing
with adoration and passton
for its Creator. It is the soulwrenchmg lament of one
trapped 111 the mire of loneliness and pain. Prayer is the
cryi ng out of one life for the
deliverance of another.
Prayer is talking with God
but is also sitting silently
before Him .
Prayer ts the giving of .
thanks and praise to the Most
High but is ;,tlso the recetvmg
of the blessings of His presence, joy and peace.
To NOT pray is to be completely and utterly alone
though surrounded by a sea
of people. But to really pray
is to be with God as we walk
along through life.
To NOT pray is to languish
in fmlure and futility however successful the World tells
us we are. But to really pray
is to be about our h1ghest
calling of aiL
Let us be careful then to be
a people who pray.
"Devote ~ourselves to
prayer, keepmg alert in it
with an alit tude of thank s~ lv­
ing; praying at the same tJme
for. us as well, that God will
open up to us a door for the
Word, so that we may speak
forth
the
mystery of
Chnst. .. " (Colossians 4:2-4 ).

RoN BRIINCH

Remember when the interest in your spouse-to-be,
sparkled, spurring romantic
sentiment and the seduction
of love?
Let's be honest, now. At
the onset of the 11ffair, the
one who became your spouse
looked so very, very nice.
Interest was of such intensity ,
that you employed those flirtatious strateg1es to get on
the inside track. Hand-holdmg and kissing were extra
speciaL Nothing was more
1mportant than spending time
wtth each other. Character
qualities seemed so appealing There was somethmg so
wonderfully different about
this particular person than
any other. It was all so very
exciting!
Eventually, the prospect of
marriage felt-right and good.
Having become husband and
wife, you had the sanctioned
privtlege to live together and
enjoy each other immen sely.
The sense of love for each
other brought satisfaction
and stability that made daily
living exctting.
Why should your marital
experience to the love of
your life - as it was from
the onset- ever diminish as
the most exciting affair you
could ever have?
Unfortunately, tt seems
rare these days that married
couples continue to consider
their marriage as an exciting
affair, and many rather opt

Thom Mollohan has numsrered in sourhem Ohio rite
pa ;T nine years and is cur1'1!/Jtly the pastor of Pathway
Commwury Church. He and
his wife are the parents of
Three children. He may be
reached by email at pasrorthom@ parhwaygallipolis.com

exciting affair, then continue
to be intimate with one
another. When I was an older
teenager, my Dad and I had a
discussion about sexuality.
Dad made a comment I
remember to this day, when
he said, "Son, sex ts 75 percent of a good marriage."
You can disagree, be
almmed. or snicker at the
sugge stion But , he had a
valid point - intimacy is
Important for husbands and
wives. and it is certainly supported by God's Word.
According to I Corinthians
7:5, the lack of intimacy sets
the stage for temptation.
If marriage is to remain an
excitmg . affair, make it an
absolute pnority to treasure
time with each other just like
you did in the beginning.
Recently, Terry trJveled to
Maryland on a Tuesday to
visit with her mother. The
following Sunday I traveled
to our oldest son's home
where we were to hook up on
Monday to start our vacation .
But, !.could not wait to see
her. She was 67 mtles away
at that point. I called her up
and told her to meet me outside at midnight. My motherin-law and our younger boys
never knew I was there. It
was a fun rendezvous
Oh ·- I did have to ask
Ron if it was all right that I
go see his mother. He had to
turn oft' tile burglar alarm so I
could get back into his house
at2 am.

for the tragedtes that accompany adulterous affairs.
Has it occurred to you
recently that God intend s
marriage be an excitmg
affair, where husbands and
wives ever remain enamored
and captivated with one
another for the duration of
the1r lives?
The Scrip\ure states.
"Whoso findeth 'a wife findeth a good thing, and
obtaineth favor of the Lord.''
The same is true for the wife .
If God has ordained that
marriag&lt;! is for the happine ss
of men and women, then
why do too many couples
wind up with a lackluster
experience?
Keeping marriage an exciting affair is multifaceted, but
at' least cons1der the importance of the following to supplement the responsibility of
commitment.
If mamage is to remain an
exciting affair, it must be
remembered that mamage IS
not a one-sided affair. Just
like it takes two to dance the
tango, it takes two to contribute to the excitement.
Marrmge bring ~ an equality,
as evidenced by the exhortation for husbands and wives.
"Submit yourselves one to
another in the fear of' God."
Instead of being focused on
the needs of self, focus on
the needs of the other. Did
you not do that m the beginning of your affair? Keep on
doing Jt!
If marriage is to remain an

~t!f?day
. Times-Sentinel
.
.
,

AP RELIGION WRITER

Where God 1Sconcemed, two
blue-blood theolo~y professors
floated in opposite directions
and passed each other in midmr.
The one thinker is Harvard
Divinity School 's Gordon D.
Kaufman. who was rmsed in
the devoutly evangelical
Mennonite faith. His father
served as presJdent of the
Mennonites' oldest U.S. school,
Bethel College in Kansas.
Followmg theolog1cal study
and
clergy
ordination,
Kaufman gradually adopted
radical agnosttc1sm and has
long smce rejected the supernatural, all-powerful and personal God of the Bible.
.Oxford University's Alister
McGrath went in the opposite

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direction. As a youth in
Northern Ireland, he enthusiastically embraced atheism and
Marxism, figuring that believers were "very stupid people."
But advanced study in biochemistry and reflection
caused McGrath to reconsider. Today he's not just , a
believer but a leading figure
in the conservative wing of
the Church of England and
world Anglicanism.
Kaufman's latest book, "In the
Beginning ... Creativity," derues
God as a capital-C Creator. He
thinks a lowercase and impersonal "creativity," defined as
"the commg into bemg" of all
that\ new in the cosmos, is "the
only proper object of worship,
devotton and tiuth."
To Kaufman, religious concepts are mere "creations of

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the human imagination,"
though some might retain the
noun "God" to symbolize the
mysterious creativity.
Notably, his manifesto against
the biblical God wasn't issued
by a secular publisher but by'
Fortress Press of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, a
slowly declining mainline
Protestant denomination.
McGrath has a new book
out, too, and it's something
else, a bold broadside aptly
summarized in the title: "The
Twtlight of Atheism: The Rise
and Fall of Disbelief in the
Modern World" (Doubleday).
Sounds like wishful thinking, considerin,g the widespread dtsbelief m Britain and
continental Europe and in
influential U.S. academic and
media circles.

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McGrath doesn't so much
prove the near-demise of athetsm as claim that, in princiP.Ie,
the props that made it cred1 ble
and attractive have been rudely knocked aside.
His basic theme is that in
past centuries, Western faith
squandered its moral stature
when Christians ran around
k1lling each other and
oppressing dissenters. Back
then, atheism seemed to
promise human liberation.
Today. of course, churches
abhor any hint of coerced
faith and have long since
embraced full freedom of
conscience.
Meanwhile, when atheistic
Communists or neo-pagan
Naz1s gained political power
in the 20th century, McGrath
comments, they proved to be

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even 'more bloodthirsty than
their misguided Christian predecessors and produced 'just
as many frauds, psychopaths
and careerists."
The reasonable conclusion:
"It is not of the essence of
atheism to be a liberator, nor
of religion to be an oppressor."
He brackets the "golden
age" of atheism between
1789, the start of France's bitterly anti-clerical revolution,
and 1989, when the fall of the
Berlin Wall announced the
death . of atheism as a
European political force.
Though Kaufman decided
that science had dethroned the
God of old, McGrath concluded from studying the history
and philosor.hy of science that
thin~s aren t that simple. He
reahzed that the great atheists

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(Marx, Freud) presupposed
atheism rather than provmg tt.
Thus. "the belief that there is
no God is just as much a n\atter
of faith as the belief that there
is a God." Impasse . "The grand
idea that atheism is the only
option for a thinking person
has long since passed away."
Moreover, McGrath argues.
atheism failed in matters of
"imagination" and created
mere "organizatJons" instead of
the sort of "community" that
humans crave, and that rehgion
fosters. Apart from Western
Europe, faith is booming.
Still, McGrath maintains ' a
certain respect for his youthful
credo. Atheism's past successes showed that "when religion
ts seen as a threat to the peopie, it will fail; when Jt is seen
as their friend, it will flourish.''

f

Se..-oud Baptist ChuKh /"
\

Chu~h or Jesus Christ Apostolic
VnnZandt and Ward Rd , PastiJr: Jame~
M•ller, Sunday School - 10.30 a m
Eve mng 7 lOp m

RIVU \'allt'y
Apostolic Worshtp Ce nter SH S

ird

:.\v~, Middl epOrt Kevm KQnk le. f'Asror
Sunda}. 10 10 am
Wedn.-sday 7 00
pm.YouthFn ?JOp m

f

Emmanuel Apostolic Tatwrnal'le Inc.
Loop Rd uti New L1ma Rd Rutland
S~:rv•(cs Sun 10 00 ,, m &amp; 7 ~0 p m
Th urs 7 00 p m Pa~lor Marty R Huttnn

Assembly of God

Libert). Assembly or God
PO Bnx ~1-17 Duddmg Lu'l&lt;:

Mason

W Vu. Pa~tor ·

Sunda\

N..:ll

Tenn,ult

S~rvlCCS I Q 00 U Ill and 7

fl IU

Congregational

Sa&lt;Ted Heart Catholic Church
16 1 T\;fu lhcrry A\t Pomeroy 9'/~ - 5K9!1
Pastor R~! v Wa lt er E Hetnl Sat Ctm

Trinit~ Church
Scwnd &amp; Lynn Pomeroy. Pa~tor Rc\
J•mathan l'otllt' Worshtp 10 2'i am .
Sunda) S'h&lt;l0l9 15 am

4 45 5 15p m , Mass ~ 3() p m Sun
Con 8 45 9 l 5 am .. Sun \1m 9 li\
am Datl}M.ts s -810am

Episcopal

f'nmmumt~ ('hnreh
Stele lnmck
l\1~1n
Strt'll
Rutland Sundm \\',1r-;hip-l0 ()(! .till

l\lorrt~

Sunday Sen ttl'-7 p m

S~hool -

II am.

HPmc Rd.

Wor~h1 1 1 -

W~ dn e~tlJv Scnlll'~ -

V1U11r R••tl'li Suml.tl ~dtool 1.) 'II .111.1
Su n J.~v \ltlt,hlp - IU. 'O o\111 &amp; 1 p 'Jl·
\\cdn~·,d.t~ pr.tyc:r 'en 1u - 7 p m

Sund,t~

10.t m , fi pm

Young's Carpenter Service
26 years In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16 ·
uardrall, Fence &amp;

s1gn erection

The Right Ingredients
.
.'
\

'
i
•

:

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

If yoa c:ook, lhi• Kmario OJiBhloound lomiliar. You arr trJinl• - ale• redJI".
\'011 combine lbr i.ngedit!nll .;.. pour lbr batttl in balllns pans, When lbr time
ll'ri\les tu lbr fJniolwd pr~ your facr falk •• you ch:...er 1011~thln11
r~inl 1 panclft! Then JO'I
You lrit out .n Jnsr«diml. Mt lnsteditnl ~ould' han. 1nad. ill thl! difference.

""'*''"·

Do you C'Yfllrtl that way...that ·- thins it rnisslns from your life! Wouldn't it M
wonderful if you could hllbr Ji&amp;ht lnsncfienl., - hi cpuld 11\ike your tpl1it
riM IU new hri&amp;ht&gt;l
'

We reid WI Psalm 121 :H ... 4 lift up my eyK to !hi! hat.. From whenc'e does my
hi\1-! My help -from dll! lord. wt.o made he,_, -r ellflh.w

Is lhe lord, ·~ frOIII your life! WOdl you woulllp thd ~~~~ al your local
Houte of worthipllet yoor spirit 5011r.

Cmnit

TIIIJAY
Gmnft

11:1·15

21; 1·21

MDI\'lSDAr 11/UISDAY

CmrM
11. 1·21

SAIVRIMY

fAMM .
ll;l·"

499 Richland Alenue, Athens
740-594-6333
1-800-451-98G6

740·61i7-3156

Community Services
Ovcrbmok
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

'Nest and Resl"

1

333

·

Page Street

Moddte~rt OH

Fax

(7401 992-6472
i740i 992-7406

Warm Friend/\

209Thlrd

Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home &amp;mk fdr
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
740-949-2217
S1zes available 5x10 to 10 x 20
If ye abide in Me, and My
words abUlt jn you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

•

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Director of Family &amp;

speech; art &amp; musJc therapies

29670 Bashan Rd •
Racine, OH

..•

Michael L. Crites

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769
(740) 9'12-3279

Tol Free 1-877·583-2433

Armmphere

Hours

6am · Spm

Mi[[ie's ![(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Da1ly
Home Coolctd Meals &amp; Daily Speciol~

C}ltshtre Baplisl Chun:h
Stew Llltle, Sunday S~ohool 9r1[1

um, Mornmg Worsh1p 10 ~ U am, SunJa~

r \cnmg 6 30 pm WL'tlncsday (J JOpm

Hopl' Rapti ~ l Churrh {SouthernJ
570 Gmm St , Mtdttkpn11. Su ndny sdmnl
- 9 30 am Wor slu p- 11 am, ,md 6 r m
Wedne sday Set vtt:c- 7 p m
Rutland First B11ptist Church
Sunday School - 9 30 a rn Wnrsh1p
10 45 a m
l,omerny Firsl Baptist
Pastor hm Bux kcrt, Eas t Mum St
Sunday Sc hovl - 9 10 am Wnr-;lup
JU 30 a m

l'uhm ~ 1'11~1 tm Cllapel

Baptist Chnrth
Pastor Mark Morrow. 6th ahtl Pa lmer St ,
Mtddlepo.&gt;rt. Sunday School - 9 l ~ am
Worshtp - 1015 dnl 700 pm
W~o:Linesday Scrvtce- 7 00 ptn

Racine' 1-'irsl Baptisl
Pastor Rt ck Rule, Su nday S.:huol - 9 'O
a 111, Wmsfnp - 10 40 u 111, 7 00 p m,
Wedoe~day Scr\tcc~ - 7.00 p 111
Silver Run Baphsl
Pastor John s-...a nson, Sunday School l Oa m, Wor shtp - I l am. 7 00 pm
, Wcdncsd,•y Sen. ICC~- 7·00 p m
Mt. Union Bapti~t
Pnstn r Davtd W1seman. Sundn)' School9 45 a.m.. E\•en1 ng
6 30 p m.
Wednesday Scr.•tces - 6 30p m

Belhlehem Baplisl Chun.:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Ra(me , OH
P11 stur Dam~l Mc.:ea, SunUay S~.:hool 9 30 am., Sunday Worshtp - I 0 30 a rn,
Wedne sday Btllk Study- 6 00 p m
Old Bethel Free Will Baptisl Church
2860 1 St Rt 7, Middleport Sunday
School - 10 am. Evcnmg,- 7 00 p m ,
Thursday Scr.·wes - 7 00
Hillside Baptist Church
St Rt 14 3 JUSt off Rt 7, Pastor· Rev
Jome s R Acree, Sr, Sunday Untft ed
Servtce, Worshtp - 10 30 11 m. 6 p m.
Wednesda y Servt(es 7 p m

l l .trn~•llll

Pa•lcll
Ch.trk~
Sdmol 9 '0 1111
\\t11 sh1r • II ,1 m 7 tKI r m. \\ cdnc~t l.!}
Servile - 7 !Kl p m

Middleport Church of l:J:m~l
"ith md ~Lun Pa,tnr AI Ha1h011. Youth
Mmt~t~:r J,l~ h Ulm Su nda-,. SdJ.C•II- IJ 1(1
a m .Wonhtr - Kl'i 1!1 1U ,tm
We lln~sU.Iy So.:n'IU'~- 1 rIll

7 pm

Faith Baptisl Church
Ratlroad St .. Mason, Sunda) School • 10
am, Wors htp - I I am. 6 p m.
Wednesday Semces • 7 p 111
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor Anus Hurt. S unday School- 10
am, Wor.;htp - II am

MI. Moriah Raplisl
Fourth &amp; Mam St , M1ddleport. P:l stor
Rev Gtlbcrt Cro1g, Jr, Sundoy School
9 '\0 am Worsh1p - 10 4.'1 am

Anliqully Baptist

,
Sunday School - 9 30 am. Worsh1p 1045 am. Sunday E\cmn g- 600 p m,
Pastor Don Walker

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
nlanues t-shJrts and ·more

Rulland Free Will Baptist
Salem St , Pasto r: Jam•c Fortner, Sunday
School - 10 a fn, E'enmg • 7 p m .
Wcdncsda) Semces - 7 p m

"- l'llh K,u.llt

your light so shme be~orel
that they may see
works and glonfy
I ~''••l,er m heaven."
Mallhew 5:1

10

Slhunl

i{un
J•,,t.•t l! olh Kt•htthun f\und.l\ s,·hn•ll
um . \\t•t,Jup lJ,tm

I!I

Sund~y ~dltHl l

SunU .1y IHir~lup 7 p m ,
]1r,t)t:r IIIC~ llllg 7 pIll

IJ

~0

.1111

Wt'tln~'dU)

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
,Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

Oasis Chmtian Felloftship
l 'lon -Jenommaw-.nal fellow,htp)
i\ l eetm~ 111 thl· uld Amcno.:an Lq,JIOII H &lt;~ll
South FnurthAitnue Mui1lcport
Pastur C hn ~ Stc:\\art 10 00 am Suml a~
Uthl'r mee tm g~ 111. h(lmc-.

Contmu mly of Christ
Rd l)ttstor J1m Proffitt
S u nda~ Schon! - 9 10 am
Worshtp
10 'O am. V.cdllt.' Sdily Scf\ t l~., 7 0(]

.t ill

wm~htp

-

Ill 10 a 111
6 lU p 111
Wl dneo;day S(l VILl'~ • (1 lU Jllll

Wur•htp - Il l a

um

l'rur l L hnpcl
Sund,t\ S~huol · ') .t m Wnr,htp HI .1m
Pom('roy
Pa~ h•t

Hrtdn Dunh.trll \\111,htp
~~.till

Rmk Sprm~s
Kuth K.tUc• Sund.tl Sdtt•lll 9 15
~1.-o,~hlp
- 10 J 111
\mnh

P.t~ltw

.t

') \0

111,

h~l lu w• hlp ,

Strnd.t )

(1 pIll

~0 .1m, Wrrr~htp
Wctlnc~ay

- 10 ~U n m
Servt cc.'- 7 p m

7~

I 011

Tuppers Pluin Chun.·h or Christ
ln~ trumental Wor~ lup Sen t~c
9 n 111
Cmnmunw'n I0 .1m SunUay Sehunl
10 15 u m, Youth - 5 30 pm Sut'tda~ . Hthlc
StuUy Wcdncsda) 1 pm
Rradbur) Church of

Sall'm Centt'r
P·J5tor Wi llt.tm K l\ 1.J.r&lt;ihn ll Sund ~ ~
SLhonl 10 I ~ a m Wor~htp - IJ I~ .1. m
Bthll' Study l\ londav7 00 rm
Sno\\ \ Ill(•
Suntl:t\ Sdltltll 10 .t m \\ or~htp \J a 111.

Wesl ryan U1hll' llnlin e!i.~ Churrh
Pc.lrl St Mltld1q:~orl P.t,lor Rh.~
Buurn.· Sunday Sd1mol - [I ) .tnl Wur ~ hiJ1
10-15 p m Sundi.ly r1~ 7·00 Jllll
W~dnc stl.l) Sent~.~ 7 'tlpm

Zion Church of Christ

Pomeroy H .t rnson~tlk Ro.J ( ~ t 1J ~t
P1htnr Rog er \\l,tt~nn Sunda) Slh'"'' -

p m.

W.:dnL' ~d.t~

7 111 pm

llysl'll Run Holinl'ss Chun-h
P,t,tm R~·~ L~ l r) L,.-mlc;. Sund.ty School
- I.J 'O .1111 , w, , r ~lup - lfl -IS .t 111, 7 p 111
T limsJ.ty Bthl ~ Stud) .111d Yuuth - 1 [J m
l.aunll:hff Fret&gt; J\1t•thodist Church
P.J.&gt;tor ( ,Jcnn J.: uw~,; Sun d.ty SLJJ, ..l] ~J lO 1 Ill
Wtu ' hip • 111 Ill ,J. Ill &lt;illJ 6

Mmt ~tcr T~J m.'Runyon ~Y')'\8 B,,,tlhUI)

r Ill Wcdnc~tl .l\' Sci\ Ill - 7 tKI r Ill

Road Mtdd kfll.lr\ Sunllu y Sc ho11l - 9 'O
am
Worshtp - 10 ~0 am

Latter-Day Saints

or

Tht! Chureh of Jesus

Rutland Chul'('h Christ
Sund.ty School - '} 10 nm Wnn htp &lt;!nd
Cnmmumon - 10 10 .t m Rnh J Werry

Christ of Latlcr· Ua\ Saints
S~ Rt
160 4-16 6247 •lf 446 74K6
Suntl.1y Slhllol Ill ~11 II .1 m. Rclt~l
Sultclv/l'il~~tlwud
II 0~ -1 .!00 llllllll
S.tlf,lllll' llt S~fi i Cl' Y- 10 I~ ~ m
Hom ~tll.t l-.rn p met' llll !;, l ~ tlhur~ - 7 p 111

Mmtstcr
Hradrord Churth or Chrlsl
Corner ot St Rt 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd .
Muu ~ t cr Do ug Sha mblin, Youth MmtMer
Bil l Ambcrg~ r. Sundu} Sdtuol 9 30 .1. m.
Wor sh1p - H00 am 10 10 ,, m. 1 00
p m . Wednesday Serv1ce s - 7 ()0 p m

Lutheran
St. Jnhn I ulhcran Chur('h
Pm ~ Cmwc Wor, h1p Y tMI a m Sund.1y
s, hnol - I 0 Oil .t m Pa~1m In me ~ P
Br.lll)

H1ckor) Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist Mtk.: Moore, Suni:l.l)' School () am Worsh1p - \0 am , t1 30 p m
\Vednesda) Scrv1ces - 7 p m

Our Sa,.iour Lutheran Church
W:~lnut .111d H~ nry Sts, Ra\ens-...ond
W V.1 , Pust6r Da\ 1U Ru~s ell , SunUay
Sehoul - 10 OOa m , Worslu p- 11 a 111.

or

Reedsville Church Christ~
Pa~tor Phthp Sturm, Sunday School 9 10
am, Worshtp Scrv1ce 10.30 a.m., Bt ble
Study, Wednesday, 6 ~0 p m

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Corner Sycamoro: &amp; ScC(lnd St . Pomeroy,
Sundil }'

Dexter Churd1 or Chnsl
Sunday school 9 30 ant . Sunday worshtp
- IOlUam

Graham Unued Methodist
Wnrshtp 9 'O a Ill 1I ~~ &amp; 2nd Sun)
7 10 p m r3rd &amp; 4t h Sun) Wednesday
Scr.tt·c 7 30 p m

Mt. Olin United 1\lethudisl
Olf 1::!4 h.:htnd Wtlkc~H ll c, P.aslor R~1
Ralph Sp1rcs, Sund.t} School- 9 30 ,t m ,
Wor&gt;htp - It) JO am , 7 p m , Thur~da)
s~r.' l lc~ . 1 r m

Christian Union
Chrislian Union
Hanfor d, W.Va, Pastor Da\ld Greer,
Sunday School - 9 ~0 a m . 'J..\orshtp 10 30 am., 7 00 p m , WcUncsdny
Semce~ 1 00 p m ,

\lttgs Coo[M'rathe Parish
Nnrthctt't Cluster Alfrctl, P.1stor Jane
Bc.!ll tt.' Sunday Schnol
9 ~() am
Wo r~htp - II

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mile H1ll Rd . Ralllll' Pastor Jamc~
Sauerfidd. Sunday Sc hool - 9 4~ u m ,
E~enmg - 6 p m . Wednesday Scn•1ces 1

am. fl ~fi Jlltl

ChesiN
lone Beattie Wor~ h1p - 9 a 111
Sund.ty Schm1l
I 0 .t m . Thursda)
Scr' ~~·cs - 7 p m
Pa~wr

Joppa

pm

Pa~ tnr Hull Rando lph. Wor~h•p - 9 30'

pm
Syracuse First Chun-h of God
Apple and Second Sts, Pastor Rev Dtt\ld
Ru ssell. Sunday School and Worsh tp 10
am Evemng Scn•ic" s 6 30 p m .
WcdtlCsday Scrvsccs 6 30 p m

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Sunll&lt;.t) Sthf ..ll • !U ]0 0:1111.'

ANDERSON
FUNERAl. HOME
174laynt Stl"fd • PO Box 270
New Harm. WV ZSZ6S
Uctnstd Funeral Dirrclor
Plllnning

Bt'lhm13
Julm Gtlmon· Sund,tv SliHM.•I - 10
Wu • ~ htp - 9 .tm , W~:d tt ~~l.it)

P..t~tnr

il rll

Set\1~..:- - lll.tm

.

(,umd &amp; H,l'han Kd •

,lqh Slr«t Church
St i\·h ddkport Pa~tor Greg Scnf'o
SunJ,\) Sl hnol - ~ 10 i.l m Morntng
Wl•r.,hlp 10 ]l} am &amp; 1 pm Wcd n~~d:J•
Sen lte 7 00 p m Youth Sefl'lu: 7
pm
Agape Ure Center
hrll-G11~pcl Church
Pa~tor ~ John &amp;
Pwtl v W.1Ue. 60~ Sc~,;1r n d All' M:!sl tll, 71~­
~017. ScnKc 111111: SuuJ,t, [1)1 0 a 111.
\\eJncMJU\ 7 pm

Mlkt'

\i iddkp&lt;~n

P.hh &gt;l
t . lll l' llltt ~

I'.J.'I •r

hlfe l\l,lJl

\\,,l ,l trp Ill ( \I ) .1111
~ ptu

ll1rt~"• I Hht'l nml1· l hun h
Cldtt•u · ~,~, \ t 'it111d 11 "idu ••l - ]I ] .1
\\,&gt;f,hip - .., pi ll \\ u irrt,, l.rl S 1 1 1 1l ~

r

Ill

7

1.1 1

Morning Sh1r
Pa~;wr Jt1hn Gtlmnh .' Sund,ty St:h11o1
.ti11 Wot-shtp IO.tm

Pa~to1
-I) .1111

II

East l.~tarl
Sumlay Sdtonl - 10 .t m, Vol&gt;•rshql
WlJncsda} •· 7 pIll

Kactne
Pa~to t ' P~ h.'

asm

Sh.llfer Sund.ty Sl hool

Wor&lt;;h tp - 11 .1 111.

I0

s\'r \t ~C

SundAY

\\'t'lln e~• l uy

10 am ,

servtce, 7 p m

··aith Full Gospel Church
Lon g B,lttOill P.tswr SteH· Re.:d Surul11~
Sl lwol 910 ~ m, Wor~htp - 9 30 ~ m
.tntl 7 p rn Wcdncf\l.lnv 7 p m Frtd.ty
lclluv.;htp \C r v~~,;c i p m

rh ~IUII

&lt;.:onJmumt\' Church
Durh.tm Sund.t\ 9

llethd l:hurch
ro-... lt , hlp Rd 461K.: Stmd.t) SdJool - 9
am W0rsh1r- 10 .tm W{'Jnc~d ay
SerVIlCS - 10 am

P.htm Bill Sti.ll , n &lt;;unci,,, '"'' '' c '
ltl
Ill &amp; 7 pr n
\\ u lu"cl"
- 1' 111 ,\:
YllUth7pm

Fulll.w.pt'l ( hurd1
ultht• I "iUJ,! :-;,,, tur
Jc,~ l

Rtl JX 1\tltltJIIII\ P." t"l
Slll lll' S&lt;.~lll t d.ll : IHI]llll

\h•ltt '

C1•lumhr.t \\ \ 1' 'Ill L" 1 III!J
(h,trlP Ruu •h '1114 1 i. 7 ~
:!11\X, Sunda1 Sd1" •l ':1 \0 un Sund,n
l'\CIIIng ..._flkL' 7 \ ~1 pm l:l1hh "iiUth
W•·Jnc,d.t~ ' Lf\'' ' 7 01\pin
H,tlk ,,(
~~1ad

\\~·1

P.t ~ IL ) I

llobso n Chrislum hllnv. ~ hip ( hurl'11
Hlt ~dlll \\httl' Sunda' Sdhl,.[

Ptt , hlr

IO.ml.,Suntl.tl(hutth\L'nt.~·
\\ ~dlll''ll,\1

7

C h11~t

1,111 I t•llo\1 ~ hlJJ

l)l()'i

H oop~!

Lnum~

('"*" Suud11 \\,1•h1p

Wcd n~·-d:tl

(ll(lpm

j'I'H

Rt ~turallllll
~u

\th~11•

Ro.td

P .t•h•l
]01]0 1111.

7 p111

Mtddl~port

Communi!} Church
~7~ PL.Ul St , Middleport . Pdstor Sam
Auder~nn
Sundny Slh,JOl Ill 11111 ,
F\ enmg- 7 10 p m Wcdne~day St.:r\'ll'l'
7 ~0 pm

tango;ullt (, hr•stiu n l hurd!

Cimp'"l

rull

]' l'lur

am

70(1

/IlL" " I

Huhu1

Suntl 1.1 S~ho&gt;~ll 'J 111 1111

\\ur,h rp Ill ~U

pm \\,·dn.·, dal

Senae 7 (MI

rm
Faith Valley Tt~bernucle Churrh
Ba1le~ Run Ru.ul , Pa stor Re v Em mctt
lb w~on, S und .t) bcntng I r Ill
Thu o;day Scr v ~~.:c • 7 p m

S}rneusr Mission
14 11 Bndgelltiln St S)ri.ILU't:, Sund&lt;l)
School - IU 1 111 [vtum g
6 pm
Wcdnc ~da } Scrvtcc- 7 p m.
Ha7.el Communll\ Church
Otf Rt 1:!-l- P ns w r E{bcl Hall · Su ndJv
Scho ol 9 10 am. Wor::.lup - 10 10" m
1 10 p nl

Pentecostal
Pcutctustul ,hM·mhh
12..1 R,tcllll' l'd•ll•l \\ rl lt.un
~urlo.l.1•
'id111" l
I ( j ,, m

Sl ~ I
H11h.td

llcmrtg - 7pnl

'

' Mnrs e Cha~l Chur\·h

Sunda ) s.: hnol - 10 am Wor~htp - II
m Wednesday Servt(t' 7 ['! m

Presbyterian
~\

rlll'Ust ~ tr ~l lnit,·tl l'n-sln tcrnm
Rllbl'tt ( r1111. \\ n1~ l ll p I! ,1. 111

P .t~ tHI

1 04~

Wur SIJ1p
Wednc~da)

7

~()

p

~0

a,m

am . 7l0 pm ,

m

till' Prl'shl It• nan ( hu r{ h

Pil -., h&gt;r

R nh~n C11&gt;\1

l' !~lt •r

Middleport l'r• ·~ln ll'l'l»n
Rtlhcr(l l'll \\,,t,hlp lll.t 111

\\pr•ht]' 9 J

111.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se\enth-l)a\ \dlt'nl lsl

.1

Failh Gospel Church
Long Botwm, SunUa} Sc hoo l - 9

\\ ~d t lt,J\\Su \ i c&lt;' •-7

pm

H~trns tJu,

l:ommunll) l:hun·h
S unU~ v S~ho ol
q lU .1 m . Wor,Jur 10 10am, 7 rm
ll~esville

Coolville Unned i\lrlhudisl Parish
fla stor Hele n Khnl' LIHI[ VI ilc ('hur(h
\-lam &amp; Ftlth St, Sund.1y Sdwul - 10
,llfl, Wor~lup - 9 ,, m luc,d.ty Scr'• ~cs ·
I p 111

lil t" \t ttoJI\ {~nhr
c,,JI,po •l, , f&gt;tl .

,J.

Harrison~tllc

Pu,IDI

Wednesday 7

rm

'l'"

\?I ~G ..-. )r~, .rt &lt;'L ~i-l ,td

Sa lt&gt;m Cu111munih ( hu1lh

Abundant (,racr R.F. I.
lJ~~ S fh1 rd St 'M1ddleport. Pusll1r rere sa

Ohtll

K .tl lllC

Jnhn Gtllllelll' S unJ I)' s~hnol 'J ~ ( I rt m w.,r ~ 1up - I I) 4S " m
B1hk
Stu dy Wed 7 00 f1 m
P .J.,!I!f

Ml Olive Communily Church
L1 wrcn(c Bu sh. Sundil) School
9 10 am EH·n mg'· 6 'O p m Wedneday
Sen1ce -7 p m

Hockingport C hurc-h
Grand Str~ct Sunday Sdwol - ') lO u m
Worship 10 "\() ,, m Pao,tur Ph tlhp Bell

Pil ~ l or

' Torch Church

Co R'd 6' Sunday Sdmn l - 9 10 a m ,
Wors htp · 10 10 am

Nazarene
Middleport Church of lht• Nuzarene
Pastor Alkn 1\-lldcap Sumlay Slhool
q 10.1111 Wor~lup - 1010 am 6 '0 rm
Wt'dncsda} Sen ICC' • 7 r m Pa~tor
Allen M1dutp
Rfi!d S\ IIIt Ft'llo"ship
Churth of the NaJ,ucn c P:t stnr Jam1c
Pt.'ttH Sunday S-.:hool 9 '0 am, Worship
- 10 4~ am. 1 p m \\cdnc~tl a~ Scr.tt't'~
-1 p m
S~ racuse- 1t hurch of the Naur.t"ne

Mulh ary HI '\ R'l l'lliiii.'Jtl~ P.1'1"1
B~nnclt Lu ckte'h S.tturdt' s.nt .. c •
S:thhath s~houl - ~ p m \\or,lHp - l r m

United Brethren

Sunday Sl hool - 9 10
i.l m Wor~h •p - 10 )n 3m 6 p m
Wcdne)o([ ,l)' Sen tees- 7 p 111
Churth or the Nazarene
Jan La1 ender Sunda) Sc hool
9 10 am W1)rsh1p 10 ~0 am and 6
p m. Wedncsd.t} Scr.· tn:~ - 7 p m

pIll )'Cr\ ICC

P ilSIOr

Ch~ter' Churth or th~ Nwza~nt"
Rc • H:rlx-rt Grate Sundav Schll01

Pi.l ~tor

- 9~03m.Wr.,-~h tp WcJnc..dt~)

-----·Z
.. L.
:fi•btr :funnal Jlamr
Ml JJMICI
._L._._

MIIIZ-t444

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

1 1

am

bpm

St·r. llCS - 7 p m

Full GoSptl L1gh1housc
JJ045 Htland Road. Pomeroy Pastnr Roy
Humer Su.nday School - 10 am Evemng
7 10 p m . Tuesday &amp; Thursday 1 JO
pm
Suulh Bdhel Community C hurch
Rtdge- Pa ~ tor Lmd a Damc~ood
Sunday School · 9 a m, Worshlp Sen JCe
10 a m 2nd and _.lh Sunda~
Sll~'er

Carlt"ton lnlerdtnominalional Ch11rc,h
Km g dlll. r ~ Roud Pas tor Rob ert Vance
Sunda.} School - 9 10 3 m , \';or&lt;;htp
SerHre 10 10 am E~en1n g Sen•1te fi

pm

Roger \\ tllford. Suntlay S.:hool · 9
Wur ~ lup-

~0 am

7p m

Act~

'

24:1

an (

hri~ t

7 UO r m

\\.:Jnc,J.t' \"uth Sen k&lt;

700p m

c:xlttend
SAawh

!ltegata'lly.

\\ h1tt 's Chapel Wesleyan
Cooh 1lk R oa d . Pas tor Re \ Phdltp
R1denour, Sunday School • () ]fl am
Wn"'h1p • 10 30 am Wcdnc"'!ay Sent~·e
-7 pm

Fainiew Bil)le Church
Lt1an W Va Rt I. Pa!&gt;tnr Bnan \l a~
Sunda} School - 9 30 a m , \\nr!.htp - 7 00
,P m, WeUm:Mia} B1bk Stud~ · 7 00 p m

Far!Jer m hem·en "
Martheu 5: 16

Me1 g" Coum~.- , Old~"' Flnn't

East Ma1n
Pomeroy, Oh
•lpt u~ tl!hd

ytl'JI

&amp;noulftr'a
:firt &amp; &amp;aftl!'
IOu.nD

, ............. 7

Jt~JJ.
.

W

thou(.hlt Wtlh (JH'('I31 C~f11·

740-992-2644

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
For God so /01•ed the world
PHARMACY
he ga1•e his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbe·gm'ten sm1...
Prescriptions
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man ."

Hrdhr~u

Rt•uh1dl,
'lwJJn
School I I i.llll Sund.11 \\ or•h 1p I( I (\(I
a Ill &amp; 7 f)() rIll \\e·J n,· -JJ~ s~f\ 1 ~ -- -

Bald Knob. on Co Rd 3 I. Pastur R~ v

Ler ,lOIII' hgiJi so shine before
men. that they men lee yuur
home gnnd 110rk1 and gloriji. rour

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-6606

Eden l 'nitcd
St.ttl R\!u lc 1:4

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER
The care you deserve, close. lo

Mt. Ht'rmou l mtrd Urclhr(' n
m Chr1st ( hurch
Tcx a~ Comm umh l(10:Il \\ tel..h.oll1 Rd
P,1,1nr Pch r 11.1.t11mdnl. Sund,t\ c;;lh,,, JJ 9 ~I) am \\nr\hrp - 10 l O am ~ 110
p 11l , Wcdnc,d,tl ScntlC'
7 {)() p tll
You th gw up mec•11ng :)nd ,\: .tth 'lund.tl'
7 pm

FrHdom Gospel Mission

Adlon ~.

Mtkc

Pomcn1~

ton11: Bollom
Sunda} School - 1:{ JO am Wor~ htp, 10 \Uam
Kftdnille
Wo rsh1p - 9 \0 am , Sunil:!) Schm)1
10 ~0 .1m Ft"'t Sunday nf Month · 7 ()()

. . . . . . . . . . .s . .
992·3785

l 1h• ( hurd1

.!ud \ ll

L.1v.renL~' h•r ~m. 111

.1 m i.l nd 7 p m . Wedne~da~ - 7 p m

1-'a ~tor

.t 111

H ejmc1n~

"i(KI '\

School - 9 4"1 .1m Worshtp - II

United Methodist

Church of Chrisl
Inters ectiOn 7 und 124 W, E\angeh~t
D e ~m s Sargent, Sunday B1blc Study 930 am. Worsh1p l030 am an d 6 ~0
p m , Wcdncsda)' B1ble Stud) - 7 p m

Rutland Churt'h of God
Pastor, Ron Heat h, Sundar Wnrsh1p - 10
a 111 , 6
p m , Wcdnesda) Scrvt.:eS 1

Sefl lll' - 7 rIll

l:armd-Sutlou

&lt;.:hri~l

lummu!Utl .\po~h1h c
l hunh
l'a,hlf \\.1\lle R kill'][ '1 unJ11 \ei i ! ,L
(liKI pIll \hduc 'cl.i\ h 1M J p 111

\\cJnc-d.tl sl'l 1 ~. .. ,..

no

Kutlund
P.t-.tol I&lt; 1LI-.. l:lnurnc. Su1al.t) Sdl tHJ[ Y lo .t rn w.,r,hrr 10 lll .tnl 111.\lr,J "

I&lt; ~ .

'7 ~ ~ \ p m

Stt\t'h\ttl~

Bt•thel Wors.ip Cenler
C hc•.tcr Sl ht•o l P 3~tor Roh Rurber
;\~,t s t.tlll Pa~ to r Kur~:u Dto "· Suuda}
Woro,Jup 10 &lt;~Ill, EHn lll~ Wu,~htp 6 pm
Yt•uth gruup (, pm, Wed n c~d"~ Puwa 1n
Pr&lt;t\l'f .mU l:h hk Study 7 pm

-\ ~h

Ill

Pint• Gro\e Uiblt• llolincss Chun:h
II:! mtll or: Rt 1:!'i PNtll Rc' 0 [)(·ll
\&lt;1 mk y, S\lnUa\ Sduonl · IJ ~() i.\111
Wnrsh1 p
lU 1\1 .1.1 11
7 ~0 p 111
Sen

\\edn~,d.ll s~lll l l

pm

[) tlih

Hr11rwalluw Ridge Chunh ur C hri~t
P..1sto r Bru~.:c Terr). Su nda} S' huol -I.J \o

('a[,an B1hlt&gt; Church
Pt~ ~
(I' KJ 1'&lt;.1- wr Rn
1i ~ll .1 111
Hl.I'-~'H&gt;~'li '\u11U,t1 "idtt ~,l
\\nr~lttp
[II 'l\ 1 ,1111
7 II)
p 111

Pouww'

!\ lint&gt;r~ \illt'

P.t,ll• r Bn!"- ~ nhnl.'&lt;lll Sutid.t\ Sl h&lt;'ll •l- 9

Ro~ or Sharon Holiness Churt•h
Lc.td mg Creek Rd Rutl,md P.tstor RL'I

[)(v.c\ Kmg

Other Churches

Failh Fcllo-...'ihtp l'ru!iad(' ror Chri'il
R..-1 1-r.mt.Jm D1d;t.'n, Sci\'' ~
1-nUa). ~ r m
Pa~wr

Portl .md - Ra cm~

,, m. Sund.l\ Sl'IWt11 IO

Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Fulll1ne of
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask wha,t ye will, and it shall
Ftnanctal
214 E. Main
b'e done unto you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc
992·5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Quickel
992-6677

'

S~ulll:.t}

Sun.l.t)

I

I 90 N. Second St

"Do not steaL Do not lie .
Do not deceive one
another."
Leviticus 19; l I

R1•1~1

tlk·

M~Kcn11c .

Keno Churth llf Chris!
Wur~htp
t)·'\O am Sunl1ay Sdmu l
Ill '0 .tm. Pastnr Jct!J l') Wuli,JlC 1st .uul
~rU SunU ty

''

Flnt Soulhern Bwptlst
4 18?2 Pomeroy P1kc. Past or E LltnHtr
0 Bryant Suntlay School · 9 10 a 111.
Won;h1p · R J'i It~, ()4~ .1m &amp; 7 00 p m
Wednesday Scrvtcc ~- 7 [l() pIll

Open 7 days a week

7 40·992· 7713

l' tl ~ l ' "

Rulland Church of the Nazan-nt'
Sunday SchQ(ll - 9 10 am . Wor,htp
I 0 30 .1 m
0 HI p rn
Wcdnc~du~
Sentce-, · 7 p m

0
•

•'

1 pm

Scrv1t:c

Hartford Church or Chrisl in

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Oh1o
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physocal, occupaloonal,

1-'lal~nod!l'

llt&gt;llth ti\llddll'port)
P.t ~h•l Hn.m Dunh.trn. Sunda\ School
•J ~() .1 111, \\1'1'lup ll 00.1.111

l)um tile Holt ness Churdt

Pumero} Wl'Sbide Church or Christ

7 OUpm WcW1c ~t.lay B1hk SHJdy 7 ()(l pm
lnt enm Preacher - Floyd Ross

Pc~stor

Arl.tllll K~tlg. Sunt..I J\ SdJ.otll 10 'O .t 111 \\'ur~htp If 'O u 111 B1bk
~r u .h \\c,J 7

1](l'i7 St,l\'-' Rnull' \:!'i Lmg~\llc, P.tstnr

C11rpenter 8ap11st Church
Evcnrng

Pa~tor

1r m

Entrrprist&gt;
r~ ~ tur

htn-~1

Po.Urm\ Church of Ch risl
1 12 W Mum S1
Mtnhtcr Ant hon\

~1~~(1 C'luldn:n·~

!0 ~Oam

Holiness

Sunday S~ h nn l
9 10 u ~1r
Wnrshlp- 10 lO ,, Ill fi r 11.1 • WL-dll('~Ja}

[uppt-,1» Phun) St. Pa~ul
Pa,lPI J~nl' Hl•alltt' SuuJa, Sdtnl&gt;l - 9
.1m \hlr•lup I (I .1m Tuc •d.p, Sc11 tl\.'~
- J ~or m
l rntntl L'lu~lt·r
-\~t-un tS~r.ILih.: ) P.t,tor B·•h Rnhm-on
Sund.u~t 'ichunl • Y 4"i ,t m \\or, hlp - I I
lllll \\cdrte-,,Ju~ Sen 1tce' . 7 \() p m

•n

Grnct' EplM'Opal Chunh
~:!6 F ~\.1111 S1 Pomcro\. Sundi.l) SdM'l
.llld Hnl) l l.llh.Uhl 11 UO ;tIll

Hemlock Gro,·e C hnstian Church
Mml stt•r Larrv Bro-wn, Wnrslu r - 9 11)
a m Su oday Slh\lol - 10 J!l am, litbk
Study, - 7 p m

Baptist
ServJCc

Y.Jut~·Rd

OJ

Ciitholic

ScrVKC~

VIctory Baptist l!ldependenl
525 N 2nd St Middleport, Pastur Jumt: s
E Keesee. Worshtp - lOam , 1 p m.
Wednesday ~emces - 7 p m

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

t.:hun·h ol God or l,rophet&lt;\
L•tiSt Rt lf~t PNm P)
Chupman Sunda\ SdH .. ,I
Ill .• Ill '
\\nr-.hlp - II J. m Wl-..lllc,dd) Sen Ill'' - 7
pm

WV Su nda ) S~.:huol 10 .tm
, Mom mg wo~h•p. ll am E1emnl!- 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p m
RaiC115~ood.

Church of Christ

Fir.~t

Subscribe today • 992-2155

"

Fellowship
Apostolfe

Two blue-blood theologians switched sides on belief in the Bible's personal God
BY RICHARD N. OSTLING

WORSHIP GOD THIS W.EEK

Friday, August 13, 2004

Marr.iage is the most exciting affair!

A Hunger for More

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

740-992-6298

M!! erace is sufficient
for thee: for my
streneth is made
Perfect iri weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992~6376

�OPINION

.·· 'The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

.Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
._tim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

VIEW

Unique
TMzat makes area unique?
· GCCVB Executive Director
What makes Gallipolis and
Gallia County unique ?
What makes people want to
stay, shop and dine here, and
even think about relocating
Bob
here? One of the goals in our
Hood
office is to effective'ly market,
.not just Gallia County and
Gallipolis. but the region itself,
and identi fy the mix of 'Ps' to
make our area attractive.
Oar new GCCVB mar-keting slogan is 'The Best of Rural
Ame rica.' Let me tell you what makes us the best.
Our Product: What is our key attribute ... is it quality? Is it
our staff? Perhaps it's our style . We are very fortunate to have
natural scenic beauty and this community knows how to
enhance it. .Hats off to· our city and county employees who,
every day, make sure we are 'spruced up' and look good.
Last week a visitor commented on the natural scenic beauty of our parks and the Ohio River, found nowhere else in the
state. What a tribute!
·
· · lnsearch of a definition of product, where should I turn
except to Webster, and according to his dictionary, 'product'
is detined as quality. Gallia County is focused, placing quali'
'ty at the forefront of all our attractions.
Quality 'museums , quality outdoor recreational opportunities, a quality ·shopping district run by quality retailers, quality educators to lead our youth into the next generation, and a
quality health care system, meeting the needs of not only our
local residents but also the region.
· 'Quality ' exists and is obvious all over Galli a County. .
Our Place: The second reason to make us the best, is our
place. It's our location. We are part of Appalachian Country,
strategically located at the .intersection of highways 35 and 7.
Our Visitors Bureau is fully·stocked with brochures, maps and
new ideas for an unforgettable Southeastern Ohio experience .
for visitors.
· A member of our staff is available seven days a week, eager
to help you find everything you need for a perfect getaway.
Eacn .o f the four seasons brings their own special glow to the
region. Spring and fall temperatures range from 30-60
degrees, bring rain, to feed our waterfalls and creeks, making
them picture perfect. In summer; temperature are between 5085 degrees, cooler in the evenings to encourage being outdOQr
or walking on our trails. Outdoor activities call for relaxed,
comfortable clothes, with athletic shoes or walking shoes
appropriate. Enjoy our finest·restaurants, where casual clothes
are always in style.
· Henry Cushing, the famous inn operator, once told boat
travelers 'Come on over to Our House.' Today thatmessage
continues to be proclaimed J;ly organizations like the GCCVB,
when we tell people all across the collntry 'Come to qallia
Countv ... the Best of Rural America.'
In tlie next article, we will look at two additional reasons
why we are the best place to live, work and play.

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Friday, ~upst 13, 2004

The mot he~ of Christian Science

The Daily Sentinel

GUEST

PageA4

Unknown and penni less at
age 45, Mary Baker - later,
Mary Baker Eddy - the
founder of Christian Science,
was a millionaire when she
died at the age of 89. How
George
did she do it?
Plagenz
It was during the women's
rights movement in the 19th
century that Mrs. Eddy came
into . prominence as one of
modern
history's . most get sick. 'For the underemployed woman, ·sickness
notable religious figures.
The growth of cities and c.ould be · a fonn of occupathe burgeoning industrial tion. For the lonely, it could
revol)..ltfon were creating new be a demand for attention.'
But the modesty of · the
anxieties among the wom~n
of the country. The more that Victorian woman often made
men succeeded in this new her look upon the probing
world. the less the women and inqui sitive male medical
were needed. The more their doctor as gross and indelihusbands worked, the less cate. Retaining her modesty
the women had to do. With became more important than
little to contribute to her getting welL
spouse·'s
success,
the · In such a Victorian society
Vi~torian woman kept busy
Mary Baker Eddy introduced
keeping her house clean.
her new reiigious discovery
Freed from having to - a nonmedical , p4rely
work, women engaged in mental and spiritual ;science
conspicuous consumption. of health' called Chri stian
Some female reformers, Science - exactly what the
objecting that women were times called for.
being taught that their tirst . 'Mrs. Eddy and her J:nesduty was to please the other sage undoubtedly brought
sex, registered th)!ir protest health, serenity and prosperiby not marrying and criticiz- ty to many people,' said
ing wifehood and mother- Sydney Ahlstrom of Yale
hood. Lonely and protected University in his book, ' A
from the hard outside world, Religious History of the
they came to think of them- American People' (Yale
selves as weak and passive · University Press, 1993).
creatures.
'She cl~arly stimulated
But as one historian, much interest in the ministry
Donald Meyer, professor of of healing which the
American history at UCLA, Protestant churches had virnoted, there was one: thing . tually abandoned. She and
women could do. They could her church demonstrated the

importance of will, mind and until Quimby died in 1866.
religious faith for personal
ShOJtly afterward came a
turning point in Mrs. Eddy's
health and well-being.'
Mrs. Eddy's personal story life - ' a momen t, which
is no less remarkable than years later she would desigthe religion she founded .
nate as the birth date. of
Born in 1821 in Bow, Christ\an Science.
N.H .. Mary was a frail child,
Taking a •walk in winter,
afflicted with spin~! ailments she slipped on the ice and
and unable to attend school , reinjured her back, becomregularly. Her early and mid- ing, in her words, 'a helpless
dle years were largely unhap- · cripple.' But three days later,
py ones.
,
after reading the Bible
She was married at age 22 (Matthew 9), the account of
,to George Glover, . but a year Jesus' curing of the man sick
. later she was widowed, of the palsy, she rose from
sho1tly before giving birth to her bed healed.
their
son
George .
It was during this period
. Impoverished and in poor that, at age 45 , Mrs. Eddy
health, she returned to her says she discovered .'the scifamily .with whom she lived ence of divine metaphysical
for the next nine years. In healing.'
Between this time and the
1853, she remarried. Her
new husband, Dr. Daniel time of her death in 1910,
Patte(son, was an itinerant she married her tl1ird husdentist (whom she later band, Asa Gilbert Eddy,
divorced).
founded
the
Christian
Ahlstrom , in his article on Science Church, wrote her
Mrs. Eddy for the blogr~phi­ famous book, 'Science and
cal dictionary, ·Notable Health with Ke'y to the
American Women' charac- Scriptures,' and won wealth,
terizes the next years of her . power and fame. Her estate
life as ;miserable.'
was valued at well over $2
Moving from place to million when she died.
place with her husband,
To the outside world,
whose 'professional · practice Christian Scientists are 'peowas far from successful, ple who don't go to doctors.'
Mary drifted into isolation While that is largely true, it
and invalidism. Financially, doesn't mean · Christian
she was 'in a state of almost Scientists ig1\ore sickness.
complete destitution.'
But they treat it with prayer.
At this low time of her life Testimonies .of people who
she became interested in the have been cured of all manteachings of a spiritual healer ner of illnesses through
named Phineas .Quimby who reliance on Christian Science
did much · to help her. Her are published regularly in the
health was improving up church's magazines.

OR ISLUE
STATE?•

LIKE

A

FLAG
DECAL.

SfAHlfR
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'2o~1!1ECII-lelt1NII1111'!5r

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S~ould
In this relative lull between
the
Democratic
and .
Republican conventions, the
rumor mills are abuzz with
speculation that President
Bush may drop Dick Cheney
· as his running mate in favor
of someone supposedly better equipPed to take on the
Democrats' . glamour boy,
John Edwards.
Cheney .(so the argument
goes) has been thoroughly
demonized by the . liberal
media as Halliburton's man
in the higher ranks of the
Bush administration as a
result' of his former eKperience as that company's CEO.
OriginaUy, he was thought to
lend a needed gravitas to the
Republican ·ticket, having
served, in previous administrations, as Secretary of
Defense and presidential
chief of staff. But in the past
three and a half years, as
·Cheney has served Bush
silently and self-effacingly,
this reputation for expenise1
has subtly been transmuted
into the image of a devious
Rasputin, invisibly manipulating the levers of government in the interests of his
well-known conservatism,
his supposedly rabid Middle
Eastern policies, and, (of
course) 'Halliburton.

Bush keep Cheney?.

I will confess that I have
been astonished at how successfully the liberals have
managed to tarnish the publ·ic
image of Dick Cheney. ·In 60
years of watching American
William
politics, I cannot recall a
Rusher
public figure wbose abilities,
experience, judgment and
modesty have impressed me
more. He has held more
In addition, even ,some major public offices than
Republicans have wondered most politicians dream of,
whether Cheney, whose style and yet no breath of scandal
and manner are understated has ever touched him. His
to a fault, is up to debating recent salty response to an
the glib and glossy Edwards, offensive
remark
by
as he will have to do at least Democratic Sen. Pat Leahy
once on national television merely confinned his comduring the campaign.
mon humanity to doubters
Thus far, Bush has certain- who were beginning to wonly seemed rock-solid in his der if his behavior was too
support of his vice president. goOd to be true.
When asked to compare him
On reflection, it lias probato Edwards, the president bly been Cheney's determinareplied trenchantly, 'Cheney tion to stay out of the limecould be president' - there- light, and to give advice to
by moving the debate right Bush confidentially, when the
back to where it belongs: president requests it (~ he freover the comparative qualifi- quently does), that has given
cations of Cheney · and his critics their opening. What
Edwands.
is he saying to Bush in priBut Bush also badly wants vate? What policies is he
to win re-election, and polls pushing, behind the closed
have suggested that there doors of the Oval Office? His
may be some disadvantages very silence has left his enein retaining Cheney, in view mies free to imagine - and
of the job the liberal media proclaim - the worst.
have done on him.
But Bush put his finger qn
-r

~-

the key point: Dick Cheney
is superbly qualified to serve
as president, if some tragedy
makes that necessary. As if to
stress that point, he is running, by sheer luck, against a
man whom The New York
·Times asst',rts 'has less governmental experience than
any other major vice presidential candidate in at . least
;20 years. ' John · Edwards
unquestionably has lo'oks
and charm to burn, but what
effect would these· have on
North Korea's Kim long ll,
or the mullahs of Iran?
One hopes that the
American people will reflect
on that question before casting
their
votes
this
November. The United
States is deep in a war
against militant Islam, being
waged by our enemies with ,
terrorist tactics ,previously
unknown to modem warfare.
Dick Cheney may have his
defects, b!Jt President Bush
- and America - are fortunate that he is vice president.
Such men of solid experience
and wisdom are far too rare
to throw away.

a

(William Rusher is
. Disti11guished Fellow of rhe
Claremolll Institute for rhe
Srudy of Sraresmanship and
Polirical Philosophy.)

Hayman
RACINE - Vera Belle
Hayman, 89, of Pine Grove
Road, Racine, Ohio, passed
away Wednesday, Aug. II,
2004,
at
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation · 'Center in
Pomeroy.
She was born Aug. 17,
1914 it? Belpre, Ohio, to the

AI-Qaida and other militants turn
to crime to fund terrorism amid
crackdown on financial institutions

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Fire Department will
have a chtcken barbecue adt the firehouse Saturday. Serving
will .begin at II a.m.

JOHANNESBURG , charities believed to have
South Africa (AP)
diverted funds to the terror
Members of · Osama bin network .
·~ Laden"s al-Qaida and other
In all, the · United States
militants are turning increas- has identified 383 individuingly to crime - from deal- als
and
organization s
ing drugs to selling knockoff believed to have bankrolled
shampoos and pirated CDs or otherwise supported ter- to pay for attacks amid a rorist activities, leading to
POMEROY- On Wednesday, a report was published in this
crackdown on the · move- the freezing of roughly $141
newspaper ab~ut a Letart woman arrested by the Meig s
ment of terrori st funds million linked to al-Qaida
County Shenff's Department for criminal trespassing and
through world banks. securi - and other groups worldwide:
reststmg arrest. The woman arrested was Debra K. Roush, 42,
ty officials told The
At the same time. the
of Rt. 2, Box 161 , Letart.
•
Associated Press ..
United States and its allie s
As terrorist cells become have destroyed. ai-Qaida's
more self-reliant, they are operational
base
in
calling into question the Afghanistan, fo rcing wh&lt;\1
·notion they need an interna- had been a fairly c~ntmlized
tional finan cial support net- oper~tion to reorgariize into
work to stage attacks , smaller. more autonomous
according to the indepen- units, U.S. officials say.
dent commission that inves-.
Instead of relying on outligated ai-Qaida's deadliest side funding, these cells
assault yet on Sept. II , depend increasingly on their
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) Americans have died in com2001.
.
. own community soli.cita- A Black Hawk helicopter bat, making 2004 the deadU.S. Treasury officials, tions, tapping local charities,
loaded with U.S. troops liest combat . year yet. Two
who have driven the global conductmg small busine6s
crashed in a troubled Afghan soldiers and their Afghan
campaign to stem terror.ist operations and often engagprovince on Thursday, kill.ing translator were killed by a
funding , acknowledge the ing in petty crime, according
one crew member and injur- roadside bomb on Saturday.
shift and say it is a symptom to a report submitted to the
ing 12, the military said.
Khost, a former ai-Qaida
of their success.
· U.N. Security Counci I at the
Officials ruled out rebel stronghold in a swath of tern"Treasury's efforts have end of 2002 .
fire. But the incident high- tory along the Pakistani border ·
made it harder and costlier
Noting the development,
1ights the dangers for troops where the Taliban-led insurfor terrorist groups like ai- the 9/11 commission report
sttll hunting Taliban and al- gency is strongest, has seen
Qaida to move and . raise warned: "If ai.-Qaida is
Qaida militants nearly 'three some of the heaviest fighting.
money," Molly Millerwise, replaced by .smaller, decenyears after the start of
Spokesman Maj. Rick Peat
a department sr,okeswoman, tralized terrorist groups, the
America's war on terror.
declined to say where the
told the AP. ' However, as premise behind the govern~
"The
helicopter
was helicopter
came
down
we strengthen our defenses ment's efforts-· that terrordestroyed in the crash, but Thursday. He said troops
against financial crimes and ists need a financial support
did not burn," the miUtary were still investigating the ·
better safeguard the finan- network - may become
said in a statement. "Hostile crash site and recovering the
cial sector, ai-Qaida and outdated."
fire was not involved. The wreckage.
like-minded groups will . There is _plent~ of prececause of the crash is under.
"We move J?COple around
resort to other means dent for ai-Qaida s move into
investigation."
Afghanistan with belicopters
such as petty crime, drug ordinlll)' criminal activities.
The mjured troops -three · routinely. They were not on a
trafficking and commodities
Colombia's Revolutionary
soldiers and nine Marines combat mission," Peat said of
fraud - to raise and move Armed Forces guerrillas
were taken to Camp Salerno, Thursday's crash.
·
money."
traftic in cocaine and heroin
an American base near Khost
An Afghan official said a
The warning follows to fund their organization.
city, 90 miles south of Kabul, technical fault . downed ·the · weeks of heightened securi- Paramilitary groups in
for treatment. ·
Black Hawk in Gurbuz, a
ty in the United States after Northern Ireland benefit
The four most seriously border district close to where
federal alerts that ai-Qaida froin sales of counterfeit
wounded were flown on to American · warplanes joined
was surveilling financial iar- cigarettes. And America 's
the main U.S. base north of an ali-day battle on Aug. 3
gets stemming from arrests former
Symbionese
Kabul, the statement said. It that killed up to 70 militants
m Pakistan and Britain.
Liberation Army robbed
didn't elaborate.
and two Afghan soldiers.
U.S. officials believe the banks.
The military initially said
Afghan officials said the
19 hijackers who participatAl-Qaida and its affiliates
that the fatality was a Marine rebels in that battle came
ed in the Sept. II attacks have been linked to the
but later issued a correction, from the Pakistani tribal
were funded directly by al- heroin trade in Afghanistan,
saying one of the Army heli- areas across the border and
Qaida, either through wire credit card fraud m Europe
copter's four-member crew retreated there with inany of
transfers or cash handouts. and gem smuggling out of
had died. The other service- their dead.
They
spent
between Africa - though the 9111
men on board, both Marines,
They also said they had
$400,000 and $500,000 over commission mamtains there
were not hurt.
intercepted radio traffic in
two years to plan and ·extl,- is no conclusive evidence to
More than 130 American Arab and Chechen during the
cute the attacks, acconding support claims ·the .terror
.to the 9111 commission.
soldiers have died since U.S. battle, suggesting al-Qaida
network laundered millions
forces .entered Afghanistan in militants were involved.
Since then, U.S. officials of dollars through diamonds
200 I as part of Operation
That battle - along with
have targeted the individuals before staging the U.S.
Enduring Freedom to drive Thursday's crash - have
and institutions that formed · attacks.
the Taliban from power and highlighted both the advanpart of what. they describe as
AI-Qaida and others have
attack its al-Qaida allies.
tages and the risks of the
a vast financtal network' also tapped into the lucrative ·
U.S .-led · originally set UJ? in the trade m counterfeit goods,
Many of the soldiers have 18,000-strong
been killed in accidents, force's reliance on air power.
1980s to fund the jihad," or ranging · from knockoff
holy war, against Soviet handbags to pirated ·music
including several deadly heliMarines deployed in south'
copter crashes. In the most ern Afghanistan earlier this . occupation of Afghanist6n. ,CDs, according to Interpol,
recent crash, five soldiers year claimed to have killed
These include wealthy indi- the organization that coordividuals who · contributed nates information among
died near Bagram in more than I00 ins\11'gents, often
directly to ai-Qaida, as well law enforcement agencies in
with the help of helicopter gunNovember.
as mosques and Islamic 181 cOuntries.
'
This year, at least 23 ships and Harrier jets.

Identity of accused •
Letart woman clarified·

U.S. helicopter.crashes in
Afgh_anistan,_ ~illi~g one
sold1er and lnJunng 12

basketball coach; will have
two assistants at the high
school yet · to be hired.
·Jeremy Grimm , who has
been assistant baseball coach,
was hired as baseball coach.
An assistant will be hired for
him, and he will be using volunteer assistants.
Middle school coaches
hired were Ttm Simpson, .8th
grade
boys
basketba)l,
Derrick Fackler, 8th grade
boys basketbaU, Carson Crow,
7th grade football, and Don
Dixon, 8th grade football.
Buckley said that the hiring
of all coaching assistants is
contingent on certification.
The superintendent said
. that while the Boand pays for

the coaches and provides
facilities and maintenance,
the athletic department pays
for supplies and equipment
and officials O\lt of gate
receipts. "That means the
athletic department puts up a
significant chunk of change.
Then there are .the Athletic
Boosters who help out a lot."
. Raising admission fees to
games was diset1ssed by the
coaches and it was suggested
they, come to the next board
meeting with recommendations.
Humphreys, after commending the coaches who
came to the meeting Chancey, Brannon, Wolfe.
Kennedy, and Grimm - for
their dedication, pointed to
. the financial problems of the
district and called on the
coaches to "keep a good handle on expenses because
what's happening here is that

Church
from PageA1
April where he served as chaplain's assistant
wtth the Army National Guard 1092 Engineer
Battalion located in Parkersburg. He traveled
all over Irilq including walking in Babylon but
he said, "My heart never left the church here ."
While in lraq, Moms witnessed death,
experienced 158 degree heat in the Rahmalia

---

'

late Will Swan and Alma Donna (Bill) Nease, Racine; · Loomis, Donna Hayman and
Mae (Fulton) Pullins. Mrs . and Jerry C. (Cindy) Pauline McGuiffin :· and a
Hayman was a homemaker.
Hayman, Lancaster, Ohio. brother, Clyde Swan.
. She is survived by eight She is also survived by 34
Services will be at I :30
children: Harry W. (Diana) grandchildren, several great p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 1.5. at
Hayman, Grandville, Ohio; grandchildren, and great,
Sidney R. (Carol) Hayman , great grandchildren, · with the Birchfield Funeral Home
in Rutland, with Pastor Leslie
Rutland, Ohio; Miriam several nieces and nephew s.
(Andrew)
Hrivnak , . She was preceded m death Hayman officiating. Burial
Columbus; Judith (Robert) by · her hu sband, Harry will fo llow at Gilmore
Jirivnak,
Heath,
Ohio; Hayman; two sons, Robert Cemetery in Racine.
George W. (Tere) Hayman, and James Hayman; a daughFriends may call Saturday
Gahanna ; Cheryl (Carroll) ter, Vera Price; four sisters, from 5-7 p.m. at the funeral
Knight. Hartford,. W.Va .; Geraldine Dodson, Alice home.

Firemen to have barbecue

from PageA1

J

•

' .

For the record

·Local Briefs

Board

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Obituaries
Vera Belle

REO

I'D

l"riday, August 13, 2004

revenue is going down and
expenses are going up."
He said the Board was concerned about the coaches a'king for the same number of
assistants in view of the
financial problems of the district. "Can't you make some
sacri fices~" he asked.
Young raised the issu~ of
fairness. "How can we cut
teachers and aides in the academic areas and then not
touch the sports program?
That somehow doesn't seem
fair. Sports ought to sacrifice
too. We have to show the
people we are doing everything we have to do to get
along on the money we
have.''
Chancey responded with a
discussion of the issue of
safety. He said this year 51
kids have come out for football adding that he would

oil fields where soles of boOts melted on the
asphalt and heard of persecution of Iraqi
Christians. Moms credits sensing God's presence and pmyer for getting him through his
tour of duty.
While in Iraq. Moms says life became
simple and more defined. He appreciated the
small things that most take for granted like
electricity and running water and when he
returned home. his small church became an
even bigger part of his life as it has for the
community of Pomeroy for the past 75 years:

love to have two more coach.es (over the five assistants
hired) and emphasized that
he needs those five assistants.
The football coach talked
· about proper training and
safety issues, and discussed ·
the cost of equipment and the
various areas of drills, each
taking a· separate coach.
Buckley added that football
is a "contact sport, violent at
times, and the coach needs to
have assistants to supervise
what's going on and work,
with the kids and try to develop their skills." He also said
"it's hard to change horses in

Man pleads not guilty by insanity
POMEROY - Waylon Spurlock, 37 l Broadway St..
Middleport, has entered a plea of not guilty by reason of
in sanity in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas to a
charge of ~nlawful sexual conduct with .a minor.
Spurlock' s attorney requested tests be done to determ ine
whether Spurlock is competent to stand trial. The tests were
set for Oct. 2 I.

Civil suits field
POMEROY : Shade River Ag Services of Chester has
filed ci vii suits in the Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas against two local farmers .
Shade River claims it is owed a debt of $23.330 by David
Watson, 3951 1 Sumner Road. Pomeroy . The suit claims that
Watson offered 80 cows and bulls, 50 calves and any add itional li vestock purchased by Watson after the agreement as
collateral to the debt.
The suit agai nst Watson seeks a judgment for the debt, and
as ks the court to order a. sale of the livestock by the sheriff.
Shade Ri ver also claims it is owed 11 debt of S 19.859 by Jack
Ervin. '0(28530.State Route l 24. Langsville. According to .the
suit, Ervm agreed to put up 15 Holstei n cattle as collateral.
The suit against Ervin seeks a judgment for the debt, and
asks the court to order a sale of the .ll ve~toc k by the shetiff.

Starcher seeks
damages for injuries
POMEROY - Ronald E. Starcher. P.O. Box 15.
· Langsville, has filed a civil suit in the Meigs Counl y Court
of Common Pleas against Donald W. Barne tt Jr .. 32820
State Route 14, Langsville, for damages as the "re&gt; uh of
injuries suffered in an automobile acci dent.
On Aug. 14, 2002,· Starcher was the passenoer in a 1972
Chevrolet which was eastbound on Ohio Route T24. Barnett .is
alleged to have caused injury to Starcher when he failed to yield
the right of way when exiting a driveway in a 1981 Chevrolet.
The vehicles oollided, and the veh(cle in which Starcher was Iiding hit an emb~mkment. rolled. and came to rest on its roof.
Starcher seeks compensatory damages in excess of the minimum
allowed in the court'sjurisdiction for severe. permanent injuries.
medical expenses. physical and mental pain and lost wages.

.Firm seeks payment .
'

POMEROY- Option Card of Denver. Colo.. has filed a civil suit
in the Meigs County Court of Common Ple.1s against Margaret .
Boyce, 38711 Second St., Reedsville. claiming a debt of $1 4.948.
.combined with interest of $4,419 that Option Card says was owed
as of July 29, The suit asks lor judgment for the amount owed. the
interest. and further interest of 19.8 percent that accrues after July 29.

Probation allegedly violated
POMEROY - Donald Smith, Cole Street, Middleport. has
been arraigned in Meigs County Common Pleas Court for
allegedly violating terms of his probation . A hearing has
been set for Sept. 13.

Foreclosures
POMEROY- The following foreclosures have been filed
in the' Meigs County Court of Common Pleas:
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Pomeroy, has fil ed for
foreclosure against Leah H. Rose , doing busi ness a'
Sunshine Video and Tanning, 42090 Eastmand Ridge Road.
Pomeroy, and others.
LaSalle Bank, of Irving, Texas. has filed for foreclosure
against Thomas Darst, of Smithfield, Pa .. Yvo nne Darst. of
110 Union Ave .. Pomeroy, and ot.hers.

Dissolutions
POMEROY- A petition has been filed in the Meig., County
Court of Common Pleas for the dissolution of the marriage
between Charlotte L. Gibbs, 142 Cole St. , Apt. 7, Middlepon.
and Richard E. Gibbs, 827 Logan St., Middleport.
his raft around the pond 15
time s, fighting him fo r -!5 .
minutes.
Finally. he tired. and
Witherell landed hi s big
catch.
"I was thinking about
eating it or mounting it,
but then I wo uldn't ha ve
anything to look forward
to," he said. ••J hear them
things live 50 years .''

Thrill
from Page A1
line .
'
Last week, Witherell
hooked his big fi sh again,
thi s time using an Ugly
Stick. a 15-lb . test line.
and a bluegi ll for bait. The
fi sh pulled Witherell and
midstream." That statement
to
came in response
Chancey 's statemenrthat the
assistants we're already working with the students, even
though several had not been
officially hired by the board.
Safety was agai n stressed
by Buckley who cited liability as one reason . "If we' re
·going to have sports. we have
to have adequate supervision.
and supervision costs money.

Box Ollk:e Opens It
6:30 PM Nightly &amp; 12:30 pm

We still have to look at things
we can eliminate and · vet be
safe and do the job we need
to do."
But Buckley wamed 'the
coaches "We're looking at
ewrything and we're faced
with a live year forecast that
looks real u ~lv after the neXt
two years. so· we all need to .
be facing up to thi ngs. The
reality is that we don't always
get everything we want."

. lOth
.. ....,=····

lnaiversary.Party

FlU., AUG. 20, WILL BE THE
LAST DAY FOR THE WED.
THRU FRI. DAILY MAnNEES

.labua~ll8t,IOIM

•

llriUhull
...

m,·s Chnl CMial
hi"""' 's 11NHef CMial
9:20

Advance Tickets 5200
At Door 'Sot

�PageA6

NATION • WORLD
.
·Justice Department:
Guidelines for better .Pain
Witness calls into question treatment, less fear of DEA
:.key Detroif terror evidence

. The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 13, 2004

'

•

STATE.

The Daily Sentinel

'

.

one of the Detroit defendants,
said ttie new witness testimony undercuts one of the key
pieces · of .evidence used
• The Bush administration's against his client. "It was an
·already troubled ca~e again~t amateurish video taken by
aq accused terror cell in school kids," Thomas said.
Lawyers familiar with the
Detroit is being dealt another
blow with revelations that a interview say the student was
witness came forward after arrested in Los Ang¢les on posthe trial to undercut a key . sible marriage fraud related to
piece of video evidence pre- his immigration status, and also
had tried to get into a flight
sented to jurors.
Lawyers
and
Justice schooL But officials .have found
Department officials said no connection to terrorism.
The student told investigaWednesday night that a
Tunisian man shown in a tors he came with a group of
videotape of landmarks in New Turtisian university students
·- York, Las Vegas and California and went to places like
has told investigators the tape Disneyland and Universal
.was amateur ·footage from a Studios · and Las Vegas that
.university student trip, not sur- were shown on the Detroit
. veillance as prosecutors por- . tape. He identified himself as
·trayed at the trial of four sus- one of the people shown on
the tape. but did not attend all
pected terrorists.
· 'the witness, who was of the location s and did not
arrested on immigration know all the students.
He said he believed another
issues, was intervi'ewed in
member
of the student group
January, months after the trial
in Detroit ended, and was . bought video cameras ·to
turned over this summer to make the tapes, and may have
defense lawyers. It could deal sold the cameras later back in
a· significant blow to the Tunisia for money.
administration's first major
J11stice officials said their review
!error prosecution since the has turned up severnl problems
atlacks of Sept. II , 200 I.
. with the original prosecution.
"Since the discovery of the
· The Justice Department is
nearing completion of a tape in Detroit in 2001 and up
monthslong re.view of prose- until recently. the Justice
cutors' conduct during the Department's experts believed
case, and a judge will rule on the footage was terrorist sur:a defense request to reverse veillance, but the information
the convictions of three men. that has come to light calls into
_ "During the course of this question those conclusions," a
review, information has come to Justice official said, speaking
the government's attention that only on.condition of anonymiwe were ·obligated to turn over ty because the internal investithe defense, and we did so," galion is still under way. ·
William Sullivan, a lawyer
Justice spokesman Mark Corallo
said Wednesday night. "The for Convenino, said his client
review is ongoing and at the end had shown the tape to numerof the day,·the government will ous Justice expens who told
do the right thing based on the him it was consistent with
facts and the evidence."
other terror surveillance. "He
. Though both sides have was never presented with any
)mown about the witness evidence that contradicted
interview for some time, they those experts' assessments,"
:were precluded from disclos- Sullivaq said.
:ing it because of a judge's
Convertino is now under
gag order. Both sides con- investigation in the case.
Jirmed it Wednesday after the
In a jury verdict last sumjlfdge lifted the gag order mer hatled by the administrabecause one of the original tion as the breakup of a terror
prosecutors in the case, cell, Karim Kmibriti, 25, and
Richard Convertino, granted Abdel-llah Elmardoudi, 38,
1m interview to The were convicted on terrorism
'Associated Press this week.
and fraud ·charges, and
' James Thomas, a lawyer for Ahmed Hannan, 36, was con. Bv SARAH KARUSH AND
JOHN SOLOMON
· . ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

victed .of fraud. A fourth
defendant, Farouk AliHaimoud. 24. was acquitted.
· The convictions have been in
doubt for months after Justice
officials divulged some documents that might have been
helpful to defense lawyers
weren't turned over during the
trial, and they removed the
original prosecutors and put
them under investigation.
An FB.r agent and other
experts put on by the prosecut ion at the trial said the
tape appeared to be casing
footage consistent with the
way radical Muslim groups
. have taught operatives to
conduct surveillance.
. But the defense has argued
the tape belonged to someone
else and showed innocent
tourism footage.
Justice otficials said while
. the lielated witness test'imony
calls into question the Detroit
tape, a second tape found by .
Spanish authorities in an alQaida hideout in Madrid in
2002 that shows many of the
same landmarks is sti ll
regarded by U.S. officials ·as
terror surveillance.
Both tapes. obtained by AP
and aired nationally this week,
show footage of casino hotels
in Las Vegas, Disneyland in
California and several landmarks in New York City,
including the World Trade
Center before it was attacked.
AP reported earlier this
week that Justice Departm~nt
documents fro!Jl the time of
the ·· Detroit trial show that
repeated friction between
Washington and Detroit keP.t
the government from showing the Spanish videotape and
other evidence to the jury.
In an 'interview with AP,
Convertino alleged that "oarrow-shouldered bureaucrats" io
. Washington kept him from
. putting on a stronger case.
Converti11_o also claimed that
Las Vega.S authorities decided
for economic reasons not to
warn the public. in 2002 that
Detroit and Spanish terror cells
had footage of the casinos that
experts regarded as surveillance.
Las Vegas authorities acknowledgedtheywereshownbothtapes
back in 2002, but said their decision . not to warn the public had
nothing to do with economies.

CASH?

WASHINGTON (AP) New guidelines seek · to
improve treatment for millions of Americans with
unrelieved pain by spelling
out "exactly how to pre- .
scribe powerful painkillers
like Oxvcontin and morphine wi-thout attracting the
wrath
of the
Drug
Enforcement
Administration.
Many doctors hesitate to
prescribe narcotics, which
are heavily
regulated
becau'se they can be abused
by addicts.
. The gui\lelines issued
Wedne sday, written by
leading pain specialists
together with the DEA.
stress that the drugs ;1re
safe for the proper patient
- and pledge that doctors
won 't be arrested for pro·
viding legitimate therapy.
There is " unwarranted
fear that doctors who treat
pain aggressively are sin gled out," said Patricia
Good, DI;:A's drug-diversion chief.
The guidelines · should
help eliminate this "aura of
fear," she said.
They come at a crucial
time, said co-author David
Joranson, pain policy director at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Medical School. . Fewer
doctors are willing to prescribe narcotic painkillers,
known as opioids , partly
because of the government's high-profile crackdown on prescription-drug
abuse. Some pharmacies
won't stock them for fear of
burglaries.
"In some ways , pain
management and the use of
pain
medications
has
become a crime story when
it really should be a healthcare story," Jo ranson said.
The key message: "These
are legitimate treatments.
They're essential for good
medical care," said Dr.
Ru ssell Portenoy, pain
chief at New York's Beth
lsrael Medical Center and a

well-known pain specialist.
With the guidelines. the
DEA sanctions that view and is distributing the document to agents and prosecutors to help them distingui sh aggressive pain management . from drug diversion. A lot of opioid-taking
patienrs in a practice
shouldn't by itself si~nal
suspicion , the guidelines
advise. while long-distance
prescribing an~ lots_of premature refills might.
Fear of DEA isn't the
only obstacle. Many nonspecialists simp ly don't
know much about opioids.
Consider Cynthi tt C.
Hildt. 65 . .a · retired New
York teacher who hunted
relief for disab litig baek
pain fn r 20 years before
Porl&lt;' ll"Y prescribed morphine. · Recently af!Oiher
doctor asked if she wasn't
aft:aid of addiction.
"I said ,' 'I seem to have
the choice of living with
this unconscionable pain Or
taking a pil l that will help,
and I don't believe that
addi.ction is a worry under
those circumstances,"' the
outraged Hildt recalled.
Indeed , the new guidelines stress that when prescribed properly for serious
pain, opioids hardly ever
lead to addiction.
About 30 percent of
Americans suffer chronic
pain; for as niany as a third,
it . can be disabling,
Portenoy said.
· How many need opioids
but are undertreated? About
40 percent of cancer and
AIDS patients and the terminally ill, populations
where opioids ·are considered optimal care, he said.
Opioids also are useful for
other types of pain, such as
back or nerve pain,
although there's less consensus on how often to use
them.
The DEA regulates doctors who prescribe con trolled substances
i11cluding opioid painkillers

such as morphine, codeine,
fentanyl , Oxycontin - to
ensure they're not diverted
for illegal use.
Last year, just 50 doctors
nationwide were arrested
on chiffges that they pre- ,
scribed or otherwise distributed controlled. substances beyond the scope of
medical practice. somewhat
fewer than in recent years.
Good said .
On the ro ther hand, opioid
abuse is P ll th.e rise , a trend
illustrat ed by Oxycontin,
blamed for more than 100
death s. The long-acting pill
is crucial for severe cancer
pain, bpt it can produce a
quick, potentially lethal
high if cru shed , snorted or
injected.
The guide! ines spell out
how physicians can balance
aggress ive pain control
with the need to spot doctor-shopping
abusers.
Among the recommend·a. tions:
·
.-Document a medical ·
history, physical exam, pain
assessment and treatment
plan in first-time patients'
charts, with re-evaluations
at follow-up visits.
- Records should show
evidence that the doctor
evaluated the nature and
impact of the pain, earlier
treatments, and alcohol and
drug hi story. Measuring
pain intensity and extent of
relief over time "is important evidence of the appro- ·
priateness of therapy."
-Watch for abuse warning signs, such as a patient
unwilling to all qw contact
with . previous · -· doctors,
esca lating doses, seek ing
early refill s or requesting
specific medications&lt;These
require careful evaluation s
- they might merely signal
unrelieved pain.
-More worrisome signs
include deterioration in
functioning at home or
work, illegal activities such
as stealing or forging prescription s, and repeatedly
"losing" prescriptions.

Community Calendar
Public meetings Clubs and
organizations .
Friday, Aug. 13

RUTLAND ·-· .' Rutland
Village Council , regular
meeting , 5:30 p.m., Civic ·
Center.
Monday, Aug. 16
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. at
the office building.
~OMEROY - The Meigs
Mtddle School will have orientation Monday, Aug. 16
from 6 to 7 p.m. for all
in'coming sixth graders and
new seventh and eighlh grade
students.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Local Board of
Education will hold a specia l
board meeting at 6 p.m. in the
library conference rqom. The
purpose of the meeting is to
discuss personnel and take
care of other neccssmy business of the board.
Thesday, Aug. 17
REEDSVILLE The
Olive Townsip Trustees will
meet in special session at the
Olive Township· Garage at
6:30p.m.

Friday, Aug. 13
POMEROY
The
Widows Fellow ship · will
me.et at Millie's Restaurant at
12 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 14
POMEROY
Burlingham
Modern
Woodmen, 6 p.m. Saturday at
the halL The Camp will furnish melon, sandwiches, soft
drinks and table service.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish.

Reunions
Saturday, Aug. 14
LOGAN - The family of
John W. Cundiff and Louise
Anderson Cundiff will hold a
reunion at Lake Logan State
Park in Logan. Dinner will be
served at noon . Bring covered dish and something for .
the auction. Games and ·
prizes. RSVP to Mason,.
W.Va. •·· Mayor Raymond

Cundiff at (304) 773-5892 or
Susie Bryant at 992-2738.
Sunday, Aug. 15 ·
LETART Eva and
Patrick Riley reunion will be
held at l p.m. at the Letart
Community Center in Letart,
W. Va.
CHESTER - The' Curtis
reunion will be held at -12:30
p.m. Sunday at 'the Chester
Firehouse, Those attending
are to take a covered dish,
their own drink, and table
service. For more informa~
tion contact Elnier Newell.
985-3537.
.

Church services
Friday, Aug. 13
LONG
BOTTOM
Hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m . at the Faith Full Gospel
Church featuring local talent.
Saturday, Aug. 14
RACINE
Weekend
q~ecring at Red Brush Church
of Christ, 7 p.m. on Saturday,
I0 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday
with Brother Denver Hill.,
Foster, W.Va. as ·speaker.
Public invited.

'

WOUB radio p·rogram to
feature Athens business
ATHENS- Jonathan Leal,
• a .chef and entrepreneur in
Athens, has just gone through
extensive focus group testing
to· develop his "Vino de Milo
Gourmet Sauces" line.
This
Time
Around:
Reinventing Community fol·
lows Milo's Whole World
Gourmet through its start up
process, from focus group
taste testing to demographic
research ·and bottling. Milo's
Whole World Gourmet is one
example of Appalachian community members creating
economic opportunities.
On Tut;Sday, This Time

Around:
Reinventing
Community, airing at 8:30
a.m. on the WOUB Radio
Network, producer Jennife~
Curry follows the story of a
local business trying to
become successful.
Milo's
Whole
World
Gourmet is still in the experimental stages for their Vino
de Milo Gourmet Sauces, and
is currently operating out of
the AceNet kitchen in Athens.
. Producer Jennifer Curry interviews Jonathan Leal, founder
·and owner of Milo' ~ Whole
World
Gourmet;
Nadia
Mitchell. vice president of

operations; and Kevin Holy,
executive assistant for Milo's
Whole World Gourmet.
The program is a year-long
series that explores the fabric
.of community, how and why
communities change, and
what the future may hold for
Appalachian Ohio. Features
foc us on communities within
the WOUB Radio Network
coverage area and includes
four quarterly call-in discussion programs. The fourth
discussion program will air
on Aug. 24 at II a.m.

. Arcadia residents' quilting project

THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1004
• MEIGS • EAS7ERI • SOHRERN

---- ,
*- ~8e
.

' ...

'

..

Sure To Be A .
....art Of Th"
.
1s Ye ·

v

SPecial Falls · Or's

EASE THE
UEEZE!

-~Preview E~J'orts
····1.

u,,On/

Lisa Catlett is the lucky winner of a Lone Star quilt made by residents of Arcadia Nursing
Center. Several residents worked on ·the quilt during a Qu.ilting Bee earlier this summer. The
one of a kind quilt was not only made by residents but is also embroidered with each of their
names. Making the quilt were left to right front, Leora Sigman, Helen Sprague, Marjorie Davis
and Elva ·Gorrell, and back Nancy Gandee, .Hazel Korzep, Maxine Dornick, Martha Boop and
Lisa Catlett with her daughter, Layna.

CAA seeking input on community ·
• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24• x 12"
• 3 :Wooden StaiU!s
• 216 Pricing lab!liS . .

f

• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
boards at laundromats; markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet.' plus
'Secrets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• 1 Marker for Signs

1 Day Ad:
$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

MIDDLEPORT -The
Gallia Meigs Community
Action Agency will be holdin!~ a public meeting in
M1ddlepon on Tuesday, Aug,
-24, for the purpose of soliciting input on· community
needs in Meigs County.
inducting a discussion on the

FEMA
Food
Vaucher
Program.
There will also be an election to fill clientele vacancies
on the Gallia Meigs C.A.A.'s
Board of Directors for 2004-

I0:30a.m., will be held at the
Middleport Office 1369
'
·
Powell Street.
All interested Clllzens are
encouraged to attend. For

Meigs County meeting, scheduled to begin at

more information, call ,9926629.

2

~~~

LocAL.

PageA7
Friday, August 13, 2004

Dieters pray fo·r stength.
to lead healthy lifestyle ·
DEAR ABBY: My cousin,
"Hazel," was recently told
by her doctor that she must
lose 75 pounds. She tells me
that sticking to her diet is
almost impossible. Years
a~o. you printed a prayer for
dteters in your column. It
was ba sed on the 23rd
Psalm. I kept a copy of it for
years, but I lost it. Would
you please print it again? SYMPATHETIC IN TAOS,
N.M.
DEAR SYMPATHETIC: I
couldn't locate the prayer
you requested, but the
premise intrigued me- so I
wrote one myself. I hope it
inspires your friend. I
empathize with her. By the
way, she 's not alone. I am
told that one-third of all
Americans are overweight.
Read on:
A DIETER'S PRAYER
The Lord is my shepherd,
I shall not want ;
He maketh me to lie down
on vinyl-covered gym mats.
He leadeth me to tla vored
calorie-free waters;
He restoreth my goals.
He diveneth me from the
path of midnight snacking
for my health 's sake.
Yea, though I walk
through the alley of the
Ve.ndors of Pastry, I will fear
no weevil; for thou art with
me;

My diet and exercises,
they comfort me.
Thou prepares! a table
before me

Dear
Abby

long, bul the morning after I
con sulted him I found
myself in the hospital having my first surgery.
Now. one year later. after
two surgeries and six weeks
of' chemotherapy, I am 99
' percent cured and feeling

- - - - • great.
Thank you. Abby. for raising my awareness about this
serious di sease. I can 't stress
Spread with veggies and strongly enough the extreme
low-fat protein ;
·
importance of self-examinaThou stem;neth my fish in tion and early detection.
foi I.
•
Your column saved my life.
My resolve runneth over.
- GRATEFUL GUY IN
Surely. if I follow this li v- MARYLAND
ing plan all the days of my
DEAR GRATEFUL: I'm
life,
pleased that my column
My hips will be slim for- helped you. The American
ever.
Cancer Society informs me
Amen .
that when testicular cancer
DEAR 'ABBY: A little is diagnosed early. it is highover a year ago, after read- ly curable. Testicular selfing your column about a examinations are quick and
man who had experienced easy, and should be ·pertesticular cancer. I was formed once a mo·nth . A
prompted
to
examine simple way to do it is while
myself It was something I taking a shower. For more
had never thought about information. contact the
until that day. Not once had I American Cancer Society by
ever considered the possibil- calling the toll-free number
ity that it could actually hap- (800) 227· '2345 or visiting
pen to me.
the
Web
site:
Sure enough, I found . a www.cancer.org.
Dear Abbv is wriuen bv
large lump that sent a cold
chill down my spine. My Abigail Vait Buren. also
general practitioner didn't knm111 as Jeanne Phillips.
think it was anything to be · aiul was founded , by her
concerned about. But I was murh e1: Pauline Phillips.
still worried. so I made an Write . Dear · Abbv ar
appointment for a second www.DearAbhv.c-om .rir PO.
opinion with a urologi st. He Bux 69440. .Lt)s Angeles, CA
had a waiting list a month 90069.
.

.

Cheney criticizes K~ny's call
for more sensitive' war
I

Bv LAURA MECKLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
DAYTON- Vice President
Dick Cheney on Thursday
ridiculed John Kerry's call
for a "more sensitive" war
on terror. Kerry's campaign
said he was referrin~ to
reaching out to allies usmg a
word Prestdent Bush has
used and hit back at the
Re!Jublican tea'!''s Iack of
m1lit~ servtce m Vtetnam.
SeiZing on a phrase that
the Democratic . prestdenl!al
nommee used m a speech
l~st week, C~eney smd senSIIIvtty won t tmpress the
Sept.. II _terronsts or the
IslamiC m•lltants who have
··t· . en .
behea· ded u·s
. . c1 tz s.
"A menca
. . h'as been ,· n to~
v
many wars fo r a ny 0. f our
wishes, but not a one of
them was won by being sensitive," Cheney told supporters in this swing state, a critical one for Republican
presidential
·candidates.
"Those who threaten us and
kil! innocents around the
world do not need to be
treated more sensitively.
They need to be destroyed."
Cheney was refenring to
Kerry's statement last week
at a minority journalists' convention, where he said: "!
believe I can fight a more
effective. more thoughtful,
more strategic, more proactive. more sensitive war on
terror that reaches out to.,other
nations and brings them to

our s ide and lives up to surrogates speak for him .
American values in history."
"This is a ticket that ·has
Kerry spokesman Phil gone out of their way to avoid
Singer responded that combat duty. pursued policies
Cheney was twisting the that made America less safe,.
four-term
Massachusetts alienated key allies and
t
'
d
overextended our military to
se~a or s wor s.
Singer said Kerry never its thinnest levels in vears."
implied he would be any- Singer said. "As resuit they
thing but tough with ene- are .lorced to launch attack
mies. Rather, he said, Kerry after attack after attack ...
meant that allies arc needed
Added
retired
Geri.
. to fight- an effective war Merrill McPeak: "Do the ·
against terrorism.
· president and vice president
He also pointed to a pair really w;1nt a debate about
of instances when Bush used . who is more suit.ed to tig ht
the same word.
the war in Iraq and the w.ai
In 2001 , Bush said: on terror' Do they really
"Precisely because America want a debate about whicb
is powerful we nuts! be sen- candidate has the toughness
..
'
.
s111ve about ·expressmg our to make America stronger.";
d · 11
" Ad
Cheney appeared to relis~
power
an h mh uence
. "W
n
h'
·d
his role taking the offensive
t ISd mont
,
e
sat
:
e
b
. . . ·, .
nee w e ~err sens1t1v~ m against the Democrats, and
balancmg_ md1vtdual nghts the invitation-only"crowd of
supporters responded enthu·
an.~ I~telhgence !lathenng;
. D1ck Cheney s desperate siastically. The speech was
mtslea~m,g.attacks now. ha;e the latest in a series of
h1m cnttciZI.?g Georg~ Bush s . attacks by the vice president
Polls show Kerry and rune
own words, Smger smd.
ning
mate John Edwards
As tl has m past debates
over the terror war and nation- with a slight lead in Ohio, a
al security. Kell):'s campaign ' state no Republican has been
also responded with a forceful e l~ct ed president without
remmder that unhlw the winning . Bush has visited 20
Democrat, a decorated times as president; Kerry has
·
VIetnam Wm veteran, netth~r made 12 visits this year.
After the speech. Cheney waS
Bush nor Cheney served m
Vietnam. Bush served in the headed to his home in Jackson,
Texas Air National Guard, and Wyo., which he is using as a
Cheney had five deferments base this month. He and Bush
do not plan to campaign togeth,
from military service.
Kerry, who was campaign- er this'fall; they tmvel separateing on the West Coast, let his ly for security reasons.

Powell, other officials to address VFW meeting'
• Ava~able only With purchase of Garage Sale .Amoel'ti58fll&amp;nt.
Must be ptdl:ad "4' ar our olfir'..e.

3 Day Ad:
$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit ·
Gets You Great ·

$1 5 .Advertising!

c!9alltpolis 11Bailp ~ribune
fJoint fJleasant l\egtster

'

.

ADVERTISING DEADLINE· WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 2004 - 5:00P.M.

.Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
·For More lnformat.ion
•

e i!latlr ~enttnel

The Daily Sentinel
..

·

CINCINNATI (AP)
Secretary of State Colin Powell
will address the Veterans of
Foreign Wars national convention on Monday, hours after
President Bush speaks to the
same organization.
Powell's address at a banquet Monday night will follow his boss' scheduled
:appearance earlier in the 'day .
. He is a retired Army general
and former chairman of the
joint chiefs of staff.._ .
.
Democratic pres1denttal
candidate John Kerry. a
Vietnam veteran, is to address
the VFW on Wednesday.
Anthony Principi, the
Vietnam veteran who lteads the
Department of Veterans Affairs
under Bush, is to address the
convention on Tuesday.
Principi's depanment operates a national heillth care
system for veterans, and

VFW officials say health care · The Vfw and other veterfor their members is a top J?ri- ans' organizations have lobority. · The organizatton bied Congress for increases
claims 2.6 million members. in VA funding.

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-·....
.,..,

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Page AS

NATION

baily Sentinel

Friday,

13, 2004

'

INSIDE

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.

NFL camps roundup, Page 82
Reds beat Dodgers, Page 83 .

A million. warned
off west Florida coast as 'scarf Charley grows
.
.

Bv MITCH STACY

MacDill is home to U.S.
Central Command, the nerve
center of the war in Iraq, and
TAMPA, Fla. - About a the
Special
Operations
mi Ilion residents and tourists Command.
were told to evacuate coastal
Gary Vickers, Pinellas'
Florida from Key West · to emergency management chief,
north of Tampa ahead of warned people to not ignore
"scary. scary" Hurricane the evacuation orders.
Charley, which officials said
Heavy tmftic .flowed across
I 0 MPH from the'northwesl.
could submerge parts of this the three Ta1ilpa Bay bridges
o~ernight (1·6 a.m.)
city's downtown and other . linking
Pinellas
with
. lt will con tinue to be neighboring areas when it hits .Hillsborough · and the ,maincloudy. Temperatures will Friday.
land in Florida's biggest evac·
diminish from 63 to today's
Charley's center was expect- uation request since · 1999.
low of 50 by 6:QOa.h. Winds ed to pass west of the Keys That was when Hurricane
will be 5. MPH from the early Friday before hitting the Floyd brushed Florida's east
Tampa Bay area with winds up coast and prompted an order
nonhwest.
to 120 mph, heavy rain, spo-· for a record 1.3 million people
radic tornadoes and a danger- to evacuate; traffic backed up
Saturday, August- l4
ous storm surge. Hugh Cobb, a 30 mile~ or more as people
Morning (7 a.m.·Noon)
Temperatures will climb meteorologist at the National headed inland.
The I million people asked
from 48 to 67 by late this Hurricane Center in Miami,
Thursday.
With
winds
that
to evacuate could cause traffic
said
morning .. Skies will be mostit would be a Category 3 five times . heavier than in a
ly sunny to cloudy with 5 high,
hurricane, a m'\ior storm.
normal rush hour, state emerMPH winds from the nonhRadar showed the . first rain gency management director
west.
bands hitting the lower Keys Craig Fugate said. ·
Afternoon (/·6 p.m.)
Thursday night.
"The highway system was
· Temperatures will remain . " It does have the potential of never designed to ll)OVe this
around 70. Skies will range devastating impact. ... This is a many people this quickly," he
from mostly sunny to mostly scary, scary thing," Gov. Jeb said.
cloudy with 5 MPH winds Bush said.
About 6.5 million of
· from the nonhwest.
· Residents from the Tampa Florida's .17· million residents
Bay area, where the eye is pro- were in Charley's projected
jected to hit, southward to the path, the U.S. Census Bureau
Naples area were told to reported.
Many residents tried to preexpect a storm surge of I 0-13
feet. State meteorologist Ben pare for the worst, buying plyNSC-26.30
Nelson said the surge could wood to board up homes and
reach up to 16 feet in the stocking up on water, canned
Oak Hill Financi;tl - 32.69
Tampa area if Charley hits at food and batteries to ride out
OVBC - 31.625
120 mph.
. Charley.
..
Peoples- 25.01
"MacDill
Air
Force
Base
Power
companies
said they
Pepsico - 5 1.13
will
probably
be
mostly
underwere
mobilizing
thousands
of
Premier - 9.65
water and parts of downtown workers to prepare for wideRocky Boots 7 19.53
Tampa could be underwater if spread electricity outages. and
RD Shell- 49.2f
we have a Category 3," out of state crews were being
Rockwell ~ 36.84
Nelson said. "In a Category 3, readied to rush to Florida to
Sears - 35.46
\
you can almost get to the point help restore power.
where
Pinellas
County · The last time the west coast
SBC-25.24
(
becomes an island."
of Florida experienced a storm
AT&amp;T - 13.88
The bulk of the evacuations surge like that predicted from
USB - ~8.42 ,
were
in Hillsborough and Charley was froin ai:t unnamed
Wendy's- 32.87
Pinellas
counties, which major ·hunricane in October
Wal-Mart - 52.65
include
Tampa
and St. 1944 and from Hurricane
Wonhingwn - 18.79
Petersburg, a city thai sits on a Donna in 1960, which caused
peninsula. AU residents of serious damage, Cobb said.
Daily st9ck reports are the 4 MacDill, on another peninsula
Donna hit the Keys, the
p.m. closing quotes of the previ- in Tampa Bay, were ordered southern tip of the state and then
ous day 's transactions, provided out with only essential person- the Naples-Fort
area as a
by Smith Partners at Advest Inc. nel will remain, spokeswoman Category 4 stoJ:Ill,
about
of Gallipolis.
Lt. Erin Dorrance
50 people and
preASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-.

Weather forecast

"',.

.~

;::
Friday, August 13
" Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
!:: It should be a cloudy mornTog. There is a .slight chance
if rain. Temperatures will
3rop from 63 early this morn~g to 62 by !O:OOam then
Jise back up to 66 late morn4ilg. Winds will be 5 to 10
t/IPH from the nonh.
·
::. Aft~rnoon (1·6 p.m.)
:::It will remain cloudy.
;t:emperatures will linger at
~ with today's high of 70
pccurring around 2:00pm.
lWinds will be 5 MPH from
fbe nonh turning from the
Aprthwest as the 'afternoon
~ogresses.

::-Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
should continue to be
i:loudy. Temperatures will
hover at 65. Winds will be 5 to
~~ It

'

local
Stocks
,,
-·: - ACI-.30.11 ·
·~

._

..

;.: AEP- 31.85
~, Akzo- 31.25
:: Ashland Inc. - 49.16
:'- BBT - 38.44
; : BLI - 11.48
· : Bob Evans - 24.52
: ; Borg Warner - 45.10
: City Holding - 29.51
; : Champion - 4.07
· : Charming Shops - 6.56
:: Col - 33.04
:· DuPont- 40.74
; : DG- 18.36
·: Federal Mogul - . 17
:: Gannett~ 81.85
: · General Electric - 31.61
; : GI&lt;NLY - 4.10
· : Harley Davidson- 58:33
: ; JPMorgan (formerly Bank
One) - 36.86
:: Kn1art- 65.77
Krc&gt;ger- 15.26
- 18.82

sent-&lt;Ia}' equivalent of near! y $2 chain. Mobile home residents
were told to either leave the
billion m damage.
As a Charley churned Keys or go to local shelters.
Many businesses, especially
toward Florida on Thursday,
Tropical Storm Bonnie's dis-- along. busy Duval Street in
organized center sloshed Key West, were secured with
ashore on the central Florida metal shutters and sheets of
Panhandle with winds estimat· plywood. Residents weren't
ed near 50 mph. Bonnie failed asked to evacuate and many
.to produce any .flooding rains, planned to brave the weather.
AI Perkins, 55, placed office
but some strong squalls were
reponed: It weakened into. a computers and a photocopier
depression and was no longer in g;rrbage bags in his small
a threat as it moved into south· Key West business while out- ·~
side, a colleague hammered
· em Georgia, Cobb said. .
Still, the prospect of the metal hurricane shutters over
back-to-back tropical storms windows.
Officials ordered mandatory
- the frrst since 1906 - led
Gov. Jeb Bush to declare a evacuations for tourists and
state of emergency for all of residents of coastal areas of
Lee. Sarasota. Hernando counFlorida before Bonnie hit. Charley became a Caribbean ties, Manatee, Pasco and
hunricane Wednesday. moving Marco Island, Everglades
past Jamaica and over the City, and points in Naples in
Cayman Islands. At 2 a.m. Collier County, though resiEDT. the hunricane 's eye was dents were free to stay if they
over Cuba, 14 miles west of- wished. Voluntary evacuations
downtown Havana.
were ordered for people in
Forecasters said Charley had Glades, Levy, Charlotte,
top sustained winds of about DeSoto, Taylor, and other
I 05 mph. It was moving · pans of Collier County that
nonh-northwest near 14. mph aren't mandatory.
Charley was expected to
and was expected to strength·
en, meteorologists said.
move northward across the
Hun:icane force winds peninsula, forecasters said.
extended outward 30 miles Four to 8 inches of rain were
from the eye; tropical storm expected, with higher amounts
force winds went. out 125 · possible, which could cau~
life-threatening flash floods.
miles.
Bush activated the Florida
A hurricane warning was
issued for the Keys from the National Guard to prepare to
Dry .Tortugas to the Seven respond to any damage. Red
Mile Bridge and along south- Cross workers were readying
western Florida from the shelters throughout the areas
southern tip of the mainland to in the storm's path.
According to Hurricane
the mouth of the Suwannee
River. III miles north of the Center projections, . after
St. Petersburg area; and a trop· Florida both storms ·could
ical storm warning was in spread rain along the East •
effect for the middle and upper Coast. Heavy min from the
Keys and Florida Bay. A tropi- storms was forecast for North
cal storril watch was in effect Carolina, just a week after
from northern Key Largo Hunricane Alex damaged pans
north to the South Santee of that state's Outer Banks.
River in South Carolina.
Bonnie and Charley are the
In the Florida Keys, steady second and third named
traffic marked by spon utility storms of the Atlantic hurrivehicles pulling boat~ on trailc cane season, whi.&lt;;h runs from
ers drove north along U.S . I June I to Nov. 30.
on Thursday as visitors and
On the Net:
mobile home residents folNational Hurricane Center:
lowed orders to leave the
entire 100-mile-long . island
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov

Friday, August 13, 2004

Holcomb Bobcats prowling
back to
back up
QB role ·
Days Until
High School

Football
Season!!!
Jeff Burton signs
deal to join
Childress stable
. .· WELCOME, N.C. (AP) Jeff Bunon agreed to a multiyear deal to drive for Richard
Childress Racing be&amp;inning
next .week at Michigan
International Speedway.
• The 37-year-old Burton. who
was with Roush Racing since
1996, becomes the third driver
this season in the No. 30
Chevrolet, taking over for
Dave Blaney, who replaced
rookie Johnny Sauter in June.
"Jeff will bring a great deal
of experience and knowledge
to the America Online team
and all of RCR." team presi- ·
dent Richard Childress SaJd in a
statement P.?sted on the team's
Web site. 'He is a driver who
knows how to get the job done
arid we're going to give him
what it takes to be a champi.
onship contender."
Burton was the 1994 rookie
of the year in NASCAR's top
series. He has 17 .career victories and two poles, and finished
in tW Jop 10 in the point slaJ!dings from 1997-2001. He is
24th this year, with a seaSonhigh finish of fourth at Dover
Intetnational Speedway. · He
hasn't won a race since 2001.
"I have always had the
utmost respect . for Richard
Childress, and we're both dedieared to winning and running
up front every week," Bunon
said in a statement. ·
Roush Racing announced
Thursday that it will bring in
Carl Edwards, who is cun-ently
ibird in the Craftsman Truck
Series championship standings,
to drive its No. 99 Ford for the
rest of the season. Edwards will
also continue to race in the
truck series.

With storms,
Bengals change
Fla. travel plans
GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP)
- The Cincinnati Be.ngals said
on Thursday that they are
chWJgin~ the trdvel schedule
for thetr preseason opener
against the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers because of a forecaSt of possible severe stonns
ii1 the Tampa area.
The game is scheduled
Saturday night in Tampa.
: The Bengals said they decided io fly on Thursday night
from the Cincinnati/Northern
Kentucky International Airport
to Orlando, Fla., instead of on
Friday to Tampa.
The terun's arrival in Tampa,
on either Friday or Saturday,
will depend on weather condtl;ions in the region, Benga!s
l!fficials said.

.'

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Marshall kicker
ruled eligible
'~ HUNTINGTON ,

W.Va.
CAP) - Marihall placekicker
Nick Kelly is back at football
practice after learning he will
~ academically eligible for the

:004
season.
.
• His uncenairr standing kept

nim out of the Thundering
Herd's frrst two practices this
week.
: With his eligibility ·secured,
!he junior from Chesapeake,
ya., will now compete with
110phomore Ian O'Connor for
. kicking duties.
"lt feels good to be a pan of
the team again," Kelly said. "1
felt like I was a waste of. a
Scholarship just hanging out
waiting for it."

BEREA · (AP)
Kelly
Holcomb is .settling back into a
fami liar role - backup quarterback for the Cleveland Browns.
He's much more relaxed than
last season, when he beat out
Tim Couch for the starting job
and then struggled
as
C le v e I a n d
limped to a 5-l l
record.
"It's frustrat·
ing
because
when you finally get .your
opportunity, you·
== certainly don't
Holcomb
envision it that
way," the 31year-old
Holcomb
said.
"Everything you do at practice,
reporters are watching and critiquing every throw. It stays in
the back of your mind."
Holcomb vaulted into con·
tention for the starting job with a
stell ar performance in the 2002
·playoffs, when he threw for 429
.yards and three touchdowns in
place of the injured Couch in a
36-33 loss to Pittsburgh.
.
. He came to training camp the
following year with the chance
to unseat Couch, and did so two
weeks before the start of the regular season.
But the momentum Holcomb
had built ran out quickly.
The Browns began last season
0-2, while their new starting
quarterback threw four interceptions and only one touchdown. ·
Cleveland
defeated ""Slin
Francisco in Week 3 on
Holcomb's late scoring pass to
receiver Andre Davis, but it was
discovered .after the game that
the QB had fractured bis right
fibula. He would start just tive games
the rest of the season, throwing
for a total of 1.797 yards with 10

Please see Holcomb, Bl

Preseason
opener
milestone
for Palmer
BY TERRY KINNEY

Associated Press

Ohio tailback Justin Roush speaks to children during the Bobcat
Caravan visit to Don Tate Motors in Pomeroy Thursday. Roush is over·
coming a neck injury he suffered during the opener last year that side·
line\J hilT! for the entire season . Ohio opens the 2004 season Sept. 4
at home against VMI. (Bryan Walters)

GEORGETOWN. Ky.
Carsori
Palmer re ac hes a long-awa ited milestone
Sal~rda y night ·~ his first stan as the
Cincinnati Bengals' quarterback.
It's only Lhe preseason opener at Tampa
but it marks.one more progression for
the Heisman Trophy winner
from
Southern
California who didn't
play las t season after
.Peing the NFL\ No. I
overall draft pick.
''I'm ready to roll,"
Palmer said. ''I' m very ,
confident and comfortable in the offense and
feel good about everyPalmer
body we ' ve got and what
we' re doing."
Every move toward Palmer's first stan
has been orchestrated .
Coach Marvin Lewis took the unusual
step of naming Palmer his staning quar·
terback on March I to give Bengals play·
ers time to get used to the move.
Palmer's ascension was further formalized at minicamp in May.
When trainmg camp began at
Georgetown College, he was the man.
"Carson's getting better every day," said
oftensive tackle Willie Anderson. "'The
biggest thing with him is his huddle presence. being able to command the offense
with a group of ve terans. He's just totally
in control of the huddl e."
Palmer doesn 't ex pect too much in the
preseason, esr,ecially his first stan.
·
"Just learn,' he said. "Just get out there _
and,.hopefully, get a lot of reps. a lot of
Lim~ on the tield and just learn every
game. learn every rep - .~o through some
two-minute situations ... JUSt get a bunch ·
of differenl game-type situations."
Palmer said 'improvement isn't necessarily evident every day at camp, but
comes in stages.
"It COIJJes every Touple of days, when .
you make a mistake the day before in a

Please see Palmer, Bl

PGA Championship .

Clarke feels right at/home
on a strange course
DouG F.ERGUSON
Associated Press

BY

HAVEN, Wis. - Darren Clarke put the
rumors to rest quickly.
After three days of hys teria that Whistling
Straits might be the toughest test ever at a
major, Clarke birdied the tirst four holes
Thursday in the PGA Championship and
didn't stop until he had a 7-under 65, setting
the tone for an opening round of mild wind,
shorter tees and scores that more closely
resembled the Booz Allen Classic.
Clarke, feeling right at home on a linksstyled course that reminds so many players
of Ireland and Scotland, made nine birdies
for a one-shot lead over Ernie Els and Justin
Leonard. It was the lowest score under par in
the first round of a major since Chris
DiMarco had a 7-under 65 at the 2001
Masters.
So . much for. Whistling Straits leaving

everyone in dire straits.
"We got fortunate with the conditions,"
Clarke said. "The greens were hulding. We
were able to tire at !lags that we were not
able to do earlier in the week." .
Those weren 't the only favorable conditions.
The whipping wind during the practice
rounds was more of a gentle breeze, and it
shifted directions about an hour into the lirsl
round. That eliminated the crosswind that
tends to blow any shot slightly off line into
some of the 1,400 bunkers and over the
bluffs along Lake Mi chigan.
If that wasn't enough, the PGA of America
~ perhaps itself fearful of the unknown on
a 6-year-old course never tested in competition - decided to move up the tees on three
holes. That knocked 145 yards off the
longest course in major history. so it played Quinn Griffing. of N. Manchester, Ind.. hits from the deep rough on
only 7.369 yar(ls. Plus, all the par }s had the second hole where he got a bogeyduringthe first round of the PGA
Championship at Whistling Straits in Haven. Wis .. on Thursday. (AP)
Please see Clarke, Bl

Bryant prosecutors make
Susper"1ded Ohio State
foqtbcill player pleads guilty appeal, seek delay in trial
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A suspended Ohio State football player
·accused of assaulting a fellow student and taking his wallet pleaded
guilty on Thursday to a misde meanor assault charge.
Ira Guilford faces up to six month s
in jail and a $1,000 fine when he is
sentenced on Oct. I by Judge Alan
Travis of Franklin County Common
Pleas Court.
Guilford was initially charged with
robbery along with another player,
Louis Irizarry, on May I after a student claimed the two assaulted him.
Coach Jiin Tressel suspended both
players the same day. and athletic
director Andy Qeiger has said nei' .

ther would be back.
Guilford\ attorney. William
Meek s, said the misdemeanor charge
better fit the facts of the case. He
said Guilford punched the other ,tudent. but had no intention of robbing
him.
Guilford. 19, a 6-foot, 1.90-pound
tailback from Hoboken. N.J.. played
in five games last year as a freshman, rushing for 68 yards on 28 carries. Irizarry. 19. a 6-5. 235-pound
tight end from Young&gt;town. played
in seven garnes. mostly on special
teams.
Iri zarry
has . enrolled
at
Youngstown State. The case agai nst
him is pending .
j

DENVER (AP), - J4essure i&gt;
mounting on the judge over.o.eeing
Kobe Bryant's sexual assault case.
with prosecutors citing courthou~c
!lafTe&gt; a' a n;ason for seeking the
mdetinitc delay of the Los Angeles
Lakers star's criminal trial and Lhc
father of his accuser blasting the
bench for bias against the prO&gt;.ecution.
·
Prosecutors requested the delay
even as they made moves to appeal a
key ruling 111 the cm.e. arguing to the
Colomdo Supreme Court that lhe
accuser's sexual activities shou.hl not
be admitted as evidence. If accepted.
the appeal could delay the trial for
weeks. ·
·
The legal moves came as the father

of Bryant's accuser wrote a blistering
letter to District Judge Terry
Ruckriegle saying his family had
..lost trust that we can obtain a fair
trial in your court."
:
" It has been painfully obvious thaf
you ~real the defense as if they can dq .
no wron~ and the prosecution and my
daughter s attorney as if you have
something against them or this case,' ~
he wrote in a lener tiled with the court
on Monday and released Wednesday.:
Bryant. 25. has pleaded not guilt}(
to felony se~ a'sault. He has saic\
he had consensual sex With
woman. then 19. at the
.resort where she worked .last
Jury selection is scheduled ·-"'="Aug. 27.

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'. Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 13, 2004

:Theismann leads class·into
College Football Hall of Fame
.

'

TOM CoYNE
Associated Press
BY

. SOUTH BEND, Ind.
·Joe Theismann ·was at Los
Angeles
International
Airport when he learned he
made the 'College Football
Hall of Fame . He was told
the new s by former Notre
·Dame sport s information
.director Roger Valdiserri .
•· All of a sudden, tears
started running down my
face," Theismann sa id . "I
don't know wh y. I had never
really thought about it.
·never really ·amici pated it. I
never envisioned m ys~ l f
· being enshrined in it. "
form er
· ·Thei smann.
Washington Redskin s tea mmate Darrell Green . a defensive back from Texas A&amp;l.
former Oklahoma State tail back B·arry Sanders and 19
others will be e1i shrin ed
Saturday.
Activi.ties. begin Friday
with a breakfast and a golf
outing. 011 Saturday. the 17

.I

players and five coac hes
will attend a· news conference.· take part in a youth
clinic. pl ay in a flag football.
game and !!O to the
e n shrin~m e nt ~ banquet in
South Bend.
"Neve r, ever in my
wildest dreams did I ever
th ink th at I would be a part
of that," Thei smann said.
Thei smann arrived at
Notre Dame in 1967 as a 5foot- I 0. 1-47-pound fresh-·
man. He &gt;tiid coaches joked
about him being the next
Wtlter boy. - But he qui ckly
mad e believers out of the
coaching staff. leading the
Iri sh to a 20-3-2 record as a
'\tarter.
Theismann had quick feet.
'\ stron g ann. greut vision
and a strong understanding
of th e . game, said Tom
Pagna. Theismann· s posi tion coach at Notre Dame.
"For a little. skinny kid ,
he had a tremendou s, whiplike arm and a lot of confidence in himself - to the
point some might ca ll him

l'Ocky," Pagna said. " But
when you're coaching him
and he' s playing for you, it
isn'!. it 's confidence."
Theismann will be the
eighth Notre Dame quaner·
back enshrined into the hall.
joining former Heisman
Trophy winners Angelo
Bertelli , John Lujack and
Paul Hornung. Theis mann
was the runner' up for the
Heisman in 1970. finishing
behind
Stanford 's
Jim
Plunkett.
Theismann is fifth 011
Notre Dame's ·c areer passing li st, throwing for 4,411
ya rds.
He al so led Notre Dame to
just its second bowl game
- its first in 45 years and a victory over No. I
Texas in the 197 1 Cotton
Bowl. But the game he
remembers most vividly Is a
loss.
Playing
at
Southern
California in 1970, he was
33-of-58 .passing fo.r 526
yards in a 38-28 lo ss in
heavy rain . The 33 comple-

tions and· 526 yards passing
are still school records.
" I always felt that playing
USC was my barometer of
excel.leilce,"
Thei smann
said. "To be able to perform
like that against USC in
those conditions the
whol e second half was in a
torrential downpour ~
. that's the one where people
come up to me and say, ' I
remember thatday."'
Thei smann said making
the Hall of Fame is even
more special because it 's
happening in South Bend. ·
He will bring his in-laws
and his parents, who haven't
been back to Notre Dame in
30 years.
'
"It will be great to go back
and be able to share the
memories," Theismann said.
"Nobody else in this
enshrinement class can
bring their families and
friends thi s weekend to
where they played. I have
that opportunity. This is
where it all happened for
me . It' s great."

Buckeyes announce 2004-05 women's schedule
· COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
State women's basketball team will
play at least 10 teams that qualified for
last years NCAA tournament during
the 2004-05 season.
The Buckeyes' schedule announced
Thursday also includes the 16-tcam
Preseason WNIT fi eld. which counts
nine other postseason squads in its
rank s.
Third-year Ohio State coach Jim
Foster welcomes back Big Ten fresh.man of the year Jessica Dave~port and
:second-team all-conference selection
·Caity .Matter from last year's team that
made it 'to the seco nd round of the
NCAA tournament.
Ohio State hosts the annual Buckeye
:Classic at St. John Arena before taKing

to the road fo r five of the seven games Dec. 21 ........ UCLA ........... ....... ........ 7 p.m.
in December. The Buckeyes begin con- Dec. 30 ........ at Perm State .. .'...........7 p.m.
ference play on Dec. 30 at Penn State. Jan. 2 .. :........ Purdue ........ ....... .. ... ...2 p.m.
Jan. 6 ...........Michigan State .. .......... 7 p.m.
2004-05 Ohio State women's Jan. 9........... Liberty ..................:..... 2 p.m.
Jan. I 1... ...... at Michigan .. ............... 7 p.m.
ba~ketball schedule
Jan. 13 ...... .. .1owa ................. ........... 7 p.m.
Jan. 16 ........ .Rutgers .. .......... , .......... 3 p.m.
Date ............. Opponent .............. .. .. ..Time
Jan. 20 ......... at Indiana ..... ............ .. .7 p.m.
Nov. 12-21 ... Preseason WNIT ......... TBD
Jan . 23 ......... Northwestern .. ............. 2 p.m.
Nov. 27 ........ 2004 Wonder/Hostess
Jan. 27 .... ..... at Wisconsin ................? p.m.
.................... Buckeye Classic .. ........ TBD
Jan. 30 ...... ... at lllinois .. .. .... .. .....:...... 2 p.m.
Nov. 28 ........ 2004 Wonder/Hostess
-Feb. 6........... 1.ndiana ............ ...... ..... .2 p.m.
............ ... .... .Buckeye Classic .......... TBD
Feb. 10......... Michigan .. ... .... ............ 7 p.m.
Dec. 1 .. ....... .at Ohio ........................ TBD
Feb. 13......... at Iowa ................ ,....... 2 p.m.
Dec. 11 ........ Nebraska ..... ............ .... 2 p.m. Feb. 17......... Minnesota ......... ....... ...7 p.m.
Dec. 13 ........ at Pennsylvania ........... 7 p.m. Feb. 20 ......... at Michigan State ........2 p.m.
Dec. 15 ...... ..at Dayton .......... ..........TBD
Feb. 24.........at Purdue ....... ,...... ...... ? p.m.
Feb. 27 ....... ,. Penn State .................. 2 p.m.
Dec. 18.: ...... at Oregon ....... :............TBD

Batch's injury likely
means more time for
Roethlisberger vs. Lions
LATROBE. Pa. (AP) trek for Roethlisberger's preBefore his first college game, · season debut at the pro level.
in ·
Michigan.
Ben They' ll watch a rookie quarterRoethlisherger made a state- back who is just beginning to
ment he r~peated Thursday two learn the playbook.
days before his first pro game,
"He's not going to get overwhich will also be played in whelmed by it," said Cowher.
Michigan .
"If there's one thing I like about
He likes to get that first hit him, it's the way he approaches
the game. He runs around in
out of the way.
''I know I said that in col- practice and improvises .and
lege;" said the rookie quarter- makes plays. I think the biggest
back of th~ Pittsburgh Steelers. thing for him is that Kenny
"Well, the first hit broke my (Whisenhunt) is not standing
nose, so that wa~n't such a next to him in the huddle."
good thing to say."
Roethlisberger ·
doesn ' t
· Roethlisberger missed a play believe that will be a problem.
in his college debut against
"He won't be able to stm1d
Michigan, can1e back and did- · next to me, but he'll be in my
n't come out again over the ear:· he said of Whisenhunt,
next three years at Miami, " the Steelers' offensive coordiOhio. It led to his selection in nator. " It 's a new offense.
the first round by the Steelers in something I have to leam. I've
the last drati. His next step is to been doing a lot or it and I think
take the field Saturday at I' ve been coming a long way
Detroit in the Steelers' presea- and making a lot of progress
son opener against the Lions.
with it:"
Roethlisberger will play
Roethlisberger's
greatest
more than he'd expected earlier asset in camp has been the way
in the week because , of an he combines his mobility with
injury to Charlie Batch.
hi s strong arm. He's been able
Batch, the Steelers' second- to throw on the run with acc uteam quarterback,underwent an racy, just as he had in college.
MRI, which revealed "a loose
Executing the called play,
body in his knee," according to however, will be another story.
Coach Bill Cowher. Batch is
"I'm just going to go play
expected to miss at least two to tootball," said the 6-5, 241three weeks.
pounder. "That 's what got me
Cowher
said
Tommy here is playing footbalL That's
Maddox would start at quarter- what l do best, so that's what
back and play the first quarter, I'm going to have to do -try
with "Ben and Brian (St. not to think too much and just
Pierre) playing the rest, and go out and l"lay."
probably in that order," "Cowher said most of the
Cowher said.
· starters will play about a quarSo Roethlisberger will play ter, but those in the secondary
in Detroit, near Ann Arbor, cm1 expect to play longer.
where he made hi s college . With first-team cornerbacks
football debut and learned early Chad Scott (abdominal strain)
just how rough the game could and Deshea Townsend (groin)
be,
out with minor injuries. sec"First series, first game," he ond-year pro Ike Taylor .and
said of his broken nose. "He veteran Willie Williams are
happened to hit me, my helmet expected to start and secondcame down and next thing you round draft pick Ricardo
know blood was running down Colclough will be the nickel
my face so I missed a play."
back. Taylor and Colclough, in
Family and friends from particular, will see extensive
Findlay, Ohio, will make · the duty.

.

:NFL Camps Roundup

.:Shockey
;

sore after workout, but wants more action
.

.

.

playoffs since 1995.
.
" In my op_inion, that is whill
losers do," he said. "They bail out
. · Clinton Portis didn't remain the . on a team. (They say) 'So this team
:NFL' s richest running back for is not winning. it's not going any'lOng. He's about to be overtaken by where , I got to get out of here.'
"''ve never been that way~ so why
:san Diego's LaDainian Tomlinson.
: : Tomlinson said after Thursday 's change now?"
:practice he has agreed in principle
GIANTS
;to a deal that will eclipse. the eightJeremy Shockey is back on the
·year, $50.5 million contract signed field, although he's not doing near:by the Redskins' Portis in the off- ly as much as he'd like.
:~eason.
The Pro Bowl tight end felt sore: · Asked if his deal will be worth ness Thursday, one day after he
:more than thin given . Portis, practiced with the New York
•Tomlinson replied, "Absolutely. l Giants for the first time since hav:don't think it will even be close."
ing foot surgery .in June. He 's not
: ·. In his three years in the NFL, he's thrilled about being kept under
;Fushed for .4,564 yards and 37 wraps.
'iouchdowns. Tomlinson, the fifth
"The hardest .thing was they lim:player in NFL history to rush for ,ited me," Shockey said. "They only
:more than 200 yards in four games, told me to go one rep every period,
;Iast year became the first to rush for so I got cold. That was more dan: i,ooo yards and catch !()()passes. gerous because I was sitti ng there
• . But he has not turned the the whole time and you can pull a
:chargers into winners. Still, muscle like that."
Tomlinson said he's nevet consid,
RAVENS
ered playing out his current deal or
Jamal Lewis ' drug conspiracy
·leaving the Chargers, who haven't trial was scheduled for· Nov. I by a
~had a winning record or made the federal court in Atlanta .. That date

· :

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

.

falls between the eighth and ninth
weeks of the season, meaning if the
trial goes on as scheduled, Lewis
could miss several games. The
Ravens are at Philadelphia on Oct.
31 , then host Cleveland in a night
game the following Sunday.
Lewis and Angelo Jackson, a
childhood fri.end, are charged with
conspiracy to possess with the
intent to distribute cocaine and
using a cell phone in violation of
federal law.
VIKINGS

Mixon said Thursday. "I haven 't
heard anything yet , but that's
something I've come to grips with,
you know.
"If it doesn't go in my favor, I
intend to come out here and work
hard every day as if I was playing
the first game. If I have to sit out,
I'll have to go ahead and do that
and come back and get ·ready to
play that third game of the season."
The Vikings open at home Sept.
12 against Dallas.

•

TITANS

For the first time in two seasons,
the Vikings won't be able to rely on
Kenny Mixon.
·
After a drunken driving con viction earlier this year, the NFL
handed down a two-game suspension to the veteran who led
Minnesota's defensive linemen in
tackles last season. Even though
he's preparing to stan Saturday's
preseason game against Arizona,
Mixon - barring a successful
appeal- won't play in the regular
season until Sept: 26 against
Chicago .
"The appeal is still pending·,"

Cornerback Samari Rolle sat out
practice with a sore right ankle and
could miss the Titans' exhibition
opener Saturday night against
Cleveland.
Rolle was given a break from
practice Wednesday to rest his legs,
but he had swelling and. discomfort
in hi s ankle Thursday. The Titan s
X-rayed his ankle and coach Jeff
Fisher said the tests were negative.
Fisher said Rolle would be able
to play if it was a regular season
game. Mike Echols will start at
right cornerback if the Titans
decide to protect Rolle's ankle.

BRONCOS

One day after making a cameo
appearance, rookie running back
Tatum Bell had a greater role in
.workouts.
Denver's second-round draft
choice out of Oklahoma State,
sidelined by a broken middle finger
on his right hand, ran pass patterns
and carried the ball in his left hand.
A day before, he was running on
the sidelines.
·
CARDINALS

Former Minnesota ·coach Dennis
Green know s plenty about what
kind of noi se his Arizona Cardinals
will haye to deal with Saturday in
its preseason opener at the
Metrodome.
To get the Cardinals ready for the
din, Green had them practice
Thursday with loudspeakers blarling rock and dance music on the
sideline.
· "That is a fabulous crowd
they ' ve got there," Green said . "l
would say, probably along with St.
Louis. they're probably one of the
loudest crowds in the ' National
Football League."

;~
· r-~~-------------,
--~----------------------------------------~----------------------~--,

11 falf(tft'e~ a~e-

I

J

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~IKt'le~ O.lfd tea~~ ~gfo~el tfl/t~ MtMQ~t'et ·O.l(rl bdal(rl tfltt~ lou-e.

I •Address: ~--.,.--------1 e City, State &amp;Zip~-,.-~-----__.:_
I· • Telephone:_ _ _ _: - - - - - - . , - - - -

. The PLEAS~T VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is proud t0 announce a new

1· • t would like to purchase _ ._tile(s) at$100 each.

,,

I • Pleasecbeck appropriate box:
I
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I • Nameofindividual(s):
I One line - 18 clwractenlspaces allowedper line
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!tit f~tft~ - . ft~~ ;lt~tl. tl~tu~,
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The addition will be created in a "quilt" design to represent the family· unity and the varied personalities.
that c~mprise our community and hospitaL Corian tires can be purchased for $100 each. The tiles will be

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engraved with the name of the selected individual then displayed. The artistic creation will be located in
the main lobby of the hospital and will always remain a part of the organization's walls.
Please complete the attached fonn in honor or remembl'aoce of someone who made a difference in

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your life. Return with payment to: Pleasant VaHey H~I,ATI'N: Community Relations Department,

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'

2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Cash, check and credit cards accepted. Please make checks
payable to the "Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation."
For more informatio~ please caD, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.

The Daijy SeJ,tinel • Page B3 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Reds avoid a Dodger sweep

Clarke

'

CINCINNATI (AP) map, has made a team-high 58
D'Angelo ·Jimenez knew what appearances this season.
was coming - nothing but
"I just didn't make good
heat.
pitches, and that's what hapHe singled in the oo-ahead pens," he said.
run in the eighth in~ing off
Dreifort inherited the setup
hard-throwing
Yhency role when the Dodgers traded
Brazoban, and the Cincinnati Guillermo Mota to Florida qn
Re?s · rallied past the Los July 30.
Angeles
Dodl$ers
6-5 · ''I'm not learning on the job.
Thursday to avmd a three- This is not · a new role"
'
game sweep.
Dreifort said. "I've done this
Brazoban, a fanner All-Star before.
outtielder in the minors. was
" It 's npt Pitching 101. ' It's
converted to a lull-lime pitch- going out and doing the job,
er last year and made his major and I didn't get the job done .''
league debut only last week. .
Gabe White (1-1) got two
He throws in the high-90 ' out s for the win. Danny
mph range, b~t reltes almost Graves pitched a perfect ninth
enllrely on h.1s fastball and for hi s 36th save in 44
slider, according to Jimenez.
chances .
"With people like that who
The Reds used live pitchers.
throw so hard, you just bave to 18 players overall.
g_et the bat on the ball ," · ."Th!.s was really a t~am
J1menez smd.
effort, manager Dave Miley
. The Reds scored three runs said. "We used just about
m the etghth, all charged to everybody.''
Jason Grabowski and Adrian
Darren Dreifort ( 1-3 ), including a two-r!-111 homer by Wily Beltre homered to put Los
Mo Pena, hts 19th.
Angeles ahead 3-0 in the third.
Adam Dunn led off with a
Grabowski 's homer, his sevwalk, and Pena homered to tie enth. was a two-run shot.
it. Barry Larkin singled one Beltre's solo drive was his
out later and, after Darren 32nd, tying the record for a
Bragg walked. pinch-runner Dodgers third baseman. Pedro
Ryan Freel scored oil Guerrero hit 32 in l 983.
Jimenez's single.
Bcltre also singl~d i.n a run
Dreifort, the Dodgers' setup in the fifth, and Shaw1~

Green ·s RBI groundout made
it S-2. Both runs were
unearned. following a throwing error by Reds starte r Josh
Hancock .
.
Hancock allo.wed live hits
and tive nms in four innings.
He struck out tour and walked
two.
Dodgers starter Wilson
Alvarez pitched 5 1-3 innings
and allowed six hits and three
runs. He struck out four and
walked none .
Alvarez allowed just two
baserunners on two hiis
through three innings, but
faced a two-on. none-out jam
in the fourth.
Sean Casey's leadoff single
took a bad hop and bounced
off the chest of first baseman
Hee Seop Choi. Dunn fo llowed with a double down the
right-tield 'line.
Casey scored 011 a sacritice
fly by Jason LaRtle, and Dunn .
scored when Juan Castro's soti
liner dropped into shallo w
right tield for a single.
Pinch-hitter Jacob Cruz sin gled .in a run in the sixth to
make it 5-3.
Jimenez made a stellar play
in the second with a headlong
dive on the right-field grass to
grab a grounder · by Brent
Mayne and throw him out.

Broussard, Tribe slam Blue Jays
CLEVELAND (AP)
son.
Pinch-hitter Ben Broussard hit
David Riske (6-2) pitched a
his second grand slam in four scoreless seventh and Rafael
days, sending the Cleveland Betancourt finished with two
Indians over the Toronto Blue hitless innings.
Jays 6-2 Thursday night.
Blue Jays starter Ted Lilly
Broussard hits three slams had a 2-1 lead and got ·two
overall this season, .including a quick outs in the seve~tth, but
shot Monday against the White left after Ronnie Belliard
Sox. He is the fourth player in · extended his hitting streak to 13
major leag~ e history with two games with a· broken-bat single.
pi~~h-hit slams in one season,
Reliever Kerry Ligtenberg
JOtmng Daye Johnson (1978): (1 -5) then walked Coco Crisp,
Mike !vie (1'978) and Darryl Matt Lawton and Casey Blake
Strawberry ( 1998).
to force in nm. The right-hander
The Indians won for the sev- threw 14 pitches, only two for
enth time in eight games and strikes.
stayed three games behind
Chulk. who had not allowed a
Minnesota in the AL Centml. run in his previous seven
The Twins start a three-game appearances, then gave up
series at Jacobs Field on Friday Broussard's slam . ·
night.
..
Lilly gave up two runs and
Toronto got only three hits in live hits, striking out tour. He is
losing for the eighth time in 1-4 in eight starts since June 28
mne games.
- the win coming against the
Batting for Josh Phelps. Indians on Aug. 2 m Toronto.
Broussard connected off Vinnie · The left-hander tied a season
Chull\ to highlight a live-run high with live ·walks and went
rally in the seventh inning. It to a three-ball count on II batwas Broussard's ninth home ters, including six of . the ftrst
run of the year.
seven he faced .
· Broussard is 6-for-9 with
Carlos Delgado put Torpnto
three grand slams and 21 RBls ahead 1-0 in the third with an
·with the bases loaded this sea- RBI single off Cliff Lee.

Orlando Hudson made it 2-0
in the tifth with his eighth
homer. Crisp hit his ninth home
run in the bottom half.
Lee allowed two runs ;md
tllree hits over six innings. He
walked tbree and tied a career
high with eight strikeouts. Thai
was a significant iinprovement
over his previous lour starts. in
which he had allowed 20 eamed
run s and 30 hits over 15
mmngs.

told a PGA Tour official that No.3.
"If we have decent condi he thou·ght the tourname"nt
went soft.
tions. we can ;core:· El' &gt;Uid
An example of how the
"I think they kind of went a
from Page 81
little too easy," Singh said. "I condition~ ch:.m!.u:U came on
enjoyed playing it, and I think the par--+ I Sth. li,ted a\ one
pin~ at the front uf the greens . . it 's going to get tougher from three 500-yanl par·'-'· The t~e
" I ' think they were pretty here in."
box was moved LIP 5 I yarth
nice to us with the tee markThe PGA champion has to play at only .W9 'ards. and
ers," Jay Haas said after a 4- been under par 41 times in the the wind 1\'U' at th~ player&gt;'
under 68. enhancing hi s bid to 46 years si11ce the tournament back s. During a prac·tice become the oldest man to · sw itched to stroke play, m1d rou nd. Eb ~m tls h ed a dri vc
quali~ for the Ryder Cup at most
everyone
figured and still had to hit a 3-w(Jou
Wht~tling Straits wouM be to reach the green. On
age 5 ·
But it wasn' t much of a help one o( those exceptions. The Thu"day. he hit a · .1-wooJ
to Tiger Woods.
wind c.an be wicked ·otl Lake . through the fairway. and an HWinless in his last nine M'ch
1·ga 11 ' tile greens 'are enor- i ron to the 2reen .
.
I
majors. Woods now has mous with severe slopes and
"It's a ,·ery t&lt;lllgh layout:·
another streak to worry abOut. it's not easy to get the ball Els said. " I just felt that we
With a double bogey on hi s close' to the hole.
had " break toda) ·in the
second hole and 32 putts in his
But it didn ·1 take. long to weather.''
round. Woods failed to break realize this wasn'tthe monsrer · Nothing seems to help
par in the lirst round of' a . course that had been predict- Woods. who on&lt;.:e dominated
major tor the lOth straioht
d
the majors hut now "1v6
·
time. shootin!!• a 3-over 75 that e Clarke.
the 35~year-old them for hi &gt;wurst putting. He ·
left him in serious jeopardy of from Northern Ireland. hit a started with a hirdie. hut fell
mis sing the cut for the tirst lob wedge into 12 teet tor apart by hitting into the left
time in 128 tournaments and birdie on the opening hole rough twice. the right rough
the tirsttime ever as a profes- and ·was off· to the races. He once and three-putting from
sional in a major.
just missed the par-5 second the fringe for a d0uble bogey.
" I didn 't hit the ball all that hole in two shots for an easy He followed that with two
poor~y. but I sure putted bad," birdie, hit 8-iron into 18 feet more bog eys &lt;l!ld was 3 over '
Wooos stnd.
for birdie on the third and foi- just four hob into the linal
Vijay Singh. play in~ with lowed th&lt;ll with a driver and a major.
•
•
Woods and John Daty, got 9-iron on the 493-yard fourth
The only bright spot''
himself into position to end an hole to 12 feet for another
He · hit driver on the 373Q-for-18 droughtin the majors birdie.
yard 14th hole. and a huge
with a 5-under 67, putting him
'The greens were soft, and cheer that started from around
in a large group that included some of the pin positions the green and filtered all the
Ryder Cup hopefuls Scott were ... 1 would not say gen- . way to .the tee told him he wi1s
Verplank and Luke Donald, erous. but reasonable," he on the green. some .'0 feet
along with Briny Baird.
said. "There were birdie away. for a two-putt birdie.
Masters. champion Phil opportumt 1es out there.
Still, the focu ' Friday .will
Mickelson opened with three Fortunately, 1 made the most be on. whether he makes the
stmight birdtes in the· after- · of them.''
cut, not whether he contends.
noon and shot 69, a good start
He didn't have much
And the curio,ity continin his bid to become the tirst choice. The biggest threat ues. Whistling Straits is still :a
player to tinish in the top 3 in came from his own group _· beast. and all it takes is a little
all four ·majors in the same Leonard and K.J. Choi. who wind. firmer greens. some .
year.
birdied his tirst five holes and tougher pins and lee boxes
'Without wind. all that trou- wound up with a 68. They returned to their regular posi ble - all those bunkers you combined to shoot 17 under . tions. and everything cou ld
see- aren't really in play, for par.
chanoe.
us," Mickelson said. "The
Els. seeking redemption at
"About the time this is over.
course played very suscepti- the PGA from · a season .of I don't think the scores are
ble to low scores.·'to birdies." major heartache, also warn1ed · going to be all that low."
British · Open champion up qu 1ckly by hittmg 8-iron to Verplank said. "B ut they're
Todd Hami lton shot 72.
2 feet Ol) the par-3 12th and not goi ng to have .to do :'\O!l1e. Smgh. who slipped out a mak ing birdie on two other thing id iotic like the USGA
s1de door to ,avmd speak mg to · par 3s _ a IS~ footer on ·the did'' at the U.S. Open at
rep01te1S atte1 h1 s 67, ],,tet menacing J7th,. aSfooter on Shinnecock Hills.

2004 GMC Sierra
to Garcia, and that's when I
think Kelly 's at hi s best,"
receiver Quincy Morgan
said.
"I think he 's the man
from Page 81
when he has to come and fill
in."
touchdowns and 12 intercep- . Holcomb is still held in
tions.
.
high regard by his coaches
Couch started the final arid teammates.
three games ·in Holcomb's
"Anytime you get the
place.
.
.
chance to be the. starter is an
" It's a different thing when endorsement that the team
·you've never really started," and coaches believe in you."
said Holcomb, who had start- Browns coach Butch Davis
ed just one game in six sea.
.
sons before coming to said.
Holcomb is in the final
Cleveland. "When things year of his contract, and with
aren't going so well, you tend teams always looking for
to put too much pressure on quarterback depth, he could
·yourSelf."
be an attractive free agent
But now Holcomb can following the 2004 season.
relax.
But right now he:s focused •
The Browns signed veteran on supporting Garcia.
Jeff Garcia to a four-year,
"Everything will take care
$25 million deal in March. of itself," he said. "I can' t
·allowing Holcomb to resume worry about next year.
a job he's always done well . Everything is in the here and
"If Kelly comes in, that . now."
·means something happened

Holcomb

ing every snap last season throwing for 3,591 yards and
26 touchdowns
has
accepted
his
new
role
a·s
from Page 81
Palmer's mentor.
Palmer probably will play
:certain situation and see it on into the second quarter
:mm," he said.
against Tampa Bay.
· "I feel good, but we've still
"We're playing a good
:got a long way to go. We' re football team. so let 's see
:still not the team we need to 'how we can stack up and
. , :be. We 've got a lot of work to match thei r emotion and
·do. But the good thing is it's energy," Lewis said . "We've
:only the first week of camp." got some young guys so let's
. There's no question about not get caught up in the light s
:Palmer's arm strength, and . and let 's just play football ." '
·he's had a year to learn the
But Lewis also has remind:offense, watching last year's ed players that the regular
:starter and now backup Jon season is only four weeks
: Kitna. Now, the important . away, and Saturday night's
· thin~ is how Palmer and his game could be the only
recetvers work together. •
chance they get.
. "I think our rhythm and
"There are no guarantees
·timing ' with receivers is that we have to go through
:.going great," Palmer said. the second week and look at
:"We've had a lot of good guys. so they have to make a
:work and a good chance . to ·statement right away the first
·get comfortable with each week of the preseason,''
other." ·
·
Lewis said.
And Kitna, even though he
.lost the starting job after tak-

Palmer

if5777

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Beige ......................... ....................... $1 t,900
2003 Chevrolet Impala Pewter.............. .
........................................................... $12,900
2001 Pontiac Aztek Black ..............$9999
2003 Pontiac Sunfire 2' door, red, 4cyl,
auto, air, tilt, cruise .......................... $8999
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT - 4 door,
Maroon, Auto, Air, CD ................ $11,900
1999 Buick.Century- ................... $6,999

'!999 5-10 a·lazer 2-Door,........ $7950.00
1998 5-10 Pi ckup 4x4 .............. $8990.00
200t Dodge Ram Pickup 1500
2WD ............................................... $79~9 .qD
1998 Olds Bravada ................... $9999.00
1998 Chevy 3/4 Ton 4x4 Pickup
.............. :....................................... $t0,499.00
2002 5-10 Ext Cab R.ed,
low miles .................................. $10,880:00
2002 Chevrolet Trail Blazer.$18,902 .00
2000 Chev 5-10 4x4, LS pkg, V6, auto,
air ............................... :......................... $7,690

SHARP CARS!

VALUE PRICED
USED CARS
None higher than $5!999.00
2001 Saturn 4 door, maroon. $5975.00
99 Dodge Stratus .......................$3950.00
1998 Cavalier .............................. M850.oo ·
2000 Ford Contour ....... "......... $3950.00
1999 Chevrolet Metro - 4 door, Auto,
Air, 4 cyl Gas Mizer. ........................ $4,750
1995 Olds Cutlass.......................... $4450

HOT TRUCKS! .

'IJt~ur bw Price leader Dn

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I

Page- 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 13 ~ 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune ·- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

.

.

•• ee ee ••••. • ee ae a e eaaeae a eaae • e e eea ae e ae e. ee • • e a a a • a a ••• • a • • • • • •• a a a • • eeeee • • •

.A.THENS 2 . 0 0 4

"411p County, OH

Security chief says Olymp~cs protected, no·known threats
.BY MAn

•

NATO also is providing sea
Associated Press
patrols and AWACS' surveillance planes.
(' ATHENS, Greece _ Amid
"We are spending fo ur
gun-totin g police, Patriot times more on security than
mi ssile batteries and circl ing the Sydney Games and 20
.n'les- more' than Atlanta,"
~ urveillance planes, fears of a tl
!error attack seemed muted Sport s · Mini ster Giorgos
on the eve of the open ing cer- Orfanos said. In fact, the
emony for the Athens Games. security costs for the Athens
· Security officials said they Games - $ 1.5 billion were confident Thursday that equal the entire cost for the
·
their meas ures _ unprece- Sydney Olympics. ·
dented in sco pe _ would
Athletes, who also usually
~eep residents and Olympic ha ve to worry about the glare ·
visi tors sale.
of cameras and prying eyes
: Greek
Public
Order of fans, say the additional
Minister
Giorgos layers of sec uri ty will free
Voulgarak io. who is oversee- thenl to Co ncentrate on their
. ing effort s to protect Olympic sport.
· itors, · "Th1's 1·s the -safest place on
venues. athletes and VIS
$aid he is co1\v inced the the planet," said Martina
~ames are in no danger.
Navratil ova. who, despite her
• "As 'yo u know. we don 't go three decades on the pro tour,
bn gut feeling, but on lo~?, ic is making her Olympic debut
s upported by all available on the U.S. tenni s team. "I
lnfornoati on, by an evaluation can't even get through withOf dangyr based ·on a combi- .out a pass . l may be famous,
bation of different facts, by but l still have to have my
\!ross-checking
specific pass."
detai ls," Voulgarakis said · The sec urity is in plain
Thursday in an Inte rview view.
with Athens' Skai Radio. .
Atop a hill just yards from
Hellenikon
Sports
Security officials in Europe the
said the chatter between ter- Complex where athletes will
ror groups has dropped in play softball , baseball and
rece nt weeks, fo llowing the field hockey, Patriot missile
capture of so me 30 al-Qaida launchers are positioned to
thwart a potential air attack,
suspects in Paki stan.
'" Based on all this, there is with the big, black launching
not hin g to · indic ate. that tubes pointed at a ·45-degree
Greece is in any .danger," angle. A s1m1lar batte~y
Vou lgarakis said.
.
. squats next to the Olymptc
,
.
Analysts say that Greece, a Vtllage.
\ow-profi le member of the
As qreece,s softball team
European Union th at ·opposed was bemg mtroduced before
the U.S.- led in vas ion of Iraq playing a practice game
last year, isn't itself a prime Thursday, a helicopter hovtarget for terrorists. But the ered nearby lmd the security
Olympics the mselves, with blimp drifted in the distance ·
the ir international appeal, over .Athens - yet more
nonstop global media cover- signs of the times.
age and close confines, pro"It makes you realize the
vide a tempting terrorist plat- world isn't entirely safe,"
form .
said former U.S. softball star
. The $1.5 billion Olympic Dr. .Dot Richardson, working
sec urity package includes the games as a commentator
about 70,000 personnel and a for NBC . "As Americans,
mass ive array of surveillance sometimes we take our safety
eq uipment, including under- at home for granted, but over
sea se nsors, st:reet cameras here you realize that there are
and a sensor-laden blimp. people at war."
MooRE

Gu

the

Olympic road
network

Security concerns have plagued the buildup to the Summer Olympics in
Greece. With a largest eve r security budget of more than $1.5 billion, t~e
Greek government has designed ? plan in hopes of keeping the g~mes' safe.
Spectators

Some
130,000 on

peak days
Security
70,ood
from various
agencie·s
Athletes
coaches,
media, and

VIPs total at
least ~O,,VVV

One figure represents 10,000 people

tttt.t tttttttt
Police

Armed forces

...·;···, l

'•

·venue

Athletes and VIPs
wiil be transported
on a monitored
road network and
use separate
entrances lor drop
off and pick up.

,,,

-·Transport
network

',

'',

..
·

Parking

MitttV

Only security vehicles will
park near venue .
Spectators take shuHies
from remote parking while
VIPs are carpooled.

'~~tt

.

'"'Ei~ftherios
Airport

0
Sml
0;........,..5-km

Offee lloaP'~
HOW IQ WRITE

\'\\Ill '\tl \II '\1...,

r

secure
perlmeler

Unmanned submarine
with SONAR_

"""

t

Accesa control points
The only entrance and exit points,
each car and spectator pass
through stringegJ security check.

ahlpe moored

Piraeus

Seabed

a&amp;ttoating

m8tat

will be

·Mirrors

· dettctor

· the

centers

A network of
command
cen.ters .
mont tor video

feeds and
alerts while
coordinating
security and
managing
mtell igence .

--·

,· ~
Patrol boat

Draw ingl s schematic

.

SOURCES : Olympic Games Security Division, Ministry of Public Ord~r; International Ofymp1c Commitfee
.

Help Wanted

.I

Public Notice
IN THE MEIGS COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
POMEROY, OHIO
CASE NO. 04-CV-o88
JAMES lc VIRGINIA
BRANNON, Plalntlffe,
·. y . ..

$AVILLA lc C.A. BAR·
NETI,
at:
all.
Defendants.
TO I.
SAV!LLA
AND/OR C.A. BAR·
NETI, WIFE AND
HUSBAND, AND/OR
THEIR
UNKNOWN

I

•

r
r

Paving Pro[acts
than 10% of the bid
Gary A. Jones, Centerline ot said
Round 18 wlll be amount In the favor of whoae last kni:&gt;wn Township road T-176
received by the Meigs tha aforesaid Meigs
address Ia PO Box (Nichols Road) and
C o u n t y C o u n t y . 285, Middleport, OH County Road C-3 ·
Commlaalonera
at Commissioner, Bid 45760;
Unknown (leading
Creek
their offlca at The bonds
shall . be Spouse, If any, of Road); thence South
Meigs
County accompanied
by ' Gary A. Jonas, whose 66 deg. 29' 06" East
Courthouse, Second
~roof ot Authority of
last known addreaa Ia 294.27 feet to the
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio the official or agent PO
Box
285, Westerly tine of a 1.1
45769 until 1:30 p.m. signing the bond.
Middleport,
OH acre lot as described
Local Time, August
Bids
shall , be 45760; Angela. Jones, In Meigs County Oeod
26, 2004, and then sealed and marked ia whose last known Records Volume 245,
opened and read
Bid for: Meigs County addreiS Is 46A Mill page 75 , crossing
aloud.
Pavl_
ng
Project
Craek
Road; Iron rods at 19.5 feet
Round 18 and mailed · Gallipolis, OH 45631, and 155.55 IHI' lor
The project pro·
·VIdea · for
paving
or delivered to:
and
Unknown reference;
thence
County . Spou.,a, If any, of North 22. ·deg. 42'
40,392
L.F.
of Meigs
Kingsbury
Road
Commlsalonera
Gary A. Jonas, whose West ,32.73 feet along
(Meigs CR 18) and The Melga County tall known' addreoa Ia tho
Southweatarly
paving 11,117 L.F. .of Courthouse
46A Mill Creek Rd., tine of said 1.1 acre
S&amp;&lt;:ond Street· ·
the township roeda
Gattlpolla, OH 45631, · lot
to
the
within
the Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
will take notice that Northwesterly comer
Communltlea
of (8) 13, 16, 23 3TC
on June 15. 2004, of said 1.1 acre lot;
Pagevllle
and
Weill Fargo Bank thence North 67 deg.
Harrlaonvllle
, In
Minnesota, N.A., aa 55' East 139.22 feet
Scipio Township and
Public Notice
Truatee lor Certlftcaie along the northerly
Portland In Le~non
Holders of SACO I, line of said 1.1 acre
Township. The eng!· NOTICE OF . POSI- Inc., Series 20003 c/o · tot to. a post; thence
neer'a estimate for TION VACANCY
EMC
Mortgage North 2 deg. 00' 33"
thla
project
Is
Pureuant to the Corporation flied Ita Weet44.5 feel along a
$384,369.00.
Master Agreement, all Complaint In the westerly line of a 1.1
DOMESTIC STEEL cartlfled staff of Court of Common acre lot surveyed
USE
REQUIRE· Eaatern L4eil School
Pleas, Meigs County, April 1!175, by H.
MENTS AS SPEC!· District are hereby Ohio, Cese No. 04 CV Hysell, R.S. No. 2274
FlED IN SECTION
notified that a vacan· 072. The. ob[ect of, to an Iron rod; thence
153.011
OF THE . cy exlats lor the post- and demand for relief · North 88 deg. 29' 06"
REVISED
CODE lion of Elementary In, the co~plalnt Ia to Wast 405.69 feet to
APPLY TO THIS PRO- Physical Education , foreclose the lien of the
center
of
FE CT. COPIES OF Tsachar. Any cart!· plalntlff"s mortgage Townahlp Road T·176
SECTION 153.011 OF fled staff member recorded upon tile . (Nichola Road) crossTHE REVISED CAN wishing to be consid- real Htate deacrtbed lng Iron rods eel at
BE OBTAINEO FROM ered for the vacancy below and In which 202.89
feet
and
ANY
0~ ,
THE should · contact the plaintiff alleges that 367.99 feet lor referOFFICES OF THE
Etemenlllry Principal the foregoing dafen- ance thence South f
DEPARTMENT
OF or
Superintendent danlll have or claim deg. 30' 54" West 130
A.DMINISTRAT!VE
Immediately.
to have an lntarest:
teet along the center
SERVICES.
(8) 12, 13, 18 3TC
SHuated In the of Township road TBid
documents
Rutland Township, 178 (Nichola Road) to
may be -ured at the
Meigs County, Slate · the point of bag Inoffice of Tho Meigs
P.ubllc Notice
of Ohio, and being In nlng,
containing
County
Engineer,
Section 12, Town 5 1.053 lcte8, more or
34110 Fairgrounds IN THE COMMON North, Range 14 Welt teas, excepting all
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio PLEAS
COURT of
the
Ohio legal rlgllta of way.
45789; .
Phone MEIGS
COUNTY, Company'• Purch... Parcel
No.:
11Number 740-982-21111
01'110
and being deacrtbed 001211.00
for a $10.00 non- Wells Fargo Bank 11 !ottawa: Beginning
· The
defendant•
re~Und-lee.
Minnesota, N.A., •• at a point W..t about named above era
Each bid must be Truetee lor Certificate 1830 feet and north required to anawar
accompanied
by Holdera of SACO I, about 2310 feet and the complaint within
either a bid bond In Inc., Serlea 2000-3 c/o North 1 deg. 30' 54" twenty-eight
(28)
the amount of 111% of EMC
Mortgage Eaat 473.71 feet from day8 (the 15th day of
the bid amoont with a Corporation
!)Ia S o - I t corner October) lifter the tall
surety aatlalactory to Plaintiff
of aatd Section 12r publication of thla
the aforoaeld Meigs ve.
lllid point Of begin- · o. legal ncitlce . Thla
C o u n t y Gary A. Jonas ·
_ltlng being In the can- lege I notice wlll be
Commlaatoner or by
Angela Jonas, et at
ler of Townahlp Road published once a
certified
check, Defendants
T·176 (Nicholl Rolld) - k lor atx aucceacashiers check, or tet- CIH No. 04 CV 072
and being North 1 alve
ter of credH upon a Judge Fred W. Crow deg. 30' 54" East (8) 1~, 20 &amp; 27 and
aolvwnt bank In the
Ill
473.71 feet from The
(8) 3. 20 &amp; 17
Junction
of
the
•mount of not ••• , LEGAL NOTICE

. COURIER

Pleasant Valley Hospital is
currently seeking per diem
couriers to provide phlebotomy
services for the Jackson, Ohio
area. Applicant must have a
valid driver's li~ense and
provide their own
transportation.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE ·

r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

II~

lwr1ght(!!llc.net

IO

---.

0

•

Friday and Saturday 2-112
miles out 554 from red light
in Cheshire. on. Oxyer Ad.
Lots of name brand clo thing
all stzes, misc. items, Home
lnter'ior.
Garage
Safe · 8/13/048/14/04. Rain or shine, 214
Magnolia Drive, behind
Domino's Pizza . 8·?

f - /i

©2004by~

.
'
www.com1c&amp;.com

Garage Sale Sam-? Sat.
Aug . 14th only. 1008 . 4th
Ave. Boys sz. 7·10. womens
sz 8- 14, girls 0-6 and 3T-5.
Longabflrger shirts. toys,
misc.

.11"0
1110-IIELP-•W•ANrn&gt;•
. _.. _.1 -IIELP-•W•ANTED-_.1
1,..

a.

a.

1,..

Buy

AVON ! All Areas! To
or
Sell . Shirley Spears, 304675-1429.
•
--------Business is booming, lo9k· .
ing. for experienced drywall
and .trim crew for mOdular.
and manufactured homes.
Please tax resume or company mfo rmalion to 740·
365-7671 .

Clothes,
Lonagberger ,
,Ad .
Noah's
Ark, American ,
Moving Sale Fri: 8/13 , 9·4, Glassware /Dishes, HofT1e
Sat. 8/ 14, 9-3. ~a llyn lnjerior. something for every·
Aeapp, 601 Nelghl:l cod one!! '
-6-us-in_es_s-i,-boo--m-in_g_
, -loo-k-Ad., Gallipolis.
·
-M-o-vi-ng_S_a-le-ln-si_d_e_2_9_01 ing for part lime service and
help. Ceii -?40-3BSMoYing Sale-'
sher/d rver, Brook D rive, Au gust 12&amp; 13 dell "ery
•
n _
Chandella.. iQht fixtures. 9-5 Behind Village P iz2a 4367 Or 1 resume 10 74v_7671 ._'
365
theater speakers. coili ng Everytlling Cheap
tans, bar stools, golf clubs ,
•Certlfletl SdJGellkls
desk. curtains w/rods. lawn Three Fam1ly Garage Sale .
equipment, MUCH MORE l AuQ t 3 &amp;14. 9am to 5pm at
Drill«
414 Third Ave. Fri., Sat . 10· 1430 Jerry's Run Rd. Apple
Grove. A lot' of real nice 9-month lull time poSition
4. Sun. 12-3.
items
with the Gallia County Board
Sat. 8114, 9am·? 284
ol
MR/DO. Qualifications:
Yard Sale Saturd ay Aug
Addison Pike. Lots or items,
14th 8 1 Hawthorne Lane, Pt . Current bus driver'physical.
some freebies.
Pleasant Behind NatiOnal abstract, COL with Class 8
endorsement , background
Guard
Sat. Aug. 14, Sam-? 2650
ell~ and school bus certifiMill Creek Ad. Gallipolis. 3·
cation
certificate .
WANTED
family sale_ Baby items ,
Applications BTe available at
roBuv
home decor &amp; misc.
the GUiding Hand School,
-:-----:--:------:
Thursday-Friday 9-? 11458 Absolute Top Dollar : u.~. 8323 North State Route 7,
SA 554. Multi famil y. Lots of Silver and Gold Coins, Cheshire. Ohio 45620.
nice name brand infant, tod- Proofsets, Gold Rings, U.S. Delivery/Warehouse persOn
dler. mens, womens. clo th- Currency,·M.T.S. Coin Shop, needed, full time, immediate
ing, toys , luggage, - shoes , 151
Second
Avenue , opening, must have $)(cef·
hunting misc. too much to .Galltpolis, 740.446-2842
lent dnving record, a'pply at
mention.
Wanted to buy: House on Lifestyle Furniture, 856 3rd.
Yard Sale 807 Skidmore ~d . land contract and want prqp- Ave , Gallipolis. 9-5 no ptlone
Bidwell, OH Aug . 14 &amp; 15. arty With trees. {740)388· _c;a_l_ls_p_
le_as_e_
. ---9arri-5pm. Lots of name 8228.
on.o
brand clothing, womens ,
I \ 11 '1 (I\ \I I \ I
juniors, boys &amp; newborn to 9
Tl red of Bel ng a
-..1 1~\H I '
months, little girls, plus odds
Number?? ·
&amp; ends.

t

l'ia

Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. 2012
JackSon Pike. Clothes,
entertainment center
househOld goods.

i

.4

&amp;

n......~. .,~..:_ ~

I

HE:u&gt;WANIID

I

Adult Services Director for
the Meigs County Board of

MROD. Responsible lor
development, oversight, and
implementation of programs
tor adults with deveKJpmeneig Sale Saturday Only, 297 tal disabilities. Posillon
Ash Sl. , Middleport.
requirements: Bachelor's
n.JMI!AU.J&amp;I1'UIIJIJI.£

SaturctaY, 8114 _ gam -4Pm.
Union
Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Boys-mens
clothes name· brand farge
and XL. hunting apparel,
golf clubs , 4 wheeler . 3
Wheeler, Iguana. snake, don
hou&amp;e, furnace. and hous-&amp;-

39572

·hold ttema.

Shettemouse sale- 3 family,
786 Hysell Street (at and or
CMiver St.), Mldaiepor1 . brick
ranch on hill, Thurs., Fri.,
Sat. Sun.
--...,..-----ThurSday, Frid8y. August
12th-13th, Vte Wotte's, Elm
St. , Racine. antiques. colkdibtes, ldcl's clothes, 9-3 .

r

d&amp;gree in Rehabil itation ,
Special
Education,
Psychology,
Public:
·Administration, Business, or
related degree. Five years
experience In MADD fi eld.
two years supervisOry experlepce. Must posses Of be
elipible tor Ohio Department
ol
MAOO
Adult
Management 2 . certifiCate.
Send resuf!~S to : MCBMADO P 0 Box 307,
Syracuse. Ohio 45779.
Appticatlon deadline August
23. 2004.
-------An ExceUent way to earn
l'l"'IneV· The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645

YARD SAl£..

Appalactuan Tire is lOOking
Pr. ~VI'
for a Sale Associate &amp; a
General ServiCe Person.
Sef'ld Resume to PO aox
Friday 13&amp; 141h Yan:l Sale 321 Pt. Pteasant. WV 25550
906 27th 51. 8:00-2:00
or Stop by our location 0
Clothes. 'f&amp;CUum cleaners,
-426 Viand St Pt. ~as - tot a
desk, chair &amp; miac.
ApplicatiOn

1.,.----liiiiiii_.l

.. ·--r::---- - - - - - - - --:-:------ -

,

MoinLE H0\1F.S

BIISIN~:~

mRSAI.E

'IVIIVIC OIJ

PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Scemc H1lls Nursing Center, lNG CO recommends tha
a Tandem Health Care ou do business with pee
Facility. Is seeking a 'select pie you know. and NOT 1
few to join ~ur outstanding send money through th
team . We currentl y see~ a mail until you have 1nvesli
ated the offenna.
full time AN Proper license
or cert ilication necessa ry.
We offer pay lor experience, f'3l
PtUlffi'iSIONAi.
perfect attendance 1ncen·
SF.JI'lCES
live, shift dillerential. e)(lra
st1ift pickup bo.nus. excellent
TURNED DOWN ON ·
benefits, excellent working SOCIAL SECURI'N /SSI?
envi ronment and mu ch
No Fee Unless We Win I
morel Please apply to:
1-888-582·3345

c

Huge 3 Fam~y Yard Sale
Huge yard sale: 1/2 or right
6 Family Garage Sale: 922 on Bulaville Pike oft At. 7. One DAy Only Bam to Spm
FOUNil
Saturday 14th, 303 Staff
Jeri Cho Road, Cheshire. Thi.JrS , Fri. Sat.
House Road (near lairThurs. Fri. &amp; Sat. Everything
lost: Purse, keep money.
must go! f Lots of baby items, Inside Movin g-Yard $ale. grounds ), Point Pleasant.
Return purse &amp; ID Papers .
Items.
Gateway
clothing, househOld items &amp; Thurs . 8112, Fri. 8113 &amp; Sat. Baby
Phone .17 40)4 46-00 51 .
Furniture ,
JD.i&amp;b more.
8/14. 8:00am. 1263 Watso n Computer,

oos

--·- ---

19635 At. 554 near Rio.
Women 's, men's, chil d's
clothes ; medical supplies,
toiletries. kitchen items. trin·
kets &amp; jewelry, bed &amp; table
materials,
linens, craft
bOoks. tapes, 'COs, · DVDS.
garden &amp; hand tools, baskets, recliner, pet cage, toys.

110

LICENSED ·
PRACTICAL NURSE

Attn : Dianna Thompson,
HA
Scenic Hllls Nursing
Cenler
311 Buckridge Road
Sidwell, OH 45614
Ph: 7401446-7150
Fax : 7401446-2438
Email : admin.shn@
tandemhealthcare.com

SF/OF/EOE
HA Qta ndemhealthcare,com

SASSY SciSSORS
Stylist wanted, Salary/
Co mmission. 740·441-1880
or 740·256-6336.

~10

NEW PAY SCALE

Now hiring Manager. Tudors
8lscU11 World . Hours. 7:30-. Gallipolis Career College
Drivers with Clall A COL
2:30. Apply within or call · (Careers Close To Home)
and 2 years experience.
' Call Today! 740-446 -4367 .
(740)446-7282. . .
1·800·214.()452
of'otanUoi45-SOK
Paramedics
&amp;
E MT'S -l)ll llpol~~eareei'CCIIIege COifl
.36 centl per mUe
needed . Apply at 1354 AccreOne!l Merno.r Acc~t1ng
• $500 llgn-on bOnUI
Counc:ll b h dependant ColleoM
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
• No forced NYC
- - - - - - - - and Schoolll t27•8
, 95% No TouCh Frolght
Part-time babysitter. Must be
WANrn&gt;
• Hospitalization and 401 K honest, dependable . patient
1
.
ToDo
IVIIIIbfe
and IO\Iing . Sand resume
• with r&amp;terences to• CL.A box
DRYWALL
Interested parties call
569 cJo Gallipolis Tribune,
Install. Fin1sh Palnting,
800-652-2382 lor moro
825 Third Ave, Gallipolis,
Info.
Carpententry. Batllrooms.
OH 45631
Residential, CommerC1al.
Due to our recent Agency Piano player wanted for non·
INSURED
expansion. Mad• Hom e denom inal ton al church in
NOTHING TO SMALL
Health Agency: Inc. is seek- Tuppers Plain$. OhiO Call
Aat Prices
lOg bOth a full-time AN Case (740)667 -3095 or 1740)423Stevo-(740)388-6731
Manager and a full-tlme AN 8224
Patient Care Coordinator
Georges PtJrtabte Sawmill,
position in the Gallipolis, Town of Hartford Water &amp; oon1 haul your logs to the
Ohto and surrounding area. Sewer Dept. is now accept- miiiJUSI call 304-675-1957
Duties incfude establishing ing res.ume fof a Wa1er Clerk
and maintaining open lines deadline 'for acceptin g Wanted town and country
of communication wrth area resume IS Aug 18th must be lawns to mow. (740)«1 phySiCians and health care mailed to Town of Hartford r9-12_a_.
lacilities in the delivery of PO Box 96 Hartion:l. WV
Home Heal1h services. Must 25247
be license&lt;:! in both Ohio and
West V1rgtnia. We offer a SSW/Ortvtir, rn~n BAIBSW
competitive salary, benefits ln SoCial Work Of related
package and 401 K. E.O.E. area: exp. &amp; COL prelorred
Please send resufne to 352 Send cover letter. resume
Second Avenue. Gallipolis, and three wrmen ret to :
OH 45631. Ann · Brian King. SCAC, Hf10. 5&lt;40 Frflh Ave..
H1Qn. WV 25701 EOE
AN .

1iil

1984 65ft ScHultz 2 bed room. very good sh ape
$9800.
Call a!te1 5pm
(740)446-9342
1986 14x70 Nasllua mob1le

home . 2 bedroom, 1 bath.
ca ll (740)992-23 13
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
mobile homes starling at
$270 per month , Call 740992-2167

HOMES

New 14 wide only $899.down and only $149.74 per
month
- Call N1kk1 ~ 740)385·
0% Down Payment even
witl'lless than pe rfect credit. 7671·
.Easy qua'i_
ifyfng . Own don l .., New Oakwood mega stor.e
rent.
Locaf
company. featun ng .. Homes
by
Mortgage Locators . 740· Oakwood . Fleetw ood &amp;
992-7321
Giles One stop shopping

FOR SALE

STATE TESTED
NURSING
ASSISTANTS

HRO..ndemhulthcare.c::om

1980 Bnstol Spartan trailer.
1 4)(70 , 2 bedroom . 2 ba th,
excellent condition, call
(740)357 -7979

Like .new 2000 Redman
16X80. 3 bedroom. 112 beth,
Wan ted weekly clea ning vinyl/ shingle. 2X6 loaded
JObs. Can prov1de refer- with even mare options. Can'
ences. Serious 1nquires only. help w1th delivery. Call
(740)245-0448 please l~ave Harold (740)385·9948
message.
Make 2 payments. move in 4
Ill II lSI II I
years on note (30 4)7363409 .

2 houses in Pomeroy, one
ServiceMaster has cleaning
pos1t10ns In the Apple Grove for $26 ,000 . one for $21,000
for sale or lease w/option to
area. Call 888·305-7378
Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
buy
{w/ good
credit).
a Tandem Health Care
(740)698-7244
Facility, is seeking a select
3 bet1room nouse with 1.23
lew to jo1n our outstanding
team. We currently' seek full
acres on Bull Run Ad ,
time LPNs. Proper license or
Vinton. 740-388·8527 or
740-388-0121
certification requii-ed . We
offer extra shift p1ckup Scenic Hills Nurs1ng Center,
bonus, shift differential. a Tandem Hea lth Care 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace ,
excellent benefits. per1ect Fac1lity, is seekmg a select 1.5 acres on Buckeye Hills
$85,000 .
Call
attendance incentives and few to join our outstanding Road .
(740)709·1166
We
currently
seek
lull
team.
much more ! Please apply to:
time &amp; part time STNAs.
Attn: Dianna Thompson, Propercertil1cat10 n required~ Bank Repo Mason . WV.
We offer shift difterential. 14,900. Mike Slack Olo
HR
excellent beneflts . per1ect . Colony Reality {304)542·
Scenic Hills Nursing
attendance incentives and 5888
Center ·
'
rriuch mora! Please apply to: - - - - - - - - , 311 Buckrldge Road
By Owner LJS 35 in MaSon
Bidwell, OH 4561-4
Attn: Dianna Thompson, County. 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Ph : 740/446-7150
Bedrooms). la rge SunHR
Fax: 7-t0/446-2438
Room 12x32 , . all new
Scenic Hills Nursing
Email: admln.ahnct
Carpet, Full Basement 1/2
Center
tandemhealthcare.com
acre lot $47,500 (304) 675311 Buckrldge Roed
2933
Bidwell. OH 45614
SFJOFIEOE
Hft Ohlndemhnlthc:. ..com
Ph: 7401446-7150
Fax: 74014:46-2438 ,
Make 50% se lling Avon.
Email: admln.shn@
limited
t1me
ONLY.
tandemttealthcare.com
(740)446-3358. FirstS to call
receives a gift.
SFIOFIEOE
Need a Heating-Cooling
installer with at least 1 year Wanted: Cook. Must be
e~~:penence. Pay by expen· ' able to prepare food for
ence Call (740)44 1-1236.
large parties. and shofl
orders. Apply at tile Point
Need experienced worker Pleasant Moose Lodge
Phone (304 )675·
ful!-'ti me in restaura~l work, Office
da.yshift. send response to: 4805 for more information
The Daily SenMel, PO Box
729-10,_Pomeroy, Oh 45769

nowopo1&gt;erl

1\!l \1

0PPOR"t'UNn'Y

REGISTERED
NURSES

losT AND

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcement ....................... :.................... 030
Antlquea .. .-...............:................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorleo ...............:.......... 780
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos for Sate.............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Buildings .., .....: .................... 340
Bualneaa Opportunlty.........1............ ........... 210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers A Motor Homas ...........................-790
Camping Equipment................................... 780
Carda of Thanka ................................. :........ 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
Excavating ,.................................................. 830
Fann Equlpmet11 ..........................................610
Fanna for Ront ...... ~r.....................................430
Fanns for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For sate or Tracte ......................................... S90
Fruits 1c Vegetabtes .....................................580
Furnished Rooms.......................:................450
General Haultng...........................................850
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................640
Help Wanted.~ ............................................... 110
Home lmprovements...................................810
Homu for Sale ...................................;........310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent ............................ ;............. 410
In lllemortam ................................................020
tnaurance ..................................................... 130
Uiwn Garden·Equtpment ........................eao
Uveatock..:...................................................830
Lost and Found ................................,..........060
Lolli&amp; Acreage ............................................350
MIICIIllaneous.............................................. 170
MIICIIlleneoua Merchandl~ .......................540
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860 .
Mobile Homes for Rent ...............................420
Mobile Homes for sate................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters ..........................740
Muelcallnatrumenta ................................... 570
Peraonata .....................................................
Peta for sale ................................................ 580
Plumbing Heattng .., ....................:............ 820
Proteaelonal Servlcea................................. 230
Radio, TV l CB Repelr ............................... 180
Real Ea!Me Wanted ..................................... 380
Schoola tnatructlon ...................................., 150
Seed Plant Fertli!Dr .............. ;............... 850
sttuations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent.. ........................................... 480
Sporting GoodS ........................................... 520
SUV'alor sate .............................................. 720
Trucklllor sate ............................................ 715
. Uphoiatery ................................................... 870 .
Vans For S.te...............................................730
Wanted to Buy .................................- ......... 0110
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllu .................. 820
Wanted To Do ........;..................................... 180
_,ted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard sate- aatllpolta....................- .............072
Yard S811t-Pomer0y/Middle ...................:..... IT14
Yard sat.-Pt. PlearUnt ................................ 078

How you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
fJ~
Jr1".
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
5.1. 00 for large

POLICIES: Ohio Vallay Publlahing r.. ervea the right to edtt, reject, or c::ancelany ad at any lime. Errora must be reporte.d on the first day ol
will M re•ponalbl• for no mor-. th an the coat or the 1pa~ occupied by the error and only the tlrat lnaertion. We
any lou or axpenH that reaulta from the publication or omlaaion of an adw.rtlaement. eorractlan will be made 1n the flrat available edition. ·• Bor
are alwaya confidential. • Current rata card appllet. • All real aatate advertisements are 1\lb)ec::t to the Federel Fair 11oualng Act of 1968. • Thla
I wanttd ada
I
EOE atandard1. We will not knowln!iJIY acc-ept any 1dvert laing ln violation of the law.

Big yard sale . Fri. &amp; Sat. 9-7
YARDSALEGAU.II'OLlS

a.

-ka.

~----------------~---------------------~T-----~------------------~-~-·- --

GIVEAWAY

..

Trlbune-Sentlnei•Regl~t•r

Old Sick BoaQIO, answers IO ..
Aug-1·2·. •13·.·1·4·1·0·.·m·4·p·m.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

p._."biiC' Nootlc::e:s Ia-. Nc-8p_p..,...-s:
Y o u r "R.J.Kht t o I&lt;.n.o-vv. D c l l vc rec:t' R.la,ht t.o Y o u r Doc-.r.

i

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu51ness Days Prior To
PublicatiOn
Sunday Display: :1;:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundayli

• All 'ads must be prepaid*

b~~

1r

away for more info call - - - - : -- - : - -- - '
(304)675-231 0
· 3-lamily, Sat. &amp; Sun. 8-4. 97
Honeysuckle Or.. Addison, 1
Male dog free to good home block · otf At. 7N near
black/white spotted Bird Marathon gas station . Tools,
Dog.
Good
natured . household furniture , and lots
(740)643-1002.
mora. (740)367-&lt;1868.

•i

.Help Wanted

2B4FP253XXR36821
The Farmers Bank
pnd
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at .thla
~ale, and to withdraw
fhe above collateral'
pHor to sale. Further,
:rha Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reaervea
the right to reject any
Q• all bids submlned.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold " as Is·
where Ia", with no
expraased or Implied
warranty glv~n .
For further Information, or for an
llppolntment
to
lnepect
collateral,
pilor to aale data conloCI Cyndle Gillilan,
Diane
Rector
or
Randy Hays at 992213&amp;.
(8j11 , 12, 13

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Frllda•v For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Adt With A Keyword • ··I nclude Complete
Description • Jnclud111 A Prl1;e • Avoid A~brevlgtlont
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

1 yea r old female Beagle.
starting · to run rabbits. to
1st house on rtght past
give away. (740)388-8743.
South
Gallia
H.S.
· 3 tree kittens. (740)992· Mercerville .
Appliances,
3114
dishes, clothes, ect. 8/14,
10-4pm.
Five beautiful mixed breed
pupp1as to Qive away. 1temale, 4-male. First shots lsi of Season, Fri. -Sat. 9- 4,
333 Neighborhood Rd . Table
(740)245-5221 .
saw &amp; planer, desk, much
Free kin8ns , 6-weeks old lit·
more .
ter trained . eating hard food.
Call (740)992-2435
2259 Neighborhood Rd .
Free klnens. Part Persian, So FridayiSaturday,
10-6.
·adorable. Call (740) 441 - Fu rniture, clothing, books, ·
0833.
baby items. bikes, Barbie
:.. Heavy Metal Desk to gtve- Jeep.

port HCUrlty

'
Twelve Qruise

~o::

Display Ads

11'11!"""-----......,

Security zone

Formed around
each venue with
two fences,
used exclusively
lor security
movement.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

t
I

Oeacl~irM ·

Stormy. In 2600 Lincoln Ave 91 Garfield Ave . Gallipolis
Wanted: A place for a area ., If found call (304)675- Items inclu de desk . type·
Christian Rock Band to 5428
writer, ho_usehold items,
praclice and play. Willing to
good clothing all stzes, misc.
give donation. Please call
Bargain prices Proceeds go
Joseph (740)441 -1236.
___
YA'RD SALE
the Animal WeHare League.

'

r.

AN AD

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

•

ASSIGNS, SUCCES· . S&amp;&lt;:ond Floor
SORS, ADMIN!STRA· Post Office Box 661
TORS, EXECUTORS, Athena, Ohio 45701·
OEVISEES, NEXT OF 0661
KIN OR HEIRS AT (740) 583-3347
LAW, IF OECEASED, (740) 592-6656 - Fax
ANO, SPOUSES OF (B) 6, 13, 20, 27, (9) 3,
SAME, IF ANY.
10
Certain
mineral
rtgllto were severed
from the surface In
Public Notice
apx. 61.25 +I· AC
located
In
the LEGAL NOTICE
Southwest Quarter of OHIO '
sec. 16, Olive Twp., MEIGS
COUNTY
COUNTY
Melga County. Ohio MEIGS
by Savttta and C.A. COURT OF COMMON .
Beman. wife and hua· PLEAS
band, In deed record100 East Second
·od on or about March Street
26th, 1!MS. Th.a last Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
title
transaction
!NRE: Woodrow W.
Involving S8vttta and Hall Jr., et al vs.
C.A. Barrett concernPeggy l . Hall, et at
Ing such mineral Case NO. 03-CV·150
rights, e leaH record·
Defendant Peggy l .
Hall's last known
od on or . about
S,ptomber 27th 1948 address to P.O. BQJl
In L.use Vol. 41. Page
508, N- Haven, Wnt
211. . Matga County
VIrginia,
25285.
Loose Recorda. No Defendant Peggy L
Hall was Involved In a
tHie trlnaacttono con·
earning such severed
motor vehicle colll·
mlnarale exist of
alan which . occurred
record
In
Melgo
on Augutl 7, 1999, In
of
County alnce that , the Township
time. .
Lebanon,
Melga
The current IUrCounty,
Ohio.
Ptalritlffl ouotalned
face owners, Jlimee
and VIrginia Brennan. aevera and P.rma·
submit that under
nent pe~RIIllnjurtea
Ohio Rev. Code sec. due to this motor
collision.
5301 .56 at. seq. none vehicle
Plaintiffs
are
of the conditione
retlaf
exist which would demanding
serve to preaerv8 from the Defendants,
such severed mln..-al Including Peggy L.
Interest, that those Hall, on all counlll of
mtnarale .have ther• the complaint In an
fore ra-marged with amount that uceeda
the aurtace Inter..! In Twenty-five
aald tract, •nd are Thousand
dollars
now owned by them.
($25,000.00),
with
If you contend oth- In-Ill and coeta of
erwise, you muet file action,
Defendant
a reaponalve pleadPeggy L. Hall t~
Ing wHh the Clor1&lt; of required to Anawer
Courte office and within -ty-elght
earve legal counsel (all) days after the
for Plaintiffs on or publication dahl of
before - October 8, October 1, 2004,
2004.
(7) 30, (8) e, 13, 20, 21,
RESPECTFULLY (9) 3
SUBMITTED BY:
Frank A. Uivolle,
Esq. Anomay for
Public Notice
Plalntlffa
NOTICE TO CON·
~.lto.0010185
LAVELLE
LAW TRACTORS
OFFICES. L.P.A.
Sealed Pfl'POealo
8 North Court Strlat. for the Melga County

Word Ads

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, August 14,
2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sate will be
held at 211 W. S&amp;&lt;:ond
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
· ;rhe Farmers Bank
end Savings compily Is selling for cash
n hand or certllled
check the following
collateral:
1995
DODGE
.S T E A L T H
,HBJB3AM44HOSYOO
.
9318
i999 DOO:E CAR~

In One Week With.Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLus · YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egtster
Sentinel
{740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

/"~ 41

Venizefos

GREECE

.Coast guard ·

,

All real estate ad11ertlalng
in this new1peper Is
eubject to the Federal
Fair Housi ng Act ol1968
Wh leh make. It iiJeg.lto
adverliae ..an~
preference, lfmttatlor:a Of
di.erimlnation bliNd an
race, cok&gt;r, religion, aek
tamlllal status or na l~nal
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dlaerimtnation."
Thla ~per will not
knowingly accept

.dverti....-.e(tta tor rNI

estat. wt~tch Ia in
11ioleUon ot the t.w. Our
· re.dera ere hereby
informed that ell
dwe4Hnga adverttMd In
thla newspaper ar•
evaUabkl on an equal
opportunity baM8.

FOR SAl! ON
UNJ)' CONU!AG

only at Oakwood Homes of
Barboursville WV (304)7363409.
SAVE-SAVE·SAV E
Slock models at old price s,
20os models arriving Now.
Cole's
Mobi le
Homes ,
15266 U S. 50 Easl. Athen s.
Ohio·4570t . (740)592-1972 .
~ where
You Gel Your
Money's Worth "

r

Lms&amp;

22 acres on Hoback Road

oH Old State Route 124. In
East Racine 1·949 -7704768, cel l·t -949· 433· t 5t 8

WANTED
nd1V1dual ·looktng to. bu
and or possibly leas
Mclusive hunti ng rigllts t
roperty 1n Me1gs County
hiO. Prefer acreage 5
cres and larger II interest
d . Please call (304}372
,004
Lots for sale 1n Mercerville, 4
acres, good bu ildmg site.
$1-7.500.(7401256-1825

HO!NS
HJR RtJ&gt;T

_0'% Down Paymenl even
wtth less than perfect cred it
Easy qualitymg Own oon·!
re nt.
local
company.
Mortgage Locators. 740992-7321 .
1 bedroom. kitchen , ra nge.. refngerator. lg. utility room.
washe r/ drye r hook up,
garage, central heaM!)f a1r
cond.. recently decorated ,
Gallipolis.
$375/mo.
idepostt. Phone {740)4464555 after 5pm
1 -Poss1bly :tar House. par·
tialiy furmshed m N~h\'
Haven 5275 Rent , S250
Depos11. No-Pets (304}882·
3652
3br 1n Syracuse . OhiO No
Pets. S500 00 a month Hud
Approved (304}675-'332

3 oedr00m. 1 bcith. me
luooet .area off Rout
. I 0 m1nutes south o
all ipolis. Good stane
ome, 569 .900 Hom
740)37 9-9281 , '
Col
740 5-2166.

HOme lor rent ;)br 2·tlatl'!
2-car detached Garage. 1n
Glenwoocl S400 monttl plus
c&gt;eposrt, (304)743-65114

Homes from
$1 0 0001.
Foclosure VA Hud l~&gt;r ll sbng

e M~~~~

-=...-:=---,
FIND
-------=
1·800-749--8106 8k 1709

141C80 trailer for · rem m

area . $350 a
on Front Street 111 Mason month.
S35.0
depos,t.
ask1ng S28 000 (304)n3- (740)852-5294
5132
1980 t41(70 newty remod·
Ver-t N.ce 2br home ¥1i 'goocl ele(t 2 br. 1 oa, new carPet.
credie. t ....-HI Ftnance $ 1000 new bath, partially fur·
(7&lt;0)645-0290down lor more inlo call nished
(740)441-981 6
(304)674-&lt;Xl19

House tor Sale on 50x70 FT
)at

AJQB
IN THE
------CLASSIFIEDS

~.·Me r SV !lle

&gt;

'

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

e~~ Ir AP~ Ie~ It.l0_..~!-~---··1
mRRFNr

'
13 - and

I.

2 bedroom apart -

ments, furnished and unfur·
~ished , security dePoSit
t&amp;quired , no petS, 740-9922218.
;&amp;2 br. apt in

downl~n Pt"

KOies
Metal
Insulated
Storage Buildings, Add a
Office, Hunting
Room,
Camp, Meat Cooler, Dog
Houses. Pike St. Hartford
(304)532-8943

For

Concrete,

Angle,

For
Drains,
Pomeroy- two 2 bedroom Grall'ng
apartments, R &amp; S fur- Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
nished ,
wi d
hook-up, Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Naylor's , Run
area , Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
(740)992·6886
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Twin Rlyers T.ower is acceptSunday. (7401441l-73oo
ing applications for waiting
list tor Hud-subSIZEid, 1- br, Pole Barn 30x50xtOFT
aparlment, call 675-6679 $5,995 includes Pamted
Mela. l. Plans , Instruction
EHO

r

:~

r..~-------·

Accord.

I

Hous.:uow

Gooa

Us: X :IIa nces.

r

(740)949-2607

IF YOU RENT

1994 Pontiac Firebird, good
condition, runs good "$3500
OBO (.304)675-6986

We can insure your valuables!+
For a Free Quote or Appointment ,

1996 Mustang $3,495; 2000
Chrysler Cirrus $4,495;
1997 Dodge Intrepid $2,79B'.

Call: .

Cook Motors

6,:30 .

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Jackson Pi~e
(740)446-0103

Last Thursday of
e\'ery mOnth

~and Financial Service~

All pack $5.00

Box 189 • Middlep'ort

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

740-843-5264

message.
--------2000 Daewoo Nibura. Auto, :~~~:::===::;--;;;;;;:;:;;::~
air, CO, loaded, $3,000. 8ft.' .
lighted sign, $100, letters
SEAL IT
$50. Phone ('740)446-7192.

INC.
· Contractor
Residential/!.
.Commercial
Houses, porches,
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations

96 Z34 Red Monte Carlo.

Looks Good, Runs Good
Reconditioned
and •
Guaranteed .
washers, Block, bricK, sewer pipes, 135,000 · miles (3500 OBO
Dryers,
Ranges.
and windows. lintels, etc . Claude (304)593-3556
Refrigerators, some start at Winters. Rio Grande, OH

'97 Olds Achieve, 2 dr, air,
auto. 4 cyL ,cd, runs good ..
looks good, $-2500 OBO,
(740)992·6219

$95. Skaggs Appliances , 76 Caii74Q-245-5 121.

BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds star.t

What would you lose if there was a fire?

rior. Ron Sheets(740)4419531.
.

~

740·949-1606
740-591-1053

Vine St .. (740)446·7398
r ·--oiiii'Eiirrsiiiiiiiioo_.l
FUR SALE
Kenmore
dishwasher.
Excellent worKing condition ,
BEAUTIFUL
APART· $200; Almond electric stove, 2 male Pomerian puppies. Buick Park Avenue 2004
new $39,,085,. Bronze, 8,894
MErfTS
AT
BUDGET
Pure bred With AKC papers.
$150. (740)44 1·1308
miles, garage kept, loaded.
P!ltCES AT JACKSON
$300 each. Parents on
excellent
,
$28,500
•lsTATES, 52 Wejtwood Mollohan Carpet, :2.02 Clark p~emises . (740)992-4029
(304)675-5827
Chapel
Road,
Porter,
Ohio.
Orive . from $344 to $442.
' ¥'atk to shop &amp; rriovies. Call ·(740)446· 7444 1-877 ·830· Black Lab AKC registered . 5 Cars· 1rom $500 Pollee
? 40-446·2568.
Equal 9162. Free Estimates, Easy months old, all shots. $200. Impounds For listings call
financing, 90 days same as (740)245-9456.
.,-ousing Opportunity.
. 1·800-749·8104 EXT 3901
cash. VisaJ Master Card.
TRucKs
Jack Russell Terrier pupcONVENIENTLY LOCAT- Drive- a - little save alot.
pies-born June 8th. 2 rriales ,
FOR SAI.J:
ED 5 AFFORDABLE!
Moving Sale
2 females. (740)245·5624.
:rgwnhouse
apartments.
Good
·condition.
Washer,
and/or small houses FOR
1988 Chevy Cheyenne 112
R)"NT Call (740)441-111 1 dryer, sofa. 2 chairs enterton, 4.3, V-6, auto, runs
tainment
center,
kitchen
~application &amp; information.
good. looks good. $2,000
table &amp; chairs &amp; more. Call
.
080,
(740)992-6061
740-709-1357
or
740-4462
CyrptsSide
by
side,
F9r
Lease :
Beautifully
restored, unfurnished, two 0415.
$2,250 ea~h or $4,250 for 99 f · 150 Lari01 4x4, fully

·r15

re-conditioned

r

automatic

deposit.
References washers &amp; drye·rs. refrigera·
to rs , gas and electric
required. No pets . Call 740ranges,
air conditioners, and
446·2325 or '?40.446·4425.

10

CONSTRUCTION
RooJing - SidingPainting- Gutters Decks- etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable PriCes,
CalL. Dennis Boy~

992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

r

74-Q-992-1189

Let me do it for yaul

Tree Service
Top • R£mova! • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

875-2457
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

One &amp; . Two Bedroom Apts.
Starting at $290 month.
Deposit. required. No pets.
Call (740)441·1184.

One bedroom garage apartment, kitchen furnished,
$400, (740)992·3823

· tlpn. Serious inquiireS only.
1999
Jeep
Cherokee
_ _ _ _ __. Limited 98,000 miles, very
.JET
clean,
·$8,500
f)rin .
AERATION MOTORS •
(740)441-1308
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 1992 H d Cl .
Stock. eall Ron Evans, ~on a . VIC runs
800- 537 _9528
_greet, S·speed, a1r, $800.00
·
740·38&amp;.0434 or 388·8647

~fX:Z:Ilti:J:l:IlC::U:Z:lti:[:Z::Z:l:Ilti:n::z:lt:Z::IliD:I:[IIl:Xlti:tx. ~

CASH?

F'l 4

820 East Main St. • Pomeroy
beside Larry's Fruit Stand
Lawn Mowers, 'Lawn Tractors. Weed Eaters.
Chainsaws, Blowefs; Tillers. Generators

4 4

WM~~

~

BISSELL
BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Ganigcs

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

2003 · Suzuki Volusia 800,
' 1.300 mites, silver &amp; white,
$5,100, 1740)992-2849
Honda 250 AeCon 2002.
Two Wheel Drive $2000
Phone (304)576-2689

~'R~
High 8l Dry
SeU-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

IT'S OI'AY --- .I'M
Tfl.AINING FOfl.

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

OLYMPICS!

740-992-5232
.I.'\. I

Barnhart
Builders

( ·o n' I ruction

Bass Tracl\er Tadpole (Flat

Ymyl Siding
R~plllctmtnt

Windows

Room AMiiWns

'

Dub
Blown lnsulotion
Pole Buildings
Skylark

2.3 Motor
283,327 or 2.8 motor tor
Camaro.
460
Ford.

Gtuages
J.amn Kee5ee U. Owner
740-992-:1772

• 3SturdY CarttJoard Galagiw'lard
Sale Signs· 2~" X 12'

camPer

with air, sleeps 6_Used vety .
liHie. Price· $4,500. Call
(740)256-1197 .

• 3 Wooden Stake!

• 216 Pnclng labels
• Inventory Sheet

1999"

Colman

Pop-up

' camper exceHent condition ·
$2,300.00 Call (740)992,
4555

• 4Mini-signs !O be posl8d Ofl'buileUn
llOards at lallldromats, mali&lt;els. e1c.
• t Seven-Slep in&gt;.'l.dioo 6h8et. plus
'Secre1s ol How lp lnc!ease Pro1ls al
.a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Male;als

Coleman f2 FT Foldout .
Camper, Air Conditioner,
$4,500 (304)675-1731

•

• 6 IAUii-oolored 8a1ooos
• t IAafter lor Signs

eo ~~

Day Ad:
3 Day Ad:
$6.00 -.15 words or less
$9.00 - 15 words orless
+$6.00K~
+$6.00 Kit

$15 Advertising!

Gets You Great
.,.u.,ng.I
Adv....:..:

Gets You Great

.

'aUtpoli~ lail, lrlbune

•

Joint l)ltasant l\egister
The Daily Sentinel ·
.

•

.

BASEMEHT .
WATERPAOOANG

Uncoodltional liietirne -guarantee. Local referenceS fur·
nishod. E&amp;tablislled 1975.
Call 24 . Hrs. (740) 446-

0870, Rogers Basement
WalatpoofW'IQ.

ADVERTISE
YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIAEDS

• Creative

~

l::j.

CQkes

by I.Dra

• Birthdays
• Weddings

• Any special
occasion

!,

p-YOU'V£

efft-\ 5!-\oPI'\~G!

1'-~;::--,....-,,r;;...----~ .
I f-\1\VE ~01 .1

I'" l

Cl\1'\ IE:LL-mE: C(:(f.t'J\T u..rz()l
IS STILL

Wi&gt;Ji:.M!

~UU

TRIED

I

FELl

CAT AND YOU

RESIDENTlAL

1

FREE ESTIMATES

~

.. t.r'-".1'1..
'

~~--~~ ! ~~~~
: PEANUTS
600D6'(E, .
MQWNIE C~ARLES!
[ LOVE YOU!

WRITE TO ME EVER'( DA'(!

CALL ME IF '{OU CAt·L

Athens

SllOLILD
I-lAVE GOT
I-IER r:AY.
NUMBER

• Dirt
•Ag Lime
Dean HID

HOWARDl.
WRITESfl

I

South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

BETTY
1\1\S IS Wll~! ITS
MO: WIIO h'AI&lt;ES 1\-lc

1-800-822..()417

*IHRII

!lMe~ENCY
G1R~FRI eN&amp;-10· 61Rlfll\et-JD

*...E

CA\.L.! ,

IIIIITEIDCE
I*SfiJIIESS
1

1

work guaranteed
Master Cenified

All

Fllh

949-1415

,,

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes.
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, ·

Whaley's Auto

Kitcheni, Drywall

.Parts

&amp;More

FRE!= ESTIMATES!

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Re.tocklng #Ate J\tidel SahllJie
and Aller Market lhrts

740-742-341

Elertrical Sen-ires LLC
Residential
New ConsiJUction
.. Remodeling
S~Xurity Cameras

See Brent or Brian 'Whaley

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sal 8:30-NOI&gt;n

M01jon Sensors
'1 40-992-3452
740-742-1085

Sun. Closed

( (i't'llt,' t 1Il ,Li
( ·.II t.
•

in Tuppers PlaiRS OOlt'
bas openings oo day
and midnight shill.
740-667-6329

Pass
Pass

GARFIELD

'··

~
0

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture

Restoration
Refinish, Repair,
Restont
Keith Bailey

40 992·1956

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• floG.n A I Idee •
Rw• 7 Uog

I

·-""'-

•• 1'tumblnt1
RoafWig'
• Gutlen

• Vinyl Siding • PHotin&gt;il
• P8lio .nd Poreh DecU
We do ft al 0Kcep1

ROBERT
BIISEU
C:IIISIWIIII
•New Homes
• Garages

-- ---1111
•Complete

'1Wr CONTINUUM,

BETIY! WON'r'THIS
CR!i.\'tE A111FT IN
'!Hi CONTI!«&lt;UM"?

.AstroGraph
-

'lllrlhdlo,y:

. 912.cl15
PUii60f. Ohio

22-..-

irl writing.

. JASMn£.'+JAAT
~lD I I-lAVE

composer
6 Make tracks
7 Vast chasm
8 Couch
9 Help
hips
10 Jeer at
44 Quilt stutter
12 Prawn
46 Lamb Chop

~~~~:t:i' S©~otllA-~r.~s· WDID
GAM!'
ldfltd
POLLAN-----0 Rearrange letters of the
~~ C~TI.

four .terombled words bf·
low ro form four aimple ' words.

I
l

uL cD0 y
Iz

I

3

1· 1 I

F URGF

E&gt; UNSCRAMBLE
FORI
ANSWE!

SCRAM-LETS

.ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

T:
.

~~~~'·
Cj.~·1'~
.

"'
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&gt;£~11&lt;'1

.

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•,

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.

st¥l"""'

AR~-ION1"00~ j j\ f!c&lt;~

Remodeling

ANSWERS

P~ddle ·April· Width- Godson· HOPE to DO
,
The young let you know what they are doing the old :
what they have d.one. and the rest wh.at they HOPE to ·
00. .
.
.:

11-!IS

~?

IIIIIIII

J

WILL~~

\lli'RES5

·'

yes
4 · Kid's shooter (2 wds.t
5 "MyWay"

SOUPTONUTZ

1btblb

Stqp &amp;Compare

transport

2 Last degree
3 Monsieur's

know.

·LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -Your self-dis, cipline could be a bit too lax for your own ·
good today. If you don't resume control
and take responsibility lor your actions,
· you'll totally lose inanagement of 'f0Jr
affairs.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Today youi'
alms can be gratified if you don't give u"p
on them, so do not resort to procedures •
that you wou)dn't be proud to tell others
thai you used. You don't have to.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov .. 23-Dec . 21) Someone may give ·you a good idea today,
but, urifortunately, you may dismiss it
b9cause it ca me from one fo r whom you
have linle regai"d . It'll be your loss if you
think ttlat small.
CAPRICORN (Dec'. 22-Jail. 19) - .A friend
to whom you . are indebted could remind
~ · you of your obligation to him or he~ today.
It would be best nol to try to counter your
pal with a lot of flimsy excuses. Pay up or
'less up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Be caretul not to misinterpret the motives of a pal
who Is tryi;,g to be cooperative without just
cause to be suspicious of your friend . It
may say more about your intentions than
your friend's.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It is always
unwise to gossip with co-workers about
company matters which have yet to be
worXecl out . When ttle boss hears o1 it,
you'll be In trouble that you can't work your
way out ot
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Chances
are you could be reasonably sale today in
taking a gamble on something that is well
U\Ought out, but if you are wild in your risk
taking, Lady Luck will snap ·the string.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 - Problems
will most assuredly result tor you and
thOse with wtiom you're irivolved today "
you or anyon_
e else ,expects more frpm a
collective venture than that to which each
is entitied.
'
GEMINI (May 21 -Ju ne 20) - An a~ree­
ment into which you hastily entered may
end up CausiOg you a bit of trouble· today.
If you can't get out of the Oeal. see if Y9U
can spmehow renegotiate things around.
CANCER (Jun e 21-July 22) - Whe'l it
comes -to any type of ~mmerc•al traOsactions you enter into today, be it a small purchase or a large commitment. be' sure the
costs invoNed can 't be ra•sed later. Get it

GRIZZWEL:LS

v.c. YOUNG Ill

1 Fast

·

l

amu

*.... fsl'

Pass

19 Made steel
puppeteer
21 Ukraine city 47 Ear cleaner
22 Pul out a flre
(hyph.t
23 Go Inside
48 Wrist bone
24 Spice-rack 49 S&amp;L •
Hem
deposit
25 " - - no
50 Dre'ssad
Idee! "
53 Before
27 Increase
55 Hgt.
sharply
56 Once
29 Norlh
namad
.
Dakota citY 57 Upper limb
30 Blg.plpes
·
31 Dog-food
brand
36 Raggedy
dolls
38 Hands-on-

DOWN

' fragment
26 Qatar
backdrop
28 Jane Austen
novel
32 Shack
33 Drop heavily
34 Perfume
bottle
35 Off shore
37 Rhett's
hangout
39 Puppy bHe
40 Bruce or
Laura
. 41 VIking
name

Saturday, Aug. 14, 2004
By Bernice Bade Oaol
Greater responsi.blllties may be placed on
your sho\)lders in your chOsen field of
endeavor in the year a.head. However, if
you do a good job, advancement Is likely
and you will be monetarily compensated
· proportionately.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) -'-- Be careful and
considerate today so that you don't unintentionally slight a good friend by eKcluding him or her from an activity you plan
with some other .pals. Feelings could be
hurt.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Don't take
associates for granted today. They will feel
put upon if You ask them to do something
that in rfitalily you should be taking care of
yourself, and they won't hesitate to let you

WASN'T
SANDPAPER.

SANPPA!'ER
ON MY
CHEEK . THE C!'\T WAS
LICKIN&amp; YOUR

OMALLE~·s

30 • Racine,

THOUO.HT l.H-L THAT

I

TO PET ' Mt&lt;,&lt;,.

a weekf

New+: Used

Pass

O

BIG NATE

FACE.

740-985-1564

6•

25 Atom

- Sajak
Bam color
Flower pari

CELEBRITY CIPHER

• Sand

Syracuse, OH 45779
740-992.0U2
Qualil] worlcforafair
priu

Advertise in this.
Space for
$50 per month

Morning Star Road - C.Rd

• Limestone

ENGINE DR'S
!356 College Rd.

off any purchase of
S20.00 with this ad.

Open 1 days

HAULING:

SYRACUSE SMAll

Lora Bing

~~
~~

11

Trucking

Free Estimates

Murray, MTD All
makes &amp; models $10.00

!1

n Mon-Frl 9-5

R.B.

Conmiercial and
Residential

today
(740) 985-3917

IS FER

IJ!

WORKSHOP

740.992-7599

•Roofs

Mechanics Briggs &amp;
Stratton, Kohler,

THAT'S WHAT

I TH' REMOTE

COMMERCIAL and

30 yean e"perience
•New Homes
• Loa: Homes
• Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows

Place your order

tl

,-----""1 i

'THE BORN LOSER

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
AlL ON SALE NOW!!

Pass
Pass

59 Period
Fuel tanker
Emcee

stellation · 60
20 Enjoy,
·61
the r nk
22 Jeans Iabrie 62
24 Chi follower 63

t=low would you try to make SIX · spades
after West feBds the diamond king?
North's sequence showed game values
wilh three spades. (Yes, he might have
only a doubleton spade 1, but in th is auc·
lion, South is slightly more likely than
usual to have only tive spades.} Then.
South hoped to receive a dummy con- .
taining the heart king-queen, diamond
ace and club king. But he should have
control-bid {cu e-bid} five clubs over four
spades. Thi s would have shown the club
ace and expressed slam interest. North
would have co ntfol-bid 1 five · diamonds,
and South would have continued with live•
·spades, making his. heart prOblem cjear.
North would have rapidly passed.
South won wilh dummy's diamond ace,
by Luis Campos
.
ruffed ·the dianiond jack high, drew
Cele~ C1pller cryptagrMl5 !l"e c:reEIIBd from qLJ;tations ll'J famous ~ple . ~st !lnd p!esent
trumps, c&lt;;ts.hed hi&amp; club tricks ending in
Each letter 1n tM crpfler stands fOt another
·
hand, and led a low heart.
Today's clue: W,equaJs R
Thoughtlessly, ,West Went. ·in ~lth his
"X
ENA'Z
RXPK
LT
GNWP
HKWT
queen. East had to win with the king and
~pncede a ruff-and-sluff, on wllich
South's remaining lleart evaporat ed.
LMOF.
X ENA'Z
PANG
GFT ,
SMZ
If SoUth had king-doub leton of hearts , he
would have played toward his king . So,
X'L
IMJZ
ANZ
B
YBA
NY
LK."
West, who had a complete count of the
deal, should have gone up with the .heart
·1 B L K J
U B WA K W
ace, a Crocodile Coup. to sWallow his
partner 's king. He shouldn't have blun. dere'd , but if all OPf:lO~ents played perfect- · PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The best way to get to knowing any bunch ol
people·is to go and li_
sten to .their music.'- Wo_ody Guthrie
ly, we would never win, -would we?

Windows • Roofing

E):~~ I':;;;;~;:;J;!;~;~;~;~;;~ ~;7;4().::;:;66;:;7-6080:;:;:::;::
1997 Dodge motor home,
44,000
miles,
$1 ,200.
(740)446-1750.

MISSUS TUTTLE

Pomeroy, Ohio

0

i

DON'T WORRY,

SALES&amp;SERVICE

992-2975

East

2•
4•
5 •

play.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
·204 Condor Street

North

Pass
Pil.s~
Pass

Answer to Prevloue Puzzle - ·

AU this week, declarer has benefited from
a variety of errors by the defenders.
Yeste rday, he put West on the spot as
soon as possible. 'ln Ieday's deal , though ,
on the second and last Friday the 13th of
the year, the key trick occurs "late in the

Tt4(2020

'DEVIL'S
Snapper

West

I•
2•
4 NT

A crocodile bit
the defender

316Washlngton Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

Gravely

South

Opening !~ad: t K

• Replaceme{"!t

Looking for a
non profit
organization to
work one day of
admission gates
at the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call
740-985-4!59,

tlloA~~~1

1997 JACO pop-up

Dealer: South
· Vulnerable: Both

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrub!lery, fruit. ornamental trees,
roses, r11oaoae1111rons, ana.azaleas.

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Bonom) 14FT W/8 Horse
Mercury &amp; trailer $2,500

•

'
.AQJ

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

Manning K. Roush
Owner

and delivery service

Kawasaki Bayou 220. Looks
good, runs good, $950.
(740)446-9278.

ilch Kit Coltalns the Following:

.

18 Bear con- ·

~ 8 6 3 '

.AKIU9 fi4:1
., 52

Pu~zle

r.

South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Lawn lind Garden t;quipmenl is our
business, not our sideline

.
Roi-Air Air Compressor
Open Hi00-6:30 M-F;Sat. 8:00-3:00 992-1033

1999 Harley Davidson Fat
Boy same as new 304-5762505

97

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

Warmnty Service For Briggs.&amp; Stratton , Kohler,
Roi-A ir Compressors, Campbell &amp; Hausfeld, ·
Orcgon Chainsaws &amp; A ll' Equipment
Sa l~s &amp; Service for The Generac StandiJy Home
Generating \0,000 &amp; 12,000 watt, LP or natural gas

Ir

jj5-::i:71fpm'.":-~--~---:~

+

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

(304) 273-5321

·

Call (740)446·1714 betwEien

.AQ9 64
K Q 10
... 1 54 2

TSI&lt; ... TSI&lt; ... PARSON
TUTTLE ! !
HANDS
ARE TH'

1976 l;llack MGB 68,000 1995 Astra Van, ·3 steer,
org. ·miles, excellent condi- frontfrear AJC, Price $4,700.

in A8cine. No pets. Call

West
• 8

BARNEY

Hill's Self
Storage

Ji0873
A J
K io g
EuL
• 5 2
• K
• 9765432

.;
•

Free Estimates

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

•
LwiOio-iF:iiOiiRiiSiiALEiiii--"
John Deere 8875 Skid Steer '
Loader, 960. Hrs., 73 HP, 1- 1975 F250 Ford , 4-wheel
owner V.G .C. $13,900. drive 4x4, Cummins Turbo
Diesel. 469 Hrs. on engine,
(740)992-5072.
new "paint; black. Catl Ron .
John Deere 8875 skid steer Sheets (740)441-9531 .
loader, 960 hrs, .73 hp, one
owner, V.G.C., $13,900, 2002 Chevy Silverado LS Z71, 4x4, reg. cab, 5.3, V-8,
(740)992-5072
auto, Rhino liner, brush
Tractor parts &amp; service, spe- gUard, 4 extra wheelS &amp;'
cializing ·
in
Massey tires.
$18,000, (740).378Ferguson , Ford , and 6135
Bel~rus. (740)696·0358
2003 Yamaha Wolverine,
I ,,. , ,'\ l. \!~ 1·1 \ I I l l II
350, 4X4, blacM $3,900.00
Call (740)992·6702

Nice 2 bedroom apartment
(740)992-5174

--

·--EQulrMiooiiilliiiO
'iiiiiii:o_.l

wringer washers. Will do.
repairs on major brands in
0":cr.:.h.:.om_e.:..·__
.:..sh.:o.::.p.:o_race
· I.:.Y.:..
used Furniture Store, 130
Bulaville Pike. Dressers,
couches, mattresses, reclinGracious IIVi[IQ . 1 and 2 bed· ers, grave monuments. 2002
room apartments at Village
Bass .Tracker fishing boat
Manor
and .. Riverside
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis,
Apartments in ~iddleport .
OH. Hrs. 11-3.
. From $295-$444. Call 740·
Furnished efficiency. all utilities paid, share bath, $150.
month ..- 919 2n d Ave .
(740}446-3945.

FARJ\.t

x

.

Hender$on, WV

D8-JJ·&lt;H

Q J '

•

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basement~, Floors &amp; Walls

loaded, leather int, excellent
condition, 61 ,000 miles.
Asking payoff. (740)367-

Iii621.

Nortb

StateWide
·CNE Poured Walls

Ta~e

.I

MYERS PAVING

.

bedroom apartmeni overThompsons Appliance &amp;
looking City Park and River.
Aepair-675-7388. For sale,
J\11 new appliances, 1-1/2

i

(740)367-7156.

Trailer space for rent in P
Plea. all utiliti es included
Racine. {740)992:5858
Wooden 5 drawer chest-ofSecurity
. deposit and r:efer·
2002 Chevy Malibu 4--door,
drawers, light brown, excelenca required
no pets
black, sunroot, air, 18,000
. · (3041675·3654
i!iir;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;.-., lent · conditiorl,
$35 , miles. Like new leather inte·

rio

42 A Yoko
43 Jarrett
1 Stuck-up
of NASCAA
peroon
4~ Lalrd's
5 Gotchal
attire ·
8 Droop
47 Seeming
11 Short pencils 50 Made
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tho scene
14 Gelaha's
51 Best
weer
madlclne
15 Chicken
52 Md.
leea
neighbor
16 slat
54 Salarltaader
17 Winter mo. 58 Ltd. kin

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(740)985-3810
Honda

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Book, Slider, Free Delivery miles Runs good $ 2 .000 _
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Call (740)446-7151 or leave

Pt.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B1

•

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-]A;

Friday, August 13, 2004

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www.mydailysentinel.com

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II&gt; If you have 1 question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
Nl

)( 11 I

-&lt;. ; t i P h i Ull S

Race: Sirius at the Glen
Where : Watkins Gltm (N.Y.)
International (2.45 miles), 90
laps/ 220.5 miles.
When : Sunday, Aug . 15
Last year'a winner: Robby
Gordon
Quellfylng record: Jeff Gor·
don , Chevrolet. 124.580
mph. Aug. 8, 2003.
Race record : -Mark Martin,
Ford, 103.300 mph, Aug. 13,
1995.
·
Lut week: · Nothing cou ld
stop Jeff Gordon in ~is relent·
less quest for a record-breaking fourth Brickyard 400 victory, and it could easily have

good, sale race; a record 13
caution flags filled a functional role in Gordon's win. The
record broken was his own,
of course. The only four-time
winner of the Brickyard. 400
is not one to brag, but he·
· had to strain to make the hu·
mility ring true after leading
124 out of 160 laps. No one
passed Gordon .for the lead ·
all day. He started 11th, took
the lead on lap 27 and gave
it up only for pit stops and,
yes. yellow flags . The most
obliging way to describe the
quality of the com petition
would be to note that there

been more of a runaway than

was some debMe about who

it was. As much as everyone
likes to pay lip service to · a

(Dale Jarrett) would fi ni sh
second.

·

BUSCH SERIES

CRAFrSMAN TIIUCK

Race: Cabe.la's 250
Whe18: Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn (2.0
miles), 125 laps/ 250 miles.
When: Saturday. Aug. 21
Leat year'• winner: )&lt;ev in
Harvick
Qualifying record : Kasey
Kahne, Ford, 186.490 mph,
Aug. 16, 2003.
Race record : Mark Martin .
Ford, 159.571 mph, Aug. 19,
1995.
Laat week: Chevrolet driver
Kyle Busch won the Kroger
200 at Indianapolis Raceway
Park in Clermont, Ind.

Race : Toyota Tundra 200
Where : Nashville Superspeedway"(1.333 miles),150
laps; 199.95 miles.
Wilen : Saturday. Aug. 14
Lilt year's winner: Carl Ed·
wards
Qualifying record : · Mike
Bliss, Chevrplet, 157.32 2
mph, Aug. 9, 2002.
Race record : SGott Riggs,
Dodge, 132.'466 mph, Aug.
10,2001.
Last week : ·Dodge driver
Chad Chaffin won the Power
Stroke Die sel 200 at lndi·
anapolis Raceway Pa rk in
Clermont, Ind.

IN THE SPOTLIGt-tT

FEUD OF THE WEEK

I

v

NEXTEL Cup SERIES, tJo. 38 M&amp;M's FORD

ELLIOTT SADLER

E

R

s
Ricky
Rudd

Glen. It's unpursuit of
· there . Arid
lit considerable presGordon, Rob-

road races

in ·

l ·=~:ellan&amp;Uished al!l
lri 2004.

onship format that NASCAR calls
"The Chase for the NASCAR Nextel
Cup."
"I played a l'ot of' sports growing
up," he said, "and I learned thatthe
more you're prepared mentally before
you even get to the ballpark or the
football field or the basketball gym,
the better you're going to perform and
. understand what's going on. Every
Sunday night and Monday, I'm studying the points and looking at who we ·
gained on and who we lost to and why.
"Right now, we're really trying to
,play the points game.because, with
the new points system, those are the
rules you have to play by. I'm just a
student of the game, and r really want
to learn it and figure out what's good
and what's bad and who I'm racing."
· Sadler's victory on April 4 at Texas
Motor Speedway was his second. He

Elliott Sadler has spent the entire
season in the top 10 of the Nextel Cup
points standings, and a third-place finish in the Brickyard 400 kept the Emporia, Va., native solidly in sixth place
as the season enters the final five
races leading up to the "playoffs."
At age 29, Sadler is 421 points be-.
hind leader Jimmie
Johnson, but.
soon that to·
tal will be
practically
irrelevant
Once the 10
contenders for
the title are settied after the
26th race, the
points will be reassigned at fivepoint intervals. In
other words, Johnson will lead the
runner-up by only
five leading into the
final10 races. Should
Sadler remain in sixth
place, he will trail the
leader by 25.
As an example of just how
revolutionary this change is,
note that Johnson lost 135
points to runner-up Jeff Gordon
· in the Brickyard 400 alone. _
.
· Sadler thinks the addition of crew
chief Todd Parrott has made the dif·
ference in what has become easily the
finest season of his career.
· "I just think with Todd coming on
board, it's made the diHerence," .,
Sadler said. "He is so good with aerodynamics .... We've got a better core
· group of guys. We've all got a year under our belt now of working together.
"I think communication is the key
and that's why we're going to get better as the year goes on."
Almost immediately, Sadler became
~ keen student of the new champi-

Valley

also scored on May 25, 2001, in Bristol, Tenn. What makes the difference
this year is his consistency. Sadler has
come into his own in his second year
as a teammate to Daie Jarrett -al
Robert Yates Racing.
"Anything can happen because
that's part of racing, but I do feel good
where we're at," said Sadler. "At least
we're on the inside looking out, instead of the outside looking in. I see
what my teammate [Jarrett) is going
through trying to
battle his way
back
towards the
top 10, and
there's a lot
more stress
going on with
'that
team
than ours be:
cause of that;
and I can under.stand that So
I'd rather be
where I'm at, but
I'm not comfort·
able by any means
... not until the
checkered flag falls
at Richmond and we're
in the top 10. Then I'll be
ready to ra·ce, but, until
then, I'm sure we're going
. have some stressful weeks
with some hard times and some
_good times.
"If we can just keep being consistent and doing the things we know
we're capable of doing, we should be
fine."

Contact

Monte

Dutton

s

Michael
Waltrip

RlckyRudd
vs. Michael Waltrip

Sadler finding his stride, in prime contention for spot in playoffs
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

u

ar

The two veteran drivers got together at the end of the Brickyard ·
400. "I was trying to hold him off
and came off the corner and m.ore or
less slid up In front of the '15' [Waf.
trip], and any other lap probably
would've been OK, but ~e decided
not to give me that extra inch, and
when he did, he drove in the back of
me and turned me into the wall. It's
a shame to tear up the car racing for
20th place ."
NASCAR Thll Week's Monte ' .
Dutton &amp;fve• hit view: "That's
what's going to happen when the
'green-white-checkered' rule is Implemented at the ends of races, Indy
will be remembered as the first
place It was used in the Nextel Cup
Series, but this won't be the first
mess that occurs: And what was
achieved? The race ended under
caution anyway.~

FAN TIPS

Don't underntlmate
manufiiCturen' Influence
~

The old slogan "win on Sunday,
sell on Monday" still has some validi·
ty, according to General Motors marketing manager Terry Dolan, who
says'the Monte Carlo's success this
year will translate into sales for
Chevrolet. "Motorsports is really who
we are; said Dolan . "If you look at
our history ... our co-founder (Louis
Chevrolet) spent time at th is track
arid this facility using it as a proving
grounds to develop production vehi·
cles , along with racing fabulous
events like the Indianapolis 500, so
we took the connectton of our main- ·
stream theme and carried it over Into
our motorsports marketing.
"And the result you see is our
core drivers, our ambassadors for
motorsports, representing victory
achievements with our . Chevrolet
Monte Carlo in a dramatic, on-track
setting ... that we think creates a
memorable hook for people to connect ... winning with Chevrolet.-

hmd4858@peoplepc.com
Wl-iO'S t-iOT
ANU WliO ' S NOI
1&gt; Who'• hot? Jeff ·Gordon has fin -

ished fifth or better in six stra ight
races, and his ·season total of topto finishes (16) is one more than
points leader Jimmie Johnson.
1&gt; Who's not? Johnson SIJffered engine
failure, saddling him with his secondwor~~ finish (36th) of the yea'

Elliott Sadler Ia currently sixth
In tile Nextel Cup _polnll race-

&amp; Supply

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