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                  <text>OhiofaJJs

·Brewers shut out

to Pitt, Bt

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See Page 81

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BY TtM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'

POMEROY Meigs County
Commissioners are crediti ng new
safety programs and a full -time
employee dedicated strictly to handling workers' compensation for a
recent drop in time and money lost to
claims by cou nty employees.
Due to a history of a high number
of workers com pensation claims by
county empleyees, thfC Ohio Bureau
of Workers' Compensatio n has sent a
safety consul ta nt in an attempt to
reduce the claims.
Lisa M. Ke nney, who works out of
a state office in Logan, met with commissioners this week. as she does

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All machines
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25-YEAR LIMITED
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once every three months. She said the
county had only two new claims in
the most recent quarter, which is an
improveme nt.
·:overall , .it looks . real•ly, rea ll y
good," Kenney said.
Three
employees,
however,
remained off work, representing lost
time, which is what costs the county
money, said · Commiss ioner Ji m
Sheets.
"These claims don't look that bad,
except for the lost-time·ones,'' Sheets
said.
·
.
Sheets said the county has been
able to save significa nt lus t time simply by assigni ng Vicki Cundiff to
work full-time on hand ling workers' ·
_compensation claims.

WHAT IS A SEW &amp; SERGE SEWING MACHINE???

FIRST, IT IS A SOPHISTICATED
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NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
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WEATHER

A fall festival isn't complete without pumpkins. These were brought in to the Racine Fa ll Festival from the Morris Farm
Rutland. Here Avery King, 2, of Syracuse is s urrounded by the pumpkins. (Beth Sergent/photo)

at

Racine celebrates arrival of fall with annual festival

·,

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.THEY EVEN SEW LEATHER!!

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BY BETII S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEI'ITINEL.COM

.NOW YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL IN ONE MACHINE!
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BY TtM MALOI'IEY

This allows you to sew the seam and serge the edge of the
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you can tri.m the excess m~terial.

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necessiu·i ly mean th~) like it . A
Safety Training Day i, .to be held on
Oct. 21,. with morning and afternoon
sessions. and Kenney said employees
cannot expect to skip it. because if
they dn. it wi II be rescheduled.
Also. the class is being duplicated
in the morning and ofternoon. so that
county ufl'ices may r~main open by
sending hal f of their sw ff in the morning. anu the oth~r half in the anerno.oll. .
County employees al.so have to
form a sofety committee, fo r which
each building has to sen d a representative . The co urthou se did not send a .
·representative w the first meet ing, a

,,

·SECOND, IT HAS A
PROFESSIONAL SERGINCi STITCH.-••

•

The reporting time of injury claims
has been reduced from an average of
almost four day s to only two hours .
"That's helped tremendously."
Sheets smd.
C~ndiff was named safety anU.
health coordinator a yea r ago. Since
then, she has a1tended various training programs sponsored by the state.
and by doing so has earned the county a 2 percent rebate in its workers
camp premiums .
Kenney said Meigs County is in a
Premium Discount Program , under
which the county can save money by
having its employees participate in
trai ning programs.
County employees do not have to
pay for the traini ng. bu t that does no(

DuPont
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indudes new
water treatment
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81

Weather

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~ACINE - The Racine ·
Fall Festival kicked off
Saturd ay mornin g with a
parade that circled downtown
and ended at Star Mill Park.
The howling of firetrucks
signaled the official start of
the parade to the delight of
resi dents who lined the city
streets. Parade partici pants
tossed candy up onto the

sidewalk for excited cilildren
who' witnessed the Southern
High School Marching Band,
horses, tractors, floats and a
gigantic American flag that
required several individuals
to carry it along the route.
After the parade people
gathered at Star Mill Park for
~ music and to visit with
their netghbors. There were
games for the children to play
such as a a diu:t toss and ·

Please·He Fal. AS

POMEROY - The water
district s in Pomeroy. Ma'son
Cotmty and Tuppers Plains,
along with three more area
ui,trict &gt;. will receive new
state-of-the-arr water treatment systems as part of
DuPont Co-.'s $343 mill ion
settlement.
As many as 60.000 residents around
DuPont's
Washington· Worb plant on
the
Ohio
River
near
Parkersburg, W.Va.. sued
over exposure to the chemical C-R. also kn ow n as
amm onium
"per rluorooctanoate. or PFOA .
If the se ttlement is
approved by a West Virginia
JUdge. DuPont will ftmd :1 55
million study of whether C.S
causes disea~e in humans. If .
an independent . scien tific
panel finds such a li.nk.
DuPunt,w il l pay up to $23S.
million for medi ca l tests on
residents . .
DuPont will spend an addi·
tiona! S 10 million to remove
as much C-8 from the area's
water supp ly as possible.
That includes bui.lding state·
of-the-an water trr-a tment
plants for .com munities in the
two

~late~

.

"That\ a big wow." said
Don Poole . superintendent of
the Tuppers Plains-Chester
Public Ser1ice Di strict. "It's
something
I" ve
never
dreamed would happen."
Pomerov Mayo r John
Mu ssar ,·aid '" that so und s
great, We're 1ery exci ted at
·the possibility of having the
ability to remove all the
chemicals."
Construction , is nearly
complete on Pomeroy·s new
52 mill.ion _water treatment
plant. which wi 11 rem ol"e
minerals that h~\ e plagued
the village's waier supply for
years. The new plant does
not, however. co ntain the
advanced filtering svstem to
remol"e the C-8. ' - ·
Poole 'aid. the new
· Pomeroy system · uses the
_,ame technolo21' as the
.
.
Tuppers Plains system. which
The Racine Fall Festival Court is pictured as follows: Jordan Neigler. First Runner-up: Bethany l·is an iron removal filtering
Amberger, 2003 Festival Q1.1een; Brittany Philson, 2004 Festival Queen: JoAnn Pickens. Miss 1
.
·
Congeniality. (Beth Sergent/photo)
·
.
·
·
· Please see DuPont. A5
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Mason 773.6400
Tuppers Plains 985.3385
Gallipolis 446.2265
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�PageA2

COMMUNI1Y ·
Ohio University announces Meigs schol~arship recipients

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 13,

2004

Michelle D. Imboden of
POMEROY
Ohio Foundation Scholarship.
Morgan E. Mathews of
Joshua A. Simpson of Scholarship.
University has announced the
De lana J. Eichinger of Pomeroy, a senior majoring Middleport, a freshman
Pomeroy,
a freshman majorShauna M. White of
. names of its Meigs County Middlepon. a junior major- in graduate spon sciences, majoring in electrical engi- , Rutland, a junior !t)iljoring in ing in tea&lt;: her education, was
freshmen and upperclass ing in management, was was awarded a Kibble neering and technology, was ,· lingui s tic ~ . was awarded a awarded a Kibble Foumla'tion
scholarship recipients for the awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler Foundation Scholarship.
awarded a Kibble Foundation D i II - A r no I d - C u t I e r Scholarship.
2004-05 academic year.
Scholarship and a Kibble
Nickolas A. McLaughlin of Scholarship.
Scholarship and a Kibble
· Courtney J. Kennedy ·o f
More than 1,250 freshmen Foundation Scholarship.
Middleport, a sophomore
Kenneth W. Sisco of Foundation Scholarship.
Pomeroy, a freshman majorentering Ohio University this
Macyn A. Ervin of Racine, majoring in mechanical engi- Coolville, a senior majoring
Elizabeth B. Wilfong of ing in teacher education, was
fail out of a projected class of a senior majoting in hearing, neering. was awarded a Dill- in environmental and plant Middleport, a sophomore awarded a Kibble Foundation
over 3,800. were offered speech and language sci - Arnold-Cutler Scholarship biology, was awarded a majoring in university col- Scholarship.
sc)'lolarship awards totaling ences, was awarded a Deans and a Kibble Foundation.' Deans Scholarship and a Lela lege, was awarded with . a
Aubrie S. Kope ~ of
· approximately. $4.5 million . Scholarship,
Kibble Scholarship.
A.
Ewers
Science Kibble
Foundation Middleport. a fre shman
In addition ·approximately Foundation Scholarship and
Je sse E. Megenhardt of Scholarship.
Scholarship.
majoring in biological sci$8.5 million in university Mary
Pallay
Covell Coolville, a junior majoring
Arian . C. Smedley of
·John T. Witherell , of ences, was awarded a .Kibble
.scholarships have been Scholarship.
in industrial technology, was · Portland, a junior majoring in Pomeroy, a sophomore Foundation Scholarship.
awarded to 2,560 upperclass,
Jeremy L. Fisher of awarded a Dean Irma Vogt journalism, was awarded majoring in biological sciJonathan C. Larkins of
graduate or transfer students. Syracuse, a junior majoring S e s q u i c e n t e n n i a I with an Ohio University ences, was awarded a Kibble
Middleport , a fre shman
Meigs . County recipients in political science. was Scholarship.
Multicultural Scholarship Foundation Scholarship.
majoring in chemistry and
are as follows :
awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler
Jason N. Mora of Pomeroy, and a Raymond C. Cook
Thomas B. Wolf of Long biochemistry, was awarded a
Carrie . J. Abbott
Scholarship and a Kibbl e a senior majoring in industri- Endowed Scholarship.
Bottom, a sophomore majorKibble
Foundation
Pomeroy, a sophomore Foundation Scholarship .
a! technology. was awarded a
Brandon L. Smith of ing in biological sciences,
• majoring in human and conSarah E. Grueser of Shade. D i II - A r n o I d - C u t I e r Racine , a sophomore major- was awarded a KibbLe Scholarship.
Lauren H. Logan of
sumer sciences, wa·s awarded a sophomore, received a Dill- Scholarship and a f(ibble · ing in mechanical engineer- Foundation Scholarship.
a
Kibble
Foundation . Arnold-Cutler Scholarship Foundation Scholarship.
mg, was awarded with a
Brandon S. Wolfe of Rutland, a freshman majorScholarship.
and a Kibble Foundation
Chad L. Mourning of Kibble . Foundation, The ·Racine; a senior majoring in ing in education, was award"
Grant J. Abbott of · Scholarship.
Middleport, a junior major- Creed Janes Scholarship and sociology, was awarded a ed a Bush Cutler Sc.holar
Pomeroy, a senior majoring
Marjorie A. Halar of ing in electrical engineering Valedictorian Scholarship.
D i II - A r n o I d - C u t I e r Award and a Valedictorian
in sociology, also was award- Pomeroy, a senior majoring and computer ' science, was
Amber N. Snowden of Scholarship and a Kibble Award.
· Roger K. Marcinko II of
ed a Kibble Foundation in management, was awarded awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler Rutland, a junior majoring in Foundation Scholarship.
Tuppers
Plains, a freshman
Scholarship.
a
Kibble
Foundation Scholarship and a Kibble political science, was awardAmanda G. Yeager of
Travis J. Abbott of Scholarship.
,
Foundation Scholarship.
. ed a Kibble Foundation Pomeroy, a sophomore majoring in university colPomeroy, a sen,ipr majoring
Ryan N. Hill of Syracuse, a
Jason L. ·Murdock of · Schol&amp;rship, a ~ Presidential · majoring in graduate sport lege, was awarded a Kibble
in graduate sport sciences, junior majoring in sociology, Pomeroy, a sophomore Scholars Award and the Rev. sciences, was awarded a Foundation Scholarship.
Christina R. Miller of
was awarded a Dill-Arnold- was awarded a Kibble majoring in biological sci- Dr. Robert E. Crawford and Kibbie
· Foundation
Cutler Scholarship.
Foundation Scholarship.
Middleport, . a fre shman
Scholarship.
ences, was awarded a Kibble Son Memorial Scholurship.
Matthew J. Ash of
Tara R. Humphreys of Foundation Scholarship.
Shawn W. Barnhart of majoring in biological sci' Michael' B. Stacy of
Syracuse, a junior majoring Lon~ Bottom, a senior major· Kyle P. Norris of Racine, a Pomeroy, a senior majoring Syracuse; a freshman major- ences, was awarded a Kibble·
in chemistry and biochem- ing m nursing, was awarded junior majoring in civil engi- m health sciences, was ing in biological sciences, Foundation Scholarship.
istry, was awarded a James the College of Health and . neering, was awarded a awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler was awarded ' a Kibble
Ashley D. Payne of .
D.
Euler
Memorial Human Services Alumni Kibble
Foundati'on Scholarship and a Kibble Foundation Scholarship.
Pomeroy, a freshman majorScholarship and a Kibble Scholarship and the Jeanne Scholarship.
Foundation Scholarship.
Jackelyn M. Bennett of ing in biological sciences,
.
Foundation Scholarship.
Deleur Beck Scholarship in
Aaron T. Ohlinger of
Stephanie L. Story-Schwab Coolville, a freshman major- was awarded a ·Kibble
Beau J. Bailey Of Chester, a Nursing.
Racine, a sophomore major- of Middleport, a freshman ing in business, was awarded Foundation Scholarship.
Tony A. Hupp of Racine, a ing in chemistry and bio- majoring in university col- a Dick and Margaret Jandes
senior majoriqg in graduate
Brittany N. Powers of
•
spon sciences, was awarded a senior majoring in industrial chemistry, was awarded a lege, was awarded a Kibble Campbell Scholarship.
Langsville, a freshman
· Foundation technology, was awarded a K1bble
Kibble
Foundauon Foundation Scholarship.
David · L.
Boyd of majoring in university colScholarship.
D i II - A r no I d - C u t I e r Scholarship.
Rachel A. Taylor . of Middleport, a freshman lege, was awarded a Kibble
Matthew
Beldyk
of Scholarship and a Kibble
Christopher S: Pickens of Middleport, a junior major- majoring in university col- Foundation Scholarship.
Reedsville, a senior majoring Foundation Scholarship.
~omeroy, a Jumor m~Jonng ing in psychology, was lege, was awarded an Ohio
Tia A. Pratt. of Pomeroy, a
in electrical engineering and
Derek F. Johnson of m graduate sport sc1ences, awarded a Dili-A)llo!d-Cutler University Incentive Award.
freshman majoring in busicomputer science,
was Middleport, a senior major- was awarded a · Kibble Scholarship and a "Kibble
Nathan R. Brickles of ness. was awarded a Kibble
. named as a recipient of the ing in graduate sport sci- Foundation Scholarship. '
Foundation Scholarship~
Shade, a freshman majoring Foundation Scholarship and a
Founders Award.
ences, was awarded a Kibble
R¥~n M. Pr~tt
Pomeroy,
Robert J. Taylor of Racine, in chemisty 'and biochem- Thomas A. Jenkins Memorial
Jennifer· L. Buckley of Foundation Scholarship.
a semor maJormg m psycho!- a junior majoring in,chemical is try, was awarded a Kibble Scholarship.
.Pomeroy, a senior majoring
Joshua L.
Kehl
of ogy, wa~ awarded a. K1~ble engineering, was awarded a Foundation Scholarship .
Deana L. Pullins of
:in teacher education, was Reedsville, a senior majoring FoundatiOn Scholarship.
Kibble
Foundation
Codi A. Davis of Syracuse, Portland, a 'freshman major·awarded both a Dill-Arnold- in electrical engineering ·and · Macy S. Rees of Racine •. a Scholarship.
a freshman majoring in bio- mg m biological sc1ences.
Cutler Scholarship and a computer science,
was sophomore maJonng m
Adrianne L. Tilley of logical sciences, was award- waS awarded a Kibble
Kibble
Foundation awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler 1 health s~1ences, was awar~ed Cheshire,, a junior majoring ed with a Valedictorian
Foundation Scholarship and
.Scholarship.
Scholarship,
a
Kibble a
K1bble
FoundatiOn in English, ·was awarded a Award.
· The Creed Janes Scholarship.
Rachel N. Chapman of Foundation Scholarship and a Scholarship.
D i II - A r n o I d - Cut I e r
Jayne
R.
Davis of
Jessica E. Rosier of Shade,
:Syracuse, a sophomore Valedictorian Scholarship.
Ann
M,
R!ffle , of Scholarship and a Kibble Pomeroy, a freshman major:majoring .in teacher educaElaine D. Kincaid Chase of !Vhddleport, a sentor maJor- Foundation Scholarship.
ing in graduate sport sci- a freshman majoring in
ellucation,
was
:tion, was awarded a Kimble Reedsville, a sophomore mg m nursmg, .was awarde~ a
Brooke A Vaughan of ences, · was awarded ·a teacher
awarded a Kibble Foundation
:Foundation Scholarship.
majoring in nursing, was Deans Scholarship, a D1~l- Middleport, a senior major- Valedictorian Award.
Scholarship.
.
Jeff . W. Circle of Long awarded
a
Transfer Arnold-Cutler Scholars~1p ing in graduate ,sport sciMaegan E. Dodson of
Katie D. Sayre of Racine, a
Bottom, a junior m~joring in Scholarship.
and a K1bble FoundatiOn ences was awarded with an Pomeroy, a freshman majorfreshman
majoring in teacher
electrical engineering and
Andrea C. Krawsczyn of Scholarship.
Anonymous Scholarship .for ing in chemistry and bio:computer science, , was Pomeroy, a senior majoring
J ere my A. Roush of Health and Human Services, chemistry, was awarded a C. education, was awarded a
·awarded a Kibble Foundation in teacher education, was Pomeroy, a Sophomore an Area Six Health Services Paul and Beth Stocker Kibble
Foundation
· :schoiarship.
awarded
a
Deans majoring .in biol ogical , sci- Scholarship, a Dill-Arnold- Scholarship,
and
a
a
Kibble Scholarship
· Josep~ W. Cornell of Scholarship, an Earl and ences, ~as awarded a. Kibble Cutler Scholarship and a Foundation Scholarship and a Valedictorian Award.
:Racine, a sophomore major- Evalene Teaford Scholarship Foundation Scholarship.
Ryan P. Stoban of Long
Kibble
Foundation Valedictorian Award.
ing in university college, was and a Kibble Foundation
Justin P. _Roush. , of Scholarship.
Joel N. Gandee of Bottom, a freshman majoring
awarded a Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship.
romeroy, a semor m~Jonng
Jennifer L. Walker of Coolville, a freshman major- in chemistry and biochem:Scholarship, an . Earl and
Erin D. Lisle of Racine, a m graduate sport SCie!lces, Racine, a sophomore major- ing in graduate sport sci- istry, was awarded a Florence
-Evalime Teaford Scholarship, junior majoring in graduate was a~arded a .K1bble ing in theater, was awarded a ences, was awa~ded an and
Hunter
Hooe
Kibble
Foundation sport sciences, was awarded a Foundatton Scholarship.
Kibble
Foundation Eleanor Gifford Memorial . Sesquicentennial Scholarship
·scholarship
and
a Kibble
Foundation
Jon, E. Sar¥e~t of. Pomeroy, Scholarship
an&lt;!
a . S.cholarship.
and a Kibble Foundation
Valedictorian Scholarship.
Scholarship.
a sentor maJonng m teacher Valedictorian Scholarship.
Sarah A. Hawley of .. Scholarship.
Jennifer . D. · Davis of
Sara A. Mansfield of educahl?n, has been awarc:Jed
Philip B. Werry of Chester, Racine, a freshman majoring
Jordan M. Williams of
Middleport, a senior major- Pomeroy, a junior majoring a
K1b~le
Foundation a sophomore majoring in uni- in journalism, was awarded a Pomeroy, a freshman major.ing in nursing, was awarded a in ·political science, was Schol~ship.
.
versity college, was awarded Kibble
Found!ltion ing in university college, was
'Deans Scholarship, a Dill- awarded a Kibble Foundation
Da~1el B.S~yre of Rac1.ne, a Ben Manley Scholarship Scholarship and a University awarded a Kibble Foundation
Arnold-Cutler Scholarship Scholarship
and
a a semor maJonng m phys1cs, and a Kibble Foundation Scholars Scholarship.
Scholarship.
and a Kibble Foundation Valedictorian Scholarship.
was awarded a Dill-ArnoldScholarship.
Kimberly D. Marcinko of Cutler Scholarship and a
M. . Day ,of Tuppers Plains, a senior Kibble
Robert
Foundation
· Syracuse, a junior majoring majoring in accounting, was Scholarship. in art,. was awarded a Kibble awarded a Kibble Foundation
Jeffrey A. · Shank of
Foundation Scholarship.
Scholarship.
.
Pomeroy, a .junior majoring
Rachel M. Marshall of in . mechanical engi11eering,
Bobbi · J. · Delong of
Pomeroy, a sophomore Racine, ·a junior majoring in was awarded a · Kibble
majoring in art, was awarded hearing, speech and language Foundation Scholarship and a
a
Kibble
Foundation sciences, was awarded ·a Valedictorian Scholarship.
Scholarship.
Deans Scholarship, a James
Evan L Shaw of Shade, a
Christopher A. Dodson of D.
Euler
Memorial sophomore maJonng m
.Pomeroy, a senior majoring Scholarship,
a
Kibble telecommunications, was
in mechanical engineering, Foundation Scholarship and a awarded a Kibble Foundation
·was awarded a Kibble Valedictorian .Scholarship.
Scholarship.
.

of

ot

:a

2004 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Thursday, Septer:nber 23
Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
·Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Th_
e Daily Sentinel

.Sonsshine C.ircle meets
RACINE - Several fund
raising projects were planned
when the Sunshine Circle met
Thursday at Dorcas Bethany
Church.
· During the meeting con.ducted by Lois Sterrett, presi'dent, the group planned to·
make noodles for •sale in
September, and have a bake
·sale in November. Orders are
:Currently being , taken by
:Kathryn Hart. 949~2656.
: A float for the Racine fall
:festival parade was completed
·and new directories. of the
members were given to .each
one attending as well as a list
:of. monthly iterns for the
:Meigs Cooperative Parish.
&lt;&gt;ffiCCil&gt;' reports were given
:tiy Hart and Julie Campbell.
: Scripture·from Nehemiah 8,
.John 15, and· Philippians 4
·were read along with aniCles
:"Thanks to God", "Lessons in

-Life". and "Ponder This" by
Sterrett.
Several members were
reported ill.
Thank you cards• for
remembrances were read
from Herb and Mary Pugh
and Angie Apperson , and
cards of encouragement' were
signed for about 60 area residents,
Jo Lee and Letha Proffitt
presented the program . and.
read articles from Chicken
Soup for · the Soul titled
"Where Do Babies Come
From", Service with A Smile"
and "Heaven &amp; Hell-The
Real Difference."

They served refreshments
to Edie Hubbard, Blondena
Rainer, Edna Knopp, Martha.
Lou Beegle, Holly Stump,
Sheila Theiss, Jackie White,
Lois Stetrett, Avis Harrison,
Ruth Simpson, Bernice
Theiss, Matt1c Beegle, Mabel
Brace, Mildred' Han, Ann
Boso; Hazel McKelvey,
Kathryn Hart, Fran Sayre,
Mona Hatifeld, and Julie
Campbell . .
Next meeting will be the
second Thursday in October
with Campbell to have the
program and Mabel Brace ·
and Mildred Han to provide
refreshments.

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....
• Hardware

• Furniture
• Carpet
• Paint
• ConstructiQn •Wallpaper
• Banks
•Insurance

Run Rd. will observe homecoming beginning with
Sunday School at I 0 a.m., a
.
Monday, Sept. 13
POMEROY · The . p&lt;?t luck dinner at 12 p.m.,
Republican Pany will meet at and special singing in the
7: 30·p.m. a1 the headquarters · afternoon. Ralph Butcher is
in the building located at the the pastor· and Brother Bob
corner of Route 7 and Union Thompson will be preaching.
Ave., formerly the location of Everyone is welcome.
the employment office.
.
Thesday, Sept. 14

c!u~~E:~~

•
•
'
•
•

Dave or Brenda

Appliances
Electrical
Plumbing
And More ...

Contact Gary at 740-9920823.
Thursday, Sept. 16
DEAR ABBY: I am 19
·
lives and , prevent illness
RACINE - Racine Lddge
and
a
new
bride,
and
very
NOW
by urging 'peo ple to
164, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the
remo ve their tongue jewelr)·.
hall. Work in the EA degree. much in love with my husband •. "Dennis." We have a
and let their tongues heal.
Refreshments. .The hole in the. tongue pro· POMEROY - The Meigs beautiful son together and
County Retired Teachers another on the w.~Y·
·
!;)ear
vides a pathway fo r na1ural
· Association will meet for a
Denms never hkes to stay
Ab. by
organisms in the mouth to
..
.
.noon luncheon at the· Trinity · home . He works until m1dso
he
comes
home
lind
thw
. way to the , h~ an
night,
Church. The state president
from
work
and
goes
straight
and
the
rest
of the bod) 'WHh
of ORTA will speak bn ,curdevastmmg re, ult s. Weanng
rent issues for retirees. Also to sleep. When he wakes up,
he
calls
my
best
girlfriend
tongue Jewelry can endanger
Monday, Sept. 13
there will be a program of
and
has
her
come
pick
him
is
acting
like
he
's
single.
their
health. thw futu re .
RACINE
Racine music by the Treble Maker~
he is usually out Putting the best face on it , their ve ry lives. - KAREN
Chapter 134, OES, 7:30p.m. barbershop
quartet
or up.· Then
h
·1
h
regardless of whether there
at the hall. Plan s for installa- Gallipolis. Members are to w1th er unu he as to go is a sexual affair going on MURPHY. R.N .. MORTON
tion will be made; refresh- bring in school supplies for back to work. . .
.
between your gi rlfriend PLA NT HOSPITAL. FLA.
ments served.
~ know Denms 1s staymg . (some friend! ) and your husDEAR KAREN : Your leJdonation to God's Net Youth
, Thesday, Sept. 14
Mini stries which will distrib- faahful to me, but he never band, there ·appears 10 be an ter . rai se&lt;) eye brows in my
POMEROY -Meigs Soil ute them to children. Guests spends any time with me or · · 1 one . H.1s f'1rst ' o ff.1ce. ·mc1ud.mg my own, so ·
and Water Conservation are welcome. Phone in reser- our son. We live with his emotwna
responsibility should be to I called the American Hean
District Board of Supervisors· vations to either ):740-992- mother right now, and I'm you and the babie s. You Association for more inforalways stuck with her. We
ld b h b r f
will meet in special session at 3214 or 1-740-949-2601.
really don't get along that cou
ot ene It rom rna~- mat ion: They referred me to
11 :30 a.m. at the Meigs
· Saturday, Sept. 18
well.
.
nage
counseling.
If he won t Gerald Pohost, M.D.. at the
SWCD Office for the purPOMEROY
Star
10
When I get mad about agree
It, you must assure Uni versit y of Southern
pose of personnel issues.
Grange #778 and Star Junior
that your children are sup.
.
.
. EAST MEIGS - Cub Grange #878 will hold their Dennis leaving; she tells me ported _ and that may Cal1forma.. . who . kmdl y
Scout Pack 235 will have its fun night, hay ride and to "let him run, he's still involve talking 10 a lawyer. shareJ the followmg w1th
fall round-up at 6 p.m. behind . wiener roast beginning at young," She then proceeds . DEAR ABBY: 1 am a cer- me: He agrees that for certhe Eastern Elementary 6:30p.m. Everyone is invited to tell me that if I get angry tified operating-room nurse. tain individual s, people with
School. Ih the·event of rain, it to attend.
about it, I'll lose him.
Our surgeons have recently a medical
hi story of
will be held in the cafeteria at
I have tried talking to my seen patients in their teens rheumatic fe ver or rheumatic ·
the school.
friend · about this, but she and 20s needing open heart valve disease - or ANY
POMEROY Meigs
tells me I should stop freaR- surgery to replace a diseased heart valve disease
County
Genealogical
ing our. I have no idea what valve
.
.
, d r tongue
J·ewelr)'
could.
Thesday, Sept. 14
Society, 5 p.m. at the Meigs
to do now. His mother sticks
PI ·
ease
warn
your
rea
e
s
indeed
be
'dangerou
s.
POMEROY
The
Meigs
County Museum. Public welup for Dennis and babies that tongue studs can lead to
·
,
. . .
County Health Depanment h1m. She tells me "every- endo.carditis,
come.
. requiring
I hope my readers Wi.l1.P~Y
CHESTER - Cub Scout . will conduct a Childhood one" thinks I'm getting surgery 10 replace damaged . attention to these two wnPack 235 will be holding Immunization Clinic from 9 angry for no reason. Do you heart valves, as well as other cerned healt·h-care profestheir annual Fall Roundup to a.m. to ll .a.m., and I p.m. to . agree? UNSURE IN health problems. Not only sional s. At the · risk of sound3 p.m. at 112 E Memorial MICHIGAN
sign up new cub scouts.
do these otherwise healthy ing like an alarmist , it '' bet - ·
Please
bring
There will be a bonfire Drive.
DEAR UNSURE: No, I young people ·have to endure ter 10 be safe than sorry.
behind·'
Eastern cliild(ren)'s shot records. don't. Nor do I agree with this major surgery, but they
Dear Abby is writte11 by
Elementary/High School at Children must be accompa- Dennis ' mother that your also . lace havmg to take Abigail Va Bure , also
11
11
6pm. The Chester Volunteer nied by a parent/legal husband should spend all his blo?d thmners lor the rest of kllow as ]ea
e Phillips,
11
1111
Fire Dept. will be there with ·guardian. Please bring med- free lime with your "best the1r hves or hav1ng the1r and was foullded by her
their fire engine. Any Boys ical cards, if applicable. A friend" because he's "still prosthetiC valve . replaced
,
, ,
that are seven or in first $5.00 donation is appreciated · young" · and needs to . run. every 15 to 20 years.
· mo~her, Paul111e Ph1lllps.
through sixth grade .levels for immunization administra- His running days were supWe will see this docu- Write
Dear
Abby
at
who are interested in learning tion; however, 110 one wil be posed to be over the day he . mented in medical journals · www.DearAbby.com or ·P.O. ·
more about Cub Scouts are denied services because of an said "I do."
in . a few years as the inci- , Box 69440, Los A11geles,
. encouraged
to
attend. · inability to pay.
As it stands, your husband dence rises, but we can save CA 90069.

·Clubs and
E-le~~~s~ OrganizatiOnS.

of
8: 30 a.m.. Meigs . County
Counhouse Annex .
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7:00p.m. at the
Chester Town Hall.
.
Wednesday, Sept. 15
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ea stern Local Board of
Eduaution will .meet in regular session at 6:30p.m. at the
Eastern Elementary Library
Conference Room.
I

Revivals

.,

Wednesday, Sept. 15 . ·
LONG BOTTOM - A
revival will be held at.Mount
Olive Church through Fritlay
beginning at 7 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist David Crowell
from Mich. will be preaching . There will be special
singing and everyone is invited to worship.

Other events · ·

Homecomings/
Reunions
Saturday, SepJ. 18
RACINE - Tlie Fink family reunion will be held at
noon at Star Mill Park ,
Racine.
Sunday, Sept. 19
POMEROY - Old Bethel
Free Will Baptist . Church
located at St. Rt. 7 and Storys

Civil War veterans to be remembered
7th Ohio Voluntee~
Cavalry on Aug. 30, 1862.
Known as "The River
GALLIPOLIS . Two Regiment," the 7th Ohio
Gallipolis Civil War soldiers Cavalry was recruited from
· Gallipolis-Athenswill be saluted, with full mil- the
itary nonors, on Saturday, Pomeroy area and · knew the
Oct. 2 at 2 p.m. at St. roads and byways along the
Nicholas Cemetery:
Ohio River.
All interested persons are
For this reason; they where
invited to attend. Civil War one of the lead regiments in
re-enactors, · along with the the pursuit. of the famous
local chapter of the Sons of Confederate Gen. John Hunt
Union Veterans, will provide ~org.an during his daring
the honors, wear Civil War ratd mto southern Oh10 ~n
uniforms,
fire
period July 1863. The 7th Oh10
. weapons and play music of Cavalry and fellow regithe era.
ments stayed hot Qri the heels
Being
honored
11re of Morgan's Raiders and
Nicholas and John Thevenin, defeated them at a battle near
two of four Thevenin broth- B~.ffington Island about 40
. ers of Gallipolis who served miles
upstream . from
the Union in the Civil War. Gallipolis. This was the only
They are grandsons of battle of the Civil War to be
Nicholas Thevenin, one of fought in Ohio.
Later ' tha.t year, · in
the French 500· first settlers
of Gallipolis.
September, N1cholas and the
Nicholas and John were 7th Ohio Cavalry took part
cap,tured and died while in the capture of Cumberland
being held as . prisoners of Gap. Nicholas was captured
war by the Confederates. during a sharp~ hard cayalry
They were buried in mass battle, fought m the m1ddle
graves with no headstone or of the 11ight near the town of
military honors.
Rogersville in northeast
Recently, a law was passed Tennessee on Nov. 6, 1863.
by Congress to provide "in He was sent to Richmond,
memory of' headstones for Va., then to the infamous
such veterans. Two of these Andersonville Prison in
headstones
have
been Georgia. He was later sent to
obtained
by
the the prison at Florence, ,S.C.,
Thevenin/Thivener family where he died on Sept. 30,
and will be placed in St. 1864, almost exactly 140
years ago.
.
Nicholas Cemetery.
Just by coincidence, his
While the remains of
Nicholas and John cannot be younger brother John arrived
moved , they are being wei- at Florence the next day. The
corned home, if only in two brothers might have;
memory, almost 140 years seen each other during , a
later.
three-week period in late
Prl·vate N1'cholas Thevenin 1863 while both where cdnwas 35 and married with J!O fined at Richmond iit late
children when he enlisted for , 1863.
three years in Company L of
John Thevenin was unmar. the

STAFF REPORT

NEWSr.l&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ried and about 20 years old
when on Oct. s', 1861, he
enlisted for three years in
.Company F of the 33rd Ohio
Volunteer Infantry.
He was described as being
5 foot 7 inches tall, dark
complexion with dark hair
and blue eyes. He had previously served for 90 days in
the 18th Ohio Volunteer
rfnfantry. ·
.
\ While with the 33rd OVI
.
'
he too~ part 1~ the battles of
Perryville, Ky., and Stones .
River, Tenn., before h~ was
captured on Sept. 19, 1863,
durin . the
battle
of
. g
.
Ch1ckamauga JUSt south of
Chattanooga, Tenn. He was
held in Confederate prisons
at Richmond and Danville,
·
Y_a., and Florence, S.C. fie
d1ed . on · March 6, 1865,
while on the way to
Wilmington, N.C., to be
exchanged into Union lines.
. . .
.
The CIVIl War ended almost
exactly one month later.
To get to St., Nicholas
Cemetery, go south out of
Gallipolis on Ohio 7 about
two miles and tum right on
Ohio 218 . . Go about two
miles until you pass Ingalls
Road and cross over . the
Raccoon Creek Bridge, then
immediately turn left on
Clay Chapel Road. Go past .
the Elizabeth Chapel church
about a quarter mile and turn
·
·
right on Friendly Ridge
Road and go about one mile
to St. Nick's Cemetery.

Garden club.plans programs
POMEROY ·- Programs
for the upcoming year were ·
discussed at the recent meeting of the Winding · Trail
Garden Club held at the
home of Sharon Dean.
A tour of Country Manor
Herbs , wa~ planned. along

at 992-2155

Subscribe today • 992-21.!1!1

Monday, September 13, 200.(

Husband who runs around
must stay home and commit

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Proud to bt apart~yoJU life.

Community Calendar
Public meeti'ngs

PageA3 ·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

•

Area man flrst to sign league's charter
· BY CHRIITtNE CozZA .

CCOZZAOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM
POINT
PLEA.SANT,
W.Va. - Donald Justis of
Hartford and Commander
Bill Hamilton of Gallipolis,
recently stopped by the
Veterans Affairs Medical
Center in Huntington to
visit Paul Haner of Crown
City, Ohio.
The three Marine Corps
veterans are memb'ers of
the
newly-establisht&lt;d
League
Marine · Corps
Detachment 1180, which
represents members in
Mason, Gallia and Meigs
.counties.
Being Iiospitalized did

.

ftwlk rou
SbllltlllntA&amp;

.,,.,

Cauallt:ial ,,.,

· Jim

Lucas birth
announced

CMual Otatdoor Fumltuft
Low Back or Hii!h Back

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SPrinll Base Chairs

·clearance Sale

sggoo

Limited to Store Stock

z

'

Subsa1be today¥ 992-2155
- -

not prevent Haner's fellow get the help they need."
comrades from enlisting
him as the first member to
sign the league 's charter.
Hamilton de sc ribed the
league as a "helping organization ."
1'\
"We make ourselv es
available for Marine v e t ~ r­
ans and their familie s who
need help . We go to all
three counties'," he said .
1111 parcbuiiJg ·
Hamilton said tha,t he and
other members often transport and accompany veter:
ans to medical facilities.
"There is someone with ,,_ ,, tbl ••••
that person from the time C..IJFalt!
he w ~ lk s into the hos pital
until til: walk s out." he said .
Will
"We want to make ' ure the y

with pl~ntings of bulbs and taloupes as a · collector for
perennials this fall, and pro- slugs. It was suggested' an
ATHENS - Melissa Ihle
grams on flower, arranging. over-ripe one be cut in half
Lu2as and Todd Lucas of
New officers were elected t~at the seed side be laid 8759 McLean Lane, Athens,
and ' refreshments were -down on the ground to attract announce the birth of a
served.
pesky slugs which can then daughter, Amy Kay, born
The gardening tip for the be . disposed of in the morn- Aug. 10 at O' Bieness
Memorial Hospital.
meeting was about can- ings.

'

I

Donald Justis, left, and Bill Hamilton of Marine Corps League Detachment 1180, visited fe llow
member Paul Haner at the Huntington VA Medical Center. Haner was asked to be the first person to sign the detachment's charter. (Submitted photo)

·. Sunday.Times-Sentinel
.

mn: BIPRO\'BIE\

I

•

••

•
- --

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

• Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging t~e freedom.
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and t~ petition
the Government for a redress of gnevances •.

.

Monday, September 13,

u.s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 13. the 257th day of2004. There are
109 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On Sept. 13, 1788, the Congress of the Confederation
authorized the first national election, and declared New York
City the temporary national capital.
On this date:
In 1803, Commodore John Barry, considered by many the
father of the American Navy. died in Philadelphia.
In 1894, British novelist J.B. Prie ~t ley was born in
Bradford, England.
, In 1943. Chiang Kai-shek became president of China.
· In 1948, Republican Margaret Chase Smith of Maine was
elected to the U.S. Senate, becoming the tirst woman to serve
in both houses of Congress.
In 1949, the Ladies Professional Golf Associati~n of
America was formed in New York City. with Patty Berg as its
first president.
· In 1971, a four-day inmates' rebellion at the Attica
Correctional Facility in upstate New York ended as police and
guards stormed the prison; the ordeal and final assault claimed
43 lives.
.,
In 1989, Fay Vincent was named commissioner of Major
League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Banlett Giamatti.
In 1993, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin and PLO chairnian Yasser Arafat shook hands after
signing an accord .granting limited Palestinian autonomy. '
In 1998, former Alabama Governor George C. Wallace died
at age 79.
Ten years ago: President Clinton signed into law a $30 billion crime bilL Some 180 nations adopted a 20-year blueprint
for slowing the world's population growth at a U.N.-spon- ·
sored conference in Cairo, Egypt.
· Five years ago: Israelis and Palestinians opened talks on a
final peace accord. A bomb devastated an eight~story apartment building in Moscow, killing at least 118 people.
One year ago: Angry mourners swarmed Fallujah, Iraq, a
day after eight Iraqi police were killed in' a friendly fire incident involving U:S.. troops; the U.S. military apologized for
the deaths. The California Democratic Party voted to endorse
Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante while continuing to support Gov.
Gray Davis in the Oct. 7 recall election. Indiana Gov. Frank
O'B.annon.died at age 73. In Las Vegas, Sugar Shane Mosley
beat Oscar De La Hoya, winning a close but unanimous decision to take the WBC and WBA !54-pound titles.
ge is 24. Actor Mitch Holleman ("Reba") is 9:
·
Thought for Today: "We do not attach ourselves lastingly to
anything that has' not cost us care, labor or .longing." - ·
Honore·' de Balzac,. French
dramatist ( 1799-1850).
. .
. .

If there was something
tragi-farcical about Steven
Spielberg receiving a knighthood from Jacques Chirac
last weekend for 'Schindler's
List,' the~e was also something tragi-farcically apt.
Here we are, facing not
World War Ill (the Cold
War), but World War IV. 'the
war on terror.' We see the
gymnasium massacre in the
Caucasus, and the . bus
bloodbath in Beersheba. We
hear of the ongoing extermination of .black Africans in
Sudan, and the murders of
12 . Nepalese cooks and
cleaners in Iraq, where Iran
and AI Qaeda support terror-.
ist cadres iri their efforts to
suicide-bomb their way over
the nascent Iraqi society. The
Western mind reels and tries
to come to terms with the
global bloodletting (of the
week).
We are ~xperiencing a civilization-wide failure, even
three years after 9/ll. to
define the terrorism born of
Islam's core medieval 'pre·
cepts: 'violent. jihad and
1dehumanizjng· dhimmitude.
We see 'the same kind of ter·
rorism in Russia that we see
in Israel, Sudan and Iraq.
We've seen it in Spain and
we've seen in it Bali, and
we've ·ce'rtainly seen it in the ·
United States. We see it, but
maybe we don't believe ita fai)ufe that could ultimately. be our undoing. Too many
of us prefer to overlook the
evils of World War I~ and
watch 'Chevalier' Spielberg
get a kiss on b.oth cheeks

Diana
West

from Jacques Chirac for dramatizing the evils of World
War II.
'In this 'difticult time ,'
Chime
told
his new
Hollywood knight, ' it is
essential that cinema' blah,
blah 'recalls the hqrror of
what
is
unutterable .'
Unutterable is right. But no
'cinema' - not by Spielberg,
not by anyone - is recalling
anything, utterable or not,
about the colossal struggle of
our age. There is no cultural
echo chamber in which this
conflict finds resdnance.
Indeed, Spielberg's next picture is a remake of H:G. Wells'
1898 Martian-invasion story
.'The War of the Worlds.' This
is a far cry from the scores of
movies Hollywood made to
depict World War II, including
'Mrs. Miniver,' 'The Mortal
Stonn,' and 'Thirty Seconds
Over Tokyo.' These days,
Hollywood
just
hates
President Bush and sticks a
sock on its lens.
This is just one more reason why we haven't come to
terms with the battle we've
joined. I've .written about
this failure before. The war
we wage, the United States
and its coalition of friends, is

not a war on generic 'terror- . dhimmilltde in th.; Mu,lim
ism.' but on Islamic jihad - . world .
the spread of Islam by vioWriting in the pan;Arabic
lent mea _n~. We wage it not newspaper AI-Sharq Al against generic 'terrorists,' Awsat , the ge neral manager
·but against Islamic jihadists of
AI-Arabiya
New'
who dream ·of death &lt;ind Channi:l offers a gen ui11el)
destruction, itot to mention a fringe· view. ' It i' a ceria in
caliphate. in their religion's . fact'that not all Muslims arc
na1ne .
.
terrorists , but it is equally
In our religion's name certain. and ex ce ptionally
. the postmodern ' n!ligion' of painful. that ;olmost all tcrtolerance the pluralistic West rori sts an·· Muslims ,' Abdcl
publicly
enforces
a1id Rahman \ 1-RashcJ writ~ s.
enshrines- we torture our- 'We C&lt;lll JI&lt; :t clear our names
selves over whether jihadists unless we . uwn up tu the
·are just"a minuscule minori- shameful fact I hat terrorism ·
ty of 'extremists.· We nudge has become an Islam ic Cl ll ~r­
along a. lagging conviction prise - an almost exLiusi ve
that terrorist s who ntaim and monnpoly. implemented by
kill in the name of Allah Muslim men and women .'
constitute some far-out sect AI -Rashcd doesn'l explain
that will some day b.e the basis of this ' mnnopoly'
denounced. ostrac ized and - which inclLJllcs the ccnneutrali J.ed by a robust tral preceph of jihad and
Muslim
mainstream. dhimmitude - &lt;111J he glo,,Meanwhile, when The New es over blum 's bloody cen-·
York Times' David Brooks turies of conquest and ·stJbjuidentifies the source of glob- gation. But he docs call for
al terrorism as a 'death cult ·an end· tu a hi,tDr)i of
... at the fringes of the denial,' which is a promising
Islamic world,' I suppose we start. 'Self-i:urc starts with
give two cheers for a real self-reali 1.ation and l'llnres-.
niouthful in a newspaper that sion,' he writes. ·we shnuld
routinely mumbles over the then run after our tcrmrist
Muslim identity of jihadists sons, the sour ~rapes or a
the world over. (In reporting deformed culture .·
on the Beslan horror, the
How to support thi' mis- ·
newspaper changed the sur- sion'! B)· coming w tenm
viving terrori st's widely wi th the t'oe 11 L' t'iicl'. This
quoted words. 'By Allah, I approach won't win anyone
didn't shoot,' to 'By God. I a suit of mm ur from .the
didn't shoot ' - as noted by French. But ·it wst· mlghl
blogger Dawn Patrol ). But help save the world.
we must als.o wpnder how
(Diana Wesr i.111 ml1111111isr
fringy the Islamic 'death .fin Til e \Vmhiugrnn 7/nws.
cult' can he given the doctri- Slle can he coul&lt;icted l'ill
nal primacy of jihad and .diwra,, ·esr@l'erbm.nl'l.)

Keys relieved, but Florida's
Panhandle residents still leery of Ivan·

)

,j

F~UD .

. I

-·

On a Friday morning at 8,

s.

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

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and
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Dlelrlclllgr.: Jaoon ~ltenloo. ExL 17 canier service Is available.

General Manager
Charlene lloellich, ExL 12

Mall Subacrlpllon
lnllde Meigs CouiJIY
13Weeks .. . ..........'30.15
26 Weeks ....... ...... •eo.oo
52Woleks ,,,,,, ..... ·.'118.80

' 11-. Out8lde Melge County
13 Weeks .............'50.05
26 Weeks .. , , ....... .'100.10
52 Weeks. , .••.... , . .'200.20

•

,,,,

a

the blame on employers.
' His condition is lifeInsurance premiums rose threatening," Lown says.
14 percent last year, six 'But he's in that nowhere
times the rate of inflation. land of health care."
Expens say that health prel'he doctors tell me about
miums have become a big- the barriers to medication for ·
ger financial burden for those without insurance.
businesses than energy. even when . the government
Employers have responded,. is picking up the tab.
by hirlng fewer full-tim~
St. Anthony's, one of sevworkers, cutting health ben-1 eral free clinics in San
efits, or shifting more of the FranCisco , handles 14.000
insurance costs to employ- patient visits a .year. This is
weekend to come in here on ees.
·its 48th year. The folks here
Thus, sorne people face a say they would like be out of
Monday because he has r.o
insurance and didn't want to choice that is no choice: business before they finish
face a bill from the (San Paying high insurance pre- another 48.
.
Francisco) General ," Broner miums or feeding their famiSo how do we solve the
says. His condition was so lies. Government insurance health care crisis so their
dire by the time he arrived at programs ·have filled some wish conies true '' I don't .
St. Anthony's that Broner gaps. Most· low- income chil- know. But we won't get very
dren iue cover.ed · through far if our pre sidential candi had to call 911.
'I'm ·surprised he didn't faleral and state programs, dates and media spend this
die," she says. The man : but adults often fall through valuable pre-election period
ended up at S.F. General the cracks.
obsessing .about who · did
In 19 states, parents ·who what in a war that ended 30
after all, courtesy of a pricey
ambulance. His throat was . make as little-a,s $9,300 per years ago.
drained and. his airways year earn too much to qualiThe lunch hour is now
cleared. Now, because he fy for Medicaid. In most almost over. The doctors still
delayed·treatment for fear of states. Medicaid isn't avail· have paperwork to finish and
the medical bill, he faces an able at all to adults who are sandwiches to eat before the
neither parents nor disabled. doors are opened again .
even higher one.
In the St. Anthony's wait· Health care issues are pretty
'This kind of thing happens every single day,' says ing room, Lown flips' . boring . Insurance is even
Dr. Sonia Bledsoe, who has through his chans and finds more boring. But the cabbeen . work.ing at St. a patient who fits that pro- drivers and laborers and
Anthony's for 10 years. She file. Here, he says, is a 50ish bookkeepers waitil)g outside
has · a thousand srories, as man1 who has reduced his might have a different point
does her colleague sitting cab-driving shifts to two a of view.
Broner stands to return to
next to her, Dr. David Lown, week because he has cirrhoa young man with an' ear sis of the liver from alco- her office. 'The personal
' holism and hepatitis C. He price they pay," she says. ' i'
studded with small hoops.
of doesn't have health insur- horrendous."
The
number
(Joan Ryan is a coltmmist
Americans, without health ance from the cab company,
for
and
he
doesn't
qualify
for the San F rands co
insurance climbed in 2003
for a third -mllight year, Medi-Cal, California's ' ver- Chronicle. Smd comment.v
according to the Censu's sion of Medicaid. But he to her in care of this newspaBureau report. It would be doesn't make enough money per . or send her e-11util at
joanryan@sfchronicle.corn,)
unfair, though, to place all · lo pay for his medications.

Fewer
from Page A1

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should . patients were already lined
up at St. Anthony's Free
be less than 300 worc/s. All letters are subject to
Clinic in San Francisco's
editing and must b~ signed and include address
Tenderloin qistrict when the
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
three doctors showed up.
Joan
There is always a line. A
be published. Letters should be in go.o d taste,
Ryan
cabdriver with liver disease.
addressing issues, not personalities.
A first-grader with asthma. A
· The opinior;s expressed in this column are the
waitress witli abdominal
pains. None of them with
consensus qf the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
insurance.
that can close off the airway.
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
· health
During the lunch hour, Dr.
'He waited through the

Reader Services .

'•.;

• 'r '

The uninsured, ·up close

The Daily Sentinel

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) The only whooshing sound
Hurricane Ivan stirrtd in the
Hurricane Ivan battered the Cayman Islands with ferocious 150Keys and populous South
mph winds Sunday. Ivan has killed at least 60 people as it has tom
Florida on Sunday was a sigh
a path Or destruction ,
f
of relief from residents no
aaoss
the
Caribbean
FtA
longer fearful the 150-mph
and heads next for
storm would make a direct
western
Cuba.
hit.
Probatbtltty tllot
But even as I van veered
center
of Huntcene
west on a course that would
Ivan will poou
take it away from the 120within 75 mlleo
I
.•
mile island chain and
durlng the 72 hours
Florida's east coast, forecaststalling at 2 p.m.
'
:
EDT Sunday
ers warned that the .state,
already slammed by two
As ol ! p.m. EDT,
Sunday
powerful hurricanes in a
-Storm warning
month, was not oui of the
woods yet.
..... Huoricane Ivan
Potential day 1 to day 3 track area
Ivan's forecast track across
.. • .. Past storms
D Potential day 4 to day 5 trad&lt; area
the eastern Gulf of Mexico
could take · it ashore on the
.o
2tX!rn
MO .
Florida Panhandle , ' which
0 2&amp;lkm
took' a glancing blow from
.Hurricane Fmnces. or parts of .
ARK.
the state's west coast that are
recovering from Hurricane
Charley.
"It 's creepy,'' said Amanda
Morrow. sipping froze n coffee at a Tampa restauranrthat
(iulf•f
still had windows boarded up
_Ma.deo
against the earlier storms.
"No one knows where it's
going to go. That's what is
stressftJ[ ."
(
Ivan . blamed for at least 60
'I
,; MEJt,J
-.-..
deaths and hundreds of
", •. /t
"
· injuries as it roared across
i i'
, Ctlrlbheon Su JAMAICA
Caribbean island nations,
SOURCE : National Oceanic aoo AtmoBpherle Adminlsttalion
was expected to pass near or
over the western tip of Cuba sure how many.
the region last w~ek but
- possibly as an intensified
Tom Bordovsky, 51, was limped through without causCategory 5 storm - some- among the Key West resi- ing major problems.
time Monday.
dents. who never left.
"It came on a lion and went
At 8 p.m. Sunday, Ivan had
"Motel rooms, gas ... it's out a lamb - a lot of people
top sustained wind of 150 just a big hassle," :, he are going to remember that,"
mph. down from 165 mph on explained.
.
sa id Billy Porter. 57 , of
Smurday. and was centered
A few Key West restaurants Sopchoppy. who left the St.
2 10 miles southeast of reopened. beac hgoers went Mark s boat ramp Sunday to
Cub a's western tip.. the kite surfing and some grocery fish for mullet. ·:They ' l-l think
National Hurricane Center shoppers .- no longer tearful this one might do the same
said. The minimum for · they'd lose power for their thing. That's what's scary."
Category 5 status is I 56 mph freezers - bought ice.cream.
Because of Frances, some
wind.
"They made a panic out of 335,000 homes and businessThe storm was moving
nothing,"
said Evaldas · es still had no , electricity
toward the wesL-northwest at
30,
who took Sunday, utili'ties said.
Kubilius
.
I0. mph and was expected to
However, schools and govturn gradually toward . the advantage of what he called
perfect
conditions
for
kite
ernment
offices in many
northwest.
surfing.
"
Ir
s
great,
especially
·
counties
planned
to reopen
While hu rr i ca n~ center pro. jections had the storm when you 've got nothing to Monday after an unplanned
week off. And gas s,tations no
bypassing the Keys, brushing· do."
Forecasters
acknowledged
longer teemed with motorists
it with only tropical stormforce wind, uncertainty about Sunday what many were rushing to top off, their tanks.
Alex Medwit, 50, of Boca
its course promptecj officials . thinking.
pan
of
Florida
Raton,
filled the tank of his
''The
east
to keep an evacuation order
looks.
like
it
go.t
lucky,"
said
BelfSouth
repair truck in an
in place for lhe ·island chain's
Rafael MojiCa, a meteorolo- uncrowded filling station, the
79,000 residents.
·
gist
at the hurricane center. first time he's seen it that way
"We would be foolish to lift
However,
he added: "'The since Frances struck.
the evacuation order now,"
said Irene Toner, Monroe west part is still within the · "We definjtely did not need
County's emergency man- cone of uncertainty and any another hurricane," said
deviation to the ·right by Ivan Medwit, who's received
agement director. .
food, water and even a thank·
Gov. Jeb Bush said about could mean close calL"
Fanher north, in the Florida you card from homeowners
half of the Keys' residents
obeyed the evacuation order. Panhandle, some residents whose phone lines he's
But the Overseas Highway, boarded up ·their homes repaired. "People are so
the only way in and out of the Sunday. But others may have relieved, so happy that Ivan
Keys, was not blocked and been thinking of Hurricane isn't going .to hit ... These
some evacuees began trick· Frances, the second of three people do not need another
ling back durin~ the week' storms that struck .the Florida hurricane -it's all been too
end. though offictals were not peninsula, which threatened much."

Huntcane Ivan moves on toward Cuba

fAMl\.Y

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Katie Broner remembers the
story. of the teenage girl who
came in with sore legs. The
doctors are giving me a
glimpse of the 45 million
Americans who have no
health insurance. It is the
highest number ever, 11ccord- .
ing to a U.S. Census Bureau
report that landed on front .
pages across the country
recently.
'She came from a working
family that. had no insurance," Broner says of the
teenage girL 'She was in
here getting a physical and
was complaining about pain ·
in both legs. I said. 'Let's get
an x cray.' It turned out she
had been in a car accident
awhile back and had hurt
both legs. Her family didn't
wani to go to San. Francisco
General because they had
gone there once and got a
$1,000 bill that they• were
still paying off.
'When the X-rays came
back, I couldn't believe it both legs were fractured .This
girl was walking around some- ,
how on two broken legs."
Then there was 'the guy a ·
couple Mondays ago with an
acute infection in the throat

•

.

Tlie Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

' ------------~--------------------~~------------------~--------

2004

·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

-The First Amendment to the

PageA4

Memo to Spielberg:
Jte 're facing a 'War of the u:iJrlds'

The Daily Sentiriel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, September t3, 2004

I

problem which the commissioners said would be cor·
rected.
Thi s year, there were _six
workers'
compensation
claims by county empl?yees
in the first quarter, five m the
second, and only two so far
in the third, for a total of 13.
Last year. there were a total
of 14 by this time.·
.
Of the 13 claims this year,
four were from the sheriff's
depanment, three from the
highway department and .two
were from EMS. No other
department had more than
one.
Kenney said workers' compensation claims are to ~
expected from the shenff s
depanmcrit, but not necessarily the others. She sa1d the
county needs to concen~rate
on training to prevent senous
, back injuries, which ru:e the
most difficult from whtch to
return to work.
ln other county business.
the commissioners
.
., gave Jobs

and Family Services Director
Mike Swisher pennission to
take moriey from his budget
to pay for repairs caused by
a leaky roof during heavy
rain~ last week.
·
Swisher said the offices at
175 Race St. in Middleport
underwent a tremendous
inflow of water. Furniture,
carpet, ceiling tile, insulation, .
drywall and built-in cabinets
were damaged.
"We tried to catch water in
buckets as best we could, and
we put up a tarp to keep some
of the water out," Swisher

said. "We think we've limited the damage."
The Jobs and Family
Service s office building
has two sections. one with
three floors, and another
with one floor only, housing food stamp issuance
and caseworker offices. It
was thi s single-story section of the building · that
suffered the damage. · All
services remained open
during
: the
episode,
Swisher said, and 'the
.insurance co mpany ha s
been contacted.

Coming ~ursday in the Sentinel ...

"P~c~ f(J ·~ &amp;
Tkmg~ t(J JP(J"
.

.

Fall
from Page A1
'bungee racing. Hor&gt;e and
pony rides were also offered.
No festival would be complete without food and local
organizations were sel lin g
concessions including festival favorites "tuco-in-acbug"
and homemade lemonade .
A group from the Morri s
Farm outside of Rutland
brqught in a wagon load of
pumpkins and gourds to sell
signaling the approach of
Autumn in the area. Al so.
local craft s people set up
booths sel ling everything
from homemade baskets, to
woodcrafts, to murals handpainted onto slate.
Festival goers witnessed
Marvin White or' Coolville
demonstrate how he sews one
of his traditionally crafted .com ·
brooms on a machine that dated
back to the early l90(is. Next
to White, Mary King of Long
Bottom spoke to people about
!he process of making her rugs
on a loom. "The ugliest material made the prettiest rugs,"
King commented on her variety
of color choice and materials.
After the group Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass from
Parkersburg. W.Va. perc
fQrmed, a locally made quilt
and . quilt cover were auctioned off to support . th e
Racine Park Board. The auc·tion helps keep admission to
the festival free to the public.
At noon. Brittany Phil son
of Syracuse was crowned
queen of the faJI fe stival.
Roundin g out the festival's
court was first runner-up ,
Jordan Neigler of Racine and ·
Mis s Congeniality JoAnn
Pickens also of Racine.
The festival continued
thro'ughout the day with clog,
ging and musical groups to
entertain the crowd.

}.

'

·-

Craft vendor Mar vin Wh ite of Coolville demonstrates how to sew
togE~ther a traditional corn broom on equipment that dates back to
the early 1900's at the Racine Fall Festival. (Beth Sergent; photo)

The group Rocky Mountai n Bluegrass from Parkersburg, W.Va .
entertains the crowd at the Racine Fall Festival. (Beth
Sergent/ photo)

DuPont·
from Page A1
-.

The proposed scll lement also includes $70
milli on that DuPonl wou ld pay into a fund to
be ove rsee n by a court-appointed administrat or. At least $20 million of that would pay
for health and educatio n projects. Another
$22.6 milli on of the potential settlement is
earmarked for lawyers' fees and expenses . .
"We strongly believe that thi s settleme nt
is in the· best interests or the class," Deitzler
said. "Had it been litigat ed, we wouldn't be
at this 'point for another two years."
DuPo111 shares closed up 14 cents at S42.90 in
trading Thursday on !he New ·York Stock
Exchange.
DuPont told investors in Ju ly t ~lll it had set
aside $45 million to detend against the lawsuit.
'
The proposed settlement follows a report
that month by the U.S. Environmental
Protection· Agency alleging DuPont failed
to properly report the discovery of C-8 in
drinking water adjacent to the Washington
Work s facility and in the blood of pregnant
employees at plant
The EPA is seeking millions of dollars in
fines from DuPont for two alleged violations of the Toxic Sub~tanccs ·control Act
. and .o ne .violation of the Resource
Conserva1ion and Recowry Ac t.
DuPont has said it had no legal obligation
to provide infimnation to the EPA about C8
release&gt;.
Teflon is one of DuPont's most popular
products . The nonstick substance can be
found in every lhi ng from cookwar~ and
clothing to car p&lt;1rts ,1\ld floorin g.
Though used since World War II. C8 is
unregulated by either federal or swte agencies and its long -term effects on human s are
unkn ow n. In earlv 2002. Jir and water samples .1 ;1kcn by ihe state D~partment of
I:n\'ironmental Protection found com:entrations of CR up" ream of the plant. apparently released by it s stacks and carried by·prevailim.! winds .
Re,iden ts of both Ohio and Wl'st Virginia
filed the lawsuit in 200 I. Trial haJ been set
for Oct. II in Wood County Circuit Court.
Ci rcuit Jud~e Geor~e Hill had ordered .
DuPont last -year to pay for blood tests of
residents. but. was later overltlrned by the
state Supreme Court.
"The mo st important thing now i' that th e
·independent p&lt;llk'l' be truly independent of
DuPont's reach." &gt;aid Ken CooL president
or the Etll'irnnmcntal Working Gmup. a

system with softening. He said he envisioned
a plan in which a new DuPont' syste_m would
· clean the water of c-·8 either before or after it
is treated by the regular plant.
Also, Poole pojnted to a sentence in the
· settlement that said the DuPont system will
be buillt to reduce the level of C-8 to the
lowest practicable J.evels as specified by the
water districts.
"Our specirication is of course going to
be zero," Poole sai d. "Why wouldn't we
ask for zero? That's whaf it was before they
..
started putting it in there."
Poole attended half a dozen EPA-DuPont
hearings in Washington D.C. over the past two
years, but said the inclusion of the new water
systems in the settlement took him completely
by ·
. .
surprise.
"They kept saying the devil was going to be
in the details," he said. "For this to happen outright, without years of an extended court battle,
is amazing to me."
·
The settlement also says OuPont will
offer the same C-8 removal technology to
residents of the water district s whose so l ~
source of drinking water is a private welL
Harry Deitzler, an attorney for a
Charleston law firm that served as counci l.
for the J?laintiffs. said a criti cal issue of the
settlement is that individuals retain the
.
right to sue for damages.
If the independellt, sc ientific panel find s
a link between exposure 10 C-!1 and any diseases, DuPont will not be able 'o con test
general causation between C-8 and any diseases during individual lawsu its.
''That's th e part that's most important to
any individuals who are involved in thi s."
Deit t.ler sa id.
· DuPont als'o will pay $70 million into a
fund to be overseen by a court-appointed
administrator, with at least $20 million of
that going toward health and education projects. About $22.6 milliot) of the potemial
se ttlement is earmarked for law yers' fees
and expense s.
"We want 10 make very clear that settling
this lawsuit in no way implies any adm i&gt;sion of liability on DuPont's part." general
counsel
Stacey
J. Mobley
said .
"Nevertheless, a sett leme nt ;11 thi s time provides benefit to both partie s by taking reasonable steps based on science and: at the non - profit \\atrhdog in \\ ·a~ bingtun. D.C.
tThj.., · o;tor~ W&lt;.h l·o mpikd \\ith th~ assi:-.·
same time, contributing to the communi!) ...
'
tanc-L' of AP reports . 1

EIIY IIYBI Pill'

...... •.
........._....

·

..... ~ .. PR.-FIIIIEYUR
,

�I
The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Monday, September 13,2004

Brown• win, Bengals lose, Page B2
Brewers blast Reds, Page B&amp;

~en dead in suspected arson at apartment near Columbus

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

',._

.AN IT" CHANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

~ITER

'·

COLUMBUS- A suspected arson engulfed an apartment complex Sunday, killing
I 0 people and forcing other
residents to jump from thirdstory windows. firefighters
said.
All 10 victims, including a
child, lived' in the same apartment on the third floor, which
was destrored in the quickly
moving f1re , said Prairie
Township Fire Chief Steve
FeusteL
The tire broke out about 2:30
a.m. at the 24-unit Lincoln Park
Apartments
in
suburban
Columbus. The flames left a
wooden skeleton exposed·
above melted siding and at least
53 people homeless.
Two people. including a
woman who juniped from a
wind01v, · were treated and
released from Mount Carmel
West . hospital, a nursing
supervisor said. Authoriti es
woulc\n 't say Sunday after- .
noon whether others were still
miss1ng.
"My family is· dead," survivor ·Antonio Noriega said,
leaning against a neighboring
building.
He said his brother, sisterin-law, three nephews and five
(AP Phol:o/Pa1ul VEirnoii)
others •lived in the two-bed- Fire officials look through the remains of a third-story fire at an
room apartment where the apartment co)1lplex in Prairie Township where eight people
first bodies were found. He died. The fire in suburban Prairie Township came about six
did not believe ahy of them
Monday, September 13
weeks after three fires were set in the same building in an
made it out of the building.
Morning
(7 a.m.-Noon)
Noriega, who was wearing empty apartment and hallway, said Fire Chief Steve Feustel. All
A
cloudy
morning.
victims, including a child, lived in the same third-floor
Temperatures will rise to 79
a vest but no shirt, had eight
jumped out ttie window of his unit. Feustel said.
with today's low of 63 occurring around 6:00am , Winds
first-floor apartment. He said
firefighters pulled him from a
Those. left homeless stood the courtyard Sunday. Tpe witl be 5 MPH from the
ladder as · he tried to rescue vigil outside Sunday- some American Red Cross was southeast turning from the
wrapped in blankets, some handing out water, coffee and · south as the morning prothose on the third tloor.
. "My family. they're sleep- quietly sobbing. Dozens more doughnuts; and helping resi- gresses.
ing and the flre is coming joined them in the wait as dents find. temporary housing . · Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Its going to be a humid
fast," he said."! can't help my news spread.
' and other needs.
afternoon.
There is a slight
.Residents unable to get into
brothers."
Feustel said the fire started
of
rain.
Temperatures
chance
Feustel said it was suspi- either in the basement or the to their apartments sat on cars
will hold steady around 82
cious that the fire burned so first floor, but the cause was in the parking lot and in the with
today's high of 83 occurgrass while investigators and
fiercely in a hall way, where not known.
ring
around 4:00pm. Skies
there were few flammable . There were no suspects and firefighters were iri the will range from partly cloudy
burned apartment. The resimaterials, and blocked people no known witnesses.
to cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from}scaping.
·
The fire. came about six dents were told that they from the south turning from
He said it appeared the first weeks after three fires . were could move into-empty apartvictims found had been trying set in the same building in an ments, but it was. not clear.
. to escape the flames.
empty apartment and hall~ay, when that would happen.
A hydrant that apparently had
. "They were out of their Feustel said.
been
knocked over by a car and
beds. They didn't die in their
Pascasie Mulanigulwa, who
then
·set
upright delayed ·getting
sleep," he said. .
·Jives in the next building, was
Noriega said the victims awakened by the light water to fight the fire, which
were
immigrants
from through her bedroom window. was. already shooting through
the roof when crews arrived, .
Mexico and came
to
" I saw people jumping
Feustel
said.
. Columbus four years ago. down out of the third floor. It
"This is one no fire chief.
Many in the family worked· was terrible," she said.
no
tire department ever wants '
together at a landscaping
Firefighters were throwing to face,"
he said.
company.
charred ~uilding materials to

·Woman with big exotic pet
·collection dies of snake bite
CINCINNATI . (AP)
Zookeepers helped police
~earch for venomous and
exotic pets in a house
where a woman was fatally
bitten by a viper.
· Alexandria Hall, 44, was
bitten in her home Monday
and died Saturday
at
University Hospital; police
and a nursing supervisor
said.
Neighbors knew she had
pets, inCluding rabbits and
birds, but were unaware of
her collection of at lt;ast
nine poisonous snakes and
more than one dozen other
snakes, lizards and ·alligators until police went to
the · suburban North College

.,

~

CLEVELAND (AP) - told The Plain Dealer for a
Some archeologists say the story Sunday.
Cleveland Museum of Art
The museum's director dismay •encourage smuggling agreed, saying sharing the
and the lootin~ of ancient work with the public was
sites by acquinng a bronze important and the sale was fair.
Apollo seulpture w(th large
Malcolm Bell, {.1niversity
gaps in i!'s ownership histqry. of Virginia art history profesThe museum proudly sor and vice president of the
announced the purchase in Archaeological Institute of
June, saying the statue might America, questioned the
be the only one among about museum's account that the
20 large bronzes in the world · artwork \Vas discovered by a
that can be· ·linked tQ the retired German lawyer on his
ancient Greek masters. ·
family's estate in the l 990s.
Now some prominent
"It sounds like the kind of
archaeologi'Sts )lnd other fabrication thai is made frecritics say the museum quently in the market," he said.
should not have bought
Ernst-Ulrich Walter, the
the work because of the lawyer, declined through an
questionable history.
interpreter to be inter'The root ca1.1se of looting viewed by the newspaper.
is collecting. h's supply and • Phoenix Ancient Art, the
demand," Ricardo Elia, an ·dealership that sold the
associate professor of archae- 'Apollo to the museum, has
ology at Boston University, run afoul of t)le law before,

~

How They Fared
1. Ironton (3-Q)
DEF. GALLIA ACADEMY, 30·0

2.

DEF. VINTON COUNTY, 29: 6
OEF. WESTLAND, 70·0

4. Cabell Midland (2-Q)
OEF. G. WASH INGTON, 17·0

5. Huntington, W.Va. (3-0)
• DEF. RIPLEY, 40·0

5. Portsmouth (2-1) ·
LOST TO CHILLICOTHE, 26·14

7. Nelsonville- York (2-1)
8. Williamstown (3-Q)

. DEF. BELPRE 44·6

· 9. Point. Pleasant (2·1)
LOST TO MAGNOLIA,

DEF. LUCASVILLE VALLEY, 24·0

10. Winfield (3-Q)
OEF. SISSONVILLE, 13·3

the southeast as the afternoon
· progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It's going to be a humid and
clo1,1dy evening. Light rain is
foretas ted. The ram should
start by 8:00pm. The rainfall
will fmish around 9:00pm
with total accumulations for
this event near 0.05 inches.
Temperatures will drop from
80 early this evening to 67.
Winds will be .5 MPH from
the southeast.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It should be a cloudy
overnight. Temperatures will
linger at 65. Wmds will be 5
MPH from the southeast. .

Tuesday, September 14
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will climb
from 66 to 76 by late this ·.
morning. Winds will be 10
MPH from the southeast turning from the south as the
mornmg progresses ..
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be
cloudy. There could be a few
raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will 'hover at
79. Winds will be 5 to I0
MPH from the south turning
from the southeast as the
afternoon progresses.

al

Monday's Games
Volleyball

South Gallia at.Rock Hill
OVC at Teays Valley Christian
'

Golf

SEOAL meet at Marietta
Wahama at River Valley
TVC Ohio at Vinton County
Tuesl!ay's Games
Volleyball

Marietta at Gallia Academy
Coal Grove at River Valley
Waterford at Meigs
Eastern at Nelsonville· York
Grace Chr. at South Gallia
S()uthern at Ale,xander
Hannan at OVC
Soccer
Athens at Gallia Academy
Golf

yvellston to
hold co~d
softball tourney

.

.

Prep Sched_ule

River Valley at South Point
TVC Hocking ~t Eastern

WELLSTON
The
Wellston
Recreation
Department will hold an
adult co-ed, one-pitch softball · tournament at Veterans
Park.
The event will take place
on Oct. 2-3 and the entry fee
is $100.
Each team must have at .
least two female players on
the field throughout each
1contest. Each team is also
responsible for providing a
ball to hit. Awards will be
given .to the top two teams.
Fot more information , contact Scott Sturgill at 740-4182335 or 740-384-2720.

ion

'/
' ,,

r
g
II

••

said Elia, Bell and others.
Ali Aboutaam, who runs
the gallery's branch in
Geneva, Switzerland, coowns the business with
his brother, Hicham.
Ali Aboutaam was convicted
in absentia in Egypt last year
on charges of smugl!ling and
sentenced to 15 years m prison.
His lawyer, Mario Roberty,
.told the newspaper the charges
were "absolutely ridiculous"
and Jl?litically motivated.
Htcham Aboutaam pleaded
guilty in New York in· June to
a misdemeanor federal
charge that he had falsified a
customs document to hide tbe
origins of an ancient silver ·
drinking vessel the gallery 1
later sold for $950,000.
His lawyer, Henry Bergman,
blamei:l a paperwork error and
said the Aboutaams are "not in
the business of breaking laws."

2t ·0

10. Wheelersburg (2·1)

CAR''CARE'''~~,~,t-

I·

,

LOST TO FAIRFIELD UNK&gt;N, 17-13

FALL~:t:;WINfE

s

Jackaqn (3-Q)

3. Parkersburg South (3-Q)

..--- -

.

Ohio State 24· Marshall 21

The OVP

I.

Hill house.
An ambulance waited
Police believe an urutu outside the house in case a
pit viper bit the woman on venomous snake attacked.
Monday, and neighbors said . "We're going into an
she drove herself to Mercy. enviro'nment
we're
not
Fairtield Hospital. She was familiar with, and we don't
transferred to University know where these animals
Hospital,
where
she are," said Winston Card, a ·
remained in critical condi- zoo 'conservation program
tion
until
her
death manager.
Saturday evening.
They found more than a
"We have .no idea how ·half-dozen large lizards runshe made it to the hospital ning around an upstairs
in the first place," said bedroom. The . veno·mous
North College Hill police snakes were in secure plas-..
Sgt. Robert Kidd,
lie cases throughout the
After police broke down house, police and zoo offithe woman's front door, three cials said, and non-venfrom omous animals were found
reptile
specialists
Cincinnati Zoo &amp; Botanical under boxes and piles of
Gardens entered and searched. clothes.

Art expects . que~tion museum's.
acquisition of bronze Apollo ·
.•

r ...

Monday, September 13, 2004

I

l

Reds Legends
host pitching
camp in Marietta
MARIETTA
The
Cincinnati Reds Legends will
host a youth pitching clinic .
on September 25-26 for anyone ages 8-19 at the VFW
baseball complex.
· .
· Each session takes place ·
from 'noon to 3 p.m. and will
feature current Houston
Astros pitching coach and
former Big Red Ma~;hine
pitcher Jack Billingham as an
Instructor.
: The two-day camp costs
$40 per person and registra"
tion information can be
pbtained by q:mtacting 740~73-3476. Deadline for regis~ation is Sept. 23.

Ohio State tailback Lynell Ross reaches for yardage against Marshall Saturday at Ohio Stadium in Columbus. (Brad Sherman)

: NEW YORK (AP) · Roger Federer is at his best
against the best, when it
counts the most, and he was
pretty much perfect in ihe
U.S. Open final.
· Federer became the first
10an since 1988 to win three
majors in a year, thoroughly.
outclassiug Lleyton Hewitt 60, 7-6 (3 ), 6-0 Sunday to add
the American Gran\! Slam
title to those he took at the
Australian • Open · and
Wimbledon.

'

Nugent's 55-yard field goal lifts Ohio State to win over Marshall
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com
COLUMBUS - Prior to every
kickoff by Mike Nugent Saturday, a
rock anthem by another Nugeilt
blared throughout Ohio Stadium.
On the game's final play, the Ohio
State kicker put the "Stranglehold"
on Marshall.
Mike Nu!]:ent ,booted a 55-yard
field goal wtth no time remaining as
No. 9 Ohio State turned a rough

fourth-quarter into victory with a 2421 win over the Thundermg Herd .
"We've put him in" that position
many times in kick scrimmages,"
said Ohio State coach Jim Tressel,
coachin!l against Marshall for the
first ttme since he was at
Youngstown State. "It's the last play
of the game and here's what we 've
got to do. He's a great kicker. There's
not a better one in college football
and I think he proved that today."
"I just kind of dill my job when I
was called upon, just a few e~tra

points and one field goal." added
Nugent.
·
Prior lo Nugent's · g(une winner.
Marshall had a chance of it s own to
take its first lead of tile game. bu1 35yard field goal aued1pt by hm
O'Conner with 3: 17 left in the game
went wide lefl , leavi ng the game tied
at 21-all.
After the game, al l Marshall head
o.:oach Bobby Pruelt could do was
speak in awe of Nugent's kick.
''We had a chance," said a soft spoken Pruett. "They made their

kick. We mi,ed ours.
"Thal wa·s a long kick . That's why·
he'.s an All-American."
Most of the fourth ~uartcr. though.
was Marshall's as Ohio State turned
the ball over three times in the final"
period .
..
Ohio Sune ~t1a. terha ck Ju stin
Zwick h~d two pa"e ' picked off in
the fourth by Chris Royal. who
picked off two pa"es the week
before against Troy.

Please

set~

Survive, Bl

Pruett not So sure officials made right call
Bv RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Marshall coach Bob Pruett is
wondering whether Mike Nugent should have even
been on the field to kick the game-winning field goal
in Ohio State's 24-21 win over Marshall Saturday.
Pruett said he believed that the Buckeyes should
have run om of time before Nugent converted his 55yard field goal.
The Buckeyes took possession at their own 45 with
25 seconds left. Quarterback Justin Zwick completed

Prep
Volleyball

Eastern
sweeps ·
tri-match
bcooper@mydailylribune.com
CHESAPEAKE
Three different confer·
ences were represented
when Eastern, Gallia
Academy
and
Chesapeake mel here
Saturda)i in a high school
volleyball tri-match.
Eastern (out of the TriValley
Conference)
proved' it is one of the top
teams in the area to contend with by sweeping
the
Blue
. AngelsPlease see Ellstei'n, BZ

Pruett

,three passes and then. with Ohio
State out of timeoutS: was ahle to get
under center and stop the clock by
downing the ball with 2 seconds left.
A motion penalty was called on
the play, an illegal shift. Then only 4
yards of the 5-yard penalty were
marked off.
· Nugent then kicked the game-winner, seconds after Pruett ran on the
field to protest to the officials.
He later explained why he was

angry.
"A penalty on .the offense. the c i&lt;x:~ cont inues to
1un,'' he said. "TI1e ofticial s&lt;1id the play '"lOll because
it was a cloc~ play. Tiley c&lt;~ll~d it 'an incomplete pass.
I' II have to check on I hat.
.
· " I thought the clock 'hould ha' c been allowed to
continue to 1un but they were counting .it as an incomplete pass because he downed it."
• MOTIVATIONAL SPEECH: Fo1mer Ohio
State coach Earle Bruce may have set the tone for

Please see Pruett. B:Z

·oh.io falls to Pitt
BY

BY BUTCH COOPER

Federer wins
U.S. Open

'

.

T.J. I.AStTA

Special to the Sentinel
PITTSBURGH - Oespite holding
Pittsburgh to just two offensive touchdowns and 217 yards, the Ohio football team fell victim to the big . play
and dropped a 24-3 decision Saturday
evening at Heinz Field. ·
The Panthers used an interception
return for a touchdown and a .key
blocked punt to run away with the victory.
"! told our guys before the game that
this was an outstanding opportunity;·
said· Bobcat head coach Brian Knorr.
;,We let a great opponunity slip by. We
had a team we could obviously play
with but (Pittsburgh) did the thmgs
they needed to do to win the game."
After both teams traded a pair of
defensive stops to begin the· game, the
Panthers (1-0) finally lit up the s.corebol!fd first. Taking advantage of good
field position, Pitt marched down the
field into Ohio (1-1) territory and
capped a JO-play, 36-yard drive with a
35-yard field goal to take the 3-0
advantage.
.
·
·
Early in the second quarter, Ohio
threatened to even up the score. The
Black

Bobcats took
· the ball into
Panther territory
but
.couldn't con~~j~~.., nect on a 42 t:,
, .. "· yard
field ·
'"--· ··· goal attempt.
Ohio would. however. get another
shot later in the second quaner. The
Bobcats traveled 68 yards and witll
5:32 remaining ·in the sec.ond quarter.
freshman kicker Brooks Ros,man
connected on hi s first field goal as a
Bobcat. a 27 -yard effort that tied the
score 3-} .
· On its next possession. Ohio was
forced to punt. Matthew Miller's kick
attemg. was blocked by Pitt 's Keith
Malley and scooped up by Brian
Bennett. who rumbled 36 yards deep
into Bobcat territory. Two play&gt; later.
Tim Murphy rushed. for .the score from
one yard out as the Panthers took a I 03 lead.
The Bobcats ' special teams unit
soon returned the favor. Late in the
half, Ohio 's Taj Henley blocked a
Pittsburgh ?Unt and gave the Bobcar-

Piease see Ohio,.BZ

+
•

Prep Cross
Country

Clelland third
at Fairland
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
,
PROCTORVILLE With l\
scheduled meet at Wellston called
off, the Meigs cross country team
competed at the Fairland "Run by the
River" Saturday.
Meigs· Meghan Clelland finished ·
third in the girls", race .with a time of
25: 14. Meanwhile. teammates CayIa
Lee (25:21) was fourth and Ashley
Samar (26: I 2) sixth .
.
In the boys rae~. Ross WeU (20:23)
was 13th and Gram Arnold (20:23)
14th. Also for the Marauders, Gary .
Zonghetti (20:57) was 16th and .
Adam Pine (22:06) 22nd.
In the junior high race, Meigs'
Kimi Swisher ( 15:.45). was flfSt, and
.Jessica Holiday t 18:29) fourth.

�Page 82 :

TheDaily Sentinel

.·National Football League .

Pruett

\Martin, Jets down Bengals

.•

.Sunday, September 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com .

from Page B1

most meaningful honors he has
ever received.
• HONORING
THE
FALLEN: A moment of
silence for those killed on Sept.
11 , 200 I too~ place before the
kickoff of the game between
Marshall and No. 9 Ohio State,
with stark, black-and-white ·
shots from the terrorist attacks
was showing on the video
board.
As an announcer intoned .
"Three years ago our nation
was devastated ... and lives
were ended long before their
.time," a crowd of more than
100,000 at Ohio 'Stadium stood
silently. The tlag was lowered
to half-staff while the Ohio
State Marching Band played
"Taps."
,
.
An "honor platoon" whtch
in~luded military, police, llre
and rescue personnel presented
a tlag which bore the names of
all the Americans killed on
9/11 .
The !lag was returned to the
top of the tlagpole as the honor
platoon and band left the tield
to the strains of "Proud to be an
American"
by ·
Lee
Greenwood.
I
•
QUICK·HITTERS:
Nugent's 'kick tied the longest
ever by an Ohio State kicker in
82-year-old Ohio Stadium.
matching the distance of Dan
Stultz's field goal against
Indiana in 1997 .... The last
time Ohio State won on .the
final play of regulation was a
Stultz game-winning 24-yard
field goal against ll)i~ois on .
Nov: II, 2000. ... Zwtck had
the first three touchdown passes of his career. ... The
Buckeyes have won 22 in a
row at home and 37 consecutive non-conference games....
Marshall's Chris Royal had
interceptions on consecutive
passes by Zwick, doubling his
career total of picks. .. . Head
coach Jim Tressel is now 3·3
against Marshall -. with one
loss and two victories coming
in the I.·AA championship
game when Tressel was
Youngstown State's head
coach.

another heart-stopping win by
the Buckeyes.
Bruce fired up the players at
BY ANDREA ADELSON
Instead, Martin made all the plays. The Cowart stripped R!.ldi .Johnson of the a lunch before the game with
Associ~jted Press .
31-year-old Martin looked better than he ball, and Donnie Abraham returned it 41 inspirational words and his
has in years, mainly because of his yards for a touchdown to put the Jets up characteristic
fire.
The
renewed effort to turn around the way he 21 -10.
·
Buckeyes beat Marshall 24-21
. E~ST R~THERFORD, N.J . - ~hen started off the last two seasons. He
Palmer led the Bengals back, and his on Mike Nugent's 55-yard
:CurtiS Martm ra~ up the 200 steps Irom 'decided to cl'imb those stairs in 6-yard touchdown pass .to Kenny Watson field goal as time expired.
1he. Santa Mon~ICa be_ach dunng the . California, and asked coach Herman CUI the deficit to 21 -17. After a field goal
"He's in the college football
spnng, he had this m mmd..
.
Edwards for more work.
by Doug Brien, Martin essentially put hall of fame and now he's in
. When he asked for more work dunng
It worked against the Bengals. Martin the game out of reach with his ,24-yard the Ohio State hall of fame,"
trammg camp, he had this m mmd. When ripped off long runs and broke tackles, score to make it 31-17.
· Buckeyes defensive end Simon
:he asked for mo~e Cll:rnes m ~~ pre sea· and that helped open up the offense.
Palmer tried to rally the Bengals. He Fraser said. "It's great to hear
:son, he had·Jhls 111 mmd. a bnlhant start Chad Pennington threw for two touch- threw a 53-yard touchdown pass to Chad his wisdom and his advice- it
-to the season and a VIctory for the New downs. going 20-of-27 for 224 yards in Johnson with a little over three minutes was something special for all of
'York Jets.
·
·
· of h'ts to go to bnng
· them wtt· h'm a touc hdown. us. He's still so passionate."
· h d 29
. ~ 196 · d the f'!fst season-openmg
start
Martm
ca111es or
yar s career.
But' his final effort was not enough.
a
Bruce spoke for just a few
La,st year, it took Martin four games to
"Our football team played to the end," minutes to the team after being
and scored on a 24-yard run and 3-yard
catch, helping the Jets ruin the debut of reach 196 yards. It was his highest rush- coach Marvin Lewis said. '.'We're going introduced by head coach Jim
:2003 No. I draft pick Carson Palmer ing total since 2000, when he had 203 · to correct the rnistakes and move for· Tressel - who was his quar-with a 31-24 victory over the Cincinnati yards against Indianapolis.
.
ward."
terbacks coach in the 1980s.
:Oeng:ils on Sunday.
.
"He looked about 19," said Santana
Things started badly for the Jets. Bruce was SI-26-1 in nine sea"I knew I wa~-prepared," Martin said. Moss, who had four catches for 55 yards. Carter fumbled the opening kickoff, and sons as head coach, winning
"I knew that I was ready. When you "Curtis looked fresh. He was rolling. His Reggie Myles recovered for the Bengals three Big Ten titles.
know you' re ready. your confidence is preseason was so phenomenal this year, at the Jets 25. Palmer completed his first · Cornerback Dustin Fox said
higher."
the way he went through camp and dtd NFL pass to Chad 'Johnson for 6 yards, he gave the squad words of
.' Itsoaredduringthegame.takingaway all he did."
then convened a third 'down to set the encouragement.
:me hype from Palmer, who made his reg·
With Martin making things look easy, Bengals up at the 9.
"He said a lot of common
·ular-season NFL debut. The Heisman Pennington also got into the action, pickRudi Johnson scored on a run on the sense stuff to get us fued up,"
Trophy winner commanded the offense ing on rookie cornerback Madieu next play to put the Bengals up early. It Fox said. "You try to make· a
well and made few mistakes, going 18· Williams, who started in place of the was their onfy lead of the game, thanks · little improvement from game
of-27 for 248 yards . with two touch· injured Deltha 0' Neal.
.
in large part to a rejuvenated Martin.
one to game two, but you make
downs and an interception. .
·
Williams gave up a 46-yard touch·
"I feel as though I could go do it again a big improvement from game
But trailing 31-24 with tWo minutes down pass from Penningtonlo Jonathan right now," Martin said. When reporters two to game three."
.. remaining, Palmer made his biggest mis- Carter in the first quarter, iu1d he strug- laughed, Martin had one more comeThat may be absolute! y nec·cue. From 'his 49, Palmer heaved a pass gled for most of the game to keep up back: ''I'm not joking."
essary if the Buckeyes (2·0)
NOTES; New York City Mayor hope to remain unbeaten when
for Chad Johnson. But rookie safety Erik with the speedy Jets receivers. ·
Coleman stormed in and intercepted it,
"I was in position to make plays and I Michael Bloomberg was honorary Jets they visit North Carolina State
didn't," Williams said. "I expected them captain for the game. He accompanied next Saturday.
sealing the victory.
"We came here expecting to win," to come at me. We were starting a rook- Jets captains to midfield for the coin
Bruce was inducted into the
Palmer said. "We had what we needed. ie cornerback in the NFL, and you are toss .... Jets CB Jon McGraw (groin), DE Ohio State hall of fame along
·we had what we wanted. We had the ball going to get tested:"
.
Bryan Thomas (hamstring) and·Ben¥als with 11 others during halftime
with two minutes to go in good field
The Bengals trailed 14-10 at halftime CB Deltha O'Neal (ankle) were mactlve. ceremonies:
synchronized
position and I turned it over. I can't make and hoped to get ahead with the first pos- ... Bengals S Rogers Beckett left in the swimmer Maria Giusti-Lugo.
plays like that for us to win."
· .session of the third quarter. But Sam first quarter with a concussion.
football
players
Vlade
Janakievski, Paul Sarringhaus
and Steve Myers, swimmer
Jocelyn Jay, wrestler Kevin
Randleman, basketball players
Arnie Risen and Averrill
Roberts, tennis player Ty
BY DAVE GoLDBERG
Cincinnati to an 8-8 season, a great year
The next pass was thrown into double
coverage toward the sideline. Coleman Thcker, gymnast Blaine Wilson
Associated Press
for a downtrodden franchise.
and volleyball player Vanessa
Palmer finished 18-of·27 for 248 yards came from the middle of the field and · Wouters.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
with two touchdown passes and a passer grabbed the balL
Bruce, also an Ohio State
0¥erall, the -reviews on Palmer .were graduate, called it one of the
·:Carson Palmer's delayed debut as an rating of 105.2, which in most seasons is
NFL quarterback was almost everything good enough to win the NFL passing pretty good. The Bengals' loss was due
more to the inability of the defense to
he could have hoped for.
.
title.
Until the end, that is, when he proved
He aiso had an II :yard third-down stop the Jets than anything .their QB did.
final drive of the game.
"Watching from the sidelines i\ looked
he's not quite John Elway yet.
scramble for a first down to prolong a
The entire first half was
What could have been a game-tying touchdown drive, and threw a beautiful likene played pretty well," coach M~in
.
the
"Zwick-Holmes Show"
drive in Cincinnati's 31-24 loss to the 53-yard TD pass to Chad Johnson that Lewis said, adding the usual coaching
as
the
duo connected on
from Page B1
New York Jets on Sunday ended when · brought the Bengals within a touchdown qualification: "''ll have. to look at the
seven passes' for . 199 yards
tape."
·
s.afety Erik Coleman picked off a pass at of the Jets with 6:24 left in the game.
and a pair of Buckeye touchThe t1rst pick put the Herd downs.
The opposing QB liked what he saw.
.the Jets 34-yard line jusi after· the 2' . Even. that aborted final drive was
"I saw a young guy out there .poised, on the Buckeye 13, setting
minute warning to end the Bengals' final 1mpress1ve.
Holmes finished with 218
drive.
It started with 3:48 left at the Bengals 5 confident, running around making plays, up a touchdown pass from yards receiving on I 0 recep·
"My fault, my fault," said'· the 2002 and included a 36-J&lt;:ard pas~ to Pe~er making plays with his arm," the Jets' Stan Hill to Brad B'ates that lions, while Zwick was 18Heism¥~ Trophy winner and first overall · Wamck that got Cmcmpau to Its 49 with Chad Pennington said. "The biggest tied the game. The second for-20 in the air for 318
pick in the 2003 draft. "I didn't see the 2:00 left and w1th two ttmeouts, plenty of thing he did today was he trusted his resulted in O'Conner's yards. On the ground for the
·
safety coming over. l should have contin- ume to get the ball downfield.
. teammates. He's got some great weapons missed kick.
Buckeyes, Lydell Ross led
With a little over 30 secued to check down." .
. • "I was confident we were going to tie on the offensive side of the ball for him,
the
Buckeyes (2·0) on the
Still, it was an impressive debut for . the game and then win in overtime," . and he delivered like he wa~ supposed onds remaining, and the ground with 24 carries for 97
game still tied, Marshall had yards.
to." ·
Palmer, who didn't take a snap last sea· . Palmer said.
;
the ball. on its · own 31-yard .
Except, of course on his last throw.
son as a rookie while Jon Kitna led
Whoops.
For Marshall, Charfes had
line on
third down.
Freshman Ahmad Bradshaw, 73 yard.s on 16 carries, whil'e
who finished with 77-)'ards Hill was 22-for-34 passing
yards.
rushing for the Herd, was forBy140
halftime, Ohio State led ·
stopped behind the line-ofscnmmage, forcing a punt- 21-14, but the Buckeyes
were held scoreless in the
CLEVELAND (AP) - As they left Jamal Lewis to just 5'J yards after he ran through . With All-Pro left tackle ing situation.
second
half until Nugent's
O'Connor, who averaged
the tunnel, the Cleveland Browns paused for 500 yards in two games against the Jonathan Ogden out with a knee injury,
last-second
field goal.
to touch the 1964 championship trophy. Browns last season.
.
Cleveland's defensive front did anything 42.6 yards per punt on the
"We played a teain that I
Cleveland also stole the spotlight from it pleased. Kenard Lang tied a career- day, had a. bad kick that put thought got prepared very
.They then played as if they want one for
Deion Sanders, who came·out of retire- high with three sacks and forced a fum- Ohio State on i'ts own 45.
themselves.
Pruett wa.s quick to defend well," said Tressel, whose
. Inspired by weekend long celebra· men! and the TV studio for a chance to ble as he blew past Ogden's backup,
his kicker for his struggles Buckeyes tr4!Vel to North
tion for the '64 Browns, the 2004 version win another Super Bowl ring: But judg- Ethan Brooks, at will.
Carolina State this weekend.
Anthony Henry and Andra Davis late in the game.
:pushed Baltimore around for three hours ing from the way Baltimore played,
"You can't blame it on "Marshall is passionate
10 a 20-3 victory over ,the Ravens on "Prime Time" could have made a better picked off passes as Cleveland's defense
about the game of football.
choice of teams.
lirnited the Ravens to 254 yards, a large (O'Conner), because he had They had a good plan. They
Sunday.
some great .punts and some
"They played like a team," said Hall of
The normally brash Sanders didn't chunk of it comin~ late.
great
kickoffs." said Pruett. committed themselves to
Fame running back Jim Brown. "They have much to say aftetward. ·
After what Lew1s had done to them a
their plan. Their defense had
won, but it was more the way they won.
"They played their game," Sanders year ago, Lang said the Browns obsessed "He was doing it alL"
Two short passes by Zwick .lots of people up .by the line
They all contributed, ·every one of said. "They're good. They won. They about stopping him and the Ravens, who
to Santonio Holmes and of scrimmage. They weren't
them."
pl~~ed well offensively· and defensive- · shut out Cleveland 35-0 on Dec. 21.
going to .let us control the
.
"We didn't think about it all week," another one to Ryan Hambly tempo of the game with the
Just as they did 40 years ago when the ly.
Browns won the last world title for any
Before the game, the 1964 Browns - Lang .said. "We thought about it all year. helped set up .the game's run."
major Clevela.nd sports team. · These Paul Warfield, Leroy Kelly, Frank Ryan, We couldn't waitto get back on the field final play.
·Marshall will· fat:e another
"(Zwic~) did a good job
Browns swarmed on defense, made big Brown and others - were introduced &lt;jgainst JamaL We wanted a chance to
'
top
10 team on the road
finding the open guy," said
plays on offense, had no turnovers and and the new trophy given to them at a redeem."
when
the Herd travels to No.
won field position with special teams.
Friday ni~ht gala by NFL commissioner
Atonement was on Garcia's mind, too. Tressel of the Buckeye's 3 Georgia Saturday.
And for the first time since their NFL Paul Taghabue was brought to midfield. Released by San Ff11Jlcisco after five
Garcia sought out many former players. years, the 34-year-old finished 15-of-24
rebirth in 1999, the Browns are I-0.
· "This is huge;:' said cornerback
"I shook as -many hands as I CO!ild," for 180 yards.
Perry and Annie Cornett
He also finished. off the Ravens with a
Daylon McCutcheon, one of just two Garcia said.' "I was telling .them, 'Bring
each had 20 digs. Perry led
·
·
3-yard TD run late in the fourth quarter,
starters remaining fr0m the. '99 team. us your power."'
the Angels with eight
Cleveland's defense was sparked by diving into the corner of the end zone to
"This sets the toile for the whole season.
from
.
P
age
B1
,
points.
.
something.
· · ·
· make it 20-3 before getting up and leapFinally."
Eastern easily took care
Lewis, who had an NFL single-game inll into the Dawg Pound.
•
Jeff Garcia threw a 46-yard touchdown
'I wanted to jump
and enjoy that (Southeastern Ohio Athletic of host Chesapeake, 25-15,
J:lass and ran for another TD in his record 295 yards against Cleveland last
League) and ·Panthers (Ohio 25-11 as Morgan Weber finCleveland debut, aitd the defense held :Year, couldn't find a hole to squeeze moment with the fans," he said.
' '
Valley Conference).
ished with five kills and .
· The Eagles and Blue Winebrenner four.
the end zone. giving Pitt a 17-3 lead one more score, a 7-yard touchdown Angels went to three games
Erin Weber had seven
·
with 9:32 left in the quarter.
toss from Palko to Greg Lee that sealed with Eastern coming out on points for the Eagles against
.
The Bobcats then nearly clawed back. the game at 24-3.
top (25-21, 22·25, 15·4).
Chesapeake. .
With Pitt facing fourth down in the closOhio quarterback Ryan Hawk comDarcy Winebrenner had
Gallia Academy also
. flom Page 81
ing moments of the third quaner, Ohio pleted 19 of 41 pass attempt\ for 169 nine kills for the Eagles, defeated the'Panihers in two
linebacker Dennis Chukwuemeka field- .. yards while f\lshingfor 57 yards. Wide
the
at their. own 45.
Ohio ed a Panther punt that bounced at the receiver Chris Jackson caught a career- including four in the thir&lt;! games (25-1 0, 25- 12) to \ ·
game.
earn a split for the day
offense could not take advlmtage, Bobcat 12 yard line and returned it high seven passes for 70 yards.
Leading
the
Eastern
scorbehind Perry 's · 16 points
though, as the clock expired on the first down the field for the score. An illegal
"We knew we would have to throw the ing drive was Jennifer and four kills. .
half with the Panthers ,up by seven.
block in the back penalty charged football," said Knorr about 'O hio's
Close, mt;anwhile, had I 0
Early in the liecond half, the Ohio against the Bobcats, however, erased the offensive gameplan. "There were a lot Har,man with 12 points,
Morgan
Weber
had
II
poinls
and Sarah Cochran
whlle
defense continued· its run of big plays in touchdown. Ohio retained pos5ession, of things we could have done in · the
points · and Jenny Ames 14 digs. J:Ieather Withee h~.
2004. Sophomore cornerback T.J. but was forced to punt.
passing game 1 catching balls, malting eight. Weber 'was also a per- four k1lls f?r Galha
Wright picked off a Tyler Palko pass and
. "(Pittsburgh) made two big plays like better decision~ · - · and it would ha~e feet ' 16-of-16 serving and Academy, wh_Ile Bry!ln
gave the Bobcats possession in Pitt ter- that,, the interception return and the been a different outcome."
went 4l-for·43 passing, , Saunders contnbuted wnh
ritory. The offense could not convert the blocked punt, and that was our play Chip Cox led &gt;.the defense with seven
..
.
turnover into points, though, I!' Ohio Chuk's touchdown - but it was taken solo tackles. Chukwuemeka, Tyler Russ while Hayman was 15-of-16 three ~Ills .
serving.
Galha
Aca~ell\y
,wtll
pl~y
had to punt away the football.
back because of a block iri the back," and Kevin Carberry each were credited
Felicia Close had six kills host to Man~tta today m
. Midway throujh the third quartef. the said Knorr. "We have to be more disci- with one sack on ,the evening.
Panthers did take advantage of a plined. We had 81 yards iri penalties;
and
17 digs and Whitney SEOAL acuo~. Eastern
The Bobcats . tetum to action this
turnover. Malcolm.Postell intercepted a that can't happen."
·
Saturday when they visit Mid-American Larkins had five blocks and . re~urns t~ play 10 the ~VC
pass at the Ohio 42 and scampered·into
. four kills for Gallia wllh a tnp tQ NelsonvilleWith 2:46 rem.1ining, Pitt tacked on Coi\ference rival Miiuni.
Academy, while K11yla York.
·

Palmer is ir:npressive

until the end

Survive

Browns beat defending division champs
1

a

..
•

'
., I
I

Eastern

in

Ohio

f~tball

-

'

•

ni

'

,

•
•

Monday, Septembt!r 13,2004

www.mydallysentlnel.c;om

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

G•lli• Cmm ly, 0 11

'

)

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER '285,000 PROSPECTS
P
AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
. \![;ribttne
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-21'56 (304) 675-1•333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008 ,
or Fax To
.
Oetullfir~
Dally

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

r

~
~

ANNOUNCEMF.NfS

!:~.~ci

..V:.~In-Column:

1:00 p.m.
Sund•y• P•per

Sund•y Dleplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thuraday for Sund•Y•

• All ada muet be prepaid•

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include complete
De1crtptlon • Jndude A Price • Avoid Abbl'tlvl•tlona
• Include Phone Number And Addre.. When Needed
e Ad1 Should Run 7 D•v•

e

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

aualneaa D•ya Prior To ,
Publlc•tlon

Jn Next D•y•a P•per

'

AD.

\ '\'\01 \« I \II \1 \

1:00 p.m. ·
for ln•ertlon

In~Column:

Monday-~rld•y

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ;:;r_
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
·· $1.00 for large

~

'·

POUQIB; Ohio V.I~V Pubtl1hlng ,... ,...~the right lo edit, reJ~~et, or cancttl an~ ad at en~ time. Error• muat be reported on the llrat dey of .publlcetlon end
Trlbune-BenUneHieglatef will ba reeponalble for no mo.-. then the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the first inaertlon. We ehell not be liable
any k1N or expenn thlt r.. uhl from tha publlcltlon or omlealon of an advenlaemenl. Correction will be mada In the tlrlt available edltlo'l. •.Box n um.,Oe&lt;
arw 1lway1 gonfldlntlal. • Current r-.t. 011rd appllea. • All real ••tete advertleementa are eubltct tG,the F.cterel fair Houelng Act or 1968. • Thle 00 0001
~~eoept• only htlp wanttld ada milling EOE attn•d•. Wa will not knowingly accept any edvartlelng in
I of the law.

,.,l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Yo\RDSALE·..

PtiMF.RoYIMIDili.E

1

1

Poodle &amp; Terrier Mix White
w/Peach spols (304)675·
ADOPTION : A lov1ng COU · 2714
pie would like to adopt your =~~:----....,
newborn . Will provide a
LosT AND
home filled with Joy, happiFOUND
ness, financial security and

Care Giver 1n your Home

·r

a great education. Feel confident in know1ng because of
your brave deciSIOn you r
baby could look forward to a
bright and wonderful future.
Expenses pa1d. Call toll free
1-866 ~731 ·7825
Ba rbara
.
and M1chael

Prime lot 5 wooded acres
on Buckeye Hills Great
homesite . $27 ,500
Call

(304)675·1996

740·645·2950 or 740·388·
9649.

Compassionate lady wants
to provide personal care.
light cleaning and TLC lor
the jelder ly 1n the~r homes, 1n
the Gallla area. Excellent
references. (740)446 -3659

L.------_.1

All real eat•te advertising
1n thl1 newspaper IJ
sub}eet to the Federal
Fair Hoo•lng Aet of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
Do you need odd JObs done?
advertise ··any
Painting &amp; general home ·
preference, limitation or
repair ,Piease call (740)992 discrimination baaed on
6926
race , color. religion, sex
tamlllal status or national
DRVWAl.L
· origin, or any Intention to
Install, FiniSh, Paintmg,
· make any 1uch ,
preference, limitation or
Carpententry, Bathroo ms~
dlac:rimlnatlon."
Residential , Comm ercial .

~
3 cute &amp; cuddly kittens . 6

INSURED
NOTH ING TO SMALL

weeks old 81ack.lwhlle longhair. L1tter trained . (740)446-

Steve·(740)368-6731
ll\\\1 1\1

r

10

~
Inc.

on

Free Border Collie

pupp!~S.

SA'(tNGS

Call (740)256·1652.
Free Border Collie puppies.

Call (740)256·1652.
· Full blooded Siberian Husky
to a good home. Call

(740)446·7449.
K1ttens· 1nside only. Litter
trained . Phone (740)446·

3697
Pekingese/Jack
Russell
female, 4 months old, to a
good home, (740)992·5891

Shop
Classlfleds!

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale ......................:...............;....... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030

Anllques ....................................................... 530
Apartmellla for Rent. .................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................
Aulo Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
Auto Repalr .........................,........................ TTO
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
Boall &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ..... :....................... 340
Bualnees 0pportunlty................................. 210
Bualnees Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment...........:..............., ....... 780
Cards of Thanke .......................................... 010
Chlld/Eiclsrly Cara ....................................... 180
Electrlcal/Refrlgerattan...............................840
Equlpmelll for Renl. .................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 61 0
Farm• for Rent.............................................430
Farmalor Sale ............................................. 330
For.Leaae ..................................................., .490
For Sale ........................_. .................................. 585
For Sate or Trecle ...........; ............................. s&amp;O
.
Fruita &amp; Vegetablu ...................................
.. 580'
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 480
General Haullng ...........................................8t50

oeo

GIVNWI)I ....•;................................................ 040
Happy Ada ....................................................OIO
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................840

Help Wane.d ....................... ~ ......................... 110
Home tmprovemente ...................................l10

H~ tor S.le ............................................. 310

Hou11hold Qooda ................... ,,,,,,.,,...... ,, •••• l10

ffo.uNt ftJr Rent ......... ,................................ 41 0
In Memoriam ................................................. 020
lnau,.,ce ................................................, ...... 130
Lawn a O.rclen l!qutpment ............- ......... 110
UYMtock. .......................................................UO

Loet and Founct ...................-..•••••••••••••••••••••• 010
Lot.8 I Acrelge •..•.••,....................................310
Mleceii11110U1.......................... ,...................170
Ml-lllirwoUI Merc118ndiM .•...•..••.••.•,.......I40
Mobile Horne Repelr ....................................leO
Mobile Homee for Rent ...............................4ZO
Mobile HOIMI for 8ele................................320
Morley lo Lolln..................- .........................220
MoiOfCYCiu 6 4 WhMie ............................740
·~lt.,.w-

................................... 170

tv. ...................................................oos

Pets tor ll&amp;ttooooooooooo ~ao•••••••oooo;ooooo•o•oo••••••••••••IIO
Plumbing a '-lng.................................... IZO

PloF111Ional 'lilrvlcel..............................- .230
lladlcl, TV &amp; CB Rar*r ...........................-180

"--I E.- w.m.d..................................... 3110
Schooll tnatructlon.....................................180
s-ci , Plant a I«&lt;IIIZIIr .............................. 880
Slt&amp;lltlona W.;;bid ... -..................................... 120
ap.ce for Rent ............................................. 44111

Sporttrig Goode ........................................... 5ZO
SIJV'• for Sale.......,...................................... 720
Truc:b for Sale ............................................ 715

UphOt!IWy ........................................,_,....... 870
V... For S.le...•....- ...........:.......................730
W81'11ed to Buy ............. ,...........................-010
w..~ec~ to Buy· Farm &amp;uppt..................... ezo

Wlllllecl To Do .............................................. 180
W.illd to Rent--············-·..········-··-·····..... 470
vn s.r.. Qetllpc)lte..-...................- ......072
Yn Silo PoiJ_,.tllddle ........- ............. 074
YJI'd S Ia Pl PtW-1 ............- ............ 071

·-

---

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rln.Qs, U S.
Currency.·M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151
Second
Avenue ,
Gall!polis, 74Q-446-2842

lwrlgh!C!llc.net

located in Athens. Meigs,
Gallia &amp; Vmton Counties.
Train1ng begins ·sep1erOOer,
for more information call
OASIS Therapeutic Foster
AVON! An Areas! To Buy or Care Netwoi'k ton free . 1•
SelL Shirley Spears, 304· 877-325-1558

·------·
An Excellent way to earn
money The" New Avon .
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645 ·

'

675·1429.

116

1
l.

AN's

Forty Hours a week
$7-$8/hour

nient, Paid vacations every
six months, Full benefits

Need
a
Hardworkmg. ;::.:.:;;~mtrml!"?::;--,
dependable
Night L.-..HIO~VAL~~~~"';u:usH
Supervisor, w1th set days tor !Ur
NG CO. recommends tha
the hours of 7prri·7am with
pay starting at $19 an hour ou do business with peo
with
EliCellent
Health .
le you know, and NOT t
Vision, and Dental Benefits
end money through thE
at competitive rates. Offer a ~all until yo~,;~ave 1nvest1

pactc:age after ninety daysl

401 1( Plan and Smart Fllan :b;••l;ed:l:he:o:ff:e':'n!n
.

Call tor mator Non·Profil
or~anizatione Of Help
Protect Your Gun Rights!
Professtonal work environ-

Schedu~ your lnteNiBW

for Health Benefits and Child
Day Care to saVe money.

now to earn a

Please apply In person, fax

$200 Sign on Bonual

or mail application w•th
resume to the follow1ng

1-877..t63-6247 9xt 2458

address:

Billiards. Call 20&amp;-8622 ask - - - - . . , - - - - ; - for Rob or stop in.
- -- - - - - - NOW HIRING; A leading
Housekeeping/
Laundry provder to lndtvlduals with

Arbors of Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest onve
Galtipolis,.QH 45631

==~

r

PRof.'ESSIONAL

SERVICES

r•o

1§1

Patient Care Coordinator Applicants must have a Middleton Estates, 8204
poSition in the Ga!hpolis, Bachelor degree and WV Carta Drive, Gallipoli&amp;, OH.
Ohk&gt; and surTounding aree, social work licensable. Pay An
Equal · Opporlunlty

Duties &lt;&gt;elude esloblishlng slarts al $11 .29 hOtJrly DOE Employer. FIMIDN.
and maintaining open lines KVc" provides !n-home and
of communiCation with area foster care services to chif. ---IWIIOlOO-'---v_:__
physicians and health care dren ancl families.
KVC
facilities In the dellvely ·of offers excellent training,
Home Heallh Services. Mwt Including LflC superviii:HI,

Socond Avenue. Ollllpo/lo,
OH 4 !5831· lltlr~; Brian King,
AN.
Eute High Scl!ool ~
m
conIIMrlng appllcanll tor
Val'ltty

Glrll

BatketbaR

TECHNOLOGIST CT

P08ITIOH

992 _7321

1
L,_.,:INs'nwcnoN~:,:;~:;::oo..J "'1'11;'1!13'1V111'111mllnrr;;Oi1
Galllpollo Clnor Callogo
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal Todayt 740-446-4367,
1-800-214-0452
- .g 1
.,..
a .c:cm

eonao-

.....

~ .....~...

~· ... ~·

I

17_,..,

hoiPital--baud radlologyil6
clapatlmtnl. Ftlondly IHmMIK'fJJANI!Dll!
thai
O"•en•~
-... a•-aphora
""'"'

....-·-·-

~;;Fax~:~7.W;;;4;4;8~toll;;;;

~ S~
T- N&lt;nlng'ManaginG oow/uUJ,... lor ConlJOII1IW "" icelo Mlon. Call ..
-~
~ •ou
-~
,., .,....,,~

1&gt;0 highly morlva11K( and
poogood "'rbll
.and
!catiOn
wnnon
~n
(740~2673,
skills. CompetiiMI oolary Main1"""""" 313
- - pacl&lt;ago...,.

=

-r

==~

resume to PO 8oJ; 808,

lei

For 111o WOigl1l ycu t..ou

ThiAI,...

SAssy SOssollS
Stylisl....,.,. Salaryf

eo."'or740-215(!.Q3(1.
' ooion. 740-441-1880

Jbr in Syracuse. Ohi o No
Pets $4 75 O() a mont h Hud
Approved (304)67S.5332

~.:""~

.,.._: . :
......

"''P'Y

10•

·

~

flodcapringo

36759
-Cen!M.
Ro&lt;kapringa
Road,

Pomeroy, Ohio
Eldencllcaro

-15789.

SoMon. lnc. · io

an , ~

He-

opportunity omployor lllal

encou,_

.- *"·1411' ON

~

---,-----

Clo se
to
everythmg
Homes
irom $100001, $6101month
No
pets
Forclosure , VA Hud lor llst- Depos1t reqLured Ca ll, Kelly
lng 1-800-749-StOOex 1709 (740)446·996 1.

House 3 Bedroom 1 112 FOR RENT 3 bd rm 1 batn ·
Bath Heal. Pump, new house." LA w/FP, 2-car car·
Caroet. Windows &amp; Roof. port. qu1et locat10n . edge ot
town. S550fmo &amp; S550 sec
ctep You pay all util1t1es Call
(740)446-3644 lor mfo.

River View 12 Smith St No
Money Down to qualifying
Buyer $425/month why Rent
(304)675-2749

Homes for rent. 1 140 &amp;

$425/month pluAs ',ast monl~ 54 00 . depOSit References
rent. no pets, e requrreu reqwred (740)4.4 6·34 13
(304)773-9181 or (304)773-

MOIIIL.E H«)\I•S
ffiR RB'T
l..__..,;,;;;;;,;,;;iioii--"
~
(4211

5040

Aaoch s/yle home 1 112
miles from Rio Grande on
2 bedroom, like new. central
Cherrv Ridge Ad. Call
'
alt.
(740)446-2003
(740)245-51
02 1
_ __..:._ _ _ __

;.,.,;,;;...;..;...;.._ _ _....,
. P..loUJu: HU'-IFS
3 Dedroom. 1·1/2 Datil . CIA .
FUR SAI..F

3 Bedroom, Hud Home.
14.000 Won'! lul! mo 1a
•·~ 1. 'Homtt ava,~a~,~~e
our -~-unga•

800-366-i783ex 1797

14 x70 w1th expando no
month ... deposit

Pets. S4 50

r

.
I, 7i:40~):.;44,;,;6-46;,;,;;;,
24;__...,;...,
1986 'Ciay1on t4x65, 2 oed- r.:
room Priced to sell. Call
.'\PARnn=~TS
(740)446-o368 .

FOR.IbJt.rr

__

For &amp;ale or rent· 2 bedroom 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt sta rting
mobll,a homes ·start ing at at $290/month . deposit
$270 per month , Ca ll 740- req wec1. No pete WO

l'll2·2167

'

hOOkuP. (740)441 - 1184

Make 2 Payments. mow in 4

veare on note (.304)7363409.
- - - - - -- New Oakwood mega store
foaiU,ng
Homeo
by
OakwoOd . FleeiWOOd &amp;

1. and 2 bedroom apart·
menta. fu rmshed and unlur·

mohed . sacu' i!y deposn
""l""ed. no pelS. 740-992·

·

2218 .

Next to new 2000 Redman

){8() .
bedr0om1 bath. 740-&amp;4s-4848
16
3
2
GrHn TownShip close IO
l br. Studlo Apt ve ry clean.
1
· Prlcod lo 1011. More "'"Y aodlng/llf1Gie 'ool fully fulniOhed S3 25 • Oepol/1
into (7&lt;1()~7377 .
loado&lt;l $27,900 00 Can ,
holp delivory. Ask "'' (30&lt;1)675-2970
.-: b~room • . 1112
Nitdd (7.W)385-9948.

3BA', 2BA, 5 .129 acres'.

bath

iJ

2 bearoom aoarrmem lor

...,

houM IDI'Iale P\&gt;ineiO\', 314 SAVE-SAVE-SAVE .
""'"· 3/4 r11f110deled . 0% SIO&lt;i&lt; models 11 old pnceo,
dOWn possible,' paymon1
- . $025.00 monm, no 2005 ITlOilet, anN1f1G Now.
land

~~r·- .
""""'
1

-·

17 .w1~a~......-

Cole'•

Mobile

S

E

Homes,

"'"' '" Sy,ecuse $200 00

oepos•1.

S33000Jmonlh

rent . -

water. 18W8118

and trash Mu!l have suffl·
etent

1nccme

,~

to

qua ..1

15266 ,U. . 50 UI, Aihena, (7&lt;1() )37H 111
0111045701 , (7&lt;1())582- 1972,
5AoomHouNon55J&lt;55101 'Where You Gel · ~, 2 bedroom ap!O. IO "',_.
· P1 PIHouMMoney'sWonh'
f'om
Holzo ,
HOOpnal
...:;., Ss,Ooo Ph l304fn3S460/monln ,.,. allOwed,
7080

-ble

~·n

....,._,.

- - - -- - - ' --

i

LoTs &amp;

ACIIF.AGE "

I

storgage

un1ts

ava1Ia ble

(740)«1·1184 0&lt; (7.W!441·
0194

2·Bedroom ~
Everyth ing new 1 ~e of land wi1h sepOc.. :.=-----~
PoMtie no Money down to electriC and water on 2 bedroom. stove ,

A
Home,

liiiiiii;;-iiDi*iHC*.
~ ·Buyer~. (3()4):674WOICk PllOM tiOitE
,

Sheph erd

La ne .

(740)J88.B3 IS

V~nton ~,.,....tum~

=.:;

r~~

SJS0

~·5 ,.,.. 34 1"2 5 .... _.
su- Call (7.W)446-3870.

Horne Buod-

5111

&amp;m $al0-Sooo PIT
&amp;m 12.000 and up FIT
Poid Vllca1iollo. eor.-

By Owner us 35 '" Mason 5 · 1o1s "" sale dose to 2 2 Of 3 bedroom apartment 11n
County. 5 Rooms &amp; Bait! 12 • acres ..,..... 'iano """"" Middleport.
no
pets.
Bedrooms) . Lar ge Sun- (304}675-5106 aher 4 pm
(7&lt;1())992·5858

74().4t1-1984
_._

-..-

'

. =-~----'-1BR partially lumlohed. all
_, _
Gilt&amp;. One stop sl"'oppmg new. suttatlle tor 1 pet!jOO or
only al Oakoood Homea ol a couple, no pel$ . 7 minuto&amp;
BarbOuraville WV (304)736- from town and A10 Grande.
3409.
$575/fnonrh, all uttlrt111 s
1nctuded
740-2&lt;45-1984

-r...-- -------

Wef'l1r'ibul
, $CASHREWARDSI

In 30 ,._
.....1 Hlgf1 401K available. Wo lau
Ce11Trocy740-441-11182
pr1dO In our and r - ·
(800)2oHlll32
c11nt1 and nNd greet team · www.-~--~
..............,._,_&lt;Dft

Gallipolis. OH
45631.
FDIC and Equal
Oppor1uni1y Ernployor.
Poramedocs
&amp;
EMT'o
needed. ....,. 01 1354
~•
Hiring cash ier &amp; ~- .-on Pil!e.
Gallipolio.
5:30am-2pm. AfliiiY wllhln,
S o - IWl cleanOlg
T.-&amp; BlsQ,jt · Stale
Route 7, beol&lt;le Friendly pooiti9no ln lheAI/POGnMI
Mart (740)446-7282. .
area. C all 88&amp;-305-7378

-

cres, newty refiniShed I
001 , central a1r, hea
ump, basemen t, co nv1ent
y located 1.5 , miles o
50 &amp; only 5 minute
rom
Tuppers
Plains

Is

Coach. ~ lho princlo MANAI3EF1-IN-TAAININCI
Pal, Jon Undner, or the
~...,
• d
-·
Atl'lle1tc Director, Pam HEALTH CARIIIRYICU ••
~•wapenwr.......
·
·
contlnuriCI education and HI""
Se•··l
Ju 1o
Oouthltlat (740)e8S-3328
currenlly
hu
•
'
"''
,_,
" rt,
l aundry / hou!ekeeplng profeMional development Stnlofa and POOr SeMce
Expel10nc:ld Roollna Cr- ouporvloor·ln-Ualnlng poa1- 1 oanclldataa, ycu can fill poo1tJono
nHdocl
in
Florldo'l lion opon. Flololfng pllaao ~ II (7.W)5V2· In lho WM1 VIrginia 1vmy
liurrlcano AIH ~op ..... Coli _____,1 ~M- _ , _ , 11483 n1 oanc1....,. to;
Nallonal GUiftl. H - · llW
::;~.
"'"' ~~ ~- ,.....,.,_
R •
•
,
ol
•David • 1 -m-587~
Must pouNII mang .....,..., m:~gync h'
betwMn the IQM at 17·~
v11ory lldll, btl twdwoddng
Alhlnl
or haW pnor mi+itary lirv·
~ Bonlc lo oottclng· o and dei&gt;Ondablo. Bentfl1o
PO 11m&lt; 2ClOII
Ice, yoo wan1 WMI to ·londoriDl'lhoGallillOIO!mar· pocbli*--. EOE.
-.otU&amp;701
lhllup. For~ln
llol Quallfiod oppllcant wll Sond oppllcollon/r1JIUf110 Ill:
Fu' (740)11112.-.
""" . _ ~: 304-075havo an·all""'•le dogroo or
G
llio
5837
The Albola •tr•·;
• ml ·~- ol -.- v..,.
...........
..._ ,170 PinecrlNt Ottwe
a............v.- RehlbNtbllloft lij;;;;jftft,~--·
lii&lt;tdlng--oroqu!Y,...._. • ._
'!Ill II .,..._ - •
lllentoomblnollonoll&lt;lucaAnn: l.JnclaOOnnll
Ctnllrlol0oldnglordodlca1•f •'
lion ·and............._, -

3 bedroo m m country
Available Immediately, no
pets. $400 month, depo sit,
references (740)446-6890
for appo1ntments

In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunltv ba•e•-

Jl

~ ~ Ac:cr~t!ng
and benefttl. Send I'MU"'- Seeking ARRT , registered ::;:_:. ~27le. ldlllll
to HR Otpl, 200 BradforCI technologist for fuH Ume -----'-~-St. Charlnton, WV 25301 poo111on. Primarily lor CT Sho1okan Karate C -:
pproj,Imololy N50.
ball; 800~835·52n Fu: wtrh opporb.r\lty to work lri . Monday &amp; Thurtday begin- . onthty ptyment. Cal
8
~7·9728.
E-mail: MRI Of UltraiOUnd, a well. nlng S.SUrrber 13111, 6:00·
hrll
or
Robb ie
wvhrOI!W.org EOE
Exporlonco P"''-"ld. bu1 PM. Carloton Sehodl, 17!.:.&lt;1()~~7~-304
:!2:.1'---_.J
Mou 50% oolllng AYDt1. amployof will provldo tr.ln- S - , OhiO. For lnforma· 3 badroom house in
Llml1ad
dmo
ONLY. lng IOWitd certHicallon. lion contact; K«\ny Tolllve' Sy,acuM Willi Q81BIIf. CoN
Groal oppor1unlly · - n g (740)1185-31111&lt;1.
Stove (740)1192 ~115
(7.W)I-46-33tlll. Fif115tocall with-~.,
In a • _ _ ..,...7 .3()39
____
• __
· _· _ _ _

.-lveo a gHl

1184

New LISting lor saJe :0 r rent 1 140- 112 Seco nct
A11e .•
TURNED DOWN ON
in Mason WV manufactured Gallipolis Gre at ne 1ghbor- .
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSI1 1560 sq FT on aox200 hoO&lt;J . For more 1nformat1on
No Fee Unless We Win! · feflcecl lot. 3br. 2bath LA. ,1 7._4::..:
: 01::_
36::.:8_:
·96:::5::.:1_:._ _ _
1 -888- 582~3345
OR, Kit, 3 Seasoned glass Nice 2BR home 1 m•le from
po H.:h.
·ssa ,ooo
or Galhpohs. S4'5o per month

mentlal retalrddalllobnllf" an_d
,Phone· 740-446--7112
H~'.................
deve opmenta sa •·~188 IS
F8JI:: 740-446-9088
Vl•........,
looking tor direct care staff in
FOH SALE ,
•• ·. 7'"
""9088
Clalllpolls. No experience If further Information is
F_.
_,....,_,..
Due lo our recent Agency - - - - - - ' - - . , . . - - necessary. Paid training. ~
0% n-. p
.......lr'n ~men1 ~en
expansion. Medi Home KVC Behavioral HealthCare you would like to join our needed please call Judy · h 1
h
rt
ed 1
Barcus or Jimmie Snyder ·a1 wd ess t an pe ect cr 1 ·
Health Agency, Inc. Is seek· Pt Pleasant .famtl" Seryjcel team to help lndivtduals 7,n . . . 7112.
E
~,
Own don't
1
~
asy qua ..,, Jng.
lng both 8 full·time AN C8se Specja!ist" lh1s· iS 8 case achieve their fullest poten· ~~--~---....., ren1
Loca 1
company.
Manager and a full·time RN management
position. tlal , appty in person at
Sotoot.s
Mortgage Locators. 74D-

package and 401K. E.O.E.
flleue tend resume lo 352

bed roo m
hou:je
in
GallipOlis
"$35 0/month
depos1t req u1red. (740 1441·

Home For Sale
Hand buill log home . 6 years A Foreclosed Home
old Pnvci te w1th 10 acre s.
Onl y $8,9001 Th1s Home
.St.unntng viewl 3 Br., 1 1/2 Must Sell! tor li stings cal l. 1•
Absolute Goldmlnel 60 bath. Open loft '
600·366·9783 "' b83B
vending machines/excell ent Financing iva liable with
Beautiful Downtown 3·bed·
locations all for $10,995
NO DOWN PAYMENT!U
room. 1-bath, storageroom
(800)234·6982
(740 )368:0164

-

L~ Furniture, 856 3rd. position , fuH or part lime.
Ave, Gallipolis, 9·5 no phone
Arbors at Galllpolts
ca"s plea&amp;e:
Ann : Unda "oennis

be licenMd in both Ohio and
Walt VIrginia . We offer a
competlllve salary. benelilo

992·7321

80()..234-6982

IIELPWANTFD

Now Hiring!

- ------Full time position at Rob's

Delivery/Warehouse person
needed, full time, immediate
opening, muS1 have. excellent drivln~ record, appty at

w1tl1 l e~s tha n pe dect credit
Easy qu alifymg Own don 't
company
ren t
Local
Mortga ge t..o cators 740 -

dwelllngt~advertllad

0Pro1ffi1NITI'

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
60 vending machines/
excellent locations
all tor $1 o.995

IC&gt; 2004 by NEA,

0% Down Payment ever

r::::=J -------,J -------IIEIIWANTFD·

River lot wtth water &amp; electric ·available Box trailer for Foster Parents needed· if
storage. Call Ron (740)446· you have an extra bedroom
&amp; wish to help a child you
7885.
can become a therapeutk:
I \ 11 '1 !~\ \ II \ I
foster pare~t k&gt;r youths age
" I I\ \ 1( I ..,
birth thru 18. You will receive
reimbursement of $33 to
110
lll::u- WANIJ:tD
$48 a dav plus paid repent,
1•
we are looking for homes

BuSJNfNi

~

~
~

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real
estate which ialn
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
lntormad·that •II

Flat Prices

7484 or (740)645·0891.

IH '\ 1\1 '

Room 12x32. all , new
'
Carpet, Full Basement 112 Mobde home tot lor rent at Doe bedroom apartment.•
acre 1o1 s.41 .900 (304)67S. Johnson's Mobile ' Home no pets. 1n Pomeroy_
Park. (7&lt;1())446-2003. •

2933 •

I '
I

'

(740)992·5858

'

.

.

�..
'Monday, September 13; 2004
ALLEY OOP

Monday, September 13, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel 'Page BS

www.mydai lysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Aparbnonl Avalloblo Now.
River Bend Place. New
Hawn. WV now accopllng
oppllcallona for HUD-aubsl·
dlzlld, 1 bedroom apart.,.nll. Utilities lnctuOed Call
1304)882-3121 Apartment
available for qua'lifled senlorldlsollltd person. EHO
Applications being taken for
very cltan 1 bedroom in
coun1ry aet11ng vet close to
town. Washer, dryer, stove,
fridge II"ICIUded. Water and

garbage Included. Total electric with AC. Tenant pay electriC. $300 deposit. $375 per
month . No pets. No smok·
lng. 740.446-2205 or 740.
•46-9585 as~ for Virginia.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive !rom $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740~6-2568 .

Equal

Housing Qpportuntty.
Beech Street, Midclleport, 2
bedroom. furnished apart·
ment, utilities paid, deposit &amp;
reference,
no
pets,
(740)9l'2-Q165

..CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
REN:r. Coli 1740)441 ·1111
for appllcaUon &amp; information.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor . and
Riverside
Apartments ·in Mlddleporl.
From $2~5-$444 . Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
0--'-'ppo_rru_n_it_le_s____
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
1740)446·3736

JET
1998 John Deere 8875 skid
AERATION MOTORS
loader (73 HP) turbo excel·
Repair~. New &amp; Rebuilt In lent condition. 975 !'lours
camper lots, $125.00/mo. 1 Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· with construction bucket
$13,500.00. Also have 9-11
-office buHdlng. $300.00/mo 800-537-9528.
backhoe to tit skid loader,
~lgglng depth up to 11 feet.
NEW AND USED STEEL Prk:ed sopan1te 1740)992Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 5072
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, ,Flat Bar, Steel Firewood for sale. $30 picl&lt;.·
Grating · For
Drains, up or s6o &lt;Wiverad, in most
Good Used Appliances.
starts
Orl\lewavs &amp;·Walkw~ ys . L&amp;L areas. Delivery
and
Reconditioned
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Sept6. 1740)3811·8738.
Guaranteed.
Washers,
I \tnt "I 1'1 ' 1 I I...,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
.\ I I\ I .., 11 H 1,
Refrigerators, Some start at
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Sunday. 1740)446-7300
FARM
Vine St. : 1740)446-7398
EQuii'MF.N'I'
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
Chapel Road. F'Qrter. Ohio. $5.995 Includes Painted Ford 600 .series, new paint,
1740)446-7444 1-877-830- M8tal, Plans, Instruction gauges, tacK; changed to 12
9162. Free Eslimates, Easy Book, Slieler, Free Delivery volt, runs goocl, $3200,
financing, 90 days same as 1937)559-8385
'1740)949-2700
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Precious
Moments J. 2030. Deutz-8006,. Four
Ori\18· a- little save alol.
Figudnes &amp; P Buckley Moss Bo"om Plow, NH Hay-Head
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Plates 1304)882-2436
HayWagon. NH HayBine, JO
Aepalr-675-7388. For sale,
48-Loader;
JO-Mower
5'x7' ,$50.00,
re-conditioned automatic Window
1304)882·3459
washers &amp; dryers, refrlgere· Marble Window sill 1'
tors, gas and electric stO:oo, Storm-Door 35• 'Model 782 New Holland
ranges, air. conditioners, and wide $5.00, Basket-Ball Pole Forage Harvtster with 35• i
wringer washers. Will do $20.00, Ph. 1304)882-2755 row corn llead. Model 770W
Hay head. New Holland crop
repa irs on major brancts in
carrier
a silage wagon &amp;
0
Gehl&amp;ilage wagon. All are in
130
,
good condition &amp; field ready.
Bulavllle Pike, dressers, Block, brick, sewer pipes, 1740)245·5047.
couches. mattresses. reclln- windows, lintels, etc. "claude
ers, grave monuments, Winters , Rio Grande. OH
1
much more. (740)446·4782 Call740-245*5121 .
Gallipolis, Ohio Hrs. 11·3
PITs
6yrs Old Morgan/Quarter
IM-F).
~
FUR SALE
Horse, black, broke to ride &amp;
traffic sa.fe $750
2
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab Yearling Palomino Stud Colt.
puppies. Sho1s. wormed &amp; Reg . Quarter Horse, gentle
Horton
Super
Mag . dew claws refnovecl. $300· $800
Crossbow with scOpe &amp; $350. 1 740)4~1-0130 .
6yrs old Bay Mare Pony,
case, $275, Call (740)367broke to ride 5450 (304)n37564.
.
5103

~:: ~:::1::eh:7:.~

r

i

s:=

S1.

Auto
Parts

Rt .681

Darwin, OH

Restockfrrl late Nbdel Sal"'9'e
and Arter • .tla rket hrts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun.

c'iosed

~.~o_..;,iiiAiOl!fOSiiiiilliiio-rJ
~

Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Bonanza Gel
SFREE

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

r

'

Call:

1140

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

92 Buick Regal , $1 ,000.00; 1986 Honda V45 excellent

2000· Pontiac Grand AM SE, condition, 13,000. miles. 2
$6,700.00 call 1740)992· new helmets, $2 ,~00 .00
2136
1irm. 1740)992-6154

sage

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

liNDA'S PAINTING

1995 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic . E11cellent condition,
low
mileag·e,
extras,
$12,000.
17401441-0541
·a_1_te_
r Sp_:_m_._ _ _ __

BARNEY
DIDJA GIT TH'

1999 Red Honda Foreman
450S 4.x4 Adult Ridden. Exc.
Condition $3,300 1304)7735103

(304) 273-5321

TRUCKS
FOR
SALE

2001 F-1 so Super Crew
Lariat 4x4, 53,000 miles.
excellfnt condition, loaded.
' $21 ,000. (740)388·0151 oi
740}339..()564.

· THE BORN LOSER

o.J~ L~NC.i-\ f-\OIJ R:'&gt; AA£ ~=
(N(R~!',c.,\;iiPh--::-·1.\ ~

~'I'\ EJ&gt;..I&lt;,L'{ FOR

I""

Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

D\ ~(R .,_..- ,",...

1-7 40-843-5382

FOR SAu:

•.

See'

' .
'. ·Rocky:,"RJ"
.
· .Hupp

1981 Arne. Eagle, All Wheel
Orivei, Auto, Great Work Carl
1·984 Ame Eagle for parts 4
speed, select 4 Wheel Drive
both or $600 1304895-3470

BIG NATE

Mr.
F'1x
It ,
Home
Remodeling,
Repairs,'
Roofing, ·· &amp;
Painting
1304)675-3733

~~

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

BUILDERS IOC.

High&amp;Dry

'

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Rcplace~en1
Windows • Rooting

33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

PEANUTS .

45771
• 740-949-2217

TillS IS OUR LAST 6AME OF
TI-lE SEASON SO IT'S VOIJR

to 10!x30'

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

CIIANCE TO BE TilE llERO .

111-4/1 mo pd

I
9113/04

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

BETTY
\I' 1 GO

South Chiucb St.

-~'0\f\1

Ripley, WV 25271

1 Ge.T M'f
~~?

l-800-822-0417

"]/

di.E

Place Your Classified Ad In Wednesday's
~
GalllpoUs Dally Trlhune; Point Pleasant
. dU.USS
IIlid
Register, or Dally Sentinel, And .Jt Will Ru·u For 1II•••
...1415
FREE . In The Tri-County Marketplace!
1.
1

7

I

I•.
1
•I

.I'

~
·

\

.I.\ I

'flME 'TO E:XPI.-ORE 'fHE OUfER
REACHE5 OF MY UNIVE~

ltl-

R--'ddid&lt;&gt;tu

B,_:;c:,,_,
PtiW Bl1il4i•rs

J -740-992-l17l
-~~Owner
740-741-llJl

Barnhart

•Po.aF...._

r------~-..,
YOUNG'S

_J304) 675-J33J _

_j

·-----

•

A
1' .
._no..,..

·~&amp;~

-&lt;:ompkk lltmodding

,-

• Vinyl s.Jinta &amp; P.wrtirlog
• Pltio IQd Porch Oec:U

OMAATSP

COMNC

NTRX

TO

F WT D
WSI

EN ."

EGRXGO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "OppMumt1es are.often lh.ngs you haven 't not1ced
the lirst ltme around."' - Catherine Deneuv~
·

~~~:~:~' ~© \t~ N\-g t

irS

8

~::~:

- - - - - - - l~it•J ., CLAT I, P O L L A N - - - - - -

-... '11lrlhdlltY:

Rearrange letters cf
0 four
scro mbled •words

th•

be-

low ro form four words

I

CIDUNE

T ORNF

I I. 1· I

I

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

I

rrR RDI
5
.I .I 1
. .

~ :,~

-

My husband and I ratsed five : .. ,
.
. ... children. We learned early nol .,
•
to tefi \he chil dren . what we .:
.,
L O DS I T
didn't \,ant the ne&lt;ahbors tc ·

tully appreciative of th'eir importance. just
go with the flow.
SAG ITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) - As of
today, con.j1tions will beg1n to stir that
co uld have a profound effect on vour
hopes and ambitions. Follow your •mpuls·
es it they tell you to strive lor some lofty ·
objective.
CAPRfcbRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Those
very same people who may hao.;e reJected
your plans or Ideas in the past w111 recetve
new infOt"mahOn today lhat w111 cause them
to do an about face and beCOme .loyal
supporters.
'
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Profound
steps can De taken today to alter a negative situation that seemed impervious to
chcmge up until now. A shift in comhltOns
v.·Ut make this new opportunity possible
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) - An lllJDOrlant CtWenant !'13V be reached today 111at
wilt have e•cellent chances tor success.
Dame Fortune may play a role m bnng1ng
about an agreeable nature by all par!Jes
involved.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) - As an
employee. Circumstances today could QIV(I
you a chance to do th1 ngs that would

I
f--,;~6;-:,l...:...,l:..,.:,lc;7'-,lr--l '()
L _.l..--'---'·--'·--'·'---'·

C;m-pieoe ohe &lt;hu:lle quc&lt;ed

i

by till rn; in rhe m•UmQ words ·
yau d~Ye lop from !lep No 3 b~low

9 PRI
NT N UMB~ lEO l£TTERS I'
' • '
IN THEoE 501JARE5
I
'
I'
I
'
.
0
UNSCR~MB, E lEITERS! I I I
I, I.
;_
· -F~
O;:_
R :;:.;
A";;:.:
' SW
:..;;_l;;_P._...l.......:.--l...--1..-

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ' -:

Manure - Owner- Eider - Wallet-

I
.

o-"'

WANTED

Humans ar e an odd lol. When they gel whal they ·
w 1sfle:J for they wond~ why they WANTED &lt;tl

ARLO &amp; JANIS

•~

•

Starting today. everyth•ng can ~ J n to
changi, with new contacts ancl intere5ts
openiflQ up a whole new world lor you . '
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - What will
develop today may serve to cause fam1ty
manNs to taka on tar greater ~gnit..:;ance
and Oraw your entire C1an Closer together
1nto a more loving and supporting unrt
CANCER
(June 21-Juty 22)
tmaginaboo and creatiVity can be used
51Ji1Xe$5fulty toclay to sell others on emerDriMS Of ventures that ara ot 1nterest to
- , you , Don't be tlmid; go 1n and maQ an

SO.UP TO

..

NUTZ

&amp; Gufl«t

7H=.7JI~

• New Homes
• Garages

- Complete
Remodeling

148-992-1&amp;71
StDp &amp; Compare

"
)

•

VMV

TO

0M

W

.J~"YI£E

•Replattmeat \\indo"' s
•Roofs

''

DZGS

AstroGraph

.op tharn.

'

'

(C

X S E R X A G V WA A
ESDTA

RWDRZ

LEO '( .July 23-Aug. 22) - Although !hoy
may be in their embryoniC stages. there
Will De more material opportunrtles than
usual around you today tt's your chance to
Ott aheAd by doing 'tllhat_you can to deYel-

CARPEMTER

I
Jotnt Jlrasa~t l\rgistrr j ~'t:tes v~~;~n
~40-667-6080

OM

omhu--.

a.m.,..

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TAURUS (Apfi120-May 20) :-II your SOCial

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Toda y's c'ue. X equals K

LJ~Qrade the quality of vour ~rformance

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inclinations
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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Glimmers
of fresh new hope may become porceptlble today. but evtm il you are not as· yet

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Celetln!'; Cipller crypt~ rams are oealed flom Q oota~oos by famoo! pMpl!, past ar'£1 p~esenl
Eacn lette1 rn the cr~h er Slands for another

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COMMERCIAL and

I

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-!

43 Typo ol
wrestling
44 Decoy
45 Strong

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Tua1day, Sapt 14, 2004
By Bernice Bade Oaol
You. could be exceptionally successlul in
the year ahead in s11uations where you can
use your creativity and imagination. The
produ cts of your fertile mind will be
responsible lor making you a winner.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Now is the
~me to accelerate your pace, not slack off
it you are promoting someth1ng that otters
lhe promise of. personal benefits . Sell·
reliance is tt1e greatest gift you can give to
yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. 23) - Today marks
the onset of a period where you will beg1n
10 reap rewards from past hal'd work or
!rom persons t9 whom you've t:leen kind in
th e past . Good works are coming home to

Athens

=

_:_ _

G

,.

IMPORTS

.

Dbl.

have a void and is hoping to achieve a
trick-one ruff. If the leader is in any doubt,
1'\e.chooses th e first non-trump suit bid by
the dummy.
Sitting West, wt:Jat wo uld you lead against
six spades doubled after the given auction? .
East's Lightner double asked for a non diamond lead. West. expecting his partner to have a club void, picked the club
ace. At trick two, though , it was the work
of a moment for West to shift to a heart.
Finally, note that after a dramond leacl,
declarer makes an overtrick .

4X4

~ounties

Pass

ble should ask for an unusual lead . So,
the leader doesn't s.efect a trump or a suit
bid by his side. 'Often, the doubler will

No Job 10 Big or Small
Servin!!: Meigs. Mason._.

740-992-5232

'

6 11'

Pass

41 Relieve
from
uniformity ·
42 Think .
.
nothing - ,

~e.

5tnnette)s
Jfduse Cfeaning_Service

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

.!-:-·-~--·--·----~--'-·-·~·-·--·---·-,

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s+

38 Winter mo.

40 Foggy

lnslead , Lightner suggested that the dou-

___.,

93 Nis.san Pathfinder n~s
transmisaion. $1,500.00; 96
Toyota
4-Aunner
nice
$8,900.00 Call 1740)9922136

l0}allipolis l)ail!' ~ribunr The Daily Sentinel

••

East

••

37 Small purse '·

Theodore Roose.velt said. "Nine-tenth s of
wisdom consists in being wise in time."
Timing is very importa~t in bridge, not
only during the play but al so Ji"1 the auc~on . We had a famous Theodore too :
Lightner of that ilk. He invented the slam
double that bears his name 1 Lightner rea·
soned that doubling competent players 1n
a freely bid slam is mathematically
unsound. Suppos·e the nonvuln erable
opponents ·are in six spades. The slam is
unlikely to go more than one down , so a
successful double will .lurn plus 50 into
plus 100. However, if the slam is made,
the double· costs 230 points (180 in trick
score plus 50 "for the insult"). Also. the
opponents might redou,ble, when you
stand to gain 150 points (plus 200
instead of plus 50) or to lose 640 (540 in
Irick score ana 1.00 ~lor the insult") .
Clearly, expectations are against a clou-

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Center

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SeU-Storage

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When Theodore
doubles a slam

740-843-5264

Dodge 1 ca·ravan,
needs little work, body in 101 ,700 mil es. $5,900.00
great shape, needs fuel Call i740)992·2136
pump, cooling 1an assembly.·
MO'roRcYa.ES/
runs good , new clutch,
4 WHEF.LEHS
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YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE
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OPening lead : ??

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89 Taurus S,H,O .. 5 sp., 2001

1997 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat.
1141&lt;, black, leather Interior,
cld player. $9,200 OBO,
1740)992-2932

.

South
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

",----d Financial Service~

VANS
FoR SALE

1997. F-150 tariat Step
Side, ext cab,107,000 mites,
red. Asking $12,000. Call
(740)367-7762 or 1740)3677272.

Reach 3

Dealer: East
Vulnerable : Neither

·

Rocky' Hupp Insurance

1996 SuZuki Side Kick. Auto.
air, covt. h~rd top, e~ecellent
condition, low miles. $4,000.
(740)25fH;800.

II -·

+K2
"- 9

For a Free Quote or Appointment

•r15

1999
Bohnevllle
68K
$5.295; 1997 GMC 1500 SL
pick-Up, t 35K $3,895; 1995
MUSICAL
Grand-Am2099K$1,995. 3
__
~t.JMD(J'S
months/3000 mi le war·
ranties.
COOK MOTORS .
Student SaxophOne toJ sale,
328
JACKSON PIKE
· tor more information call
(740)44H103
ll:l.li::l:~=--...1 1740)441-1892.

.• . QI086

We can insure your valuables! •

For Sale 1986 El Camino,
$2 ,995. 1304)675-7790 or 2002 Yamaha Road Star
Warrior 1700cc $7,500
$500! Pollee Impounds! 1304)593-4111.
1304)882-8290.
Cars!Trucks/SUV's
from
FOR
SALE
$500 Honda's, Chevys,
Jeeps &amp; more! for-listings 2002 Buick Century·Special
800-366-9913 ex V717
Edition Color-Ugh! Sanddrif1
Me1alllc . Mlleage-52,000
19.85 OldsmobJ'Ie Delta 88 ,·n mr'Ies. Intenor·c
·
Ioth seats, 98 Basestream boat. 99
•goo d
rea l
con d'1tion, Ioadod -concert sound sys· Merculrv 150 HP motor, 97
17:_4:.:0!.:.)9:.:9:.2·:_72:::7:_4_ _ _ _ tem II. Exceptionally clean
has cover.
0
1992
M8rcury
Grand car. Call Mike Brown
.
Marques, loaded, all power, 1740)446.()925
'j,p.;~,;;.;;;;.
new ctdtstereo, tires &amp;
080,

.

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

What would you lose if there was a fire?

FOR SALE

brakes.
52300
{7 40)9SS· 381 0

MONTY

6:30
Last Thursday of
every mo11lh
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5,00

-

K J 4
Wesl
Easl
• 4
• J 8
¥ K 5 2
• 6 5 4
+ · AQJ J09873
li'AQ 10763 .. 8 52
South
li'AKQ1 U63

IF YOU RENT

~

..

•

878-2417
.•

09-13 04

.AJ 974~

Henderson, WV

Early birds start

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

.
·-

North
• 9 7 5 2

MYERS

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30 .

Whaley~s

92 Corsica V-6, new !Ires,
BOer
Male
Goats brakes, paint (burguncly)
AKC Registered
Championship bloodlines, runs great, looks great,
Collie Puppies Parent on Site all ages. au full blooded, reg~ $2,700, 1740)742-0509
istered with ABGA. Adults
asking $150 (304)675 ~ 8898
95 Z-28, 350. auto, T-tops,
proven . 1740)245-0485.
leather, dark gre'en, tan lnte·
Beagle pups, tri-color, 1b
Ill \ \" I'41R I\ 114 )\
rior, great shape, $7,000,
weeks old, 1st shots. Call
1740)742-4011 leave mes-

r~l

Guesthouse for rent· bed·
foam, bath w/shower,
microwave, refrigerator, ·air
conditioned, all utilities furnished, S90wkiS350 month,
1740)992-4543

L~

s~ I

New 2 bedroom witll
ANnQUES
attached
garage.
$400/month,
no
pets,
deposit
&amp;
references BuY or sell. Riverine
Anliq1,1es, 1124 East Main
required. 1740)446-2801.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740One bedroom garage apart- 992-2526. Russ Moore.
ment, kitchen furnished, owner.
$400, 1740)992·3623
1_740-)25_6_-t_8_59_
. ___
CKC
Jack
Russell
Terriers.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
$125
each.
1740)256·1652.
Are now taklr)g Applications
tor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR.,
Applications ·are taken $TV's from $101 , OVD· Ferret for-sale 2/years old
Monday thru Friday, from Players,
Vldeo·Games, decanted &amp; fixed , 2./story
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is Computers, Ectl now avail· cag8, hammock, house &amp;
Located at 1151 Evergreen able tor lnio call 800-366- more OJery friendly $150 "tor
~1 t ~1
t wv 9850 ex M655
all call 1304)675-1935
0 r IV9 run
~""" easan •
--~------ - - - - - - - Phone No Is (304)675-5806. 1998 ·weber Horse Trailer Labrador Retriever pUps .
E.H:O
38' w/showtime conversion. AKC, excellent hunters,
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· 3 horse trailer wlfull living $250~biack, $350-yellow.
n •npl"'"tiOO
' 5 for wal'tl'nn• quarters . .Excellent condl· www.s1ee le pam
. t'mg1ab s.com
In .,
""f"'"
,_,
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, tion. 525 ·995 ·00 call Harolcl (740)256-6172.
apar1ment, call 675·6679 _17_4_0 )_385_-7_6_7_
1_ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - EHO
For Saki Dress ~lothing &amp; Rat Terrier puppies, born
Dress Coats sizes 10·14 August 3rd, all fem~le, very
r ui'U'IIiXlUI
cute, shots, clew claws
2 3339
R&lt;lClMS
I304)88 '
removed. 1740)742-1703

i

r

43 Etna 's
island
1 Umpire's
46 " Kon-Tiki"
call
cralt
5 Cul-d•- 47 'loast beef
8 Organize
au12 Doing
48 Propane
• nothing
or coal
13 Rush oH
50 Clapton
14 Scream
of " Lay Ia"
and shout
51 CPR pro
1S Missing
52 Ocean Iller
16 Stein filler 53 Ancient tale
17 Fall to
54 Stuffed
Include
animal
· 18 Indy drivers 55 Take a ·
20 Bfany kl~s
break
article
21 Covered up
20 Fails to be
22 Slxlh sense
DOWN
22 Many
23 Dice throw
26 Chinese
1 Sticky lruit
centuries
soup
2 Nose .
23 Sault Marie
29 Tiny spasms · stimulus
30 Wish lor
3 'Arm bone
24 Patrick 's
31 Two
4 Freeloaders
domain
25 TV adjuncts
hund~ fins 5 Piece
33 Miscalculate
ol broken
,26 Worker's
34 March 17
glass
pay
dances
6 Feels
27 Gawk at
28 Within
35 Dressed
under par
36 Getaway
7 High note
reach of
38 People
8 On time
30 Towe I off
of action
9 Home
32 Magazine
39 Drain
furnishing
execs
cleaner
10 Hertz 'r ival
34 Toronto
Blue40 Some
11 Beauty'
newlyweds . aelon it.em 35 Pine or
41 You, to Yves 19 German
cedar

Phillip
Alder

B

j

--'----- r4____,

. . . . . . _.. _.

ACROSS

Camper lots for rent. River
Pirie: permanent hook-up. 3
small mobile home or

'

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�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Sunday, September 13, 2004

.NASCAA Nextel Cup

'

Reds Baseball

.

Mayfield breaks four-year Brewers shut
drought to race into chase out Reds
jump five spots in the standing ~ to ninth . NASCAR has
now reset the points totals of
th e top I 0. and Mayfield
RICHMOND. Va. - It heads into the i O-race chase
was win and in for Jereniy to the title 40 points behind
Mayfield, who couldn't hide le:ider Jeff Gordon.
his
excitement
when
NASCAR chairman Brian
'· I couldn't see us getting
in without winning the
France stopped to congratu- thing,'" Mayfield said. "We
late him on raci ng his way were in trouble. We had to
into the playoffs
win ... we weren't going to
· "Man, I love your .new ac:cept anything else."
points system," Mayfield
But was a victory seriousgushed. "You couldn't have ly in reach for a driver who
caine up with anythin~ bet- last visited Victory Lane on
.
June· 19, 2000- a span of
ter than this." . ..
One of the ltrst. thm gs 142 races ·l
France dtd.upon mkmg over ' Mayfield
infamously
as N~SCAR s chairman was bumped th e late Dale
shakmgup the pomts sy~te~ Earnhardt out of hi s way on
the senes had. used smce th e final lap to win at
1975. The new torm~lcreat- Pocono that day, and
ed a I 0-race pla~oft s~stem Earnhardt congratulated him
tor the top I 0 dnvers tn the with a one-finger salute as
i)e passed him on · the coolstandmgs.
.. . .
The resu lt ts a Wld~-open down lap . .
The years since then have
race that Will_ give Maytrel_d
a chance at hi S first IItle . It ·s · been :i seri es of ups and '
.a pos!lton he never would downs for Mayfield.
have been , tn ~nder the . old
He split with car owner
syst~m. whtch · le warded Rog er Penske
midway
conststency but .made t?r through the 2001 season and
lacklust.er
cham~tOn:~hlp spent the end of the year out
chases With fe': re~l chal- of work. With no job. he
lenges over the stretch run.
stayed away from the garage
. Now, Mayfield IS cledfly area each week. and hi s
111 the hunt, although he had absence fueled gossip and
to earn the nght. 10 get 1 ~· speculation about hi s perMaylteld ended ~ four-year sonallife and his career.
wmle ss drougln . Saturday
Then car owner Ray
mght With a Vlct~r~ ?t Evernham opened up a seat
Richmond
. International for him in his fleet of
Racewa~.
t' ·
Dodges. and Mayfield again
He had go~e 11110 the had a chance to revive hi s
Chevrolet 400 111 · 14 th place career.
in thehstandings and a minhdBut the results were
set · t at a vtctory was t e mixed , and Mayfield was
only way he wquld crack the rumored to be on his way
tot~eO. moment he crossed out at Evernham this time
the finish line, he was offi- last year.
Instead, they tightened up
cially in, using the win to the program · and Mayfield
BY JENNA fRYER
·Associated Press

has been on a rise all year: ninth, ani.! left Richmond
He's got two runner-up fin - II th in the standings - the
ishes a\)d 1·0 tcip I Os.
first driver shut out of the
But the inconsiste ncy that chase.
·
had kept .Mayfield from ever
In a cruel twist of fate, .
being a contender in the though. McMurray ended up
early part of hi s career still· J'ust 15 points out of lOth
plagued him and he found place and hi"s team couldn't
himself outside the top 10 help but look to the 25
this week after three consec- points NASCAR docked
utive
mediocre perfor- them earlier thi s year when
mances.
. hi s car failed a · pre-race.
With just one race to go . inspection at Bristol.
before tlie playoff field was
Tony Stewart had the same
set, the pressure was clea~ly infraction before McMurray,
on.
but his team was not docked
Hi s team was prepared any points. ·
upon·
its . arrival
in
"Tony Stewart had the
Richmond , qualifying sev- same deal and they didn't
enth and wasting little time take and points away from
in moving toward ,the front. him ," team co-owner Felix
He ended up leading a race- Sabates complained. "Why?
high 151 laps, but needed I don't know why. All I
Kurt Bu sch to run out of gas know is we lost. by 25
eight laps from the end to points. NASCAR took it
retake the lead and lock him- away from us ."
self into the chase.
Bobby Labont e. Kevin
Mayfield, who consider~ Harvick and Dale Ja.rren
him se lf a bit of a hardcluck also .failed to race their way
(acer, couldn't believe I his in. ·
good fortune.
·
And Ryan Newman made
"I couldn't believe it it -just barely. ·
because . the way my luck's
The pole-sitter fell two
been, I thought no way he's laps down early in the race
going to run out," Mayfield on an ill-timed pit stop, then
said. "When he did, I said, saw his gas tai1k running low
'This can't be true, now it 's on fuel late in the race . As
my turn to cut a tire or some- his
team
frantically
thing:"
crunched numbers to see
It wasn't all good luck for where they were in the
the ~est of the ·contenders, standings, Newman held his
though.
,
breath and hoped his Dodge
Kasey Kahne, Mayfield 's would make it to the end. ·
rookie teamma~e. struggled
He fini shed - in 20th
all night and dropped out of place - and took the I Oth
the top 10 after his 12th- and final spot in the standplace finish.
.
ings.
Jamie McMurray had late
"We won the battle, but we
engiae problems that prohib- ·haven ' t won the war.'' he
ited him from racing for the said. "We'll get all our guns
critical few positions he polished for the last 10 races
needed to crack ·into the top and do what we have to do
10. He finished the race as a,team to stay focused."

Indians
Baseball
'
.

Zito, A's· shut .down Indians, 1-0
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) When Barry Zito reached I08
pitches after · six ' innings, he
approached Ken Macha and
assured his manager he'd be
fine t.o go one more.
'· .The way things were going,
Macha had no doubts.
Ziw struck out I0 for the
first time in more than a year
and Erubiel Durazo hit his
career-high 22nd home ·run,
leading the Oakland Athletics
over the Cleveland Indians 1-0
Sunday night.
Zito (Il-l 0) had not reached
double digits in strikeouts
since fanning 10 at Minnesota
on May 27, 2003. He had
struck out nine t.wice this season.
"I think I just found I relaxed
a litlle more," Zito said. "I
think I put too much pressure
on myself early in the year to
be dominant."
He also worked on elevating
his fastball between starts, and
it worked wonders.
After the A's rallied w win 54 Saturday on consecutive

eighth-inning home runs by Oakland plays its final 20 to escape the ba ~e·s-loaded
rookies Bobby Crosby and ·games against the division, jam. That was the only inning
Nick Swisher, Zito gave starting Monday night with the an Indians runner · got farther
Oakland one of his best perfor- opener of a four-game series than first when Zito was in the
mances this year, allowing against Texas.
game.
four hits in seven scoreless
"We couldn't ask for any"We took it all the way to the
innings. His 125 pitches were thing more on Sept. 12 being last out," Indians manager Eric
his second-most ever - he two games up and gain~ back Wedge said. "That will pay off
threw ·128 at Cleveland on against our division,' Zito for us in t.he future. We just
Aug. 21, 2000.
said. "This is what we look couldn't ¥elthat final knock to
Chris Hammond, Chad forward to the first day of tie it or gtve us the. lead."
Bradford and Octavia Dote! spring training."
co,mpleted the six-hit shutout.
Durazo connected with one
Dote! pitched the ninth for his out in the second, sending a l20tli save in 25 chances, strik- 0 changeup from Jake
ing o~t Coco Crisp looking to Westbrook (12:8) over the
end the game with runners on center-f1eld wall. He surpa~sed
first and second.
his home run total of 21 from
" I thought it was important last season, and the A's
.to prove to Macha that I could improved to 14-5 in games in
go out after 100 pitches and which he homers.
Zito struck . out Crisp,
still have a quality inning,"
Zito said. "It was big."
Cleveland's leadoff hitter.
Especially since Zito ·left his ~ limes _and didn't allow a
previOus start .last week htt,. until ~tvmg up back-toagainst Boston after 6 1-3 bat;;k one-out singles to Ronnie ·
innings and 119 pitches.
BeMjart,j and Victor Martinez
The Ns maintained their in the fourth.
two-game AL West lead over
Zito walked Josh Phelps two .
Anaheim, which beat the batters after Martinez, but got
Chicago White Sox 11-0. Lou Merloni to fly out to left

lheAPToplS
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college lootball poll, with first-place votes in paren-

..
~! I

I

•'

theses, records through Sept. 11 , total points
based on 25 points lor a first-place vote through
one point for. a 25th-place vote, and previous
ranking:

ru ~
1. Southern Cal (52) ....... ;!-0 .... .'1 ,611 .... 1
fill&lt;.

2. Oklahoma (10).:.......... 2-0 ..... 1,552 .... 2
3. GeorQia (3) ................. 2-0 ..... 1,478 ....3
4. M181llt .......•.............•.... I -0 ..... 1,398 .... 5
5. LSU ........................" ... 24l ..... 1,344 ....6
6. Texas ...........................24J ..... 1,311 .... 7
7. West Virginia ...............24l ..... 1,087 .... 10
8. Aorida St. ................... 0-1 ..... 1,058 ....4
9. Ohio 51... ..................... 24&gt; ..... 1,030 .... 9
10. California ....... ,............24l ..... 969 ....... 12
11. Florida ........................ 14l ..... 955 ....... 11
12. Virginia .......................24J ..... 812 ....... 15
13: Tennessee:.. ............... 14&gt; ..... 798 ....... 14
14. Auburn .......................24&gt; ..... 739 ....... 18
15. Utah ...........................24&gt; ..... 699 ....... 17 .
16. Iowa ...........................24&gt; ..... 665 ....... 16
17. MichiQan .., ................. 1-1 ..... sn .......8
18. Purdue .......................24&gt; ..... 557 .......25
19: Fresno St. ..................24&gt; ..... 454 .......20. WISCOilSin ...................24l .....404 ....... 21
21. Maryland ................. ...24l .....392 ..... ..23
22. Minnesota .................. 24&gt; ..... 340 .......22
23. Boise St. ....................24&gt; ..... 201 .......24. Louisville ....................24J .... :153 .... :..25. Memphis ....................24&gt; .....86 .........Others recei't(ing votes: Kansas St. 51 ,
Oklahoma St. 47 , Georgia Tech 46, N.C. State
44, Missouri 4 I. Notre Dame 38, Southern
Miss. 37, Troy 31 ; Colorado 27, Clemson 23,
Alabama 20, TClJ 20, Virginia Tech 13, Boston
College 8, Arkansas 5, Stanford 4 .
,

COLUMBUS (AP) -· Universities could be
unfairly targeted ·as discriminating against
women athletes because of wild inaccuracies in
federal data on their sports spending, according
to newspaper review.
An online database of the spending shows that
Indiana University, for e~ample , spent $7.6 million on game-day travel, meals and- other
expenSes for its men's football team in 2001 .triple the costs of any othe~ Big Ten schooL
University officials told The Columbus
Dispatch the true figure was less than $1 million.
The numbers are supposed to indicate if, a
school is complying with the federal Title IX
. law that guarantees women equal access to
intercollegiate spans.
The newspaper reviewed three year's' worth of
data from the U.S. Department of Education and
compared it to ~ produced by the schools,
Each fall, colleges and universities receiving
fedeml aid are required to submit the data electronically to the Education Department, which
posts the infonnation on the Internet.
However, the f.ducarion Department doesn't
check. the reports for accurncy before they are
posted.

·, ,

t

J-.. .

I'\

\n l.

l.

&gt;. '" , -l

•

• Congressman criticized
for handling of debate on
health studies.
SeePage A&amp;

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center resident, Mary Rinehart, 94, plays the. organ donated to the
facility by Edward Jones in memory of his late wife, Maxine: (Beth Sergent/photo)

Late wife's wish fulfilled when organ is donated
BY BEnt SERQEJ'jl
BSERGENT&lt;ii&gt;MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

inst.ead of selling her beloved
organ, he would give itaway.
Giving it away would honor
POMEROY - When a one of Maxine's last. wishes
loved one dies, their belong- which was to donate the
ings represent a physical con- organ for other's enjoyment.
nection to the people they
Edward and Maxine 'met at
leave behind, Their scents church camp a.~ children and
may linger on clothing or eye were married in 1946 before
glasses may be smudged with moving to Iowa. While Mr.
their fingerprint. Knowing Jones taught school, became
what to hold onto and what to a principal and later superinlet go of can be difficult.
tendent, Maxine raised their
When Maxine .Jones . two boys. The family eventupassed away last October, her ally returned to Ohio where
husband Edward decided that. Mr. Jones worked in the

WEATIIER

BY TIM MALONEY

A3
B3-4

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+ $6.00 Kit
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Advertising!

Editorials

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Obituaries

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Bob Burton, left, and Jim Soulsby look over a large cavity
beneath a section of bleachers on the visitors' side of Bob
Roberts Field. The landslide moved all lhe dirt from beneath
the end section of the bleachers and left wide cracks olong the
hillside below. (Charlene Hoeflich / photo)

Toledo and Warren school
systems. After his relirement ,
he decided to go to school to
become a pastor which led he
and Maxine to the community of Albany.
Maxine always supported
her husband's work by talking, advi sing and praying
with the people of her husband's congregation. Amid
all the changes in her life, a
30 year battle with diabetes
and heart disease remained

Please -

.

Organ, AS

MIDDLEPORT - Mayor
Sandy lannarelli got plenty of
calls about it Monday, but
said Middleport resident s
should not be worried the vii!age was excluded. from the
DuPont C-8 settlement.
Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains
and Mason County warer districts will receive new stateof-the-art treatment plants to
remove the C-8.
Iannarelli said ql Monday' s
regular meeting of village
council that she was reassured by Steve Williams in
the Logan Environmental
Protection Agency office t.hat
Middleport is far enough
away
from
DuPont 's
Washington
Woiks
111
Parkersburg t.hat the C-8
poses no t.hreat.
·
·
:we really don't have any.~ ·
t.hmg to _worry about,
lannarelli sa1d.
The mayor said Williams
reassured her that the parts
per billion of C-8 would be

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - All Meigs
County villages were represented at last week's emergency mit.igation meeting,
including Middlepon and
Pomeroy, which had missed
the first t.wo meetings. .
Pomeroy was represented
by Village Administrator
John Anderson, while his
son, Bmdford M. Anderson.
represent.ed
Middleport,
where he, too, is village
administrator.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The conditions of Union Terrace Road
and the walking path dominated the discu"ion at
Robert E. Byer, director of gency mitigation plan cali Pomeroy .village council on
the . Meigs
County indeed be a tedious, difficult Monday night.
Emergency
Management task, as ·evidenced in Gallia
Pomeroy resident Robert
Agency, . last month had County. where a similar comSmith
of Union Terrace
called · Pomeroy
and mittee spent t.wo daYs outlinRoad, followed up · with
Middleport's failure to attend ing solu~ions to potential
on _his request to have
council
.
previous meetings "ludi- emergenctes.
crous " but was happy with
Nonetheless, Byer satd th~ the road paved. Mayor John
·attendance 'at last week's · work has to be done, to make Musser infomned Smith that
meeting, at which there were Meigs County_ eligible for after checking into it he
10 officials, counting Byer.
htgh-dollar mitigation grants, found that it would cost the
"Definitely," Byer said. "I a new focus of the Federal · village $15.000 to pave the
Management road and funds were not
think the villages are getting Emergency
.
. available at this time. Mu~ser
more interested, and I'm Agency.
pleased to have seen so mariy
Maureen R1chard. an engl- added that he is working on
Issue Two which will possiat the meeting."
bly
result in fundin g for the
.
Ple1se
Meetl-AS
Prepanng a county emer-· ..
road at an undetermined date.

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The Daily Sentinel
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far below dangerous levels at
Middleport.
"People called and couldn't
understand why we weren't
included." she said. "I would
be concerned, too , if the
chemical was here. It's not
here , so· that's a different
story."
Village
Administralor
Bradford M. Anderson said
the water districts receiving
the new tr~atment systems
are inheriting an expensive
maintenance bill as well.
"If this all goes through,
and those water , districts do
get upgrades to remove C-8,
what's going ta happen when
it comes time to replace the
filter?'' Anderson said.
"There could be a large operating cost ."
In other business, village
council voted narrowly to
deny paying an increase in
health insurance premiums
for employees with depen'
dents . The decision affects
six emp.loyees who w"ill now

Please see EPA. AS

Poor roads and high
weeds top Pomeroy
Village Council agenda

Emergenty meeting is_well-attended this time

Dear Abby

,,

\\\\H , I11HI.nho..,t'11l111d 111111

BY TIM MAL.ONEY
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

'

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EPA assures Middleport:
No C-8 worries ·. . ·

INSIDE

Elich Kit Contains the Following:

i

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Page AS
• Donald B. King

Calendars

t

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OBITUARIES

Classifieds '

,

l · ·•~ tlO

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
about it in the way of correc- he plans to check into thill '
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM tive work. He· said the end with Barb Flowers of ·t he
. ' sect.ion Of the bleachers will D~partmenl of Natural
POMEROY .
While be removed and that area will Resources, Division of Mine
~pa1rs to an earher landshde remain roped off.
Reclamation . "To me it
111 the end zone of the Metgs
While the matter will be looks like thi s one is just
Marauder football field were discussed at tonight 's Meigs where lots of water zame off
t.
completed earlier th1s sum- Local B d 0 f Ed
mer. a second one has now
. . oar
uca wn that hill and with the nature
occurred on one end of the r.neetmg Buckley says as he . of the slop and the five inchseating area on the vi sitors sees It the best thmg to do ts es of rain we got, the soil
· became saturated causing it
side of the field
nothmg nght now.
A section · commonly . "I think we need to wait to slip."
referred to as Hannah's Hill and see what happens there. . Buckley said getting in
shifted last week, leaving the We can get along without there with a bulldozer and
hillside w.ith open crevices those ble~ch~rs. When I l~ok starting to move the ground
and what almost appears to be at that h1lls1de ~~ looks like around as he 's been encoura cave beneath one section of more slippage IS occurrmg aged to do by some could just
the bleachers. An area of the and the best thing now is to lead to more slippage. He
hillside and a section of the block the hillside off and see said in his opinion for now
bleachers has been roped off. what happens, and then go the best thing to do is wait"
At the present time, Meigs from there."
and see what else happens .
Local ·
Superintendent
When asked about it possiThe area where the slipWilliam Buckley said there bly being mine related as the
are no plans to do anything other slip was, Buckley said . Please see Lllndslide. AS

2 SECnONS- 12 PAGES

l

I

• Southern golfers take
third place p,t Cliffside.
See Page 81

INDEX

,) l \ l

.._,I I'll \I I'~ ll''\.

Second landslide occ.urs ·at Meigs football field

- o n P. . A8

•• -

II I "II\'1

SPORTS

~m""""""""

CASH?

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-Bengals' defense
crumbles first
timeout, B6

. Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GARAGE SALE KITS NOW
AVAILABLE· ONLY $6.00
• 3 Slurtly Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24" ~ 12"
• 3 WOoden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs.,to be p!&gt;sted on bulletin
boards at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step onstruction sheet, plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Profits al
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multk:olored Balloons
• I Mar1&lt;er for Signs

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en

CINCINNATI (AP)
runs while starting the last
Russell Branyan is with his three games of the series.
third organization this season .
"I feel if I can get some
He thinks he has found the consistent at-bats, I can proright tit.
duce," Branyan· said.
The Milwaukee third baseClark, who spent 2001-02
man,
who played for with Cincinnati, added a
Cincinnati the_ last two years, three-run shot, his career-high
homered twice and drove in seventh overall and sc!cond of
three runs to lead the Brewers the series, to give· the Brewers
over the Reds 11 -0 Sunday.
a 7-0 lead in the fifth.
.
"We never expected that
Jenkins hit his three-run
type of power production, and homer off Todd Van Poppe!,
he 's played · a solid . third his 23rd, to make it 11-0 in
base," Milwaukee manager . the sixth.
Ned Yost said.
·
One ~ay after the Reds beat
Brady Clark · and Geoff the ~rewers 9-0, Luts
Jenkins each. added a three- Vizcaino and Dan Kolb
run hom~r to help the pitched the last two innings to
Brewers gain a split of the · complete the four-hitter for
four-game series.
Milwaukee's nimh shutout of
Branyan responded to a the season. The Reds have
fan's comment that he was been blanked nine times. .
overrated by hitting a solo
"They killed us yesterday,
homer in the second inning and we. responded,' Branyan
and a ·two-run 'shot in the said.
Aaron . Harang (8-9) was
fourth to give him ·10 this
year.
handed hi s third straight loss
"I didn 't even know I was since throwing a three-hitter
rated," said Branyan. who against St. Louis on Aug. 26.
spent time in the Atlanta and He gave up nine hits al)d
Cleveland system.s before seven runs with no walks and
joinin~ th~ Brewers in late two strikeouts. He's given up
July. ' How can I be overrat- II homers in his last three
ed?l couldn' t evenJind a job starts, including three on
in the offseason.''
Sunday, after allowing a total ·
Ben Sheets (11-11) struck of II in his first 22 starts.
out II in seven innings,
"If you look at t.he StLouis
allowing three hits and no game, there's no question he's
walks tor his second win in capable . of doing it," Miley
three starts. He had I0 or sa1d. " Everythin¥ is t.he S_ilme.
more strikeouts for the eighth It's just hi s locat1011 and comtime in his career, allt.his sea- mand. I just think. he's making bad pitches.''
.
son.
"It was nice to get Ben ·an
Harang allowed a seasoneasy game," Yost said. "He's · high four homers in each of
had so many dadgum games his previous two st.arts.
when he's goUen no .run sup"I can't explain it," he said.
port."
"It feels like when I'm throwThe Brewers averaged 3.2 ing the ball, there's nothing
runs per game while Sheets there. It's like a dead arm.
went 1-6 with a 3.99 ERA in We ' ll look at video and look
his previous II starts.
at it in my next side and try to
"ft was nice to get out there fi~ure out if there's someand not have to worry about thmg wrong and try to end the
the home run, like I do some- season on a positive note.''
times," said Sheets, who will
Reds pitchers have allowed
·try for a career-high 12th win a major league-high 209
in his next start.
homers, tying the club record
He's won II in each of his set last season.
"Harang has been tough on
four big league seasons.
"You knew it was gain~ to us all year," Yost said. "To
be tough to score runs agamst score that many rul)s is big,
a guy like lhat," Reds manag- and Branyan· had a lot. to do
· er Dave Miley said. "If you-' re with it.''
·
only down 1-0 or 2-0, you've
Lyle
Overbay
gave
got a chance, but you can' t Milwaukse a 1-0 lead in the
give him that. much to work first, drivmg in Bill Hall from
with."
·
second with a double.
Branyan' s
multihomer
Branyan led off the second
game was the ninth of his with a home 'run to right to
career and second this season. give Milwaukee a 2-0 lead.
He also hit. t.wo against the He made it 4-0 by following
Chicago ·Cubs in Milwaukee Clark's single with a homer to
on Aug . 18. He hit three home center in the founh.

EASE THE·
UEEZE!

Report: Errors abound
in university.athletic
.• spending reports

.

Reds snap Phil1ies'
.
stx-game wmmng
streak, B2 · ·

•

Smith requested that the
village cease grating Union
Terrace Road because he felt
it made the conditions worse.
Since there were no funds
immediately available for
paving. Smith also requested
that the village see if they can
oil the road to control the
dust. Musser rep! ied that the
village did not oil roads but ·
he would check with the
Highway Department to see
what they could do on the
matter.
,
Smith complained that a
comtant flow of speeding
cars and ATV" s stir up dust
clouds along the road that
make it impossible for him to
sit on his porch. Smith said if
the 1·illagc could not come up

Please 5ei! Apnd.; AS

'

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