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                  <text>. 06•

Ohio • Point'

QI:imrli -ilorntind

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2004

The River City Players Presents
.

Two killed in

stortn-relatea-accident;
road washed away
by flooding , A6

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.

·Tropical storn1 slams
· into coastal South
Carolina, A2

~ -

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Meigs, Eastern, Southe_rn .Get State Grades

SPORTS
• Athens celebrates
successful games~
See Page B1

~cience,

citizenship and math.
While S\!I:Jerintendent s in Eastern
and Southern were satisfied with their
POMEROY - Both Eastern and results, Meigs Superintendent William
Southern local school districts ha~e BuFkley said
is noi convinced his
gotten
grades
of Continuous district deserved a poor grade.
· Improvement on their latest state
There
are
five
categories:
report cards, w!Jile Meigs Local was · E~cellent, Effecti vc, Continuous
scored on Academic Watch.
lmprovement, .Academic Watch and
The grades are based on perfor- Academic El(cellence .
While the Meigs district as a whole
mance, attendance and graduation
rates. The districts also got results of was placed on Academic Watch. its
proficiency te sts for 'reading, writing, · high school was graded Effective,
BY TIM MALONEY

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ne

and both the middle and intermediate
schools on...Continowumprovement.
"''m not opposed to . needing
improvement, but how can that be?"
Buckley said. "Your district b a composite of your buildings." .
Last year, Meigs High School was
placed on A~ademic Emergency. and
jumped all the way to Effective this
year. At the same time, the district as
a whole remains on Academic Watch
for the second stra,ight year.
"Go figure,"
Buckley
said. ·

"They ' ve got their magic f0 rmulas. It .
makes mue.nse.lO_me."
Despite the district grade. Buckley
said not all the new s on the report
card was bad. Improvements were ·
made in reading scores in every grade
tested. The percentage of lOthgraders who ha ve passed the ninthgrade reading proficiency test jumped
all the way from
percent to 98.5
percent.

so:7

Please see Grades. As

Deputies with the Meigs County Sheriff's Department destroy
some of the 6,000 marijuana plants seized in this summer's
eradication effort. (S heriff's Department photo)

OBITUARIFS
Page AS
• Jerry Powell

Eradication nets
$13 million in plants

INSIDE

. Aug. II. Those plants are
assigned an estimated street ·
value of $2,000 each, placing
POMEROY
- Meigs the total value of eradicated
County law enforcement offi- plants at nearly $13 million.
cials have rid the county of
Tlie eradication program
over 6,000 mature marijuana uses . helicopters and other
plants in an annual eradica- vehicles, agents from the
of
Criminal
tion effort that will continue Bureau
Investigation, deputies and
into the weeks ahead.
Those plants are destroyed special deputies to locate
unless they can be used as patches of marijuana and
evidence against those culti- remove them before they can
be processed and sold, While
·
vating the plants.
According to Sheriff Ralph the primary goal is removing
Trussell, officers had seized the plants before they can be
6.326 marijuana plants from · sold, criminal charges are filed
throughout the county, as of when evidence supports them.
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Drketc Available at:
• Fanners Bank. Pomeroy/MasOn

For more infonnation, .
992-1004 or visit
_ ......www.rivercityplayersohio.or&amp;;

• People's Blink, Middleport
• Middleport.Dept. Store
• Swisher &amp; Lohse Phannacy
• Ohio RivefBear Co.

T -·

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CROW
Law Offices
992-6059.

• France rushes foreign
minister to Middle East to
seek release of journalists,
seeA2

WEA1HER

110W. 2nd Pomeroy

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Established 1907

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Galllpoli1, Ohio 45631

(304) '77'U4oo

211 Welt Second Street
P.O. Box626

.Route7

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9

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Malon, wv

(740) 446-2265

(740) 992-2136

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192-3381

INDEX
2 SI!CilONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

ClassifiedS

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - . People
from small towns often complain that there's nothing to
do. During Basket Bingo night
in Middleport, they are wrong.
Recently, I 50 people crowded into American Legion Post
128 in Middleport to play basket bingo and raise money for
the Ernie Sisson Memorial
Fund. The Siss~m family was
attempting· to raise money for
the Community Center at
· .
Syracuse.
Basket bingo is quickly
becoming one of the most popular social event~ · ipthe region.
The game is played like bingo,
but participants play for
Longaberger baskets filled
with Longaberger merchandise. Longaberger is an upscale
company located in Dresden
that releases collectible baskets
and accessories.
Cathie Wood of Syracuse
and Patty Pape of Racine regularly play basket bingo at
the Middleport American Debbie Ball declared "Bingo!" to the dismay of the other playLegion. One night Wood ers at a receot basket bingo event at .the American Legion in
turned an investment of $35 Middleport. VFW member, Rusty Mozingo declares Ball a winbingo
c'a rds
into ner. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
in
Longaberget. baskets with a
retal.l value of $700. Wood Germany,
Japan
and enue goes to a good cause ."
resells the baskets as well as . Australia.
Pape always get s to the
other items she wins on
Wood's friend Pape enjoys Legion early so that she and
EBAY, the popular internet the social atmosphere and Wood can sit in the same
swar.-shop . "E-bay 's my said, "We like it because seats . On this night, the two
job,' said Wood who has there 's no smoking ~llowed
'
shipped baskets to buyers in in here, and the bingo rev,.Please - Bingo. AS
countries as far away as

Med(il/ of Honor
Park hails sacrifice
BY. KEVIN KEuY
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTEA.COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
- Point Pleasant's Medal of
Honor Monument the
product of several years of
work by local veteran~ and
city leaders - will serve to
remind future _generations of
the sacrifice made by the men
the monument honors.
That was ove'rriding theme
of Saturday's dedication ceremony for -the monument and
the park along Jackson Avenue
between 26th and 27th streets
that surrounds the structure. as
the state 's la't living Medal of
Honor recipient reflected on
the meaning of the medal and
the monument.
"This monument serves as a
reminder of two precious
gifts - Jjfe and freedom:·
said
Her;hel. · "Woody'"
Williams of Ona. a World
War II Marine Corps veteran

who received the Medal of
Honor for bravery and decisi-ve action at Jwo Jima in
February 1945.
·
'There is no doubt this park'
will serve as a. bridge between
duty and ho.nor, a bridge being
crossed by thousands of men
and women today," Williams
said. 'This monument was not
built. l .believe. for those who
have gone on. but for future
generations to·know what it is
to be an American."
The Medal of Honor is
awarded to soldiers for
courage and sacrifice beyond
the call of duty, a point a local
commiuee stressed when it
decided to place a monument
honoring Mason County's
medal recipients on cityowned property.
''This memorial is a recognition of the singular courage
and dedication to duty these
men · exemplify,"
City

Please- Med1L A5

HOME NATIONAL •
itiii BANK ~
m=
949-221
0 • Racine, OH ·
•
. 992-6533 • Syracuse, OH

-------

f

.'

.

.

•

•

'

�.,

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

·France rushes foreign minister to Middle
East to seek release of journalists

PageA2
Monday,.August 30,

2004

FBI's Pentagon investigation is
another burden for Rumsfeld

PARIS (AP) - President
Jacques Chir~c dispatched
his foreign minister to the .
But as the insurgency in
WASHINGTON (AP) Middle East on Sunday to
Iraq took hold in the summer
The FBI investigation into
work for the release of two
·
of
2003 and the casualty toll
whether
a
Penta~on
analyst
French reporters abducted in
for
American troops mounted
passed
classified
mformation
Iraq, vowing to spare no
- more than 950 have been
to Israel is yet another politieffort to free them from kidkilled - Rumsfeld became a
.
cal
.
weight
on
Defense
nappers demanding that
target ot' critici sm on Capitol
Secretary
Dona)d
H.
France scrap its ban on
Hill.
.
Rums(eld,
sti
ll
fending
off
Islamic head scarves in state
A Tifue magaz ine poll
criticism over the Iraq war
schools;
and
prisoner
abuse.
released
Saturday said 39
Chi rae ap~?~:aled to the kid- ,
percent
of
those surveyed
It
is
not
clear
whether
the
nappers w1th an implicit
in
of
the
job Rumsfeld
approve
investigation
will
result
remmder that France opposed
has done and 37 disapprove.
charges of espionage at the
tile U .S.-Ied invasion of Iraq .
They
were split on whether
Pentagon.
At
the
least,
the
.
But he did not directly
Pres
ident
Bush
should
probe
complicates
respond to their reported
replace Rumsfeld: 49 percent
demand that the ban on head French Interior Minister Domin ique ·de Villepin, center, sur· Rumsfeld 's position as con,
said Rumsfeld should go and
scarves and· other religious rounded by members of the French Counci l for the Musl im gressional committees that
the
Defense
48 percent preferred that he
apparel be overturned within Faith. de livers his speech after a meeting Sunday. Islamic mil· oversee
Rumsfeld
stay.
_
_ __
Department
prepare
fo~
morec
.
- 48 hours. ·
- lra-nts ~on- Satorday re leased a brief tape showing-kidrrapped
Rumsfeld, 7'2. took much
"France ensures equality, reporters Christian ·chesnot of Radio France-lnternationale, or hearings on the abuse scan- of going beyond the single
political
heat when the Abu
dal.
.
individual
under
investigathe respect and protection or RFI. and Georges Malbrunot of Le Figaro newspaper, and sa1d
'
Ghraib.prisoner
scandal came
Rumsfeld
has
not
comtion.
the free practicing of all reli- they were holding the men to protest a French law
~ente~ publicly on the FBI's
Larry Di Rita, Rumsfeld 's to light in April with phogions," a solemn-looking Is lamic head scarves in schools, according to footage ai
spokesman.
said tographs of U.S. soldiers
Chirac said in a televised by Arab TV station AI-Jazeera . The council's head, Dalil mvesttgatton. While the FBI chief
has
spent
.more
tha'n
a
year
on
Sunday
that
the
Pentagon
.is · abusing and sexually humiliaddress. "These values of
Boubakeur, third from the left, has strongly condemned the the case, It only ,became pub- sticking by its initial state- ating Iraqi prisoners .
.
respect and tolerance inspire
Two official investigations
he Fnday.
·
ment Friday that it underour actions everywhere in the kidnappings. (AP Photo/ Jacques Brinon)
It is focused on an analyst stands the investigation is found that the highest levels
world ... They also inspired
support
our
representatives'
efforts"
from
·
lawmakers
of lram~n affatrs who works limited in scope. He said it of the Defen se Department'
France's policy in Iraq."
·
from
across
the
political
to
win
the
reporters'
release.
m a pohcy offtce heade!i by would be tflappropriate for shared blame for manageThe kidnapping proved
"Everything is being done spectrum. But it sparked Douglas 1. Feith, the under- him or Rumsfeld to comment ment lapses that may l).ave
false the notion that France's
6pposition to the Iraq war and everything will be done protests by Muslims .. in secretary for policy. He has further .because it is an active contributed to the problems
at Abu . Qhraill. But those
ljnd its generally pro- Arab in the hours and days to France and abroad, . with been accused by Demqcrats investigation.
As for the possible political reviews found no evidence to
QOiicies may to some extent come," said Chirac. · He said many saying Islam was being of seeking to manipulate
that
Rumsfeld
intelligence to help make the implications for Rumsfeld· at suggest
nave inoculated it from France has no fresh informa· unfairly targeted.
But
French
Muslim
leaders
tion
about
the
reporters.
case
for
going
to
ordered,
encouraged
or conwar
in
Iraq.
the
height
of
a
presidential
fslamic terrorism.
who
opposed
the
illw
were
Prime
Minister
Jean-Pierre
Congressional investigations election campaign. Di Rita doned any abuse of Iraqis.
The militants claiming to
indicated
that strong in their condemnation have found no evidence of said, ''I would not try to preTo the suggestion that
hold Christian Chesnot and Raffarin
France
is
using
its
contacts
in
of
the
kidnapping
and
urged
Rumsfeld
resign over the
that.
,
.
diet
how
the
political
season
Georges Malbrunot described
the
government
Sunday
not
the
Arab
world
to
seek
the
The Washington
Post wiH .affect this."
abuse
scandal,
former
the headscarf law as "an
Early in his tenure at the Defense Secretary James
aggression on the Islamic men's release. He met minis- to capitulate. Some also reported Sunday that the FBI
rehgion and personal free- ters and Chirac on Sunday to expressed fears, however, of investigation has broadened Pentagon, Rumsfeld spoke Schlesinger said last week
doms," accordmg to the Arab coordinate the government's .a backlash for the 5 million- to .include interviews with out ~ublicly against the unau- that such a deveh;~pment
str.ong Muslim community, mdlVlduals at the State and thonzed .release of classified would be a "boon to all of
response.
TV station Al-Jazeera.
western Europe's biggest.
The
headscarf
law,
which
Defense departments as well information. He undertook a America's enemies."
· The station showed a brief
"We
must
not
11egotiate.
It
will
take
effect
when
.
s
chool
Schlesinger headed an
as
Mideast affairs specialists special investigation when
tape on Saturday of the jourresumes
this
week
following
is
blackmail
which
·
the
panel
that
outside the government. some elements of Pentagon independe nt
nalists saying. they were in
captivity - the first word on the summer break, forbids Muslims of Francereject. It Israeli officials predicted that planning for war il] Iraq . looked into the abuse. A sectheir fate since they disap- public school students from is blackmail 'which does not the alle~ation it got secret leaked to the news media in ond panelist. former Defense
Secretary Harold Brown,
. peared more than a week ago. wearing "conspi cuous" signs serve the Muslim cause and informallon on White House 2002 .
affili·
w
hich
unfortunately
holds
showing
their
religious
.
policy toward Iran from the
In his 3 1/2 years as secre·- agreed that Rumsfeld acted
Chesnot works for Radio
Muslim community Pentagon analyst would tary, Rumsfeld h~s had a appropriate! y.
France-lnternationale and ation. While that includes the
· sometimes rocky relationship
"If the head of u departRadio France and Malbrunot Jewish skullcaps and large hostage," said Lhaj Thami prove false. ·
Breze,
president
of
the
powChristian
crosses,
French
Vincent Cannistraro, a with Congress. When the ment had to resign every time
for RTL radio and ·the dailies
authorities made clear that erfu l Union ·of Islamic retired CIA officer and for- ad'ministration began a global anyone down below did
Le Figaro and Ouest-France.
mer director of White House fight against terrorism in something wrong, it would
Foreign the measure was aimed at Organizations of France.
Chirac . said
"The
head
scarf
issue
is
a
removing
Islamic
head
intelligence programs during response to the attacks of be a very empty Cabinet
Minister Michel Bamier was
solely
French
affair
scarves
from
classrooms.
and
we
the Reagan administration, Sept. 11 , 200 I. his stock rose table" ·Brown said.
rushing to the Middle East
That was just days before
"to . develop the necessary · The law was adopted in do not accept foreign inter- said Sunday, "It's another quickly and he gai ned popuference,"
he
·added.
March
with
overwhelming
.
news
broke of the FBI inves·
scand~l
f~r
the
Pentagon,"
larity
for
his
tough
approach.
contacts there .and coordinate
with the p6tential in this case
tigation at the Pentagon.

Tropical storm slams ·into
coastal South Carolina with
near hurricane-strength wind
MOUNT
PLEASANT,
S.C. (AP) - Tropical Storm
Gaston sloshed ashore in
South Carolina Sunday with
near hurricane-force wind,
spinning sheets of rain that .
flooded roads as the storm
lptocked out power to thou~nds of people. ·
· Gaston made landfall near
McClellanville, a small fishing village that was walloped
by Hurricane Charley earlier
this month when it came
a5hore for a second time after
devastating
southwest ·
florida.
Gov.
Mark
Sanford Homeowner Claudia McNabb, foreground, meets Mount
declared a state of emergency Pleasant firefighters bringing tarps to protect belongings in her
Sunday and encouraged house Sunday, in · Mount Pleasant, S.C., as Tropical Storm
· ~folks to stay in thei( homes Gaston moved along coastal South Carolina. The crew had
for the time being so that already checked the downed power lines around the fallen
~amage assessment crews, tree. (Wade Spees/The Post and Courier)
had sought refuge in five
l'tility truck crews and deb~s those downed trees."
~m~yal crews can do ·the•r
By midday, Gaston was shelters in coastal counties as
JObs.
.
.
. moving north about 8 mph Gaston approached. Shelters
As much as e1ght mches of toward
inland
South were opened in at least one
rain had fallen along .some Carolina, weakening along inland county.
parts of the coast by m1dday, the way but still prompting
Gastpn - the hurricane
and a flash flood watch was flood watches and warnings season's seventh named
in effect. Hundreds of resi- of wind gusts as high as 60 storm - had maximum susdents were urged to evacuate mph.
·
tained winds of 70 mph when
ahead of the storm.
Charleston County officials it hit land but was down to 45
Hours after the eye of said there was only one· initial mph by early afternoon.
Gaston cam~ ashore, steady report of a serious injury- a Forecasters said the weaksheets of ram pelted Mount resident injured when a tree ened storm could reach North
Pleasant. Tree limbs littered fell on a home.
Carolina by Sunday night.
flooded roadways, some of " It just goes to show that
Legare said the storm had
which were impassable. the residents took the proper picked up speed, which wuld
Palmettos were pushed to the precautions that they needed mean less flooding.
pavement and road signs . to take and shows they were
"The faster it moves, the
twisted in the wind. ·
prepared,"
said
Roland less chance it has to rain,"
Across the harbor · in Windham, . the Charleston Legare said . " But until it has
Charleston, Gaston flooded County administrator.
passed through, I don 't think
streets and pushed over
Residents in low-lying we can say flooding is not a
power poles. At least 125,000 areas in Charleston and concern."
people were without power at Georgetown counties were
In the Atlantic Ocean,
the height of t!le storm.
urged .to move to higher meanwhile,
Hurricane
The rain tapered off along ground before the storm hit. Frances had sustained winds
tbe coast by midday, but blus- Authorities also asked people of 135 mph about 550 miles
tery wind still raked the living in mobile homes to east of the Leeward Islands in
j:Qastline near Charleston and evacuate.
the southeastern Caribbean.
in~ons throughout the
"We hope we don't experiThe National ·Hurricane
had no traffic lights.
ence any more injuries during Center in Miami said people
· "'!be important thing is !hill 1he cleanup," Windham said. from Cuba to the soutbeastwe don't have any false sense ''1bat's typically . when you ern United States should
of safety that it's all over," see a lot of injuries occur."
closely monitor the progress
said Charleston's mayor,
John Legare of the state of the storm, which could
Joseph P. Riley Jr. "We have Emergency
Management strengthen on Sunday and
downed trees and often times agency said about 30 people threaten land by Labor Day
tbere are power lines under
weekend.

. Sunday Times·Sentinel ·
Subscribe today • 992-2155

CASH? .

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings .

7:30 pm., Chester ' United Church of Christ, Fifth
Methodist Church. Special Avenue at Main Street.
program by Janet Bolin .
Monday, Aug. 30
Members bnng gifts.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Thursday, Sept. 2
County Veterans Service
RACINE - Special meetThesday, Aug. 31
Commission, 9 a.m., 117 E. ing of Pomeroy/Racine
POMEROY
- Meigs
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy. '
Lodge 164. F&amp;AM, with
County
Health
Department
Wednesday, Sept. 1.
· work in the Master Mason
PAGEVILLE Scipio degree on two candidates. will conduct a childhood
immunization 'c linic from 9
Townshtp Trustees will meet Refreshments. . .
.
to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at
at 6:30 p.m . at Pageville
112 E. Memorial Dr. The·
Town Hall.
child's shot records must be
provided and the child must
Thesday, Aug. 31
be . accompanied by a parent
'
MIDDLEPORT
or legal guardian. Medical
Middleport
Ministerial cards, if applicable, must also
Association will hold a . be provided. A $5 donation
Wednesday, Sept. I
Concert of Prayer, for the will be accepted but no one
CHESTER Chester 2004-2005 sc hool year, at 7 · will be denied services
Garden Club open . meeting, p.m. at the Middleport because of an inability to pay.

Other events

Church services

Clubs.and.
orgamzat1ons

'Real Worla' star-co~lng to ~Rio
Syrus
RIO GRANDE Yarbrough! of MTV's "Real
World Boston" will speak at
the
University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
College on.
Wednesday.
He wi ll be keynote speaker
at
the
New · Student
. Welcoming·
Induction
Ceremony at I p.m. in .the
John
Berry
Fine
and
Performing Arts Center. The
spee•h will welcome freshmen students to campus and
motivate them for the academic year ahead of them. Other
students will also be allowed
in if tickets are available.
Yarbro ugh . will also be
speaking later in the day to
students in Project CHAMP.
Project CHAMP is a special
program aimed at increasing
the college-going rate in the
area.
Erik Miller, student activities director and director of
multi -ethnic affairs at Rio
Grande, said the purpose of
the ann ual New Student
Welcoming
Induction
Ceremony is to introduce the
students to the campus and
help them feel empowered so
they will feel comfortable
with the college environment.
It also brings the entire freshman class together for the
first,. and perhaps only, time.
"''m really excited about
this," Miller said. "The college stude nts of . today grew
up watching 'Real World' on
MTV, and many of them identify strongly with the people
who.have been on' the show."
"Real World" is a program
placing seven college'age
individuals from around the
country in a house where their
day-to-day lives are filmed.
The .show focuses on issues
such as living with roommates, getting jobs, dating

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs • 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• 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 Protns 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

area

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Monday, August 30,

2004

Girl harboring secret crush~
.hesitates to share feelings :
DEAR ABBY: My best
me to keep quiet. That may not
friend, " Angela," has · a
be fair to her. She's starting
boyfriend I'll call Robb. I
another book. and I think she
have an insanely strong crush
should know the truth. How
. on him. I am 14, but I am
can I tel\ her without hurting
very mature for my age and .
her feelings or in&gt;ulting her?
have unusually intense feelDear
Her friend ship means a lot to
ings. Seeing Robh with
me. - ' LIL WHITE LlE
'
Abby
Angela every day is torture.
DEAR ·uL: Writing her
The school co.unselors su~­
thoughts and feelings may be
gested l· immerse myself m
vour friend's mechanism for
something to get my mind off
~enting her frustrations. and
Robb - sports, ·drama, my lovesick you can't function . it's a healthy one. I see nothing
studies - anything. I tried for Just let her know that if she to be gained by di sc·ouraging
months, but it hasn't worked. I wants to date others, you'll her. Because you and your
can barely function because be happy to co nsole Robb. friends didn 't care for her book
I'm so miserable and lovesick. Then cross your fingers and doesn't mean no one will.
A few days ago, Angela told make yourself available if he Since her friend ship means a
me she doesn't like Robb as a · wants a shoulder to cry on.
lot to you. mum 's the word.
boyfriend as much as she used
RS. If he does, be sure ta
DEAR ABBY: I . say that
to and would really rather be tell him jokingly what a fool- the name s used in yo ur col=
good friends with him. But she ish girl you think Angela is to umn in quotation marks are
doesn't want to hurt his feelings. let go of so meone as special fictitious . My husband dis,
I want to tell her how I feel as he is. He'll think you are agrees; he insi sts that the letabout him. but I can't bring intelligent and· insightful, and ters you print are exactly as.
myself to do it. What if she you'll be off and running'
'Written and the quotation
laughs at me or tells me he'd
DEAR ABBY: A good marks don't mean a thing.
never like me? ·I might kill friend of mine recently wrote Who is right1 - NEEDS TO
myself. Please help. I don't and self-published a book. lt is KNOW. PAHOKEE . FLA. . ·
know how much longer I can comprised · of anecdotes,
DEAR NEEDS TO KNOW '
live with this pain.
poems and short essays. She You are. I make it a practice to
LOVESICK IN CALIFORNIA asked if I liked it, and I (cow- change the 11ames that appear
DEAR LOVESICK: Speak ard that I am) told her I liked a in the body of the letters that
up! Angela gave you the per- couple . of the stories and appear in . my . column,
fect opening when she said thought the book was quite However, if a name is uSed in
she'd prefer to be good good. I lied. The book is horri- the signature, it's because the
friends with Robb. Don't let ble. I thought it was just me- writer has given me express
your fear of what she "might" but when I shared it with a few pern1ission,to do so.
·
say .keep you suffering in others,, they felt the same way.
Dear Abby is written by
silence. The only thing worse
Much of what she wrote Abigail Van Buren, also
than caring for someone who reflects strong · negativity known as Jeanne Phillips,
doesn't know you're alive is about her job as a social and was founded by her,
feeling trapped in a relation- worker, the people she's there mother, Pauline· Phillips.
ship with someone you no to help, and the children she Write
Dear Abby at
taught as a substitute teacher. www.DearAbby.com or P.O~
lon~er care for.
·
I want to tell her my true Box 69440; lAs Angeles, CA
It s not. necessary to tell
Angela that you're . so feelings, but everybody tells 90069.

Holter receives OVB scholarship
Alyssa Holter. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Holter, Pomeroy,
was the recip ient of a four-year Ohio Valley Bank scholarship awarded during the youth
recognition program at the
Meigs County Fair. Here Pam
Johnson , Pomeroy Save-a-Lot
bank manager, and Raymond
Polcyn, loan officer at the
Gallipolis WaiMart super;
. bank, present the award'
Holter is a graduate of
Eastern High School and will
be attending Ohio · State
University.

Syrus Yarbrought

and other iss ue s involved
with being on your own.
Rio Grande students face
these same issues, so bringing
in one of the stars of "The
Real World" will hit home
with many students, Miller
said.
·
In additon to appearing on
the Boston season of "Real
World," Yarbrough appeared
on MTV's "Real World Road
Rules Battle of the Sexes
Challenge," "Re11l World

Road
Rules
Extreme
Challenges,"
"Hook-Ups,
Heartbreaks and Forever
Afters,". and other programs.
Now a motivational speaker, -Yarbrough has been .mvited to speak at more than 100
colleges and universities
across the country. Ouring
thiselection year, he is also
taking part in MJ'V's "Rock
The Vote"· campaign, encouraging young adults to vote
and get involved in politics.

ou announ~es d~an's list, graduates
ATHENS - The following
local students were named to the
dean's list at Ohio University:
David Tennant, New Haven,
W.Va.; Kenneth Sisco, Esther
Van Oort, Coolville; Orion
Barrett, Langsville; Stacey
Brewer, Brooke Vaughan,
Middleport; Jennifer Buckley,
Maureen Heines, Andrea
Krawsczyn, Sara Mansfield, Jon
Sargent, Jeffrey Shank, James
Stanley, Joshaa Will, Pomeroy;
Joseph Cornell, Mariam ElDabaja, Macyn Ervin, .Jessica
Chad
Hubbard,
Fisher,

PageA3

Kimberly llile, Rachel Marshall,
Jennifer
Walker,
Racine;
Mathhew
Beldyk, Carrie
Johnson, Reedsville; Sara llile,
Amber Snowden, Rutland.
ATHENS
Ohio
University has · announced
graduates receiving degrees at
the end of spring quarter.
Graduating with honors were:
Tamra Schetter, Coolville;
Orion Barrett, Langsville;
Stacey Brewer, Middleport;
Scott Needs, Joshua Will,
Pomeroy;
Leah
Sanders.
Reedsville; Sara llile, Rutland.

Other graduates were: Jeffrey
Creamer, Amy Thomas, Christi
Williams, all of Coolville; John
Heath Proffitt, Alison Rose,
Long Bottom; Monty Hunter,
Nicholas Mills, Middleport;
Jennifer Shrimplin, James
Stanley, Pomeroy; Jody Norris,
Emily Smith, Racine; and
William Francis, Reedsville.
Receiving graduate degrees
were John Barcus, Middleport;
Frank Blake, Middleport;
Anna Wolf, Pomeroy; and
Michael Moore. Reedsville.

Community brief
Derick Powell

Winners announced

would like to

POMEROY -Meigs County Republican Party has
announced the winners of prizes at the county fair booth: U.S.
flag, Melissa Morris; Republican bear, made by Jane Beegle,
Roger Epple; $25 cash, Remi Frankoviak; $20 cash, Diane
Bachtel; Ohio Bicentennial bank, donated by Marlene
Harrison, Herman Carson.
·

Thank

Farmers

Bank
for purchasing his

Market Hog
at the ·

2004

ProuiJto be apart of your life.

Meigs
County

Subscribe today • 992-21SS

Fair

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OPINION

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·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
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•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment ofreligion, or prohibiting the
free exei'dse there·oj; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, _and to J1elition '
the. Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Aug. 30, the 243rd day of 2004. There are
123 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On Aug. 30, 1862, Union .
forces were defeated by the Confederates at the Second Battle
of Bull Run in Manassas, Va.
On thi s date.: In 30 B.C. (on Aug. 30, by some estimates),
the sev'enth and most famous 'queen of ancient Egypt known
as Cleopatra committed suicide.
In 1905, Ty Cobb made his major league batting debut,
playing for the Detroit Tigers.
In 1941, the World War U siege of Leningrad began as Nazi
forces took Mga.
In !945, Gen. Douglas MacArthur arrived in Japan, and set
up'AIIied occupation headquarters.
In 1963, the 'Hot Line' communications link between
Washington and Moscow went into operation. ·
. In 1967, the Senate confi rmed the appointment of Thurgood
Marshall as the first black justice on the Supreme Court.
In 1983, Guion S. Bluford Jr. became the first black
American astronaut to travel in space, blasting off aboard
Challenger.
.
In 1986, Soviet authorities arrested Nicholas Daniloff, the
Moscow correspondent for U.S. News and World Report. (He
was later released.}
In 1991 , Azerbaijan declared its independence, joining the
stampede of republics seeking to secede from the Soviet Union.
In 1997, Americans learned of the car crash in Paris that
claimed the lives of Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul. (Because of the time difference, it was Aug.
31 where the crash occurred.)
Ten years ago: Rosa Parks, whose refusal to give up her seat
on a Montgomery, Ala .• bus in 1955 helped touch off the civil
rights movement, was robbed and beaten in her Detroit apartment. (Joseph Skipper later pleaded guilty !O assault and robbery and was sentenced to prison.)
.
Five years ago: Residents of East Timor voted for independence from Indonesia in a U.l\1.-sponsored ballot. (Afterward,
pro-Indonesia militiamen reacted by going on a violent rampage that ended when international forces were sent in.)
·One year ago: A Russian submarine being towed to a scrap
yard sank in a gale in the Barents Sea, killing nine of the I 0
crew members. The World Trade Organization agreed to let
impoverished nations import cheaper copies of patented medicines needed to fight killer diseases. Actor C)larles Bronson
died in Los Angeles at age 81. Inventor Robert Abplanalp, confidant of President Nixon, died in Bronxville, N.Y., at age 81.
Writer Marion Hargrove died in Long Beach, Calif., at age 83.
.Thought for Today: 'Whom the gods wish to destroy they
ftrst call promising.' - Cyril Connolly, British joumalist~riter (1903-1974).

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consensus of the Ohio Valley Publisliing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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No wonder my mother
was a little breathless on the
telephone. 'Listen to this,'
she said, preparing me for a
snippet from a tome by the
popular, late and liberal historian William Manchester.
It describes Franklin D.
Roosevelt's initial reaction
to news of the surprise attack
on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,
1941 , that devastated . the
American fleet, killing 2,403
soldiers, sailors and civil-"
ians.
After calling the secretary
of state, Manchester writes,
' the President of the United
States did nothing for 18
minutes.'
Eighteen minutes. Why,.
that's II, maybe 12 'minutes
more than George W. Bush
paused during a visit to a
Florida elementary school
before taking action on the
morning of Sept. II, 200 I.
Truth be told, I've withheld
this historical mini-scoop for
a while, thinking 'Agitprop
9/1 I,' or whatever. which
first ginned up the notion
that President Bush fiddled
around while · the · Twin
Towers burned, wasn't 'worth
spilling ink over. But now
that the Kerry presidential
campaign
is
MichaelMoore-ishly aping the outrage over the Lost Minutes,
the fact of FOR's post-Pearl
Harb01: lull gains currency.
'John Kerry is not the type
who will sit and read 'My Pet
Goat' to a group of secondgraders while Americll is
under attack,' Kerry ca m-

Monday, August 30, 2oo 4

Monday, August 30, 2004

Obituaries

the goat

The Washington . Times
points out. Mr. Kerry's reaction to the attacks of Sept. II
wasn't exactly the stuff· of
the Minutemen. Mr. Kerry
Diana
told 'Larry King Live' .that
on the morning of Sept. II
three years ago, he
•W•e•s•t-- . nearly
'sat stunned and unable to
think for' more than 30 minutes in the Capitol until he
paign
spokeswoman and other senators were
Stephanie Cutter declared · whisked out of the building
last week, by all accounts to safety,' the Times reports.
with a Straight face. Ms. ' By that time, Mr. Bush
Cutter, Ted Kennedy's for- already had addressed the
mer press secretary, was nation, vowed to capture
referring to the kiddie book those responsible and begun
with
Vice
Mr. Bush continued reading discussions
with schoolchildren for sev- President Dick Cheney and
era! minutes after learning other top aides about
. that the second tower of the whether to shoot down any
World Trade Center had civilian aircraft violating t)le
administration's order that
been altacked.
all
planes be grounded.' And Them may be fightin'
words in a 'more sensitive' fini shed reading 'My Pet
war on terror, but I'm guess- Goat.'
This, uf cou rse, is getting
ing that Thomas E. Dewey,
FDR's fourth .and final presi- ridicul ous - and I don't just
dential opponent, never even mean the non-issue over the
thoughtto hit Roosevelt for first minutes after the World
18 minutes of inaction at the Trade Center attack. The real
onset of World War II. Let's question is, why does Mr.
just say that John Kerry is no Kerry keep ere.:;ting so many
Tom Dewey. 'Had I been wobbly pedestals for himreading 10 children and ·had self? Whether it's a silly vow
my top aide whisper in my of insta-action belied by his
ear that America is under behavior; a Christmas in
attack,' Mr. Kerry intoned Cambodia that wasn't really
this month, 'I would have Christmas and likely wasn't
told those kids very nicely Cambodia; widely, seriously
and politely that the presi- contested military claims of
dent of the United States has both heroics and atrocities;
something that he .n,eeded to or talk of a 'secret' plan to
attend to. And l would have save Iraq; .the man increas- .
ingly sounds like he is all
attended to it.'
Really? As an article in bluster.

. The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Oustanding FFA member Land transfers

Jerry Powell
Mr. Kerry's Brahmin braggadocio on the 'Goat' min- :
utes may seem t.o be a small
thing: hardly a matter on
which presidential elections
turn. But in a campaign
based solely on the candidate's 'biography,' it is one
more telling detail in an ·
evoJving character study that ·
the Kerry . campaign, given
the probing charges raised
by Swift Boat Veterans for
Truth and the pressing, new :
journalism of the blogos- phere, is no longer sole ,
author of
As
·n
Democrats
admits, there is little in the .
Kerry re sume to boost a
wartime presidency : two .
dovi sh Senate- dcGades ~ a
stint as a leading antiwar
protester instrumental in ere- ·
ating the iconic image of ·
Vietnam vet-as-baby-killer;
an abbreviated tour in •
Vietnam that netted a considerable and, lately, controversial, collection of medals;
and a presidential campaign. :
This, of course, explains
why Mr. Kerry has strategi- •
cally reconfigured his biog- •
raphy so that those four ·
months in Vietnam 35 years .
ag&lt;i appear, climactically, to .
precede his White House run ·
today. Such a life, though,
leaves rather a longer lull
than either FDR or George
W. Bush has ever had to
explain.

' J

,

RACINE - Jerry A. Powell, 76, Vine Street, Racine,
passed aw.ay unexpectedly at 5:24 a.m. on Sunday, Aug. 29,
2004, at h1s res1dence.
·
·
He was born March 3, 1928, in Racine son of the late
Michael J. Powell and Mayme Johnson 'Powell. He was
retired from the Meigs County Highway Department. Prior to
~o~king fo~ the.~ighway department. he was employed at the
Swtsher stnp nunes. He was a member o( Racine First Baptist
Church and was a. charter member of the Racine Vofunteer
Fire Department. He received the Carnegie Medal of Honor in
1961.
'
.
His wife, Marilyn L. Diddle Powell whom he married Dec
12, I945 in Xenia, survives, as do tw~ daughters, Donna Ra~
(Austm) Wolfe of Racine and Jane Ann (Roger) Hill of
Racme ; four gra ndchildren: Jerry (Dixie) Wolfe, Aimee
(Randy) Pyles, Scott (Mary) Hill and Heather (Jamie Jones)
Htll; SIX great grandchildren: Hannah Wolfe, Betsy Wolfe,
Grace Wolfe, Charley Pyles, Stefanie Pyles and Molly Hill;
seve~al s1sters-m-law, brothers-in-law. nieces, nephews and
COUSinS. .
·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two grandchildren and hi s stepfather. Earl Custer.
Serviees will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday;Sepr.t~ 1004-;­
at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine with Rev. Don Walker
and Rev. Rick Rule o!Ticiating. Burial will follow at Letart
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at
·
the funeral home. ·
Memorial contributions may be made to the Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept., P.O. box 246, Racine , Ohio 45771. ·

Soldier killed in Iraq buried in Elyria
ELYRIA
(AP)
The infant, sometimes asleep
Reside nts, many holding and sometimes wide awake,
fl ags or putting a hand over spent the day of his father' s
the1r hearts, stood along a 5- funeral cradled in the .arms of
mile route from the chapel to his weeping mother, Kassie.
the cemetery where a soldier
Shepherd planned on coming home to be a police offikilled in Iraq was buried .
Sgt. Qaniel M. Shepherd, 23, cer, said Roger Pace, a retired
was buried with mihtary non- Navy chaJ?rain and minister
ors on Saturday in his home- at Broadview Road Church
town southwest of Cleveland. · of Christ in Parma.
He was killed Aug. 15 when
In his eulogy, Pace said
his military vehicle was struck Shepherd exemJ?lified a
by a homemade .bomb.
devotion to pubhc service
He had been scneduled to and to the well-being of his
leave Iraq one week later. fellow soldiers. He called
expecting to see his 6-month- such devotion the real motiold .so n for the first time.
vator for any fighting force.

(Diana West is a columnist :
for The Washington Tiines.
She can be .contacted via ,
diana west@ verhon.net.)

Medal
from PageA1
Attorney James Casey said.
"This memorial, for the city
and those who made it possible, is a reminder for those
who will come in the future.
"We gather to offer our
respect to the men and
women
who
survived
unimaginable feats of sacri fice," he added. "We are eternally indebted to their family
and friends. It is never too
late to say thank you for their
service and that sacrifice."
Honored during the cere. mony were the families of the
men :listed on the memorial.
· These include Leonidas M.

Bingo
from Page A1

The error of too 11!Uch tolerance
. I just returned . from,
facility was in the flight path higher percentage o'r women
among · other places, Dubai
of a local airport: Women in Saudi Arabia own busiin the United Arab Emirates.
might be seen by men jetting nesses than is the case in the.
My son and I spent a week
United States, Khan said.
overhead.
.
with · friends who recently
'The International Olympic
'Liberation is in the mind,
moved there. The place
Committee banned South not the clothes," she said;·
Joan
looks as if it rose from the
Africa for 28 years because referring to the Western pre-·
Ryan
sand . just
yesterday.
that country discriminated occupation with the chadors
against blacks. But it has and head-to-foot,abayas.
Shimmering skyscrapers.
Late-model cars. Hotels as
shown high-minded tolerBut this isn't about clothes.
vast and eye-popping as
ance toward Saudi Arabia, It's not even about Islam,
theme parks. Malls with end- of oppression?
· the U AE and other Arab . which allows women to
less floors of Gucci, tbe Gap
The story in the Gulf News governments that refuse to make their own choices
and Starbucks cafes.
was about Arab women and include women on their about what to wear and how
· You c.ould almost imagine sports. The United Arab Olympic teams. Are certain to conduct themselves in
you were in ultra-modern Emirates again sent no types of oppression deserv- public. This is about governSingapore or eve·n Las women to the Olympics. · ing of tolerance and others ments that use th~ pages of
Vegas. Except for the ghost· Saudi Arabia sent no women, not? Is oppression accept- the Quran to build cages
ly women. Sometimes you either, which is np surprise. able when it springs from around their women .
can
see
their
faces. According to the Gulf News religious beliefs rather than
In the hierarchy of injusSometimes just their : eyes. story, it is illegal in Saudi sqcial policy? ' Or should all . tices, women missing out on
Sometimes you se.e ni&gt;thing Arabia for girls and women oppression be condemned; the Olympics is low on the ·
at all of the humans bi:neath to participate in physical edu- no matter what the cause?
list. But like so many
the bla.c k shrouds.
cation artd sports. 1be parliaSabhiha Khan, the com- protests, an IOC ban on
As a good San Franciscan, ment passed a bill in June munications di.rector of the oppressive countries like
I swallowed my judgment as overturning the law, but ci!rli- St,mthern California chapter Saudi Arabia and the UAE
I watched the Muslim er this month the Saudi of the Council on American- would serve as a symbol. It
women move through the Ministry
of
Education Islam Relations, says an IOC" would say that d~rimina­
malls and restaurants like announced it had no intention ban would be counterpro- tion against women - for
shadows of their husbands of honoring the legislation.
ductive.
whatever reason - is no
ln Iran, which sent one . 'You llave to let' change more acceptable · than dis, and sons and young daugh.ters. If I have learned any- woman to Athens, it has happen from within," Khan crimination against ethnic
.. thing in two decades in the been against the law •since said. ' You can't impose it on and racial groups.
Bay Area, it is tolerance for 2000 in Tehran for a woman another country. ... I think
Khan is surely correct: We
the customs of other cultures to ride a bicycle or motorcy- the response would be, 'Who cannot force another country
and religions.
cle for fear that· men watch- are you to judge us?"
to change its values and cusBut one day at breakfast in ing might be 'led toward
She says the South Africa toms so they better reflect
our Dubai hotel, I came dangerous urges." When comparison is inappropriate our own. ·But we don't have
across a story in the English- women in Tehran delliJ!llded because blacks were second- to accept them, either. Some
language Gulf News that a place where they could class .citizens denied such customs and values are not
made me question the play Sports, a plan was for- basic rights as voting. In • worthy of our tolerance.
assumption that tolerance is mula ted for a women's facil· even · the strictest Islamic
(Joan Ryan is ·a columnist
always a good thing. Is it ity. Jt would have an all- ' countries, women are not for the San Francisco
· possible, I wondered, to so female staff and I 2-foot second-class citizens, she Chronicle. Send comments
single-mindedly embrace the walls so men could not see argued. Iran's parliament h~ to her in CtJre of this newspavirtue of tolerance that we in., The plan fell a'part when more women thi!n the U.S,. per or send her e-mail at
become de facto supporters authorities noticed that the Congress, for example. A joanryan@sfc~ronicle.com)

arrived one hour and 15 minutes early so they would be
sure to get those seats. ·
Bingo players often have
ritUals they follow for good
luck similar to athletes who
superstitiOus · about
. are
changing routines. However.
Pape playfully denied that
she was superstitious and
explained that they arrived
early because "we have a fun
table," and therefore wanted
to preserve the atmosphere.
In a way, basket bingo
night at the Legion resembled
a high school lunchroom will
all the different social . factions anq cliques. There were
parents, children, grandparents and girlfriends huddled
together at the "fun tables"

Grades
from PageA1

..

''The one thing we try to
improve the most is the re!!ding," Buckley said. "Our
logic is, if a kid can read,
they can do the rest of it."
Eastern
Superintendent
Rick Edwards also was proud
of his district's reading scores.
. In addition to fourth-,sixthand · lOth-graders, thirdgmders were tested for the
first time on reading. A whopping 93.2 percent of. Eastern
third-graders passed the reading proficiency test, compared
to 73.7 percent at Meigs, and
75.6 percent at Southern.
"That's an outstanding
effort fo~ a first shot at that,"
Edwards said.
Overall, however, even
.t houg·h Eastern scored an
80.3 ·on the performance

Randy Hudson, 18, was chosen as the Outstanding FFA
Member from Meigs County for 2004. His recent FFA projects included attending the Intel ICEF lntemational
Science Fair in Portland , Ore., soil judging, envirothon and
forestry teams and raising hogs for the Jun ior Fair. Hudson
graduated from Meigs High School in May and plans to
attend the OSU Agricultural Technical Institute this fall.
After participating in the FFA program for three years he
said "It was a good experience and I learned a lot. It
helped me decide what I wanted to do with my life." (Beth
Sergentjphoto)

Godley,
William
Plaques were also present- Honor is ·based on the stateBaumgarner, Samuel 0. ed by monument committee · ments of an officer and at
McElhinney, William- H. chairman Ron Kapp to com- least two witnesses, there can
Barringer, Hiram R. Howard, miuee
members Robert . be no greater honor than to be
Charles Schorn, Joseph ·Matthews, Bruce Dennis and recognized by comrades in
VanMatre and Joel Parsons D.K. "Cheyenne" Simpson, arms.
Citing the example of
from the Civil War; Chester while a plaque for the late
John
Craddock
was
accepted
Bernard
Bell , honored for
H. West fro in World War I;
Bernard P. Bell from World by his father, Jim. Former int1icting more than 20
War Il; aAd Jimmy G. stat~ Sen. Oshel Craigo was enemy fatalities and capturalso thanked for securing ing 33 German soldiers,
. Stewart in the Vietnam War.
Williams said the word of
Receiving
plaques of funding forthe monument.
Also
honored
was those witnesses is vital.
appreciation were Nina
'T m not sure he kept a IiiBowles, Doug Hudson, John Commander Mike "Btight of
Corps
League tie black book. He was a
and Fay Meadows. and Stella Marine
Leport for the family of Detachment 8 of Jackson busy, busy boy," Williams
Chester West; David Forshee, County. which provided a 21 - said. "Their · testimony · is
Patty Albright and Nina gun salute and a mournful what ga ve him the Medal of
Forshee for the family of rendition of "Taps" to c!Qse Honor. .
William · Barringer; and the ceremony.
" It makes one proud and
In his address to the audi- humble to know your buddies
· Lorena Haer, accepting on
behalf of the family of ence,- Williams noted that · believe you deserve the
because awarding a Medal of Medal of Honor," he added.
Bernard Bell.
from the traffic at the door. "I
drawing of the night.
Commander
Russell . am very happy with tonight's
Mozingo of the American turnout. Very happy," said
Legion said that the post rent- Joyce Sisson, Ernie's widow.
ed out the hall 33 times in
She hoped to raise enough
2003 for basket bingo games money to benefit the children
with 20 havin g already taken of Syracu ~e. carrying on a
place this year. Running the
tribute to her late husband
concession stand during the
bingos is o.ne of ·the few who loved kids and played
sources of income available S;mta every year. Ernie died
to 'the Legion's Ladies ' of a terminal illness in March
and Joyce felt that organizing
Auxiliary.
Betty Johnson, President the fundraiser was a way of
of the auxiliary, said the helping her heal from that
here."
' money from the concessions tragedy, and do some good
Like Evelyn, several play- are used to help local veter- for her community.
ers said that they didn't care ans and programs in the comWhether they were in it to
if they won influding Jim munity such as Meals On socialize. or raise money for a
the · American · good cause, all. the people at
Louks who also worked with Wheels,
Cancer Society's Relay for the basket bingo game were
Ernie.
"It's not about winning Life, the Salvation Army,
happy to be there, proving
tonig ht ," said Louks' wife GOd's NET Ministries, and
Sharon, who relayed the weekly bingo games at the that there was so.mething fun
sentiment that- the night Overbrook Nursing Home in to do in Middleport on a ·
Thursday night. Anyone that
was about Ernie's memo- Middleport.
didn
' t realize that just wasn't
The fundraiser's organizry. Coincidentally, Jim
Louks won the first raffle ers take home any profits looking hard enough.

enjoying each other's company. while hoping to win a
pnze.
Still, there were others
there like Evelyn .Wood of
Chester who ·was playing
basket bingo for the first time
because she had a personal
stake in the fundraiser 's
cause, the Ernie Sisson
Memorial Fund.
"My husband worked with
Ernie for 37 years," said
'Evelyn. "We loved him and
miss him, and I'm glad to be

'

meeting the ~tate standards
index, Edwards said he'·s a every area,"· Grueser said.
Southern had received for the district's final grade of
little disappointed that the
district did not do better.
alarming indications from the Continuous Improvement.
"We're pleased with the
"For us, we're stuck in this rut . state during the last school
right now where we're not year that they might slip as improvements we ' ve made,
going fO!Wand," be said. "We've low as Academic Emergency, · but we know we have a long
made progress, but we're not as Grueser credited district way to go. We' II get there,"
high as we're expecting yet"
teachers for focusing on Grueser said.
While Eastern scored high
~
~~
~.
!!I'Iiiiiii.
in reading, and again did well
on writing scores, Edwards
1
said improvement is needed
in math·. Only half of
~
Eastern's fourth - and sixth~u·ulrdStreet Racine (740} 949-fJ&lt;~Ilt//
graders passed the math test.
Check out our wide variety of lotions...
·" ·
II
I
do
not
have
~
y011
like,
I
con
order
it!
"Math has been a problem
for us across the boar.d ."
BEGUiAR BED 120 Minute lkdl MEDIUM BED (12 Mioul&lt; Wl
Edwards said. "But we're not
Per Session: ................. $5.00
Pu Session: ................ $3.00
alone in that."
5
Sessions: .......:........ ~$20.00
5 Sessions: ................ $12.00
At Southern Local, while
I 0 Sessions: ............... $30.00
10 Sessions: .............. $20.00
the district .may be in fiscal
I Month. Unlimited: ..$40.00
·~ Month Unllmited:.$20.00
emergency, it certainly is in
Owner: So.nia Circle
'\
no academic emergency. It
rv----~
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~
~~
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~
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~
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~
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~1
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.
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.
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cootinued to make improvements across the board.
· . Wofjf'Tanning 'Beds a 'Tryj!
"The most important thing
You wiff a6so[utefy fove thim!!!
is we demonstrated consistent improvement . in about

r

I

.

Love ')(mr TantfimniT~J5afon

-

POMEROY
- Meigs
C. H. Williams, Mildred
County Recorder Judy King Williams, to Joyce Pauline
reported the (ollowing real Sisson, deed, Village. of
estate transfers:
Syracuse.
Everett
H.
Parsons,
Donald R. Shultz, Kay
deceased, to Frances M. Schultz, to Paul A. Musser,
Parsons,
certificate, Michele C. Musser, deed,
·Olive/Lebanon.
Salem.
Countrytyme ALC, Ltd. to
Susan Watkins to William
Gary L. Bond. deed, Chester. E. Slater, Jr., affidavit .. extin. John Harmon, Kellie R. guished life estate.
Harmon, to Bishop of the
Maxine
Hoffman,
Roman Catholic Church, deceased,
to
Paul
E,
Roman Catholic Church, Hoffman, affidavit, Chester.
Deutsche Bank. N .A. ,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
John Mitchell to Nancy S. Barikers Trust Co. , to
Grueser Trhsi Agreement , Laverna M. Hoffman, Larry
E. Hoffman. deed, Village of
deed. ·
Velma Essie Winland to Middleport.
Edna M. Hunnell.• Ge.orge D.
Donald R. Marks, Wilma
Stobart, Jr., Hazel Dudding, L. Marks, to Troy L. Bearhs,
John Wayne Stobart, Marilyn deed.
Sue Rice. Roger Stobart, cerKathy S. Wilson. Joseph L.
tificate, Sutton .
Wil so n,
to
Columbus
Jerald L. Keys. Virginia C. Sm:thern Power, easement,
Keys, - to Tuppers Plains- - cli.ester.
- -Chester Water District, right
Charles C. Williams, Alice
of way, Chester.
E. Williams, to Ohio Power
Carl Wo·lfe, Della Wolfe, to Co., easement, Sutton.
TP-CWD, right of way,
Harry W. Pickens, Sr. to
Chester.
Ohio Power Co., easement,
Alton Tenney, Alton R. Sutton.
.
Tenney. Anna M. Tenney, to
Southern Local School
Barry D. Bobo , Alice R. District, Board of Education,
Bobo, deed. Bedford.
to Ohio Power Co., easePhillip J. Weaver to Freddie ment, Suuon.
Alan Queen, Mary Kay
Jason Burton to John
Queen, deed, Village of Burton, Jack Burton, Juston
Syracuse.
Burton, deed, Salem.
. Oranna Perry to Robert P..
Darrell Napper, Bonnie
Drake, Mona J. Drake, deed, Napper,
to · Gary
D.
Columbia.
Underhill , · - Nancy
S .·
Max A. Ei1chinger, Jr. to Underhill, deed, Scipio.
Charles Edward Wheeler, ·
Kelly L. Eichinger, deed,
Sutton.
·
. Martha
Kay
Wheeler,
Terrence Lee Silva to John Wheeler Family Revocable
R. Montgomery, Connie D. Trust , to Buckeye Rural
Montgomery, deed, Salem.
Electric Cooperative, right of
Howard Eugene Cecil to way, Scipio.
Bruce R. Fisher, M. Thomas . Cynthia Zimmerman . to
Dooley, deed , Village of BREC, right of · way,
Middleport.
Columbi a.
John William Hess, Jr..
Jamie A. Nicklis to BREC,
John W. Hess, to Rebecca A. right of way, Bedford.
Hess. affidavit, Rutland.
Edward
Reinheld,
Mary M. Brown, Jeffrey E. deceased, Helen Rein held, to
Brown, to Shane R .. Lauer, BREC, right of way, Salem.
Dinah J. Gryska, Eric
Victoria A. Lauer, deed, '
Orange.
Gryska, to BREC, right of
Ishmael J. Smith, Tanya R. ' way, Columbia.
Smith, to Reba Jean Elkins,
Willie Collins , Carolyn
deed, Village of Rutland.
Collins. to BREC, right of
State of Ohio, Omega JVS, way, Scipio.
Everett L. Schuler, Teresa
to Kilbarger Leasing Co.,
deed, Salisbury.
Schuler. to BREC, right of
Kilb.arger Leasing Co. to way, Rutland.
State
of Ohio.
deed,
Jeffrey
M. Workman, .
Salisbury.
Linda S. Workman, to BREC,
Kilbarger Leasing Co. to · right of way, Scipio.
State
of Ohio,
deed,
Emanuel Namenyi, Pamela
Salisbury.
E. Namenyi, to BREC. right
Diana Lynn Nease, Diana of way, Salem.
Charles G . McElfresh,
L. Woods, Diana Lynn
Woods, Kyle Woods, to John Anita J. McElfresh , to
David Staats, deed, Village of BREC, right of way. Scipio.
H.
Anderson,
Middleport.
John
Randy D. Taylor, Kathy L. Gretchen
Anderson,
to r
Taylor,
to
Billy
J. BREC, right of way, Scipio,
Teresa
M.
JohnS. Scott, Jr., to BREC,
VanCooney,
Barber, deed, Lebanon.
right of way. Scipio.
Vivian L. Jones,. Vivian L.
Robert E. Jacks, Donna Y.
Robinson, Howard Robinson, Jacks, to Citigroup Consumer
Emma C. Roush, Emma C. Financial, sheriff's deed,
Crow, George Crow, Clara Bedford.
Carl R. Pulver, Jr. to Brian
Mae Hysell, to Janet L.
A. • G. Brittain, Kim K. Brittain,
Hendricks, · Ronald
Hendricks, deed, Rutland.
deed , Olive.
Ronald W. Vane, Dian W.
Janet Manuel to Charlotte:
· Vance, Sherry Vance, right of VanMeter, Wanda Oxley,
way. Olive .
Larry Oxley, Michelle Sible,
Dion W. Vance, Sherry L. Randy Sible, Belinda Kitsos,
Kitsos,
Melissa
Vance, to Thomas R. Troy
· Hutchinson, Jr., deed, Olive. Patterson, deed. Salisbury.
Dion W. Vance, Sherry L.
Hazel G. Wilson to Amy R.
Vance, to Thomas
R. Ohlinger. de~d. Village of
Hutchinson, J~.• deed, Olive.. Middleport.

..

Proud to:be apart of you; life.
Subtcribe today • 992·215S

The River City Players presents:

;!Wtit get ~ur g~ i
; Saturday, Septeinber 4th •
7:00P.M.

Sunday, September 5th
. 2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00P.M.

l

Ir;qm Aujllblc At
~ • F1rmen Bonk,

• • Peoples Bonk. Middleport
• Micldleport Deportment

I.Swisher • Lohse' '!~;:~~
• O~io Killer Be1r C1

�'

The Paily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Earnhardt's confidence soaring, Page 82
Reds, Indians win, Page 86
Miami routs Indiana State, Paga.B6

Monday, August 30, 2004

.

MQnday, August 30, 2004

.

College Soccer

An overturned vehiete--lays In a creek. adjacent to asphalt ehunks that used to be Ohio 45 In
nearby Salem, Saturday. {AP Photo/ Morning Journal, Patti Schaeffer)
·

Two killed in storm-related accident;
road washed away by flooding
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
state would help clear storm ager at· the state park. As for.
A late-summer storm sys- debris from roads and help the damaged road. "The
tem rushed through r.ural deliver 3.000 gallons or gua rdrail is hanging in
northeast Ohio on Saturday, drinking water to Lisbon , midair," Hum said.
ripping houses from their where flooding txoke the
Abqut two dozen campers
foundations, tearing a 65-foot main w&lt;ller line to the village. checked out of the 40-camp·
deep crater into a road. and
Five highways in the site location Saturday. Water
causing an accident that Lisbon area were flooded or covered the sand leading to a
killed a couple on the Ohio closed because of storm swimming beach .
·
Turnpike. authorities said.
debris.
Six inches of rain fell
David P. Martin and Laura
Rushing water left · a hole hetween I0 p.m. Friday and 4
L. Murtin. both 50 and resi· abuut 65 feet deep and 125 a.m. Saturday on this area
will be 5 to 10 MPH from the
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
dents of Plain City in central feet wide in state Route 45 about 60 miles southeast of
north.
Temperatures will stay near Ohio. where killed when near Salem in Columbiana Cleveland, and more heavy
E1•e11ing (7 p.m.-Midnight) 57. Skies v,;ill be sunny with 5 their car hydroplaned on County. and
car that rain was poss ible through
It should continue to be MPH winds froni the north roadway water during a plunged into the crater landed Sunday, according to the
cloudy. Temperatures will
heavy rainfall about 9:25 on its top in a creek. The two National Weather Serv1ce.
hover at 63. Winds will be 5 turning from the northeast as a.m. south of Youngstown. people inside the car were not
Columbiana
County
to 10 MPH from the north.
the morning progresses.
near th e eastern end of the hurt , said Lt. William Sheri tT David Smith said sevtoll road.
·
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Thompson of the State eral homes were pulled off
The
State
Highway
Patrol
HighwilY Patrol ' s Lisbon their foundations. forcing
Temperatures will remain
Temperatures will hold
said
the
.
eastbound
vehicle
post.
about 60 people to sleep on
around 59 with todav's low of steady around59. Skies will
ran ofT the road, ~rossed the
"We' re not sure if they cots and the floor at a shelter
58 occurri]lg around 6:00am.
Skies will be partly cloudy to be sunny with 5 MPH winds median and hit a we·srbound were on the road when it .set up at David Anderson
cloudy with 5 MPH winds · from the northeast turning trw:k filled with gravel. The washed away or if they drove High School in Lisbon.
One man was presumed
from the north .
·· from the east as the afternoon truck · tlipped over and over the i::lifT down into the
dumped
its
load;
forcing
a
ravine,"
Thompson
said.
dead
when his home was car1\Jesday, Augljst 31
progresses.
shutdown of the turnpike durRising water swept away, ried off. but he was found in
ing
the
cleanup.
part
of the entrance roadway a tree unhurt, auihorities said.
..
The truck driver, David E. to ' Guilford Lake State Park,
''One minute the creek was
Kaminski, 36, of Ravenna, located in Columbiana rising slowly and the next
escaped injury.
· · County
'so uthwest
of minute it was a tolal disas:
Gov, Bob Taft declared a Youngstown.
ter." Smith said.
state of emergency in
"It was nonstop rain and
Federal di saster officialS
Columbiana · County, .the thunder aod lightning," said were determining property
hardest hit area. He said the Bob Hum. campground man- . damage estimates, he said. ·
the Chicago offices of ABN
Curry learned from a
Amro North America, and no neighbor that notices were
listing for the mortgage com- tacked to her door, and
pany could be found in Ohio. strangers were coming and
•
A spokeswoman for ABN going, taking pictures.
Amro told The Columbus
"I was helpless. I was cryDispatch that the company ing," she said. "The commanwouldn't comment on pend- der · said, 'Let's get you on
ing legal matters.
Cleveland State does not
emergency leave to straight· . CLEVELAND (AP) - A Black Law Students Association.
Curry, who worked for en this out."'
man who served a prison · Jackson qualified .for law . require criminal-background
Carmel
Health
Mount
Curry called state Sen. Ray term for murder but was later school with a bachelor's checks on law-school appliSystems . before deploying,
accepted to law school has degree in criminal justice from cants and does not have a rule
was married on Jan. 31, 2003 Miller, of Columbus. for again run afoul of the law. the University of Maryland in barring admission of applicants
and activated less than a help, and the lawmaker dis- authorities said.
2002. He earned some of the convicted of serious crimes.
cussed her case with the
month later.
·
"He should've spent. more credits while serving eight
Jackson has been charged
Curry was at Fort Stewart, mortgage company.
time studying," said Lakewood years in prison for murder.
with
conspiring to rob
"I told them they should be Police Chief Tim Malley,
Ga., when the house she'
He moved his wife, Dawn, Charter One branches in
wanted became available, so ashamed of themselves," whose
oftlcers
arrested ·a native of Warren, and two Westlake on May 15 and
she gave her husband power Miller said. "It was the typi· Stephen C. Jackson, 35. while daughters to Cleveland Cleveland on Aug. 18.
of attorney to sign her name cal bureaucratic response: he allegedly changed hundreds because CSU's was the only Authorities also said he was a
to a $127,000 loan from ABN 'We have the right to do what of dollars in ink-stained bills law school to accept him, his . suspect in two other bank
we want to do."'
from a robbery into quarters at father, Carroll Jackson of holdups since May.
AMRO Mortgage Group.
Curry was granted · another a car-wash coin machine.
Soon ·after her husband
Temple Hills, Md., told The
Jackson's father said his
closed on the house in April . emergency leave recently
The money from ··the rob- Plain Dealer in an interview daughter-in-law c.laims she
2003, the military began after hearing from friends bery was stained red 'when a published Sunday.
knew nothing about her hustr-ansferring her. She says th!! and neighbors that the lock dye pack exploded. Police
"H~ wanted to be a lawyer; band's crimes, but police S!lid
paperwork couldn't keep up on her hou$e had been said they found $457.50 in that was his goal." the elder otherwise and charged her in
quarters wcighi ng 23 pounds Jackson said. "I thought he the two robberies.
with the four transfers and c hange~ .
that she didn't receive pay for · She arrived home Aug. 14 in ' Jackson's pockets and was moving in the righ)
Authorities said some of the
three months.
,
and found a letter from the about $2, 185 in bills on him direction. I' just don't know bank loot wa' wired to prisons,
what happened. I cannot including a prison in. Virginia,
Vitale said Curry has been mortgage company that said and in hi s car.
able to verify that version of the foreclosure would stop if
Jackson wa~ elected by fellow make heads or tails of it."
where ·Stephen Jackson's
·
events to him .
He said his son doted on his younger brother. Thomas, is
she continued her mortgage students a' president of
Curry sent ABN AMRO payments and paid the com- Cleveland State University's daughters, ages 5 and 2.
serving time for drug !f.ttlicking.
copies of her orders after pa~y's $3.256 in legal fees.
missing two payments, but
"I told them f . would not
left her husband to deal with · accept this agreement," she
·the company because she was Said, and she requested the
about to head overseas.
"I didn't follow up," Curry Army Reserve 's help.
Lt. Col. Duncan A,4ckland
s'aid. "I should have."
of
the Ohio National Guard's
Last November, the mortgage company filed a fore- joint staff judge advocate
closure complaint in Franklin olfice said it sou nds like
County Common Pleas ABN AMRO has the right to
do everything it has done.
Court.
."It doesn't seem unfair for
Meanwh'ile, communication · broke down with her . the lender to seek the remedy
husband, who had told her he it lawfully can seek,"
didn't know if their marriage Auckland.said.
Lane Double
But, he added: "You can be
would survive her deployment, she said. Eventually acti ng within your rights', but
Reclining Sofa
she lost contact with him .
not doing the right thing."

VVeathertonecast
Monday, August 30
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

A humid and cloudy morning. There is a good ~han~e
we could see some rain.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 71. Winds will be· 5 to
10 MPH from the north.
Afternoon (/·6 p.m:)

It will be a cloudy after·
noon . There is a slight chance
we could see ,.some rain.
Temperatures will linger at 71
with today's high of 74 occurring around 2:00pm. Winds

a

Reservist struggles to stop . .·
mortgage company from foreclosing
COLUMBUS (AP) - An
Anny reservist who tends to
critically wounded soldiers in
Iraq is desperately trying to
k~ep a mortgage company
from taking her house away
while she's gone.
Sgt. Yyvette Nicole· Curry
was working with the 629th
Forward Surgical Team last
spring when she began
receiving worrisome reports
from friends.
When she returned home
on I0-day emergency leave
in May, she found a life in
disarray - her husband had
left her, family members ·
were taking care of her four
children, ages L0-16. and a
mortgage company was foreclosing on her home.
During leave, Curry filed
for divorce, called the mort·
gage company and made
arrangements for her kids.
Then she traveled back to her
station 30 miles · north of
Baghdad, where her unit tries
to keep wounded soldiers
alive long enough .to get them
to a hospital.
But Curry is now back on
another emergency leave,
after the mortgage company,
ABN Amro Mortgage Group,
continued its foreclosure proceedings.
"I have to fight f9r this
house," she said sitting in the
two-story house in west
Columbus. "It's the only' stability that my kids have."
Lt. Col. Dale Vitale, an
Anny Reserve lawyer helping Curry, said she:s making
an honest effort to pay her
debt.
"She's not a deadbeat who
didn't pay. It was impossible
for her to pay," he said.
·No one could be reached
for comment on Sunday at

•

Bank robbery suspect was
ex-convict enrolled in law school

&gt;

.
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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Ohio High School Football Scorn
St!turdey'a Re1ult1
Akr. Buchtel 33, Massillon Washington
20
.
Akr. Coventry 2I , Norton 6
Akr. SVSM 21, Rave nn~ 13
· Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 33, Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E. 6
Atwater Waterloo 37. Doylestown
Chippewa 1
Barbenon .&amp;9, Akr. Kenmore 10
Berlin Western Reserve 12, Vienna .
Mathews 6 •
Birmingtlam (Mich.) Brother Rice 28.
Hilliard Davidson 12
'
Brookfield 34, Conneaut 14
Can. GlenOak 42, Ak. Centrai-Hower 7
Chardon NDCL 26. Chesterland W.
Gsauga 1~
Cln. AnderSOn 30, Riml11on 7
Cln. Colerain .21, Cin. Elder 3
• Cin. F»rlriceton 22. Cln. Winton Woods 20
Cle. St. lgnattu~ 43, Cle. Benedictine 6
Clyde 23, Ottawa-Glandorf 13 .
Day. Dunbar 21, ToL Scotlt4
E. Can. 32, Hanoverton Unfted 14 ·
Findlay Liberty--Benton 48, Kansas
Lakota 6
Garrettsville 31, Middlefield Cardinal 7
Girard 35, Niles McKinley 28
Hamler Patrick Henry 40, Leipsic 7
Haviland Wayne Trace 45, Paulding 6
Hilliard Darby 69, Gallowav Westland 13
Jackson 55, Wellston o
Kirtland 24, Beachwood 13
Lakewood St: Edward 23. Cin. St. Xavier
16
Leavittsburg La Brae 35. Cle. S. 20,
Lima Ba'th 20, Lafayette Allen E. 0
Lisbon Beaver 29, Akr. E. 3
Lodl Cloverleaf 16, Can. Timken 7
louisville 27, Poland ·13
Louisville Aquinas 20, Akr. Spring. o
lucasville Valley 9, Waverly 7
Magnolia Sandy Valley 47, Salineville
SOuthern 6
,
Massillon Jackson 20. Cuyahoga Falls
10
Massillon Tusl aw 35, Rittman 14
Minerva 54, Alliance 27
Minster 21, Spencerville 10
N. Lima S. Range 42, E. Palestine 15
Napoloon.27, Defia nce 7
New Middletown Spring. 26, Campbell
Memorial14
l'epper Pike UniVersity 38, Gates Mills
• Hawken 7
Portsmouth Notre Dame 54, Harts

(W.Va.JB

·Local Golf

Rio soccer holds
Mason's Roush wins ·u.s. Mid-Amateur
Qualifier
off Missouri Baptist Mid-Amateur Qualifier
Guyan G&amp;CC. Huntington, W.Va.
Friday, Auguat 27
·

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
RIO GRANDE
NAJA No. I Rio Grande
jumped out to a 4-0 lead
and then held on for a 4-2
victory over Missouri
Baptist in the final gaf(le
of the Rio Grande Soccer
Classic, Saturday afternoon at Evan Davis Field.
Rio Grande (2-0) got
the sconng underway

early on a goal by se nior
striker Simon Carey in the
ninth
minute .
Tony
Gri[fiths was credited
with an assist on the play.
Redcshirt freshman Guy
Heywood scored hi s third
marker of the-season-with
a goal in the 40th minute
g1ving the Redmen a 2.-0
advantage.
Heywood
stole an outlet pass from
Spartan goalkeeper Matt

Please see Rio. Bl

tournament · in Sea Island , Mitch Roush
72 (Medallsl)
GA. He joins amateur stand- Mike Koreski
74 (1st alternate)
out and West Virginia Steve Fox
74 (2nd alternate)
Amateur Open champion Tony Brown
74 (3rd ahernata)
HUNTINGTON - Mitch Pat Carter in the title tour- lan Patrick
74 (4th aHernate)
Roush 'of Mason earned. ney.
meda Iist honors at the 2004
Mike Kore ·ki was amo 0
Hatold Payne
74
U.S. Mid-Amateur Qualifier ..
. ~
;
nO: · David Jude
75
h ld P 'd, .
G . ' urilf _ tJve_,utber_, \\tth 74 sand IS - ChrlstopherTollir
78
. ed ~ &lt;~y at ·dal~
the ftrst alternate. Steve Fox, Bud Tate
n
111 Tony Brown and Ian Patrick
an . ounty
u
John Guenther
76
Huntmgton. .
,
. were named second through Travis Wood1ord
78
Roush shot ,1 on e-o\ er p,tr fourth alternates.
Robert Jividen
79
72 to wm th~ e;e n~. two
Guyan Golf and Country Michael Haynes
61
shots bett.er tha.n a handful Club is a par- 71 and 6.446 _ JohnBashlord
B2 •
82
Scott Griffen
o f . go II ers .. t0 earn a spo t 111 yards in distance.
Dattell Bryant
as
tht s year s champtonship
L....----..-------'
STAFF REPORT

spo ns@ mydai lyregister. com

c

.

Athens celebrates successful games
EDDIE PELLS

Associated Press
ATHENS. Greece - If any·
one de&gt;er.ved a party, it was the
people of Athens.
The flame went out on the
Olympics during a closing ceremony Sunday night that hon'
ored the birthplace of the games
. with an ebullient display of
Greek pride and symbolism, a
relief-filled celebration of the
ancient and the new.
Famed Greek singer George
Dalaras serenaded the crowd.
Dancers danced, arms folded,
legs kicking high, during an
enactment of a traditional Greek
wedding. Fireworks exploded
over the stadium packed full
with 70.000 fans who waved
twinkling strobes they were
given to light the show.
.
Hundreds o athletes from
many of the 202 countries that
participared mingled in the center of the stadium and paraded
their tlags ·- Canadian and
Swiss, American and Brazilian
- around the floor. They were
ringed by ·a ,cadre of security
guards, and a white security
blimp hovered overhead, just
two of the strong reminders of
how much the world has
changed since the Sydney
Games four years ago.
Later. the huge white torch
that burned brightly over the
stadiu'm for 17 days was lowered and ~~ymbolic remnants of
the tlame were p&lt;!ssed to the
people of Beijing,· where the
games will be held in 2008.
·
China's capital city put on a
. short ceremony_ filled with a
preview of what's to come.
.Chinese string instruments
played and red-clad. martial arts
performers romped around the·
stage. Elaborately clad women
wearing headdre!ISes walked out
on stilts. A giant. red lantern
popped up and, while a young
Chinese girl sang. a banner was
unfurled that said "Welcome to
Beijing ."
.China will have to put on
quite a show to match Greece, a
poor country that spent $8.5 billion to bring the games back to
their home. and often wondered
if the effort was worth it. ·
'The ·world discovered a new
Greece," said Athens 2004 president. Gianna Angelopoulos··
Daskalaki. who made it all hap·
pen with her fierce determin~
tioA to overcome construction .
delays and avoid international
humiliation .

.

Salem 30, Alliance Marlington 7
Sandusky St. Mary's 34, Norwalk St.
~aul 12
Shaker Hts. 38, Houston . (Te)(BS) Gult
Shores 14
St. Henry 38. Sidney Lehman 0 ·
Tallmadge 48, Mogadore Field 13
Tol. Woodward 24, Holgate 3
Troy Christian 19, Maria Stein Marion
Local12
Uniontown Lake 26, Copley 12
Van Wert 34, Bryan 1o
Warren Harding 21, Washington (D.C.)
Dunbar6
Wheeling (W.Va.) linsly 21, Steubenville
Cath. Cent. 12
.
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 40, Youngs.
Chaney 7
Youngs. 'Libertv 19, Struthers 13
Youngs. Mooney 26, E. Liverpool 0
Youngs. Ursuline 34, Youngs. Boardman
7

ur

Ohio College Football score•
Saturday's Results
Ashland 48, St. Joseph's, Ind. 7
Findlay 40, Tiffin 21
Miami (Ohio) 49, Indiana St. 0
w. Liberty 28, Urbana 27. ?T

Tornadoes win
TVC Hocking
Division match
POMEROY'
The
Southern Tornadoes claimed
top honors in the third TVC
Hocking
golf match
of the season,
this
time at Pine
Hills Golf
Club.
T h e
Tornadoes
(166) posted a team
Crouch
score
of
166, 'one
shot better than county rival
.Eastern.
Brad Crouch won the
medalist spot with a low
round of 38, three strokes
better than· Evan Dunn
(Eastern), Michael Owen
(Eastern)
and
Patrick
Johnson (Southern).
Trimble finished in third
with a team score of 173,
while Federal Hocking
placed fourth with a 191.
Miller claimed fifth with a
198, while Waterford fin- ·
ished last with a 209.
Eastern individual scorers
were Evan Dunn · and
Michael Owen with 41
apiece, Nathan Cozart shot a
42, and Jacob Warner posted
a 43 to round out the team.
scoring. James Will and
Ryan Nave shot 4~ and 46,
respectively.
Through three events,
·Eastern leads the Hocking
race with 12 points. Trimble
is second with II, Southern
sits third with I0, and
Federal Hocking is fourth
with seven points. Waterford
has three points, · while
Miller has 2 points in three
· matches.

The Olympic flame is extinguished during closing ceremonies of the Olympic Summer Games in Athens
. Sunday. The
. next
Summer01YJ11Pics will be held in Bejing in 2008. (AP)

Please see Olympics, 11

Olympic .Basketball

Defrocked priest attacks marathon
in third place
U.S. inen win bronze · leader, who finishes
.
.

.

CH,RIS SHERIDAN .

Associated Press
ATHENS, Greece - The
U.S. men's basketball team
can console itself with two
things: third place, and the
highest point total of the
Olympic tournament.
The Americans took the
bronze-medal game seriously Saturday night and earned
some revenge in a I04-96
victory over Lithuania.
Although they didn't get
what they wanted in Athens,
they didn't embarrass them·

selves in their finale, either.
"You want to win lhe
whole thing, but yo~ 've got
to cherish the fact that you
were able to win something," Allen Iverson said.
"You come all the way o1(er
here to Greece and then go
home with nothing? That's a
lot worse."
Defeating one of three
teams that beat them earlier
in the 1ournament, the
Americans got 22 points
from Shawn Marion. 15

Please see Bronze, Bl

ROB GLOUSTER

Associated Press
ATHENS. Greece _ A
defrocked Irish priest bolted
from the crowd and grabbed
the marathon leader about
three miles from the finish
Sunday. The Brazilian runncr wound up with the
bronze - and a special
award for sportsmanship and the former priest wa~
arrested.
Cornelius Horan. 57. was
wearing a green beret, a red
kilt and knee-high green

-

socks when he attacked
Brazilian runner VanderJ.ei
de Lima, knocking him into
the crowd. De Lima was able
to recover and finish, but
· was passed by two runners
about a mile after the incident.
"I was scared. because 1
didn't know what could happen to me, whether lfe was
armed with a knife. a
revolver or something and
whether he was going to kill
me." de Lima said.
"I don't know if I would
have won, but thing.s would

--------

have been different," he said.
"After that. it was hard to get
my rhythm back. It· really
distracted me."
The Brazilian track federation protested the result and .
sought a duplicate gold
medal for de Lima. but while
the jurors expressed sympa·
thy they said they couldn't
change the result. Brazil saiQ
it would appeal to spons'
inte.rnational
arbitration
panel.
"I'm not going to cry fo~
PIHH- Ptlllt, a1

�..
: ·4 Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

Monda~August30,2004

Monday, August 30, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

•

m:rtbune - Sentinel- 1\egt~ter

~arnhardt's confidence so~ring after special Bristol win

CLASSIFlED

•

end to his struggles.
his father 's final win here,
•
"We're not a championship- when he knocked Terry
winning team right now and I Labonte out of the lead on the
think everyone knows that," he tina! lap.
: BRISTOL, Tenn. - Dale declared.
The win was.condemned by
t:am~~ardt Jr. v'lcationed in the
My, how his tune has. the fans. who drowned
infield at Bristol "Motor changed.
.
Earnhardt out in Victory Lane
Spee_dway, running .wild with
Not only does Junior no~ as he proclaimed over the PA
bts childhood buddies, looking think he's capable of winning system that he hadn't intended
up every so often to see his the Nextel Cup title: he's con- to wreck Labonte. he simply
daddy drive on by.
fidem enough to declare him- wanted to ''rattle his cage."
· : His annual trips to Bristol self one of the favorites. With
Junior wasn't at Bristol that
Vo'ere a treat, starting with the two races to go before night, he had already returned
scenic drive through the NASCAR's· 10-race playoffs, to Charfotte atier competing in
mountains, camping on the Earnhardt Is in third place in the Busch race the previous
family van and ending-with a the standings, just 51 points day.
fantastic race.
behind leader JetT Gordon.
He's glad ·h~ missed it. The
It helped that his father won
NASCAR will reset the tield booing would have upset him.
nine times on the Tennessee on Sept. 12. separating first
But asked if he thought his
track, and Junior hoped to through lOth in ti~e-point fat her ever regretted the bump
!i(lmeday make his own .visit to · increments. The challengers on Labonte. he laughed and
Victory Lane.
will then race for the title.
gave an emphatic 'No.'
He did it Saturday night,
With a little momentum ''He probably hated that it
winning the Sharpie 500 and Eamhardt 's got it after was Terry, they went hunting
exactly five years to the day . winning both the Busch and together some after that,"
~_theJate Dale Earnhardt's Cup race arBri to! =·Junio-r--Junior said. "But I still think
l'inal Bristol victory.
has to be listed along side Terry . don't appreciate it.
: "There's a lot of memories, Gordon and Jimmie Johnson Terry's not that kind of guy.
Olis is almost like your back- as the favorites.
"Dale Earnhardt was," he
yard in a lot of ways," he said.
"''d like to think we are No. said. "Love him or hate him,
"He had some great races here, I, but Jimmie is strong. Jeff is he was tough."
'that's why this place is so ma~­ very strong. Them two cats
Junior is proving to be just
tcal to me. I've wanted to wm right there are tough," he said. as tough.
•
here so bad ."
He stood strong during a
"Burl hope I am right up there.
: The
win
resvrrected It is pretty much anybody's wave of criticism after he was
Earnhardt's
championship championship.~·
.
injured while practicing for a
bopes, which he h.ad all but
Earnhardt pulled himself meaningless sports car race.
declared dead a · month ago. back into the race by leading He accepts responsibility for
Stuck in a terrible sl ump and 295 of . the 500 , laps on the setback it caused to his
nursing serious bums he suf- Saturday night. When he was Dale Earnhardt Inc. team, but
fered while practicing for a in the lead, no one could chal- makes no apologizes for his
non-NASCAR
race
in lenge him.
extmcurricular activities.
.
California, Earnhardt saw no
It was very different from
And when it was obvious to
•

JENNA FRYER
Associated Press

Priest
from Page 81
ever about the incident,
although it liroke my concentration," de Lima said, "but! managed to finish and the bronze
medal in such a difficult
marathon is also a great
achievement"
, The International Olympic
Committee said. it would pre$ent de Lima with its Pierre de
Coubertin medal in recognition
of his "exceptional demonstration of fair play and Olympic
hlues."
: "I think the Olympic spirit
prevailed and I prevailed. I was
able to show that determination
wins races," de Lima said after
receiving his bronze medal at
{he Olympics' closing ceremony.
: "What prevailed here was the
Olympic spirit Never mind the
tesult of the appeal. I'm very
happy to have won this medal."
Athens police sources identified the intruder as Cornelius
Horan, who has been barred
from practicing as a priest for

from Page81
from Iverson and 14 apiece
from Lamar Odom and
Stephon Marbury.
. Just like their quarterfinal
victory over Spain, the key
factor was outside shooting.
After missing all five of their
3-point attempts in the first
half, the Americans made
eight in the second half. Four
carne in a fourth quarter that
the U.S. team closed by scoring 21 the final 35 points.
: The I04. points was the
tnost by any team in the
men's t.oumament, topping
the 102 the U.S. team sconed
against Spain two nights earjier.
"I think we ought to be real

or

Olympics
from.,.81
The three-week festival of
sports was tumultuous, as
expected, but' not for the reasons most people anticipated.
, Athens put the finishing
touches on its games with
only days remaining - paint
really was still drying in
i&gt;ome places when the torch
· was lit. But the city put on a
fantastic - and safe show, much to the surprise of
skeptics who fretted over the
country's readiness and security · issues almost from the
·day it was awarded the

.

While Greece shone, the
athletes, delegations and
even the fans were not as
well-behaved.
These games were marred
by doping scandals, booing

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1\egt~tef
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or. Fa~ To
992·2157

...

Sentinel

Word Ads

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

Dale Earnhardt Jr. (8) passes Jeff Burton (30) to take the iead during the Sharpie 500 Saturda)
at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn. Earnhardt won the race . (AP)
everyone thin his team was
struggling, he ,didn't deny it or
sugarcoat it or hide from it.
Instead, he set out on trying ·
to .fix it, all the while defending his team and the effort they
were putting forth.

Now he's back on track,
secure in being Dale Earnhardt
Jr. and living in the spotlight
that goes with it.
"I don't ever wish I was anybody else," he said. "There is a
lot of things I would change if

Rio
from Page 81
Fenn·essey, made a one-on-one move
and scored the goaL
Rio would carry. the 2-0 lead to
halftime.
Sophomore defender Courtney
Rimmer padded the Rio lead with a
goal in the 55th minute and fellow
sophomore Ben Hunter tallied his
first goal of the season in the 60th ·
minute, providing the Redmen with
4-0 cushion.
Missouri Baptist (1-1) would prove
to be a tough out, scoring twice in the
final minutes to cut the deficit in half.
Hernan Merino notched the first
goal for the Spartans on a free kick in
the 69th minute and Alejandro Pozzi
scored on · a penalty kick with three
minutes remaining in the game.
· The game was physical and numerous fouls were called. The R,edmen
were assessed three yellow cards and
senior defender Mark Fahey (Preston,
England) was eje9ted from the con- .
test when a fracas erupted. with 20
minutes left in the game.
David · Kelly was ·given a -yellow
card for Missouri Baptist and

· been worse, I guess.''
The Americans were saying · pretty much the same
thing.
Wearing red after 'their
replacement uniforms arrived
before Lithuania's; the
Americans opened an early
22-13 lead and created fastbreak opportunities with their
pressure
defen&amp;e .
But
Lithuania answered with
three consecutive 3-pointers
- one of which became a
four-poini play - · to take a
23-22 leild.
Tim Duncan stared at the
referees in disbelief after his
first foul, just as he had after
almost every call against him
during the tournament. When
he was whistled for another
moments later· on what
appeared to be a good call, he
stood.along the lane with his

in. the stands and protests by time to celebrate ·the Olympic
the teams. The misbehavior spirit and the Olympic hosts
extended right to the very that held the first games in
end, wh.en a man jumped out 776 B.C. and resurrecied the
of the crowd and tackled modern-day version in 1896.
Athens was only one of the
Brazilian
marathoner
Vanderlei de Lima. He recov- sites. The games also ma(_le a
cameo
appearanct&gt;.s , in
ered, and finished third.
"I think the Olympic spirit Olympia to watch the shot
prevailed, al)d I prevailed," put, and to Marathon to sfand
de Lima· said during a nc;ws on the spot where the race,got
conference, held in the bow- its name.
Mia Hamm was the U.S.
els of the stadium while the
flagbearer during this, the
. ceremony rocked on above.
The complaints came in no last of three medal-winning
fewer than six sports, most appearances 'for her at the
The
U.S .
notably in gymnastics, where Olyfllpics.
South Korea's protest of · women's soccer team won
American Paul Hamm's all- one of the 103 medals for the
around gold medal became Americans, surpassing the
one of a handful of unsavory U.S. Olympic Committee's
stories that dominated the goal of I 00 and easily outgames. Disgraced Greek distancing Russia, "''hich finsprint stars Kostas Kenteris ished second with 92 medals.
,and Katerina Thanou also
China was third with 63,
played a role, and a record and the Chinese already are
two dozen athletes were gearing up their Olympic
caught on doping Cases.
efforts, planning to lead the
On Sunday,' though, it was world when · the games are

at home. ·
In his closing remarks,
International
Olympic
Committee
president
Jacques Rogge lauded
Athens , a city that came
close to having the games
taken away because of massive construction delays.
"'You have won," Rogge
sai&lt;.l. "You have ' won by
brilliantly meeting the
tough challenge of holding
the games. These were
unforgettable,
dream

•

m:rtbune

To Place

been slowly §hrinking, was able
to get back into the race. But .he
lost several seconds as a result
of the auack, and eventually
was overtaken by Stefano
Baldini of Italy and Meb ~
Keflezighi of the United States.
De Lima finished third.
When the incident occurred,
dozens . of
flag-waving
Brazilian fans at the stadium
that marked the marathon's end
were watching the front-runners~ on a giant screen. They
suddenly went silent · and the
huge crowd gasped.
The police sources said
Horan arrived in Athens just
before dawn Sunday aboard a
British Airways flight
Horan was to be. taken to a
prosecutor on · Monday, the
sources said. It was unclear if
he would be charged or
remandeo for psychiatric evaluation.
on·Aug. ·16, a Canadian man
wearing tights and a tutu
jumped into the Olympic diving
pool after an event. He was
convicted of interruptipg the
games and sentenced to five
months in prison, although he
remains free pending appeal.

hips ,'~

ln. One Week With Us
R'EACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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..

the 63-year-old Brown
said. "We were in a slow jog
trying to get here ."
Strange stuff, but not quite
as weird as the Americans
dropping three games after
they had lost only two in the
previous 68 years. It's the
first time since pro players
were added for the 1992
'Dream Team that the United
States is going home without
gold.
For the Lithuan.ian · 1eam,
the defeat was the second in a
row after it won its first six
games. The loss denied them
a fourth consecutive bronze
medal.
"In general, fourth place is
very good for a country like
ours, but to lose the last two
games
hurts,"
Sarunas
Jasikevicius said. "Could
have been better, could have

positive about them and what
they did, the 'commitment
they made and the sacrifice
they made," U.S. coach Larry
Brown said. "I said this
before:· This is the greatest
time I ever had as a coach,
and I don't know if I've ever
been more proud of a group
of .people after tonight than
this §roup. It has not been
easy.'
·
The start of the game was
delayed 48 minutes after both
teams arrived wearing white
uniforms. It also included a
second half that started with
no coaches on the American
bench: Brown emerged from
the utnnel 50 seconds after
plar had started, and his
asststants beat him out by
only 30 seconds.
"They changed the clock
on us, and I've got two new

Bronze

.~ames.

the past decade. 'He once published a book called "A
Glorious New World Very Soon ·
To Come" that pre~icted the
world was about to end.
The attacker had a piece of
paper attached to his back bearing the message: . "The Grand
Prix Priest Israel Fulfillment of
Prophecy Says the Bible."
In July 2003, Horan, in a cos- ·
tume similar to Sun'day's, ran
onto the track in the middle of
the British Grand · Prix and
stayed there for mort; than 20
seconds, forcing Formula One
racers traveling at more than
200 mph to swerve .around him.
He was carrying a sign that
sai(!: "Read the Bible - the
Bible is always right."
British authorities sai.d Horan
also allempted a protest on
Wimbledon's Center Court during a rain break , and tried to
disrupt cricket and rugby
matches.
On Sunday, Horan · jumped
from the crowd, ran across the
street and grabbed de Lima. A
policeman following the leader
on ·a bicycle jumped off and
helped free the Brazilian:
De Lima, whose lead had

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I could go back - l think
everybody would .... But as far
as' my situation and how it's all
changed and how it changes
and continues to change and
will change in the future - I
look forward to everything."

Rackley Thomas was ejected from
the game.
Rio Grande out-shot Missouri
Baptist, 12-6 with an 8-1 edge i,n
shots on goal.
Fennessey recorded two saves in
the first half for the visitors. His
replacem·ent , Leonardo Capotorto,
had two saves in the second half of
action. Rio 's Andrew Moore did not
register a save.
Rio Grande Head Coach Scott
Morrissey was haPPY with his team's
performance. "I think we played really well today," Morrissey said. "I'm
pleased with the effort, we got the
changing ·of the personnel · in and
out.''
"It's a good win ·agai nst a team that
is top 25 caliber." Missouri Baptist
received eight votes in the NAIA Top
25 pre-season poll.
Morrissey was not shy about stating his disappointment over the way
the gali1e was officiated. "The thing I
was disappointed in more than anything else, and I don't ever really say
it a whole lot, I think the officiating
really let both teams down.''
Rio will head to Milligan College
Friday and Saturday for matches with
NAIA No.I 0 Mid-Continent and
Milligan.

back to the basket and the
referee while . a Lithuanian
player took his free throws.
Duncan stayed on the
bench for the entire second
quarter, which ended with the
Americans ahead 49-44 after
forcing 13 turnovers and
making eight steals.
"[ am about 95 percent sure
my FIBA career is over,"
Duncan said, . using the
acronym for the sport's international governing body. 'T II
try · not to share my experiences with anyone."
Lithuania started hilling 3pointers and opened a 65-58
lead in the third quarter
before · the United States
came back with an -8-0 run .
Duncari went to the bench
with his fourth foul with 2:02
remaining in the third quarter
and ' the score 67-67, and the

Americans led 83-82 when
he returned with 6:08 left.
A pair of 3-pointers by
Marion and Odoin came dur, ing a 9-3 run that put the
Americans up for good. and
their defense held Lithuania
to just seven points in the
final three minutes.
·
Lithuania went 21-for-37
.on 3-pointers but committed
20 turnovers and 27 fouls.
"We wanted gold, but I'm
taking anything right now.
That 's the way it is," Marion
. said. "'Everybody wants to
play for the gold . To come
back and be motivated for
(the bronze) was a big challenge for all of us. We had to
dig (jeep inside of us. We did
tonight. At least we' ll go
home with something. We
won ' t go home empty-handed."

games."

At the end, a chorus of
popular Greek singers serenaded the crowd and
150,000 ba,lloons were sent
skyward. While the music
blared, silver, blue and
white confetti rained down
as the athletes headed for
the exits, saying goodbye to
an Olympics that were spectacular and memorable, just Greek singer Anna llissi performs during the closing ceremony
like the city that hosted -for the 2004 Olympic Games at the Olympic stadium in
Athens, Greece Sunday. (API
them .

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Bu•lne•• D•v• Prior To

In Next

Publication
Sund•y Dl8play : 1;00
Thu,..day for Sunday•

Pap•r

5~ ~:::~.~~,-~~~:~':;~~
F 1
Sunday•

1:00 p.m.

Paper

• All ada muat be prepaid'

• • Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include complete
Deacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevletlons
• Include Phone Number And Addresa When Nnded
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Dayt

Irn

GM:4WAY

Oearlf:~~

POLICI!&amp;: Ohio Valley Publlahlng riMrvn the right lD edit, r.Ject. or cancel any ad at any time . Error• muat bt reported on the flrat day
will bt I'Mponalb'- for no mar. thlln tha cu.t of th•
occupltd by lh• trror and onlw- I~ flr1t lnnrtlon. We
not
any IOM or Ppen&amp;e that reeuht from lht publleatlon or omtaaion Of an ildVtlrtiMmant. Correction wilt be n'ladrt In the fir11 avallabla .ctltion. • Boll
a,.. atw.ya cttnfldentlat. • Current rate card appllaa. • loll 11181 aatata advartiMmentl ara aubjecl Itt lha Federal Fair Hou•ing Act o1 1968. • Thla
eca.pta only help wantH .Sa miNting EOE atandalrda. W. wUI not knowingly acc.Pt any advartlalng in violation of tha taw.

•PM=•

Trlbun~tln-'-R~taltter

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~~~~

ANNolNCEMFMS

WORK FltOH HOME
Home Based Business
Earn $200·$500 Prr
Earn $2 .000 and up FIT
Paid Vacations. Bonuses
740·441·1984
866·540·8097
www:workatcasa.com .
&lt;http://www.workatcasa.co

~~------· ,.J.

I

FOUND

FOR SALE

www.comics.com

A
Young·Man
seeks home only. Call after 8pm clothing, 8 foot slide truCk
Romance with/Woman of . (740)446-2886 .
camper, tools. Cash only.
any age J.G. PO Bmc '722,
Lasher Rd., RutlamJ. Ohio
Poca, wv 25159
'
LosT AND
(740)742·2821.

r

Set.Sept4ti1 136ASt.Rt

· .850, Rodney. Bam-? Oceans
Found : Black Lab puppy, 4·6 Aquarium bouncer, Daby

ml&gt;

Wanted: A place for a mon ths lound Herman- bed, toddler bed, strollers.
Chri stian Rock Band to Clicker area. {740)44~ ·1m3. baby clothes &amp; misc., horse

WANilD

practice and play. Willing to
give donation. Please call lost-Child's Pet .
Joseph.(7401441·1236 .

!0"'&gt;
3

GIVEAWAY

adorable . kittens,

reins etc., toys, llousehold
Large items, car tires, little Tikes
~hl te·Ral:!bll taken by mls· swing set&amp; movie.s:
take from the Mason County _ __c.._~-'----Fair Rabbit Barn {304)674Yard sale
0095
Burgers
iO
382 Jackson Pike
10
SAL.F:
.
Thurs . Fri . &amp; Sat.

weeks, litter trained , cute,

playfuL

Calico,

r

~::::::=::::==~·

oralige .. .,

-y~GA~,:.~·s: ;~ I:.:.E.-_.11
;:.

(740)742-2954

tL./2.
·

5 cute &amp; cuddly long-haired
kittens. 6 weeks old. Call
(740)446·7484 01 (740)645·
0891.

'

Call B.D. Construction for all
of your home improvement
needs. roofs .. decks, siding,
etc . reasonable prices, tree
estimates, call (740)9922979

e

Sept. 2,3&amp;4 .

9-5

~~y~

I

DR¥WALL
tnsiall, Finish Painting,
Carpententry, Bathrooms ,
Residential, Commercial.
INS UR ED
NOTHING TO SMALL
Flat Prices
Steve·(740)388c8731

--

4 family garage sale 3919
Addison Pike (aprox. 4 miles
from At 7) Thurs. &amp; Fri.
9/2/04-913104 from 9-4 Rain
Frea kittens. call (740}388· or shine
086,7 after Spm.
-=a";u-ag_e.:_S_a_te_ 9_4_6-G-a-ge-R-d.

4-family yard sale. 1 1/2 mile
out Story's Run Ad &amp;
Hobson 1.2.3.4 Sept. HulchTable· Vech's· Truck toppersMore.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 's For Sale ........................................:..... 725
Announcement ...........,.......................... :..... 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ........................:.......... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorles .......................... 760
Auto Rapalr..................................................
Autos .for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles........................................ 550
B.uslness and B,ulldlnga ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Business Training ....................................... t40 ·
Campara &amp; MotQr Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcal/Refrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. .........................................610
Farms for Rent........... ,.................................430
Forms for Sale .........................................:... 330.
For Lease .....................................................490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................... :.................580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ...........................................B50
Glveaway................................................., .... 040
Happy Act. ......:.............................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wantsd .................................................110
Home lmprovementa ...................................B10
Homes for Sale.......................................:.... 310
Household Goocla ........................................ 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlem ................................................020
Insurance .........;...........................................130
Lewn 1 Garden Equtpment ........................ aeo
Uftti0Ck ......................................................B3b
LNt and Found ...........................................
Lota • Acraaga ............................................350
Ml~eettlneoue .•.·...........................................170
Mt-ttaneoua Merchandtse .......................MO
Mobile HOlM Rapalr....................................aeo
Mobile HOIMI for Rent ...............................420
Mobile ~ for 8ale................................320
Money to Loan ....................................~••.•...•220

no

oeo

Motorcycllll. 4 wtwetn...................:......740
Mualcallnatrumenta .............:.......... :.....;.... 570
Pttsonlla .•.•.•••.••..•••••.•.••••...........•...............•oos
,... for ...................................................680
Pfutnblng I tteet~nta .....:.............................. 820

Ptllfllalonallarvl-................................. 230
RadiO, TV I CB AIIPIIIr ............................... teo

A... !~tate Wanted ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 310

8cfloOia lnltructlon................,..,_,,,••••...•._.150
IMd , Plant I Fertlllar .............................. 8511

11tuat1oona Wentld ....................................... 120
8pect for Aent ............................................. ..ao
Sporting Qaocll ...........................................520
BlJV'e for 8ele..............................................720
Tl'uekl for Bale ......................., .................... 7t5
· Upholatary .................................................. 870
Vane For 8alt...............................................730
Wanted to luy ............................................. OIO
Wanted to Buy. Farm Suppllu .................. 820
Want.d To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to.Rerlt ............................................470
\'ard
Galllpolli.............. ~ .....................072
\'ard Bale ,_o~JIIIddle ......................... 074
Yard Bar.Pt. Plaaunt ................................ 078

C&gt; 2004 by NEA, Inc.

613 Elm Street, Racine,

- - - - - - - - ,Patriot dh. Avon , dolls ,
Ohio Sep11&amp;2 9:00am-? In
Kittens- male &amp; female. to antiques/glassware, lots ot case of rain will be 8-9th.
good homes only (740)992-' misc. Sept.1-3 Rain or shine
1108 lea\le message.
;:9·_:_?_ _ _ _ _~- 9/1, 3 family,' large women's,
kid's clothes. knicttknacks. 7
Large Yard Sale 15 Ann pc. dining room suite, cOm·
Lab/Shepherd miK pup to Dr.ive, Route 7 South , Sept puler desk. piano. Home
Time 8:30am til Interior, etc., follow sings at
gdod
counlry . home, 2-3·4.
(740)992· 7869 '
5:00pm.
5-Points.

aa...

To Do

I

YARn

sa le - furniture,
Moving
household items, clothing, 8'
slide in truck campe r, tools,
cash only, Lasher Rd .,
Au11and, Oh , Friday 27th·?,
(740)742·2821
Yard sale· Sept. 1, 2. 3, 243
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Oh
45769

r

YARD SAl.EPr. l'u:AsANr

,
,..,
10. . . - - - - - . . . , . . . ,
HaP WANIID 11110
11
"-------·
Qri\le
CLASS A COL
DRIVERS
NEW PAY SCAL,E
•Earn between 45·50K
•Min. 2 years eKp.
•Home Time on Weekends
•$500 sign-on bonus
•Start at 36 cpm
•95% No touch freight
•NO FORCED NYC

"--"'··~

nur

nt'IJ..-tEU

Have room in my hOme for
one lady, comp lete ca re . for
info call Priscilla [}(ldriJI at
Dodrill Private Home Care
(740)388·8193 .

Nice 2 bedroom . large bath
with washer/dryer hookup;
living room, large dining
room, dry basement. out of
11ood plain , corner lot on
3 bedroom, 2 baths, fire- Gen. Hartenger ~arkway.
place. On 4.3 acres. In the Price reduced. (740)992COlmt'ry,
$75,000.
1166·

Scenic
view _30:_:5_7--~--­
Call (740)709· NO
OOWN
PAYMENT

3 s1ory house in Pomeroy, 5
bedroOms. lr. dr, kitchen , 1
112 bath, full basement w/3
rooms. aPprox 3/4 acre. 4
decks, 3/4 newly remode led ,
0% down possible wlfinanc·
ing
available ,
ser1ous
inquires only, $65,000,
(740)206·!_060.
3BA, 2BA , 5.129 acres,
Green Tow nst1ip close to
·SChooL Priced to sell . More
inlo (740)446·7377.

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI

1100-234-6982

An real estate edvertialng
in thil newapeper Is
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act ol-1968
which mttkes It Illegal to
advertiH "any
praference, limitation 1M'
discrimination baaed on
rece, color, religion, HX
famlll81 atatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limita,tlon or
discrimination."
This newsp11per will not
knowingly accapt
advertlaemena. tor real

eltate whkh It in
vkllallon of the ltw. Our
reeder• .,.. hereby
Informed lhM au

HI \ I I .., I \I

sage.
I \ I I 'I l l \ \1 1 \ I
" I I~\ If I ..,

A leading pravider of support HNICII to Individuals
with MR/00 has vacant
poaltlons for LPN's. For
more
Information, call
Dorothy Harper at Middleton
Eatatea (740)U6·8145 01
(740)446·4814 . An Equal
Opportunity
Employer

F/MIDN.
An Excellent way to earn

money. The New Avon .
Coli Mantyn 300-882·2645
AVONt AJt AtOUI To Buy or
Shlrtoy Spea11. 304676-1429.

Sell.

J

Possible on this 3 br, i batli
home , country setting,
secluded on a paved road,
Racine area. B acres:
approximately $650 per
month, clean . ready to move
into, shown by appointmen1
on~. call (74Q)949·3124, No
calls after 9pm please.
·

www.orvb.com
Home Listings .
L1st your home by calling
(740)446-3620

View photos/into online.
4br, 4bath , Hud Home.
$8,900 Won't lastl more
Homes available! tor listings
800·366-9783 ex 1797

riO

60 vending machines/
excellent locations
•II tor $10,995

'I

1 112 story house with basement, located in Chester,
Oh. Asking $42 ,000 . Call
(740)667-6620

-------By Owner US 35 in Mason
County. 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (~
Bedrooms) ,. Large Sun ·
Room 12x32, all new
Siner' will stay with the sick. Carpet, Full Basement 1!2
Satellite Installer
Days only. Call (740)367· acre lot $47.500 (304)675·
Seeking exPerienced satel- 7582.
2933
lite installers. Must have own
II \ \ \ ( I \ I
equipment, truck, liability ::.:i;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Cqmpletely
Fl:etinished
insurance.
SBCA
~ Great location , in
Certification
required .
BUSINIRi
Gallipolis Ohio, 3 bedrooms,
Contact Shawn (614)476· ..__oiOProiiioiiiRI\JNITYiiiiiiiioiiooorl 2 full baths. Price to · Sell
9669 or fa• re~ume to .,
Now. Phone 1740)446-9539
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
(614)476·3446.
60 vending machines I
excellent locations all for
S1 0,995 (800)234·6982

WANI1lD
TO BUY

·Used Banjo or Ukelele.
(740)992·2529 . leave mes-

"'""P"I""'I

HoMES

Part llish Se.rtel &amp; Collie. Moving sale till' all sold, ful· .
Blond, 2 years old. To good niture, household items ,

r
I

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
Borders $3.00/per ad
l,!iitlll
Graphics SOd for small
$1.00 for large

dwelllnga achlertiMd In
thll new.paper are
...,.u.ble on •t' equatt
opportunity baNs.
Home&amp; from
$10.0001, ·
Forclosure. VA Hud tor listIng 1-800-749-6106ex 1709

EW LISTING . Secluded
Bedroom. 3 Balh with
autiful River View.
ocated Close to town
ode 825 or cali
740)441·0 323.
Bedroom. 2 Bath. River
iewl AccesS . Private
at Dock in Gallipolis. 1
ere lot. Code 90303 or
II (740)446.QS31.
Bedroom Brick Home .. 2
ath, 3 Car Brick
nattached Garage. 2
tory outbuilding. Code
270!1 or call (740)446·

566 .
Bedroom. 2 112 Bath.
lose to Holzer Hospital
n Spring Valley. Code
13 or call (740)446·
624.
Bedroom. 1 1/2 Bath,
ull Basement.
iddleport. OH. Code
17 or call (740)992-'
743.
.
Bedroom. 3 Bath, Pool.
10 acres. Bidwell, OH
ode 42104 or' call
740)388·9839

r

MOIIII.Jl HOMES

tURSALE

�Monday, August 30, 2004 .

www.mydailysentlnel.com

down

446-4110.

.

992-2526.

New Qakwood mega store 2 bedroom upstairs apt .

Russ

I

•

112 acre lOt on Tycooo Lake.
County water, no septic, bar·
dars Eagle Road. A~king
$8,500.00 (740)247·1100

2.26 Acres located off
. Sandhill Road In Wal.nut
Creek Subdivision, Point
P'leaeant.
For Info call
(740)446-78B()

Applications being taken tor
very clean 1 bedroom In
country setting yet close to
town. Washer, dryer, stove,
fridge included. Water and
garbage included. Total elec·
tric with AC. Tenant pay alectric . $300 deposit, $375 per
month. No pets. No smok·
ing. 740-446·2205 or 740·
446·9585 8sk tor Virginia.
BEAUTIFUL

APART·

3 adjolnl11g lots in Gallia Co. MENTS
AT · BUDGET
Aprox . 28 acres, 2 with large PRICES AT JACKSON
hOuses. . Call for more info ESTATES, ,. 52 Westwood
(740)245-9549.
·
Drive from $344 to $442.
sa acres hunting land on Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call

wv.

Rou1e 35 Henderson

74().446·2566.

Equal

~~=t~;;'· F~~r Bar, or~~~=~

2002 Pontiac Grand Prl• GT
Sedan. Fully loaded, Bose
stereo, sunroof, leather, CD
player,
30,000
miles.
Redflre metallic, .$17 ,000.
(740)245-041 0

Drlva.ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. {740)446-7300

2003 Dodge Neon ,· 4 cyl.
Pork custom freezer meat. automatic, 4 door, , loaded .
Call R&amp;R Packing 740.245· 11 ,000 miles. CO player.
$7000. Call (740)441-0337
9440 reference Blacks.
or 645·6153
St1 Qf 4o14: .lllll SOQK~
knoc k off wheels, triple '7~ Ch.Welle Heavy Chiwy
chrome $300. Brand new. 454, au1o, $14,000 .00. 65
Pnone
•
.
Plym. 440 six pack molor,
17401446 2316
$12,200; 72 Demon- 38~.
Turbo muffler- Stainless, like
auto,
$2,600,
phone
·new, $30. Cold-a1r intat.:e (304)773·5679
$20. Phone (740)446·2316.
89 Taurus S,H,O. , 5 sp.,
TV's from $101, OVD·
needs · little work. body in
Players,
Video-Games , great shape, needs luel
. Computers. Ectl now avail· pump, cooling fan assembly,
a~e for info call 800-366- runs good, new clutch,
9850 ex M655
$800, 740-742'· 0507.

$45,000. Day 740·645-1306 _H_ou_s_in_g_O_P_Po_r_1u_n_ltv_
.-evening 740-256-6574.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
WANTED
Townhouse
apartments,
n&lt;:livldual looking to bu
and/or small houses FOR
and or possibly leas
RENT. Call (740)441-1 111
elusive hunting rights t
tor application &amp; Information.
roperty in Meigs County
hio. Prefer acreage 5 Furnished efficiency apt. tor
cres and larger. It interest rent. All utilities Included. Block, brick, sewer pi~s .
, please call (304 )372 GeorQes Creek Road S500 windows, lintels, etc.,CJa:01je
.004.
per month . ~740)446-4868.
Winters, Ala Grande, OH

r

919

2nd

would you lose if there was a fire?

We can insure your valuables! •
For a Free Quote or Appointment
CQ/1:

Rocky Hupp Insurance
Servic4!~ ~
Box 189 • Middleport

·Financial

Mobile home lot for rent at (740)446·3945.
Johnson's Mobile Home Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
Park. (740)446·2003.
room apartments at VIllage
and
Riverside
Nice level lot 50x190 on Manor
High St. in Middleport All Apartments In Middleport.
hookups, out of flood plain. From $295·$444. Call 740.
Price reduced to $22,000. 992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities
Phone (7401992·2782. •
. Pt . PI ea.x~n
_, 1,Large 3br m
I{ I ' I \I "
Downstairs,
C/A
&amp;
Deposit
Appliances,
Req uired leave message
Hou~
(304)875· 7783

FOR

RENT

New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
0% Down Payment even (740)446·3736.
with less than perfect credit
Easy qualify!ng. Own don't One bedroom garage apanrent.
Local
company. ment, kitchen furnished,
Mortgage Locators. 740.. $400, (740)992·3823
992·7321.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
1 Possibly 2Br House, par- Are now taking Applications
tia lly furnished In New for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Haven $275 Rent, $250 ~pplications are taken
Deposit, No-Pvts (304)882· Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
3652
Located at 1151 Evergreen
2 story home for rent. 3br, Drive Point Pleasant, WV
$500/monlh. CoH (740)446· Phone No is (304)675·5806.
3481
E.H.O
2br House In the New Haven
Area. No-Pets, must have Twin Rive rs Tower is acceptReferences. $400 month, ing applications for waiting
$300 Deposit
Serious list 1of Hud-subsized, 1- .br,
Inquires only (304)882-2760 ~~~tment, call 675-6679

3 bedroom house in Tuppers

i

He .

S INC.

Contractor
Residential &amp;
Commercial
Houi!e6, porches,
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations
7 40-949-1606
740·591-1053

4br
lor $300
rent Indeposit,
Mason
$450House
month

-r:r--:o:-----.,

r,o

HolmfoLD

low-llllitiititiiiii--r'

2 Tiny Toy Poodles. and an
AKC Shehie fema le, obedience 1ralned
In 4-H .
(740 )441 _9478
--:-:----::-:-:--:3 Miniature Ponies for sale,
Kid broke, also Cub Cadet
Riding-Mower w/36 Inch cut
1304)675·4877 .

2400.

::c.:c:.........-.....--:-::-.....-:-::2

Home· 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, •
cai" gar. 51 ,000/mo plus sec.
dep. Bulaville Pike. Bsmt
Ap1· 2 bdrm, 1 batn,
$600/mo plus $600 sec.
dep. BulaviUe Pike. Both
available
lmmedia1ely.
Includes an utilities excepl
trash. References and
emtliovment info necessary.
, Call (740}446-3644 tor more

into.

New Home- 3BR, 1 bath,
al1ached garage, No pels,
roferencoa
+
deposit
rtqulred . $500. (740)4462801 ,
.....--::-:-:-.....-......---:::Nloe 3 bedroom' . Langsville
area . $400.00 deposit.
$450.00/monln .. No Pets.
HUD approvoG , (740)742·
2210
·

3

~*!room,

2

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

let me ]o 1: for y ou l

liiDI'S PIITIIB

Hill 's Self
Storage

-

tu- ond untur-

ENGINE DR'S

Pomeroy

1356 College Rd.·

beside Larry's F.ruit Stand

&amp; Push

Generating Systems and
Roi-Air Air Compressors
Open 8:30-6:00 M·F;
Sat. 8:30-2:00 9'12-1033

IJI.......

Ht'gh 8l Dry

I

I SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

2000 Chrysler Voyager V-6,
AMIFM cassette, air, loaded
53,000 miles, excellent con·
d~lon. $9,500 (740)245·
5157

ii[i:iafr-M:":"OillR...,,..CY~a,_FS/~~~
W~ ~

4

·~

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

condition has new back tlre

jjStl1,000~,.;;1304;.;.,ol~67~5":'·7":'6.;,53;..._,
rlloA~.,~~
I"'Uft.

.3ALI'..

I

BUILDfRSint

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

R.B~

Trucking
HAULING:

• Limestone
1

,l.'i;l
( 1111,1rurlio11

2001 · Harley
Davidson
Heritage Springer 1169
miles, Blue Ice, lots of
Extras call (304)675-7273
98 Honda XR1 00 In Qood

BISSEll

New General Standby

$850 Call1304)675-5666 or CD/Casset1e, ·
Chrome
304675-6112
Wheels,31inchtires,Extras . - - - - - - - - - ,
iii""-~~:-:"~..., $;1,000 OBO (304)682·
'l)~·
FOR SAu:
2439
f{IJIII- ,lliii,i
OR 'flwll!
2000 Dodge Durango AT,
''Iow, 360 moor,
t
cdlcas1999 Fifth Wheel, new car- Yo:n
·pet, woufd lrade for mobile . sette, leather.
$11,800
home, or sale $12,500. OBO. (740)258-1616 or

I

'

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Parts
.

1998 Jeep Wrangler Sport,

FOR SAUl

Quality work for a fair

Mowers, Chain Saws,

Soft·Top, 4.0L, V6, 62K, AC,

• ~,\NS

. Syracuse, OH 45779
740-992-0122

Warranty Repair •

Vin]l $i4ing
R~Mc~m~ntfVindowl

Room Additions
Dtcks
Blown lnsullllion
Pole BuUdings
Guwtgu

Barnhart
Builders
30 yean experience
•New Homes
•Log Homes
•PostFnuae
-complete KemodelinK

•Replac:emeat Windows
•Roofs
Commercial ODd
Residentlol

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

0

price
All work guamnteed

Master Certified ·
Mechanics Briggs &amp;
Stratton . Kohler,
M urray, MID All
makes &amp; models $1 0.00
orr any purchase of
$20.00 with this ad.

F"'

11M.

·

·

r1V
.

I

Auros

.

"--•"*iiii&amp;iiiiuiill_.·

11173 !lh -

fool
Prowllr
(740)245--.

compor· 28
$1,500.

1180; hinging pto..- 16 S500 Honda'o, Cllovye, ~R;,;..c:.;
· c.;.;;,.r"",""
_t_l_ o_n_o_l
1
ooch: IUtt bod $128;
~ l rnor.~ tor-tlotfngO
bod 1550.
800-38llll 13 ox V717
VolllciiiCom~r
21·foot
~ Apptfonoo
Batmon Troll-l.llo, Fu,_,
· 78 VIne 8trMt
11118 Vol!lwagon · Bug . AC, SIOVe, Rofrlgorolor,

L.oolco )10011, runo )10011. 1lll+et l -

Artztmo
cor. .
(740)9112-1483.

·2-

·1

$3,1100. rogulor l
1 hill (31Mje7S-111111or (31M)6113-

-a

2 bod&lt;oorn - - ' tor wringer
Wll dO l="'ftll"~"'tZZI:I:"'l=~.,Air.i:::::I
ront In ' -· 1200.00 rapOirs on mojor brondf · ln~-o1~
. dopoll1,
$330.00/monlh ohop or II your- - -

....nor..

IWIIIIIHT

WATIRPIIOll FIIIQ
UHd Furr&gt;turt- 130
4-'....,_
ond troth. oufll- i!ulovlllo Plq _ , . 1880 Ofdo - · · •Jm_, .,....., Looal rwlentf"1:81 turclonl lnoomo 10 quollty.
• .
• 4 door, runo good. $7!0.
(7..0)378-6111
ooucltM, motlllllll,- (304)875-5812.
nllltod. Elllblllltod 1~75.
oro, grow monumontl, ------:--:-..._...- call 2• Hro. (740) ...e.
One bedroom .,..nrnont, mucll ntlft (740):448-4782 Cora from 11100 Pollee 0870, Rogoro Baaamont
no Pf!l. In Pl:&gt;m.ror. Golllpoflt. Ol1lo Hro. 11·3 . . _ . , . FO&lt; llotlngo col Woi1rproot1ng;
(740)992-!858
(M-F).
1-800-J:49-311M EXT 3901

~~

u--guar-

I

'

No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.
1·740·843·5382
r--:::--:-::-:-~"1

.

""'l

CJ\IE:.F, r Wl-0 N£\11':1&lt;.. ""'
VER.Y GOOD IN SCIENCE'!

I Wml '&lt;OU .\0 WO~WITI-\
Tl-\( C:MPLO't'EE~ ON 11-\EIR

TE.I&gt;\1&gt;\ ~IRI'i TI-\~OU6+\0UT
~£ C.OMI'AA'( 'NILL ~~=--~ Lfo...T£11'\TO 1~£(&gt;

P"(,(£,

Cl-\t:I"\I~TRY!

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

CTLy!
So HOW
BE.CA.US.E ..
COME YOU'RE ... WELL .. .
. ;n Ll BUHr· BECA.USE
lNG. AND
T HA.T's HOW
STEALirlGo
YOU
5ASES.?

WIN .

81LLYn STOP
fRATERNIZitlG

;'

WITH THE

sss ~ ·

• • - · • -.

·:'

r~

"

PEANUTS

HA!

SOMEDAV WE'LL LAU6H
ABOOT ALL THIS ...

Sun. Closed

Dean Hill '
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

BETTY
I ~INI\ASMY

1 ~€C0/11E l.ESS
&amp;&lt;Jl,.D AND

TOITS~L.

Al)lle(TUROUS

HAlR G!a::&gt;WS SACK

l-800-822-()417

••E
·
MIIIIIDIIIICE

~!:NG11t ..

SO IT /111GHT
NOT9EA
MID~IF€

CRISIS,..
AF-rulALL

ie?AH-

IMY~

II'S A

MlD·HAII2

,...

CRISIS'?

•

PubliC NoUce

Shop
~ty
Classlfleds!

Persistence, effort and fbve of accomplish ment will bring you greater succ·esses than
usual in the year ahead. When you see
something you rea lly want to achieve,
· you'll be prepared to pay the price.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Being with
old time friends 1n familiar surroundings
will giYe you the greatest p~asure today.
It'll be like Slipp1ng into comlort8ble, wa rm
and cozy slippers that can 't be replaced.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0&lt;:1. 23) - Vou are far
beHer 'equlpped to handle dillicult assignments than you may realize, as you'll soon
discover today. The ease of your accomplishments might come as a great surprise
to you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Special
knowledge and expertise !hat you 11ave
acquired oyer a long period ot li me
through eKperience and hard work may be
used quite ad\lantageously today and
rewa rd you handsomely.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - You
cou~ be in tor a pleasant surprise today
when you discover somettiing that would
have been costlv.to most will turn oullo be
tar less expensiVe for you because of your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Today's
81/enls could sarwe to further solidity bonds
with an imwrtant and special relaliOnship
you already treasure. 11 Could be with your
spouse or with one 9f your oldest friends,
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Although
your workload may be a bit heavier tt)an
usual today,. owing to things thai you will
be doing tor others, you will .end up derN"IMQ great joy and happiness hom your
input.

PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) -You have
the gifted ability today to see hope in situations where others may onlY see doom
and gloom. The attrlbute.will help you manage any diHicult situation with surprising

.

bonds today.
,
TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) - The light
and lovihg touch that you'll be able·to bring
to all your imiOtvements. as well as apply

!IL.et:P IN. OR E:AT 1'...
5LISr:P IN, OR t:AT?

COifSti'Uctlon
Bry8nRMYM
NewHOIIIM,

r---r-----~~,----1~

Room AddltloM,

0

B8rqe~,Pole

In oompl-- with
Rotiden~lll
S.CIIOn 11111.01 ollhe
New Coosttuctioa
Ofllo Rev!Md Code,
Remodolinl
1M llela8 Cou
Security c . 1101111 ollievlelon ~
Molton SeiiJon
740-9'12·3452
011 - . . 11.._ 2,
C4
740-742-1085
201M,
It 11:00 AM In ,___-:
............:::'
1M llelga County
Auditor'•
Olllce,
S.Cond . Floor, ~·
County Cowthouae •
Heney Plltl anopenlop on day
8oerd
and mldnlahl tlblft.
ol~.
7441-66'7-6329
&amp;'30

'lllur'lllrth&lt;fll.y:

ARIES (March 21-Aptil 19) - CurTenls
are presently stirring that will bring your
family or 1hose you love much ck)ser
together as a unit than ever before. You
could see the first signs of forging lighter

GARFIELD

Public Notice

AstroGraph

ease.

lib

FAI!I! I!ITIIIATUI

0

... Ilencl Antique
•nd Fumlture

0

R11t01:111on .

Rellnllll, Rlpllr,
llt2-1111

GRIZZWELLS
:I"~ "ftmWII A. UtiE.

. CARPENTER
. SERVICE

--

~w-tlf£~

. . J ••

._,.,_
• 'lloll . . . . ,..,.,.
•3 ....... "". . .

.............. a.a
""~!.kll

•New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling
J

..Iif

\(.C. YOUNG Ill
' I!N211

·:a-..-4
Jloi&amp;M

1«m · ~· !~~

I4'D . iiUt~t:• :'

Ohio

•

•

tonic tor all those with whom you share
you r day.
GEMINI (May 21-.Jun¥ 20)- If you have
been plann1ng to take a shopping trip
sooner rather than later, today would be a
good day to do so. You'll have a sharp eye
tor both bargains and beauty that'll stand
the test of time.
CANCER (.kone 21 ·...... 22) ~
you won 't deliberately seek any contests
today.' you'll be bener than uguat at handling difficUt challenges that might arase
As a bOnus. you'll dertve bolh pnde and

""hough

SOUPTONUTZ

ft!EM~~~~-­

....... ,$$ • •

to serious situations today, w1ft be like a

acclaim.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Once you make
a commitment, your companions will learn
today that they can bank on yoo to follow
thfough on it regardlet~s ot difficult~&amp; that
·migh1 arise. Respect Yml be your reward.

' RIIIOre
. K*tll IIIKeV

YOUNG'S

=""'""

40 IOC member

18 Playa orole
Carthage
20 Ice-cream
42 Uon'a
. aervlng
mane
22 Correcl
43 Bradley or
23 Smallnoact
Shorff
24 - of thumb 44· Vlctorton
25 Wading
coiffure
bird
45 Meldon
26 Bu1lato Bl- 46 Boxing
27-Walked
wino
28 Smidgen
47 Rocehorn
29 "Fargo"
parent
director
50 Arm the
31 Davenport
alarm
35 Mows
52 Platona'
37 Egyptian
org.
boy-king
38 Flow out
39 Bettie toctlc
41 Wal'tl
agalnot

The Spanish have come up with what
seems like a clever way to stop drivers
from speeding. Someone approaching a
junction too quickly causes the traffic light
to turn red.
We have speeders in bridge: players who
overbid. They make a weak two•bid with
only a five-card suit, or open a weak
three on a six-bagger, or overcall on
emaciated values. They hope to win mora
on th e slot machines than they lose at the
roulette tables.
This deal occurred duri ng a match
between Italy ancl Norway at the 1997
world.champlonships in Tunisia
At the first table, the 11alian North made a
· boring pass. Ah9r th at. South bought it in
two spades . Maybe East opened one notrump, ami South ove rcalled two spades
(perhaps showing spadeS and a minor),
Possibly · East opened one diamond,
South bid one spade, and North raised to
. two ·spades. The contract made with an
overtrick (it could have been two) attar
West led the diarriond jack.
Probably you've worked this out already,
but just ln case , the Norwegian North's
two-diamond opening showed at least 4by Luis Campos
4 in the majors and 3-10 high-card
Celebrity Clplltlr cryptogtame tre auted trom Quoteliont by tamoua ~. pat Wid~
points'l
.
·
Each •ner if1 the dpher .wxls tor anolhef.
East. Altre(Jo Versace, overcalled with a
Todsy's clus: 0 ~Quais W
natural two no-tru mp. South might have
" U RDGO
Cl
PKMGGM
OKX
YNGII
passed because he has good. defense
against that contract, or sentect for three
spades, but he jumped 1o four spades.
OZGD
Cl
VKXGVKEE
PKMH
PKCQ
East doubled on th e way out.
On a spade, heart or diamond lead, the
YJL
OULZ
DY
TUPLJMG ."
contract would probably have succeeded, ·
· but Lorenzo Lauria found the killirlg clubAYMCGM
PKLPZGM
VYV
~GPRGII
queen start: two down.
The snag with the Spanish sch~me is
· that law-abiding drivers are forced to stop
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Telling stories on 111m is wllall decided 10 do In
by one speedster.
lile, lo keep aliVe, and to 1ell people who I am ' - He~or Babenco

prepar~ess .

HOWARDL
WRITESEl
••IRII .

Bulldlnge, Roofa,
Siding, Decke,

Q

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

~:~~:~:~y S©i-.~M-"t.tfs•

:::

- - - - - - 111"1 ~J CUY 11. ~ - - - " - . . . ; ,'Rtorraho- letftrs of
four ll!romblocl word1
low to form four llmptt

0

By Bernice Bede O.ol

Parts

Dirt
1 Ag Lime
740-985·3564

Pass

·Tu~•d•~Aua. 31,2004

ENEMY~!

Auto

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restocklng late Md.&gt;l
and Arter Market Rtrts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

Pass

G

I

Kltchena, Drywllll
AMore

1

c.-.

Fiopotr.e?S-73ee. r.., -.
2724
1br.AI*lt1tet~ ln-- ouiOmltlc IQMMonllo Corto 88, , _
Pt. PI
nt nc&gt;polll driWI. tolrlgeo• po1n1, _ . .._, ~
dop NqUirod HUD IC "-&lt;! f11r1, gaa oncf o1oc1r1c rolloya, M,OOO, (740)742- n~;;;
740 1412200
range~, U«Mddoi*' and 2710

ront,--·-

P"

.....

-htyor ut 1800: Ule
18Ge Colomon Clloylnno
fftgldofra IIICic - . $5001 Pl:&gt;llco lmpoondol Pop-Up Comper_ $3,000
orldryef' 1-1211: - l l u l t : h C.roll'rucl&lt;oiBUV'o
lrom (31M)875-5752

1 Nelroom, WUhor/d~r
(740)445-73111
,_,., I211C11moitlh dopoott
roqulrod. (740)441-1184.
~o Applloneo l

~

Sand

*fl'llll$

EU)I

ltack

.

TI-\ORtolf&gt;..PPLE, I lf\INK. &amp;:TIER

II lid

1-an-saoe-.
nnanctng, so ._. aamo oo

Moytog

THE BORN LOSER

n Mon-Frl9-5

Whtdey~s

East

2 NT
Dbl.

An-• to Prwvlauo Puzzle

CELEBRITY CIPHER

dEIIILEII

-=-_

_____

_

GOOI&gt; Nh15 is TtiAT
YOU l&gt;ti&gt;N'T C.Ar&lt;~Y ANY
~\t
OF T~t 5~C~l&gt;ING
,--....usrAns tN .Tti~
f:L~CT IOftl,
AftiYwAY.

·SYRACUSE SMALL

820 East Main Sr.

L awn Tractor

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975
Manning K. Roush
Owner

,..,•• DlfiJJN

I

r

UkAI

T~t

BARNEY

Lawn and Garden 'Equipment is our
·business, not our sideline

IMPORTS
Athens

r

i

204 Condor Street

:"ttorth

2.
Pass
Pass

Clever idea,
honest drawback

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

45771
740-949-2217

98 Dodge Dakota 3" body &amp;
suspension lift, standard, aJr,
Canning tomatoes U-pick 70,000 mllea. $4,000 080.
$3.50 a bucket Rowe Farm. (740)256-9031'
Bring containers. {740)2474x4
4292
.
FOR SALE
Sweet corn , for sale $1,75
dozen .. Bring your own con- 1997 Fofd F- 150 4 x4 Lariat.
tainer. (740)949-1316.
t t4K, black, leather Interior,
FOR SAU.:
cld player, $9,200 QBO,
(740)992-2932

$200 llkAI new. (7&lt;10)245-

nllltod, oocurlty dlpoolt
7
,.qulracl, no Pf!l, - 22 18
_ _ .._.· -..-----btdloom llouaa In
Qolllpollo
13!0/rnonth
cMpoott ,.qu~Nc~, I740I-"l·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST- -

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Racine, Oh10

West

Opening lead: "'

Snapper

Gravely ·

29670 Bashan Road

FRUITS &amp;
___
VEGETABI...ES
1.,-llliiiiiiiiliiiiii-"

F.Qu!PMENr

T.V:o S40 IICir, couch 175
1101&gt;; tlbiO , • _ .. 175;

Pass

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

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

j

5eol8

oport·

4•

(304) 273-5321

Dollbl1wldl. 'Alton.,.., no caon. Vlul MUter Cord.
2
rotor...,... llrfwo • 111111 1M olol.
$400/montn, S300/dlpoolt.
Rid mtlol bunk 111C1 with
(740)388-0011 .
bunk baard1 &amp; mattr1u,

1 . ··• 2 ~room
.N
_

South

-~
•

~~~ .

t

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

Ravenswood Chiropractic
out of PAINTINGI
Center

202 Clark
Chapot
Road,
Pl:&gt;rter,
Ohio.
eenooJ
(740)...e-7444
ba111,

AKJ86
tO
t K Q42
.. g 8 7

Free Estimates

Tree Service

Adorable Minil!lture Collies.
2 males, 2 females, $100 2001 F-150 suPer Crew
Lariat 4x4, 53,000 miles,
each.
(740)441 ·0865 or
excellent condition, loaded.
(740)645-4155
$21,000. (740)388·0151 or
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab (740)339-0564.
puppies. Shots, W9rmed &amp; c8_6 - R
' --M-o-de_I_ M-ac- k-. - ];-rl-pl-e
dew cl aws removed. $30().. frame triaxle log truck. Good
$350. (?40)441-0 130·
condition.
740·441·094 1
Full blooded Ronweiler pup- 740·645·5948.
pies. Both parents on preen·
96 Chevy 1 ton duellie, crew
ises, tails docked, shots,
cab, 454, $11 ,500; 96 5·10,
wormed. (740)245-5017
4 cyl , $2,500, (740)9925025
.

Appliances,

Frot

Foundatlm!£, Basements, Floors &amp; Wa!ls

South

.
•

Specializing In Poured Concrete

20CIO Dodge 9)(1. cab Diesel
Dually flatbed . $22,000.
(740)448-9317.

ll'lll""--:::-----,

~182.

. ·,

high don~estiic 111-m::
labor costs
require us to
outsource the
production of
this week's
comic.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

740·992·11 89

• Moi!Ohon Corpol,

2 bod&lt;oorn, likAI new,
alr. l7401440-2003

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

Where

41 .Indy ....
INI
42 DofNia
7 1040 org,
45 Vlollora
10 Geologic
48 Ballpark
dlvlalon
• llguro
1 1 - down
49 Taking
lmu1od)
odv•tt&amp;g&amp;of
13 llurno and
51 Rolatlveo
Allen , e.g.
53 Novelty
14 Uaea
54 Uncanny_
microwave 55 Moon or
1 5 Beyond the
planet
limit
56 To's .parlneJ
16 Curly letter 57 Patient's ·
17 Horae barn
need
19 Snake River 58 Whale home
locale
21 Oflahore •
DOWN
ioland
22 Pari oiTNT 1 Tarboosh
23 Soul food
2 Some CDs
26 Arcane
3 Engrossed
30 Worn-down 4 Name
pencils
tor a parrot
31 Nol worth
5 Before,
aIn combos
32 Aussle
6 German tllle
Jumper
start
33 Husband
7 Theory
of Fatima
8 Haste
34 Keats opus
9 Fair (hyph.)
35 Dove'a
1 t Band
shelter
Instruments
36 Appear In
12 Type
court
otlarm

East
• Q7
• A Q
t A9763
• A J 6 2

Q tO

•

Once again,

ltatalfllla
CNI l'llutall WaDI

SEAl IT
CONSTRU(JION
Roofing • Siding Painting- Gutters Decks - etG-. ~ For Fast Courteous
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Call... Dennis Boyd

1993 Nissan pick-up, 4 cy l.,
5 sPeed, 160K, 'driven daily,
$1500 OBO. (740)992-65 11

Recondi1ioned ·
and
Guaranteed .
Washers, r10
F.
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
ARM
Refrigerators, Some start at
w
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St, 1740)446-7398
800 Ford . 35H~,
live
hydraulic 3pl hitch. New
Kroehler Sofa, LO\Ieseat, paint, very · good conditton.
large Cllalr, Queen Ann $3150 OBO. (740)367~
styftl chair, 3 tables , matchlng Lamps. Uke new all for Tand8m axle equipment
S12oo OBO. Antique 1950's trailer 18 H. dove tall
·Blonde Oak Table w/4 wlramps $2,200. 740-441 Chairs. refinished $200, 0941 74()..645.5946.
1950's Kitchen Cabinet
w/orl)6gl7n5-al2503pain~ 5200 call
Llvi;s tuCK .
(304
" no anawer
•
leave mes11ge or call
(31M)5113-Q244
5 year Sorrel Quarter male
- - - - - - - - papered OJIC. disposl~on,
Uke new aota. chair wtth well brolcan, great barrel ,
ollon111n, rock&lt;lr. coctctall reining. gymkatl potential.
IBble lend-· Allwk:Mr, $3,000.17401-"1·1013.
llkAI now. Rattan pedestal
gtaoa top tabla wtlf1 4
padded chalro. 7oi0-448-

L ~~ 1-87~48..,.
~

Used

Call Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

(.15•
_-oiThiiiiiUCKSiiiiiiiiio-,.1
t'OR SAUl

17401256 6

For rem: Houae in Gallipofis
2 BR. No pets. (740)379· Good

MONTY

87H417

this coupon

1 Evergreen
4 Weto~lly

K 5 4 J

West
• 9 4
• 985~:12
• J 10 8

~sa,;gre-~~----,

'---GOOOJ---·r

Central Heat. Central Ak,
·1304)882·2858
'

· Henderson,- WV

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

JONES'

95 Z·26, 350, auto·, T·tops,
· leather, dark green, tan inte-

1 Wood Pellet Stove, 4yrs old

Room and Board ,at Cozy
3br in Syracuse, Ohio No Hollow. Monthly and weekly
Pvts, 5500.00 a month Hud rates available. (740)245Approved 1304 167 5-5332
9549 for Info.

MYERS PAVING

,3G

Khartoum Ia

08·311-fi.l

Ta~e the PAIN

---------

FtfRNSfED
RooMs

Plains. $4....CO.OO nionth, plus
deposit and utilities. No pets .
(740)667·3487

Bring

740-843-5264

92 Corsica V-6, new ti res ,
brakes, paint (burgundy)
rJ.mS great, looks great,
$2,700, (740)742.0509 .

tURSALE

Ave .

Pomeroy Eagles
BIN&lt;;O 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
. 6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00

IF YOU RENT

ii

montn .

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

·2;;:4.:;:.
5·::50:12;,;1•
. ~-, rlor, great shape, $7,000,
Lots tor sale in Mercerville, 4 Furnished efticlency1· aU utili· Ciia!i-11:.;74;.;:0;:
acres. good building site. ties paid, share bath , $150
PETs ·
(740)742-401 1 leave mes$17,!500. (740)256 -1 825

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1993 Olds 88 excellent condition, AIC, tll1, cruise. new
tires . &amp; battery. $1,500.
(740)245-5948.

' Dried
Cherry
Lumber
1995 Chevy Lumina V-6,
• 2 bedroom. 5 minutes past (304)n3·5878
AM/FM cassette. air, loaded
Holzer Hospl!al, CIA, wash56,000 miles, good condler/dryer hookup, appliances
· JET
SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
. tion . $3,500. (740)245-5157 .
furn ished.
$460/month ,
AERATION MOTORS
Stock models at old prices, deposit req~lred . (740)441- Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
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~where
You Get Your nood. $45b per month, no NEW AND USED srEEL t6ather. with extended war·
pets, reference + deposit Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar ranty, 46,000 miles. $10,500
Money's Worth•
required . (740)446·2801 .
For
Concrete,
Angle. OBO (614)65().9738.

_ _.·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Moore. 5017

owner.

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in
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Security
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~r

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�Page 86 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Monday, August 30,

2004

Elarton tosses shutout against White Sox
CLEVELAND (AP) step up for my team."
where he went 1- 1 with a
Scott Elarton downplayed his
Cleveland's Ben Broussard 3.15 ERA in three starts.
first career shutout, though was. hit by a pitch in the
He went 0-2 in his first
his new Cleveland indians eighth from Neal Cotts, and eight starts for Cleveland
teammates were impressed. . Matt Lawton had a pitch from until defeating Detroit 5-4 on
Elarton pitched a two-hitter White Sox staner Jon Garland July 28. In his last eight
and .Casey Blake hit two of sai l past his head in. the first. starts, Elitrton is 3-1 ~. with a
Cleveland's four homers in a
"Let's just say that Scott is a 3.8 1 ERA.
9-0 yictory over the Chicago good teammate," Wedge sai~. . ''Scott has handled the ups
White Sox on Sunday.
Elarton was warned by and downs and shown steady
Travis Hafner and Ronnie plate umpire Ed Rapuano, but progress," Wedge said. "All
Belliard also connected for maintained his composure . the little things are starting to
Cleveland. Blake drove in He allowed Crede 's single to add up."
·
.
four runs.
center, but easily finished his
Blake put Cleveland ahead
"At this point in my career, third dreer complete game with a two-run homer in a
I'm not caught up in num- and first since Aug. 27. 2000, three-run second innin g.
bers," Elarton sa1d, "but a with the Astros at Montreal.
Hafner singled and scored on
shutout is nice to get."
It was the fastest g&lt;lme in the home run . Jody Gerut
The right-hander allowed Jacobs Field history at I hour, later doubled and scored on a
an infield single to Willi e 56 minutes.
sing le by Coco Crisp to make
Harris leading off the fourth
The Indians moved one it 3-0.
•,
and a one-out single to Joe game ahead of Chicago for
Blake and Belliard homcCr;de in the nin.th in his finest second place in the AL red in the fourth to make it 5. performance since reaching. Central by winning for just 0.
the major leagues in 1998 the third time in· 14 games.
Hafner opened the · sixth
with Houston.
The White Sox have lost with his 24th homer, but first
"Scott was outstanding," eight of II .
. since Aug. 14. He added a
. Indians manager Eric Wedge
Blake hit a two-run shot in two-run double off Mike
said. "He was in co mmand the second inn ing and led off Jackson in the eighth to make
the whole ballgame."
the fourth with hi s 24th . it 8-0.
Harris hit a slow roller that homer against Garland (8Blake followed-with an RBI
second baseman Bel liard I 0). That gave Blake homers double to tjnish the scoring.
Hafner went 3-for-4 with
fielded at the cut of the grass, in three consecutive at-bats,
but he could not make a including a ninth-innin g three RBis. and three runs to
throw. Harris was erased on a drive Saturday night against break out of a 4-for-33 slump ·
.double play, as was Ross Jon Adkins.
(.121 ).
Gload, who walked to open · Elarton . walked one and
Garland · allowed six runs
the third.
struck out six, .including and 10 hits in seven innings.
"Scott pitched a great ~ame, Harris and Paul Konerko He walked one and struck out
he/'ust kept throwing stnkes," twice each. The only hard-hit three in falling to 2-5 in his
Be liard said. "You love to balls off the right-hander last 10 starts.
play · behind a pitcher like were a sixth-inning lineout to
Notes: Chicago turned four
that."
third by Crede and a tly ball double plays and Cleveland
Through eight innings, to medium-deep center by two .... The White Sox won
Elarton (3-3) faced the mini- Gload in the eighth.
the season series I 0-9. .. .
mum 24 batters, but he hit
Elarton began this season Garland is 3-8 in 14 career
Ben Davis in the right knee 0-8. The right-hand!1r went 0- appearances
against
with 'the first pitch of the 6 with a 9.80 ERA for Cleveland .... The Indians
ninth.
Colorado in eight games and have Monday off before
"It had to be done," Elanon was released. Cleveland going to New York for a Cleveland .Indians second baseman Ronnie Belliard throws to first after forcing out Chicago
said. "Both sides knew it signed him May 25 and sent three-game series against the White Sox's Joe Crede at second base in the ninth inning Sunday in Cleveland. White Sox's'
Willie Harris was safe at first. The Indians beat the White .Sox 9-0. (AP)
needed to be done. I ~ad to him to Triple-A Buffalo, Yankees.

Residents want to
restore historic canal in
disrepair, A6

Wallace to retire
after 'os, Bt

Middleport • Pome),"oy, Ohio·
,otl'\1 "" •\ul ,,I :\u

lll~l)\\ .

1

\t(.ISI :; • .-•ool

CINCINNATI (AP) - For
six innings, Edgar Gonzalez
dominated the Cincinnati
Reds. With one swing, Adam
Dunn changed everything.
Gonzalez held Cincinnati
hiHess into the seventh, but
Dunn's. 39th homer on a 3-1
changeup helped the Reds
rally for a 6-2 victory over the
Arizona Diamondbacks on
Sunday.
"That was the only pitch he
gave me that I could really
hit," Dunn said.
.
Ryan Freel drove in the goahead run with an eighthinning single and the Reds
avoided a three-game sweep.
Gonzali!Z faced the minimum I 8 batters through . six
innings before Freel led off
the seventh with a walk.
Felipe Lopez followed with a

chopper to first baseman Shea
Hillenbrand while Freel was
breaking for second and was
credited with an infield si ngle
when Gonzalez failed to·
cover the bag.
"I didn't see the runner
going," Gonzalez said. "I
thought (Hillenbrand) was
going to go to second base.
Then I saw him look. toward
first, and I started too late."
That miscue cost Gonzalez
and the Diamondbacks.
'"it leaves a little bit of a
bad taste, but it will happen,"
Arizona manager AI Pedrique
said. "Late in the game, we
didn ' t execute defensively.
You're not going to play perfectly every day."
Sean Casey then hit into a
double play, but Dunn's twofUll homer gave the Reds a 2-

· College Football ·

I lead .
hitter Jacob Cruz followed Stephen
Randolph
was · Hancock matched his career ·
"I wanted that pit.ch down with a walk and Freel ground- scratched from Sunday's start high of six strikeouts by the

in the zone, but it was right ed a single through the hole
down the middle." Gonzalez into left lieldfor a 3-2 lead.
said. "I tried.to get him to roll
The Reds added insurance
over on a changeup and get a runs when pinch-runner Wily
groundball.".
· ' Mo
Pena
scored
on
Dunn stayed confident even Hillenbrand 's throwing error
as the Reds struggled at the and on bases-loaded walks by
plate against Gonzalez.
Shane Nance to D'Angelo
" I knew we'd get to him, Jimenez and Lance Cormier
eventually," Dunn said. "He to Austin Kearns.
made great pitches all day,
The game was scoreless
but you knew he'd make a until the sixth, when · Luis
mistake."
Terrero hit a double to leftScott Hairston tied the center and scored on Jerry
game with his 12th homer in Gil 's. bloop singl.e for
the eighth. off Todd Van Arizona.
Poppe! (4-5), who ended up
Gonzalez was demoted to
with the win.
the bullpen after his 3-1 loss
. Juan Castro started the at Pittsburgh last Tuesday left
eighth-inning rally against him 0-7 in seven major
reliever Mike Fetters (0-1 J · league starts this season. He
with a one-out single. Pinch- got another chance when

• Astros blast off Reds.
See Page 81

Bv TtM

MALONEY

.

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- A High Street resident
has had his vehicles broken into and
robbed twice now in one week, but
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Pniftltt
says the perpetrator will be caught.
Chris S. Scherfel, of 110 High St.,
awoke· 'Monday morning to find his

busine's van had been entered, and over · Another vehicle, belonging to a stu$1,000 worth of power tools missing..
dent. narn~d Brandon Black who was
.A wec.k ago, Scherfel's Jeep staymg wtthjL,Belghbor at -108 Htgh
Lt5erty was entered and robbed ot a S~ .. also ~as entered someume Sunday
camera and compact dtscs. .
mght or early Monday mornmg .. A CD
"Th1s type of behaviOr will not be player, COs and a case were stolen .
tolerllted in the Village of Pomeroy,"
Proffitt says his department already
Proftltt said. "We will seek the stiffest has potential suspects in the case.
penalty allowed by law when these
"We're right on it," he said. "We're
suspects are caught."
hoping for this case to be resolved soon.:·

OXFORD (AP) - Josh Betts
passed for three touchdowns and
ran for a score to lead Miami of
Ohio to a 49-0 rout of Division 1AA Indiana State on Saturday
night in the season opener for both
learns.
Betts. making his first start as
the replacement for first-round
NFL
draft
choice
Ben
Roethlisberger, led the RedHawks
to six touchdowns in the seven possessions he played. He
completed 17 of 27 passes to 'help Miami win its 14th
straight game, the longest streak in Divi sion 1-A.
·
The game started 49 minutes late because of lightning that
flashed near Yager Stadium. After kickoff, the RedHawks
wasted little time overwhelming the Sycamores.
· Miami scored on its first five possessions, including Betts'
scoring passes of 16 yards to Luke Clemens and 30 yards to
Michael Larkin. Betts also scored on a 1-yard sneak.
Ryne Robinson returned a punt 70 yards for a touchdown
and had two other.punt returns for scores- a 67-yarder in
the second quarter and an 82-yarder in the fourth - called
back by penalties.
. Miami tum~d the ball over on three consecutive possesSions after Mtke Kokal replaced Betts at quarterback. Twice
the RedHawks were moving in for scores but fumbled at the
Indiana State 8 and 20 yard lines.
.
Clemens was Miami's leading rusher· with 69 yards on
. nine carries. Martin Nance caught six passes for 75 'yards.
Betts also threw a 5-yard TD pass to Larkin to close the scoring.
Sidney Montford led Indiana State with 39' yards rushing
on 16 attempts. Jake Schiff was 12-of-21 for 104. yards an
interception.
.
Miami totaled 454 yards of offense to 204 for Indiana
State. The, Rej!Hawks averaged 43 points and 501 yards a
game last season, when Roethlisberger led Miami to a. 13-1
record and a win in the GMAC Bowl.
Miami will have a tough time extending its winning streak
to 15. The RedHawks play at No. 8 Michigan next Saturday.

'

'

fifth inning. He allowed one
run on seven . hits and two
walks in six innings.
·
Notes: Ken Griffey Sr., the
right fielder on the Reds'
1975-76 World Series championship
teams, ·. Bob
Howsam, Cincinnati's gener·
a! manager in that era, and
1800s pitcher Will White,
were inducted into the team's
Hall of Fame in pregame cer~
emonies .... Reds RHP Johti
Riedling celebrated his 29th
birthday. .. . Arizona catcher
Chris Snyder was hitless in
his last 10 at-bats before hiS
second-inning single. ..;
Hillenbrand's · error was
·Arizona's .J 07th of the season, tying a .club record set
twice previously.

Wesam· Construction Co .. Pomeroy, is nearing completion of
the new Tuppers Plains office of Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. The new bank, to be nearly identical to the office in
Mason, W.Va., will replace a branch office constructed in 1973
the Pomeroy National Bank, and will include an expanded
drive-through facility and an ATM. (Brian J. ReediphDto) .

Page A5
• Lena Evelyn Clark
• Julia M. Engle ,
• Helen Hood
• Robert S. Marcinko

Final preparations
_.,-,.....,......,
Chris Jones. 9, of Pomeroy was ·~aught in the Act of Reading• at the Pomeroy Library. "Caught
in the Act of Reading• is a photography contest sponsored by the MCDPL and is open to contestants of all ages. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
world. These moment~ could persons entering contest
Bv BETH SE~GENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Photos must be 3 1/2 by 5
be caught on film and displayed at the Pomeroy Library. or 4 by 6
POMEROY - The Meigs
• No more than 5 entries
The idea of the contest is to
Public promote reading of any kind, per person
County
District
Library is currently sponsor- especially by young people
• Entry form must accoming their sixth annual said, Wendi Maxson, Outreach pany each photo
"Caught in the Act of Supervisor for Meigs County
Entry forms can be tilled
Reading" photo contest.
Library System. Though the out at any of the Meigs
The object of the contest is contest is open to anyone of County -Libraries and all photo "cat.ch" people in the act of any age, in the past the major- tos will be on display at the
reading by taking theif photo- ity of the participants have Pomeroy Library the week of
graph. For example, some peo- . been children:
· September 20-25. All patrons
pie fall asleep in .bed reading.
The rules and guidelines visiting the library that week
Some folks sway on their front for the photo contest are as will be able to vote, one vote
per person per day.
·
porch swing while they read follows :
The deadline for turning in
the newspaper, hopefully The
• 35mni fii!JI · or digital
photos is Sept. 13, 2004. The
Daily Sentinel. Children often photos can be submitted
• Photos can be color, or Meigs County District Public
sit cross-legged on the living·
Library reserves the right to
room carpet or lay on their black and white
accept or reject any and or all
• Unmounted photos only
stomachs to react a book while
they block out the rest of the · • Photos ·must be taken by photos submitted in the contest.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-4-0
Pick 4 day: 6-7-4-8
Pick 3 night: 8-4-3
Pick 4 night: 8-7-7-7 .
Buc:lieye 5: 8-26-28-30-31

West Varginia
Dally 3: 0.5-0
Dally 4: 9-3-3-7
cash 25: t-5-8-18-21-22

WEATIIER

Show appreciation to your fair buyer...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

.
Please see Dave or Brenda at The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads mu.st be paid for in advance.
~

2 Col. x 5"
$82.00

Thank You

1 Col. x 2" . $16.40
=-;:I~

1"":""' ,-

~-~,,.

2 Col. x 4"
$65.60

L.. -~-· - - ' L

. ........, -

INDEX

Bv TtM
l:l PAGES

Comics

:.._..) ..__.

Dear Abby,

Obituaries

Sports

Weather

2 Col. x 3"

POMEROY - All six Meigs
County schools graded by the
state are· at least Continuous
83-4 · Improvement or better.
Two schools. Eastern High
Bs School and Meigs High
were rated Effective.
A:3 School,
Eastern Elementary, Meigs
Intermediate, Meigs · Middle,
A4 Southern
High School and
Southern' Elementary aU were
gJlKied Continuous Improvement
In addition to the overall
B1
grades, the local districts also
A6 have received the results
from proficiency tests administered to fourth-, sixth-, and

A:3

Classifieds

Editorials

MALONEY

NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.r

•

lOth-grade students.
The students were tested in
reading, writing, math. science
and citizenship .. Third-graders
were tested for reading only.
Following are the test results.
The numbers reflect the
· percentage of students who
passed each test. The IOthgrdders were tested for ninthgrade proficiency, while the
fourth- and sixth-graders
were tested for proficiency lit
their own grade level. .
Tenth grade:
Reading: ·Eastern, 91.2;
Meigs, 98.5; Southern, 97.7.
Writing: Eastern, . 94.6;
Mei~s , 94.8; Southern, 95.5.
Ma!h: -Eastern. 62.7; Meigs,
'

$49.20

2 Col. x 2"

'. $32.80

Borders and Artworlr
•

-·

--- -

- -----

Ben Coppick of Jeffers Paving and Excavating prepares to reconnect the. wiring in the scoreboard at Bob RobertS Reid in Pomeroy.
The scoreboard had been removed during work on the Lewis landslide site. and is now back in place in ·plenty of time for the first
game of the season. The Meigs Marauders play their first home
game Friday against the Athens Bulldogs. (Tim Maloney/photo)

Winners announced

..

,All Meigs County Schools Graded
Continuous Improvement or Better

Pace A&amp;

Calendars

,~·'If~~,
-

-on
:l SI!CI'IONS -

· 1 Col. x 3" $24.60

Breaking and entering is a fiftl].:
degree felony, carrying a potenti~t
sentence of up to-12 months in priso~ :
Proftltt also warned anybody w~~?
might buy the stolen power tools fro!!(
.
. .
. .
the thief. He sa1d recetvmg stole_!(
property worth more than $500also !!{
a filth-degree felony and carnes the;
same possible prison sentence.
-

'Caught in the act of. reading' Nearing _completion~

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

•

.Miami routs 1-AA
Indiana State, 4~-0

with stiffness in hi s right
shoulder.
"(Gonzalez) had really
good stuff, but nothing you
would think would no-hit us
for six innings. We should've
gotten to )\im a lot earlier. We
didn 't square him all day until
Dunn's two-run .· (shot),"
·
Casey said.
Gonzalez allowed a careerlow three hits and two walks
with three strikeouts in seven
innings.
"He was working faster,"
Pedrique said. "He improved
a lot in that area. He did a
great job, and he deserves
another stan. The way he
pitched today, I thought he
should've Won."
Cincinnati starter Josh

HH\\IIt\dllh-,4'1\lt thl,,iJ II

Pomeroy PD Investigates Vehicle Break-Ins~

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Dunn's homer helps Reds rally past Diamondbacks

.

89.4;
Southern,
76.2.
Science: Eastern. 86.0;
Meigs. 91.8; Southern, 79.1.
Citizenship: Eastern, ~6.2;
Meigs, 93.3; Southern, 88.1.
.
Sixth grade: .
Reading : Ea'stern, 50.0 ;
Meigs, 59.2: Southern, 49.0.
Writing : Eastern, 87.9:
Meigs, 86.6; Southern, 92.2.
., Math : Eastern, 51.5: Meigs, Jeff Snowden of Rutland . Mary Bowles of Pomeroy and Pam
Southern,'
45 . I . Harten bach of Pomeroy were winners of gift certificates award- .
65.6:
Science: Eastern , 45.5; ed by The Daily Sentinel at its bo&lt;/th at the Meigs County Fair.
Meigs, 59.9; Southern , 43.1. Snowden was awarded a $50 gift certificate for Fruth
Citizenship: Eastern, 56. I ; Pharmacy, Bowles a $75 certificate to · Vaughan's
Meigs, 63.1; Southern. 56.9. Supermarket. and Hartenbach a $100 certificate for Powell's
Foodfair, by General Manager Charlene Hoeflich. Jack King of ·
Fourth grade:
Reading: Eastern , 65.0; Pomeroy, Debbie CheValier of Pomeroy and Dewayne King of
Chester were winners of three-month newspaper subscripPl·r.e ~ Graded, AS
tions. (Brian J. Reed/photo)

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