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                  <text>BrowDs l'OIIghed up by

Pirates double
·up Cincinnati, 4-2, Bt

.. Giams, 27-10, B1

Racine, Pomeroy get ODOT Grants

SPORTS
· • Ohio defense shuts
down Buffalo, 34-0. See
Pagtt 81

Bv TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY- Projects in
both Racine and Pomeroy
have been included in $12
million worth 'of . Ohio
Departqsent of Transportation
grants announced Thursday.
Racine
will
receive
$50,QOO to replace the sidewalk on Tornado Road running from Tyree Boulevard to
the new elementary school.
Pomeroy will get $10,000

to install park benches, trash
receptacles and a water fountain at the walking path.
The news was welcomed
by mayors in both villages . .
"We're pleased with that,"
said Racine Mayor Scott Hill.
Since the new U.S. 33
opened, there has been a lot
more traffic on Tornado Road,
as motorists use it to get to the
shortcut using Bashan Road
(County Road 28).
After Tornado Roal;l was
repaved, it became almost

level with the sidewalk. It's
been a signiticant safety concern for all the elementary
school children who walk
there. Hill said.
The new sidewalk, 'which
will be constructed in the .
spring, will include a curb and
a two-foot-wide strip of grass
between it and Tornado Road.
"That way, if a driver went
off the road,' they would hit
it would stop
the curb and
I
.
Please see ODOT, AS
Appalachian Dental Clinic

Continued operation of
dental' clinic assured;
ARC.grants $200,000
Bv CHARLENE Ho~FLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS
·Page AS
• Rosemary Hysell
· • J.P. Rogers

INSIDE ·
• Latest hurricane
assault leaves Florida
pattered anew. See
Page AS

...,.......... _...
Tropical SlQ •• ·

-----·---........ .,..,.. II:

MO'I!Md . , . . _ .

001

2

, . , .

F~.*Mng

M

=~

county ~en· ices go... said
Larry Marshall. administrator
of the Health ' Department.
POMEROY With a "We· re delighted to get the
$200.000
Appalachian word that the funding has
Regional Commission (ARC) come through.''
grant. the ~eigs Courity
He said that without it con-•
Health Department wi ll be tinued operation would not
able to continue operation of have been possible since the
the Appalachian Dental clinic is not to the self-susClinic in Middleport for at taining point yet. He did,
Jeast another year.
however. note that thi s will
The.
funding
was be the last vear for the ARC
announced Thursday by the funding. arid after that "we'll
office of U.S. Sen. George have to go on ·our own."
Voinovich '(R-OH).
Mm.t of the patients at the
"Every resident deserves dental clinic are either uninaccess to quality healthcare, and . sured. underinsured. or under
I am pleased to see the ARC Medicaid: according to
reaching our like this to help the Marshall.
although- he
community." said Voinovich.
emphasized that anybody can
Stacy Hall need only walk through the gate before all 125 members of the herd at Big Rumen
The grant money will be u'e it.
·
farm congregate around her. In the baCkground are the pastures where the cows graze, instead combined with $50.000 from
Services are provided on a
of being bam-fed. (Tim Maloney/photo)
match · funding through the sliding scale basis. He said
Osteopathic
Heritage the agency had "reluctantly"
Foundation for a total project raised prices by I 0 percent
cost of $250,000.
but that no cutback in ser"The dental clinic is a gem
and Hall are well known by operation. that they became in the community insofar as
Piease see Clink. A5
·non-traditional farmers all symbols of farming's future .
In 1993, Dix and Hall were
over Ohio. A group of 45-50
CARPENTER · - While farmers and other agricultural d&amp;ry farming the traditional
other dairy farmers were enthusiasts toured their 6ig way, feeding their cows
trudging out into the cold of Rumen Farm. located on instead of grazing them. They
January last winter, Bill Dix State Route 143 between bad a big bam full of milking
and Stacy Hall ·of western cafpenter and Harrisonville, machinery.
MeigS County were fishing in in August.
"We. wc;re running ourthe Caribbean.
Later this fall, a group of selves in circles and making
That's just one of.the bene- Amish farmers from Holmes only about enough to feed
fits of their 'pasture~based. County are 'expected to visit. us,·· Dix said. "The profit
seasonal dairy farm. It's also
'"Stacy and Bill I think are margin was very narrow.
profitable, humane and envi- really what we could call the because we were doing what
future of dairy farming." everybody else was doing ...
IUillllelllally ~YLaura Ann Bergman, Bergman said.
At the time. 'they had only
spokeswoman for Innovative
Ironically, it was by radiPl,ese see..._ A5
Farmers of Ohio, said Dix cally simplifying their dairy

Local dairy farm takes unique approach

Justus sworn in

WEATIIER

Carleton School to hold Community Olympics

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

BY BEnl Sa:;ay .·
BSfRGEM'~YSEHTltta..COM

SYRACUSE

INDEX •

2~~PAC£S

p.Iendars

A3

aassifieds

83 4
7

Omtics

The 1

Carlelol\ School is 3 DODprofit organization that educides and b3ins individuals .
wilh mmtal retardation and
mental disabilities. The
scbool also reaches out to its
CIOIIIJDIInity by hosting their
second annual Community

Dear Abby

Bs Olympics.
The Community Olympics
A3 will be held from 8:30 am. to

.F.ditorials

on Oct. 9. at Carleton
A4 4·p.m.
ScbooL The events ~ · from

Obituaries

to 3 p..m.
As 9 a.m.
I Aand! and water

Sports

81

Weallw

A6

e&gt;-.ow.v.-.,r

IF

II

(Je.

will be
provided for tam members,
while a roocessioo stand will
.be open duuugbout the day
for ...,.....en wbo want to
cheu 011 the palticipanls.

Scott Justus was sworn in as Middleport:s new postmaster on
Wednesday during a ceremony attended by his family and collegues. Justus has been employed with the U.S. Postal
Service for seven years. Recently. he was the Customer
Service Supervisor in Gallipolis. Pnor 'to that he was the
Offteer-ln-Char~ in Jackson. He began his career as a Pl!
clerk In South Point. As the new postmaster of Middleport he
wants to increase revenue by providing customers with more
·options and a· better quality of sel'vice. Ptctured from left to
Particilllllllllts compete in the egg relay during Carleton School's right 1s Vickie Schnuerer. Manager of Post Office Operations.
Community Olympics.
Columbus District: Andrea Justus. Scott's wife: McKeehan
1
Kay Davis, Director of wants the Olympics to promote Justus. Scott's son: Scott Justus. Middleport postmaster.
Justus and h1s farmly reside •n Potnt Pleasant. W.Va. (Beth
Fduqr)oo a Cabin Scbool
PI me . . Olt Jll:l. A5 , Sergentfphoto)

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sovrtgs Company
b,.BanktJ+.-

..

•

�Pagei\2.

COMMUNITY

The
' Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 27, 2004

·Bv·THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

•

. POMEROY Meigs
County Court Judge Steven
L. Story recently processed
the 'following cases:
Charlie R. Adkins, Athens,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Dennis A. Adkins, East.Lynn,
yv.va., $30 and costs, spet)dmg; RobertS, Allen, Oneida,
Tenn., $30 and cost' seat belt
violation; Jimmy J. Arnold,
Pomeroy, $50 fine and costs,
drug abuse; Charles W.
Bailey, Reedsville, $200 and
Ball,
costs; James F
Meherrin, Va., $30 fine and
costs, seat belt violation;
' Sarah · J. Barber, Reedsville,
$30 and costs, seat belt violalion; Van L. Barber, Portland.
Ohio, $20 and costs, failure
to control; Mitchell D.
Barringer, Reedsville, $30
and costs, seat belt violation;
Curtis W. Benson, Marietta,
Ohio, $30 and costs, speeding; Virgil · E. Bickel,
Coshocton, Ohio, $30 and
costs, speeding; Nick R.
Blackburn , Long Bottom,
Ohio, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation.
Jason W. Blessing, Vienha,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speding; Jerome P. Blodgett,
Spooner, Wis., $30 and costs,
seat belt violiUion; Lonnie
Boggs, Gallipolis, $30 .fine
-and costs, seat belt violation;
Zachary
K:
Boileau,
Bluefield, W.Va., $30 fine
and costs, speeding; Michael
f':t.. Bolin, Racine, $50 fine
and costs, seat belt violation
and failure to register;
Christina M. Bond, Dexter,
Ohio, $30 fine and costs, seat
belt violation; Joshua L.
Bowman,
Ravenswood,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; James E. Boyer,
Middleport. no fine or costs,
stop sign; Michael K.
Bradford, Racine, $30 and
costs. speeding; Teresa P.
Brennan, Fairview Park,
Ohio, $25 fine and costs, disorderly conduct.
Steven M. Bricker, Toledo,
Ohio, $25 fine and costs,
speeding; Charley F. Brown,
McArthur, Ohio, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Edward
, . P.
Bryant,
Charleston, W.Va., $40 and
costs, permit violation and
overwidlh violation; Jon P.
Burek, Cincinnati, Ohio', $30
and costs, speeding; David J.
Burnett, Thornville, Ohio,
$20 fine and costs, traffic
control . deviation/signs;
. Jennifer L. Burns, Kettering,
Ohio, $30 and costs, speeding; Stephen L. Butcher,
Columbus, Ohio, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Richard D. Buzzard, Racine,
$30 and costs, seat belt violation; James M. Cains,
Grayson, Ky., $30-and costs,
speeding.
Raymond D. Canter,
Racine, $30 and costs, speedin&amp;: William R. Capehart,
Pomeroy, $30 and cos'ls, seat
belt violation; Judith S. Carl,
Pometoy, $20 and costs, dri· outSide of maiked lanes;
· ~ I. Casteel, Pomeroy,
, $30 ·and costs, speeding;
·· Linda Casto, Charleston,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Mart R. 'Chambers,
Grove City, Ohio, $30 and
c:Osts. seat belt violation;
Jeny W. Childers, Eleano£,
W.Va., $30 and costs, seat
belt violation; Richard D.
Chaplllllll. Pinehurst, N.C.,
$30 and costs, seat belt 'violation; Cbri.stina J. Christian,
Jackson. Ohio, $10 and costs,
speedil!g; Tracy ~- .&lt;:;lark.
Reedsville, 90days_mJaJI (all
suspended), probali~ $230
fiJ_H:. and $1,71. S m costs.
~ ~magmg and seat
belt VJOlattoo.
Jeonifec M. Clarlre, Athens,
$30 and costs, speeding; l'mll
D. Clay. Syracuse. $30 and
costs, SJ
fiog; Christopher
L. Clemons, I .aoca~. Ohio,
~and~ seat belt violabOD; L.aticia M. Coates, Long
BouoOI, $30 and costs,
speedi'ng; I .inda L. ' Cody,
Ann ·Albor, Mich., $30 and
costs, speeding! James E.
Cookie, Nelsonville, $30 '!lid
costs, speeding; Donald R.

- Meigs Williams, to TP-CWD, right
Conley, L~. Ohio, $30 and costs, no stop lights; Millfield, Ohio, $50 and . POMEROY
and costs, speeding; Sammie Donald
B.
Howland, costs, speeding; Charles 0. County Recorder Judy King of way, right of wa)', Chester.
Robert R. Craft, Carol
L. Copley, Culloden, W.Va., Shadyside, Ohio, $20 and Noland, Shade, Ohio, $30 reported the following transCraft,
to TP-CWD, right of
$30 and costs; Kevin D. · costs, traffic control devia- and costs, speeding; Emory fers in real estate:
way,
Olive.
Ralph J. Day, Ralph J. day,
Cowdery; Reedsville, $20 tion; Brian Hunt, Racine, 10 L. O'Bryartt, Pomeroy, $30
Larry E. HotTman. Levema M.
Jr., Retta K. Day, to Green Tree
and costs, stop sign violation; days in jaii (seven suspend- and costs, seatbelt violation; Financial Servtcing, Coitseco Hoffman, to Steven Shull, Cindy
Paul R. Croy, New Haven, ed), probation, $400 and John C. Omaley, Athens, $30 Finance Servicing, sheriff's Shull, ileed, Villa,ge of Pomeroy.
W.Va., '$30 and costs, speed- costs, driving under the intlu- and costs, speeding; Marc A. deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Steven A. Rfftle, Carol A.
ing; James R. Cummins, ence and reckless operation; Orlando, Hilton Head, S.C.,
John H. Seckman, Louia Riffle, to Steve A. Riffle,
La·ncaster, Ohio, $30 and Tarek Ismail , Hilliard, Ohio, $20 and costs. failure to M. Seckman, to Charles B. deed, Sutton.
Teresa Hedwig !{oush, Teresa
costs, speeding; John D. $30 and costs, spee&gt;ling; maintain assured clear dis- Roberts, Carla M. Roberts,
Hedwig
Cremeans, Gary Roush,
Curtis, Syracuse, ,-$50 and Donald P. Israel, Lansing, tance; Joanna M. Owens, deed, Olive.
to
John
M. Cremeans, Tammy
James E. Fish, Constance
co&amp;ts, speeding; Belinda L. Mich. , $30 and costs, speed- Walker, W.Va., $50 and costs,
L.
Cremeans,
deed, Salisbury.
Dalton, Rutland, $30 and ing; Michael D. Johnson, speeding; Elmer B. Parsons, R. Fish, to Karl Huff,
Nora
J.
Martin,
deceased,
Amanda Huff, deed, Rutland.
costs, speeding.
Racine, $20 and costs, seat- Racine, $30 and costs, seatRick Miller to David to Evelyn L. Gilliland, affiHeather
'A.
Darr, . belt
violation-passenger; belt violation; John E. Bystreck, Denise Bystreck, davit, Chester.
Charleston, W.Va., .$30 and Darlene
L.
Jones, Partlow, Langsville, Ohio, deed, Salem.
Evelyn L. Gilliland to
·.
costs, speed ing ; James E. Mid.dleport, probation, $50 $100 fine, cultivation of marThomas Hamm, · Linda Christopher L. Smith, Trina
Diddle, Racine, 20 days in and costs, selling cigarettes to ijuana; Paul J. Payne, Hamm, to Roscoe Mills, D. Smith, deed, Chester.
barry E. Zorn, to Larry D.
jail (seven suspended). pro- mitior; Donald G. Jones, Columbus, Ohio, $30 and Sandra J. Mills, deed, Sutton.
Zorn.
Daniel M. Zorn, deed,
Roscoe Mills, Sandra J.
bation, $150 and costs, reck- Reedsvi lle, I0 days in jail costs, speeding; David R.
less operation; Andrew J. (seven suspended), ·proba- Perine, Belmont, W.Va., $30 Mills, to · Christopher Todd Lebanon.
Michael ·B. Wayland to
Dill, Sabina. Ohio, $30 and tion. $350 and costs. DUl and and costs, speeding; Geoffrey Hamm, Anita Gayle Hamrn,
Michael
B. Wayland, Carla
deed,
.Sut.
t
on.
costs, speeding; Larry V. failure to control; James A. M. Polen, Heath, Ohio, $30
K. Wayland, Bedford. ·
Rex
Robinson,
Wilma
R.
Dillon, Reedsvi lle, $30 and · Jones, 'Rutland, 390 days in and costs, speeding; David S.
Nancy W,ilxcoxen, Nancy
Robinson, to Michelle R.
costs. speeding; John H. jail (380 suspended), proba- Popick, North Canton, Ohio, Donovan, deed, Orange. · · Adams, to TP-CWD, right of
Dorsey, Vienna, W.Va., $30 tion , $250 fine , three counts $40 and costs, permit and
Wendy L. Shulec to way. Athens County.
and costs, speeding; James' E. of
domestic
violence; overwidth violations; EvanS. Thppers Plains-Chester Water
Charles R. Eads, Jo Ann
Douglas, Athens, $30 and Mathew
Eads,
to Aaron Lee Krautter,
W:
Jones, Prather, Georgetown, Ohio, Distric, right of way, Sutton.
costs, speeding; Brian · E. Columbus, Ohio, $30 and $30 and costs-, seatbelt violaClifton T. Sisson, Suzapne deed, Rutland.
Dale Barr, Pauline Barr, to
Durham, Racine, $30 and costs, speeding.
tion; Charles W. Price, l. Sisson, to TP-CWD, right
Ernest
H. Martin, Jr., Patricia
of
way,
Salisbury.
.
costs, seatbelt violati'on;
D'Ly nn
R.
Keesee, Whitesville, W.Va., $30 and
A.
Martin,
deed, Olive.
Charles
Lewis,
Ruth
William J. Durst, Middleport, Middleport, $50 and costs, costs, speeding.
Brian
Hannagan
to John D.
Lewis,
to
TP-CWD,
right
of
180 days in jail (all suspend- speeding; Jesslee K. Kimes,
Dale
F.
Proffitt,
Stock,
Diane
Stock,
· deed,
ed), probation, domestic vio- .· Middleport, costs . only, Parkersburg, W.Va., $30 and way, Salisbury.
Mickey Williams, Robin Rutland.
lence; Mathew A. Dyck, domestic violence; Julia A. costs, seatbelt violation;
Athens, 10 days in jail (seven King, Pomeroy, 10 days in Dwayne E. Qualls, Pomeroy,
suspended), probation, $425 jail (seven suspended), pro- 990 days in jail (98,0 susfine, driving. under the intlu ~ bation, $100 fine, driving · pended), probation, costs,
ence, failure to ~ontrol, fail- under
the · suspension; · two counts of resisting arrest,
ure ro display plates/valid Michael A. Klein, McArthur, assault, criminal trespassing,
sticker; Shane M. Edenfield, Ohio, $40 fine, speeding; eight counts of disorderly
· Charmco, W.Va., $30 and Cyrus H. Knotts, Reedsville, · conduct, two counts of DUI;
costs, speeding.
.
$20 and costs, .reckless oper- Timothy
L.
Querrey,
Donald Edwards, Pomeroy, ation; Samantha Lambert, Murraysville, W.Va., $30 and
360 days in jail (323 sus- Racine. 10 days in jail (all costs, speeding; Jason G.
pended), probation, $100 suspended), probation, $100 Quivey, Racine, 10 days in
fine, two counts of theft; fine ; disorderly conduct; jail (all suspended), probaT.
Eigensee, Ronald
James
L.
Landow, tion, $.150 and costs, driving
Columbus, Ohio, $30 and Columbus, Ohio, $30 and under suspension; Douglas·
costs, speeding; ,Oliver H. costs, speeding; Brandi N. Raines, Long Bottom, $30
Enoch, Given, ,W.Va. , $50 Lane, Racine, $80 ·fine, drug and costs, seatbelt violation;
and costs, speeding; Steven P. abuse and seatbelt violation; Joseph D. Rebecca, Long
Erwin, Pomeroy, $20 and Jason C. Lang, Grove 'City, Bottom, • $50 and costs,
costs, speeding; Patrick R. Ohio, $30 and costs, speed- speeding; Daniel J. Reese,
Fahy, Athens, $25 and .costs, ing; Craig A. Laverdiere, Wellston, Ohio, $30 and
disorderly conduct; · Ira C. Mayfield Heights, Ohio, $30 costs, speeding; Gary R: · Again this year Trinity Church had a fee gospel concert in the
Fisher, Ripley, W.Va.. $30 and costs, seatbelt violation; Reitm,ire, Pomeroy, $50 and amphitheater and accepted a love offering from those attending.
and costs, speeding; Nicholas Simon K. Lawrence, Galina, costs;
speeding;
M.R. That evening at the concert a total of $620 was .given for the
A. · Fogg, Athens,. $30 and Ohio, $50 and costs, speed- Richter, Chillicothe, Ohio, God's Net youth program of the Meigs Cooperative Parish~ One o.f
costs, speeding; Chester M. ing; Angela M. Lee, Albany, $30 and costs, speeding; the singing groups,The Proclairners, donated the money they
Francis, Pomeroy, $30 and $30 and costs, seatbelt viola- Donald A. Riffle, Racine, $20 received for travel expenses, and the Trinity Church contributed
costs, seat belt violation; tion; Charles M. Lemley, and costs, failure to control; enough to make $1,000. The other singing group was Day Spring.
William
M.
Francis, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, traf- Norma J. Riggle, Athens, $30 · A check was presented by project chairman, Carol Adams, to
Reedsville, $20 and costs, no . fie control deviation; Jerry J. and costs, speeding.
·
Keith Rader, parish director, this week. (Cha~ene Hoeflich)
assured clear distance; Scott Lewis. Racine, $60 and costs,
R. Frazier, Middleport, 180 speeding and seatbell viola- •• ·•••
rt• . . . •• ',t•
..
days in jail ( 170 suspended), ttOn.
probation, $150 fine, theft;
Charles E. Linko, Vienna,
Kim W. French, Parkersbnrg, W.Va., $20 and costs. failure
W.Va., $30 and costs, speed- to maintain assured clear dising; Heather A. Fry, tance; Steve B. Lippson, ••
'Middleport, $30 and costs, Syracuse, $30 and costs, •••
•••
speeding; Minter V. Fryar, speeding;
Jennifer
L. ••
·
•
Syracuse, no fine or costs, Mankin, Pomeroy, no fine or •••
\~
speeding; Mark E. Frye, costs, speeding; Carl A.
Cheshire, $30 and costs, sear Metheny, Sissonville, W.Va.,
belt violation; Scott W. $30 and costs. speeding;.
Gallaher, Col!lmbus, $30 and Randal L. Matthias, Foo :•..
costs, .speeding; Julia L. Wayne, Ind., $30 and costs,
Garnes, Cottageville, W.Va., speeding;
Crystal
D. '·:
$30 and costs, speeding.
Mauntel, Langsville, Ohio,
Ronald A. Goldhardt, $30 and costs, speeding;
.7
Columbus, Ohio, $30 and William K. Maxwell, $30 and
P.
•
costs, speeding; Marisa A. costs, speeding; Brian J.
J.
Gray, Pomeroy, 20 days in McClintock, Shade, Ohio,
jail (all suspended), proba- $30 and costs, speeding;
tion, $50 and costs, two Angela
S.
McClure,
counts of drug abuse; · ~omeroy, $30 and costs,
Timothy
M.
Grove, speeding;
Jeremy
M.
Williamsville,
$50 and McDonald, Nelsonville, $20
cOsts, Speeding; Mathew A.
costs, stop sign;
Cedric . . .
GIUI!b, Thppers Plains, $30 and
L. McDonnell,
Middleport,
9
and costs, seatbelt violation;
$20
and
costs,
stop
sign;
Curtis R. Grubbs, Gallipolis, Janet M. McElroy, Coolville,
" 1
$30 and costs, speeding; $30 and costs, speeding;
Robert D. Grueser, Racine,
Mark D. McMuUen, l..orain,
$30 and COSts; speeding; Ohio, $30 and costs, speed.
·
Jesse D. Haggy, Pomeroy, ing; Justin R. Meadows,
$20 and costs, failure to confrol; Tena Harper, Belpre,
$30 and costs, ~peeding; Columbia, S.C., $30 and . .
Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004
·Jeffery A. Harsanyne, Welch. costs, speeding; Todd E. ...
'!'.Va., $30 and costs, speedmg; Tracy M. Heines,
pets
· Pomeroy, $75 fine, selling
c1garenes to minors; Mathew fine, ' equipment misuse;
~-t
S. Hensley, Tuppers Plains, James E. MooiSO!I, Ripley,
S30 and costs, seatbelt violalion; Emily A. Hill, $20 and : ~a·~~~ ~Ms!:,~~
costs, failure to control· =~~i~:~o, $30 and .~-N~;~ ~f~Jennifer S. Hill cOlumbus'
Ohio, $50 and ~. ~
Robert A. Murphy. Racine..
~
N
I~
ing; Bruce A. Hilliard, $30 and costs, seathelt viola- ~ .our arne,~·----------------Ellwood City, Pa, S30 and
lion; Edna M. · Nance,
Address.~·
costs. speeding.
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
TtiiiOihy
L. . Hogue, speeding; Jamey L NelsOO,
Clartsburg, W.Va., $30 and Racine, $20 and costs, dricosts, speeding; Melissa J _ ving left of center; Jeffrey Q.
Phone·~------~------~----------- II
Holley, Gallipolis, $30 and- Noble, Shade, Obio, $36 and
costs, speeding; Gordon L. costs, seatbell . violation;
Ph n e send or bril•lhis aaby Mjii ..
with your p1101D to ~
. Holter. Long Bonom, $20 Benjamin
J. . Nograd):.

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8

The winning
will be featured in this
unique calendar..
.
lhe winner wilt be highlighted on the cover.

*
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Revivals

Theday, Sept. 28
POMEROY -. Calvery
Pilgrim Chapel on RT. 143
will host a revival at I0 a.m.
and 7 p.m. through Oct. 3. All
other services are at . 7.:30
p.m. Rev. Ken 'Thompson
from MO and si~gers. Rev.
Charles McKenzie, pastor.
Everyone welcome.
'

Other events
Thursday, Sept. 30 .
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Adult .Baste Literacy
Education program plans
open hou ses at its Middleport
and Bradbury ABLE centers,
from 9 a.m. until noon at
Middlc po,rt Library and

.

'School news

Enrollment up
:at URG
RIO
GRANDE
Erirollmeni continues to rise
:at the · University of Rio
Drande/Rio
· Grande
:Community College, just as
lhe national ranking of the
institution also continues to
climb, according to · Rio
President Barry Dorsey.
. Dorsey has announced that
.the early enrollment count for
,Rio Grande's fall semester
shows that the institution has
2~7 more students than it did
'at this time last year•. putting
enrollment at 2,530 students.
Dorsey said he expects it to
go even higher during the
year.
"For three years in a row,
·we have seen an enrollment
increase sometime during the
year," Dorsey said. The
enrollment increase includes
. a record number of first-year
students.

learn the Spanish language so
they will be able to speak,
read, write and translate
Spanish
effectively.
Employees who have bache.lor's degrees. in Spanish are in
demand, and Rio Grande created the new bachelor'&amp;
degree program in order to
· keep up with the changing
workplace and offer another
learning opportunity for its
students.

On dean's list

Bradbury Learnin~ Center.
Meet instructors, v1ew learning materials and classrooms
DE~R A.~BY: My husand ask question of staff. band,
Ned , and I have been
Information is available j:Jy havmg the same argument for
calling 992-6930 or 992- years. I care for our kids and
5808.
handle all the ho.usework.
Saturday, Oct. 9
The only ch?re I refuse to do
SYRACUSE
The 1s_mow the l!lwn .
Carleton
School/Meigs
Every spnng, I bUJI flow· Industries will be sponsoring ers, plants, trees and fierbs to
their 2nd Annual Community plant around our large yard. I
Olympics from 8:30a.m. to 4 p~ant· them, mar~ where t~ey
p.m. It is a fundraiser for a e, do the watenng and
Marvin Cooper who is bat- weedmg,, an\1 show Ned
where l ve planted them.
tling cancer. Call 1-740-992- Without
fail in the middle of
6681 to register a team by sum mer wh~n my plants are
Oct. I.
. nourishing my husband will
mow them 'over.
The first few 'times it happened, he said, "Oops 1 1 didn't see them." Later. he
Thesday, Sept. 28
admitted . he didn't feel he
ATHENS - O'Bleness should have to bother remem·
Memorial Hospital in Athens bering where 1 planted and go
will offer a breastfeeding around them. r think he acts .
class for expectant mothers this way because he want s me
from I:30 to 3:30p.m .. at the to take over the mowing.
.
It hurts me that Ned would
Birth Center in the lower
level conference room. deliberately destroy someMichele Biddlestone, board thing .1 care about. 1 feel like
certified lactation consultant, he's trying to destroy part of
will lead the class in topics my personality, and it make s
including advantages of me reallr. depressed.
If you re wondenng why 1
breastfeeding for mother and
refuse
to mow, it's because 1
child, anatomy of the breast,
EVERYTHING else. My
physiology of beastfeeding, do
list of chores is already endand maintenance · and man-· less. I also think it' s particuagement advice for working larix mean of Ned to wait
mothers. The class is free. unt1l my plants are e'stabFor more information call lished and growing beautiful 592-9364.
1 b f
h
th
1y e ore e mows . em.
What do you thrnk? READY TO TRANSPLANT,
ST. JOSEPH, MO.

Support Groups

Stanley,
son
of
Daniel and
Shirley
Stanley of
Pomeroy,
graduated
from Ohio
University
with a B.A.
in political
science.
Stanley
Stanley
plans to attend the University
of Akron School of Law this
fall . He has received the
Board
of
Trustees
Scholarsh.ip, a three-year
full-tuition award.

POMEROY - The following students were named
to the dean's list at Hocking
College for the summer quar~
ter, having earned a grade
point 11verage of 3.3 or better:
Janet Calaway, Reedsville;
GALLIIPOLIS - Ohio
Trenton
Joe
Davis,
Valley
Christian School third
Middleport; Gary Grueser,
Beaver
Syracuse; Scott Kimes, grader Kateyln
receives
the
SchoolMall.com
Reedsville; Matt Stewart,
Rutland; and Stacie Watson,. M and M phone from Dr.
Fred· Williams in
prize
Long Bottom.
drawing. Students who participated in the program were
. given an opportunity· to win
POMEROY
- Ohio the M and M phone valued
University's Department of adt more than a $100.
Ninety-four chost; to take
Geography awarded Joshua
RIO GRANDE - The D. Will of Pomeroy its part and all received prizes.
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Academic Excellence Award, The program raises money to
Grande Community College
support technology . at the
. is introducing a new program acknowledging his outstand- school. The program advering undergraduate scholarfocusing on the Spanish lantises the .SchooiMall.com site
ship.
guagt: and Hispanic culture. ·
to the parents and friends of
The son of Daniel and Julia ovcs.
.
Beginning in the fall of
Will, Will is a senior major2005, Rio Grande will begin
ing in geography.
off~ring. a bachelor's degree
' .
The geography department
program
in
Hispanic
at O.U. has more than 160
Studies/Spanish. The prO- majors, making it the secondgram will offer numerous
learning opponunities for its largest undergraduate geography program in Ohio ..
students, including a summer
srudy program in Mexico.
Subscribe today • 992-2155
Students in the new bache)or's degree program will
POMEROY -James K .

Student
receives award

a

Receives award

New program
at Rio -

. Proud to be apart of
your life.

Graduates OU

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grows as he mows her plants

POMEROY - The office
Sunday, Oct. 3
of Vital Statistics at the
POMEROY
- Hemlock
Meigs
County
Health
Grove
Christian
Church wlll
Department will be closed
from noon tp 4 p.m. 'Normal observe its homecoming with
business hours will resume at a 9:30 a.m. ~hurch service
and Sunday school follow8 a. in. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Veterans ing. A potluck dinner will be
Service Commission will held at 12:30 p.m. at the
meet at 9 a.m. at the office, Grange Hall. Take a covered
dish. The homecom ing ser17 Memorial Drive.
POMEROY - · The Meigs . vice will begin at 2 .p.m. with
Co. Library regular board special music by .Scott·
meeting will be held at 3 p.m. Brown.
.at the Pomeroy Library. ·

Monday, Sept. 27
POMEROY -'- The OhKan Coin Club wi II meet at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
Pinal plans will b~ made for
the Oct. 17 coin show.
RACINE Southern
Local Band Boosters, 7:30
,p.m., high school band room.
Tuesday, Sept. 28
RACINE - Regular meeting
of Racine
Area
Community Organization
will be held at 6:30 p.m
Mem"!rs and special guests
will meet at Gino's in Mason,
W.Va.

Monday, September 27,

Wifes resentment of husband

Public 01eetings Homecomings/
Reunions
Monday, Sept. 27

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

Dear-Abb.Y·

DEAR READY: It appears
you are married to a horticultural grim reaper. Since you have
enough to do without adding
mowmg to your list of chores. a
practical altem;ltive might be to
hire a neighborhood teenager to
do the mowing next sum mer. If
that 's not feasible, consider
placing a decorati ve mediumsized rock border arounu vour
planteu areas &gt;O your hus6aml
can't mow them down. (Hoehoe-hoc! )
DEAR ABBY: I am a
receptionist in a law firm .
There are times when I am
ve ry busy. but there are long
stretches when there is nothing to do.
Is it proper for me to read
du,ring the downtime'' I fee l
awkward when my boss sees
me reading. - BORED ON
THE JOil
DEAR BORED: Ask yo ur
boss If there are other tasb
he or she would. like you to
do at your desk during the
slow ~riods. or if there is
any 0 Jection to your reading . II' there is no objection,

sign up for night classes and
use the downtime to ' tudy. In
no time at. all, vou could
upgrade your ; kill; and possibly your salary.
.
DEAR ABBY: Is it just me.
or has the world gone "tip
crazy"1 1 find tip baskets on
the counter at the local coffee
" house. the yogurt shop. the
juice shop - even near the
ca&gt;h register in the cafeteria
in my office buikling.
1t seem&gt; that even though
:hese people ~. p~1d to _per01 m these part1cul.u :-erv1ces.
they thmk they shuukl be
t1pped1on top ol Jt. _Where Will
ll end: Should I expect !IP c&lt;~n­
1ster; at the do~tor s ol11ce. my
ca~ ~echamc,s or the post
oft1cc. I can t~ aftord to tip
everyone I_ come m contact
w1th. W~at 1s proper t1p protocol now . --ALL TIPPED OUT
DEAR ALL TIPPED OU'f:
T1ppmg IS d1screttonary: 11 IS
not required. Employee s
do1ng counter work are parLI .
mrn1mu~ wage a~Li need the
money. It the servtce !Scheer· fu l. prompt and etfic1ent, put
some change rn the t1p pr. If
you can't afford to tip and
doing so would cause you
hardship, don't do it.
Dq~r Abhr is H-riuen bl
Abigail Vqn Bur~n. ciHo
known as Jeanne Phillips. ana
was founded by her morher,
p r
Ph 'II'
wf ife
· 0 ear
au me
1 1ps.
Abbv at www.DearAbb\'.com
or .P 0. Box 69440. . Los
Angeles. CA 90069.

LAW YOU CAN USE
Family b1centive Trusts Help
Children Set Goals Most of us
strive throughout our lives to provide for our families. If we arc
diligent and fortunate, we may
. acquire enough resources to
make our children's lives easier
than our own. However, additional ftnancial resow-ces may not
always improve our children's
lives. Sometimes, children have
trouble wisely handling money
intended to help them, and they
may become unproductive and
when lite it "too easy."
Q.: i m not rich, but l have
some money set aside for my
children so that, when I die,
they won't have to worry too
much about life's necessities.
How do I help them without
stunting their ·development
and diminishing their own
sense of accomplishment?
A: A Family Incentive Trust .
can help achieve these goals.
With a Family Incentive Trust,
you can leave a'\sets for your children's needs, but encourage them
to earn money for the things they
want A Family Incentive Trust
can be very flexible. It can reward
children with distributions upon
achieving oertain goals, such as
learning a skill or earning a college degree, or keeping a certain
grilde jXJinl average in school.
Q.: How does a Fanli.ly
Incentive Trust encoumge my
children to earn their own money?
A: The trust can match the
income earned by your children,
thus encouraging them to be pro- .
ductive. You can make the match
greau:r at the low end, encouragmg philanthropic or other helping occupations such as teaching.
Or, if you prefer, the match could
be set for earnings ~ve a certain level, encpurnging your children to earn as much of their own
inoorre as possible.
Q.: I want to encoontge my children to share with OOI:rs aOO to be
involved in causes thll our family
~always SUJ.liD.!_fd Can I use the
Family locentive Trust to do this?

tlnhappr

A.: Yes. Basically ,~ Family
Incentive Trust can be l&lt;tl lored to encourage your chi 1dren with financial incenlives; which are -appropriate
to your family values and
goals. Such a trust can be a
[ovmg way to support your
children while encouragi ng
them to be productive menhbers of society and fostering
their sense of self-worth.
Q.: no should I contact to prepare a Fa.nily Incentive Trust1
A.: A ·qualified estate planning attorney can help you provide for your children with a
trust that is tailored to reflect
your goals, your children, your
values, and your circumstances.

Law You Can Use is a weekly
consumer legal i11{onnarion coiumnpmvided to this newspaper
as a public &gt;erviCI' of the Ohio
Srme Bar Association and the
Ohio Stme Bar Foundation.
7ltis anicle "'as prepared bv
atlomer Richard W Ashle\: the
flrincip(li of the Akron iawjinn.~
Ashley &amp; Associares. and of
counsel ro rile Medina finn of
Largent Be11y Preston &amp;
Jamison Co.. LPA. Articles
appmring in· this cniunm are
imended to pm1·ide brrxul. gen. era/ infimnarimi about the ian:
Before applving this infonnation to a specifii' legal problem.
readers are urged to seek rl{e
advice of a licem·ed a/lome):

"I IlDia tastlat Mexico right hare In MISGII County"

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Authentic Mexican Food
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BUY ONE lUNCH PlATE I •
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BUY TWO DINNERS ,
AND GET ONE ~

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uam - 2:30pm

·•

a!'e file yuiltt - ft"u-et ~~~eul_ fljet~e!', ttite~erl wit~
11
ffl(tfet P.l(d teaf't, eofo!'erf ~Uit~ IKetKof-iet tl.lrrl Jou.l(d . ~Uit~ lolfe,

11 fafl(tft'et

The PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is proud to·announre a new
Honor &amp; Memory Wall that will be creatt!d in remembrance or tnbute to family. friends and loved ones.
The addition will be created in a "quilt" design to represent the family .unity and the varied .personalities
that comprise.our community and hospi~l. Corian tiles can be purchased for $100 each. The tiles will be
engraved withJhe nl)me of the selected indi'1dual then displayed: The aitistic creation will be located in
the main lobby of the hospital and will always remain a part

of. the organization's walls.

Please complete the attached form in honor or remembrance of some~ne who made
'

.

a difference in
'

your life. Return with payment to: 'Pleasant VaHey BospitaltATTN: Community Relations Department,
2520 VaHey Drive, Point Pleas~tnt, WV 25550. Cash. check and credit cards accepted Please make checks
.

'

payable to the "Pleasant Valley Hospital F~undation."

For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.

~----~-----------~

·.

•

�•

'

OPINION

~ The Daily Sentinel
.

,.•

The Daily · Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene HoeflichGeneral Manager-News Editor

"

0

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

TODAY IN HISTORY'
Today is Monday, Sept. 27 , the 271 st day of 2004.. There are
95 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: Forty years ago, on Sept. 27 ,
1964, !he Warren Commission issued a report concluding that
Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassinating President
·
Kennedy.
.
On this date: In 1779, John ;\dams was named to negotiate
the Revolutionary War's peace terms with Britain.
In 1854, the first great di saster involving an ~t lanti c Ocean
liner occurred when the steamship 'Arctic ' sank with 300
people aboard.
In 1928, the United Stales said it was recognizing the
Nationalist· Chinese government.
. In 1939, Warsaw, Poland. surrendered after weeks of resistance to invading forces from . Nazi Germany and the Soviet
Union during World War II.
In 1942, Glenn Miller and his Orchestra performed together for the last time, at the Central Theater in Passaic, N.J ..
prior to Miller' s entry into the Army.
In 1959, a typhoon battered the main Japanese island of
Honshu, killing nearly 5,000 people.
In 1979, Congress gave final approval to forming the
Department of Education , the 13th Cabinet agency in U.S.
In 1989, Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc. agreed to a
$3.4 billion cash buyout by Sony Corp.
.
In 1995, the government unveiled its redesigned $ 100 blll,
featuring a larger. off-center portrait of Benjamin Franklin.
Ten years ago: More than 350 Republican congressional
candidates gathered on the steps of the U.S. Capitol to sign the
'Contract with America,' a 10-point platform they pledged to
enact if voters sent a GOP majority to the House.
One year ago: President Bush and Russian President
' Vladimir Putin urged Iran and North Korea to abandon sus·. pected nuclear-weapons programs, but disagreed over how to
deal with both couiltries; Putin also declined at the end of a
two-day summit at Camp David to pledge any postwar help
for Iraq.
Today's Birthdays: Former Illinois Senator Charles Percy is
' 85. Producer Don Cornelius ('Soul Train') is 68. Actor A
· Martinez is 56. Actor Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa is 54. Rock
musician Greg i-lam (Men At Work) is 51 . Rock singer
' StephaJl Jenkins (Third Ey·e Blind) is 40. Actor Patrick
· Muldoon is 36. Singer Mark Calderon is 34. Actress Amanda
· Detmer is 33. Actress Gwyneth Paltrow is 32. Country musi" i:ian Patrick Bourque (Eryerson Drive) is 27. Rock singer
' Brad Arnold (3 Doors' Down) is 26. Rapper Lil' Wayne is 22.
· Singer Avril Lavigne is 20. .
·
Thought for ioday: 'Sanity is a madness put to good uses.·
- - George Santayana, Spanish-American philosopher ( 18'63I 952). ·

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR
'Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
. and telephone numper. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
adilressing issues, not personalities. .
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
· editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The _Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

tusPs 213-960)

Correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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There is a natural impulse
to pounce and hold John
Kerry to his latest pronouncement on Iraq namely, that it would be
Kerry presidential doctrine
Diana
to pull out of Iraq in the near
West
future, just as it was Kerry
anti-war-protester doctrine to
pull out of Vietnam in the
past . Partly, that impulse
comes from the desire to rec- of 'a' chaos. but l resist oncile the Kerry flips with Ken-y ex presses a distressing
the Kerr~ flops, draw a nostalgia, maybe not so
straight lme, and be done much for· the ancient regime
with it . And partly, it's the of Saddam Hussein a0 for
fact that such a line of Kerry what has be'en dubbed the
thought really does exist 'decade of defiance' precedbeneath his absurdly baroque ing his removal. . The era he
vacillations. The guy was pines for - beginning, say,
against the war in Vietnam, with the first World Trade
and he's against the war in Center attack in 1993 (on
Iraq - · for now, anyway.
which lraq left still-unex'It is never easy to discuss plained fingerprints) arid
what has gone wrong while ending after U.N. Security
our troops are .- in constant Counc il Resolution 1441
danger,' he said in a 'major' was adopted unanimously in
speech on Iraq this- week as 2002 - was not exactly a
he prepared to discuss what run-up to endless summer.
he believes has 'gone wrong
With Iraq having !louted
while our troops are in con- 17 Security Counc if resolustant danger.' In so doing, he tions call ing for its disarmaopened two windows into his ment, international law was
thinking (current?) on Iraq. rendered impotent. With
'We have traded a dictator . Islamic jihadists having muri'or a chaos that has left dered 3,000 Americans on
America -less secu.-e,' he 9/11 - the hellish climax of
scolded. And: ' Iraq was a more than two decades of
profound diversion from that attacks on American s and
, war (on terror) and the battle other Westerners - the non· against our greatest enemy, ji~adist world was struck at
Osama bin Laden and the its heart. While the WMD
terrorists. '
that assorted intelligence
On 'trading a dictator for a agencies indicated were in
-c haos'- much could be said Iraq have not been found,
about the crashing infelicity Saddam Hussein's drive to

procure WMD remains
beyond dispute. Put . it all
together and 'a chaos' was
looming and 'a dictator ' was
doing what he could to , urn,
bring it on, including providing. safe haven for AI Qaeda
members.
Maybe Kerry yearns for
Saddam's Iraq because he
also believes, as he told us
this week, 'Iraq is a profound
diversion from ... the battle
against our greatest enemy,
Osama bin Laden and the
terrorists.' According to
Kerry, the war in Iraq might
as well be an extraterrestrial
expedition for all .it has to do
with the g!_obal war (World
War IV) provoked by the AI
Q;•eda attacks ·of Sept. II,
200 I. The president knows
better: 'Coalition forces now
serving in Iraq,' George W.
Bush told the U.N . General ,
Asse mbly thi~ week, 'are
confronting the terrorists and
foreign lighters. so peaceful
nations around the world will
never have to face them
within our own borders.'
Britain's Tony Blair. also this
week, described the conflict
in ·Iraq as 'the crucible in
which the future of this global war on terrorism will be
decided. ·
After all we have learned
about interlocking, overlapping Islamic terror groups
spanning ·the globe, John
Kerry's truncated . analysis
shows - and I just hate to
say it - a troubling lack of
nuance. How do you cordon

2004

Obituaries
Rosemary Hysell

off jihadist war in Iraq from
jihadist war in the rest of the
world? Kerry should realize
that our enemies are linked
by something stronger than
politics or blood or nationality. They are linke? by a
belief that m ftghtmg,
beheading and killing non.
Muslims, they are doing
Allah's Work. This belief
took them to New York Cily.
It took them to Beslan. It
took them to Madrid. It takes
them all the · time to
Jerusalem. And it's taking
them to Baghdad.
And in Baghdad they await
the result&gt; of our presidential
election. In a way, this draws
another line between John
Kerry's past and present. In'
the early 1970s, Kerry did
much to further the aims of
the anti -war · movement, a ·
movement credited by,
among others. General, Yo
Nguyen Giap, commander of
North Vietnam's armed
forces, with helping the
North Vietnamese to victory.
As a presidential candidate,
Kerry has become the anti war candidate. What does his
message, that Iraq was a rnistake, convey to our foe s in
the field? Noi American
resolve, that's for sure. More
like a mega"attack of
Vietnam Syndrome. And that
doesn't help anyone in the
crucible.

(Diana West is a colwimist
for The' Washington Times.
She can be contacted via
dianawest@verizon.IJet.)

.YOU WANT
TO JOIN AN

ORGANIZATION
DEDICATED
TO KILUNG

AMERICANS ?...

MIDDLEPORT- .Rosemary Hysell, 63, Middleport, went
to bewith her Lord on Friday, Sept. 24, 2004 at St. Mary's
Hospttalm Huntington, W. Va. after a shon battle with cancer.
She was born on April 16, 1941, daughter of the late
Lawrence S. and Juha M. Manley. She was a recently retired
employee of Rockwell Automation. She was also a seamstress
and attended Wl!sleyan Bible Holiness Church in Middleport.
In addtlion to her p(U'ents, ·she was preceded in death by a
brother, Raymond Man ley.
She is survived by four daughters, Brenda Ferguson, Penny
(Charhe) Burge, Sherri (Dale) Little, and Julie (Tony) Leach;
grandchildren, Charla (Ch~i s ) Snouffer, Lacey Barnette,
Cameron Leach, J.aimee Little, Channing Burge, Tyler Little
. Maranda Barnette, and Faith Leach;. brothers, Roger (Connie)
Manley, Lawrence E. (Francis) Manley, a sister-In-law, Selby
Manley, several niece and nephews.
..
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 29,
2004, at the Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church . Officiating will
. be Rev .. Rtck Bourne and Rev. Roy McCarty, Jr. Burial will
. follow in Middleport Hill Cemetery. Fr.iends inay call on
Tuesday, Sept. 28 , from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m . at · Fisher
,..
Funeral Home in Middleport.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Meigs
High School Marching Band.42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
·
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- ·
homes.com

Deaths .

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Tips on cleaning after·a flood
STAFF REPORT

that is labeled with an EPA registration · in hardware and discount stores as TSP)
number as a disinfectant. After wiping
Follow all safety precautions wl)en
or spraying with a disinfectant, put the using this strong solution. Wash a small
POMEROY - When the tlood water item out in the sun, if possible, for addi- area at a time. Rinse quickly, and dry
receded. the clean up began, but how do tional natural disinfecting plus drying.
with a soft cloth.
you know when your home is really
Finally, dry and ventilate with an
To remove mildew from clothing or
clean again?
entrance and elthaust opening for air to textiles that are colorfast 'soak in a soluHere are a few tips on how to make promote cross-ventilation. Place a fan in
tion of 2 tablespoons liquid chlorine
sure your home has been properly di sina window or door with the fan to the bleach and ! -quart water s~ 15 minutes,
fected .
.
First. remove contaminated mud . out'doors . Seal the rest of the opening then rinse . .
with
cardboard,
plywood
or
blankets
so
To
remove
mildew
from non-bleachShovel out as much mud as possible ,
the
fan
can
create
-a
vacuum
.
Wood
able
items
milt
one
tablespoon fresh .
then use a garden sprayer or hose to
eon
tent
of
less
.
should
have
a.
moisture
lemon Juice and I tablespoon salt:
wash away mud from hard surfaces. .
than
15
percent
before
drywall,
paneling
Moi sten the stain . If poss ible , spread in
Start cleaning wall s at the bottom or
or
other
coverings
are
pi
aced
over
It'
.
the sun to bleach. Rinse thoroughly .
where damage is worst. Remember to
If mildew has developed because the Anoiher option is to soak the stain in 3% .
hose out heating ducts, di sconnecting
molds
weren't killed and the source is hydrogen peroxide for 15 minutes.
•
the furnace lirst.
still
damp,
a strong product is required
Keith
Little,
Director
of
Next, scrub surfaces with hot water
and a heavy -duty cleaner. Scrub off all to remove it , and the required strength Environmental Health for Meigs County
urge s everyone to wear thick latex
contammants wtth a brush. Rmse off may ruin some household items.
On
hard
surfaces
mildew
may
be
glove s when using bleach and handling
soap and then disinfect.
Bacteria can only be dest royed by removed fmm walls and similar hard any mud. The mud more than likely condisinfecting or sanitizing. This can be surfaces with thi s solution :
tains raw sewage.
I gallon water
done by wiping or sprayin g surfaces
The health department can al so assist
with a solution of 1/4 cup chlorine
%cup liquid chlorine bleach
you with advi ce on how to properly
bleach per gallon of water or a product
I cup trisodium phosphate (available clean your well or cistern.
NEWS&lt;JMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Latest hurricane assault leaves Florida battered anew

HUTCHINSON ISLAND, very frustrating, I know, for those
Ra. (AP) - Jeanne, Aorida's who live in those communities."
fourth hunicane in six weeks.
Frances was larger, while
piled on destntction in already Charley · and Ivan were more
ravaged areas Sunday, slicing powerful. But Jeanne was bad
across the state with howling enough. once again sending the
WELLSTON - J. P. Rogers , 60, of Wellston, died Sunday, wind that rocketed debris from Sunshine State into a state of
Sept, 26 . 2004 in the. Holzer Medical Center at Jackson. He earlier stonns and torrents of r.tin emergency.
was the 'tlwner and director of the J. P. Rogers Funeral Home: that turned streets into rivers. .
Gov. Jeb Bush sought to reusCremeens Fune\•ul Chapel. Gallipolis, is in charge of funeral
At lea't six people died in the SLU'e weary Aoridians. "This will
arrangement~.
· ·
stonn, which was a cruel remn become a memory," he said.
for many still trying to recover 'This does come. to an end, and
from earlier hunicanes. Jeanne ·when it does we can probably
carne ashore in the same area hit use the terin 'nonnal' again."
three weeks ago by Hunicane
Seawater submerged the botFrances and wa' headed for the tom tloor of condominiums on
Panhandle, where 70,000 homes Hutchinson Island, where Josh
reduction in value . If and businesses remained without Lumberson rode out the stonn . .
approved, you will see the jXlWer because of Hunicane Ivan The parking lot was under 5 feet
of sand and water, and sand rose ·
reduction on your 2005 tax · 10 days earlier.
bi II. .
The stom1 peeled the roofs off to tlre kitchen cabinets inside
buildings, toppled light jXlles, lirst-tloor condos. The ocean,
Homeowners
needing .
destroyed a deserted community once 75 yards away, lapped at the
'more information or an
·
POMEROY ·Meigs application should contact center in Jensen Beach and foundation.
tlooded some bridges &gt;from the
" It sounded like the whole
·County Auditor, Nancy the Auditors Off ice at mainland to the Atlantic coa,t's building was cominu down,"
Parker Grueser, would like 992 -2698. Off ice hours barrier island~. More than. 1.1 Lumberson said. " You could
homeowners and manufac - are
Monday
through million homes and businesses hear cvety metal screw coming
tured homeowner.s to be Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 were without power.
out of the walls."
'
•· aware of possible reduc- p.m.
'The last three weeks have
As the wind subsided, the
been honific," said Joe Stawara, clang of metal siding c-ould still
tions in value as a result of
owner of a Vero Beach mobile be heard on the banier island.
the recent flooding.
home pari&lt; where about half the
Jeanne made landfall as a
State law authorizes
232 tr.ulers were damaged. "And Categoty 3 hwl'icm1e witl1 winds
property owners to apply
just when we start to tum the cor- of up to 120 mph just before
to the· COLtnty auditor for a
ncr, this happens.''
· midnight SatllfCiay at Hutchinson
reduction in the valuation
Until this weekend, no state Island, 35 mtles north of West
Meigs Co, WIC (Women, had suffered a four-hunicane Palm Beach. Frances struck in
of property that has been
damaged or destroyed .at Infants, Children) program pounding · in one season since almost the samesjXlt.
Once inland. Jeanne's 400any time during the year in can help women , infants Texas in 1886. And the hunicane
and
children
aged
birth
to
sea~
still
has
two
months
to
go.
mile
diameter system trudged
which
the
damage
Rain blew sideways in wind acrossthestatc,passingnortheast
occurred. The reduction is five years. If you are pregnant,
or
have
children
less
that
. reached 120 mph when · ofTan1pa.lt then headed towand
prorated on a quarterly
Hunicane Jeanne's eye hit land the Panhandle, which was still
basis , depending on the than five years of age, the late Saturday night: by ' 8 p.m. recovering limn Ivan.
calendar quarter in which WIC Program can help you EDTSunday it had weakened to
Max Maytield, director of the
the damage oc&lt;;urred.
provide nutritious foods a tropical stonn with sustained National Hunicane Center in
wind near 55 mph.
Miami, described the similar
Manufactured
homes for your family.
At least a foot of water rushed paths of Jeanne and Frances as
W IC be lie ves babies are
that have been damaged or
born
to
.breastfeed.
through
some streets in Vero perhaps unprecedented.
comple!ely destroyed by
Breastfee4ing
is
an
irnporBeach,
where
a mattres.s floated . T,he toll from the latest stonn
the recent flooding could
·
·
h
through
one
neighborhood.
extended as far north as Daytona
f
qualify for up to a 50% tant aspect 0 nutntwn t at
President Bush declared a . Beach, where the famous beach
refund of 2004 taxes WIC avidly encourages major disaster area in Aorida. was ravaged by erosion, and
assuming that they have and supports , Breast milk · The hurricanes have prompted south to Miami, where one peralready
been
paid. . is the most perfect food for the largest relief effort in the son was electrocuted after touch· Emergency ing a downed jXlwer line.
Manufactured homeowners the new born. It is easily Federal
Two people died when the
mu st file the appropriate digested and helps build Management Agency's history,
the
newborn's
immune
sysec~·
smg
responses
for
the
19?4
SjXlrt
utility vehicle they were
application no later than
uake
m
Northridge,
Calif.,
driving
plunged into a lake
tem
January 31, 2005.
·
and
2001 terrorist attacks, beside the Sawgra$S Expressway
If your home is listed as
Call the Meigs County director Michael Brown said.
south of Boca Raton. In Clay
real estate and you have WIC Program tod~y . at
"You're going to have some : County
southwest
of
had recent flood damage~ 740-992-0392 to see tf you areas that have .been hit once, Jacksonville, a 15-year-old boy
you have until December qualify. WIC is part of the twice and sometimes maybe died after being pinned by a
31, 2004 to file for a Help Me Grow Campaign. . three times," Brown said.' 'That's falling tree Sunday.

J.P. Rogers

Local Briefs

Tropical Storm
.Jeanne moves no1t11
Before being downgraded to a
tropical storm; Hurricane Jeanne
moved across Florida killing at
least five people:

-

Flooding May
Have Reduced
Value Of Homes

A tlanzic

c&gt;cean .

BAHAMAS
''·

·· cuBA

WIC
Announcement

·Hitting higher ~ducation 's glass ceiling
As we lurch towand lhe
apocalypse, with Russian
peddlers blowing themselves up on airplanes, 'freedom fighters" lerrorizing
school children, and our
Joan
brightest Wall Street wizards
Ryan
sharing prison bunks with
guys named Meat, you'll be
pleased to know today's column is abovt college presidents.
women account for just 21
Perhaps this topic seems percent of the presidents.
irrelevant, given the fact few
When the· Massachusetts
of us have ever met a college lnstitute of Technology
president. They are, as far as named Susan Hockfield as
most of us can tell, tiny, its first female president sevrobed people on distant eral weeks ago, some heraldgraduation stages handing ed the hiring as part of a
our kids the final parchment- trend that has seen female
paper receipt for our tuition presidents appointed in
payments. But my own per- recent years at Brown,
sonal research has revealed Pril)ceton,
Syracuse, ·
that college presidents are Michigan, North Carolinaextremely influential in Chapel
Hi II
and
the
determining for the 'entire University of Pennsylva~ ..
CO)Jhtry what it means to be But the growth is excruciatwell educated.
ingly slow, increasing just 3
That means they are key percentage points since
voices in the debate about ACE's last survey six years
whether the primary role of ago.
higher education is, say. ecoIt isn't that colleges and
nomic - preparing workers universities are out of line
to keep America prosperous with the rest of society. Last
- or if it's more sociological year, just 3 percent or the
- producing thinking, car- highest paid executives at
'ing citizens to .sustain
Fortune 500 companies were
strong democracy. Given the W\)men,
according
to
importance of the job · in Catalyst, a non-profit group
shaping what students will that studies women in busicarry from the campus into ness. The only thing more
society, one cannot help but path~tic than the 3 percent is
· ask:
that the statistic represents a
Where are the female col- doubling of what il was in
lege presidents? .
1995.
Women now make up
What's
disappointing
about half of college stu- about the scarcity of women
dents and 40 percent of col- among college presidents is
lege faculty and senior staff. that you .expect universities
But a report released recent- to be wiser than corporate
ly by the American Council America abOut the direct
on ElJucation found that impact of diversity. . .

a

•
:

Monday, September 27, 2004

A 'chaos! in Iraq, or Kerry's thinking?

hi~tory.

I

PageA4

Monday, September 27,

"

'Although higher educa- importance not only on
tion is remarkable for a shaping students who are
shared value set, it is also excellent in their fields of
remarkable for being t.he study but also engaged in ~he
mo.st conservative institution world beyond campus.
in our society," said Janet
Maybe if more women
Holmgren, president of become college presidents,
Mills,
the
liberal-arts we could start chipping
women's college in Oakland, away at the idea that a work. place isn't productive unless
Calif.
'What's hidden in . those it is populated with obsesnumbers (of women who are sive; myopic employees and .
now college presidents) is executives. Maybe we could
that the majority are at two- better equip young people
year-institutions and the next with the intellectual and ethhighest numbers are atlibet~ ical skills to forge ·a definial arts and women's colleges. tion of success that goes
There are the few stunning beyond stock options and
examples
in
private, acreage.
Maybe we could drive ·
research institutions."
Hi ring women for top jobs home the notion that educais not window -dressing or tion doesn't end on lhe grlld- '•
quota-filling, the usual com- uation stage, that to be well- ·
plaint from the gentlemen at educated is to be continuousc
the e~eculive urinals. Hiring ly learning - .asking questions, challenging evidence
women is, as it always is and I can't believe I'm saying and assumptions, allowing ·
this in the year 2004 - · ourselves to be wrong and to
about tapping into perspec- have our minds changed by
tives .and skill sets that new information.
The world today someenha,nce the quality and
times feels like a jar of
direction of an institution.
'It's important to under- bees, buzzing and ricochetstand that women who ing off the ·walls, everybecome presidents are not thing careening around and
simply honorary men," into each other so fast your
Holmgren said. 'Having brain can't keep up. Hiring
women's perspectives repre- more women as ,college
sented in leadership roles presidents won't slow anyfundamentally affects the thing down. But adding our
quality and char.l~ter of best and brightest'women to
higher education." ·
the brain trust gives us a
Women as college presi- better shot at preparing
dents can help shift the val- upcoming generations to
ues of education the way make more sense of it than
Shirley Jackson did at we have.
Rensselaer PolyTech in
(Joan Ryan is a columnist
Troy, N.Y. She created a for the San Franci:;co
bond between the college, Chronicle. Send comments
the town and the surround- to her in care of this newspaing areas, . coining ·the tenn per-or send her e-mail at
'c.ommuniversity." She put joanryan@sfchronicle.com.)

.

,

Farm
from Page A1
. . h d .·
. 24 cows. Nov.:. th eu er ts
up to 300, spht between the
. R umen Farm and a nother
B1g
in Athens County, near
Pratt's Fork.
"We're in a growth mode,"
Hall said. "Since we've started we've been trying to grow
and ge( bigger and bigger."
They have• done so by
copying the methods used by
dairy farmers in Ireland and
New Zealand; who esch~w
the "modern" methods ·used
·in the United States. Instead
of feeding the cows, the herd

·Olympics
from PageA1
.

-

awareness of the school as
be!ng part of the community.
"We want to make our
community better, and thank
them for passing l!!."t year's
levy," she said.
'
· ·
Funds for the Olympics
will be targeted to me,et different needs in the Syracuse
community. This year the
event will benefit Mar~in
Cooper (Cobp), a Metgs
Indus.tries Crew Leader who

is rotated from one pasture to
another to graze.
·
Because of this, Dix and
Hall's cows only produce
about half the milk of barn. fed cows. On the other hand,
they aren't buying much
feed
·
Instead
they pay close ··
attention to the natural cycles
·
of the pastures and the cows
themselves. All of th_etr
females are ready to gt ve
birth by March. When thetr
calves are 60 days old, they
reach peak lactalion.
"Factory farms tgnore all
the natural cycles," Hall said.
~ "Wedon't try to wrestle with
nature."
Instead of a big barn, Dix

and Hall have milking par- sure others would follow.
They have not. While there
lors, the simple design for
are
other pasture-based farmwhich has been borrowed
from farms in New Zealand. . ers in Ohio, there are only a
The parlors cost very little to few, and Bergman said none·
build, and allow the cows to are using the exact methods
be milked in quick order.
used at Big Rumen.
The less. time they spend
"This is completely oddworking lhe better, Hall said. . ball," Hall said. '
"We don't work much anyTm th be told, Dix and Hall
.
more," she said. "We JUSt revel in their non-comforminudge them one way or the ty. When a traditional dairy
farmer recently visited Big
other."
When they began pasture- Rumen. Dix ribbed him again
hased, seasonal farming, Dix and again about how many ·
and Hall thought they would hours he spends milking and
hold an advantage in compe- feeding his cows. ,
"I don't know if'we'll go to .
tition with ·o ther farmers for
only so long. Unlike so many the Caribbean this year or
family farmers , they were someplace else,'' Hall said.
making money, and were "We like to !ish."

is battling cancer.
Coo~r. who has been at
Meigs Industries for two
years, takes adult students
oul on work crews to teach
them skills that may lead to
employmen\. He is described
as doing an excellent job
working with adults . with
developmental disabilities
and is a valued member of
the Meigs Industries Crew.
The Community Olympics
·are a family oriented event in
which teams compete in various events throughout the
day including volleyball, egg
relay. sack race, obstacle

course, frisbee golf, hu,la School/Meigs
Indu stries
hoop spin. and tug of war. Levy campaign .
There is also an "office · Last year's teams were the
antics" event which includes Southern Spanish Club ( l st
the paperclip chain race and place), Carleton Sthool (2nd
place),
Meigs
National
office chair spin.
The team with the most Honor Society (3rd place),
medals· at the end of the day Eason/Powell Team. Couo
will win a trophy that will be Street Grill , Meigs Magic
on ·disl'lay at Carleton Special Olympics, and Meigs
School/Meigs Industries for French Club.
the year. The top three teams
If you would be interested
also receive a "take· home" in regi stering. sponsoring a
trophy.
team or volunteering time or
The cost to participate is goods for the event, please
$150 per team. Last year the , contact Carleton School at
event raised approximately (740) 992-6681. The deadline
$I 500 for the Carleton to register a team is Oct. I.

ODOT
. from Page A1
them," Hill said.
The village's share of the
project is $ 14 ,000, for a total
construction cost of $64,000.
In Pomeroy, the grant will
be used to give both walkers
and people visiting the levee
and amphitheatre a lot more
places to sit. A total of 27
benches are to be installed, a
few along the walking path,
.and the majority in the parking lot.

Mayor John · Musser said
Farmers Bank' is donating
$2,000 toward. the project's
total cost of $12,000, meaning the village will (lOt have
to spend a dime .
"We plan on having a dediin
cation
ceremony
November," Musser said.
The project also includes a
water fountain to be built
directly across the street from
the old Pomeroy Junior High.
to be sponsored by. the family
of the late Mayor John
Blaettner.
"The waterline already has
been run," Musser· said.

Clinic
.

Middleport with the first
ARC grant supplemented by
.
local levy funds . Norma
from Page A1
Torres (retired) was health
.commissioner and adminis'vices had taken place as the trator, and was instrument in
clinic waited for word on the bringing the dental health
ARC grant.
,
car.e clinic to Meigs County.
·' · A full range of services .are
. The clinic operated with
offered · including dentures,· Dr. Herbert Rolling, a retired
and Marshall reponed that Columbus dentist until May
the dentist, Dr. Dale White, is 2002, closed for a time while
busy all the time. His dental a search for another dentist
assistant is Beth Cremeans. was conducted, and then
Tammy Taylor works in the
reopened and operated part- ·
office , and Rhonda Davis
provides part-time dental time with two dentists.
, In Marth 2003 White. w(lo
hygienist services.
resides
in Athens, was hired
The clinic was opened· in
August 200 I in the former on a part-time basi s. In· June
oflices of the late D. R. R. of that year he began full
·Pickens on Third Avenue in time with the clini.c.

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•
•

PageA6 ·

REGION
Cornfield art: mazes are

I

'fhe Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Monday, September 27, 2004

NeWman wins at Dover, Page 82
Top 20 takes care of business, Page B6

·ne Daily Sentinel1.

Bl

becoming more elaborate, popular

ewsChannel

-~

Winds will be I 0 MPH from
the north.
Tuesday, September 28

Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will linger at
63. Skies will be mostly
sun ny to cloudy with 5 to lO
MPH winds from the north
turning from the southwest
as the morning progresses.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m,)
Temperatures will hover at
69. Skies will . range from
sunny to partly cloudy with
5 to I 0 MPH winds from
the north. ·

Fistfights result from·dispute
over Sikh temple leadership

TOLEDO - Alan Adam is
part artist and part magician.
His trick is designing corn
mazes that are agricultural
works of art.
It all begins on a computer
as he scans the imuges.
invent s the picture and converts that into an outline. How
he constructs the maze.
.
though, is a secret.
"People always ask," he
said. " But it's sort of like a
magic trick. If you tell people
the magic trick, it loses the
mystique.''
This year, his 25-acre creation is an elaborate Noah's
Ark maze complete with a pair
of elephants, turtles and rabbits in a field south of Toledo.
Corn mazes have not only
grown in popularity in recent
years but also in their intricate
designs. and themes that cross
politics. sp011s and religion.
There are the faces of
President Bush and Jol\n
I
in
fie ds
in
Kerry
Pennsylvania and Utah. The
Statue of Liberty stands
across· I 2 acres in upstate
New York. Ohio State and
Michigan football helmets
·square off in northern Ohio.
Each year, designers engage
in a friendly game of oneupsman ship.
"We all have a bit of pride,''
said Shawn Stolworthy, a professional designer from Firth,
Idaho. "For a few years. each
of us were trying to get the
largest."
·

· Toc!Jiy'a

.. •

..... '31..

i

'

.

"

•

South

•

••

Falrlond at .fi)Yo( \lalloy
· Melgl, at Vinton COimtll
(AP Photo/Gwlnnen

Dally Post, Craig Moore)

1

Washington Farms in Watkinsville, Ga. created a 6-acre corn
maze for the second year as seen from this aerie! photo. The
.maze that is made up of approximately 360,000 stalks ancl
will be open from Sept. 24 - Oct. 31.

Eastern at 'IMrnble
j:edar8J Hacking·at Southern ' -~

ovcs et ~·oe

'

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··. -=t'"' .·

•&lt;llllfo Academy at VlntQ!I COUI1Iy
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Bart rum
.

scores in.
Eagles' win
DETROIT
Mike
Bartrum, a I 988 graduate
· of Meigs High School ,
hauled in two catches for
18 yards in Philadelphia's
30-13 victory over the
Lions.
Bartrum, a long-snapper
who occassionally serves as
a tight end for the Eagles,
hauled in a 1-yard touchdown pass from Donovan
McNabb at 6:04 in the second quarter.
For Bartrum. it his fourth .
career touchdown reception
and his sixth career reception during his I l NFL seasons. He ha s 32 yards
receiving for his career.
It is his second touchdown with the Eagles in the
last three years. The other
came against Minnesota in
200 l on a 4-yard route.
Bartrum also had two
· catches from Drew Bledsoe .
during his years with New
England.

: MASON, W.Va. - . ·The
:11th annual
Riverside
Invitational
was
held
Saturday at Rivers.ide Golf
Club with a few·modifications.
Due 't o the flooding that
Hurricane Ivan caused
a~ong the Ohio River, the
course was condensed to I 4
holes and a par of 52 due to
wate,r damage to some of
the holes.
When · it was over, it was
the Jackson Ironmen that
claimed this year's title by
·holding off Ironton and
!rrimble for an eight-stroke
.
victory.
. Jackson, who finished the
day with a 227, was led by
event medalist Bradley
Wilson; who fired a oneover-par 53.
'
· Ironton placed second
with a team score of 235,
while Trimble placed third..
with a 238. Meigs finished
fourth with a 249, and
Southern rounded out the
Jop five ·with a 253.
· Po'int Pleasant . was sixth
due to a tie-breaker with a
scqre
of 253,
while
Gallipolis . edged
out
Jiuntington St. Joe (258) by
a stroke for 7th place.
: Eastern (259) was a shot
back of St: Joe for ninth,
:While Athens (259) lost a
tie-breaker to finish in the
tenth spot.
: R'iver Valley was II th
with a 261, and Warren
{264) was closely behind to
i:laim the 12th spot.
· Wahama finis))ed I 3th by
posting a 272, while
Nelsonville- York was 14th
·with a 274.
Wellston (278) edged out
Waterford (320) to avoid
finishing last.
.
Individual results. were .
not available at release
time.

loons with no extra fee to all Pomeroy
customers. And anyone holding a.
currentCashland loan

ciS&lt;! may qualify

for special terms. Just call Coshland at .

877-690-CASH to inquire .

Street location .was spored by the
recent flooding and we ore operating
on a business-as-usual basis. Please visit

'.

us. there or for assistance with current
or future loons, call our hodine:

877-690-CASH.

J

,,

Wf STE'R N
UNION

MONFV
lHANSFEJ.l

397 West Main Street (1 /2 blo&lt;k East of M(Donalds)
Weekdays 9:00 om · 7:00pm • Saturdays 9:00am- 5:00 pm

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Qolllo·~rren

their feet, we ore offering 30-doy

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CASH ADVANCES • CHECKS CASHED

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w-._.
at CNCs

ovCS II TtiiYI \lallev .
c-Country
Meigs at Altoandol (lako Sr\oMIIn).

Right now, to help folks get bock on

_T/tmg~. '" JP~~

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$olhrn atMolgl
Eutem at Welloton

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in the Sentinel .:. ·

· BY BUTCH COOPER

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•

by three scores.
. . .
"First I thought I was ~omg_
to get tackled nght away. smd
Muncy. "But, after I got past
ATHENS ~ It was up to the the quarterback, I could see
defense to save the day.
right m. front of me and I knew
While Ohio's offense strug- I was going to make it because
gled early to get the ball in the there was only linemen chasing
end zone, the Bobcat defense, me."
led by sophomore linebacker
Patterson finished with 62
Matt Muncy, made momentous yards on 17 carries to lead U1e
plays in a 34-0 win aver Buffalo offense.
Buffalo.
·
"We had a dismal offensive
Muncy had 15 tackles, 10 performance," said Buffalo
solo, along with a sack, a fum-' coach Jim Hofher. 'There are
hle recovery for a touchdown. a very few teams in America that
forced fumble and an intercep- would be able to overcome that
tion.
kind ·of performance, with the
"It was a blur," said Muncy number of turnovers and how
of his performance. "I just ill-timed they were.
found myself at the right place
"We started bad and we realat the right time a few times ly never got better.'' ·
and tried to make plays out of
There were three times in the
it."
first half when Ohio had the
His biggest play, and perhaps ball inside the Buffalo 25 and
the most tmportant play of the failed to score. Twice the
game came late in the third Bobcats failed to convert on
quarter.
fourth down inside the five.
With Ohio (2-2, 1-1 MidBut, the defense helped the
American Confere"nce) only Bobcats lead at the break.
leading I 3-0, Bu(falo (0-4, 0-2)
Ri&amp;ht out of the gate, on the
was driving the ball deep into openmg possession of the
Bobcat tern tory.
game, Buffalo quarterback
'They're down at the goal Randall Secky was picked off
· line and thet re going to make by Tyler Russ, who returned it
it. a six-~omt game if they 33 yards for the score. It was
knock it m there," said Ohio the second time this season
coach Brian Knorr.
Russ has returned another
But, the Bulls didn't.
team's pass attempt for a touchBuffal'o's Jared Panerson and down.
the ball to the left side and was
Meanwhile, Secky was
heading to the end zone when replaced by P.J. Piskorik, who
Rashad Butler forced a fumble, didn't fare much better as the
which was picked up - by Bulls were held to 94 yards
Muncy.
.
. _
passing on the night.
The Bobcat linebacker then
In the second quarter, with Freshman runn ing back Kalvin McRae (32) avoids the pile and looks for positive yardage
broke loose from the 2-yard
Saturday at Peden Stadium. The Bobcats defeated Buffalo 34-0 for the ir first MAC win of the
line all the way to the endzone,
2004 season. (lan McNemarjphoto)
·
Please see Bobcals&gt;B6
a 98-yard haul, to put Ohio up
bcooper@mydailytribune.com

Marauders
fourth at
Riverside

Cleveland police·seek 'patient' bank robber
. It said: "I have a gun give
me the money no dye packs
no alarms. Remain calm and
you won't be hurt:"
The man calmly took the
money and walked out of the
·
bank.
The robber is unusual
becau~e he . apparently has
robbed the same bank twice,
does not try to hide his
appearance and is cool and
patient.
"If he cut in ·line or raised
his voice, he'd ·draw atten·tion," Sanders said.

ga~rnea

·.~o~IWblll
G11i1!1 ~ at Oak HIR
Rod&lt; Hill ot Soulh (lalllo

Thankfully, our new 397 West Main

and $Is and asked if he want~
ed larger bi II s. The man
replied that he had enough,
according to a police report. ·
On Aug. 23. the man did
not speak' to the teller, but
handed her a note and "stared
at her as if he was crazy and
meant business,:· a police
report said.
· The teller gave the man
about $2,000.
On Wednesday, he returned
to the same bank and waited
in line for another teller. He
asked about a stack of papers
behind the counter while
handing the teller his note.

Ohio ·defense sh_
uts.down Buffalo, 34-0

..

he cuts a path through the . One of Herbst's favorite
fields. It's accurate to within designs over the years was a
an inch.
Lost in Space theme complete
B
H b
h
1
with nine planets o.f the solar
~
rett
er st, w 0 a so
makes a living designing system.
mazes. said he starts with the
Many mazes ate operated
design first and then fig ures by farmers looking for extra .
out where to make the paths . . cash so that they can stay in
:'Most farmers ask more agriCulture·.
about the design than the
Mark Benjamin, 'a farmer
maze," he said. "Part of mak- with a 20-acre maze · in
ing it entertaining is having a Williamston, Mich., said runcool looking design."
ning his maze takes up mqre ·
The biggest challenge is of his time than farming.
getting the details .into a small
"I might spend 80 hours just
space, he said. Some mazes tinkering on my design until I
cover just 5 acr.es - about get it perfect," he said.
five football fields - while
Adam designed the Noah's
the bigger ones are 25 acres or Ark maze for his church,
more.
.
Fallen Timbers Community
''The problem is you only Church in Waterville. He
Stolworthy, who travels have so much space to work doesn't use a global positionaround the country building with," Herbst said, "It's not ing system to plot and cut
mazes, said all designers have like you can use a smaller through the corn even t))ough
their own style.
brush to add more detail."
it would be faster.
. "I like free-flowing ·forms
Herbst, who operates a
Instead; volunteers do the
that are more · artistic ," he ·
maze \n Pleasant Grove, job.
said. " I want my mazes to
h'
h
• I'
h 1
form an emotional attachment Utah, near ts home, as two
• ve got a w o e congregayear-round employees and tion that looks forward to cut. to the person looking at it."
"also hires seasonal workers · ting out the maze," he said.
He uses a computeri zed who helped him complete 160 "To do it right requires a lot of
design and a global position- mazes nationwide this year.
man hours."
·
ing system that guides him as

BEDFORD (AP) -A.feud ly 500 years ago in the cy and equality. They don't
• among members of a subur- Punjab region of India. There want that."
.
ban Cleveland Sikh congre- are ,about 2.3 mill\on Skihs
Gill is one of three men in
gation has erupted into ·fist- worldwide and 2,000 in control of the temple who do
fights and has brought J?Oiice northeast Ohio.
not wear the traditional dress
to the temple II times m the
Paramjit
Singh
of of Sikh leaders. He said he
past nine months. ·
Strongsville said temple lead- was elected in January by a
Members of rival factions .ers must wear the "articles of vote of the temple's founding
disagree over how to run the faith," which also include a members.
Guru. Gobind Singh Sikh hair comb under a turban, a
He declined to further disTemple and how its leaders steel bracelet on the right cuss the issue or .talk about
should dress.
wrist, a sword, and they must his choice of dress.
Hostilities boiled . over wear baggy, cotton underA lawyer for Gill, Nicholas
Sept. 18 witb a brawl involv- wear as a symbol of purity.
Phillips,
said he's examining
ing more than I 00 people,
"They're trying to vanish
~suiting in four being taken
the identify of the Sikh,'~ the temple's constitutiotYand
to a hospital, police said.
Singh said. "We want some- legal structure to figu're out
Gursharan Gill, who idenJi- body with a full turban and who should hold power.
The temple, which began in
fies himself as the temple's full faith to represent us."
1992
with about 90 people
president, is cleanshaven and
Janda and others say Gill
wears a bandanna called a and his followers have hoard- now has more than 300.
Hoping to alleviate the ten- .
upatka." .
ed power among a small
sion,
Gill's group announced
That riles some members, group and have denied the
who say temple leaders congregation an open vote on · Friday that it was closing the
Temple until Oct. I 0. Phillips
should wear traditional dress the leadership.
that indudes a turban, long
"By not giving the rights to said the executive committee
hair and beard.
the congregation, they a re decided to lock the temple
"He ri'lust look like a Sikh," deceiving the community, . doors on Friday night after
said Kamaljit Singh Janda of they are ·deceiving the reli- ~onsulting with the city.
Solon, who has a beard and gion," said Hari Singh
Pol ice said a small group
wears a turban.
Dhillon of Maple Heights. met peacefully outside the
Sikhism was founded near- "Sikhism prom~tes democra- temple on Sunday.

CLEVElAND (AP) - He
'has robbed a bank a month
since July, each time calmly
handing a note to a teller saying he has a gun.
Detective Clarence Sanders
calls the man the patient robber.
The .man is slightly balding, 5-foot-6 and about ISO
poun$ . ..
"Nobody actually sees . a
weapon, but we h~,ve to
assume he has one," Sanders
said.
.
During the first robbery on
July 12th, the teller gave the
man a wad of $20s, $1 Os, $5s

September 27, 2004

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Weather forecast
Monday, September 27 • from the southeast turning
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
from the east as the afterTemperatures will rise to noon progresses. .
73 with today's low of . 58
Evening
(7
p.m.·
occurring around 6:00am. Midnight)
Skies will range from mostly
Temperatures will fall
sunny to mostly cloudy with from 72 early this evening
5 ·MPH winds from the east to 65 : Skies will range from
turning from the southeast as moslly clear to cloudy with
5 MPH winds from the east
the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.) ·
· turning from the northeast as
Temperatures will stay the evening progresses. .
- near 76 with today's high of ·Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
78 occurring around 3:00pm.
It's going t\J be a cloudy
Skies will be sunny to most- overnight. Temperatures will
ly sunny with 5 MPH winds hold steady around 62 .

Mon~,

JOHN SEEWER

Browns roughed up by Giants, 27-10
percent of their third downs
while limiting Cleveland to
Associated Press
2-of- I 0.
Warner was outstanding
EAST RUTHERFORD, for the second straight
N.J. - With the way Kurt week, going 19.-of-27 for
and
Michael 286 yards and no intercepWarner
Strahan played. the New tions. He hurt an ankle late,
York Giants never had to but said it was not serious.
worry about a letdown · . "Kurt is putting the ball in
against the injury-ravaged places where we can catch
Cleveland Browns.
it," said Amani To\Jmer,
Warner set up a touch- who had five catches for
down run by Tiki Barher 126 yards and helped set up
with a long pass. and !he two touchdowns. "''m realveteran quarterback capped Jy happy with the way he
another drive with his se.c- can buy a little extra time
und career regular-season· and get the ball out."
TD .run in a 27-10 win over
Strahan, who played with
a sore left hand, had two
the Browi)S on Sunday.
"More important than sacks and two fum ble
who we were playing today recoveries as the defense
and what the Cleveland made life miserable for
Browns brought to the table · quarterback Jeff Garcia in
was, 'Can the New· York handing the Browns ( l-2)
Giants not beat them- their second straight los~.
selves ?"' Giants center and
Strahan's biggest play
Shaun came in the opening minformer
Brown
O'Hara said.
utes of the second hal f when
The .Giants (2-1) won he recovered a fumble by
their seco)ld straight under Garcia at the Giants 5 with
Tom Coughlin because they New York leading 10-0.
got big games from their
"Th at play kind of took
playmakers, and they did all the air out of their sails,
the little things right. . .
because we went down and
They won the takeaway scored,'' said Strahan , who Cleveland Browns wide receiver' Dennis Northcutt, left, attempts to run with the ball as New
battle 3-0, held edges in also had six tackles .
York Giants Brent Alexander hangs on to his jersey during the fourth quarter Sunday at Giants
time of possession and field
Stadium in East'Rutherford, N.J.. The Giants beat the Browns 27-10.·(AP Photo)
Please see Browns, Bl.
position and converted 45
BY TOM CANAVAN

Lewis, Ravens run wild on Pirates double .
Ben gals for 2~-9 victory
up Cincinnati, 4~2
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press
CINCINNATI - Jamal
Lewis up the middle. Jamal
Lewis around the end. Am;!,
with the game on the line,
Jamal Lewis rumbling
toward the end zone.
After two subpar efforts,
the · Baltimore Ravens'
game-breaker is liack at· it.
Lewis ran for 186 yards
- the fifth-best total of his
career -· and broke a 75yard
touchdown
run
Sunday that clinched a 23-9
victory over the Cincinnati
' Bengals.
It was vintage Lewis.
"It was time," -said J,.ewis,
who hadn't CO!Ile close to
l 00 yards in a ~alile this
season. "I'm a pattent guy. I
just wait for things to

unfold."
When Lewis is off and
running, things usually
unfold'' nicely for the
Ravens (2-1 ), who rely on
their punishing back. Kyle
Boller 'ran 'for a touchdown
and threw for· another, but
had two &lt;:ostly fumbles that
kept it close.
Lewis needed only 13
seconds to finish it off midway through the fourth
quarter.
He took a handoff,
changed direction twice,
.left two tacklers empty·
handed · iind sped off,
pulling so far ahead of the
defense that everyone
slowed once he reached the
20-yard line.
·
The Bengals (1-2) always
have trouble bringing him
down. Lewis has . topped

l ()()yards in all seven of his
career
games
against
Cincinnati, including a !SOyard effort last December..
"Jamal's one terrific player, but you've got to tackle
or you can't win." Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis said .
"We stayed with the script
and got back into the game,
but that long run they got at
the end was disheartening."
Until Sunday. the recordsetting back who topped
2,000 yards last year had
little room to run. He managed only 57 in a seasonopening loss to Cleveland
- a team he tormented for
500 yards last season and Pittsburgh limited him
to 62 yards a week, later.
The Bengals were much
easier to crack.
·

Please see Bencals, Bl

PITTSBURGH .(API The Pirates · finished the
home portion of another
dismal s·e ason with a victory.
Slumpin&amp; Tike Redman
hit a patr .ot run-sconng smgles, and Pittsburgh beat the
Cincinnati Reds 4-2 Sunday
to stop a five-game losing
streak.
"You have to win the last
game at home," shortstop
Jack Wilson said . "No matter what you're doing . . you
want to win that last game
in front of your hom.e
crowd. Give them · a nice
sendoff and say. ·Go get
them, Steelers!"'
Pittsburgh went 39-41 at
PNC Park and has not had a
winning record at home
since going 45-36 in 1999 .
The P1rates, 69-86 overall ,

are ass ured lftl their 12th
consecutive losing season .
Wilson helped save the
win by starting a spectacular double play in the
eighth.
Leadoff
hitter
Anderson Machado walked
and pinch hitter Jacob Cruz
grounded a ball sharply up
the middle . Wilson made a
diving stop. then used his_
glove to tltp the ball to second baseman Jose Castillo,
who m'a de an accurate
throw to first as Machado
Please see Reds, Bl

__:..--'--J;-----~----:----,--·,-,----'-:___ _ __ _ ...------, ---------------- ~-- -----.

�•

Pap B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 27, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.oom

.

Monday, September 27, 2004

Newman wins at Dover; Gordon takes points lead Twins scalp Tribe, 6-2:
.
BY DicK BlltNS I Eli

BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

Associated Press

off Francisco Cruceta (0-1'
for the playoff-bound Twin~
(90-66), who continue to ~
overlooked despite beirlg
back in the postseason .
"People said we were not
going to win 90 games or the
division," manager Roil
Gardenhire said. "We didn 'l
pa:¥ attention to those people.
We're pretty proud of what
we accomplished. We think
it's a pretty big deal."
.
Losing Vizquel would be a
pretty big deal to' Indians
fans. who have 'seen Jirir
Thome and Manny Ramirez
leave as free agents in recent
years and may now see
another star depart.
A three-time All-Star an(!
nine-time Gold Glove win,c
ner, Vizquel is expected t()
become a free agent in
November. He has a mutual
$5 million option for next
season that the Indians are
not likely to pick up.
The 37-year-old Vizquel i&amp;
willing to accept a one-year
deiil to remain - and retire
- with the Indians.
"I think we c.an work it
out," said Vizquel, who will
meet with general manage,r
Mark Shapiro immediately
after the season. "This is the
first time I've ended a season
not knowing where I am
going to hi for the next one.:·
If Cleveland fans had their
way, Vizquel wou\dn't be
going anywhere.

DOVER, Del. Ryan
CLEVELAND Omar
Newman has -a plan to win
Vizquel didn't know how to
the NASCAR Nextel Cup
·say goodbye.
title even though the matheSo as the fans in Jacobs
matics m~e that- seem very
Field bestowed him with
unlikely.
another standing ovation
"If we can finish in the top
Sunday, Vizquel removed his
five in the last nine races, I
cap
and patted hiS right hand
can pretty much guarantee us
over his heart.
a championship," he said
''That means I love you
after winning Sunday at
all,"
he said.
Dover
International
The feeling was mutual.
Speedway. "But we can't finish 33rd, first and then 33rd."
Vizquel got a wann sendHe certainly can't, give.n
off in possibly his final home
the 107 points by which he
game fQr Cleveland. and the
trails leader Jeff Gordon with
Minnesota Twins reached 90
remammg .
eight
races
wins for the third straight
Newman is playing catchup
season with a 6-2 victory
because engine failure releover the Indians.
~ated him to a 33rd-place finVizquel, the Indians' wildrsh a week earlier in New
ly
popular shortstop, went 1Hampshire.
for-4 in the team's home
"But this is a big step in the
finale
- perhaps his last
riJ1hl direction," ' Newman
srud of his victory Sunday in
game wearing Cleveland's
the J\1BNA America 400. Jeff Gordon· leads the points race by one point after his third place finish in the NASCAR MBNA
white jersey.
"We' II just do the best that America 400 race, Sunday, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, DE.(AP Photo/Nick
Unless he's willing to
we r.ossibly can, and if we Wass)
accept a reduced role next
don t deserve it then we
season
·and work out a new
the margin reduced only changes among seven driwon't get it"
contract with the Indians,
because a caution flag vers.
Four-time series champion
Vizquel's II th season with
bunched the field on the
Former series champion
Gordon
agrees
with
327th lap.
and two-time Dover winner
Cleveland will be his last.
Newman 's assessment that
Newman's
victory
in
the
Stewart
finished
sixth,
Tony
"I want to stay here," he
consistency will win the title.
$5.4
million
event
was
his
followed
by
polesitter
said
before Sunday's game.
He isn't rhat concerned with
third
at
Dover,
where
he
Jeremy
Mayfield
and
Jamie
·~But it' s not up to me."
wms .
·swept the races last year. He McMurray. Johnson wound
Carlos
Silva
(14-8)
"What more can you ask
got
his
second
victory
this
up
lOth.
for than top-fives every
allowed one run and eight
Reigning series champion
season and 11th of his career,
weekend," Gordori said.
hits in · seven innings,
"That would do it."
shot at Mark," Gordon said. beating Martin by 8.149 sec- Matt Kenseth finished 32nd
improving to 4·0 in his last
He also believes Newman " But we had nothing for onds on the high-banked con- after spinning out and hitting
eight starts as Minnesota
crete oval. Martin got his a tire harrier at the end of pit
remains a threat, saying that Newman."
won for just the second time
one bad race should not
Gordon said his car was fourth Dover victory in June. road. That caused the race to
m stx games.
"We made some adjust- be halted for 12 minutes
knock a team out of champi- good at times and far off at
Pin•• SH Tribe, 16
ments
but
we
didn't
have
to
Jacque Jones had two RBis
while repairs were made.
onship contention.
others. He also believes he
make many," Newman said.
.
"If Ryan Newman does can run better next week.
"Once
you
get
it
right
on
this
"I just hope that doesn't
what he did today anymore,
he'll be right back in the mean we have a bulls-eye on concrete it stays right."
Busch was happy with his
thick of things," Gordon said. us at · Talladega," said
best
Dover finish.
Newman's optimism stems GordoQ, a · winner there in
c:INCINNATI (AP) - Former Cincinnati will go tQ a charitable foundation set up in the
"We
just lost the handle on
from the belief that practical- April.
·
Reds owner Marge Schott left $123.4 million name of her and her late husband, Charles.
ly every team will have one
New Hampshire winner it in the corners," he said. "I
in assets when she died in March, according She left $1 million to each of her four sisters
very ba!;l race in the final I 0. Busch came to The Monster was trying to hold off Jarrett
couldn't."
but
I
to documents her estate filed in probate court. and smaller amounts to several longtime·
"We've got to forge t about Mile tied for the series lead
Martin,
now
-tied
with
Schott, who died March 2 at 75, owned $3 employees.
today right now," he said. "If with Dale Earnhardt Jr., who
Jimmie
Johnson
for
fourth
million in paintings and other art, pottery
Schott signed her will in 1991 and updated
you're spending time cele- fell to third irl the title chase
brating, you're not spending by finishing ninth. He's 18 place in the series, said he got
worth $66,000, two Corvettes and a house in it three times·before her death.
all he could out of his car.
time working."
points behind Gordon.
Schott, majority owner of the Reds from
suburban
Indian Hill worth $18 million,
"The race was decided on
Gordon finished third
Although he was· unable to
according to the filing Friday in Hamilton 1984 to 1999, retained a one-fifteenth stake iil
behind Mark Martin in the make a large gain, Newman the last restart," he said. "I
County Probate Court.
the team. Her share will be sold to the other
race and is one point ahead of demonstrated tl)e power of found out what the 12
(Newman)
really
had."
Schott's lawyers say the bulk ·of her estate owners for $6. I million .
Kurt Busch, who wound up his Dodge by leading 325 of
Newman
averaged
119.084
fifth and lost the points lead 400 laps. Newman, who
when he was passed by Dale started second, was ahead by mph in a race slowed five
with a late 5-yard touch- Davis. "You start thinking
Jarrett with six laps to go. . . a half-lap for much of the times by cautions covering
down run for New York: .
this guy has to do this anq
"I thought we might have a final quarter of the race wirh 38 laps. There were 13 lead
Garcia, who had a 0.0 this guy has to do that, that
Page 81
quarterback rating against ' you almost paralyze yourDallas last weekend, hit self."
moment, tl}ere was a bad
Palmer was 25-of-52 · for
With Ron Dayne out with Quincy Morgan on a 3-yard
The Brown s were held to
one. Boller fumbled on a 316 yards, but got sacked
touchdown
pass
and
Phil
89 total yards in the first
scramble 2 yards from the four times and threw three .a calf injury, Barber rushed
Dawson
kicked
a
49-yard
I
06
yards
anil
scored
on
for
half, in which four of their
end zone and lost the ball interceptions, two of them to
from 'Page 81
.
field
goal
for
the
Browns,
without being touched on a safety Ed Reed near the end an B-yard run in the first
six series started inside their
•
who got all their points after own 14-yard line.
second-half
run,
setting
up
quarter.
zone.
Lewis powered through
"You can't get greedy,"
The two-game winning falling behind 17-0.
Warner gave the Giants
defenders who couldn't get a the last of Cincinnati's three
"We had too many · mis- the lead with a three-play,
•
field
goals.
Palmer
said.
·:when
you're
a
·
streak
matched
the
Giants'
grip. They clawed at his
" I'm still learning," Boller young quan:erback, you get high for last season, when t~kes and penalties that 71-yard drive on their seOshoulder pads and 1ul)ged at
"!' ve got .to hold onto greedy. and I have to fight they went 4-12 under Jim erased positive plays," said ond ,possession that ended
said.
his thighs, then found them' that temptation. You need to Fassel.
Garcia, who finished 21-ofselves fla~ling on the ground th~ ball sometimes."
when Barber scored on a
His
counterpart
had
a
develop
patience.
When
·"I think we are starting to 31 for' 180 yards and an sweep.
while Lewis went on his
painful time trying to stay on something isn't there, you believe in ourselves," said interception.
"We
had
way.
After Garcia fumble early
it
up
in
the
his
feet.
don't
just
throw
in
bad
situations.
turnoYers
Giants punter Jeff Feagles, ·
"lie's an All-Pro runnil)g
in
the second half, Warney
For the second consecutive air."
back, but we helped him a
who landed four punts We never seemed to get
At limes, they looked like inside the 14-yard line in anything headed in the right drove the Giants 95 yards ip
lot," linebacker Kevin Hardy game, the Bengals' offense
failed to score a touchdown the old Bungles.
said.
'
the first half. "Everybody in direction until much too II plays. A personal fo~J
behind
second-year
quarterhavThey
were
flagged
for
ag.ainst Cleveland safety
The Ravens needed it.
this league knows how late."
back
Carson
Palmer,
who
ing
12
men
in
the
huddle
in
Leading receiver Todd Heap
Cleveland had six starters Robert Griffith for a late hit
important confidence is.
by
a
blitzing
was
hit
often
the
first
half.
Once
the
5-yard
is sidelined by a severe ankle
We're getting turnovers, hurt in last week's loss to helped the drive early and
defense.
the
penalty
was
stepped
off,
injury, and Boller is still
the CowbC!ys, and also lost Toomer and Warner comLinebacker Ray Lewis Bengal s huddled again, came we're not giving the ball up
finding his way. The secondand (we're) playing sound linebacker Ben Taylor with bined on a 38-yard pass to
Palmer's
co-star
in
an
offbeat
the
line
and
discovered
to
year quarterback was ll·of·
footbalL We're getting on a a pectoral injury in the first set up Warner's TD run. ,
18 for 126 yards, including a television commercial last they had only 10 men on the rolL"
A holding penalty again~!
quarter.
drew a 15-yard field, forcing them to take a
7·yard touchdown run and a year Morgan
in the third quarte;r
"There
was
so
inuch
made
Steve Christie added field
38-yard TD pass to Randy penalty for slamming into timeout
On the kickoff following goals of 43 and 25 yards and out of our having six or also nullified a . 49-yard
Hymes that put the Ravens the quarterback's head after
he released a pass. Lewis Hymes'
touchdown, Mike Cloud iced the game · seven starters out of the tou~hdown run by William
up 17-0. .
game," Brown coach Butch Green.
·
But for every good also recovered Palmer' s Cincinnati sent only I 0 men
first-half fumble.
out for the return.

Schott's estate worth $123.4 million

Browns
from

Ben gals

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC HEARING
,I against the Reds, allow- singled in another run in the
ing one run and six hits in 5 third for a 3-0 lead .
2-3 innings. Jose Mesa
Cincinnati loaded · the
pitched the ninth for his bases with no outs in th'e
from Page 81
41st save in 46 chances.
sixth but scored just one
Fog~. usually slotted as .run. Anderson Machado
was sliding into him.
,
the P1rates' No. 5 starter, strayed too far off second
, You always want to get has 'won at least I 0 games and was doubled up by
better offensively and that's " in each •o f his three seasons Redman on Ryan Freel's
always my goal," Wilson with Pittsb urgh.
flyout to center. Felipe
said. "But my number-one
thing is still defense and
"His stuff isn't the best on Lopez hit an RBI single,
doing the job for my pitch- the staff but he has· the right but Mike Gonzalez struck
er. That play was just per- attitude and makeup," out Adam Dunn.
.
Pirates manager Lloyd
"Our baserunning was
fect uming.
It was a perfect McClendon said. "He's a really a factor," Miley said.
spot in the game, it helped bulldog."
"We basically ran ourselves
us y;in and gave the fans
Jose Acevedo (5-12)' lost out of the game." .
. ~~~~~~~ 10 cheer about. It for the ninth time in · J 2
Jack Wilson doubled in
the
seventh and scored on The . crowd of 23,84! decisions, ~iving u~ t)me
Rob
MacJ,owiak's triple.
stood and cheered but · runs and nrne h1ts rn f1ve
Wilson couldn't take ~ cur- mnmgs. Cmcrnnatl had Wilson became the first
tain call since · he was · won four straight, one shy Pirates shortstop with 40
of its longest road winning doubles since Arky Vaughn
already on .the field.
in 1940.
-'
"The perfect situation is streak this year.
After Austin Kearns hit
that's the third out and
"He didn't pitch that
an
RBI single in the ninth,
you're walking off the badly," Reds manager Dave
Mesa
got Javier Valentin to
field," he said. "You have Miley said. "He kept us in
another out to go so you there and gave us a ground into a double play,
chance."
then struck out Machado
can't have a lapse·. You can
Pittsburgh took a 2-0 lead with a runner on third.
only enjoy it until the next in the first when Jason Bay
"This was one of the best
pitch comes."
Josh Fogg (10·10) won hit an RBI single, stole sec- all-around games that we
all
year,"
for the fourth time in six ond and scored on a sin~le rlayed
McClendon
said.
d
·
br
~edman,
just
his
thtrd
decJstons an tmprove to 5 - hrt in . 25 at-bats. Redman
,.

Reds

l

t!tribune - Sentinel - l\,e

'

'

•

I

The goal of the CDBG New Horizon Program is to provide funds to units of local .
government to affirmatively further fair housing in addition tb activities undertaken :
with their CDBG Formula Allocation Program funds.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on October 7, 2oo4, to make sug- :
gestions and comments and to provide public input on various activities which may :
be undertaken in this program.
'

If a participant will need auxiliary aitls ! interpreter, brailled or taped materials,
assistive listening device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria Kloes '
Clerk; prior to October 1, 7004, at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that your needs
w.iH be accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Written comments will be accepted untill:OO P.M., October 7, 2004 and may be
mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio45769:
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners
'

Equal Opportunity Employer

•

~~

I

CLASSIFIED

M~p

Coo.&amp;nly, OH

G.aUU. COWlry, 011

'

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

'

m;rtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

Register

Sentinel

992-2156 {304) 675-1333
Call Today••• {740) 446-2342 {740)
Or Fax To
992-2157

Oftfee !lowe-~ ·
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AM
Ads

" \ t i l \ t I \I I \ h

r~ 1

AD.

Items

r-~.;~~
VARD su ....
1. .

tu...~:.

Sale October 1st. lOam· :
GAUJPOLJS
8pm Krodel Club-House, ""~--iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiio_.l
Pt.Pieasant.
Jewelry,
Btg yard sale Sat. Oct. 2, aBaskets,
lndtan 5 . 520 BaU Run Ad off
DecoratiOns , Fabnc, Toys, Skidmore Rd. Tools, d1shes,
PictUres,
Christmas
some antiques. lots of misc .
Decorattons. Flowers &amp;
much Mtsc.
Mov1ng
Sale
at
97
Honeysuckle
Dnve
m
GiVEAWAY
Add1son CANCELLED nLL
_ _ _ _ _ __ , NEXT WEEKEND. Ftiday
...
October 1st thfu Suriday
Cast Iron Bath Tub in good October 3rd. due to Illness.
condition can (304)675-4435
I
4
afte• 5pm
YARD SALE-

tllr:r-------,

r

-------

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Frl d•y for ln•ertlon

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lneu Day• Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
-Frld••v For Sunday• Paper

l'oMEROYIMUJIJL~

Now you can have borders and graphics
IL-'
added to your classified ads
{p~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Publlc•tlon
Sund•y DI•PI•y: 1 : 00 p.m .
Thursday tor Sunday• Paper

• Att ada must be prepaid•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publt.hlng NMn'M tM right to edit, reject, or ctncel any ad at any lime. Errore mua~ be reported on the rlrlt day of
Tribu.,....semirtet-A.glet.r will be f'MPOfUllble for no mOfe than 11'141 coet of ti'HI epKe occupied b~ the error •nd onl~ the first lnaertlon. We .t'lall not bl&gt;
MY 1oM or es:pense that rnuna Prom Hill publle.Uon Of omlaslon of an advMIIMment Correction will be made In the firat availab.. edition. • Box
. . atwaye c:onfldentlll, • CUI'Tent rwt• nrd IlPPI• • A.U fftl eUte Mlvertieement. are
to the Federal Fair Hou11ing Act of 1968. • Tf'tla oowopa1&gt;e&lt;l
KCepts only help wanted ada
EOE atandarda. We •ill not
In "'lolallon
law •

• St.rt 'Your Ada With A K•yword • Include Complete
Description • lnducle A Price • Avoid Abbrtno'l8tionJ
• lndude Phon• Number And Addrus When rte.ded
• Ads Should Run 7 Dayl

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARDSAu-:

. rl'l'li'

~

lwrlghl@llc.net

. . __ _ _-..J

...r~:o::::·~~~~s:~:-:;::~l- ......~.'•ro··~.5.~.(~.~---~

. ,r.~---ro•"•~•RF··~.-~.---~

r

Ne:d to new 2000 Redman
16X80 . 3 bedfoom/2 bath,
vinyl Siding/single root fully
loaded. $27,900 00 Can
help w1th delivery Ask for
Ni ~ ki (740)385-9948

HOUSE FOR RENT . 3
bdrm . 1 bath. LA w1FP 2·car
carport qwet locat1on, edge
of town. S550imo S $550
sec. dep. You pay all utiht1es
Cali (740)446·3644 for mfo

Nice 14X52, 94 Flem1ng . 2
bedroom. shmgle root, Lot
100X120 in Syracuse
(740)992-5888

N1ce house· 3 BR. 1.5 balhs
Good 1ocat1on Close to hospital. $650 rent w/$650 sec
deo You pay ·ail utilities
Relerences
requ1red
(740)446·3644

Land in Gallia County.
Woods and hills !me Will do

I \ 11'1 I

n

\II \ I

All reel utate advertlalng
In this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes tt illegal to
advert\te "any
preterence, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, cokH', religion, sex
familial status or national
origin, or 1lny Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

..,I 1{\ ll I "

110

1.

HELP WANIID •

I

An E11.celtent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
Call Memlyn 304·882·2645
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1 429 '

t · ~a:

-------Reddish
brown
mate
Dachshund, , . 112 yrs
old,last seen 10 Mile Ad.
Rewatd
(304)895-1 890
(304)674-5592

Absolute Top Dollar . U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs, U.S.
Currem;y,·M.T.S. Co1n Shop,
151
Second
A~enue ,
Gallipolis, 740·446-2842

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725 ·
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques ............. ,......................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market-............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Acceasortes .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autoa for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Molorstor Sate ............................. 750
Building Supplies, ..........................,............ 550
Buatnesa and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlly .................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor 'Homea ...............,........... 790
Camping Equipment ........ :.......................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Child/Elderly·care ....................................... 190
Etec:trlcai/Relrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment for RenL .................................. 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
. Farm Equlpment ..........................................61D
Farms for Rent .............................................43D

·
·
.
·

:
·

Dutlea Involve keying
retail price Information
Into
a
database.
Information Includes merchandise unit price, item
descrlptlort, quantity, purchase '
orders,
data
Ch 8 ng..• n.w Vendor
information. Must have
good vlaual and mental
coordlna11on, be able to
key accurately and with
production apaed, have
working knowledge of
Microsoft
Word
and
Microsoft OHice . Send
resume
end
salary
requirements to: TSC-24
200 Main Sl., Pt. Pleasant,
WV 25550
-------Delivery/Warehouse person
needed, full t1me, 1mmed1ate
opening, must have "'Xcel~~'
lent driving record, apply at
lifestyle Furniture. 856 3rd.
Ave, Gallipolis, 9·5 no phone
calls please.

~

www.comlcs.com

Iri7U

"'11~------,

r:IIIO

Hrn.r WA_NfED

•

Nursing Assistant Classes
beglnnmg O&lt;:tober 4, 20,
2004 thru October 20, 2004.
If you enJOY elderly people
and want to beCome a member ol our health care tea m,
please slop by Rocksprings
AetlabihtaMn center at
36759 Aockspnngs Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
out an application for the
classes.
Extendicare
Health
Servtces, Inc. is an equal
opportuntty employer that
&gt;
~ncourages
workplace
diversity WF ON

Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed APP IY at 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
- ' - - - - -- - Part time tax preparers
needed for busy tax office ,
Pomeroy iocat1on We w1il
train .
Computer. skills
required Send resume ,to·
E)(penenced Roofing Crews The Oa11y 5enllnei, PO Bo11.
needed
in
Flonda's 729- ta
Pomeroy, Ohto
Hurricane Area Top Pay Cali 45769
Dav1d 0 1~772~567..()559
Farms far Sale .............................................. 330
'll time Ftonl Desk Cletk PT/LPN or
Medtcatlon
Fu
For Lease .................................... ,.................490
Technician
, Oestred,
Apply in person Holiday Inn,.
For Sate ........................................................ 585
577 $1. At. 7N . No phone Flexibility
Required ,
For Sate or Trade .....................,................... 590
Interested Applicants Mav
II I
ca s pease.
, Mon.· Fn.. 9am·
Fruita &amp; Vogetablas ..................................... 580
Apply Da1iy,
Furnished Room a................. -......... -........ -... 450
lnfoCision
Management Spm, Ravenswood Care
General Hauling...........................................850
Corp. Is currently accepting Center, 111 3 Washington
applications for Full·Time Sl., Ravenswood , WV,
Gtveaway................................................ :.....040
Oayshlf1 positions (8a-5p). References
Required,
Happy Ada....................................................050
Q ualified applicants should E; 0 E
Hay &amp; Gratn.......:..........................................640
.
be stable, highly mottvated - , - - - - - -- - Help Wantad .................................................11 0
Individuals with good com~ Sales...
Home tmprovementa ...................................810
municatlon sktlis. We offer a
Homes for Sate ....................................... ,.... 310
full benefitS package and Are you looking for a new
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 51
401K. No previous e)(perl- career with an unlimited
Houaea for Rent .......................................... 410
enoe necessary. We are the opportunity for advancetn Memoriam ........................ :....................... 020
lneurance ..................................................... 130 profBsslorial dlffBrence · 1n ment?
lAwn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................880 . teleservlees and need great
team players to join us\ Would you like to be racogUve•tock................................................ :.....630 " 'Interested
candidates, nlzed as a professional
Lost and Found ....................:....................... 1180
please can H177-463·6247 salesperson In one ol the
Lot• &amp; AcMge ............................................ 350 ext. 1901 or apply online country's highest paid occuMteceltaneoue ..........................................-... t 70
l'i'NW'N~e!n~!oo~!s~!o"':n':co~m~-- patkJns?

Earn $600 WEEKLY or
Proceaalng our
more.
mall from home. Genuine
opportunity. FREE supplies.
FT/PT.
1DO%
Satlafactlon guarantiHKI.'
Cel 1{702)933-4666 (24
houra)

o

Mt-lta~ua Merchlndln.......................540
Moblle·Homt Repetr ....................................880
Mobile Homeetor Rtnt ............................... 420
. Mobile Hom11tor s•ra......,....... :................. 320
Maney to LOin .............................................220
Motorcycttl l 4 WhHte .............................740
MutiCII tnttrumtnt1 ................................... 570

Ptrlonala.....................................................005

Pat• tor Sale ................................................. 580
Plumbing&amp; Heatlng ............ ,.........: .............820
. Prate~lonat servtete ................. ,...............230
· Rldto, TV l CB RIJM1Ir ..............................180
. Rtal Ettall Wanttd .....................................380

· 8ohoolalnetructlan ..................................... 11SO
8ttd , Plant l Fertilizer ..............................150
Situation• Wanted ....................................... 120
Space tor Rtnt.i...........................................480
Sporting Qoode ...........................................520
SUV'efor 81'-..............................................720
Trucka lor Sale ........... ,.... ;........................... 715
Upholltery ...................................................870
· · Vana For 8ate...............................................730
Wanttd to Buy .............................................oeo
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supptlet ..................82D
' W1nttcl To Do .............................................. 180
wanted to Aent .................. :......................... 470
Yard set. O.Jtlpottt.................................... o72
Ytrd ..tH'omeroyiMiddle ......................... 074
Yard S.I•Pt. PIMunt ............._. .................. 078'
')/

This newsp.~per wilt not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
utate which Is In
violation of the law, Our
readers are hereby
inlormed that all
dWellln!itS advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basea.

Database Coordinator.

'Golden Retr1ever tound m
AUCTION
the Pt. Pleasant. Gallipolis RIVERSIDE
BARN At 7 SOuth , 5 miles
Ferry area (304)675-6023
below the Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm.
lost large set of keys. From Ci7,C40~25;;6;.;
·6~98:;:;9"----,
Rutland/Route 124/Route 7
WANTED
to Route 33. $100. reward
10 BUY
- (740)416-1594

= .

dozer work lor property.
(740)388·8228

Lovable 'K1ttens to a good Depot Street, Rutland, Sept
home, 1 Bobtail, mnced vari - 27 through Oct 1st, babv to Carpenters wanted set
ety (304)675·4317 after 5pm adult
clothing.
mce Posts ~ Trusses lor Pole
Barns, Some Travel requ1red
Christmas 1fts
call (937)718-1471

·
·

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two public hearings at the :
office of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio on
:
October 7, 2004 at I:. 15 P.M., for the purpose of providing the public information
and receiving comments 9n the 2004 CDBG New Horizon Program, a federally
funded program administered-by the State of Ohio, Office of Cominunity and
Housing Partnerships. Meigs County is eligible for $15,000 in funding, providing
the county meets applicable requirements . .

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

·www.mydallysentinel.com

-

Little
John's
Cltgo,
Centenary, now accepting
applications for the following
positions· Full time experl·
anced Dell Clerk; Full time
Part
time
Cashier ,
Oellfcashler. Taking aPJ)IIca·
tiona Mon·Fri at Location.
-M-A-IN-5-TR_E_E_T_J-EW-EL_RY_

Ii

-'1:!"-------,
I\11:scn..LANEo

Need a job?
We ate hlrlngl
You could earn up to
$8/hr plus bonuses.
We also orfer paid training,
hoHdays, and vacations
Full or part time shifts

available

1
C8II •-•
•~ay
1-u
"'n·4..
""·6247
ext
2454
~

1§6

1

T-.~IJCI'tON

.ll'3t"-

Oalllpolll Clretr Col~•
(Careers Close To Home)
Cali Today! 740-4461 •4367 •
1·800· 2144Vi2
~. gatllpolleoarNrcollegl .oom
A.cc:rtdj1ed M1mber A.c:c:redltlng
CO!ncll
lor lndlpii'ICWil COIItgllll
and 9onoolt 12748

I

J'RSIJflN)ERVI.O';S
IONAI.

riO

1180

r

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old prices.
2005 models amvmg Now
Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
15266 U S 50 East. Athens.
OhiO 45701 (740)592- 1972
"Where Vou Get Your
Money's Worth"

i

Lots &amp;
.__ _oiAiiciii:REii~ii\iiiGiiE_...
'
0 97 acre bu1ld1ng lot on
Grandv1ew Ave near County
Fairgrounds N1ce neighbor·
hood. all utllilleS e11.cept
sewer $10.000 (30 4)489 •
•
1353
Commerc 1ai buddmg plus

"'!l;-"::-'-""""---, For Sale or Rent. New 3 t 5 acres m Green Twp

High
School
Juniors,
TURNED DOWN ON
Seniors and Prior Serv1ce SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
you can flU vacant pos1Mns
No Fee Unless We Winl
1n the West V~rginia Army
1·888·582·3345
·National Guard II you are
between the ages of 17·35 lim!"'"_"!'!"_ _ __,
or have prior military servHOMES
ice, you won't want to pass
FOR SALE
th 1s up For Opportunities 1n
&gt;'our area, can: 304..()75·'
sg 37 .
(2) 3 t&gt;OOroom houses for
sale. 2 baths, fireplaces, on
acreage. Call (740)709·
Royal Oak membership lor 1166
sale great deal $700
'
' - - - -- - - (:lo4)874-4169
0% Down p aymen1 an d
-------I
financmg availa,ble wilh
SeeklnJ 39 Peop e approved cred1t Average
Locally
credit qualities you. if down
who want to earn money
payment has kept you from
wh1le losmg weight showing buying, thiS IS 'your chance
others how
to own your own home II
(740)441-1982,
you have a down payment
FREE SAMPLES
but would like to conserve it,
www.famousnutntton com we offer low down payment
ur.~.~
programs also. Great inter·
"11J,..~:o~,
est ratesI Local company,
To Do
Mortgage
Locators .
(740)992·7321
For all your Home Projects· - - - - - - - and Rep81rs Early, late, big 3 bedroom bnck lront
or small, ca ll the Handyman Ranch. Newer roof. v1nyl.
(740)446-0422.
heat
pump,
Smiths
C.blnet.' 1 Car ga,age' Pnvale lane Off SA 160. 1.8
·Georges Portable Sawmill, acres, $92,000 (740)388don't haul your logs to the
m1H just can 304-675-1957. 8676.
----,--~----,-,-:-'-,:-:- 3 bedroom , tun basement,
Housecleaning $10. a Hr. garage, appro11. 1 acre of
(740)446·3385
land, 5 miles from town on
SA 7 @ Five Points. can
J'm's Carpentry &amp; Small
740-416-0768 Ot 304-882Landscaping Call (740)446· 2299
2506
5 bedroom hOusa, Pomeroy
Will
s1t with
elderly (town), 3/4 acre, new-roof,
Day/Night Weekdays/week· windows, cia. furnace, s1d·
ends
Have references. lng, porch, Insulation 3/4
Many years of exper!ence remodEHed , no land contract,
(740)949-2543
$58 ,000 080, (740)208·
- - - - - , - - - - - 7000 •
Wood's Extra· Care for your - - - - -- - Loved one. Pilvate . room· A Affordable ;!~Bedroom
bath, 3 hot meals. Phone Home, Everything new.
(740)388.()118.
Possible no Money down to
fir~.;..~~-..., qualifying Buyets (304)6741190 ~'r' l-51_1_1_ _ _ _ __
•
'-"'lUl.
•

If 1o, our salespeople earn
an excellent Income and
enjoy the benefits of working
with a eucceastul and pro· ~cceptlng appl1catlons lor
gresalve dealarahlp.
care of elderly in my home.
Private rooma, nutrltloua
If you're serious about a new meal planning, 24 hour care
career and are looking lor with 20 yeara at experience.
the training and guidance 8am~3PM
740.446·785.5
that are eeeentlal for long- .m.
74
'300
.
looking fore eligible people. term auccesa- we 'd like 10
•
""'
'
Must be sales ortented.
10
Smallln•es1mant. (740)742- talk you .
-"r-'""l~~~·~-,
15
1U ~.
Please, atop In for In InterVITVIU\JAUI
2418.
Make ·50% selling Avon. view.
Limited
tlnie
ONLY
.
(740)«6-3358. Fltal5to call , Norrlo Northup Dodgo
recalvea a gift.
·
Chrylltr JHp

2004 by NEA, Inc.

08

I·

ATIENfiON!
GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME I
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME LOANS I
NEW PURCHASES/
REF NANCES
I
SO DOWN/ $0 DOWN
CASHOUTIHOME
iMPROVEMENTS. NO

bedroom 2 bath home on
2 66 acres 25 mmutes 1rom
Athens,
Pomeroy
or
Galitpohs Alexander or
Me1gs Schools $93,000
(740)698·3504

Central heat &amp; air ba th and
complete kitchen $165.000
Call Clillord Realtors 740446•7702
-------For Sale. Acreage. Meigs
County. 82 acres, woods
and hiilsic:le. Great for recre·
ation
and
hunt1n g
$99,500 00 Cali {740)7422637
-------'-Land on McCormick Ad. 2
large lots 112 acre each
(more or less) Electnc and
water on one su1table for
bulldmg or mobile home.
(740)367-7886

0

i

__

01!~1E;

MOFDBILER

nJ:J'II

I
•

14JC70 3 ' bedroom, 1.5' bath,
CIA. no pels, $450 "&amp;
deposit qan (740)446-4824
2 bedroom. remodeled
mobile home , all electnc 1n
M1ddieport 645 Broadway
Street, $350 plus deposit, no
1ns1de pets, (740)992·3194
or 740·416·1354.
-------Mob1i e home lor rent 1n
Vinton. Rele rence/ depoSit
reqwed No pets 740·446·
6865 or 740-446-6189

rt.._----·-.,J
APAili'T'fiENTS
FOR RINT

.,
I &amp; 2 bedroom apt start1n g
at $290/monlh , deposit
.reQUired . No peta WD
hookup (740}441 -11 64
-------1 aM 2 bedroom apartments, lurniShti'd and unlur·
nished, security depOSit
reqwred. no pets. 740·9922218.

For Ssie · or Rent · New 4
bedroom, 2 bath home on
14.4 acres. 25 minutes from
Athens.
Pomeroy
or
Gall1pol1s Aie~~.ander or
Meigs Schools. $115 000
(740)698·3504
1 bedroom apl . utihlies
----~--~
1ncluded $450 month , $300
House 3 Bedroom 1 1/2
depoSit Call (740)992·2274
Bath Heat Pump. new
Carpet Window s &amp; Root,
1br. StudiO Apt. very clea n,
RNer, Vtew 12 Sm1lh St No
1&lt;1 ' I \I..,
turntslled $325 . + Depostt
Money Down to qualifying
(304)675-2970
Buyer $425/month why Rent
(304)675-2749r
r.:':l
1ol"'"_"!'!"_ _ _..., 2 bedroom apts 10 m1nutes
-------Hous.:s
!rom
Holze r
Hospital
House lor sale by .owner 4+
nlR RE:Nr
&lt;t' A
h Pe
d
11
1
.
.;&gt;'060
mMt uMs ts."'available
a owe .
bedrooms,
2.5 baths, large '
storgage
country kitchen, 1.5 story. 2· 0% Down Payme nt and ( 740)441 •1164 or (740 }441 •
car anached ga~ge plus financing available with 0194
two large outbuildings apprO\Ied cred1t
Average - - - - - - - Blacktop driveway, many cred1! qualifies you 11 down 2 bedroom. stove. relrlgeraex tras. $129,000 with 713 payment has kept you from tor tur01shed $150 depos1t,
acre lot, or $159,000 With an buy1ng, th1 s is your chance $275 rent 34 1/2 Smithers
addltlonal3.485 acres of flat to own your own home. 11 Street Call (740)446-9061
ground Very close to town . you llave a down payment
on SpruceSt e)(tenslon butwouldliketoconservelt. 2or3bedroomapartmentln
Call (740)591·0437 anyt1me we offer low down payment Middl eport.
no
pets,
programs also Great 1nter· _F_
•o_)9_9_2_-s_
858
_ _ __
One new custom built nome est rates I Local company
28x56 on 4.5 acres m1i,
Appli ca tions bemg taken lor
Mortgage
Locators
1
1 bed oom 1n
$85,000. One 1 1/2 story
very c ean
r
home &amp; 3 bay garage With (740)992·7321
country settmg y6t ciose .to
rt
b
th
town Washer, dryer, stove,
an apa men1 a ave . 8o . 1 bedtoom house S250/mo lr•dge 'ncluded. Water and
for
$115.000
080. 2 bedroom house $350/mo
·(74o)3BB·B273
garbage Included Total alec4 bedroom house $450/mo , tnc With AC Tenant pay elecMOBU£ HoM~
Deposi tS ne.gotiable
tnc $300 depoSit, $375 per
FOR S.U.E
14x65 mobile home every· month No pets. No smok·
..,_ _ _ _ _.__, thing . mcluded, e11.cellent 1ng 740-446-2205 or 740d111
$ 4 000 (740}446
·
· 446·9585 ask tor V~rgrn1a
1987 14 x70 mobile home 3 ~~~ on,
bedroom, 2 bath, some tur·
Basement Apt- Bulav11te Pk
niture &amp; appliances $8 500.
bedroom house m 2 80. 1 bath $600!mo. +
~all (740)245·9040
$350/monlh
Gallipolis
sec de p Uti11t1es
--c-:---:----:---:--::- deposit required (740)441· $600
Included
e11.cept trash
1989 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1194.
Refe rences
requtred.
t4x70 Completely , remod(740)446-3644.
eled.1ns1de 740-256·1526 or 2 story Colonial 3 bdrm. 1
740-645.()446.
bath Gas heat Cntrl AJC BEAUTIFUL
APART- - - - - - - - ; - $600 mo (740)446·3481 .
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
1992 Southern Elite Mobll'e
PRICES AT JACKSON
Home ,611.70, 2 bedroom, 2 2br 1 1/2 mtles out ol Town 0 ESTATES, 52 Westwood
bath . some appliances Must have Ret No dogs, Drive !rom $344 to $442
$9,900. Caii(740)949 -20tt . StOO deposit, $250 a month Walk to shop &amp; movtes. Call
Call (304)675-1429
Equal
74 0-446-2568.
1993
Mansion
Mc.,i\e
Housing
Opportunity
Home-14X.60 2 bedroom, 1 3 bedroom home In
bath , total electric, QOOd Middleport, $400.00/month , CONVENIENTLY LOCATcondltton, central air, stove , plus deposit and utilities ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
requi red Townhouse
refrigerator and microwave References
apartments,
included.
$8,500 00 . (7 40)992-6154
and/or small hOuses FOR
(7 40)949·9016
-3-b-ed-roo-m-ho-u"'se_4_m_l_les RENT Call (740)4~,.,, , ,
1997 Stngle·wida, 3 bed· !rom Hq)z~r. $400 mo. pius lor application &amp; information.

1.._----·-·

4

room, , 1 bath, all electric, sec. deposit and raferances. Garage Apt 1 bdrm, 1 bath.
good condition, must be No pets. 740--4~6-6865 or Gas heat
$275 mo.
moved. Call (740)441-0034. _74_o_-4_4a_·_61_
·e_9·--~- (740)446-348 1
For sale or rent• 2 bedroom
mobile homes starting at
$270 per month1 Call 740·
992-2167
-------Make 2 payments, move in 4
years on note (30~)736·
3409 .
'

3 bedroom hOuse Water lur·
ni&amp;hed,
no pets, S450
~~~==~~~ CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES
r
WELCOMEI
month, S400 deposit. Call
(740)245·5064.
"HIO..,VALLe't~p·u~ISH
...,,
Dlo.
UNITED SECURITY
-------3 bedroom, 1 bath, Maaon,
NG CO. riKXImmllndt tha
MORTGAGE
you do bualneu with pea
WV. Remolded, gas heat.
I-I00-37D-&lt;IIMI5
CIA $450 00/month plus
le you know, and NaT IC
CALLTOOAY
end money througn the
'deposit.
· (740)698~7002
STAFFED BY U.S.
mall until you have invettl
New
Oakwood
mega
store
(740)590-4123
V!TERANS
featuring
Homes·
by - - - - - - - ated the offering .
Oakwood, Fleetwood &amp; CondO 3 bdrm 2 baths. w/
MB 5283
Your Personal Ttaaaure Map
Giles One stop shopping basement . View ol river.
to
lnttrnet
Proflta :
A/C
S700
mo.
Homea from $10.0001, only at Oakwood Homes of Cntrl
www.up'rotllflrat.comldtal
FordOil!re, VA Hud tor llal· Barboursville WV (304)736· Gallipolis Farry. (740)~46·
or call (304)6711- 1181
3481
lng 1-800.749,8106 ex 1709 3409 '

Gracious Uvlng . 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
Ftom $295-$444, Call 74099 2·S06~ . Equal Houalng
Opportunities
_..:_:_ _ _ _ _ __
Huge clean , 3 b&amp;droom , ,
bath , dmlng. storage. aprox.
2,5oo sq. ft. No petslsmoking, $610.
Call Ktily '
(740)448·9961 ,
.:..._;_,~-~--­

New 1' bedroom apt Phone
(740)446-3736.

'•

�'
I

·P9 B4 •

r-oom~ l...r_AN'n__
Ql!}s ....

Monday, September 27,2004
ALLEYOOP

Monday, September 27,2004

The Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

apartmont .. Atltfquo Bottfo S~. West
In Pomeroy, VIrginia State Farm, Fall•
Festival , Poinf Plea&amp;ant
{140)992-5858
Oct. 2. ID-3. 2004. Into.

or

sell.

Riverine

Atltlques, 1124 East Main
124 E. Pomeroy. 740- t Valley Apartment 992·2526. Russ Moore.
.No ,_101&lt;11'9 Apptications owner.
38
4
"" 2BA.
A &amp;
BA ..
,o\ppllcationa
are taken
".'~'.~
.Monday thru Friday, from ~ ,.~ •
A.M.-4 P.M. otfice' ls
located at 1151 Evergreen 1998 Weber Hot'se Trailer
Ortva Point Pfeasant. wv 38' w/showtime conversion.
Phone No fa (304)675·5806. 3 horse trailer w/full livi"9

on SR

·r~"'!M~-"""'---.."""',.~"""'~~,

:e:oo

quarters. Excellent condl·
tioo . $25,995.00 call Harold

E.H.O
"'

Phillip
Alder·

_&lt;7_40_J_992--5088---:::-:-

-ment, ktlchen turni$h8d, Buy
'S400, (740)992-38:!3

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Medical

Equipment is currently accepting resumes for

a

of an approved Respira1ory
Therapist program. MuS! be registered and
licensed in the states of WV and Ohio. One or

Sta'r1 $385/Mo. No Calculator $20. Compaq
Pets, Lease Plus Security Presario- 1270 Laptop
Deposit Required. Days: Computer, Windows 98, .2
1

Evenings: Hard Drives: C: 2.82GB, 0 :

.1.20GB McAfee Virus Scan,

=--:--:-:--:-:--:-

PaJts

E•cellenl salary, holidays, health insurance

single/family plan, dental, plan, life insurance.
vacation, JOng-lerm disability and re tirement.

% Human Resources
·
. 2520 Valley Drive

Point Pleasant, WV 25550

r

•'

~

FOR
..."~ .

·

2000 GMC Jimmy Blazer
$6,500; 2000 Chev s-10
Blaze( $6,500; 99 Dodge
Durango $7,200; 2000 Chev.
s-10 ex. cab $5.500; 98
Ofds , Bravado $3,900:95
Dodge ex. cab PU $2,500:
~6 Dodge work van $850; 00
,Dodge Neon $2,600: 99
Mazda $2,500; 98 Ford
Explorer ~as Is• $2,800; 96
Ch9v. Lumina van ·as is"
$950.
B &amp;. b Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N
1740)446-{i&amp;IS

1995 Ford W indstar GL.
'Dual air, new motor. vel')l
clean, high m ileage, $2,600.
Call (740)446-1082.
F;::!r~~lo
' ...,~~..,
F«&lt; MOTORCYUJlSI

j

4x4
L~---FIIORii·,siliAiiiLilll-,..1
1993 F·1 50 XLT supercab
4x4, 5.0 literwfair, cruise, tilt

wheel, ps, pw, pt, w/fiberglass topper, SS,SOO OBO.

~740)74:2-2957

1995 Ford
150
XLT 4x4.
speed:
100K,
excellent
con-5

dition.'
$6,700
( )
_
_
740 245 5697

4 WHEELER'I

I
.

.......iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ _,...

1991 BMW. KLT 100, 1,OOo
CC less than 25.000 actual
miles, $5,200. (7 40)2566796.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

. - 11411839
UNIT PRICE CON·
TRACT Mailing Date:

-0111712004
E033(058)

Sealed propCJiala will
be acceptod from all
pr.quaiHied bidders
at the Office of
Contract• of the Ohio
Department
ol
Transportation,
Columbua, Ohio, until
10:00a.m.
Wodnoaday, October

20,2004

i

tI

For
Improving
Section MEG-7-11.00,
State Route 7 In
Malga · County, Ohio,
In accordance with
plana and apecHicetlona by grading ,
planing and naaurlac·
lng
with
Aophait
Concrete.
. "Tha dote oat lor
' completion of thla
WOrlc lhlll be •• Ht
forth In tho . bidding
propoaal:' Plana and
Speclftclttlono are on
fila In tho Do))lll'lmont
Of Tranaportatlon.
Gordon Proctor
Director
of
Tranoportatlon
(8) 27' (10) 4
Public Notice

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho lollov1lng epi)ll·

• oatlona

1ndl

or vart·

flod oomptalnta ware
-wid, end the fol-

lowing
poaad,
actlona

droit, pro·
or
final
ware laallld,
by
tho
Ohio
: l!nvlronmenlll
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) laal
weak.
: "ACTIONS" Include
lha IICIOplion, modlll·

Ollllon, or !"'PMI of

•

ordare (other lhan
emergency ordlro);
lha laauance, Cllnlal,
• modiiiCdon or , . _

cation· of llcensaa,

effective

par'mlta, leases, varl·
ancea, or certlllcatea;
and the approval or
dlaapproval of plana
and specifications.
"DRAFT ACTIONS"
are written state·
menta ol the director
of
Environmental
P r o t e c II o n ' s
(Director's) Intent
with re~pect to the

Issuance or a atatod
effective
dale.
Pursuant to. Ohio
Revlaad Code Section
3745.04, a final action
may be appealed lo
the
Environmental
Review Appeala
Commlsslqn (ERAC)
(formerly known aa
the
Environmental
Board ~ Review) by a

lsauance, denial, ale.

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Bolh

r

r

I

upon

.·

ONLY AfFO~l&gt;
ttGtiT ITtMS

'•

o~ Hwf:~.

BARNEY
I 5'P05E I COULl)
GIVE YA SOMETHIN' CHEAPER !!

EXPENSIVE,
DOC!!

273-5321

~nnette's

~

House Cfeaning Service

CAMPilllS&amp;

THE BORN LOSER
P'SI(.I.\ ... \i~ /&gt;.. C.i-'./&gt;..~GI~C:o""'
111'&lt;\E- OF '{U$..,
ll +t't+ll, ---~ &amp;U..D'1'S!

. No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

1993 30 tt. camper. Layton,.
1997 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat. ref. stove, shower. sleeps 4
114K , black. lealher interior, i
oi
6. i
Calll740
i i388-8
i i188.
ill
c/d player, $9,200 OBO,
'1740)992-2932

'----_:________ _

LIVt 1-tf~ IN

/

THt=SE PILLS
ARE AWFUL

Advertise
I in this
MOtOR HOMES .
space
for
$50 per .
HOME
month
IMPROVIlMINI'S

1·740·843·5382
.

'T~'&lt;IN" TO D\11'&lt;\P.,\E \\-\(II'\-~ P'1'10- /&lt;\mi&gt;.C:,It-1(, /&lt;\'( F,_,~TP\~'(""1
TEN&lt;'6 N&gt;l£1\ mt.
!&gt;.tolD

\ft:t{T&lt;::R'( '{OU'[{(.

i

tr+tl+ll GOI~G 10

f(f{r\.~., ~BNL

l'olff.D

fOI:. Tr\E fJDLI\&gt;1\'( ~

.i

~

BASEMENT
.._,_,
WATERPROOFING
..... , . BllgJnft
Uncondrtionat lifet•me guar820 East Main St.
antee. Local references fur·
Pomeroy •
nlshed. Established 1975. bes ide Larry 'S Fruit Stand
Call 24 H rs. (740) 446Warranty Repair •
0870, Rogers Ba sement Lawn Tr:1ctor &amp; Push
Waterprooling.
. M owe rs. Chain Saws,
Chain Sharpened

1:

I
•
'

Wes t

North

1"
4 \'

Pass
Pass

4 "Pass

...,,

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

• Pass
Pass

AstroGraph

By Bernice Bede Oaol
Jn the year ahead , you could become
involved in several c f' allenging new proj·
eels that are kwlded with great possibilities. However. you may have to seftle on
only one in order to give it your tun anen-

IMPORTS .

Athens
I

BISSEll

New Homes • Vinyl

29670 Bashan lload
Racine, Ohio .
45771
740-949-2217

BUilDERS IDC.

Siding • New Garages

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours

740-992·7599

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Do not invite
critidsm from 8nyone today - especial·
ly your mate. unless you are toratty prepared for some candid criliques.
Another's frankness could be anything ·
bu1 pleasant.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - · .Just
because you may have been negleCtful
of yout exercise and diet lately. don't try
to make up for it all in one day. Don't
starve yoorselt. and remember to pae6

PEANUTS

· yourse" regarding your phvsical exer-

DID ~ TELL "r'OU? 1VE
DECIDED TO RUN FOR
CLASS PRESIDENT..
1

cise.
SAGJTIAAIUS (Nov.' 23-Dec. 21) When it comes to the romance depart·
ment 1oday, Dan Cupid could smite you
with a lew~~ arrows if you come on as
too demanding or pos.sessive of the one
you are supposed to lcwe.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, 19) Mrst.Jnderslandfngs and tnction can be
avoided today if· you aren't iOo impatient
Of act IOo sternly when dealing .... Olh-er&amp;. Make certain ~ are especialty tol-

1/1411 mo. pd

erant of family membets.

DeaD Bill

person who was a

ol a permit, license,
party to a proceodlng
ordeot etc. lntlireatod
before the director by
persona may aubmlt
filing an appeal within
written commenta or
30 days ol notice of
request
a . public
the
Final
Action.
meeting
regordlng
Pursuant to Ohio
Draft
Actlona.
revlaad code section
Comments or public
3745.07,
a
Final
moatlng
requests
Action laaulng, deny·
muat be aubmltt&amp;d
lng, modifying, revok·
within 30 deyi of
lng, or re'18wlng a
notice Of the Draft
permll, llcenoe, or
Action. " PROPOSED
variance whlc:h It not
ACTIONS" are written
preceded
by
a
alatementa of the
Propoeod Action, may
director's Intent with
be eppealed to the
respect
·to
the
ERAC . by filing an:
laauance,
.-nlal,
appeal within 30 deyt
modification, revoca·
of laouance · of the
lion, or renewal of a
final action. ERAC
· permit, llcenaa, or
appaalo muat be flied
variance.
Wrlttan ,with: Environmental
commenta
and
Ravlaw
Appeal•
requeota lor a public
Commloalon,
308
South Fourth
· maatlng regarding a
propolod aellon may St,..t, Room 222,
be oubmlttod within
Columbuo,
Ohio
30 dayo 01 notice ot
43215. A copy of the
the Propoald Action.
appeal
muat
be
An adjudication hearserved on tlie director
lng may be hold o_
n a
wltllln 3 daya altar Ill·
propoiMd octlon If a
lng tha appeal wtlh
hearing requeat or
tha ERAC.
ob]lctlon lo .-lvod
Final laauanca of
by lha OEPA Within 30 Flndlnga and Ordore
daya Of lll.,.nce Of Country Parka, lric. •
Country Mobile Homo
tho propoold action.
· Wrltlan
commanta,
Park
requaata lor public
Townahlp Road 243
Iedford Twp., OH
maatlnga, and aclludlootlon
haatlng
laaue Data 01110812004
requeata muat · be · Aeoolvlng
Walera:
llrit
lo:
Hearing · Unriamld Tributary ot
Clark, Ohio
Shada River
Environmental
F a ·c I I 1 y
P.rotac11on Agency,
Doacrfptlon:Waatow81
P.O.
lox ·
1048, or .
Columbus, Ohio
Thlo .flnol octlon not
43216·1049
procldad by pro(Telaphono: 1~
polod action and 11
2128).
appealable to ERAC.
"FINAL ACTIONS"
FlO
laeued
with
are actlona 01 the
penalty:
director which are
(8) 27
'

New&amp;: Uaecl
4 75 South Church St.
. Ripley, wv 25271

HOWARDL

.....

·WRtTESfl

SUNSHINE CLUB
SECAUSE \00 SL.llP
l.a.JGER. 'raJ WIRE EAAl.JER.
'r()) ~OFf, '1CX.! NAP.

'£)() OOZ£...

1-800-822-0417

*:I.RII

lllinuleE

.

];

.;

I

•flllfll' IIW*

9p 1

-1U5
GARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
month
r

• Loa"-

• Post Fraaae
oComplete R..., .,,Ina
•RepiKflMnt Wlndowt

•Roots

e

.CGmmertW and
R.nldrntlol

Free Esdmates
7~7-'080 "

&lt;,

•

!L-~~~~~~=-~

AOUAAIUS (Jan . 2()-.Feb. 19) - Your
mind is 5harp today. and it is also generOUII , which 'WI itsetf is fine. Ha e w . if you
are rash or- tmputsiyo with your benevo-hHlce. you muMj create unroece · ary
prot:Aem&amp; tor youf!ieff.
PISCES (Feb. 20--... 20) - Siooe
· you're pretty lucky today ~ it comes
to money ma11er5. row ~nanaa~ QOmmOn sense may not be tuned in. When
you have to act ~ l.ady ludL you
could me wt1at she gave .
ARIES (Marct. 21-Aprit 19) - Allhou;jh
nl05I people you encoi..Wiler tudilr wil be
~

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER .

SEIMCE

•111M,

2

,,

Le ••

a

......

••

·-a...
...........,

-

. .....__
...
:~...:

We do MII 1"'!1111

GRIZZWELLS
.
.

118111

1 Mln)orable
time
4 Hoaa down
7 W-2 Info
10 Burnlth
11 Klaa targat
13 Spy's org.
14 Lael vein ·
15 Fuel tanker
16 Modern-&lt;lay
toller
17 Synthetic

dough

48 Corry
49 Oil-well
51
53

54
55

capper
RidTraat a
sprain
Ostrich kin
Alluvial fan
Regret

56 Com) 11 1 dir•
57 Honey

fabrics

maker

19 Permeate
21 Small music
maker
22 Brewery
product
23 Ia and was
26 Flour
grinders '
30 Ex-Met
Tommie31 Disposed of
32 Tanc dish
33 Mauna34 - - r oll
35 Four
quarters
36 Catching
sight of
39 Portents
40 Unser and
Gore
41 Merchandise
10

58 Tokyo, once

==
22 Verdi

DOWN

1 Foul up
23
2 Cllll dwelling
3 Advice
24
columnist
4 Be cranky 25
5 Lampnays
26
6 Souvenir ·
Item
27
7 Union flouter
8 In -28
(aslound)
29
9 Identify
1t Diner
emplorees 31
12 Whale a diet
18 Garage job 35
20 Cartoon
17
voice
38
- Blanc

heroine
Goodbye,
to Gaius
Swelled
heads
Pick pears
Valuable
vase
Nonle1hal
blade
Sorrel or
bay
Buslnets
salutallon
Howard
and Reagan
Gym org.
Chatter
Homer's
tale

39 Puccini
genre
41 Consolidate
42 Swiss artist
43 Drones
44 Feverlah
chill
45 Garden
green
46 Serious
47 Lowdrifting
clouds
50 Society
· newcomer
52 Want-ad
abbr.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Luis Campos

C.!Mirity C4Nt ayptograms .. Cfhlld fr1111 ~ trt !ncu: IIIQPie, PUIII'Id IRIII'I
Elldliea.. II the ciP1er ..... !or anar..

Today'sclue:H-isR

"ETV

ST

NEIXO

GOSSMRI
NED

QLRDO,

KOIHROU

RIYHISMKTYI
EOH

EIRUN ."

BHTF
IBSOH

RLFOHTLN

TR

VEIS

FIHSMRI
KTNIIRD

ST

SIIFON

carrying a canoe - you can11ake a taxi.' - Alan Aida

.· ':~~~:::-::~~~,-:S::-:©:::-tt-=--d{l-::~::-1A--::-_-:!l::-:£:-:t}:::--S~.......~..::--:
lcl it etll ltr CLAY lt.

,.OHA~

--:----

ORec ,rgnge letteq of th e .,.-,_,..--....,,....~
fovr scromblr d words bf'· ~
low 10 form lou• s1mpie wo1d•

NEFMOT
2
1

IIII

SNUE E

I

I!

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

I

#

Il .I,0 RIL DI "..•

Our minds are like a televis1on set If +t goes blank. it's
-:-,.-------...., smart to turn ·••• the ••••• I
5

-

_

.

•

.

I

FLUDOH

'7'1_,.1":-'TI-T-1-'-lr-i 0
•

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UNSCR•MBf.E fOil
ANSWU

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co~=~··
,,.. ,~vctle Ouo1ed
Q\ f rlt ·,~ 1n 1ne l'liU.ng 'NO!dJ

.,.ov de·,eloc from Sle:p

No 3 below.

1• 1•

SCJtAM.UTS AN SWEllS J • H - 1 •

Akimbo - Enact · Rebel- Outlaw • WON'T LIKE
Over the years I've found that when something is done
for your own good, you can be sure you WON'T LIKE it

ARLO &amp;JANIS

and cordial, thefe can atways

TAUR.JS (Apf-11 20-Uay 20) Your
tocu5 and detefminatioo will be
the seaets to your SUCC8M today. K you
hope to hit you-- tatget. donl taN! )I'OUr
aim olf the bA's--eye.
•
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) ln your
ilhlOtw:wa.,.llts with tneod$ or aS9Jciates
at WCW'k today. you must be extJ.,•oelr
cateluJ not kJ show any partiality. It you
slio;1it one person, she or he d f'tnd a
Wiq $0 oet ewen.
CANCER (.Jt.ne 21·Jtkt..22)- An 4mpof-·
tan1 ob;ecti-.e can be 3.cn e oed today and
will be tar .easier than )'OU anticipate. but
• m9"Jt not c:ome aboUt "' a mannet" that
}'IOU tike . Tty to be satiShed W1tt1 what you
pmwlfl

.

LEO ~ oUr ZJrl\ug. 22)- ft you enter no
an ag~~ today, donl try to a.11er 11
once )IOU 'Wie CO:IWIIIined )'CIU1'Self Bebre
)IOU .59" Ofl the dotted line, the t.ne to
settle the &amp;erm5 IS WI'Uie e&gt;ooerfo,1e • try•
~ 10 read'! an uncserstanding
V1RGO (. 23-S&lt;¢ &gt;2) Soaal
conotJ'llll'bwoe in«JJjj08rnents llhoUld nal be
..=;;,;,;=~..;9"":·Z;..7;,__ _ _ _ _ _....J , _ , 1oo _..,.,., todO)r • """ 901
, upl91l 110 wiD l!!lllei')"'OIE! ~ and
)"'U'I spoil the tun tor lhe erwe gang.

SOUPTONUTZ

•••e•
..,._

I

OR-.

w:&gt;f'l&gt;£1'&lt; IF Goo
USEs UPS

•New Homes

• Garages
•Complete
Remcideling

V.C. YOUNG Ill
IIH211
ONo

'

42 TDIUI fabric
45 wo;J.o

ACROSS

be a lhom among the f'05eS. Myou'At prepared, you can ~ llil'ilh arl)IOnB who
may be a bit trrilamg.

......

$50 per

•New I ' -

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amu

30yannpe~lrn

..~

~

"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer·
·

•IEIIIESI

a.mhart
Builder•

NEA Crouword Puzzle

tlon.

Hill 's Self
Storage

Daily Sentinel • Page B5

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Onginality is unexplored territory. Yoo get tt1ere by

-~=
Tueaday, Sept.
28, 2004

. I

~~~
High8l Dry.

F.ast

The declarer leads dummy's jack trom Jx. You 1 rext to play, have queen-emptyfourth (or -third). Do you c6ver or duck?
Most of the time, it will be correct to
cover; declarer might have A-K-10-x . But
if he cannot afford two losers, you should
duck, giving him a guess. Ho.we11er, if you
know from the bidding that declarer
knows you must ha11e the queen, cover.
He might be trying to pull a fast one- as
happ&amp;ned in this deal. from the IsraelItaly match at the 1979 European
Championship .
North-South were using four.·card majors.
North's four-club response was a splinter
bid: game Values in hiarts with a singleton {or void) in clubs.
The Italian declarer was Dana De Falco.
He took East's club QUeen with his ace
and Immediately returned the club jack.
When West played low. South placed
East with both misalng club honors. After
rutting in the dummy, declarer drew
trumps ending In hand and played a diamond to the jack and king. East returned
a diamond, West taking his ace and lead·
ing another diamond to dummy's queen.
Needing 10 avoid two spade losers. tbe
Israeli declarer al the other table played a
spade to his king and went one down.
However. this was a zero-percent play,
because West was marked with the
spade ace. If. East had that card, he
would have had 12 points and opened
tt1e bidding. So. De Falco called for lhe
spade jack, and East fell for tt. ducking.
The jack pulled oU1 West's ace, and De
Falco had his contract. He was awarded
the Bois Brilliancy Prize for this effort.

G

BIG NATE

&amp; Pans
Nc\v Ge neral Standby
Generating Systems and

:F--:S-1--:P:--:-1-L-:-bor e.e;
opar um er
h t'
b
d 45
~--,.;,""iiiiiiiii~iiiii-.,1 s ee mg
oar
per
bo d ' H. d s• . leh
'
ar n. ar w000 ·mu
- Roi· A ir Air Compressors
$20
"k (740)992 5965
1995 DOdge Ram Van. 3/4
. per !;J t.
Open 8:30-6:00 M-F;
Sot. 8:30-2:00 992-1033 •
ton, 130,450 miles. $1,000
as t's. Can be seen at the
Pick-up ru1d delivery service
II
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. For
Now servicin Kerosene Hei!ters
more
information ,calf
(740)446-2342 ask for Paul.

6 5 4
A J tO

You know that
he knows

Ttlf fAST
t.ANf: l~cAuse ~ CAN

~

2000 · Harley · Davison
Sportster 883 Hugger. Lot's
of extras. Days 740-645- "
3248, evenings after 6:30pm
740-256-6589.

080 - -

1997 Ford F- 150 Lariat. ext
cab, step-sid8, exc. condi·
tion. 4-wheel drive . $12.000 .
740·367-7762 or .740-367·
7272r
2000 F350 Super Duty 7.3
Diesel,13,000 m!les. Dually,
4K4, extra clean, Stainless
.Steel Brush Guard &amp; Nur1
Bars, set up for Goose Neck
·
Hit&lt;::h
$25.000
F~r m
(304)576 -32 59
i:'l:l"---:~----,
VANS'
F·'•• S• LE

45760

Dr. Kelly K. Jones

2002 Hond a 400 EX .
Excellent condition. Call
740-256·t526 OJ 740-645· . - - - - - - - - ,
0446.
--------2003 Wolverine 4K4, Brand
New, Ramps included
$4,000 1304)675·3613

K Q8 3

•
•

Opening lead: • 7

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

liNDA'S PllmiG

•

South

Middleport
111

K 9 7

Pass

Ha111enswood
Center·

Let me do 1! fer y~ul

Self·Storage
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
COiumbua, Ohio
Office of contracts
Legal Copy Number:

.KQ 64J

6 7 5 2

•

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

V•~

"".,.,.

·

I'

--------

""• ~

·--ililiil"""""iiii-._.1 ·-tlliFttiORiiiiiSii!iii
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WV Contractors Lie. #003506

4tt

""11!"""_":::______....., "lll:il"'"-~"'!"'---.,
"

--------

r

4 2
K 10

Boxl89

1

FARM

Q 64 2

•

South

Financial Services

'

r·O

•

A 10 6 3

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

I

·

East

• 7
t A9 8 3

•

Hupp Insurance

r

.

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
- FREE

9

Wesl

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

~;::::;::::A:AIE
~~O;E;:======~
IZI"--"':::'----,

160.0 MB of Ram 30
PF.TS
FlO
Allllli
The Valley Apts. ,locatad In Processor
Free Printer
FOR SAt£
FOR SALE
Mason has openings 1of 2 Carrying Cas9 and Software •--~iiiiliiiiiilto._.
bd. and 3 bd. Applications' w/purchase $300 call 458 - ·
1 ·
wilt be _accepted on 1997 for more information ·Full blooded St. e·ernard 2000 Dodge Neon, air.
l\Jesday's on~ from 9·3 at
puppies for sale, $200. Call 57,000 miles. $2,600 OBO.
501 Shawnee Trail. Pt. · I
ouu':'scouno uu ..e · 1740)379-2605.
1740)258· 1233.
Pleasant, WV 675-4900
Grand Opening Sale
Equal HoUsing Opportunity
op quality. warranties
Labrador Rettlever pups. -20
- 00
--F-or_d_E-xp-lo"'
·r-er-e-xc.
il..tihon, WV, Flea Marke
AKC , excellent hunters,
~~~·
condition, blaciVgrey Interior,
l"'ection
c. Fridays $250-black, $350-yellow. wheel drive, 98 _000 miles.
l'Nin Rivers Tower is accept· ~aturdays and SlJndays. www.steelepolnllnglabs.com $4 ,
9 950 . (740)446 _6754 .
lng 8f,II:Mications lor waiting 606)~22·7185
1740)256-8172.
list lor Hud·subsized, 1· br,
JET
Old English sheepdog pups, 2001 Doclge Caravan Sport
apartment, call 675-6679
: EHO
"
AERATION MOTO~S
loliable, shaggy dogs, first miles- 72,960, 57,500; :2001
Repaired, NeW &amp; Rebuilt In shot &amp; wormed, price $250, Chev. Cav. LS 4 door
Stock. Call Ron Evaos. 1· call (740)985·9823
$5,900, miles- 053,007; 99
Pontiac Montana eKt. · Van,
800 537 9528
. .
.
. r_tlliiiiiMiiUSJiiiiCALiliiiitiii._. miles- 097,927, $6 ,295,
Boat &amp; camper Storage - ' - - - - - - - - - - __ INsrRUMENTS
Nice!; 98 Chev. Blazer LT
Mason County Fair-Grounds NEW AND USED STEEL
.4x4. miles 101 ,357, $6,295;
$8.00Jpet-Foot. Sat &amp; Mon Sreel ·Beams, Pipe Rebar Alverez 6 string Bass brand 99 Olds Alero 4 door, milesduring Oct 9~ull-5pm other For
Concrete,
Angle, new condition. (740)446- 103,463 $4,500; 96 Chev.
times by Appl. (304)675- Channel. Flat Bar, Steel 9709.
Silverado BXI.'cab Z-71, 4K4,
5463
Grating · For
Drains, -:---:-::--c-:::---:-:- 350 automatic, high miles,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Story &amp; Clark Piano, $850. $5,995.
\I I l{t II \ ' Ill"' I
Scrap Metals Open Moilday, LoWery Organ (electric) with
Southern Avto Sales
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Genis $250. 740-245-5428.
Second Ave.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed \;Vurlitzer Piano. Exceller]t
Ph: (740)446-8554
Thursday,
Saturday &amp; condition
$900.
Call - - - - - - - Sunday. (740)446-7300
(740)446-2684.
2003 Dodge Neon, 4 cyl.
3 piece living room suite,
auto, 11,000 miles, cruise,
$150·. See at 256 South P$ole- B~rn d30x50px ~0 FTd
@ , NC , $7,000. (740)4419
Fourth Ave . Middleport.
63 5. mc u es
am e
0337 or (740)645-6153.
Metal. Plans. Instruction ll:ilr--:~~-...,
95 Geo Metro. Looks great
Coffee table with 2 end Book:, Slider, Free Delivery
EQuiPMJ;Nr
need molor, 43 mpg. $550
tables, glass tops. Very nice. 1937)559·6385
$275. Ph. 74D-245-5428.
18
·' - - - - - - . . . . . 0
BulwiNG
__8 _0 _·0_"_11_17_4_0_16_45_. 60
_ _ ·_
.,.----.,-,.,-,-- 1.---SuwuiiiiiiiiE'l--,...1 8N Ford wfGrater 5 ft blade
Good Used Appliance s. --,
$2,600. 9N For~ w/ 5 ft. 98 Dodge Caravan, air, runs
Reconditioned
and Block, brick, sewer pipes, Brush Hog, $2.800; Ford good, $2 ,300 080. Call
Guaranteed.
Washers, windows. !inlets, etc. Claude 800 w/ 5 11. Brush hog (740)256-9031 .
Dryers,
Ranges,
and Winters, Rio Grande, OH
F'5
TR
Refrigerators, Some start at Call 740-245-5121 .
OCS:KS
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 iii:-~.;;.;,~;;;.;,;..._ _,
IUR ALE
VIne St., 1740)44&amp;7396
I'F.TS
1!':::---A~tJ-I'OS-,--,1
FOR SALE
1976 Dodge Truck, uses no
1,~--eitiiiiiiiiii--P
FOR SALE
Oil, new Transmi ssion, ru ns
Molklhan Carpet, 202 Cieri&lt;
AKC· Black &amp; Yellow Lab
great. Topper Included
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio:
1988 Lincoln Mark Vll , $1,275 1304)674 .0092
(740)446-7444 1-877-830- puppies. Shots. wormed &amp;
dew claws removed. $300• 100,000 miles, excellent
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
co ndition. Call (740 )256 " -1990--C-h-ev-.-1-to_n_p-ic_k_u-p.
· financing, 90 days same as $350. (740 )441 -01~).
"1~_1 3_5_·$_1_·5_0_0·_ __ _ Cleari &amp; nice truck. Call740cash. Visa/ Master Card .
AKC Labrador Retrie11ers. 1997 Chevrolet Mon te Carlo 441-0941 or 740-645·5946.
, . Drlw- a- little save atot.
?arents
tieldlwater1owl LS. Power moonroot. leather - - - - - - - trained. Very ;amlly oriented. interior, loaded, eKcellent 1996 Chevy Silverado Club
•Thompsons Appliance &amp; Shots &amp; wormed. 740·988·
condition. (740)388·019'8 or cab. Leather, 93K, $7.200
Repalr-675-7388 . For sale, 4081
uttUab@mail.chio- (740)388·8997.
080 . 1740 )245-5697
re-conditioned automatic hills.net
'-::-:-'--,.-----:-washers &amp; dryers, retrigera· - - - - - - - - - 1999
Nissan
Quest. - - - - - - - 1999Chevy1 tonwlth11ft.
tors, gas and electric AKC Min. Dachshund pup- Excellent condition. auto,
utility
bed, welder. air comranges. air conditioners, and pies,
Black
&amp;
Tan. co, 5 d'sc
changer, AJC, fee1
:
pressor. 740·256-1526 or
wririger washers. Will do male/female. 1st shots &amp; tory power sun root. new
740·645-0446.
repairs on major brands in wormed by Vet. (304)895· tires, power seats. $7".500.
3299
-------~ShoP or 8 I your horne.
'
(740)388·8228.
· 95 Dodge Dakota, King Cab.
4x4 pickup truck. Call
(740)379·2409. Good condi·
tlon.

1

·

MONTY

87N417

(304) 675-4340

"eo.

'

every month

All pack $5.00
. Bring this coupon

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

Send resumes to:
Pleasant VaHey Hospital

Last Thursday of

.•

Hendel;lon, WV

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30

• J 5
• A J 10 9 6 5
• QJ 72

MY£18 PAVING

&amp;

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Retltockfrtg Late Model Sa/t'IJgoel
and . Aller Market Phrlll

'IWO years of ex.perience is preferred.

Pat~.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
Sunday

Whaley's Auto

gr~dume

1
2 Bedrooms, 2 FlOors, CA.
Smith Corona Deville 700
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Electric Typewriter $20,
Aduh Pool &amp; IBaby ~I . Texas Instrument Scientific

~-27- IH

North

full time, Day shift, Respirator) Therapist.
or Certifted Respiralory Therapist. Must be

1 - -..,:-- Tara
Townhouse _17_4_01_385_-7_6_7-:
Apar1monts. 1/ery Spacibus. Exercise Bike S15. Like new

7~348 :
740-387..(15()2.

Th~

BRID.G E

•

~Ont
no peto,

,:on. -..... garage apan-

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

,,

�..
Pqe B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 27, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

College Football

.

'

Top 20 teams take care Of business Saturday
By The Associated Press
STANFORD, Cali( (AP)
- Matt Leinart passed for
308 yards and LenDale White
scored on a 2-yard run with
6:15 left, capping Southern
California's comeback from
an 11-point deficit for a 31-28
victory over Stanford on
· Saturday night.
Steve Smith caught eight
passes for 153 yards and a
touchdown, and Reggie Bush
contributed 95 yards rushing
anq a key punt return to
USC's 13th straight victory.
After yielding 291 yards in
the frrst half, No. I USC gave
up just 36 after halftime.
But the· nation's secondlongest winning streak nearly
ended acro ~s the Bay from the
site of the defending national
champions' most recent
defeat, at California last season.
Stanford took a 28-17 lead
into halftime, embarrassing
the Trojans' vaunted defense
and shocking the thousands of
USC fans at Stanford
Stadium. The Cardinal scored
on a fake field goal and ~dded
J.R. Lemon's 82-yard TD run
as time ran out.
It was all too reminiscent of
the Trojans' 34-31, tripleovertime loss in Berkeley last
fall. That game featm:ed similarly tentative defensive play,
another big frrst-half deficit
and a poor performance by
Leinart.
But Leinart was nearly
flawless against Stanford,
going 24-of-30 and finally
~etting his offense going late
m the· third quarter on Smith's
51-yard reception to the
Stanford 12. Leinart scored on
a 1-yard keeper, cutting the
lead to four points.
No. 16 Florida 20,
Kentucky 3
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
..:.. ·With Hurricane Jeanrie
approaching,
Florida
squeezed in its game against
Kentucky and beat the
Wildcats behind Ciatrick
Fason's career-high 210 yards
rushing and two touchdowns.
Kickoff was mqved up 6 112
·hours · to ll :30 a.m. EDT
because of the growing storm,
which · bore down on the
state's Atlantic coast with

winds near 115 mph. Three
No 8 Florida State 41, win over Florida last week
million people were told to Clemson 22
and a meeting with No. 9
evacuate.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Auburn next week.
It didn't keep the fans away - Wyau Sexton threw for
Ainge again got the bulk of
from Ben Hill Griffin 162 yards and a touchdown the playing time while alterStadiull', better known as The after replacing an injured nating with fellow fresHman
Swamp. The announced atten- Chris Rix and Florida State Brent Schaeffer. Ainge !)ndance was 89,741.
forced five turnovers.
ished I 0-of-15 for 198 yards,
No. 16 Florida took a I 0-3
Rix sprained his right ankle and Gerald Riggs had a
lead early in the second quar- late in the first quarter an~ care~r-high 116 yards on J6,
ter when Fason broke through was able to return . but spent carnes.
the middle, bounced · off six the rest of the game on the · The Bulldogs (2-2) lost
tacklers and went 46 yards.
sideline watching Sexwn starting quarterback Donald
Florida
(2- 1,
1- 1 direct the offense for Florida Allen at the end of his first
Southeastern Conference) State (2-1, 1-1 At)antic Coast. series with an injury. Matt
held the Wildcats to 207 yards Conference).
Kubik, who started the season
of offense, 56 coming on a
Sexton, a redshirt sopho- opener, replaced him and was
first-quarter drive for a field more, _completed 17 of 26 intercepted twice.
goal , and 10 first downs. The passes with a 47-yard scoring
No. 12 Virginia 31,
Gators have won 18 straight pass to Chauncey Stovall - Syracuse 10
games in the series. ·
the Seminoles' .fi.rst TD pass. CHARLOTifESVILLE, Va.
Kentucky ( 1-2, 0-1) was of the sea,son.
(AP)- Marques Hagans had
held to 207 yards.
Justin Miller matched a 283 total yards . with two
No.5 Texas 35, Rice 13
school record with two kick- touchdown runs and ·a TD
AUSTIN. Texas (AP) - off return touchdowns for pass. to lead Virginia.
.
Cedric Benson rushed for 189 Clemson ( 1-3, 0-2), which has
Wali Lundy added a 27yards and a touchdown and lost three straight.
.
yard run for his lOth touchVince Young passed for three
No. 9 Auburn 33, The down of the season for the
scQres to his tight ends for Citadel3
Cavaliers (4-0).
Texas.
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) The Orange (2-2), 51-0
Texas (3-0) came in with Jason Campbell passed for losers to Purdue in their seathe nation's No. I rushing 194 yards in the first half and son-opener, drove 68 yards
attack and pounded the Owls Auburn coasted in breather for a field goal on their openon the ground from the start, between a pair of high-stakes ing possession, then managed
grinding out 339 yards. The contests.
just 41 more yards on four
Longhorns have won 37 of
The Tigers (4-0) had no possessions and trailed 21-3
the last 38 meetings with Rice problem overcoming a few at halftime.
(2-1 ). ·
sloppy . plays against the
Hagans had scoring runs of
Benson had 169 yards on 18 Division 1-AA Bulldogs (0-2) 59 and 27 yards in the first
carries in the first halt' against in a tuneup for nex~ week's half and fmished with 81
a defense that was No. I in the showdown at No.
ll yards on six carries. The
country against the run com- Tennessee. They have a six- Cavaliers have outscored their
ing in~
game winning streak for the opponents 120-13 before halfNo. 6 West Virginia 45, first time since opening the time.
James Madison 10
1997 season 6-0 .
No. 15 Purdue 38, Illinois
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
Auburn outgained The 30
(AP) - Rasheed Marshall Citadel (0-2) 593-169 in total
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) threw two touchdown passes yards, coming off a 10-9 win Kyle Orton passed for 366
to Chris Henry to lead West over LSU.
yards and four touchdowns,
Virginia.
Carnell Williams gained 95 and Taylor Stubblefield
West Virginia's defen,se yards on 22 carries, all in the ca:ught II passes for 115 yards
scored one touchdown and set first half, but lost a pair . qf to- )ead Purdue. ·
up
another
as
the . fumbles in the Bulldogs' terri- . Orton completed 35 of 50
Mountaineers (4-0) remained tory. He had a 1-yard toljch- passes and was not intercept"
unbeaten heading into a down run.
ed for the third straight game .
showdown next week at forNo. 11 Tennessee 42, He had scoring passes of 2, 5
mer Big East rival Virginia Louisiana Tech 17
and 34 yards to Stubblefield
Tech.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) and 49 yards to Brandon
James Madison (2-1) has - Erik Ainge threw three Jones as the Boilermakers
been outscored 135-10 in its touchdown passes 'and Cedric rolled up 515 yards.
last three contests against 1-A Houston ran for 160 yards and
The Boilermakers (3-0, 1-0)
teams and is 3-13 all-time two more scores to lead won their eighth straight Big
against them.
Tennessee.
Ten opener.
The . Dukes limited the
The Volunteers (3-0) started
Jon Beutjer threw three
Mountaineers to 171 yards on slow ~.x~t broke open the game touchdown passes for the
the ground, 140 yards below in the second quarter to catch Illini (2-2, 0-1 }, who put
their average.
a breather between a crucial themselves in a hole early by

fumbling a reverse on the Iowa handed them their worst
game's first play. Receiver loss at Michigan Stadium
Ade Adeyamo bobbled the since 1967.
handoff from BeJ.Itjer and
fld Hinkel's one-handed,
Bobby Iwuchukwu recovered diving TD catch on the openat the 5, leading to Orton's ing drive gave the Hawkeyes
first TD toss to Stubblefield. (2-2, 0-1) their only lead.
No. 13 LSU 51, Mississippi Chad Henne was 16-of-26 for
State 0
236 yards with a TD and,
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) most
importantly
for
- Alley Broussard ran for a Michigan, no turnovers.
career-high three touchdowns · Iowa frrst-year starter Drew
in the first 17 minutes and Tate was 24-of-32 for 270
LSU held Mississippi State to yards, two TDs and two interceptions.
·
seven first downs and 130.
The Tigers (3-1, 1-1
No. 19 Mlnnesota 43,
Southeastern Conference) Northwestern 17
rolled up 594 yards and led
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) 34-0 at half.
Laurence Maroney had a 50The LSU defense had four yard touchdown run and ~n­
interceptions, recovered a ished with 145 yards rushmg
fumble and scored a touc.h- to lead Minnesota.
down.
Bryan Cupito, who comThe Bulldogs ( l-3, 0-2), pleted passes to eight differwho are rebuilding .under ent receivers, threw for 155
first-year coach Sylvester yards and two TDs for the
Croom, have lost seven Gophers (4-0, 1-0) in the Big
straight in Tiger Stadium and 10 opener for both teams.
12 of 13 overall against LSU.
Northwestern (l-3, 0-1) got
No. 14 Utah 49, Air Force a 97-yard kickoff return from
35
Jeff Backes in the first quarSALT LAKE CITY (AP) ter.
Marty Johnson tied a school
No. 20 Wisconsin 16, Penn
record with four rushing State 3 ·
.
MADISON, Wise. (AP) -..
touchdowns and Utah held off
Air Force for its best start in Matt Bernstein bullied his
I 0 years.
way to a career-best 123' yards
Johnson, who had 20 carries after replacing an ineffective
for 68 yards, became the and injured Booker Stanley to
fourth Utah player .to score help Wisconsin hold off Penn .
four TDs and Alex Smith ·State.
added a rushing score and
The Badgers (1-0 Big Ten)
passed for two more. Smith held their opponents out of
completed 13 of 23 passes for the end zone for the third time
260 yards and had 13 carries in four games and ended the
for 84 yards.
month 4-0 despite the absence
. The Utes are off io their of star tailback Anthony
first 4-0 start since 1994, Davis (eye) for the last 3 l/2
when they went 10-2.
games.
After allowing 35 straight . The loss was costly for the
points, .the Falcons (2-2, l-1 Nittany Lions (2-2, 0"1}, who
Mountain West Conference) .lost their top two offensive
got back 'Yithin a touchdown weapons in the first quarter
but no closer as they turned when quarterback Zack Mills
the ball over'-three tiJTieS.
injured his right shoulder on
No. 18 Michigan 30, Iowa Penn. State's first series and
17
his replacement, Michael
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) · Robinson, suffered a concus- Braylon Edwards caught sion and was taken off the
six passes for 150 yards and a field by ambulance.
touchdown and Michigan
Bernstein was pressed into
turned four turnovers into 27 duty when Stanley, who
points.
gained just 9 yards on l 0 carThe Wolverines (3-1, l-0) ries, couldn't go in the second
won their 23rd consecutive half because ·of an injured
Big Ten opener. They have · foot.
·
won 12 straight at. home since

Bobcatsfrom PageB1
the Bobcats only up 6-0, the
Pulls were threatening to score
and perbaps take the lead.
Aliunbled Ohio snap, recovered by Buffalo, put the Bulls
«illbeir own 20. ·
·
Buffalo moved the ball tO the
Ohio 13 before a Piskorik ~s
was picked off by TJ. Wnght
in the end zone.
On the following play, Ryan
Hawk met up with Scott
~Ie. who used his speed to
5p11m past the Buffalo defense
fix' an 1!0-yanl touchdown.
.. "'!!r defense really, really
pmjed us," said Hawk. "We
want to just be able to have a
50-50 even game for four guarters.It's kind of upsetting.'
It was a career day for
Mayle, who caught five passes
. ··
for 134 yards.
Hawf( was 11~{-19 passmg

~

=

=!
the gropnd

~

. McR;Ie led Obio 011
. widll5 carries for 79 yards and
a score.
Ohio's next~ is a trip to

Tribe
ftomPageB2
Hundreds lined up before
the game to shake bands with
V1ZQuel, who joined his
teammates at the turnstiles to
welcome them as they
arrived at the gales.
· Some carried "Keep
Omar" signs, and many'
stopped to hug Vu.quel or tell
him bow much he meant to
lbcm.
: WJbat was awesome, man,"
V1ZQuei said. "'t was 50 cool
to see 50 many people that I
Jiaven't sc:cn for a wlaile and
people that I've known for
)al'S-.,

Playing in his 747th game
81 Jacobs Field, Vu.quel
received a loud ovation each
lime he came up. He popped
out. in his first two itt-bats.
and got \idded about it tJY
teammate Casey Blake. ·

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County... .
Kenny and lisa Roush ·accepted the "Player of the Week"
award for their son, Ohio University running back Justin Roush,
~tween third ,and fourth quarter play Saturday in Athens.
Ohiorealestatelisting.com presented the award for Roush's
performance during the home opener against VMI Sept. 4,
where he. rushed for 130 yards on Hi carries: (lan
McNemar/photo)
.
face Kentucky this Saturday. 35-14 Wtldcat win.
The Bobcats t'nost recent visit
Butfalo, meanwhile, plays
.
to Lexington was last year, a host to Central Aorida.

"I said, '0, these people

didn't come here to see you
do that,"' Blake said.
Vizquel led -off the sixth
with a single but was forced
on a double play. Before
stepping into the batter's bolt
in the eighth, Vu.quel waved
to the crowd and then took a
~ breath before diwng
m;.

·

,

. It was pretty hard, ~
s_rud. ~t s the most emo. uonal .I ve been. It w~ hard
to g_? m there and swmg the
bat.
He grounded ollt to ~ond, but not before he. tned
to beat th.e ~w wtth a
headfirst dive mto ~ the
~ of play that has typified
his stellar career._
.
' Vu.quei took his spot m the
field fo! the ~ but manager Eri_c Wedge sent :fbonny
Pera!ta m to replace him - a
movmg gesture that caught
Vuqut:l
guard
! didn t 1bow they w~
gomg to do that. I wonder if

"!f

that's a sign I'm not coming
back," he said .with a laugh.
"I'd better ask Wedge what
he was doing."
When he reached the
dugout, Vu.quel stopped to
acknowledge the fans and
the Twins, who were
applauding Cleveland's No.
l3 from across the field
"He has always been a
hero and always will be a
hero to everybody in
Venezuela," said Minnesota
pitcher Johan Santana. "He
was my favorite player
growing up and probably
will be forever."
Vuquel's young teammates, too, were moved by
the· sibili that his career
in ~e::fcould soon be
over.
"I hope one day I can have
half the success that be has
. had... said rookie outfielder
Grady s~. who had
three bits alid Cleveland's
two RBis.
'

October 8, 2004
.

'

·Senior Citizens nuuce.
Up 65% of the fOU.'U:
populatiOn of the
Tri-Colinty.
To reach this ur~tlln
contact your
Advertising
Representative.

'

•
----~\-----------------------~--~--~~----~------~--~

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