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0

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

EDT
League

'11.11 tq, Oct. 5
Mlnn810.. (SIIIltana 20-6) at ·
New'lbrti(MUS8ina 12-9), 8:19

.-v. Oct. 6

11:8} at
14-8), 7:09

..

.

or
p.m.
at

or

if

•••

=~Houston

~Jitlly, Oct. 6
Houston ';(~ns 18·4)

.
at
:Atlanta {~hi 15-8), 4:09
._p.m. ('i'..,~
•
~
.
• Oct. 7
Hous · · - a l t 20·10} at
Manti\ fl'liolnsan 14-8), 4:09

.. ..

.

I~\.''&gt;"

p.m.~~-~ t-'

.
...,.Ocl.9
: Atlani\i(~on 13-9} at
Houston" ..' · ,
~••Oct.10
Atlanta !ltl;·1-\W"iiton, if necessary !'";&lt;'~
K""""·-~f, !!{'
MO!Icfey, Oct. 11
·. Houston. at ' Adanta, if necessary

~ 1,.~

~.

Bobcats
from~eB1
for 44 yards and an Ohio
touchdown.
Before the half. Kentucky
would close the gap. The
Wildcats drove 52 yards in less
than five minutes before settling for a 29-ya¢ field goal off
the footofTaylor Begley. Ohio
still led 14-IO,Ii.owever. as both
teams went to the locker room .
On Kentucky1s second drive
of the tbird quarter, the Bobcat
defense forced its first turnover
of the evening. Ohio linebacker
Matron Church ·scooped up a
Wildcat fumble and gave the
Bobcats wssession at the
Kentucky 38;1',Wtth the ball in
Wildcat ~l't)hio attempted a 34-yliriMle'kl goal. Brooks
Rossrnail'~ • attempt
was
blocked by Lofinel Dewalt - his
third block of the season - as
the Wtldcats averted a potential

score.

~.

Early .in ,the fourth quarter,
KeniUCky- )breatened to touch
up the SCOJeboard once again.
The Wildcats drove deep into
the Ohio red.;wne but on third
dow
· n
· ,,.,_Matt
·
Muncy
picked
at the one-yard
line • ' ~ it out to the
nine, whi*~the Bobcats took
over with I0:56 remaining in
the contest
"You can't say enough for
that defCQSC," said Knorr. "We
had six SIIU:ten from game one
back in Athens a.nd the guys
who stepped up - the Mall
Muncys, the Rashad Butlers.
the Ralunlln Shavers - there in
the last fiye Minutes, tlit&gt;se guys
were playing on fumes."

Two car bombs rip
through Baghdad,
killing 21, wounding
more than too, Bt

Final Standings
Biggio. Jeff Bagwell
East Division
w. L
Pet
GB
and Carlos Beltran met in th~
x-Atlanta
96
66
.593
miuule of the fielu for hugs.
Philadelphia
86
76
.531
. 10
manag~r Phil Garner tippeu
Florida
83
.79
13
.512
his hat to the crowd and conNew
York
71
91
.438
25
fclli showered fans at Minute
Montreal
67
95
.414
29
Maid Park.
Central Division
I
Ama7ingly. the Hmtston
W
L
Pet
GB
Astros \\ere in the playoffs.
x-St. Louis
105
57
-.648
And when they won Sunday
92
70
y-Houslon
.568
13
89 . 73
to take the NL wild card. all
Chicago
.549
16
. 76
86
of the postseason pairings
Cincinnati
.469
29
Pittsburgh
72
89
.447
32 12
were set - no need for any
67
Milwaukee
94
.416
37 12
tiebreakers this year.
West Division
The fun begins Tuesday
W
L
Pet
GB
afternoon at Busch Stadium
x-Los
Angeles
93
69
.574
when Woody Williams starts
San Francisco
.562
2
91 • 71
for the St. Louis Cardinals
San. Diego
87
75
.537
6
against Los Angeles. Later.
Colorado
.420
25
68
' 94
Curt Schilling and the Boston
Arizona
42
51
111
.315
Red Sox visit Anaheim.
That night. the Minnesota
x-clinched division, y-cltnched wild card
Twins wi.ll be at Yankee
.American League
Stadium.
Final Standings
"We'll be ready to play."
East Division
New York manager Joe Torre
W
L
Pet
GB
said after wrapping up a
x-New York
101
61
.623
weekend at Toronto. ""These
y-Boston
98
64
.605
3
three days off did us some
Baltimore
78
84
.481
23
good after playing such an
Tampa Bay
70
91
30\
.435
intense month. We're readv to
Toronto
67
94
.416
33 ~
get back tu competition .'' ·
Central Division
On Wednesday, the other ·
W
L
Pet
GB
x-Minnesota
92
70
.568
series starts with Roger
Chicago .
83
79
.5 12
9
Clemens and the Astros playCleveland
80
82
.494
12
ing at Atlanta.
Detroit
72
90
.444
20
The final day of tht! regular
Kansas City
58
104
.358
34
season began with one playoff
West Division
spot open and all four
W
L
Pet
GB
matchups still to be deciued.
x-Anaheim
92
70
.568
But everything got firmeu up
Oakland
91
71
.562
1
in the AL once the Twins lost
Texas
.549
89
73
3
to Cleveland - there hall
Seattle
.389
63
99
29
been a chance Minnesota
x-clinched division, y-clinched wild card
wou-ld host Bo&lt;:!on.
The Astros eliminateu any· '----------------------,-..J
need for ·a one-game playoff Wright ( 15-8) in the opener. series. a fun series:· said
:11h Sa1_1_ Franmco lo; th~ Roy' Oswalt. the NL's only Williams, who f&lt;tces Odulis
tid . c.tru
by . be,~un, 20-gamc winner. pitches Perez in the opener. ""I look at
Colorado 5-3 .. Houston com- Game 2 for Houston.
their team and see :1 lot of us
pleted a startl111g turnaround
"" I think we've got them
in them. and them in us."
by wmmng tis ISth stratght riuht where we wam them."
In a rematch from the first
h~~ne game·
A~tros
owner
Drayton
round
last year. the Twins
People thought we were McLane. "I really want those
on the
Yankees.
dwead Ill . the . ",'vate r ~~~~d . we guys. We've done everything take
Minnesota
ace
Johun
Santana
orkeu ,til the_ •!Y b.tck and unconventional this vear. So
opposes
Mike
~han ged . that. Garner satd. maybe we 'II do it again in the I 20 -6 )
Muss ina.
Th" ts JUS I a great endmg to playoffs...
""It's going to be u lot of
what becu~e an nnpmbable
Wild-card teams have won
the last · two World Series pressure... Santana . said.
year for us.
Houston was 56-60 on Aug. titles. with Anaheim follow ed ""That's the way this game is.
14. about a month alter by Florida. Like the Astros. That's what we want. That's
G:p·ner replaced the I1reu the Red Sox ho e to make a what we-~ e ready fm ...
.lnny Willwm s. and trai-l.eu push fron1 the f~unh Ia · ff
Chtcu~n by seven gam es 111 spot.
P yo
,
the wtld-card race. The next
S h1II"
_,
_
day tl A t
11 · -• 1·
c lllg 1 1 61 st;trh
· · le . s ro' ra leu . or against the Anoeis' Jarr d
three runs 111 the 111nth 111111ng \V hb
· th "
tho
to heat Montreal 5-4.
as u.rn m e opener, . en
""Ho · t· II
.th
Pedro Marunez pllches Game
pe u Y- "-" 11 . use at 1 for the Red S ·
as a spr uwboaru lo r some
.. 1 d ·
hf.l\
b d
. 11.ke 1h·at. ..
on 1 1 111~
a ny o• -v
more k1. nd o' t· wms
..
B
wan 1s to p1ay us. oston 11rst
. ·d 1• 1 ·
G arner "II
a ter 11at vtct&lt;&gt;ry. b
. K . M"ll
.d
That's exactly what h&lt;tp- ascman C\"111 I ar sat .
.. , ,
The Cardmals posted the
Pelled • N&lt;)w• lh e, As.1ros. 1,1c
c .t b
d . h
.
familiar October opponent est_ recor Ill t e maJors '~
the Br:~ves beat Houston in !05 57. They v.ent -+-~
the first round in 1~'!7. l'llJ&lt;J ugamst the Dodgers. "'cepand 2001 .
tng_ them 111 a three-ga me
Clemens 11S--+i faces Jaret '"~:1cs Sept. 3-5 at St. Louts.
Cr~ig

BY JOE KAY

Associated Press •
Barry
CINCINNATI
Larkin said g.xJdbye to evety,
one, just in case.
The Reds captai n hugged
teammate.- on the . lield. bill
good luck to Joe Nuxhall in tlie
broadcast bqoth and even
kicked back with fans in the
stands for a half-inning.
Then. he left his hometown.
unsure if he was coming back.
Larkin played what might
have been hi s tina! game in a
Cinci nnati uniform on Sunday,
a 2-0 victory by the Pittsburgh
Pirate.s that was much more
than just the end of a season.
It became an impromptu
send-off for the 40-year-old
shottstop, who would like to
pl~y one more ·season in
Cincinnati but hasn't been
offered a contract.
"I don 't know if this is the
end, but 1 wanted ttl say thank
you," Lark in said. "This was
my way of doing it."
Larkin. who grew up in
Cincinnali and has played all
19 seasons with the Reds. came
out of the game atier three
innings so he could stan his
round of farewells.
He mixed in a pitch to come
back.
,
"Thank you all. and I hope to
see you next year:· he said over
the publi c address system. gettin g a loud cheer from the
30.854 fans .
So far. the Reds have given
no inuication they want him
back. The L"luh decided to not
ta lk about a contract extension
until ~ ·the season. an ominous s1gn.

""1 can only let my baseball
ability talk for me:· saiu
Larkii1. who hit .2K9 in Ill
games. ·'It \ like I"m runRing
l(lr political oflice. It 's a shame.
It 's like I have In politick to get
asked hack here. I don 't know
why it is. but 1t is what it is:·
Even the Pirates made sure to
say gond bye. Every player
httggecl him on the tield after
they congratulated each mher

over the 'eason-ending win.
"I hope things work out fat
Lloyd
Barry,"
·manager
McClendon said. "It would be
hard for me to see him in another unit(mn. He's a class act.
He's everything that's right
about the game of baseball."
The crowd was subdued fm
most of the game, which tcatured two runs and two emotional moments.
Oliver Perez ( 12-10) gave up
live hits and struck out nine in
six innings. tinishing as the
Pirates' top winner this season
with 1 a 2.98 ERA. Tony
Alvarez's founh-inning sacrifice tly off Brandon Claussen
(2-7) and Jose Castillo's solo
homer made the difference.
' Jose Mesa pitched the last
inning for his IOth consecutive
save, leaving him 43-for-48
overall.
The Pirates (72-89} completed their 12th straight losing season, matching Milwaukee for
the longest current streak of
futilitv. The Reds &lt;76-86) have
four ·consecutive losing seasons. their longest such slump
since the 1950s.
The Reds waited until the end
of the third inning to do what
everyone came to see.
Nuxhall. who is retiring after
his 38th year in the booth, got
an oval ion when he was ~hown
on the videoboard · between
innings while the Reds infielders wanned up.
Moments later. Anderson
Machado let\ the dugout and
headed for shonstop. hugging
Larkin before replacing him.
The rest of bis teammates
fanned a fare1vell line as the
crowd came to its feet.
''l"ve been trying tn put oft
!thinking ahout 1 B;my leaving
tor all these years:· said first
baseman Sean Casey. who
wrapped his arms tightly
around him . --rm sti ll trying to
put it otT. hut I did get a little
choked up.
"'The guy's played here for 19
years and if anyone on any
team ever shoulu be able to go
out on hi s terms. it\ Barry
Larkin::

. ...........
. .•..•• ,... .•..••• :•.. ...
••
t
\
••
·•'!: e
'!:

••••••
••

••• •

•• • •

•

•••••

••••

•••••

Th1s

The Bobcats quick!) tumed
the turnover mto points. With
backup Auqe n Everson under
center. Mayle pulled in a slant
on tirst liown anu scampered 89
yards to the end zone for the
scure. The cffon . marked the
second longest play in the program's historv as the Bobcab
took a con1tmmding 21-10
advantage.
,
"Ryan (Hawk) got dinged a
little bit on the one dmw in the
third quarter and I don't know if
it was that. He seemed healthy
there at the end of the game but
we just felt right at that point
that we W&lt;UJted Austen to come
in and make some decisions."
Knorr said. ""Ryan wa., a little
groggy. Austen made a great
throw and nobody"s goi ng to
catch No. 82."
The Wildcats turned the ball
over on downs on their next
possession. giving the Bobcats
the football at the Kentucky 35.
Three plays and less than a
minute later.· running back
Kalvin McRae punched it in
from 12 yards out as the
Bobcats went ahead 28-10.
On the ensuing kickoff. the ·
Bobcat ,pecial team~ unit got
into the act. As the kick ~&gt; l ipped
past the Kentucky retum team.
Ohio\ Marcquis Parham
(Kent) picked up the footbal l
and was tackled at the Wi Ide at
four-yard line. Ohio attempted
a fake field goal but the emlrt
was unsuccessful.
Kentucky took ·o~er 'hut the
Bobcat de!Cme stntcl;.. a\lain.
Ohio\ Rahman Sha,cr\ ri~keu
off a P'"' ;mu returneu 1i to.)hc
Wildcat 40 with jl"l more th:in
four minutes left on the clock.
"You really need good things
to hapren and when vie ){lfccd

Spotlight shines
oBVP debate host
Cleveland, A6
I

"

National League

Associated Press

1

.

9

Monday, October 4, 2004

Astros earn final playoff. Goodbye
spot, all matchups set Larkin? Pirates
shut out Reds
..
BY BEN WALKER

a~lnneeota

p.m. (FOliO, •
W.dn ..

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

IS

gomg lobe a Lough

turnovers. guys just kept believing and believing:· said KtJorr.
"") was getfrng pretty nervous
there at the end. That was the
longest last live minutes T ve
ever been associated with' 'bot
the defensive guys just came up
with big play after big play and
we had a couple of good drives
there at the end.""
Ohio relin4uisheu possession
and · the Wildcat- tacked on
another score. A two-yard
touchuown to ss w1li !ailed twopoint conversion brought
Kentuckv to within 12 but the
Wildcats wnu lu get no closer.
Muncy paceu the Ohio
defense. recording nine tackles
in addition to his fourth-quarter
interception. Hawk tinished 7lor-15 tor 114 yarus and one
touchdown while Everson went
a pcti'cct 3- for-3 for I04 yards
anu one score in relief duties.
\1ayle rushed live times for
52 yards while McRae gained
34 yards on 18 carri~s for the·
Bobcah.
Kentucky qumterback Shane
Boyd completed 12 or 25 passes for 11 8 yards and two interceptions. Tony Dixon led the
Wildc:at&lt;o on the ground, picking
up 90 yards on 17 carries.
"Before t11is game. we satd
win. lose. draw·• whatever happens, '&amp;·e're going right away to
Marshall,'' Knorr said of ne xt
week\ opponent. "So '" much
a~ we'd love tflmorrow morning as coaches to break thi'
down and go over it. we·n~ !!CI-

ting right on Marshall.""
•
Ohio will return to conlcret]cc play lor the remainder of
the 200-+ campilign . Thi'
Saturday. the Bobcat ~ will play
host · to Marshall I p.m..
Saturd;~y.

!:

t
·•!:•••
•••••

!:

·•!:

~,.

2005

•••••

•••

•••

Send us a
photo of
your
favorite
pet and
they
might be ----==~~~~:
voted into our
~!'.

t

'!:

Pet Calen.d ar!

\

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

~-N~;;;~ ~-t-r~t:--

~:

••
•••

~!'.

~.

·~ dd
·~
A ress:
•• •
' '\&gt;1

~•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.iO l 1 '\IS • \ ol. ;;;;. '\o. :10

• Reds can't emerge from
one of their deepest ruts.
See Page 81
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- County.
township and village officials
are encouraged to attend a
bri efin g Wednesday to fin alize the proce ss of filing
claim s for tlood damage to
public infrastructure.
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Dire:etor. Robert Byer sa id
Monday~ficials from the
Ohio EM will auend the
meeting to ·stribute claims
packets and to explain the
process of seeking state reimbursement for tlood damage. _I
The meeting will be heldat 9 ·'
a.m. at the M~igs County

Courthouse Annex.
" Arrangements will also be
made with FEMA officials to
look at uamagecl sites and
assist in writing project work ..
order' tu repair damage:·
Byer ~a id .
Bycr ha s pl aced estimate\ ·
of 'tlt•od damage to infrastruclllre from the three-day
flood at over ~2 million .
Damaged infrastructure in
the count y includes roads . ·
bridges and culverts. '"'. well
as public property including
village property in Racin e
and
London
Pool
in
Syracuse. FEMA will pay for
debri s removal. emergency
services related to tlfe lloouing and severe storms. anu

""" ·"""·•il"•·ntin..J . ...,,.,

repatnng or replacing &lt;.lamaged roads, building .s and
utilities .
La&gt;! we~ federal emergency ucl"iai·ation for the
count y makes local governments avai lable for ·an
incrc~scu rei mbursement rate
for th'e wsts of tlood damage
repair tn X7.'i percent.
The mee ting docs not apply
to indil·i,lual llood damage
assistance. Those with home
all 19 years Arnold Priddy costumed as Santa has led the
floou damage must call Meigs Cou[\ty Bikers on their annual toy run. (Charlene
FEMA at (ROO ) 621-3362 to
register their uama ge and file . Hoeflich / photo)
a claim . Byer csl imates at
least si.x homes were totally
destroyed in the lloocl. and at
least SO otherc suffered some
extent of uamage .

Bikers stage toy run,
for needy children ·

LINE THROWING' CONTEST

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• James Fisher
• Eileen Polk
• James Edward Spaun

li sts of what they want from
Santa is provided by the
Department of Jobs and
POMEROY - Santa led Familv Services .
the pack as about 200 leatherFru;n that list gifts are
clad guys and gals climbeu bought by the bikers. nicely
ohto thei r motorcvcles and wrapped. and individually
roared off of the· Pomeroy tagged for each child before
parking lot Saturday for their the parents came by to pick
I&lt;Jth annu;d tny run.
them up JUSt before Christmas.
Ttte even t is a pu11 of the .
Meigs County Bikers' elfort to · When the bikers left the
raise monev for Christmas parking lot just atier noon they
gilts for needy children. The were kd by a police cruiser
bi kers cnntribute money which and Santa (Arnolu Priddy ) on
is used to buy toys fbr young- his purple bike. They traveled
Main
Street
to
stcrs who might otherwise down
where
they
have u bleak holiday. Their Miuuleport
ar
Wayne's
Place
for
a
stopped
goal thi' year was S6,000. a
and
then
moved
on
to
the
time.
thousand more than was raiseu
Tavern
near
Milway
during
lust year's toy run.
I
The n:uncs of children anu Harriso-nville for a party.
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

LO'l'l'ERIES

'

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-8-8
Pick 4 day: 7·0·4·7
Pick 3 night: 4· 7
Pick 4 night: 0-5-1·3
Rolling Cash 5: 13-15·26-28-31

.

-o

'
Line throwing lakes rea l ski ll
and several Meigs Countians
showed they knew l1ow to do
it in Saturday's events at the,
Sternwheel Rive rfest. The
winners (above) were. left to
nght, Paul Gibbs of
Middleport. first. $300 and a
trophy: Todd Smith of
Pomeroy. second. $175 and
a trophy. and. Kev1n Layne of
Racine. third, $150 and a ' '
trophy. Ann Layne. whose
The stone wall on the upper parkmg lot has been so damaged
late husband, Lee . had conby flood water that it is in danger of collapsing and Laking the
ducted the event since it
'
sidewalk
and gazebo w1th 1t. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
started at Sternwheel festi vals here. made the presentations. Smith (left ) shows
his te chnique of line throwmg
during the conipetition.
(Charlene Hoeflich jphotos )

West Virginia
Daily 3: 3-0-4
Dally 4: 5-4-4-6
Cash 25: 9-10-17-20-22-25

WEATHER

~

Parking lot wall in
danger of collapsing

rope off ce rt ain areas of the
wall anu river bank below to
protect the publ ic from lhe
P0\1EROY - The slllne ha7 ard.
To remedy thi' situation,
said tnappn,priate trea tment \\'all on the upper parking i&lt;ll
of those ,·isitor' D\ 'local has been ,o d:~maged hy ~1u;ser has rece11tly had both
deruti~ . . \tand~ to Ji . . ~'tiUrag.c fi&lt; HlU \\ atc'rs that it i' in the Arm) ,Corps of Engineers
'j..,Jtor . . '' lw 'i"il Skatopia imminent danger of collaps- and Repre&gt;entative Ted
•ui'u spenu n1l&gt;ney :11 lucal in~ accorJin!.! tn Pomt:i·o ,· Strickland 'iew the damage.
V(lla~e Mam ~. John \1us ser~
With no monev in their bud. re~taurar11\ and &lt;..tore:-..
In
the
1
.9)()",
part
of
the
gets appropriaiect for the proAc&lt;:oruinQ
to
Manin.
\anJstone
wall
collap,cd
anu
ject
bnth the Corps and
S~atnpi:~ i~· ""f:tntou' and
\\ orld-remm ncJ ... and" pop- I '"" replaced with conc-rete Stricklanu saiu ther~ ~as
ular dest-ination fur lucal ; by the Arm\ Cnrp' of nothing they could fiscally
teenager-. and a growing 1 Engineer' . Su ll. mn the do . Traditionally the Corps
car' .mJ thr&lt;'U!! h the tlnod' has ta~en cure of those types
ll lllllhcr ur out-of-~ounty \ i~­
the
. \\;Iter has .-ontinueJ to . of repair pr&lt;llel·ts . ·
itprs. He saiu he lim~' no t
wa"h
aWil\ the . . tnne.., frl11li
\1u,er estilmites that in
c·nmilllle a'n\ ille~al acti' it\
at Skatnpia 'cycn\,_ although the 'andst&lt;.llle p:~rt &lt;'f the 'i .111 ,,rder to properly repair and
he admitted :\'-att1pia ha' ,1 crc:.ning :! U:.m~cr&lt;'th 'itua- pre,~rw the wall it would
n»t Sll:i.CJOO . Although he is
n:putation cl' d '\Ta/). part) , IHlll .

INDEX

BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

'
12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

"Bl

Weather

A6

© :.&amp;004 Ohio Valle}- Publishing Co.

••

RUTLAND - The owner
of a skateboarding park near
Rutland said last week that
local sheriff's · deputies anp
police officers are profiling
visitors. performing inappropriate searches on ve hi cles
traveling there and gi\'in g ·
Meigs Countv "a had name ...
A' sheriff's uepartment
spokesman denies allegations
made bv Brewce Martin of
Skutopi;. and said law
enforcement act ivitv on
McCumber Hill Ro~d where the rural skateboard

park is locateu- and ncarhy
roilds is onh the result of
complaims n{auc by Martin's
neighhor,.
· Martin met '' ith \1eigs
Cou nt y Commissioners on
Thursdav to uiscUS\ .!Ji, cnmplaints . \1anin is a profe s-sional skate hoarder "hose
skateboarding how I \\·a,
recently featured on ~1TV
and i~ I)O\\' part Df a n~w
vitlco game based on \kate-

boarding . Martin saiu tlte
facility'~ rerutation a' a preIn i cr

~katehoardi n~

faci Iit\

draws ""thuu,;mus l;ron thou~and&lt; ' nf \'i..,itnr . . from a(ro~..,
the l'llUntr~ l'ttl'h )eilr. hut

Ill

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MY OAI LYSE NTI NEL.COM

Skateboarders allege police profiling·

I

Please see Allege. AS

)

Dangling rod"" anJ ~aping
hok"' haH' L'&lt;tLJ,L'd the' illagt:

Please see Wall, AS

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 4th Annual

Respiratory_Fall

~ymposium

I

Please send or bring this entry form along with your "photo to

~oint fJirasant
l\rg1Strr

• : &lt;Ballipolis :t!l3aiiP

··~
I

4:
:!

[:ri~unr

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
825 Third Avenue
200 Main st
G'allipolis, 011 456l'I Pt Pleasant, wv i5550

Friday, October .29 • 7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center · Gallipolis

l~· ·

•
••

A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory field '
For more information , or to register, coli Sandy Moore at

"Pet Calendar" ,~ .
111 Court St.
1'
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~:

•........-·.. •....•: ......-·.. •........-· .......-·.. .•..

· ------------------------. ---------------·--------~

··~.w
···
. .

··~.w··

MEDICAL CENTER
nisnwcr: the Holzer D!tf'aence

www .holzer .org

(740) 446 .. 5919

(

'

l"t "I·.Sll.\\, O(TOBI-:1{ ;,, :!OO-t

FEMA to brief local officials

SPORTS

.,,: Phone: _______ ~-----------,----

:!

en tne

at

.

·-.----------------.------------- -~

~.. Your Name:

~

2 SECTIONS -

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

'

. ;... ..JI'.t'!±.il~

·~ ..

'

..

+
•

•

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•

•

PageA2

WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel
r

__ Tuesday, October 5,

2004

\

J

Car bombs rip through Baghdad, killing 21 people, V'{OUnding more than 100

Car bombings rock
Baghdad, Mosul ·

BAGHDAD. Iraq (A P\ ln&gt;u rgen ts exploded !wo car
bombs at the gates of th.; main
U.S.-Iraqi headquart ers in
Baghdad and near major
hotels Monday. killing at least
21 people and wounding more
than 100. In Fallujah, U.S.
warplane.s struck what the military called termr hideouts,
killing II . according to doctors who said women and chil dren were among the dead.
The two car bombs ripped ,
through ce ntral Ba ghdad
streets about an hour apart.
Two more vehicle bombs
0 100mi
TURKEY
went off the northern city of
Mosul. killin g three people.
The attacks~were the latest in
0 100km
the insurgents' swelling C&lt;1111paign of vehicle blasts. Jfi.
September. militants carried
IRAQ
IRAN
SYRIA
out at least 39 such bombings.
Some of the near-daily explosions have caused only injuries.
Baqouba
but others wreaked devastation.
such as a series of vehicle blasts
on Thursday that killed 35 chi I·
A fore ign security person, carrying a second gun picked up from one of the ~njured foreign
dren and seven adults.
lnsuments have also stepped nationals at the site, and a U.S . soldier. right, survey the scene after a car bomb npped through
up their strategy of kidnap- saadoun street in Baghdad, Iraq, Mo nday. The bomb ta rgeted two four-wheel drives carrying
pings aimed at driving U.S. foreign nationals and the casualty figure is unknown ; (AP Photo/Saurabh Das)
SAUDI
allies out of . the country.
Militants on Monday claimed
ARABIA
to have killed a Turk and an
lr~q i businessman abducted in
. ~ ,'iui~- Aiugust. calling them spied.
·' ~'the ' family of the businessman.
Baghdad
a lon~time resident of Italy.
~ Two car bombs ripped through
said th~e Italian government had
confirmed ·the man's death.
Baghdad, killing at least 21 people
Other militants freed two
Indonesian women whose abduc...- Gunmen killed a senior official
tion wa,- 1eported lasl week.
Also Monday. the U.S. miliof Iraq's Sciences and Technology
tary said two American soldiers were killed by gunfire at
Ministry"and a female employee
a·checkpoint in Baghdad a day
earlier. As of Fridav, 1.055
Mosul
members of the u.s.· military
have died since the beginning
Three people killed in two car
of the Iraq war. according to
the Defense Department.
bombings
In Mondav's tirst blast in
Ba!!hdad. a ·fo ur"whee l-drive
Baqouba
vehicle packe(i with explosives detonated outside the
..._ A police commander was
heavil v fortified Green Zone.
the seiu of the U.S. Embassy
assassinated in drive-by sliooting
and key Iraqi government
offices. Interior Ministry
~ Insurgents killed one person in
'
Adnan
spokesman Col.
mortar attack at the municipal
Abdul-Rahman said.
Yarmouk Hospital received An injured man is brought in for treatment at Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad. Iraq, Monday. At
building
15 bodies and 81 wounded least 21 people died and over a 100 were inJu red in two car bomb explosions 111 Baghdad on
from the explosion. said Monday. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed )
·. ·
Sabah Aboud. the facility's
1·
Falluja~
chief registration official.
rooftops and police return ed police said. lnsurgeA·ts also '·ensure no innocent civilians
The blast went off at 8:45 fire, said Tahsin ai-Kaabi. fired mortar rounds at were present" at the time of
U.S. warplanes struck what the
a.m. near a checkpoipt at the another FPS member.
Baqouba's municipal :build- the strikes .
military called terror hideouts,
western entrance to the comThe pickup truck carrying ing. killing nne person and
Shortly before 3:30 a.m ..
plex, said. Maj. Phil Smith, a the explosives was ripped in wounding seven in the city 35 coaliti on forces struck a site
killing
spokesman for the U.S. 1st half. with one part lett dan- miles northeast of Baghdad .
where members of a)Cavalry Division. No coalition gling from a shop sign on the
In Baghdad, gunmen killed a Zarqawi 's network were
se nior otli•ial of Iraq 's believed to be meeting, anothforces were hurt in either of opposite side of the street.
Ramadi
Monday's blasts, Smith said.
At least five other ca(s were Sciences and Technology er military statement. &gt;aid.
The blast was also near a charred. including one of the Ministry and a female employMonday's violcnce 'co'mes a
U.S. Marines killed two insurgents
day after U.S. and Iraqi comrecruitment center for Iraqi targeted vehicles, which had a ee. Abdul-Rahman said.
In rebe l-held Fallujah . manders declared a S\)ccess m · · \Mlil~ on patrol
security forces. Such centers burned body left sitting in the
have frequently been targets front passenger seat. 1'nothcr American
warplanes an operation to take ~ontrol of
for bombings.
man was thrown against a unleashed strikes on two the insurgent-held Sunni
''I was thrown I 0 meters garage wall. his body crumpled ho~'cs earl y Monday. kil ling Triangle city Samarra.
SOURCE: ESRI
(yards) away and- .hit the in the street. A head and other at least II people. hosp ital ' As helicopters flew overwall."
said
Wissam body parts were strewn in the offic' i ~ls sai'a.
.
head, U.S. troops patrollea civilian death toll.
Iraqi troops during the
·· The military said the stnkes Samarra in tanks. armored
Of the 70 dead brought to Samarra attack. saying they
Mohammed. 30. who was vis- road amid shards of £las;.
itin~ the center. He lav in a
The blast ripped throu gh a targe ted
followers
. of personn el · carriers
and Samarra General Hospital secured the hospital , a revered
'bed~ at Yarmouk Hospital. his passing minibus &lt;.: arryi ng Joruan1an terror mastermtnd Hum vees
on
Monday. since lighting erupted. 23 were shrine and a centuries-old
right hand broken. his head commuters. killing the dri ver. Abu Vlusab ai-Zarqawi and Sporadic gunfire and some children and I R were women. minaret. The Baghdad govexplosions broke the relative hospital official Abdul-Nasser ernment has portrayed the
wrapped in bandages and hi s "I saw his body torn apart ... thetr ass?nates.
clothes stained with blood. · said Razaq Hadi . 36. a pasA stnke 1n the central calm. as U.S. troops and Hamed Yassin said Sunday. battle as a landmark on the
The second car bomb explod- ' senger in the bus who who Jumhun ya h area kdled nme members of the Iraqi National Another 160 wounded people road to establi shing an effecec) at 9:45. targeting a convoy was covered in the driver's people.
l~cludtng
three Guard searched cars. asking also were !reated.
tive fighting force .
"The people who we;e hurt
of four-wheel drive vehicles blood . Hadi said seven seri- womenand tour ch 1ldren. sa 1d for people' s identity cards.
Washington is eager to raiseleaving a comple x of major ously wounded passepgers Dr. Add Khat\m of Fnlluph u,s. soldiers, along with Iraqi most are normal people who lraqi s' fightin g ability to
hotels where foreign contrac- were taken out throu gh the General. Hospnal. Twel~e translators carrying li sts. have nothing to do with atiy- allow American troops to take
tor.s andJoumalists reside .
bus windows .
we re InJured. lllcludtn g siX entered house s asking about thing." said Abdel Latif Hadi. a back seat in combat. operaAt least six people were
Two car bombs ab o ex plod- women and three l~hddren. he specific persons.
. 45.
tions and eventually pull out
kill ed and 15 wmmded. said ed Vlonda y in Mos ul. 225 sa_td . They mclud~ rcstdents
Local s were angered by the
U.S. commanders prai sed or Iraq.
Tahsin ai-Freiji of the U.S.- mile s northwest of Baghdad . ol netghbonn g houses that
--trained Fncility Prote ction One blast killed two people were damaged in the' blast.
......
Service. which guards major be lined to be tran, port ing the
A second strike in the ci(y's
~~ 1
installations in the city.
explo,ives and a civil!an 'ou th em Shuhada ne igh bor.L
••
A pickup truck loaded witH' bystander. said Capt. Angela hood killed two more people.
dates ex ploded as it plowed 'Bowman, a mtlttary 'pokes- Kh ami s said.
into the three-vehi cle convoy woman . Hospital otl1 c1a l'
The militarv said a "preci- .
as they emerged from a park - sa id they treated II wou nded sion strik e" at about 1' a.m. hit
ing area shared by several intheblast.
a bLtilding where about 25
•
major hotels. al-Freiji said~
The second bomb targe:ed a in surge nt s we re movi ng
~
·
'
speakin2 at the scene . One ol U.S. Army conmy. lllJUnng weapons on the outskirts of
the three vehicles in the con- one
American
soldier. Fallujah. Intelligence so urce'
voy was destroyed, and shrap- Bowman said-.
.
said imu rgents we re using the
nel hit the nearby Palestme
In Baqouba .. a pol!ce com- 'i te to qore we:tpons and conmander was assassmatcd 111 an duc t training. the mili tary said
and Baghdad hotels .
Minute&gt; later. gunmen early mormng drt\'e-hy shoot- in a statement. adding that
began shoot ing from the ing by unknown gunme n. pre caution' \\·ere taken to

Insurgents exploded car bombs
in Baghdad near the Green Zone
and near major hotels Monday.
Another pair of car bombs went
off in Mosul.

Wednesday, Oct. 6
PAGEVILLE
-Scipio
•
Township Trustees , 6)30 p .m.
at Pageville Town HaiL
POMEROY - Applicants
briefing for all Meigs County
townships. · village officials,
· county officials, fire departments not part of a village or
town &gt;hip and other government entitities experiencing
flass flood and river tlood
damage, 9 a.m., courthouse
annex basement. Call Robert
Byer at 992-4541.
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustee' will meet
at 6:30 p.m . in regular session at th~tow hip garage.
Sunday, Oct. 10
:
T urs y, Oct.'7
POMEROY
The
- Public
POME
Carleton
·Church
of
County
..
meeting to discuss the initiaRoad
18,
Pomeroy
will
have
tive petition campaign to
pring full health care to all its annual homecoming with
living and working in Ohio dinner at noon and · special
and bring E.R. and medical services at .1:30 p.m.
RUTLAND
The
tran sportation services to
Meig s t:ounty. 7 p.m.. Rutland Church of Christ will
Pomeroy Library. Contact celebrate its 175th anniverBob Smiddie, 698-3415 or sary with a homecoming .
Worship and communion will
Linda Dye . 698-6050.
begin at 9:30a.m .. a carry-in
dinner will be held at noon,
and afternoon services will
. follow at •2 p.m. with special
music by th e Gabriel Quartet.
Thesday, Oct. 5
CHESTER
Chester
Counci l #323, Daughters of
America. regular meeting
Thesday, Oct. 5
nnd inspe&lt;.:tion 7 p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT- Revival
hall. Members to wear white. services will be held at 7:30
MIDDLEPORT
- The p.m. nightly through Oct. 10

Homecomings/
Reunions

I

l

•

Faii~Jah: '~agh

Clubs and
organizations

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

I .

Children's organized sports
programs have many benefit s. These include exerci se,
getting along with others, and
learning new skills. how to
win and lose, and sportsman- ''
ship. Parents can help teach
iheir children the art of being
a good sport which can carry
over into the pther aspects of
their lives.
But too many times the
parents behave improperly at
their children's sporting
events. This conduct does
not promote good sportsmanship, nor does it serve as a
health y role model for the
child.
· What is good sportsmanship'! · It is defined as the
behavior where one loses
without complain t or wins
without
bragging.
Opponent s are treated with
courtesy. re spect. fairness

they are on.
Parents should accept their
children's abilities and avoid
comparing them to other children. Each child develops
skills at his or her own rate.
Becky
Parents should encourage and
Baer
support their children to do
well and to try to improve,
based upon their past performances. They should be
careful not to have unrealistic
expectations and demand too
and consideration.
What can parents do tci pro- much of their children.
Parents should respect the
mote good sportsmanship?
They should be good sports. authority of the . coaches and
them&gt;elves . They can show the officials. If something is
interest in the game, cheer handled unfairly, parents
positively for their children, shou ld go through the proper
and tell them how proud they channels to resolve the situaare of their accomplishments. tion. They should remain in
Parents should never make control of their emotions, so
fun of or yell at a child for they dbn 't do or say somemaking a mistake. They thing they will regret later.
should commend everyone 's
Parents can be selective
efforts, no matter which team when finding a sport and

HMC Offers Wellsource
Online Well ness ,Center

AP

Family Homes of Pomeroy has set the grand opening of its two
new Pinnacle built model homes Thursday through Saturday of
this week. Family Homes is at the corner of U.S. 833 and Ohio 7.

Pinnacle built model
homes make debut
at area business

\J.J. ""

IIIJN'I11Nf.,
l'
l' J
1.,1)1'11J•)N]'

POMEROY
Family invited to the Family Homes
Homes of Pomeroy announces ()pen
House
celebration
its grand opening_ of two new Thursday, Oct. 7 through
Pinnacle built model homes.
Saturday, Oct. 9. On Thursday
The homes located em the 1and Fnday. you- can tour the
corner of U.S. 833 and Ohio' homes from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
7 ure I00 percent drywall 1 and \ ign up for drawings for
fini shed with . real 2-by-6- g1ve-a-ways mcludmg Snapon
inch board s: and include Tools ;md a Longaberger basket.
Kenmore kitchen appliances,
On Saturday. Oct. 9.
Andersen tilt sash double Family Home s will be having
hung windows. cultured mar- an open hou se pm1y . from
ble vanity and drop-in tub noon to 6 p.m .. wh1cl1 w1ll
tops. Andersen Frenchwood include free food. · carnaue
pat io doors , Merillat oak cab- nde . tours ot the Fam11y
met&gt; with maxnnum cabmet Homes housmg de,velopment.
space and Truss floor system. drawin gs for give-a-ways
which is 47 percent stronger dunng il hve rad1o remote,
free candy and balloons tor .
with fewer tloor squeaks.
Homes . available include the kids and much more.
ranch. Cape Cod. and two:story. You can even s~e a replica.
· The homes can be, mpclihed ll! ot Elv1s. Presley s bedfOom
su1t the customers net-ds. The turn1ture m one of.the hornes.
homes ru'e of the highest qual\tY
On Saturday, Oct. 9. you will
. cmfts111anshtp ru1d are dollar lor aiso be able l? talk w1th a
dollar the best value avmlable . Pinnacle Homes factory repreAH homes are built to meet ~1e &gt;entative about your personal
strictc\t standards and all state housing needs. Plus, the tii&gt;t I0
building cbdes.
.
people to purcha1e a home will
. Fumlly' Homes also special- ':Cceiv~ a Longaberge_r basket
izcs in unique projects sucl1 full ot cleanmg supphes upon
as lake cottag~:s and medium- final payment and everyone who .
purchao;es a home w1ll automau'
sized commercial projects.
To come tour the interiors of cally get a $600 price reduction
'tl1e new homes. the public is house- voucher. good tor 90 days.

IDAY, OCTOBER 29th
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October 20th.

_U.S. military fighting complex guerrilla war
U S mihtary comrn~nders div1de the tn surgents

Former regime
'loyalists
"' Believed the larg-

AI·Zarqawi and allies
"' Abu Musab al,
Zarqawi·s group IS

est movement Whtch

responsible for car

m Iraq tnto foui Gategones

has dozens of cells
aligned loosely in umbrella groups : roany
JOi ned after being

bombings and beheadings Groups
goals vary from
turning Iraq 1nto an
- .
ant1-Western state AI-Zarqawl
banned from publiC
l1fe m Mily 2003
to a t1ghtly controlled lslam1c stale
lr- U.S. believes large
l1ke Afghan1stan s Taliban reg1me
numbers can be
"' Ansar ai-Sunna, mtl t1a of Kurdcoaxed to 161n gov- · 1sh lslamtc radtcals and others
ernment wtth Iuera trve amnesty offer

who follow conservat1ve lslarr
practtced 1n Saudt Arab1E1

Mahdi Army
Raa1ca1
clenc Mu-

qlada alSadr's m111
!Ia ·- only
tnsurgent

gro up

ai-Sadr
based tn
Shu te Muslm1 cu rnm um:
ty. Iraq s largl'st soc1al
bloc Fought U.S rn1l1_.
tary m Na1ar, Karbel a.
Kul and currently Bagh
dads Sadr C1ty C ty

To Have Your

Supporters
of Islamic
Theocracy

Business Included .•.

~omt ~leasant ll\el,lister

• lraqts who
wa nt to instal
governmental ·;
system based
on lslorn tc low,
as tn Ira n

(104) 675-llll

&lt;19aUipoli!.i 1JB11il!' cr::ribune
(740} 446-2342

• Stmilar go.als

to some of alZarqawt s a!-

The Daily Sentinel

l.es bul they

(740) 992-2156

have no: used

terror tac t cs .

.

,..,... ,.,

. ,.,..
•·

........... . . .,. ,.,. .. - .

~ ..

..

..

·saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE
The
Carleton
School/Meigs . girl took her· bath. and also
Industries will be sponsoring stroking the girl's backside to
their 2nd Annual Community lull her to sleep at bedtime.
Olympic s from 8:30a.m. to 4
You advised "U neasy'' that
'
s
a
.
fundral'ser
for
.
her
husband 's behavior was
It
l
P.m.
Marvin Cooper who is bat- inappropriate and .urged her
Call992-6681 to to di scuss the situati on with
tll.ng c•ncer.
....
·
the girl's pediatrician. You
regl.ster a team by O··t.
• 1.
TUesday, Oct. 5
Silid the husband might back
POMEROY - Evening ott if he heard from the docclinic at Meigs County tor that what he was doing
Health Department, 4 to 7 was wrong - and that the
p.m .. offering childhood and doctor should report the man
adult immunization s from I if. he refused to stop.
to 7 p.m., blood pres sure
Abby, I think you threw gas
measurements, WIC, parental on the fire without kn owing
services and vital statistics n1ore_ about that mother 's
·
information,
head
lice concerns. Why 1's the hu sband
~eenings and eradication eating his dinner while the
education , environmental daughter takes her batl; '.'
·
heat
I h appomtments,
answers Does he get hotne late, after
to other general health-releat- the rest of the family has
·
c
ed questiOns. In.ormation at eaten? How developed is the
992•6626 ·
girl? My 11 -year-old girl
looks like she's R! Is the
fatht;r really rubbing the girl's
bottom - or her back'' A
Friday, Oct. 8
back rub isn't inappropriate.
POMEROY - Widow's
Eleven is a we ird age. The
Fellowship meets at noon at girls aren 't women, but they
KFC/Long John Silver's.
aren't small children eithel)
My 11-year-old thinks nothing of jumping into the tub
wlien I'm bathing my 3-yearold. She also does it when my
coach that promotes good husband is bathing our son..
sportsmanship. Parents can
lf "Uneasy" feel s the way
help children choose approshe does. whv doesn't she
priate sports figures as role
models who exemplify good have her. daughter take her
bath earlier?- TRIJSTS MY
sportsmanship.
Parents can also encourage HUSBAND IN TUCSON
DEAR TRUSTS : That's a
fair competition where pargood
question. However, she
ticipants will want to do their
best. Children should be wrote to me because she has a
reminded that one should not sixth sense that's telling her
win at any cost. Cheating something is wrong. And she
and dishonesty have no place should li sten to that sixth
in the sports arena. A team sense and act on it. After I
should win because it played printed 'that letter, the volume
welL FoJ)owing a victory, of mail I received from surcelebrations
should
be vivors of child sexual abuse
curled my hair. Read on for a
observed in gracious ways.
If a child displays poor sample:
sportsmanship,
parents
DEAR ABBY: As a child, I
should correct the inappropri- was sexually abused by my
ate behavior. A talk about fathe r, a "pinnacle of the
what would b'e appropriate community." I still bear the
. can put the child on the right emotional
scars.
What
path to fairness , respectful- ·'U neasy's" husband is doing
ness and consideration.
is called "confusing touch"
and is very likely a precursor
to outright abuse. By confusing the daughter into thinking
his behavior is OK, the father

Support Groups

Church services

11

._,()()t.l

Other events

DEAR ABBY: You printed
a letter from a woman,
"U neasy
About
My
Daughter," who wm. concerned that her husi:)and might be actin g .inappropriately with her 11 -year-o ld
daughter. Sne went on to
de scribe her husband sitting
on the toilet and eating h'is
· dinner every night while the

.

..

GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer
Medical . Center
Community Health . and
Wellness Department recently
purchased a new online wellness program.
The Wellsource® Online
Wellness Center (OWC), features basic infonnation and
links to numerous articles on
health topics. The site can be
acce ssed on the world wide
web by logging on to
http://holzer. we)lsource.com,
or by logging on to the
website
at
Hospital 's
www.holzer.org. and accessing the site throug!J the. home
page.
Wellsource® launched in
2000 and is organized into 31
·health centers with key word
search capability. When one
topic or article is . accessed,
links to related articles are
prominently and automatically displayed.
The site

includes numerous quizzes,
assessments and checklists.
Many Of the articles include
charts an\'1 graphs to add to
the benefit of the information.
as well as a numbe r of cartoons for a healthy se nse of
humor. All article s are carefully re searched and have
links to the original resource.
Sponsored messages, conflicts of interest and pop-up
ads are not included on the
OWC. Each month, tl\e entire
front page is revised to reflect
· what's new and important for
In addition.
the month.
Wellsource ® takes requests
for articles covering specific
information.
For more information, call
Bonnie McFarland. RN .
BSN, Director ()f Community
Health and Wellness at (740)
446-5679. or Jenni Dovyak.
Director of Community
Relations at (740) 446-5054.

·Meigs -County to host
charitable giving workshop
POMEROY - A workshop
on charitable giving options
for Meigs County will be held
at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct.
13. at I :00 p.m . at the Meigs
County Annex located .on
Mulberry Heights . behind
Holzer Clinic .
This meeting, which will
cortinue to look at our county 's capability and readiness
to supply lastin g resources for ·
the commu nity. will use The
Philanthropy Index, a step-

by-step process th at measures
a rural .area's potential for
engaging community mem bers in creating a charit····h'''"
fund.
. This ' project is a pi lor effort
of the Foundation (or
Appalachian Ohio and Ohio
State University Exte'nsion.
Meig s ·County. For. more
information , contact Becky
Baer at N0-992-6696 or
baer.29@osu.edu.

Proud to be apart of your life.
'

S~bscribe

\odaY • 992-2155

Dear
Abby

opens the door for behavior
that isn 't. "lJnea&gt;y" mu't get ·
hel p for her daughter so the
girl can learn how to set
boun dane'
, an d ue
"' f.111e appropriate to uch.
parent&gt; have a resp,onst·b111.
h
·
h'ld
t
. tY tot et r c 1 ren to pro ect
them from sexua l abu&gt;e by
familv members. friends or
others. _ BEEN THERE IK
PLANO. TEXAS
DEAR BEEN THERE : 1
was taken aback by the num ber of fiN -per&gt;on testimonials 1 received describ ing si m·
il ar experiences .
,yDEAR ABBY: I am a "''
detecti ve spec ializing tn
crimes against ~hildren m a
cen tral
Fl orida sheriff' s
·
department . If the father acts
·
·
this way when he IS bemg
·
observed, I can only imagme
what goes on .whcn the mother isn 't present. The fact that
the mother referred to the.
man as "my hu sband.'' not as
the girl's father. rai ses more
red nags.
Had this ' been reported to
me in my juri sdi ct ion. I
believe 1 would have probable cause for an arre.st on
,charges of lewd and )asci vious moleo.tation.
.;Uneasy" should contact
local law enforcement and
.child welfare age ncie s and
report her husband. If she
doesn 't, she could be charged
with failure to protect her
child. -FLORIDA DETECTIVE
DETECTIVE:
DEAR
Several other members of law
enforcement around the coontry offered similar sentiments . However, pediatri· cians are mandated to report
.child abuse if there is evidence - an'd that is why I
recommended the mother
first talk to her child's physi cian.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear AbQy at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

I

Celebruting_ sped11/
days with you!
The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

!!! M!!!!!~M~!

!"!~ ~~.Ml!

October 9th/Starting at 4 :00 pn1
• Live mu sic • Grear·Food

Come Celebrate with u st • ..
It will he ' I motin-tootill good time'
Locah:d on Main Street in do,..nt ow n Pum ~ruy .

992-0099

J

.,

�r

'

•

OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager·News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the frt:edom
of speech, or of the press; or ihe 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

READER'S

VIEW

Eledions
I

Democrat morals
Dear Editor:
I'm writing thi' letter to the editor to give my opinion on
Democrat inorals . We all li ve in the United States, the land of
the free. When you have freedom. you have to take the good
with the bad. Yes. I'm Democrat. and I think women should .
have a choice- it's their bodies. I th ink we should have welfare for the ones in need in oyr own country. We need to take
care of our own first. Democrats arc gun owners too, not just
Republicans. And who doesn't like hearing that taxes may
have to go up? But it has to happen, to get us out of the debt
Bush has made in the last four years. And my last question is
. this: Why would you , working people , vote for a .Republican
· who is against raising the minimum wage of $5 .15?
Democrats like Kerry and Edwards want to raise the minimum wage. and it would benefit all working class people. I
know it sure would help us all pay for the $2 per gallon at the
gas pump that we weren't paying four years ago.
Thank you for letting me vent.

The New York Times and
Washington Post finally have
caught up to the fact that this is
a very nasty presidential campaign. But they're blaming it
all on Republicans and utterly
ignoring the mud thrown by
Democrats.
In an editorial Saturday; the
Times accused President
Bush's campaign of indulging
in "despicable" and "unAmerican" politics and of conducting "an organized effort to
paint (Sen. John Kerry) as a
friend to terrorists."
Earlier in the week, in a bia'
. tant piece of editorializing
piayed as a front -page news
story, the Post's Dan'a Milbank
declared that "President Bush
and leading Republicans are
increasingly charging that
(Kerry) and others in his party
giving comfoJtlO terrorists
and 4ndermining the war in
Iraq - a line of attack that
tests the conventional bounds
of political rhetori c."
It's true that Bush and others
have charged that "mixed
messages" can embolden the
enemy and dispirit U.S. troops
and the Iraqi people. and that
AI Qaeda and Iraqi insurgents
would prefer Kerry over Bush.
Such comments, I'd say, are
close to the line of low-blow
campaigning, but they are far
from deserving to be compared, as they were by
Milbank, to the Alien and
Sedition Acts &lt;'lf 1789 or the
McCarthy era of the 1950s,
when Americans actually were
jailed or ruined for their politiq l opinions.
And no one in the Bush
campaign has ever actually
challenged Kerry's patriotism,
as Democrats repeatedly
claim, nor called Kerry "a
friend to terrorists" or said he's

are

GrAHlfR.
~.

finish out the campaign by
calling conditions in Iraq
"chaotic" or even "a quagmire" is not likely to affect
morale in lmq decisively.
Morton
Moreover, Republicans
Kondarcke how led e~eessively when
accused Iraqi Prime
• - - - - · Kerry
Minister Ayad Allawi of
putting a "best face" on
progress in Iraq. That was a
"giving aid 'Jnd comfort to the fair comment, especially
enemy," a'&gt; the Times charged. ·since
Allawi
virtually
Even anti-l&lt;frry 527 groups endorsed Bush during his
like Swift Boat Veterans for visit last week, declaring
Truth and the Progress for that invading Iraq was "the
America Voter Fund haven't Tight decision."
accused the Democrat of lackSenior Kerry adviser Joe
· ing patriotism.
Lock han called Allawi a "pupIn fact, assertions that some- pet" ·of the Bush administraone is "unpatriotic" or , "un- tion . 1l1at led Bush's campaign
American" have been leveled manager. ·Ken Mehlman. to
exclusively - so far a~ l. can charge that the Kerry camlind - by Democrats agaiFISt paign was "echoing what the
Bush.
enemy is saying."
Those who've used such
It's true, what Lockhart said
words include Kerry, former does parallel what the enemy
candidates Wesley Clark and says - btl! Lockhart's saying
Howard Dean, Teresa Heinz it is not likely to materially'
Kerry. Sen. John Edwmds, D- affect Allawi's standing in
N.C..
and · Democratic Iraq .
National
Committee
The Bush campaign doesn't
Chaim1an Terry McAulitl'e .
need to even hint that Kerry's
And the Media Fund, a rhetoric. so far, has made the
Democratic 527, has charged · war. harder to win. Bush is
that Bush is beholden to Saudi doing just tine politically by
Arabia's royal family and is ·. pointin_g to the mu!tiple inconconcealing its sponsorship of sistencies m Kerry s Iraq statements and to his weak overall
terrorism.
Republicans ought not try to foreign policy record . .
All this said, most media
stifle debate on the most
important issue of the prcsi- scorekeepers have bought into
dential campaign by saying the Kerry line that he has been
that Kerry's criticism of condi- ruthlessly "smeared" by the
tions in Iraq and Bush's con- Bush campaign and have
duct of the war will embolden utterly ignored excesses pourthe enemy or undermine the .ing out from the DemO&lt;..ntic
war effort. Everyone who fol- side.
lows American politics The media overplayed Vice
including U.S. troops, Iraqi President Cheney's remark allies and insurgents - knows later restated - that Kerry's
that the United States is divid- election would lead to new AI
ed over the war. For Kerry to Qaeda attacks.

© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

The Daily ..Sentinel
Correction Polley

. (USPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our mam concern in all stories is to b€1
accurate. If you know of ar:~ error in a
story, ca!l the' newsroom at (740) 992 ·

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through Friday, 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, Q.hio. Second·ctass postage

paid at Pomeroy.

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. ·15
ClassJCirc.: Judy Cl8'rk, Ext . 10

Circulation

District .Mgr.: J~son Patterson . E;t. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , E)(l. 12

E·mall:
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Postmaster: Send addr9ss correctiOns
to The Daily Sentinel.

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Eileen Polk
PORTLAND
-Eileen
Virginia Polk , 82, of
Portland, passed away at
8; IS a.m. on Saturday, Oct.
2. 2004, at OverbrO'ok
Rehabiltation Center . 111
Middleport.
She was the daughter of the
late Charles and Evalena
Keys Congo. She was a
retired upholstery worker and
a homemaker, and was a
member
of
Hazel
Commurrity Church in Long
Bottom.

She married Claude C.
Polk on Dec. 8. 1938, and he
preceded her in death on
April 29, 1959.
Surviving are several
nieces and nephews: a special great nephew, Sam
(Debbie)
Persons
of
Middleport; a special greatgreat
nephew.
Hunter
Persons and special greatgreat nieces, Amber Persons
and Anna Reynolds, all of
Middleport;
a
special
nephew, Randy (Tammy)
Congo of Portland; a special
cousin, Beverly Hill of
Middleport : and a great
nephew, Jonathan Dailey.
Family members also surviving are Lawrence Powell.
Ruth Robinson , Aja Roach
and Maria Martin .
Besides her parents and
h,usband. she was preceded in
death by her three brothers :
Charles, Gene and Dana
Congo, a sister, Louise Craig,
and a special nie~e. Ann
Dailey.
Services will be held at
noon on Tuesday, Oct. 5.
2004, at the Cremeens
Funeral Home. in Racine.

Friends may call an hour
pnor to the service. Rev.
Edsel Hart will officiate.
Burial
will follow
at
Ravenswood Cemetery in
Ravenswood, W.Va .
Memorial contributions
may be made to the Hazel
Community Church, c/o Sam
Perso ns , 810 Maple St. ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.

James Edward ·

·

·spaun
James Edward Spaun was
called home on Aug. 2, 2004.
James was originally from
Racine and the son of Junior
Spaun. who preceded him in
death. and Marie Spaun of
Pomeroy.
He is also survived by
brothers, Charles ''Duke, "
Roger. Bill. Bob and Terry
Spaun, and a sister, Wilma
Lee Powell.
James served his country in
the U.S. Marine Corps, with
two tours of duty in Vietnam.
Arrangements were by the
Vail Funeral Home of Ripley,
W.Va .

Chili cook-off winners

Family fall festival
set for Saturday
POMEROY - The second
annual family fall festival
will be held from 4 to 8 porn .
on Saturday at Trinity Church
and on Lynn Street in
Pomeroy.
There will be games,
including a basketball shoot,
cake walk, beanbag toss, fish
pond, candle shoot-out and a_
dunking booth. with all of the
money raised • to go to the
Community
Mulberry
Center.
Clowns will be there to
paint faces, do magic tricks.
and make animal balloons for
the children.
Again this year there will
be a penny-a-vote carved
pumpkin contest in the age
categories of 6 to II , 12 to 17
and 18 to I00 with first. sec-

ond and third place winner&gt;
in each age group, As a
grand prize a 27-inch television will be awarded to the
person who guesses the
weight of the great pumpkin .
Everyone will be served
one free meal. For those who
want "seconds." there will be
a small charge.
The fe,tiva·t is sponsored
by Sacred Heart. First United
Methodi st
Church
of
Pomeroy. Heath United
Methodist
Church
of
Middleport. . St.
John' s
Lutheran Church , St. Paul'&gt;
Lutheran Church. Middleport
Church of Christ. Grace
Episcopal , Pomeroy Church
of Christ. First Bapti st
Church of Pomeroy and
Trinity Church.

Local Briefs
Correction

prizes includin g .two gold
coins will be awarded.
Tickets can be bought on
POMEROY - Guy Hyse ll other gold coins. :rhe event is
attended the recent Hysell sponsored by the OH-KAN
reunion. His name was unin- . Coin Club which meets the
tentionally omitted from a last Mond"y of every month
listing of family members at 7 p.m . at the Pomeroy
there.
Library.
·

Coin show set

T.B. office open

GALLIPOLIS - A coin
show will be held from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 17,.
at the Gallipolis Holiday Inn .
There is no admission. Door

POMEROY -\Jl;e'Meigs
County TB Clinic will be
open until 7 p.m . on Tuesday.
For question' or information
call 992-3722 .

A patriotic quilt made by Marie Tracewell of Belpre, a life mem'.N''•, ' 'I
ber of the Lad ies Auxiliary of VFW Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains
t""l
I '
is be~ used in a fund raiser for the post. A drawrng for the
quilt will be held Dec . 2. The money raised will go to purchase
phone cards for servicemen and women. and to buy personal Winners in the chili cookoff at the weekend Sternwheel
items for veterans in veterans · homes. Donations to other orga· Riverfest were from the left, Jeff Circle and Pat Boston of the
nizations. including the Special Olympics. will also be made Pomeroy Carpenters Local, third: Denise Bunce. Pomeroy
from the proceeds. Here Joanne Vaughan, Betty Longenette attorney, second place. and Don Stewart of the Mason VFW,
first place.
and Lela Hawk display the quilt. (Charlene Hoeflichjphoto).

Highway Patrol

turned. went off the right side
of the road. struck an
embankment.
overtvrned
again and came to rest on its
top.
The car had disabling damage. troopers said.

LONG
BOTTOM
Cristy A. Riggs. 34. 36610
Post Office Road, Long
Bottom. was cited for failure
to control by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
CHESTER - A Pomeroy
Highway Patrol following a man was injured in a twoone-car accident Monday on vehicle collision Fridav on
Ohio 248.
Ohio 7 in Chester Towtiship,
Troopers said Riggs was the patrol said.
eastbound in Olive Township
Thomas M. Bowen, 60.
at 7:45 a.m. when she lost 124 Butternut Ave. . was
control of her car in a left transported by Meigs County
curve. ·slid off the right side EMS to Holzer Medical
" It apparently didn't was said to be a safe dis- of the road and struck a ditch. Center, the patrol said.
the . black, minerally ash
The car had funcJional
Troopers said Bowen was
generated by seismic activi- release enough stress to shut tance to see what happens
damage,
troopers
said.
northbound
in an Ohio Power
ty deep within the moun - the earthquakes down," ne~t. Barbecues were fired
at
2:24.
p.m . when he
truck
up and entrepreneurs so ld
tain. Instead. researchers Medema said.
POINT ROCK An slowed to make a right turn
Scientists have said Jhey hot dogs and coffee to peo- Athens County youth was
believe the steam was geninto a private driveway.
erated when hot gases vent- do not expect anything close ple camped along the side of injured in a one-car accident
A northbound car dnven bv
ed off from the volcano and to the devastation of Mount the road.
Saturday on Ohio 689 in James H. Vining. 30. 42116
The 1980 blast obliterated Columbia Township. the Woods Road , Coolville. was
vaporized ice and snow con- St. Helen' s May 18, 1980,
tained in the glacier that on explosion, which killed 57 the top 1,300 feet of the vol- patrol said.
unable to stop in time and
the mountain's highest . people and coated much of cano, devastated miles of · Mishe N. Elmore, 17 . The struck the rear of the pickup.
forest and buried the North Plain s, was transported to the report said.
the Northwest with ash.
reaches.
of the Toutle River in Grant Medical Center folFork
The
recent
eruptions
and
The colli &gt;ion forced the
A drumbeat of earthquakes since a plume of long runiblings deep in side debri s and ash as much as lowing the 7:25 a.m. acci- pickup off left side of the
road. where it overturned on
dent, the report said.
steam was released on the mountain are unprece- 600 feet deep.
its left side. Dama2e to both
Troop~~rs
said
Elmore
was
Thi s time. the main conFriday indicated that pres- dented in the past 24 years .
Among the their hi gges t cern was a significant ash northbound when the driver vehicles was disabling . and
sure was mounting within
the mountain, Geological concerns is that bot and plume c.:arrying gritty pul- lost control of the car in a Vining was cited for assured
Survey
geo logist Tom gassy new magma is filling verized rock and silica that curve. The car th en over- clear distance .
damage
aircraft
the volca nM interior reser- could
Pierson said.
pick up pennie&gt; ...
Crews also observed a voir and priming the vol- engines and the surfaces of
cars
·and
homes.
Musser also believes 'if the
shift in the crater tloor and cano for a significant blast
Many
spectator
s
couldn't
that
wall
cou
ld
send
large
boulcollapse&gt; it would take
on part of the I .000-foot
wait
out
the
mountain.
part of the parking lot\ sidelava dome that essentially ders flying for several
from Page A1
Sunday's sunset brought a
wa lk and galet'&lt;1 with it.
se rves as a plug for magma. miles .
The \ illa~e i' still busv
lf the w~ather cooperates. mass exod us oil the moun- currently searching for grant
• Guy Medema. a seismic
analyst at the University of scientist plan to helicopter tain.
money, the burden of repair- cleaning up the recent !load
"Our
attention
span
is
Wa shin gton's Seismology into ·ihe crater and install
ing the wall will more than dama£e done to &gt;torm sewers
Lab in Seattle. &gt;aid earth- more instrum ents on the about like thi s." said James likely fall on the village al and d-rains but repa iring the
wal l bd'or~ 11 imer is a prioriquakes of magnitude 2 and growing lava dome inside Wilder. 25. of Aberdeen. this point .
·'tt will fa ll." warned !'
3 continued after the steam the crater. The lava dome holding his forefi nger and
Although the ,·illage does
thumb
"about
one-qu-arter
of
Musser
about the wall\ curburst. unlike a steam erup- has risen by 50 feet in
an inch apart. "We've been rent disrepair. "Once it falls it not ·have the S65 .000 to make
tfon Friday. when the earth- recent days. they sa id.
quakes stopped for several 1&lt;crowds have gathered here five h!Jurs and we need will cost somewhere around repair,. Mu., er ,aid they \\'ill
$200,000 to $300.000 to do what they can to preserve
along park roads at what to leave pretty soon."
hours.
replace. I feel like we're the wall with teniporary ,oJuwalking over dollar bill' t0 tions ~w:h a;.; rl.!g rou ting .
arrests were made . Dispatch officers have been assigned make any kind of intensive
records at the she riff' s to work on night&gt; when c,overage of the weekend by
department show only that Martin hosts skateboarding deputies impossible.
"We cou ldn 't place eleven
deputies assisted ·Rutland · parties and special events.
officers
at Skmopia to profile
police officers on a few traf- b.ut he sai u officers are
alway s mindful of reasonable vi~itor~ or harass-them . even
fic arrests that weekend.
"Skatopia brings in 3,000 to cause concerns when they if we wanted to." Tr~ssell
4.000 tourists a,year. llut this investigate complaints or pull said. "We don't have the staff
will deter those people from drivers over. He deni eci any in place to do that."
At Thursday's commi'coming in the future." Martin efforts to ex ploit visitors in
said. •They may not come the name of fines and arr~sts. sioner:-. · meeting. Board
A Big Thank ou
"If we stop someone dri- · Pre"dcn t Jeff Thornton
hack because of the way the y
goes out to Paul Reed and the
were treated by Ioral pol icc . ving into Skatopin or out of explain·ed that commissionth ere. it's only because ers are not rc,pon,iblc for the
Wh ~~~ if son\ething like this
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
happens when MTV is here . there's reason to believe the dailv activities of sheriff's
law is being broken." deputies. and \hat the board is
for sponsoring
or ESPN is here 1"
Deputy Scott Trus~ell · was · Trussell said. "whether it be ·a only re,pnn,iblc for appro"Annie Get Your Gun.. ,
not surprised · bY. Martin 's traffic \·iolation nr reason to priating county ftrnd ; each
.and to
all egations. and officers at believe the driver or a pa'- )ear for the department''
Skatopia know it&gt; location senger might be guilty of a operation. I k ' aid . however.
Bill Buckley and
.
tha t l1c felt Martin w~" ju,ti and i" reputation well. criminal activitv...
Meigs Local Element&lt;l.'ry School
Tru&gt;'ell said. rec·ord, indi - lieu in being concerned if
Tru ssell said officers arc routin ely called by residen ts liv - cate that the countv's canine profiling i' taking place .
for hosting the production.
"U nfortunatel y.". Thornton
ing jJ1 the rural area where drug unit wa;. nut· il\ailablc
"' River City Players ·
Shitopia i' located . fm com - for any investigations on the sa.id . "people are still preJuplaint&gt; about excessive noi\e. June weekend in question . diced. and , make judgments
trallic -infraction' and crimi - and 'ihat the low 'tatTing lc\ - about _people b~tsed on their
nal activity. and that extra cls in tile ckpartmcnt ~ .oulu · :qi'p~arancc or tht&gt;ir lifc~t'ylt' ...

...

Mount St. Helens lets off steam as

scientists wonder whether volcano will blow

'·

Reporter: Berth Sergent. Ext 13

The Daily Sentinel • fage.As

•

For the record

'

Closed minds on college campuses

News

Phyllis (Delbert) Allison of
London and Norma Shively
of Parkersburg, W.Va.; and
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1
p.m . on Wednesday, Oct. 6,
2004. at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport ,with
Delbert Allison officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 7 to,9
p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home, and may send online
condolences to www:fisherfu. neralhomes.com.

Quilt fund-raiser

IWI NOT SURf; Hf'5 RIGHT FOR THE JOB,

SOCIETY IN THIS
LIFETIME?

Edhor: Cllarlene Hoeflich. Ext . 12
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14

MIDDLEPORT - James
Paul
Fisher.
65,
of
Middleport, passed away on
Sunday, Oct. . 3, 2004. at
Holzer Medical Cenrer in
Gallipolis. He was born on
Jan. 17, 1939, in Gallipolis,
son of the late Otho and Alice
Neal Fisher. He was a retired
employee of the Pomeroy
Water Department.
Besides hi s parents, he was
preceded in death by his sister, Ella Shoemaker, and a
brother, Charles "Chuck"
Fisher.
Surviving arc his wife.
Bessie
Quillen
Fisher,
Middleport:
daughters ,
Jeannie (Brent) Slayton of
Indiana and Angie Kerr of
Middleport : four sons: Paul
David (Ruthie) Fisher of
Indiana . David (Cheryl)
Fisher of Rutland, Dewaype
(Tabitha )
Fisher
of
Middleport ,
and · Jay
(Christy)
Fisher
of
Middleport: 12 grandchildren
and a great grandchild: his
mother-in-law. Myrtle Queen
of Middleport : two sisters,

from the media for hinting that
Bush might rein&lt;titute the
draft or. as Sen. Edward
Kennedy. D-Mas, .. charged
this week. that Bush's election
would make nudcar 1\·ar rmm·
likel y.
.
And the meJi &lt;• h;" reponed
without comment the Ken~
ca_mp's daily a"cnions that
Bush "lied." "mi .slcd" and
"deceived" the country to lead
the way into lmq .
While the Bush campaign
- as opposed to the 527
group, Swift Boat Veteran' for .
Truth - has never questioned
Kerry's Vietnam service.
McAuliffe has charged that
Bush was "AWOL" from the
Texas National ' Guard and
Kerry himself said that Bu,h
and Cheney "refused to ,crv~
when thev could have. "
The latest Gallup poll show'
that voter;. think that both parties have been equally unfai"
in attacking each other. By my
reckoning. the Democrats arc
still well out in front.
(Mm1on Kondracke is P\Huril·e ediror of' Roll Call. rite
neii-'Spap&lt;'r of G'r'irul Hill.)

A WIRELESS

(740) 992-2156. .
Department extensions are:

JaiiLeS riSher

Co. are g.L:Iting a virtual pa!&lt;!"

Moderately Confused .

Our main number is

Obituaries

Milbank and the Time'
reacted with outrage to
Speaker Dennis Hasten';.. RIll.. speculation that AI
Qaeda would prefer a Kerr)
presidency and statemen"
by Sen' Orrin Hatch. RUtah, and Deputy Secreta~:
of State Richard Arrnita g~
that terrorists are trying to
defeat Bush:
No one ha;. accused Kcn0
of favoring terrorist;.. Th~) 're
saying that Bush i' a better t~r­
ror-fighter than Kerry and that
AI Qaeda know' it. It\ "hat
the Anll'l it:an people think.
too, by a "ide margin .
In the 111e~mtimc. Ken)' &amp;

Pomeroy

2156 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

· Tuesday, October 5, 2004

Chuck Yo.utrg

Reader Services

Tuesday,~ober5,2004

Dems still lead in low-blow department

T)te Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Page A4

For years, there has been an
insistent call for diversity on
college campuses, usually
centered on underrepresented
race and certain ethnic applicants. But lost in this debate
Nat
1
on aftirmative action is the
Hentoff
need for diversity of · ideas.
both conservative and liberal.
An article in the Sept. 24 issue
of the prestigious Chronicle of
Higher Education reports that California at Los Angeles: "Of
. "on left-leaning campuses more than '55,000 fac ulty
around the country, professors members and adminisirators
on the right feel disenfran- in 2002-2, " reports the
chi sed."
Chronicle
of
Higher
Yet, Sen. John Kerry - as . Education, "48 r)ercent identiquoted in the Sept. 17-19 New fied themselves as either tiberYork Sun- dismisses "the idea al or far-left: 34 percent as
that there is an ideological " middle-of-the'road, and only
bias on college and university 18 percent as conservative- or
faculti_es" as a fantasy of "con- far-right."
servaltve talk-show hosts."
Occasionally wlteJI I teach,
But professor · Robert l give each student a pocket
Brandon, chairman of the phi- copy of the U.S. Constitution
losophy department at Duke on the first day of class
University,
presumably because I have found that the
unaware of Kerry's dictum, history and content of that
says: "We try to hire the best, document - essential to the ·
smartest people available. I( education of an American on
as John Stuart Mill said, stu- free speech and free , inquiry
ptd people are generally con- is only sketchily and
servative, then there are lots of quickly tau ght in too many
.cons~rvat ives we will never secondary schools. ·
hrre.
But, in t-he New York Sun,
If I still had children filling Ruben David Johnson, a hrilo.ut college applications, I liant , nationall y respected
would be .hard-pressed to scholar and persistently indeadvtse them on where they . pendent historv professor at
had a chance to learn from a . Brook! yn College and· the
faculty . that would enable City University of New. York
them to thrnk for themselves. Graduate Center- writ.es:
Consider this .survey by 'the
"Bro'ok!yn College ptesiHtgher EdUCl\llOn Research dent Christoph Kimmich
Institute at the University, of recently installed on the histo·

tinuous act of k:arnmg '' d.. ,
infectious. He did not fi,JJ."'
an ideological pany line.
Currently. iltthe l lnil c'l',lt\
of Montana\ Ia\\ " ·hunI. lui ;
profe"or Robert N:rtci \lJn
has experienced the part vline barriers on c1mpuscs
He wants to teach c·urtstitu.tional t·aw. hut cb piie hts
scholarl y publicatio n' on th e
subject, he was rejected f(&gt;r "
vacancy in that cour,e foirr
times. When an outside
mediator got the uni vcrsit1
to let Natelson teach the
course next spring. on a teri1- ·
porary basis. a le llo w law
professor
there
Scott
Burnham told the Chronic le
of Higher Education:
"The problem is our litw
school has a culture where it's
not receptive to an exchan~c
of views." Burnham di sagre~ s
wuh Natelson's free -market
conservatism, but believes he
should be able to teach constitutiQ,nlillaw. lilthat univer,it v
enclave of heavily weinhted
dom."
intellectual bias. shouldtit the
But what of the right of stu- ' students ha~e the right to an
dents in so-called higher edu- exchange of views on the faccation to exercise free inquiry ulty''
in the·essence of lifelong edu, Doesn't their tuition cover
cation and of citizei1ship 0 their right to h&lt;rve that diversi When I was an undergraduate . ty?
long ago at working-class
(Nar Heniu!J i.1 tl IWtiona/1 ,
Northeastern Uni versity in renoum'ed awlwritr on tlte
Bo, ton. Professor Elmer' Cutts First Ammdmc•u wid rhe /Jill
taught me 'the excitement of ufRighrs and 11111hor ofsel'&lt;'l'-·
re searching . American arid a/ hooks, inclrtdi11g ''71t&lt;' Wt11·
world history. I never knew on rile Bill '!I flif!hrs a11d th 1•
what his politics were, but his Gatherilll! Ri'.\'1,\ IW/ce" ( Se1 ·eil
passionate delight in the con- Srories Press, 2003 ).

ry per;onnel . committee,
which controls future staf!ing
decisions. a senior professor
who had informed him that
studying about the history of
Ame1ican political institutions
is useful only for a 'certain
type of student. almost always
a young whit~ male."'
Johnson asks: "Imagine the
outcry if a college president
(said ) th&lt;H African-American
history classes are appropriate
only for 'a cenain type of student, almost always' ·a young
black female."' Johnson
waged a hard-fought battle to
ge t . tenure at Brooklyn
College, and you can see why.
He is, in Duke Ellington·~
phrase. "beyond category."
When complaints are raised
with col lege presidents,
provosts and trustees about
what amounts to widespread
faculty inculcation of their
·ideologies .in their teaching,
the customary response from
on high is a vigorous invocation of "sacred·academic free-

MOUNT ST. HELENS
NATIONAL MONUMENT.
W~1.sh . (AP I Mount St.
Helens belched steam thousands of feet above the volcano's
crater
Monday ,
apparently the larges t burst
yet as days of tremors and
low- leve l earthquakes have
raised fears the volcano will
blow at any moment.
Scientists said it was
unclear whether a larger
eruption was &gt;ti ll expected .
A thick. white cloud billo~ed and shrouded the vo lcano's sttattcred summit.
then wind slowl y stee red the
cloud to the west. Within .10
minutes or so, the c loud had
dissipated and the summit
was clearly visible again.
Monday\ steam relea se
followeu a similar blast and
20- minute
tremor
late
Sunday.
"Something is driving J,ike a pi ston - something is
driving up. We believe it's
magma." said Jeff Wynn ,
chief scienti ' t for volcano
hazards at Vancouver, Wash.
Researchers sa id the
emission contained little,

or

Allege
from Page A1
' place ."
" Meigs'County has a reputation for allowing people a
little bit of freedom. and
th&lt;i't', une reason we attract a
lot of visitiJrs.'' Martin said.
"But those 'crazy' events are
onlv two-day' a year. The rest
of 'the time. it' s a quiet
plare ." "
Martin said a weekendlong eveht in June attracted
II poli ce officers and three
~ dru·g units to the roads near
his property. and th at. offocers
hara;,sed vi,itors and "profiled" manv with ,kateboarding and. Skatopia sticker;, on
their vehrcles . Marlin satd
over 200 people were pulled
over in the course of the
weekend. and that ··only a
handful " of mi,derneannr

•

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OH~-

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- - - - - - - -- -· - ·

...

Wall

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..

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PageA6..

'OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 5,

The Daily Sentinel

Redwomen lose two, Page B2
Eamharilt's may be In trouble, Page _B6

2004

Bl

'

INSIDE

Tuesday, Octobers. 2004

NewsChannel

POstseason
Baseball
All Times EDT
DIVISION SERIES
American League
New York vs. Minnesota
Tuesday, Oct. 5
Minnesota (Santana 20·6) at
New York (Mussina 12·9), 8:19
p.m. (FOX)
Wednesday, Oct. 6
Minnesota (Radke 11 ·8) at New
York (Lieber 14·8), 7:09 p.m.
(ESPN)
Friday, Oct. 8
New York (Hernandez 8·2 or
Brown 10·6) at Minnesota (Silva
14·8), 8:09p.m. (ESPN)
Saturday, Oct. 9
New York at Minnesota, if nee·
essary
Sunday, Oct. 10
Minnesota at New York , if nee·
essary

Stagehand Denn1s Boddy works on the backgrounq (or ~e vice-presidential debate Monday at
Case Western University in Cteyetand. Vice President Dick Cheney and DemocratiC challenger
John Edwards will hold their lone debate Tuesday night.

Spotlight shines on VP
debate·host Cleveland
THOMAS J. SHEERAN

Weather forecast
Thesday, October 5

Morni11g (7 a.m.-No011)
Temperatures will rise to
51 with 10day's low of .14
o&lt;:curring around 7:00am.
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from ihe north
turning from the northeast as
the morning progresses.
Ajtemoo11 (/·6 p.m.) 1.
Temperatures wil l remain
around 55 with today's high
of 57 OC'curri~g arounu
3:00pm. Skies will be sunny
with 5 MPH winds from the
northeast.

ASSdCIATED PRESS WRITER

..· E••eui1111 (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
T~mperatures

Wednesday, October 6

Mor11i11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)

will fall
Temperatures will drop
fmm 49 early thi s evening
to -+2. Skic.s will be l'lear from 39 early this morning
with 5 MPH winds from the to 3R by 7:00am then climb
northea,t turning froni the back up to 58 late morning.
ea:-.l as the even in g pro - Skies will be sun ny with 5
MPH winds from the north·
gre~Sl:~.
east turning from the east as
Overnight ( 1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will stay the morning progresses.
Aftemoou (1-6 p.m.)
near 40. Skies will be clear
temperatures will hold
with 5 MPH winds from the
east turnin~ from the north· steady around 62. Skies will
ea.st as the ovemight pro· be sunny with calm turning
from the southwest as the
gresscs.
afternoon progresses.

Retailers betting on
poker's rising popul~rity
o

TOLEDO (AP) · With
poker's popularity growing
because of televised tournaments, retailers are betting
that playing cards and ch ips
will be among the must-have
items during the holiday
shopping season.
Stores are showcasing uisplays of casino-quality chips
and gaming tables with hold·
ers for drinks anti betting
chips.
"''m not a big poker player.
but I know a lot about it
because it's such a hot item··
Kmart spokeswoman Caryn
Klebba said. "It seems like
the teenagers are in love with
it."
·walmart . spokeswonwn
Karen Burk said the renewed
interest in poker may make a
deck · of cards the top stocking stuffer of the holidays

this year.
Poker, which was introduced to much of the country
the
by
riverboats
on
Mi&gt;&lt;issippi and Ohio rivers
in the 1800s. is now seeing
another surge thanks to cable
nel\vorks . televi· ~ in g tournil ments at all hours are fueling
the poker craze.
"Tite Worlu Series oi'
-Poker" on ESPN alung with
Bravo's "Celebrity Pokrr
Showdown·· anti the "World'
Poker lour" on the Tral'el
Channel arc among the
bigge st hits.
Few networks were interested in poker umil the
World Poker Tour turned into
an overnight ~uccess a ·year
ago.
·PokerS!'tr\ .com. a popular
poker Weh ;ite that offer;
games online. c ... ti.mate~

based on ane&lt;·dotal research
that. from 50 million to 60
million people play poker at
least once a month.
Games range from hi gh
school studei11s gathering in
basements
on
weekend
nights to organized tourna ~
ments.
Noah Campbell. 25, started
a weekend tournament in
Toledo this year that draws a
combined 80 players on
Friday and S&lt;tluruay nights.
with the money going to
charities.
He spent at least $2.000
buying t.ables. cards and
chips. Campbell said many
of his friend s are buying
their own supplies too ' _
including high-end chips and
can)&gt; .
·'They want emulate what
they see on TV," he said.

CLEVELAND · The city'o
travel industry is · hoping
Cleveland is the big winner in
Tuesday night's vice presidential debate.
Dennis Roche, president of
the
Greater
Cleveland
Convention and Visitors
Bureau. said the influx of
politicians and media for the
debate between Vice President
Dick Cheney and Sen. John
Edwards had sold out 7,500
rooms. "That means the town
is sold out," he said Monday.
In addition to the immediate
economic impact estimated at
nearly $20 million, Roche
said the city should reap a lot
of positive publicity around
the nation and the world during the debate coverage.
"We have a' substantial foreign press corps here. so there
will be significant international exposure.'' Roche said .
That should make it easier to
sell the city as a tourist desti·
nation. he said.
As he spoke, CNN's daily
political show broadcast live
from the picturesque grounds
of the Cleveland Museum of
Art down the street from the
debate location at Case
Western Reserve University.
Roche said he had been
asked by visiting press about
the recent Census Bureau
report listing Cleveland as the
nation's poorest big city. He
said the debate coverage
would give the city a chance
to show off a more po si tiv~
side.
Democratic and Republican
city and county officials from
around the nation tried to
steal a sliver of the interna·
tiona! attention with a news
conference calling for local
issues to be addressed in the

• ••

Anaheim vs. Boston
Tuesday, Oct. 5
Boston (Schilling 21·6) at
Anaheim (Washburn 11·8), 4:09
p.m. (ESPN)
Wednesday, Oct. 6
Boston (Martinez 16·9) at
Anaheim (Colon t8·12), 10:09
p.m. (ESPN)
Friday, Oct. 8
Anaheim (Escobar 11-t 2) at
Boston (Arroyo 10·9 or
Wakefield 12-tO), 4:09 p.m.
(ESPN)
Saturday, Oct. 9
Anaheim or Minnesota at
Boston, il necessary
Sunday, Oct. 10
Bos.ton at Anaheim or
Minnesota, if necessary

debate.
issues Iike police and tire pro·
Case Western Reserve . tection and local services.
University did some final
That was also the feeling of
primping Monday for its 90 Cleveland
Mayor
Jane
minutes in the spotlight as Campbell. who said issues
host of the debate. The uni·
versity has spent $4.1 million like afforuable housing and
on the host fee and upgrades educatio n
should
be
to the debate site, the Veale addressed by Cheney and
Euwards in .addition to homeathletic center.
The campus of nearly land security.
10.000 students and more
"When it all comes clown to
than 5.000 staff and faculty it. it comes down to the local
members hummed with activ- .level ," said Campbell. a
ity Monday, with security
vehicles blocking roads and Democrat who has cam·
network satellite trucks se.t· pai gned with· Edwards and his
ting up outside the athletic running mate John Kerry.
center.
Akron
Mayor
Don
Most student s did some Plu squellic. a Democrat and
rubbernecking and headed off . presiuent of the
U.S.
to class on a cool: wmdy day. Conference of Mayors. said a
.
"Obvtously n s "Omg to .
.
· .·
" .
btpar!lsan group of mayors
bnng the natrona! spothght to
. . .
..
G
G·
·barro
.
would
repeat
the1r
us.
reg as
, 20 , ,1
. .
. mststence
sophomore from
nearby that local tssues be addressed
Hudson, said as he emerged on the eve of th e tinal'presi·
from an engineering calculus dential debate in Tempe.
class.
AriL. on O&lt;:t. l .l.
Gasbarro. who identified
The
Cleveland
event
him self as an undecided booked up hotels. including
Republican. said the top issue
6'15 -room
the
in the election for him i'
lnterCominental
Hotel
and its
opposition to reviving the
adjacent gue st house and
military draft.
While he said bringing back sui tes on the Cleveland Clinic
the draft "seems like political medical research campus next
suicide" for either party. to Case.
Gasbarro said he was skepti·
"There's a great hun. great
cal and would vote tvr . elcctrl&lt;:ity going on here.
wh1chever
party
.
. had the
. most .. w·e, re a11 caug 111·up ·1n . th at ."
uonclad policy agamst a
.d • d
G ·
h
draft.
sat ,-.,.n rew •&lt;IJary. me 1
Jonathan Nwachukwu. 18, manager. The complex books
a freshman from Louisville. ~p only a few times •a year. he
Ky., said local issues some- said.
times get ignorea in the big·
The hotel\ restaurant and
issue campaign themes .
bar will accommodate ihe late
""It feels like they forge t hours of the debate, which
&lt;tbout real, everyday people."
said Nwachukwu. Newly reg· goes frot.1l 9 · 1OJO p.m.
L'tered to vote and planning to Tue sday, hy staying open
apply for an absentee ballot, until· 2 a.m . Wednesday.
he thinks Cheney and Normal closing hours are II
Edwards should address p.m . to I a.m.

• ••

National League
St. Louis vs. Los Angeles
Tuesday, Oct. 5
Los Angeles (Perez 7·6) at St.
Louis (W.Wi tliams 11·8). 1 09
p.m. (ESPN)
Thursday, Oct. 7.
Los Angeles (Weaver 13·13) at
St . Louis (Marquis 15·7). 8:19
p.m . (FOX)
.
Saturday, Oct. 9
St. Louis (Morris 15·10) al Los
Angeles (Lima 13-5)
Sunday, Oct. 10
St. Lou 1s (Suppan 16·9) at Los
Angeles (Perez 7·6). if neces·
sary
'Monday, Oct. 11
'
Los Angeles at St. Louis, if nee·
essary
I

CLEVELAND tAP) but had little criticism for
the
plan.
With closed department
Schneiuer ,aid construcstores sitting empty down town. the city hopes to tion coulu start hy next
revive its retail business with :Yiarch and be mostly done
a suburban-style shopping by fall 2006. if fimmctng .
mall featuring "big-hox" tenants and other matters fall
stores at a former steel yard.' inio place.
The idea has been tried'
Pre,liminary plans call for
successfully
elsewhere. up to I million syuare fee t
including the Brooklyn. of retail. with fi ve major
N.Y. , Gateway Center. which retailers. a supermarket and
has been fully leased since 11 -1.500 parking spaces.
opened two years ago.
"C levelan d·,, · Stee lyard
The proposed Cle.ve land Common.; is going to be a
shopping center. called' tremcnuous con' enie nce:·
Stedyard Common,, has Schneider said.
been pitched by Mitchel l
Schneider ha s declined to
Schneider, president of First ' name retailer; he is pursuInterstate Properties Ltd., ing. but the cnnce.pl hn ~ a
who developed Legacy heen useu in other ci ties to
Village in Lynuhurst.
attract the like; of Aarne s &amp;
The $90 million project Noble and Staples .
would be built on 130 ac res
" It make' it a one -stop
south
of
downtown shoppin g destination retail
Cleveland near Interstates 71 ·center.'' sa1d Ana Blumenau
and 90 and the Jenning &gt; with the Relateu Cnt11panies.
Freeway.
which
developed
the
"It's huge," city Plannin g . Gateway Center on former·
Director Chri ~ Ronayne sa id. marshland in the East New .
The
city
Plann1ng .
Comm iS\io n appro ved site
and de sign co nceph on
Friday. Commi;sion mem·
bers urged Schneider to pro·.
vi'de space. amcnitie l and
pub li c. art for pedest ri ans .

ed real estate taxes at $2.5
.York section of Brooklyn.
In community meetings. million yearly and estimated
Schneider has mentioned the a payroll of up to $35 mil·
suburban Avon Commons lion, which would yield as
shopping center that First muth as $700.000 in income
Interstate developed as a tax for the · city. Schneider
model
for
Steelyard thinks the project could pro·
Commons. Large retailers vide I,800 full -time jobs.
A Case Western Reserve
there inc lude Costco. Target .
University economist ques·
Home Depot and Kohl's.
City officials said the pro- tinned why the city would
pos~! would help Cleveland
ba\:k a retail proposal at the
regain retail trade lost to site instead of hi ghe r p~ying
suburban
mall s. manufacturi ng or health-care
Clevelanders spend one-third positions.
"Retu iling jobs, casrno
of their shoppi ng dollars about $1 J billion annually jobs, any of those kind of
- c\utside .the city. accord- jobs barely make a living
ing to a retail study done w&amp;ge," said Ed · Morrison. •
this year.
"We need to look for higher·
"We have a chance to curb value business opportuni·
the outflow of Cleve land ties ...
consumers. getting in their
But some .neighbor; are
car' and driving to North excited. Pete Caraballo. 60.
Olmsted. Valley View, Avon who owns a two-story house
or Lake County. simply to just north of the site and
buy their con&gt;umer good&lt;' goes to the suburbs to buy
Rona yne said.
hardware and clothing, said
Schnciuer. who has sought he would love the conveno tax breaks "' far. cstinmt· nience of nearby shopping . .

" "

Coming lhursdaX}~ the Sentinel ... ..

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~~ Deadline for Entry:
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Thursday,

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October 21

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On\y
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per Ad
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Mail or drop off at the Daily Sentinel
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Chiefs finally
win a game

;,

Cleveland hoping for suburban-type shopping center downtown

•

Atlanta vs. Houston
Wednesday, Oct. 6
Houston (Clemens 18·4) at
Atlanta (Wright t5·8), 4:09p.m.
(ESPN)
Thursday, Oct. 7
Houston (Oswalt 20·10) at
Atlanta (Thomson 14·ffl, 4:09
p.m. (ESPN)
Saturday, Oct. 9
Atlanta (Hampton 13·9) at
Houston
Sunday, Oct. 10
· Atlanta at Houston , if necessary
Monday. Oct. 11 ·
Houston at Atlanta , if necessary

..

BALTIMORE (AP)
Winles.s no more, the Kansas
City Chiefs rendered the
Baltimore Ravens defenseless
with an almost unimaginable
display of ball control and
pattence. ·
Priest Holmes ran for 133
yards and two touchdowns.
and the Chiefs wore down the
highly touted
ll'aitlmtrrc
defense in a 27-24 victory
Monday night.
Trent Green went 21-for-31
for 223 yards to help Kansas
City (1-3) to its first win since
Dec. 28. After going IJ.J a
year ago. the Chiefs were off to
their worst 't~u1 si nee 1980.
· Through three qmlrters.
" J&lt;ansas City hau 22 tirst downs
. compared to four for the
~avens and a 36 1-126 advan·
t~ge in yardage. A 1-ymd
touchdown nm by ·Holmes on
the tirst pia} of the fourth quarter put the Chiefs up 27 · 17.
and that proved to be enough
to end the Ravens' seven-game
)lome winning streak.
Holmes, who played for
Baltimore .[rom 1997,2000.
became the tirst playe r to run
for 100 yards against the
Ravens in ·.10 games. He carried 33 time's. .22 in the tirst
half.
B&lt;iltimore 'S last los' at home
was last year to the Chiefs by a
17-10 score . On Monda y
night. Kansas City had 17
point~ by halftime .

Tornadoes declaw ·Tomcats in four
BY SCOTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent .
RACINE - Led by persistence anti consistency,
the Southern Lady Tornadoes de-clawed the
Trimble Lady Torocats Monday night in a Tri·
Valley Conference Hocking division varsity volleyball match in Charles W. Hayman gymnasium.
Southern claimed the tilt in four highly compel·
itive matches. all squeakers. 23-25, 26-24. 25-1 ~.
and 25-19..
Southern narrowly trailed much· of the first portion of game one, but tied the score at · I0- I0 on a
pair of Ashley Rou sh serves. The rest of the contest was a game of ~at-and-mouse with Trimble
once again claiming the slightest edge.

the score to 23-21 fur Southern but Trimble went
on to claim the exciting 25-23 wi n:
lnthe :second ga me, after trailing 19-15,Trimble
tonk the lead at 20-19 on five points from
Southpaw Julie Trace . Southern trailed 21-22 but
Rou ' h tied th e score. then gave SHS a one point
euge at 22-2.l Fighting back and forth in a ·onepoint differential. Southern's Kristiina Williams
brought the Tornauoc; back from a one-point
deficllto score the last three points for the Tornado
win. 26-24.
· ...
Negler
Senior Brooke Ki ser gave Southern a 4-2 lead in
Williams
Roush
the th ird game of the night. but Trace knotted the
TraiWng 19- 13, Coach Roma Sayre's trngps cut score at 6-6 fo r Trimble. Bethany Riffle boo~ted
the uetkit to one point at 19-18 !Bethany Riffle SHS to an II-~ advantage. then senior Roush lift·
serve, ). but Trimble opened the spread to 23- 18 on
Please see Tornadoes, Bl
a trio of tallies from Carrie Woodgcrd. Roush cut

Reds can't emerge from Eastern
_
one of their deepest ruts defeats
Waterford
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI tAP ) - Percheu
halfway up the stairs that connect the
Reds· dugout with the tiel d. Ken
Griffey Jr. lm&gt;ked down at his close
friend. and smiled.
Team captain Ba1ry Larkin wore a
somber expression as he emerged
" 1
·
·
from .
the
dugout tunnel
and hcadeu for
hatting prac WRAPUP tice
.
"Hey. this is
your worla thi s weeke nd." Junior
reminded him.
Larkin· grinned briefly. th en
climbed the stairs and stepped onto
the lield with a fm·away ga1.c. \till
Jeep in thought.
_
Yes. thi' was his worlu - for.cme
last time. perhaps. And. like everyone
else. he \V&lt;~ I]'t sure wl1a1 to make of
it.
The Cincinnati Red' completed
another losing season over the wcekcnu with more questions than clue'
about where the franchise is headed.
They're stuck in a rut of historic pro·
portions .
·
A 2-0 lo" Sunday to the Piushurgh
Pirates - their NL Central 'oul
mates in miserv - c·ompleted the
· Reds· founh stt~ai ght losing season.
their longest such slft'lch 'ince they
well! from 1945-55 without a win·
ning recun.l.
The shutout also left them with a
losing record at horne for the fourth
consecutive season - thev haJn ·t
done that si nee 1929-J-1. ·
Expectation' have faflen so low
that the 76-Ho tini .,h wa' deemed a
step forwaru.
"After as bad as last year was. just
to bring fun back into the clubhouse
was a plus for us." said close r Danny
Graws. who had -1 I save, . "We
know that we· re going hack toward
the right directio.n - at least. that's
what I feel right now. Mayhe the offseason will answer some questions a
liule bit more."
There's no 'hortage ofthose.
When the Reus movcu into Great
American Ball park last year. they
thought they were headed for playoff
contention. Instead, the pitching staff
imploded. the lineup was ravaged by
injuries and ownersnip decided to
save money and start over.
A trading spree cannibalized the
roster and set up a 93-loss season that
squandered all the goodwill from the
new ballpark.

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydaitytribune.com
WATERFORD - After a tight first·
game win. Eastern breezed to beat ,
Waterford in three games Monday, 25·
23. 25-14. 25-5 .
Morgan Weber had 15 kills for the
Eagles ( 11--1. 9-3). · while Darcy
Wincbrinner hau five kills. Erin Weber
and Jen Hayman each had four kills
and Casey Smith added three.
Leading th e Eagles in serving was
Jillian Brannon. who was 23-for-24
serving with 20 points. Hayman had
10 points an Morgan Weber nine.
Eastern was 70-for· 75 serving on
the nig ht.
,
The Eagles also won the j unior var·
sity contest, 25-19, 25-19 .
Eastern plays host to Southern
today.

04 REDS

Marauders
fall to
Buckeyes
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune .com
Cincinnati Reds shortstop Barry Larkin prepares to bat during their game with
the Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday in Cincinnati. Larkin .. who made the Nat1onat
League att·star team at the age of 40. doesn 't know if he witt be back with the
Reds next season. (AP)

Reds have a lot of holes
heading into offseason
BY

JoE

KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI - Some of the
biggest questions facing the
Cincinnati Reds as they come off
their founh straight losing season.
• What's the payroll?The Reds
slashed it to $43 million in their
second season at Great American

Ball Park, ranking 25th in the
majors. Outfielders Adam Dunn
and Austin Kearns are eligible for
arbitration and major raises from
their salaries of $445,000 and
$400,000, respectively. Unless
ownership reverses course and
significantly increases the payroll,
the front oftice's options are limit·

Pluse see Holes, Bl

Please see Reds, Bl

1\ELSONV ILL E - With Samantha
Cole. one of Meigs key players at the
net. out hecau'e of an illness,
Ne lsonvil le- York was able to pull off a
th ree game win over the Marauders•
Mond,i\. 25-23. 25-11. 25·20 .
Renee Bailey led the Marauders (9-5.
8c-l Tri-Valley Conference) at the net
with I0 kills. while Megan Garnes had
four kill; and Em ily Ashley three .
Meanwhi le. Brittany Hysell had two
block , anti two kilb.
The top scorer for Meigs was Erin
Cullums with eight points on 11-of-13
sen·ing. Cu llums al so had seven assists,
while Joey Haning, had etght assists :
Ashlev and Cassie Lee each had four
~ints.
.
Meig.; was a combined 48-for-54 servrng.
· The ~ larauJers won the junior varsity
comest. 25 · 1(l. ~5-8.
.
·
Meigs will play host to Alexander
todav.

National Football League

Bengals holding up the rear once again
BY. JoE KAY .

. Associated Press
, CINCINNATI - Boy. Jnes. this
feel familiar.
One month into the sea,o n. the
Cin&lt;:innati B~ngal s are languishing in
the last place anyone wat1t' to be. the
one place they can 't &gt;eem to e;capc.
, They ' re hottom dwellers &lt;lgain.
A 28-17 lo" in Pittsburgh has thein
·bringing up the rear in the AFC North
with a . ]..1 record·. the ·type t&gt;l ,]ow
\ta rt that ut10nled them ·in their fir; I
season und,·, coach rVbrvin Lewis
and threaten s .to do 'o th~ 'ec&lt;lllu
tim~ arnund :
·

here:·
\.Vflf\C. thL'\' . \"C

think about it.

1"'' ur "lwr~ it left off.
hN~ad. t h~' ·, e faded ra.11 and fnt·
tc-red ·a\\ ,1) much of their support . .
"La,t y: ear's . ].J wa, almost a
relief:· Le" i&gt; 'aiel Munday. "'This
ye.ar. for 'omepeople. it has you in a
p.mil· on the edge of your chair. I
rhink that"' the biggest difference.
"Last )car. the expectation was not
there. Thi') ear. it's a disappointment
more than ilnythin$. albeii it's the
'~'me. record at I - J.·
.
tim~: cxpeLt;Hitllh ar.:n't thl' ... amc :
It "ill h~ wugher to rebound from ...
l .l'\\ l' madl' a c_, . . t ... ttl!\ ~'IlL' or hi ... th1' nne . The 'cheJule is.rougher and
\)rt'. . c;t...lm pnori ti ~-.... anJ tr ied tr'l get the roster t&gt; depleted by inJuries,
Jhl' tc,tm po Ji..,hcU in training ~..· amp :'\O · fnrcing rookies to pia) major roles
il lOU]d h(' ,It ih hL""'l in the \lpC11111f!
Please see Bengals, Bl
rlh' lllll ..httl' l''\ l'l' l'tt'd tP 'L'C the tl·am

Si rh.' L' j l)91. tht·~ · \l' gnnc 1\ -..C in
"At
tile
hee inni nc · i&gt;f till' ... ca,on·.., np~ning mnnth . Th~y
LhC :-.~a ... n!1. rw &lt;th' a' " "tumble: nut nf the !.!ate and
(~llC
\\ &lt;tn l L'd ...pc nJ the n: . . t uf th~ yettr lry inf t~l
it." ofh: n . . i,·c rew\·cr. Thev d1d it in U\\ i&lt;' fiN
ta ckle \\'illic . . ~a-.nrl. ~lpl'rling \\ ith a 1-3 . mark
.- \ndcr"' n ''lid h~f~m..• pia~ 1ng lhc m. . ~hc-. int u l'On·
~luncht) . " But tentinn and fini . . hin!.! S-X.
IHl\\ .
it'..,
"Tiw~ ;-. \\llcrc \~C w~re Ja,t \Car
'111d "~ fo u~ht nut uf it." quarterba,·k
gnt 1\\ (l' \\Cek.-... In Cmun Painter 'atd .
. There·, one ";major JiffercllL:~! lh i~

The Be·n~al" .n ill :.pl'nJ tlwrr !1~c

we-ek fi~hting the leel ing thai the~
can·t '"''ape thci·, f"te . !'he) h.l\l'n ·t
had a winnin!.! rccorJ 'i!h:c JlJtJH. a
J..i-\car ;.tr.el l~h that ha" a ~,.·ll lliii Hlll
thrc.1d .

+
.

'

"

•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

•

College Volleyball

Holes

Redwomen drop a
pair of AMC matches
•

STAFF REPORT
sports@ myda1lytnbune com

CEDARV ILLE - The Un11erstty of R10
Gr.mde Redwomen volleyb,dl squ,td d10pped
two Amencan Mtdeast Conference Smith
DIVIston matche&gt; on Saturday at Ccddrvtlle
R1o Grande (9 16, I 5 AMC South) lost to
NAJA No 14 Cedan 1lle (tor the thtrd ume th is
season) mthe first match of the day 20 30 I I
30 and I0 10
Sophomore outSJde hmer
Lmdsa) Unon paced the Redwomen offenSIVely w1th seven kills Jumor outs1de/m1ddle
httter Lynnette Ktesltng and sophomore tlllddle h1tter Melissa D&lt;1ss follov.ed up Urton wllh
ftve kills each K1eslmg added two solo
blocks
Semor outs1de httter Chelsea DeGarmo tal
hed 15 d1gs to lead the Rw defense She v.as
also 8 tor 8 servmg F1eshmen Alex Savage
and Jodt Smllh posted s1x d1gs e.tch
Sophomore seller JesSJca Ve,JLh regiStered

Reds
from Page 81
Thts ye.tli?Jhere w~re tewer trades- Irankly
not much "'" left to de,tl And tor a couple ot
gtddy months, the Reds ~;ere the talk ol baseball
for somethtng other than &lt;:ontraversy
Gnttey enJO)ed what amounted to a renmssdnce dS he closed 111 on 500 home1 s ,md d lowrent p11ch111g staff somehow kept up w1th the
h1gh rollers The Reds had the best record 111 the
N.ItJonal Le&lt;~gue "' summer appJO.tched
By early tul) they were Ill a flee f,tll
lnJunes to Gnttey Austin Ke,rrns .md Sc,m
Casey left the lmeup feeble ,md the p1tchmg
staff tound tts level ':ind sank belo\\ 11
II w.ts a t,tmlil.tr epnhct
It seems hke for the last three ye.trs we 1e
nght there for the first two or three months and
we 1e only " p1ece or two .tway tram std) 1ng
nght there Keams sa1d \\.e have to keep
everybody healthy It we uo that we could be
really gooc!
'&gt;'.hen Gntfev ts he&lt;tlthv the lineup ts pdn2eloth He Wds hntmg 251 w1th 20 hon'leiS ,mu 60
RBis \\hen he tore hts hamstnng 1equmng
more surgery He II be 15 111 No\ ember w1th "
recent h~&gt;tory ot m,uor lllJlllles ,md tour years
lett on hiS contract at $12 5 nullton per season
Kearns "only 24 but hds also tuli1ed 11110 dn
IllJUT) -prone player, depm 111g the lmeup ot
another one of Lis best run producers
Unfortunately we c,m't stay health)

15 .tsststs ,md t.tlilcd t11e &lt;ilgs
Rto 11111shes the se,tson senes Wtth
Ccd,lt vtlle (2~-2 7 0 AMC South) at 0-3
In the second 11111lh the Redv.oJnen pl.tyed
benet agallbt Mount Ve111011 Naz&lt;trenc (19 9,
4 3 AMC South) but1t v.,tsn't enough to get .1
wm as they d10pped three sti.Hght games (IR10 20-30 and 17 10) to lose the nMtch
K1eslm g ".ts ,, I01 ce at the net for the
Redwomen notch1ng 14 ktlls with two solo
blocks and one blm:k .tsstst DeGarmo had
se\en k1lh while Doss .tdded SIX
Sdvage led the defense Wllh 14 dtgs Veach
( 12) and DeGarmo (II) ,tlso 1eached double
figures 111 dtgs for the Redwomen Ve,tch accumulated 22 &lt;tss!'ts
Sn11th ,md DeGarmo were the top ser\ers
both gomg 9-tor-9
R10 Grande will hook up wtth MVNU tn the
final home march of th e season fo1 the
Red women Oct 28 ,,t the Nev. I Oliver A1ena
The Redwomen will t,tce Sh,Jwnee State (n
9) 7 p m 1 uesday .tt the Newt Ol1ver A1ena
Gr,l\e&gt; smd 'When we hltve ,til ou1 guys out
there were p1etty d.ml good But 1! yolll mun
pl,tyers Cdll t pl.tl fhdt s ,, btg blow The list
goes on ~md on
- Health w.1sn t the problem wtth the pllchm~
stat! I he bullpen wds plildged bv the 200"1 ll dllmg sp1ee ,mu the pltLhm,; p1ospeds obtamed 111
retu1 n h&lt;~ven t patd d11tdends so l.u
B) m.mv meast11es thiS"'" the woJSt stdfl 111
franchiSe hiStor) g11mg up a club 1ecord 907
runs - most 111 the maJors- dnd ~16 homers.
only three sh) ot the NL record
R12ht h.mde1 Paul Wilson led the staff wllh II
wms m.tde $"1 S 1mllion ,md would like to
1etum Othe1 WISe there s not much expenence
to bmld alound
You can have a tew good weeks 01 " few
good months but vou h,l\en t p1men anyth1ng
unttl you ve had " good lew yews C1se) s,ud
It" tough to wm w1th )'Oung gu)s YouiM\e to
h,l\ e " lound,mon tor the young guy s
Rtght now. the1e 1s no toumJat1011
Nc) te,nn c.tptam e11he1
,
Larkm would hkc to ICillrn f01 "~Oth s~.tson
w1th IllS ilometo\\n te.Im whllil deuded not to
t,llk about ~l conll~lct ex tensiOn dU1111g the ... cason
- a l l OllllllOUS 111tlU..d{\Oil

The 40 ~e.rr old shortstop "ould l1ke to e'en
tu,tlly move tnto the tram oft1cC .md \lork on
resunet:tmg the tJ~IIlLhl...,t' It .!ppeLLrs m~u1~1ge
mem has other 1de.t&gt;
I w,mtto be p1oud ol thts orgamz.ttlon,' satd
Lmkm, "ho helped 1t wm ,, Wmld Se1 1es cham
ptonshtp 111 1990 lis track record hasn t really
been \CI) good l,nely "
For tour years 11 s been stuck mthe nmck

from Page 81
ed
• Where s the rotatiOn' R1ght hander Paul
Wilson won a te,tm h1gh II games, made $3 5
million ,md would hke to return Otherwise,
there s not much expenence LH Brandon
Claussen - the pnzed prospect acqutred durIng last ye.n s tr,tdmg spree- went 2-8 111 14
stMts w1th .1 6 14 ERA ThiS area needs the
most work and 1\ til cost the most
• Who's on th1rd' The Reds finally gave up
on lllJury p1one Brandon Larson, but there s
no obvwus c.tndtdate to replace hun
• What' gomg on ,1t shortstop' Fehpe
Lopez &lt;~ppears to be 111 lme to replace Barry
Larktn but comm1tted 15 errors m 79 games
,md hll only 242 Ltrkm would hke to return,
but the tram otftce seems cool to the tdea

from Page 81
ed Southern to tts b1ggest lead at 14-8 Jenny
Warne1 \\.IS av.esome at the net 111 tillS ~ame
v.nh f1ve boommg k1lls
Th,n momentum s\\ 1ng g,lve the Tornadoes

the hit 11 needed to stay on top the rest ot the
game Wnh th1ee stratght senes Lmda Eddy
push~d the wmners to 24 15 but Trace clll II
to 24 18 R1ttle then added g,tme poult tor the
second SHS wu1
In the tin,tle Southern JUmped to an e,trly
lead IHth suong con&gt;tstent servmg from
Wlilwms Ktser Roush R1tlle Jord,m
Ne,glel .md Edd) Ne1gler W,trneJ Rob1e
,md Roush dnchored the net Tnmblc cut the
sco1e to 19 17 but ne\ er c,une close1 as
Whnnev R1ffle notched a pomt then Bethanv
Rtttle .1dded tour and Roush .tdded the 24th
.tnd "mmng pomts 25 19 Southern
Tnmble was led h) 0 luhe Trace wnh 19
pomts Janelle 17 Am,mda Alexander 15 and
Carne Woodgerd wtth I 2
Beth,my Rtftle had 21 pomts for Southern
Kn stnna Wllltams 20 while Ashley Roush

.tnd Jordan Ne1gler each had 17
R1tlle was 41 4S pasSing ,md 65-65 settmg
1\ tth e1ght sets tor k11ls ,md 21 21 sen mg
Ne1gler was 9 II sp1k1ng WJth ,, k1ll and was
49 50 pasSing and I 1-15 senmg v.tth l\\O
.tees ,md stx blocks Roush "as II II serv
mg 42 53 p.tsSing 18 26 sp1k111g with three
ktlls and tow hlocks
Kmtuna Wllh,uns w.ts S4 S9 sp1k1ng v.tth
se\en kills and ,t 19 21 serv1ng ga me wnh 2Q
pomts Jenn) W,1rner v.as S6-61 splktng v.nh
I0 kills and ,111 11-17 passmg game Brook
Ktser v.,ts Sl 51 p.1ssmg ,md '\8 61 setung
v.nh stx sets for krlls Lmd,r Eddy wds 8 8
ser&gt; mg and I 5 19 passmg Ashley Rob1e w,ts
II II sp1kmg Wh1tney R1jlle w ts S 7 pass
mg and 2-1 sCIVIng Kaste Sellers had ,, klllc
while Selen.1 Spencer E11n W1se ,md N1kk1
R1ttle all contnbuted to the wm
Southern v.un the resen e game 25-16 .md
~5 I 6 fm tts thml wm 111 ,( rov. Southe1 n
owns ,IJl outstandtng S 4 over,tll recmd
Southe111 v.as led by Whnney Wolle-Riflk
with 11 Steph,m1e Cundlfl v. 1th ten po1111s
and Amber Hill e1ght Tnmble was led b)
Ryan S11noms w1th e1ght L1de Metc&lt;tll SIX
and J.1d1e Smnh five
Southern gocs to Eastern Tuesd.ry

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUN·
TV OHIO
Aeg1s
Mortgage
Corporation
d/b/a
UCLend1ng
Pla1ntlff
• vs
Irene Wells et at
Detendants
Case No 04CV074
Judge Fred W Crow
Not1ce 1n Suit for
Foreclosure
of
Mortgage
Irene Wells, whose
last known, address IS
165 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy OH 45769
and the unknown
hetrs dev1sees lega
tees
executors
adm1n1strators
spouses and ass1gns
and the unknown
guard1ans of mmor
and/or mcompetent
he~rs of Irene Wells
all of whose residences are unknown
and cannot be reasonable diligence be
ascertained Will take
notice that on the
171h day of June
2004 Aegis Morlgage
Corporation
d/b/a
UCLendlng flied its
Complaint In
the
Common Pleas Court
of Mojga Counly,
Ohio In Cue No
04CV074
on
lhe
dockel of tho Court
and the obfoct and
demand for retlel of
which pleading Is to
loroclolt lht lien of
plalntlll'o mortgage
re~orded upon tho
following deocrlbod
rHI ostall to wll
Property Addro11
165 Mulllorry Avenue,
Pomeroy
OH45759
and being more par·
llcularly doecribld In
plaintiff 1 morlgago
recorded In Mortgage
Book 104, pago 703,
of
thlo
County
Racordor'e Olllco
All of 1ho above
named
defendant•
are
required
to
anawer within twenty·
eight (28) dayo alter
laat
publication ,
which shall be pub·
llehed once a week
for six conaeeutlve

•

weeks or they m1ght
be denied a heanng
m th1s case
AI Maddix
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
Attorneys for Pla1nt1ff
PO Box 5480
ClnCinnall, Oh 45201·
5480
(513) 241·3100
attyema•l@lsrlaw co

m
(9) 7 14 21 28, (10) 5
12

Pubhc Not1ce
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
Mortgage Electromc
Reg1strat1on
Systems Inc solely
as
nominee
for
lender c/o Select
PortfoliO Serv1cmg
Inc and U 5 Bank
Nat1onal Association
as Trustee of CSFB
ABS Trust Senes
2001·HE11 c/o Select
Portfolio Serv1cmg
tnc
Plalnliff
vs
Pamela G Bentz aka
Pamela L Bentz aka
Pamela Bentz, et at
Defendants
Case NO 04 CV.Q89
Judge Fred w Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Jane
Doe
unknown apouae of
MD
Ruasoll
on
Moroh 7 1941 , Jam11

Doe,

unknown

1pouH of Cora Ball•
S RUIIIII on March
7 1041, Julie Doe
unknown apoue• of
Edword A Stark on
March 7, 1941, Jamie
Doe
unknown
1pou1e ol Mergertl
Stark on March 7
1941, and Jonnl Doe
unknown apouae of
William
Slark
on
March 7, 1941 whooo
1111 known addreea
are
ADDRESSUN
KNOWN and all of
whose residences are
unknown and cannot
by reasonable dlh·

gence
be ascer
ta1ned
Will
take
not1ce that on the
19th day of July, 2004
Mortgage Electrontc
Reg1strat1on
Systems Inc solely
as
nommee
for
Lender c/o Select
Portfolio Serv1cmg
Inc AND US Bank
Nat1onal Assoc1a11on
as Trustee of CSFB
ABS Trust Series
2001 HE1 1 c/o Select
Portfolio Serv1c1ng
Inc
f1led
1ls
Complamt
m the
Common Pleas Court
of Me1gs county Oh1o
In case No u4 V 089
on the docket of the
Court and the object
and demand for rehef
of wh1ch plead1ng IS
to foreclose the hel)
of plaintiffs mort·
gage recorded upon
the
lollowmg
described real estate
to w1t
Property Address
124 Mulberry Slreet
Pomeroy OH 45769
and being more par
ticularly described 1n
plaintiff s mortgage
recorded m Mortgage
Book
Off1c1al
Records Volume 139
page 769 , of th1s
County
Recorders
OH!ce
All of the above
named
defendants
are
required
to
answer within twenty
eight (28) days alter
la•t publication date
Doc 7, 2004 which
ohall be publlehad
once a w•ek for alx
consecutive weeks
or they might be
denied a hearing In
thll CliO
Jennifer K
R011
Attorney
LERNER SAMPSON
&amp; ROTHFUSS
Atlorneyo lor Plaintiff
PO Box 5480
Cl~clnnatl OH 45201
5480
(Sf3) 241 3100
attyemalll.tillsrlaw co

m
(10) 5 1,2 19,26 (11)

2 9

l..t.ir--.!'.:1••

PubliC NotiCe
NOTICE OF ELEC
TION
Notice 1s hereby
g1ven that pursuant
to a resolution adopt
ed by the Board of
Education
of the
Metgs local School
D1strtct County of
Me1gs Oh1o on the
1oth day of August
2004 there w11t be
submitted to the qual
tfled electors of said
school d1stnct at the
etect1on to be held on
the 2nd
day
of
November 004 at the
regular places of vat
1ng therein the ques
t1on of levytng a
renewal tax outs1de
of the ten mtll constitubonal llm1tat1on for
the benefit of the
Me195 Local School
DIStriCt for the py r
pose of permanent
Improvements at a
rate of ftfty five hun
dredths (0 55) m111 lor
each
one
dollar
(S1 OD) of ta. valua
tlon wh1ch amounts
to five and one·half
cents (SO 055) for
each one hundred
dollars ($100 DO) of
tax valuation, for a
period of five (5)
years commencing
wllh tax year 2004
collection year 2005
The potts will be open
lrom630em to730
p m on said date
By order of the Board
of electlono of tho
County of Molgo
Ohio
Alta Smith
Director
(10) 5 12 19, 26
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
E~CESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code elec
lions 3501 1 I (G)
5705 19 57D5 25
Notice 1s hereby
given that m pur..suance
of
a
Resolution ot the
Board of Township

•••

....._••••'-"'~

1"••1-.li...: J""o.oc•llic.: .._,,... i•'ll ~.""',..I..,"" I"'"' •,...
1-.,oo.;livc.:•.-._•d I~IJ.r:l•• tc• '"WCJo'IO.•• I»•••••

Trustees
of
the
Township of Ohve
Reedsv11le,
Ohio
passed on the 5th day
of August 2004 there
will be subm1tted to a
vote of the people of
sa1d subdiVISIOn at a
General Election to
be
held
In
lhe
Township of Ohve
Ohio al the regular
places
of
votmg
there1n on the 2nd
day of November
2004 the quest1on of
levy1ng a tax
m
excess of the ten m111
l1m1tat1on for the benefit of Ohve Townsh1p
for the purpose of
F1re protection Sa1d
lax being
A renewal of a tax of
1 5 m1lls at a rate not
exceedmg 1 5 m11is
for each one dollar of
valuation
wh1ch
amounts to f1fteen
cents (SO 15) lor each
one htJndred dollars
of valuation, for f1ve
(5) years The Polls
lor sa1d Elect1on will
open at 6 30 a m and
remain open until
730 oclock PM of
sa1d day
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
Counly Ohio
John N lhle
Chairperson
Rlla D Smith
Director
Dated Sept 5 20D4
(10) 5 12 19 26

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TA~ LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code elec·
tiona 3501 11 (G),
5705 19 5705 25
Nollce Is hereby
given that In pur

suance
of
Resolution of

a
the

Board of Townohlp
Trustees
of the
Township of Salem
Langsville ,
Ohio
passed on lhe 1oth
da~ of Augusl 2004
there will be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of sa1d subd1

vls1on at a General
Election to be held m
the
Township
of

Salem

Oh1o a1 the

regular places of vot·
mg therem, on the
2nd day of November
2004 the question of

levymg · a tax, m
excess of the ten m111
lrm1tahon for the ben
ef1t
of
Salem
Township for the pur
pose of Mamta1n1n9
and operating ceme·
tenes Sa1d tax bemg
A replacement of tax
of 0 5 m1ll at a rate not
exceeding 0 5 m111 for
each one dollar of
valuation ,
wh1ch
amounts to f1ve cents
(SO 05) for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation for f1ve (5)
years The Polls lor
sa1d Elect10n will
open at 6 30 a m and
remam open until
7 30 o clock PM of
said day
By order of the Board
of Elections of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N thle
Chairperson
Alta D Smith
Director
Dated Sept 5 2004
(I D) 5, 12, 19,26

2004 the quest1on of
levymg a tax
m
excess of the ten m111
hm1tat1on, for the ben
ell!
of
Sutton
Township lor the pur
pose of Mamtammg
and operat1ng cemetenes Sa1d tax being
A replacement of tax
of 0 5 m1ll at a rate not
exceeding 1 mill for
each one dollar of
valuat1on
which
amounts to five cents
($0 OS) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valyat1on for hve (5)
years The Potts lor
sa1d Election will
open a1 6 30 a m and
remain open unlll
7 30 o'clock PM of
SOld day
By order of the Board
of Etecuons, of Me1gs
Co1..1nty Oh1o
John N lhle
Chairperson
R1ta D Smllh
Dlreclor
Deled Sept 5 2004
(10)5 12 19,26

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subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon '
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~alhpoltl Jlall~ lnbune
{Bomt ~(ea&amp;ant legt&amp;ter

The Daily Sentinel
iunba~ It me&amp; ·ientinel

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Atvleed Code elec·
tione 350f 11 (tl)
5705 1 9 5705 25
Notice Ia hereby
given that In pur·
•uance
of
a
RIIOIUtlon of tho
Boord of Townehlp
Truellll
of
lhe
Townehlp of Sulton
Racine, Ohio, paued
on the 2nd day of
August, 2004 there
will be submitted to a
vote of the people of
said subdlvlolon at a
General Election to
be
held
In
tho
Township of SuHon
Ohio at lhe regular
places
of
voting
therem on the 2nd
day of November

Senior Discount*

.

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Subscnber's Name
.

Address

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Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
675·5234
~~C~a~II__T_o__d_a__v_._·_·___o~r~F~ax~~'7~lm44~s~-ao~o~e~~~o~r_F~ax_l~o~(7~40~l_99_2~-2~1s~7~~

Offee !lowe-~
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response,.
\ V \01 '\( I \II '\ 1..,

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GIVE\1\A\

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~-------·

D•llv In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Nex~ Day•• Paper
sunday In-Column: 1•00 p m
'Fr·Jd,,. For Sundays Paper

1 yr old male large breed
dog (740)256 1092

3 3 mon old Chow German
Shep pups good guard
dogs not good wl k1ds 304
576 3080:;__ _ _ _:7 1/2 month old male
Chihuahua/Cocker Spa mel
m1x 1st shots &amp; wormed
crate tra1ned {740)379
. --------

~06

r70

Y-\RD SALE

!.,~:::::::~

Female dog 5 months old
m xed breed med large
tan/black lace has shots

PJ!!

very hyper bul
(740)441 0668

L,.-..iiiiiiliiiialii-_.1

tnendly

I!!!!'"

ut ~

y

ARD

• All

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARDS.UU
PoMEROY/MIDDLE

0

Lr.'--ro·"-~.s.~.I.E...Ir,o

lwrlghtt!!llc net

Cozart res1dence 1 1/2
m1les east of Hams Farms
on SA 124 Portland lots of
mce m1sc 1tems clothing
and books Oct 7 8 9 !rom
9am 4pm low p cas

Ranch style home w1th lin
shed basement 3 bed
rooms 1 bath large lv ng
room and d n1ng 100m
k 1chen w1th 2 car gmage
attached and a 30x6C
garage and a t6x24 sheter
house 1 5 m11es out Cherry
3 bedroom 2 bath I v1ng A dge Ad on the r ght
room d1nnmg room fu r (740)2 45 5102
n1shed k1tchen
2 car ~~~-~=-=---..,
garage 2 outbUIICl ngs 6 320 l\'IOBU E H0\1~
plus acres close to !)Chools
1-0K SALE
$94 000 (740)742 7200

flJ~:J.I.ES.

JI4'&gt;AW

"~"&lt;76..--Y-ARD--S-A_L_E_·""""'

Pr. PI..EAS!\NI'

L,._.;.iioOoiiiliiiiililii_.l

()

Cornmumty Sale Gunv111e &amp;
Cam A dge Oct 7 8 From
p 1 1 PI
1 AI 2 N lh 10
on easan
or
Rt87 go 6 m1les follow s1gns
96

0

AI...E-

GALUPOI

L~

YARD SAil-

••

3 bedroom 2 baths eat 1n
kitchen concrete pat o and
front porch 5+ acres car
port shed barn on county
black topped road Extra
mobile home lot Beautiful y
landscaped
$85 000
(740)245 5157

small House m rear
Wed Tllurs &amp; Ff1
Yard Sale Duncans Res
Corner 4th &amp; AoU1ns New
Haven Oct 5th 6th Come
check 1t out
~;;.....-...,
AliCilQr&gt; AND

to -r

FLEA M 'RKET

Po\.tF..RO\IMIDDllo

=,.,.-,----. t...aialiliiiliiliiiiiaiiiliii_.

4x4 s For Sale ..... ............................................ 725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auct1on and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repaor
770
Autos lor Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Building Supplies
560 •
Bus~ness and Buildings
340
Business Opportunlly
210
Business Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790 '
Camping Equipment
780
010
Cards of Thanks
Child/Elderly Care
190
Electr~cai/Relrlgerallon
840
Equipment lor Rent
460
Excavating •
830
610
Farm Equipment
Forms lor Rent
• 430
Forma lor Sale
330
For Lease
490
For Sate
585
• 590
For Sale or Trade
Fruita &amp; Vagetabln
580
Furnlahed Roome
• 450
General Hout11111
850
QfVIIWIY ,
040
Happy Ada •
... 050
Hay, 1 Qraln. ..
• 840
• 110
He p Wanted •
Homelmprovamenta
... 810
Homta lor Solo
310
Hou11hold Qooda...
.. .. 510
OUiel lor Rent
,410
tn Memoriam
• 020
tnauranco
~
•• 130
Lawn &amp; -aardan Equtpmen1.
• 880
Ltvutock
.. 830
Lo•t and Found
• OliO
LOll I Acreage..
.. 350
MIICIIIIMOUI
170
Mlscellaneoua Merchandlae
... 540
Mobile Homa Repair
880
Mobile Homoa lor Rent
420
Mobile Homea lor Sale.
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcycles I 4 WhHiera
740
Mullcallnstrumentl. ••
570
Personate
005
Palo lor Sale
, 580
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Proloaalonat Services
230
160
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
380
Real Estate Wanted
Schoolo Instruction
150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fer11llzer
650
Situations Wanted
120
460
Space lor Rent
Sporting Goods
520
SUV'I lor Sale
720
Trucks lor Sale
715
Upholstery ,
870
Van• For Sale
730
Wanted to Buy
090
Wonted to Buy· Farm SuppOes
620
Wanted To Do
180
Wanted to Rent
470
Yard Sale· Galhpolls
072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Sale Pt Pleasant
076

r

(740)256 6989

~

~ANUU
ro BU\

I

~

&lt;0 2004 by NEA, Inc
1110

. ·

L,.------_.1

r:'rn"-----...., . . . -----l
T Do
l
tto

HFLPWA~

JOB OPPORTUNITY

Manager needed lor mob1le
home park m Shade send
resume to Country Park
An Excellent way to earn Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh
money The New Avon
43138
Call Marlyn 304 882 2645
Need mght shIt donut
AVON 1 All A1eas1 To Buy or maker lor local bakery Exp
SeH
Sh~rley Spears 304
prel not nee Br1ng resume
675 1429
to 454 2nd Ave

HF.t.PWANTED

Babysmer to come 'f'l.o.::4l!Y
home m Mason Co wv·lo
511 for 11 month~ld must
have references &amp; be 1nlant
ch1ld CPA cert1hed call
between 6 9 (304)576 3353

NRA Recruiters

lntoClt on
Managemenr
Corp Is currently accepting
appl cation a at our Galtlpone
location Qua I! led appll
cants ahOu d be arab e"' h![;lh
ly motivated lnd vlduals with
good communlcatlM skllla
We otter a fu I benefits pack
age and 401 K Several
scheduling options avail
able No prev ous e)(perl
ance s necessary We are
the profess onal dlf1erer)ce
n lele&amp;erv ces and need
great team players to jo1n ust
Interested
candidates
please call 1 877 463 6247
a~~;t 2455 or
apply online
ww mtoc!s1on cam
Make 50"o sell1ng Avon
L1m t~;~d
t1me
ONLY
(7 40)446 3358 F rs1 5 to call
rece1ves a g1h

Overbrook Rehab Ctnttr tt
currently accepting 1ppllca
tiona lor reii)Ontlble and
caring LPN I ALLdSHI,FTS
II you ere nterette p 1111
come In and til out an appll
p
cation 11 333 age Street
_M_Id_d1_•po-rt_E_o_e-:--~::-

=-

&amp;

POSTA~

JQBS

St 4 62 120 92/ht ~ow hlr
tng For IPPI!cltlonl &amp; free
government JOb nlo cal
Amtr can Aaaoc of LabOr
1 913 599 8042 24 hrs
emp serv

0

I

Center IS looking for \self or smal call the Handyman
motwated team player ~h a (304)593 361,
h1gh energy lave to JOin our
management team Must Georges .~Portable Sawm1l
enJOY worktng w1th people don t haul your togs to the
tra1nmg and develop ng stalf mill JUSt caii304 675 1957
respondmg
qu ckly
to W11l clean ho"use $8/hour
statt1ng needs momtonng References
ava table
employee
performance Preferably m town or
mserv1C1ng and counseling Ga ohs
Ca ll
employee Must possess (740)
E)(cellent communtcallan
and 1nterpersonal ski Is W II do ousecleamng 81g
Presentahon sk lis and the or Smal JObs Call (740)446abtl ty to work under pres 1310
sure Demonstrated plan Woods Extra Care 1ar your
n1ng and o•gan 1zal&gt;onal Loved one Pr vate room
sk lis Cr heal thinking and bath 3 hot meats Phone
pro bl em so IVlng s,.c 115 The (740)388 0118
ab' ty to lo ow through on
g1ven tasks Tram the Tra1ner
-;;;;;;;(O;;;h;;•o;;L;;o;an;;s;;O;;;n~y~J~
Lo &amp;
and Human Resource StaHr
r
Development expenence
B~
~
L~--_;;~---.,J
preferred but not requ~red '-.-aiO.;IPI'OIIIiRll!NrtYiilillii.;.,.,J
Please send resume With 5
2 acres on Ingalls Road
cover letter to Overbrook Absolute Goldmmet 60
S 15 000 740 245 0133
~ehab Cen1e1 clo M1c"elle
"
1 ex.ce 1
11
r1
ven d1ng macr11nes
G Imore AN DON 333 ent Iocat1ons a I tor $10 995
2D 300 Homes te n Upscale
All ,...1 .. tate advertls Ing
eve 1opment 4 m11rom
Page St Mldd aport Ohl o (800)234 6962
In this newap1~r It
45760 EOE
:___:_______
tubjtct tp tt"te Feder11l
PI P eas.ant on Sa.nelh 11 Rd
BI,.IStNESS OPPORTUNITY
Felr HoullniJ Aot of till
S29 900
Ser~ou&amp; lnqu ii&amp;S
Substitute ANILPN wanted Start 8 Second Income Vary
which mektt h Illegal 10
only
(304)675 3648or
lor the Mal~a County Board llttle out of pocktt colt Free
advertlae eny
{614)747 0998
ol Mental retardation and COMPUTE~
1 888 279
p,.ferent:s li mitation or
1
Devtlopmantsl 0 aabllllll l 8322
EXT
77492
dltcrlmlnetlon btetd on
Com marc 81 bu lldmg Pus
Houri 9am 3pm Muet have WWW Fla ntree McnayWaya
raot oolor rtllglon •••
1 5 acre&amp; n Orttn Twp
current RN I ctnlt n the com
lami11altlatue or netlontl Cerwal neat &amp; a~r bllh and
Stall 01 Qhlo Pralar e~tptrl r~=-'"11!"""1"::"--, origin or an., Intention to complttt k tchtn S, e~ 000
"II h llh
In
Cll
make any aucn
Ca l C!ltlord ~et ltor• 740
HIO VALLEY PUBLISu
1o
II II II 01
'46 7702
anct 1n PUw C II nura g
end/or work ng with chlldr1n INQ CO rtcommtnda th~
pre d~=~ln:l:n on
~ •
and adultt with dtvtlopmtn
Land on McCorm1ct.: ~c 2
tal dltablllttt Sand retumt
u do butlntll with pea
11 you know tnd NOT t
Thte newepaper will not
large Iota 1/2 sere taet'l
..,y
Frldly S-tombor
3rd tO
w
...,..
end monty through th
knowlnglyeooept
(mora or leaa) Electrc anCI
MCBM~DO 1310 Ctrlelon
until '""U hava lnvtatl
ldvertiHmentt tor rwt
water on one aulttb • ~ fOr
111
1"
Strttt
1'0 Bo~t 307
eatatt whlct"t Ia. In
attd tha offer
bullctlng or mob1l1 home
Syracu11 Oh 4!77GI
~lolatton bf tnetew Our
(740 )3 7686
"1111""-~...---...., You owe It to yourttll! Cut
ret~ll'l are htreDy
111 "\ l \ 1 ....
~ 1~
SotooLS
your 111111 In hat lnexptn
intormM tt"tlt 111
................UcnON
dwtJUngt advertiHCI In
L,.-•'""iiiiiiii'niiliiiiioaaP
alve Tax Saving InfOrmation
1 888 277 4;t2 Ext 7749:2
tl'itt ntwtptper are
•~allabt. on tn equtl
Qalllpollt Carttr Colltlll WWW Ralntrtt TaxWtyz co
opportunl bent
(Caretra Cleat To 1-!omt) m
.':~~===== L,._..;,ii
Cal Todayl740 448·4387
1-!omee !rom , 10 0001 1 800 2,4 0452
~ONAI
Forctoture VA Hud for 1111 ODfo Down Payment and
~gaUpolltcaratrcolltgtcom
SERVICES
mg 1 800 749 8106 ax 1709 tmanclng ave ablt with
approved credit
A.vertge
Ace td tid Mtmotr Accrtd t ~ L - - - - - - - . , J
Council l!lr lnCII~Mnatnt CCIIIIQII Houtt 3 Bedroom 1 112 cred t (luallfl&amp;f you t Clown
trod SohOOII 12?'•8
TURNEO OOWN ON
Bath Heat Pumj;l new payment haa ~apt you from
1116
SOCIA• SECURITY""? Carpet Wlnc:towe .l ~oof buy ng thta 11 your e~II'\CI
Fllvtr VJtw 12 Smith St No to own yoL&lt;r own home II
~
No F.ee Un ass We Win!
, 888 582·3345
Monty Down 10 qual lying you nave a dOw~"~ payment
Buyer $425/montn why ~en1 but wou d hke to conae ve t
we otter lOw oown payment
It! \I I ..., I \II
(304)875 2749
H gh
School
Jun ors
programs also G eat 1nter
Sentora and Prior Sti'VIce
you can 1111vacant poaltlona ~r'"IO"""______ Houee for sale bY owne 4+ ~ eat rates Loce! company
HoMES
bedrooma 2 5 bathe large Mortga~e
locators
m the Wilt VIrginia Army
Lw--iiiFUIIRialiSiil-\L.Eiiia-.,1.
country
~ltchtn
1
5
story
2
(7401992
,
732
National Guard If you are
..,
car a!1&amp;Ched garage ptua
between the age a of '7 3S
two
arge outbuildings 2 story Colon1al 3 bOrm 1
or have pr or military serv
11
tee you wont want to paaa 0 /Qo Down Payment and Blacktop Orlveway many bath Gas heat Cntrl AJC
this up For OpportUn ties 1n financing availab e with e~~;t as $129 000 w1th 713 $600 mo (740 \446 3481
acre lOt or $159 000 w1th an
your area call 304 675 approved" credit Average
add1110nal 3 485 acre&amp; ol flat 3 bed roo m hOuse 101 ent 1n
credtt
qualifies
you
II
down
5837
payment has kept you from ground Very c ose to town Pomeroy HUD acp1oved
buy ng th1S s your chance on Spruc e St extehs,on ..$500 Month pluS ClBi'OS I
to own you own ho'tne tr C811 (7 40 )591 0437 enyt me Ca I jl40)388 0435
Seelr.t"ll 39 People
you n&amp;lfe a Clown payment
House m Kanauga Old 3 bedroom 1 bat'"! lr..U base
Locally
but woulel hke to con serve 1
Farmt:Jrs Ad Gal1polls Oh mem aetacheo garage
who want to earn- money
we offer ow down paymenl
S40 000 2 tre.l ers KtoCiel country sett I'IQ 5 mnutes
wh1le lo&amp;mQ weight shew ng
programs also Great nte
Pa1~
on
Neal
Ad from R10 Grenda 10m nut
others how
est rates Loca company
$675/mon.th
1nvestment ad from l:losp tal 4700
(740)441 1982
Mortgage
Locators
.
Bolh
1 &amp;11ers
$35 000 month ... deposit !740)446
FREE SAMP~ES
(740 )992 7321
(740)441 5(25
3051
www famousnutnt1on com

i

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Acr!;GE

er.

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..

•

4 Bedroom 1n Syracuse
OH
S600imonth
No Pets
$600 deoos t
(304)67:, :,332
Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths w
basement V ev. ol r ve1
Cntrl A/C $700 mo
Ga !lpol s Ferry (7 40)446
34"81
Horre for rent w1lh garage n
V1nton!R o area on 17 acres
water patd (606 )286-2148

420

Mosn1 Ho\11.."
FORRF.w

14X 70 3 bedroom HUO
approved No Pets HUD
on y {740\742 2714
2 Oedroom 1 bath AC slor
age burld1ng deck washer
&amp; d yer Cent al y ocated
between town hosp ta &amp;
plants No pets (7 40)446
4234 0 (740)208 7861

2 bedroo n 14x70 1ea Cay
Make 2 payments move n 4
schOol TraS'1 and ... ater
years on note !304\736
Included $350 month S350
3409.
de~os
(7 40)256 1664
New Do'i:ible W1de and 1
2 bed oom Green school
acre of and $78 000 (080)
d1stnct S300 mo Clepos t &amp;
call {304)675 7561
NEW PURCHASES
refe1ence (740)367 0632
REFINANCES
New Oakwood mega sto e
$0 DOWNI $0 DOWN
teatur~ng
Homes
by
CASH OUT/ HOME
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS NO
G1ies One stop shOppmg
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES only at Oakwood Homes of 1 anel 2 bedroom apart
WELCOME!
Barboursville WV (304)736 ments furniShed and unlur
n1shed secu ty dapos11
3409
requred no pets 740 092
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
SAVE SAVE SAVE
2218
1 800 370 4965
Stock models at old or ces
CALL TODAY "
2005 models arr v ng Now t be:1 :rom recently Jpda
STAFFED BV U S
Coles
Mob e Homes ed HUD aop rd ~eel 5280 00
VETERANS
15266 US 50 East Athens per rnonth 1888 514 0192
Ohio 4570 t (740)592 1972
Be' OO"" '' ·rn sheJ Aot
MB 5263
Where You Get Your Ut1 111eS '"
Pad'"' Bas c TV
Money s Worth
S550 month $500 Clepos t

'
(

3 br 120 Howard 51 New
Haven WV $350 month +
deposit Rental appllca110n &amp;
ret requred 1 yr m r ease
C304\415 0585

6JTLNT10i'\!
GETYOUR
LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME
FREE APPROVED
HOME LOANS

r

Tudor &amp; Blscult World now
hmng at Point Pleasant WV
local on Store Hours 5 30 to
2pm apply With n or call
[304)675 6166

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

W~'l'Eil

1990 S ngie W de Tra ler
3 bedroom
2 tuns ze baths
New Haven WV
1304!882 2355
-------1992 Southern El te Mobile
Home 16x70 2 bedroom 2
bath
some appl ances
3BA 2BA 5 129 acres
$9 900 Ca I 740};149 2011
Green Townsh p close to
school Pnced to sell More 97 mob1le home tBx80
mfo (740)446 7377
3be 2 ba v nyt s1de sh n
:__A__:_:A:__IIo:__r;__da_b:__le___:__ -d_ro_o_m gleel roof trent anel back
2 88
Home Eve ythlng new deck (740)949 3700
Poss ble no Money down to For sale o re QI 2 bedroom
qual tymg Buyers [304)674 mobile homes start ng at
S270 per month Call 740
5111
992 2t67

;;;;:10;;::::=:;::::====;

Work ro protect oor Gun
R1ghts and get pa d lor 1tt

Wl~h electtons nQhlt around
~·rprrs• R•rrt-~-car
lrle cornerlynow 5 Lyour
EnLC
K;
co
...
Management Tratnee posl
opportum 1o ma,.e a
d.ff.'enc.
11on available $ 25 K year
College degree preferred
Will tram m Spreadsheet To schedule an Interview
AnalySIS Marketing and
call 1 877 483 6247 ext
Sales lntaresteel candidates _ _ _ _2_3_1_,_ _ _
apply on tnt www enter
C
Nura nQ AIIJttanl 111111
prise com EOE
beginning October 4 20
Enterprtetng l.ndlvlduall to 2CXU thru October ii!O 1!004
halo lllabl ah health and If you tniOY •lder Y ptop t
wtllntta
bualntll end want to become a mtm·
b.' 01 Our h•• llh O.r. l•• m
Succtllful candldalll w II pltalt atop by Roclcaprrn gt
poattll tMCI tnt follow
through tklllt
!'Illative FlthabHitation Centtr 11
Roc"o"r nga Rood
3. 7•9
tic
II
and
bt I Pomeroy
"
"' ""
lnter"'lftOnal
""
Ohlo4e7691ndflll
rtlatlonah lp and
t11m
to th
bul dtr Th a unlqua opportu out an app 11 oat1on r 1
c atttt
nlty prov dll lltxiCit houra E~ttnd care
Ht&amp;ltn
and a lucrative oomml11lon
1
btlld comptntat on plan Strv 011 Inc 1 an tqual
owing
you
to
control
earn
opportunity
employer
that
I
•
c1
In~ potential Pltaee call encourtgll
wor,.p act
740 379 ; 083 or 1 877 815 divert ty M/F ON
4409
Fu!l/partlmt Paramtdlct
$9/hr part time ~MT B I
S71hr lor 12 and 24 hr
thllt,a
Apply Meaon Co
B•" 34 "•In!
EMS "0
"
~
rv
Pleaunt WV
25550
13041875 613'

11100

Staff Development Nurse For all your Home Pro eels
LPN Overbrook Rehab and Repa~rs Early late b g

Oak Hill Un1on Local
Schools 265 W Cross
Street Oak H II Ohto 740
682 3431 L1brary Media
Spec1ahst Must have cur
I \ JI&gt;II), \ 11 '\ 1
rent L1brary Med1a Spec aflst
"'il 1-t \ H I ..,
Cert1f1Cat10n
DEADLI NE
,..,.;._;.._ _ _......, October 15 2004
10

~

HrLP '1\ANlED

·-------'

Absolute Top Do tar U S
S lver and Gold Cams
Prootsets Gold A1ngs U 5
Cur ency M T S Com Shop
151
Second
Avenue
G II ol 74Q-446 2842

I'

HIJLSES

F'OR Jux r

3 bedroom bnck front
Ranch Newer roof v1ny1
heat
pump
Sm1ths
Cab1nets t car garage prJ
vate lane off SA 160 1 8
acres $92 000 (740)388
8676

I'M 11/oi 6!2&amp;A~N~
&lt;)fiJFF. I'M MAI'INl:l

RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
Pupp es' Part St Bernard Oct 7 8 g Ram or Sh ne BARN At 7 South 5 m1les
part
Rottwe er
Cal Basement &amp; ya d sa e 1464 be ow the Dam EVERY
(740)446 1874
St At 14 1
SATURDAY
@
6pm

4

ads muat be prepaid•

S

Garage sale 6 m les south
F rewood Wood s already ol Gall polls on At 7 Oct 7
on ground You cut you haul 8 9
Tflursday
Fnday
(7401446 3826
Saturday
Free k1ttens very beaut lui Man Oct 4 Thurs Oct 7
Cahco mostly black peach Turkey Run Ad Chesh re
&amp; cream
wormed Bam 6pm to low pmk s gns
(740)742 2954
Ra n cancels

Red Bone Coon dog male
to good home (304)675
7185

All Display 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Days Prior To
Publication
sunday Display 1 oo p m
Thursday for Sunday• Pap~(·l•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtayourclassifiedads
{I~
J'f"J",
Borders $3.00I per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio VlllltY Publishing reeervea the right to adlt reject or cancel any •d et any time Errors must be reported on llle f1ret dey ol pubhcatlon and
Tribune-Sentinel Regl.-r will be reeponalble tor no mora than the coat of the apace occupied by the error end only the f~r•l ln18rtlon Wa ehall not be lilo&gt;b .. lo•l
any loh or expenae that ~eulle rrom the publlca1ion or omi..lcn of an advertisement Ccrractlcn will be medeln the f rst •~allable edition • Bo•
are llwaya contklentlel • Current rJte card apt:lllu • All rHI estate adliartlaamenta are aubJecl 10 the FederJI Fair Houa ng Act of 1968 • Th11 .,.,.,.,,....
ecceptl only help w1nted adt mHtlng EOE ttand~rdt We will not knowing y accept any advertitlng 10 VIolation of the law

Desulptlon • Indudll!! A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phon~e Number And Addre.. When Needed
• Ad I Should Run 7 Days

fOUND

Lost
black
German
Shepherd red collar m ss
mg s nee Oct 2 Hysel Run
Jeffers Ad Happy Hollow
area ,Reward {740)992
2556
-------Lost 2 German short ha~red
Pou1ter dogs VIC mty of SA
141 &amp; 775 {740)446 3547
days (7 40)379 2361 after
7pm
,.~------..,

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

74

losri\ND

OecuiiJirtU'

Word Ads

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

If so, you qualify for a

i~ter

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

32984
S&gt;deh II
Road
Rutland
Ram!S h ne
October 9th-&amp; 10th 9AM
4PM Freezer g111 organ 011
tamps cann1ng Jars d1shes
cookware ots of good m1sc

A-re you 65
or older?

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\lr:ribune ~ Sentinel~ l\e
CLASSIFIED

In One

Ben gals

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
V•••••

..... :-:.:.:-:::;::::::::::::::::::·
.. --:-:.:.:.;.
:•:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:
..... :-:o
.....
.. ... .
..... .. ..0...• 00o
"
o
••·••••••••••••
.. :. :. :. :-:-:0:0 :-:·:-:·:·:·:-:-:-:

• How do they keep Jumor healthy? Ken
Gnlfey Jr tore h~&gt; hamstnng. the latest tn &lt;&gt;
senes ot maJor lllJUrtes, and turns 35 111.
November It m1ght be best to move htm out
of center tield but where would he play? Andwhat happens to W1Jy Mo Pena, who tinally
had h" breakout season but now becomes the
fourth outfielder behtnd Gnffey, Austm
Kearns and Adam Dunn?
• Should they try to trade Sean Casey? The.
Reds' most beloved player h1t 324 and drave11199 runs, but hiS contract calls for a $7 8 mil
hon salary Ill 2005 and a te.Jm opuon for $8 5
milhon tor 2006 Dealmg Casey would save
some money and provtde ' opttons - one of
the four out It elders could move to first basebut would depme the clubhouse of 1ts MVP
,111d could east I) backfire sett111g the franc htse
back even futther
• Fmally, how much of a tacehft do ther.
gt\e the bullpen? Thts 1s the cheapest area to
overhaul through tree agency, and 11 needs a
lot of work

back H1s passer raung ts only 58 8 rankmg
second-to-last 111 the lea~ue Only Mtam1'~
A J Feeley - who lost ht s JOb - ts worse
It's not hJS tault
from Page 81
We have to be able to run the ball 35 or 40
ttmes to take the pressure off that ktd.'
long before they re ready
Anderson satd That's go111g to be the key
Plus there will be more growmg pams for
Thev'd better get 1t done .fast
Palme1 \\hots hmtng to play a much btgger
Unlike last•season when e\eryone else tn
10le than antlctpated
the diVIston struggled ,md left an openmg for
The Bengals were hopmg to run the ball them to recover the Bengals could easJI) get
ctfcctllcly w1th Rudt Johnson complemented lett behtnd 111 October The next tWo games
by top d1 dft p1ck Chns Perry Instead, the hne commg out of the bye are 111 Cleveland and at
was throv.n Into dtsa1ray by tnJUr), the home agamst Denve1 on Monday mght
.
uelense has g1ve n up a lot of pomts ,md the
There 's no margm tor error
Beng,ds h tve v.ound up throwmg more often
It's the s,une feel1ng Anderson smd
than the) d hke
th111k111g back to last year The same teelPalme1 le,rds the NFL "tth 154 pass mg'
anempts ,, b,td thmg tor a IJrst-year quaner- 1

Tornadoes

w~.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, October 5, 2004

Tuesday, October 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.corn

~3~ets n or out (304)674
--------2 bedroom apts 1o m nutes
!rom Ho ;!er Hosp tal on St
Rl 160 Water SewerfTrash
nciUded S4601mo Depos t
requ eo
Pets allowed
(740)44 1 1 1 94 or (740)441
0194
2 or 3 bedroorr apartment f1
M :lo apo rt
no
Pill
17401992 5858
2BA
Ctolt to town
$435 "!10 w111r lnc lu('ltd
Otpoet FleQulred {740)44e
4467 tlk lor Ftye or Llta
3 room• &amp; bl n atove/rtlr g
erator down ata1r1 utmttll

PI a S450li'T1onth No ptt1
46 o 1ve st (740l••e

3Q•e

4 room &amp; bllh apt Stove
ralr g water aawer trllh
$400 Perter OhiO 740 .367
7746 740 367 70d 5
App lcatlor'lt Delng tlktn !or
c u n t bedroom ~
country 11tt nQ yet clott to
town Wuher dryer JtOVe
lrldQI ncluded Water lf1d
Qln:i'IQI 1ncludeCI To1a1l it e
tnc w tn A~ Tenant 1'4} &amp;ltc
tr!c $300 Cl&amp;pollt S375 par
month No pete No sm 11~
nQ • 740 446 2205 or 740
446 956~ U~ to V ro n I
ver~

BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood
Dr WI !rom S344 10 $442
Wall!. fo ! hop &amp; mov e' Cal
740 446 2568
EQiJB
HOIJI nQ Opoo tun1ty
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
ED l AFFORDABLE!

fJrBCIOUS IV ng 1 and 2 beO
room apartments a1 V1lla,ge
Mano
and
R ~er1 ClE!
Apartme nts 1n M1ddlepon
From $29~ $444 Cal 740
992 5064 Eo ua Hous I"Q
Ooportun 1es

•

�.
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Announcements

Help Wanted

Announcements

Evening..;, weekend and ovrmight!~. a!'. needed
or as scheduled. Musl have high school

To place an ad Call 992-2156

diploma/GED, valid driver's license, three
yean. good driving cxpencnce and adequate

Business Card ... $25.00/column inch per month

JUtomobJie insurance. $7.()()/hr. Send resume

Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadline for applicants: '10/8/04. Precmployml!nl drug testing. Equal Opportunity
Employc1.

MEROJAJIIDISE
F.or

1

&amp;

Huge clean, 3 bedroom. 1 Thompsons

Appliance
Fo~ sate.
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators , gas and electnc
ranges . a1r conditioners. and
wnnger washers W1ll do
repa1rs on major brands In
shop or at you r home.

balh, dlmng, storaGe. aprox. Repalr-675-7388

Call

Kelly

(7-4QJ446-9961
Mercerville :
bedroom ,
$250 wl deposit. no pets.
water 1ncluded, W/0 hOokup
Call (740)256·1245

.

:one bedroom apartment ..
· no pets
in
Pomeroy.

: (740)992-5858
-One bedroom garage apartment. kitchen furn1shed .
$400,

sale

F1re

r

Pl:rs
tUKSALE

Wood Chihuahua, chocolate and

tan, registered female 1 yr.
old, very lovable, $175.
For Sale New Anr1 Used (740)379-260, .
Doors and Wmdows call - - - - - - - - (304)675-4534
CKC Registered Golden
Retr1evers. 6 weeks old,
0 U
ISCOUn U 9 .
$250 female , $200 male.
Grand Opening Sale
op quality, warranties. Call (740)386·0435.
ilton. WV, Flea Marke
Full blooded St. Bernard
echon C Saturdays an
puppies for sale. $200. Call
unda s. 606 615-0778

Parts
S1. Rt.681 Darwjn, OH

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Resto~kin9 IAJ.te Model Sa h ·a,ge
· and •1fler Ma rkl'l Pa..ts
See Brenl or Brian Whaley
M-Fri U0-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early hirds start

MYERS PAVING

6:30

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Last Thursday of

every monlh
AII park $5.00
Bring this coupon

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 .' REE

Sun. Closed

Gibson refrigerator 31" wide.
62"
high,
$100
Call
(740)388·8788
--------Good Used Appliances.
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
Refngerators. Some start al
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
V1ne St., (740)446-7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road . Porter. OhiO.
(740)446·7444 1-877·8309162 Free Est1mates. Easy
financ•ng , 90 days same as
cash V1sa/ Master Card .
Dnve- a- little save atot.

i

(740)379-2605.

4-Sale 03 Gravely 148 Z ·
FOR SAU:
Old EngliSh sheepdog pups,
Zero turn , rid1ng mower, 48 ~~----illiiiiliO._.I
lovable, shaggy dogs, f1rst
shot &amp; wormed, price $250. in cut. 21hp, Kawasaki 1997 Ford F-150 Lariat. ext.
engine, $7,000 new only 65
cab. step-side. exc. condicall (740)985-9823
hrs
$5,500 OBO call
tiOn 4-wheel dnve. $12,000.
Squirrel Dogs lor sale (304)377-5598 leave mes- 740-367-7762 or 740-367NEW AND USED STEEL (304)675-6132
Jess
7272

ANJ1QULS

BUILDING
SUPPLIF..S

r10

J•ARM

Buy
or
sell.
R1verine
Antiques 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740992 _2526 _ Russ Moore,
owne r.

;:::~~------,
MISCELLANEOUS

"--.;M;,;oE;:;RIIOiliA_ND_ISE;::-.,J
12x20 bu1ld1ng w1th 8ft. over·
hang . Too many 1tems to list.
$2,500. Call after 5pm. 740441 -0 131.
1976 Motor Home. $3,900;
1974 Ford Bucket lruck.
$3.900 Call (740)441-5725
8 padded church pews. 12ft.
$60 each Buggy wheels,
$55 each. Ph 1740}4467787.

2000
Harley
Dav1son
Sportsrer 883 Hu gger. Lots
of extras. Days 740·645·
3248. even1ngs after 6:30pm
2000 Chevy Prism 4 door. 740-256·6589.
auto, rad10, AIC 16 .300
actual m1les $7,500.00. 2000 Harley Sportster 883
(740)992-7165
custom factory Ins talled
1200 cc. 14,000 miles.
2000 Dodge StraUss ES, V6, excellent cond11ion, pearl
4-door, automatic, leather white with chrome , $6500,
power
seats.
sunroof. (304)675·3220 aHer 6pm
loaded ,
51K .
$4,400.
2001 Honda Shadow motor~7 40)379-27 4 8.
L.
cycle VT 1 100. E)(cellent
'2001 Sliver Hyunda1 Accent,
COnditiOn, $4,500. (740}44&amp;low mileage.

Ford New Holland, 1920 4wheel dnve, diesel tractor,
2103 hours. New tires
approx 29 HP. 12 speed
tra nsmission . V.G.C Also
PETs
Ford New HollandTC-30. 4.
~---fU-RiiSiOAiiiiit£--J wheel dnve with front end
loader (thiS tractor IS burnt)
5 AKC Beagles, trained rab- Both tractors for $7.5&amp;J.OO .
bit dogs, 2 started pups, Call (740}949-2115
1193 green Dodge Shadow,
excellent
blood
11ne.
good condi!IOn. (74 0)388(740)742-2728
Patz Silo Unloader phone 9831 .
(304)675-2443
89 Ford Tempo, new tires. 4
AKC Black lab puppies.
&amp;
door good shape $900 00
GRAIN
(740)742-3167
Shots. wormed &amp; dew claws
removed. $200. (740)44 1·
::..c::.:;...::....::.:..:c..:.____
0130
96 Crown Victoria In good
Last year 2nd cut Round
cond11lon. 740-446-8972 or
1
bale hf!Y $6 . New 2nd cut
740·367-0502
AKC Stack Lab. pupp1es hay $16.
Males &amp; Females. born 851 Ford Tractor, good con- 98 Olds Delta 88. Loaded.
9/t 1/04
$200
each dition $3,200 . Ph. (740)446· 119.000 miles. needs mtake
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windOws, lintels, etc. Claude
Wmters. R1o Grande. OH
Call740-245-5121 .
..~--~----,

r

•
•

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

v......,.

HAY

98 Sharp Ultra Classic.
Loaded w1th chrome. 103
Big Bore, 4.000 miles on
engine. luggage rack , side

racks . 740 . 446 • 972 or 74 o.
"Q
367·0502.

Better N" Ben wood burner.
2-30
inch bar stools. (304)773·5103

tnRSALE

For Sale 1948 Chevrolet.
Five Passenger Coupe new 200f Caravella Interceptor.
muffler system. tires and 21FT. 56ihours, 9 passensafety sticker (304)576-2288 ger, like new call (304)674·

SUVs

1994

Ch::e~::urban

I

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

South

Wesl

North

Dbl

Pass

3•

,.

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

I

/0-~

BARNEY

i: 'MEANT PLAY
ME SOMETHIN'
TO TAKE MY
MIND OFF'A ~"-'WORK,
~;:;:::::::;:;D;::_
JUGHAID !!

\

I

THE BORN LOSER
f-lf.Y, C.l-\1 E:.F 1

NO, Tl-\~

GUE.SS WJ.\1\\ 1

'{Q(J I

-:·.

East M.un Sl.
Pomeroy

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Purls

BIG NATE

1\"ew Gcn em l Sumdhy

Genc rotlmg Sy~tcms and
Roi -A1r Air CompreS!'&gt;Of!'&gt;

TT's

Pitk-up &lt;~nd Uclhcr) ~cn· icc
Now ~Cf''l(ln K~ro~ne H~atm

VERY

SER.rou~ '

::S NORT~: ;

ITS A TOU(:,H CLA.SS 1

IMPORTS
Athens

Open 8:30-6:110 M-F;
Sal. 8:30-2:00 992-1033

fVJII.'

FoR SALE

10

"~

HJ"gh 8l Dry

~elf·Stor:\oe
U6

33795 Hiland Rd.

Dodge Dakota· 4x4
pickup
120,000
m11es
BASEMENT
$3,700 Call (740}379·2409
WATERPROOFING .
after 5pm. You won't lind a
Uncond1t1ona1 lifetime guardeal like th1s for a 4x4!
antee. local references fur1996 Suzuki S1de Kick nished EstabliShed 1975
65,000 m11es, auto, atr, covt Call
24 Hrs (740) 446·
hard top, excellent cond1tlori. 0870, · Rogers Basement
low miles. $4,000. (740)256· Waterproofing .

.LT"S

tlEtl

I ME,...,_N

HEH

1--lA ~A ~A

SORRY.

CAN WE
\&gt;0 ·rREoE
ORAWIN(;
TODA"("'

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

New Home~ • \:'inyl
Siding: • New Garages
• Rcpla,ement
Window~ • Roofing

29670 Bashan Road

BUILDERS InC.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

PEANUTS

I CAN KICK LEAVES, TOO~~ -

MAVBE I
COULD 6UV AN
ALBUM AND

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00 PM

STAfl.T A LEAF
COLLECTION ..

1f t 411

New&amp; Used

HOWAR'D l.

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

WRITESEl

Plaee Your Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, P ..int Pleasant
llegister, or Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For
FREE In The Tri·County Marketplace%

*RODFIN8
*lOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS

1-800-822-0417
"W,V's #I Chevy. Ponllat'. Bukk . O lcls

SUNSHINE CLUB
Sl-1£ EATS. I!EFOI5- W

01-l,TI-It.RE:S MAR"JHA ...

GUS HUNGRY SO rr
DOE.SIJI HAVE ACHAI*
1tl GRA'&amp; l-IER

SHE PUT HERSELF OIJ TI-lt.

'PRE.£MPTI\IE..

I

&amp; Custom

Dl E.T

__.---.....
WHAT'.S

I

' ll1AT?

OUnER ·
*free Eltlmatab

I
I
I

I
i
I

949-1405
GARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

50, 5HERLOC:.K, WHAT
TIPPED 'o'OU OFF'?

iJ
I••

;?.M PAv!fJ

Barnhart
Builders
JO years experience
tNew Holileli,
• l.ol! llom c'i
• Post frame
•Compltlc ·Remodelinl!
•Rcpi~tccnwnt \\'imhms
•Roof~

®allipolis :IDailp \!rribune The Daily Sentinel . t;)oint t;)leasant l\egister
l._... _ ..\~/.~}343,_.,,_..,_...........\~!.~~-215~....- .. - . ... ~J304J..675:J33~.-... -..J
i

1 Very fastjel
2 Mini-guitar
3 Always,
to Tennyson
4 Braneh&lt;ls
5 "Swan Lake"
costume

38 Dept. olore
Inventory
39 Previously

Commt:rdal and
Re!'lidential
Free Estimates

YOUNG'S

· CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addlllonl &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plombmg
• Roofing &amp; Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painfirlg
• Patio and Porth Oe&lt;:)ta
We do It all except

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

~~-~ J

GRIZZWELLS
't&gt;U I&lt;\-loW W'H~, P\'&lt;.~1\'\1?
'10\1 1'\WO:R K~ U\'\\.t.~
'(0[.!. W-1

6
7
8
9

40 Frat letters
44 Coosl
Guard off.
45 Nabokov

AstroGraph
"bur 'Birthday:

By Bern1ce Bede Oaol
Chances are you'll 1md yourself mov1ng
iibout a lot 1n the year ahead by go1ng on
many more light-hearted tunKets than
you've a)(penenced in the past EnJOY ·
them 1nstead of trymg to turn tllese tun
eXcurs1ons 1nto business s1luat1ons.
LIBRA (Sep t 23-0ct. 23)- You're a person who tnes very hard to gel along with
everyone, but be care1ul that you're not
used today by someone who takes
advantage ol your cooperative spmt and
ma kes you h.IS p1geon .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - If you
have a bit ol a roving eye today 11
cause you compl ications you don't anticipata. especially where your career or .
work 1s concerned Avo1d a fh~ion with
an of1-llm1ts person
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) - Do
' all that you can to maKe those you come
1n1o con1ec1 w1th today !eel that you think
highly of them Do not unwittingly com- ·
pare yOLir deeds to lheirs, which m1ghl
not be as m1ghty
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) - Be
extremely. wary ot anyone w,h o pra1ses
you today w1thout cause. It should serve
as a red flag that his or her tlattery may
be des1gned to serve a self1sh purpose at
your expense
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Norma lly your linanc1a l 1ud gment m bus1 :
ness matters IS QUi te shrewd, but today
you may choose to sea thing s as you'd
like lhern lo be rather than be Wlllillg ·to
accept facts as they really are.
PISCES !Feb 20-March 20) - Social
amenities are always very important. yel
today you may be loo wrapped up 1n your
emotional views and do somethmg 111
poor taste thai leaves a bad impressiOn
difficult to erase
AR IES
(March
21-Apr1t
19)
Sometimes wo unwittingly hurt someone
who means a lot to us. Koep your w1ts
about you today or you coulcl clo iuslthat
TAURUS {April 20- May 20) To
appease two separate pals today. you
, may promise to spend t1m€1 with each,
lh1nkmg
yo u'll
spilt
your
t1me
Unfortunately. each will want all your time
and be angry i1 they don't get 11 .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Take care
of your own attairs t oday m importam
career matters A wall-mean1ng but bum bling assoc1a1e cou ld do thmgs qn your
behalf that w111 have 111 elfects difficult 10
mend
CANCER (June 21·July 22)- Be vary
careful not to let 1mpu1s1veness or
lmpetuou!'lnese cloud your judgment m
your dealings with others today A loose
tongue could caus e r:nuch trouble thet
could be avo1ded .
LEO (July 23-AuQ i!2) - Although you
cen manage your funds well when you
choose to do so, today m"ay not be one of
thOse limes Your generality m ight ta r
exceed your com mon sense and le ave
you In debt
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22)- 11 you don't
tnlnk - tor yourul1 today, • pereon with
less than honoreble Intentione wlll ·)ump
1n and do 1110 tor you Don 't leave youraelf
wide open to be one ot thlll pereon s vic·
tims

Comeback

Agree
Unwrttlen
tests

43 !1-diglt

14 Glut '

10

19 Carson City '45 Caesar s
loc.

year

21 News
network

46 Because of

22 Mattress

47 Pungent

(2 wds.)

category
23 Bone-dry
24 Young
tellows
25 - up
(got ready)

29 Same

50 Out·and-oul

52 Misplace
53 Freight units
56 Potato bud
58 Bar rock
59· T'ai ch'uan

30 Overwhelm 60 Heir, often
32 Moray
35 Llvy's road
36 Pushed the
doorbell
37 To be,

by Luis campos
Cetebnly C1(tle· CI)'Piogi911S i¥e cre9led from quo:attOns by tar-1ous oeoole pasl and
Each lener, me CIP!le• staros 101 aM!I\el
•'
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I owe everylh rng lo gall. Where else could a guy
with an 10 like mine. make this much money?" - Pr o golfer Hubert Green
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 10·5
1'1011
GA~I

Reem:n~o
0 iovr

\et"n ~::~ 1 !iu,
be-

xra~bi~C wor~:

low

Wednesday, Oct. 6 , 2004

Sly--fox

10 Toy ootdler
to Brutus
(2 wda. ~
42 Cheer

CELEBRITY CIPHER

fori'", !ou: ...,ocdi.

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COMMERCIAL and
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6890

\

31 Ferris wheel
33 Informal

To sta rt today, here is another definition
from Ambrose Bierce 's wonde rful "The
Dev1l's Dlclionar( " Nom~nee A modest
gentleman shrinkmg from the distinction
of private life and diligently seeking the
honorable obscunty of public ot11Ce.·
Th1s deal features some honorable plays
- or plays of honors Aga1nst three notrump. West leads the spacle seven. What
should happen attnck one?
In the auction,_E.a~t's weak two-b1d prom·
ISeS a decen t SIX·Card SUI! and 5·10
po1nts nonvulnerable. After South's takeout double and Norttl 's strength-showmg
cue-b1d. 1t doesn't cost South to reveal h1s
spade stopper North , w1th an excellent
ptcture of South's hand, is happy to pass.
Declarer covers West's spade seven w1th
dummy 's 10. Should East play the ace,
queen or nine?
Th1s 1s the bas1c principle : When declarer
has one stopper in the su1t you are hoping to establiSh, try to m'ake him burn it up
on the first round of that suit.
II East takes the f1rst tnck w1th the spade
ace and returns a spade. South wins and
drives out the heart ace, cruismg home
II East covers dummy's spade 10 with his
queen. that is fine 11 South takes the 1r1ck
But if declarer also knows the key prinCIple, he w111 duck, playing h1s spade six
Aga1n, the contract IS cold.
However, 1f East sigf}~ls encouragement
with h1s spade n1ne. the declarer is dead
South has only e1ght tncks. and when he
attacks hearts, West wt11zzes in w1th the
ace and returns his second spade. so that
East can run the su1t

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Mowers. C ha m Saw~.

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r AA~~: I

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Pass

Honors to the left,
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IS .I ALwAYS
GH TO
WO/tiC AT

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U.1rry' ~

F.:ast

novel
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suff.
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lrappor
protons ere
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in shape
need
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54 Orchid·
as data
loving
12 Do aom•
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thing with 55 Mgmt. biggla
13 Tall flower 57 Twitches
15 Garr
61 Name
of "Tootsie"
in elevatorS
16 - Mahal
62 Rand
17 Lower
of fiction
California · 63 lmKate
18 Lipn 's prey 64 Work by
20 Spotted eat
Keels ·
22 Spurious
65 - Miz
25 - rummy 66 Horse 's
26 Notice
brake
27 A Gershwin

41 Hermllo

I· 7 40-~43·5382

m~:---=--~ ILL _,

All leather seatmg
All Lookmg for eng1ne or transpower. Eqwpped for trailer m1ssion? Give me a call at
towing. Can be seen at 136 (740) 446 _0519
F1rs1 Ave .. Gallipolis, ohio
Phone 740 446-2561 .
\ I In 1&lt; I..,

Reach 3 Counties

Tt'l~ f'IIC.~ T~ING
A TU/tTL~

'""'"'

beside

K 8 54
A 6 2

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~20

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Dealer: East
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!4nnette's

•

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Opening lead: • 7

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in this
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per month.

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Call (740)446-6876

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Box 189
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99 Honda Shadow Ace
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7787.
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Moving Sale· New light
92 Silverado. 2x2, shortbed.
call after 6 OOpm.
brown Broyhill couch/accent 0 1sh washer $150, like new AKC Blond Lab pup$. Shots, Round bales of hay for sale. loaded, $4,500.
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far Jr (740)256-1102.
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0013 or (740)441-7333
sage

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Phillip
Alder

t Driveways t Tennis Courts

and Financial Services

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebu11t In
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EQuiPMENT

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysertinel.com

Henderson, WV

Antique&amp;

(740)992·3823

.-- · apanment, call 675-6679
EHO

Tuesday, October 5, 2004
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$610.

Whaleyls Auto

ro:

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Business Services

mental retardation in Meigs Coumy. Hours:

1:00 p.m.
Saturday,
October 9
White Farm
on Carr Road

2.500 sq. tt No. pets/smok-

Help Wanted

WANTED: Emergency Reli ef Workers
(Substilulcs) needed 10 work wilh people wilh

Due to Medical reasons, BOB WHITE
is retiring as bus driver from Eastern
Local Schools. Help us celebrate over
1000 safe trips to and from school!

Al1
••

Tuesday, October 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.corn

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Ex rience

••

'

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

TUesday, October 5,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

•

.NASCA A - Nextel Cup

Earnhardt's sliP.of
tongue Puts newfound
•n
J·eopardy
lead l
BY MtKE HARRIS

Associated Press
TALLADEGA. Ala. - Dale F.arnharot Jr.
was strangely subdued after hi ' late'! "icto~
ry at Talladega Superspeeoway.
Why'' Junior put hi&gt; newly acquired
points lead in jeopardy by &lt;:ursmg during an
interview with NBC. After dominating the
EA Sports 500 on Sunday to take the N'extel
Cup lead. Earnhardt erreo - in Victory
Lane. of all places.
"I'm worried abou t losing some poims."
said Earnhardt. who moved inro rhc saies
lead by 13 points ov.e r Kurt Busch. who fin ished fifth Sunday.
Asked about the significance of hi;.. fifth
victory at Talladega. Earnhardt said ... It
don't means--- right now. Daddy's won here
10 times:·
In February at Rockinghant NASCAR
president Mike Helton told drivers to v. atch
their language on radio and te le1·ision. Less
than a momh later, Johnn~ Saurer was fined
$25.000 and dockeu 25 point,' after cursing
during a radio intervie"'v following the
Busch Series race in Las Ve gas.
'·Johnny said it in a fit nl ,Inger. I said it in
Victory Lane. I hope they unuerstand that it
was in jubilation and I know me anu tho'e
other guys that got fined let ir slip. bur it's
two differenr circumstance '.
··1 r.hink that when you· re happy and joyous about something and ir happem. I think
it's different than being angry and cursing in
anger. Of course, we don·r want to promote
that. ..
NASCAR spokeswoman Deni'e Maloof
said Nextel Cup uirector John Darby and
vice president for competition Robin
Pemberton were --~ware of the &gt;ituation and
would address it on Tuesday or Wednesday.
That doesn't necessarily mean that he will
be fined or lose poim&gt; ...
The verbal sl ips took some of the eogc off
a very big day by Earnh~rdt.
"I'm a little worried about the~t. but I've
won fi"ve races this year ano I'm pretty
thrilled,'' Junior said. "I wasn·r expectin_!! to
have such a great sea . . on ...
Although he was ~~ or near th e front for
virtually the entire race. leauing a race-high
78 of the 188 laps. Earnharot need ro charge
from II th place over the last five laps to the
win the race. He fell behind when crew chief
Tony Eury Sr. decided to gamble on two
fresh right-side tires on his final pit stop.
Eury decided ro take advamagc of the fact
that Earnhardt was already on pit road for
hi s final stop when a yellow tl~g came out
for a crash involving Sterling Marlin and
Bobby Labonte.
Still, other .drivers got ahead of Earnhardt
by staying on the track or taking on ly fuel on
their final stops during the last of five cau~
tion periods. But it made little difference
once the green flag waved for lap 184.
"Those brand new rights just drove aruuml
the corners so much better than tho'e other

'

Rio Grande soccer blanks Houghton
);,

HMC to host FoUrth
Annual Respiratory
Fall Symposium, A2

~ussell

Ryan
was credited witlfan assist on
Hunters goal. .
Senior forward Simon Carey scored for the

STAFF REPORT

sports@mydatlytnbune.com

HouGHToN. N.Y _The. top . ranked
University of Rio Grande Redmen soccer team
remained unbeaten on the season after a 2-0 win
at Houghton on Saturday.
The Redmen moved their unbeaten streak 10
79 games (76-0-3).
Rio Grande (9-0) took a 1-0 lead to halftime
after a sluggish first half of play. Sophomore fd'
ward Ben Hunter put the Redmen on the scoreboard with a goal in the 17th minute. The goal
was the sixth of the season for Hunter and 28th
of his career in 34 games played.
As it turned out that was the only goal the
Redmen would need to get the win. Fre'shman

~~~n~~~~~~~~s~~!so~~~e~n~~~~~e~~~~~e~~
d
·
c
d

Redmen a 2-0 a vantage. Hunter fed arey an
picked up the assist on the play.
·
Freshman goalkeeper Andrew Moore notched
two s~ves and recorded his tifth shutout of the
season (tifth in the last six games).
Rio Grande out-shot the Highlanders 9-5.
Houghton falls to J-6-2 on the season with the
defeat.
The Redmen will return to American Mideast
Conference South Division action on
Wednesday when they entertain Cedarville.
Kick-offis sd for4 p.m. from Evan Davis Field.

guys with olo tires out ther"' " Earnhardt
said .."! wa,n't worried. They make the calls
in the pih ano I just drive the car"
Earnharut. who won four 'traight
Tallaoega race' before being beaten by
teammate Michael Waltrip here last fall.
came close again in April. He finisheo second to Jeff Gordon in a somewhat controversial finish . with NASCAR determining
that Gordon was leading when a yellow tlag
waved and froze the fie ld. The race finished
that way under caution to the displeasure of
the spectators.
·-r rn just glad to get back on top at
Talladega .." Earnhardt said. He drew a roar
from the partisan crowd when he addeo,
"This is my place:·
Gordon. who came into the race with a
one-point lead over Busch. finished 19th
and fell to third. 61 points behind after three
•
years and called it a calculated well as we'd like to, but that's
of the 10 races in NASCAR's new lO-man
BY JOE MtLICIA '
risk. Kicker Phil Dawson, who somethitig we're smart enough
Associated Press
pl~yoff-s tyle championship.
\
·
hasn ' t missed this season, to recognize," Butch Davis
It was a far . di tTerent atmosphere tllan--i.n
would
have been attempting a said. "We know there are some
April when the dis appointed fans booed and
BEREA - Browns coach 46-yarder into the winu.
areas we have to continue to
threw beer cans and trash onto the track as
Butch Davis acknowledges that
"If we had the chance to do it improve on and we' re trying to
Gordon rook the checkered llag.
Sunday's win wasn't pretty.
all over again, I would call it do that."
'After the green tlag waved for the final
But looks aren't important again tomotTow," said Davis.
The Browns did get a spark
restart Sunday. Earnhardt's red 1\o. 8
for the Browns, who are just who invited members of the on offense from Lee Suggs,
Chevrolet shot up and down the steeply
happy to get back to .500 and media into one of the Browns' who ran for 82 yards and the
bankeo track. passing cars on the outside
start
the 'eason 2-0 at home for film rooms Monday to watch game-winning touchdown after
and inside seemingly at will before finally
the
tirsttime
since 1995.
the play in slow moiion.
missi ng three games with a
moving past Kevin Harvick for the lead on
"When
you
win
that's
all
thar
The video showed that neck stinger. Suggs' return limlap IKo.
really matters," Davis said Gonzalez would have had a ited William Green to just four
Earnhardt then held off Harvick's
Monday. "You talk about goals sure touchdown. But the bot- carries.
Chevrolet. dri1·ing across the finish line
. anti objectives and statistics .... tom line is the trick play didn't
Green declined to talk to
0.117 'econd' - abou t two car-lengths The bottom line ' is in January work, and fortunately for the reporters on Monday.
ahead . It was his 14th career victory.
nobody 's going to care how Browns, their defense caused a
Butch Davis said the coaches
"I knew they were coming,.. said Harvick,
you did it. It's just. 'How many fumble on the Redskins' final will make sure Green knows
whose finish was a season best. "There wasdid you win?'"
possesSion.
he's still an important part of
n·r &lt;lnybody else in the field that was going
But it's still October, and the
Clevelano·s defense contin- the o!Tense .
'\
to get by me. They can JUSt do it when they '
ugliness of Cleveland's 17-13 ues to keep the Browns in
The Browns had one !other
want to at thi s·placc."
win over Washington is still games and has now helu both thing going for them - for the
Dale Jarrett finished third . followed by
fresh.
Clinton Portis and Jamal Lewis liN time in three weeks they
rookie Brendan 'Gaughan. Busch. title conPerhaps the most unsightly to less than 60 yards rushing.
dion·t lose any players for the
tender Tony Stewart and pole-starter Joe
mome.nt was holder Derrick
Linebacker Andra Davis said season to injury.
Nemechek.
Frost gelling smashed by two he doesn't mind the offense
So. 2-2 looks pretty good
. The last lap nirned out to be the wildest of
Redski ns defenders as he tried leaning on the defense.
right now.
the race. with Greg Biftle hitting the wall
to run on a fake lield goal late
"It's our job to do it week in •.. A win's a win no matter
and crashing into Kasey Kahne in the secin the fourth quarter.
what. It\ so hard to win a game
and week our." he said. ·
ond turn. far behind the leaders.
•
Fro'! was supposed to throw
The offense looked lost in the in this league:· center Jeff
!\ ASCAR kept the green !lag out and
it. but diun't see wide open
first half. just lil&gt;.e in the season- Faine said. "There are so many
Elliott sawe.r. who hat! a .spectacular tlip on
offensive tackle Joaquin
opening win against Baltimore. teams that are 0-4 right now. ·
the front st11ghta way in this race last year,
Gonzalez running toward the
did it again, ·sliding backward into the grass
Any time they built momen- For us to he sitting at 2-2 with a
end
zone.
and ooing a flip before landing on hi s
tum. it was blown on penalties chance to go 3-2 going to .
Davis said the Browns have and mistakes.
wheels as he crossed the finish line. He
Pittsburgh ... you can't ask for..
practiced the play for three
"We're not always playing as anything more but4-0."
wound up 22nd and fel l to eighth in the
standings, 166 points behind Earnhardt.
•• .~.· •• •• .&amp;...... ..... ••
•• •• .&amp;...... •• •• 1l' • • ...
Sadler was not injured.
• : ~# ••• ~· .........,
~~·
~· ~ ·~
in
Among the other contender'
NASCAR's playoff, defending series champion Matt Ken,eth finisheu 14th. followed
by Mark Martin and Ryan Newman. Jimmie
Johnson had an engine failure ano finished
37th. while Jeremy Mayfield was taken out
in a lour-car wreck on lap 148.
The results widened the gap .among the
contender&gt;. with Martin now Ill points
'
11.
behinu in fourth and Mayfield in lOth. 172
,.~
back.

National Football League

•••

........., •••

-..

e aen ar.

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1.

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Send us a
:f. photo of
College Football
!: your
I
favorite
Ohio State victory already a
pet and
distant memory for Northwestern
they
·:f. might be----.:::::~~~
voted \into · our

Phil more. The junior receiver this Ohio State game and
Associated Press
grew up just outside of you could see we'd look
Columbus. and he know s good one series and then the
mo&gt;t of the Buckeyes. He next series not look good,"
EVANSTON.
Ill.
also had a huge game Philmore said. ·'Finally.
Northweyterri coach Randv Saturday night. including the offe nsive ly and defensively,
Walker got so many phone first touchdown catch of his we were able to go out and
calls and e-rnai\s after the
series after series and put out
Wildcats' stunning overtime career.
Yet Phil more isn't very a great effort."
upset of Ohio State. there\ no
imerested in rehashing the
Now the Wildcats have to
way he can return them all.
game anymore.
· prove they can do it agai n. '
Receiver Mark Philmore.
'· You have 12 games in a starting Saturday aga in st
an Ohio native, had 25 voice year," he said. '·You can't get Indiana .
·
mails Wjliting for him after
in one game.''
Though the Hoosiers are 2the game and another 12 stuck
There certain ly are things 3 and winless in the Big Ten. ·
when he woke up the next Northwestern (2-3) will take they pulled off their own
morning . .
. . .
from the big win. After shocker earlier th is year.
Yes., ev.erybody v.ants , to we cb or insis ting .they knocking off then-No. 24
congratulate the Wtldc.~ t s. weren't far aw&lt;ty from bein g Oregon. The Hoosiers also
t~ese days. But the W~ld~at l a gooo team. the Wildcats played Nonhwestern tough
have a n~ther game m a c,ou- ,howcd it on t~e field. The y lust year, taking them to
pie of days. an~ rcmHmcmg piled up -14-1 yard~ of total overtime before the Wildcats
about thal g~eat ."' 1n O\Cr offen,e.
the thtrd-mos t finally won~7-31.
OhiO State, tsn l goutg to help allowed by the Buckeye' in · .. Probahly ~\,ide our
th~m prepare for ll.
.
.. coach Jim .T re"el\ three~ '· foothallteam. it woulo seem
h can be a dt s tractt o~. plu ' ,ea,on,. 'Noah Herron that · we ha ve a lot to prove
~alker
satd
Mond ~y. ru, hcd for a ,ea,on-high 1.\9 comi.ng into. this game.
Before ~ou know 11 · you re yard' and ., cored three rime ,, thinking that (Ohio State)
rev~ilng 111 the celebratro~ . I ~ including the game winner in could nave been a !luke."
don l spend a lot of ttme cel - overtime. ·
'iffety Dominique Price said.
ebratm~ beca~se the .re&lt;tltty
The defense kept the ''But nur focus for every .
of · our .next task .1s rrght '" Buckeye' in check through game i' the same. We feel
front ot.us. ··· We have lo get the first three. quarters, and like we &gt;houHc!Jme out and
our players to n~.ake sure they made big stops when they play our best game. With
do that as well. .
..
had rt&gt; 111 the founh.quaner that, we're a hard~ team to
• From what Phllmore \aid. and overtime. The y lacked defeat.''
·the Wildcats have gor(en the, Ju-rin Zv- ick lour time' and
me &gt;Sage .
.
.
held kadin~ n1 1hc r Lllkll
~ 'lORE
If anyone wa&gt; gomg to It 'c Ro, 1 to 32 y~lrd ,.
•
!V ·
•
· ,
o:f t~e. exc~temenl ol .. Most im portant!). they
Saturday 's 3.~ 2~. VICtory. hnally played wnh the con·
•
Northwestern s lust ov~r 1i1tc'nc y.thcy'd been lacking .
Suhscrihe roda\'.
Ohm State srnce 197 1. ll '
"We had four game' before
992-2155 ·

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o Cl ·: :'iTS • \ 'ol. :;:;, No. :ll

SPORTS
• Buckeyes deal with the
blame game after setback.
SeePage 81

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Daily 3: 2-2-9
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&lt;l}aUipoli!l11llai(p
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'ilribune

"Pet Calendar".
1
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825 Third
Avenue·.·
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:~ Callipolis, OH 45631

LO.CAL NEWS ·
MORE LOCAL·FOLKS . •

'3';;\oint a!:'l(easant
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~egister
"Pet Calendar"
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200 Mam
St.
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550

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In addition. several Pomeroy ,
employees wi ll be working 11 ith children and assisting 'ta\T at Meig '
Elementary School.
Mason employees will repaint the
home of Harry Ray Fry in New Ha\'cn.
Fry is well-known in the communi!)
as a devout. Chri,tian, prouo veteran
and avid Wahama supporter. David and
Jackie Field' of Fields Hardware in
New Haven have agreed to oonate the
paint and painting 'upplies.
In Gallipo·lis employee' will be
repainting the basement of the Ariel
Theatre. while at Tuppers Plain s the

RACINE A Meigs
Coul)ty horse recent\ y took top
honors in a $I 0. &lt;XJO stake'
race in Tillt. Pleasant. Mich.
Beholdanotherbeduino. bred.
owned. and trained by Jenning'
Beegle. won the Great Lakes
Quarter Horse Association
Stallion Service Sale Derby on
Auu. 22 at Mount Pleasant
Metldows Racetmck.
The three-year-olo gelding
now has three wins. two seconds and two thirds with
earnings over $12.000. Last
year he was the Ohio Reserve
Champion two-year-old .
Since Beegle\ retirement
in 1990. he ha&gt; devoted full
time to raising beef cattle and
racin g horses. In 1996 his .
homebred Watch Billy Sweep
won the Buckeye Derby, the
premier race for Ohio threeyear-old Quarter Horses .
In 200 I Beegle' s Meigs
County-breds swept the
awards at the Ohio Quarter
Horse Racing Association
end-of-year banquet. That
year he raced four horses .
two three-vear-olds and two
two-ye ar-o.lds.
Fols Beduino. a three-yearold. set a new track record at
River Downs and became the
lirst Quarter Horse to clock
an official AAA time at that
track, She also won races that year in both Michigan anti
lnoiana anu was awarded
best three-yea r-old filly in
Michigan and Ohio.
The other three-vear-old.
Strikin~ Colors. was reserve
chJmpwn sta llion in both
swtes. That same year Beegle\
Lucks Regal Chick won the $
'I0.000 Buckeye Futurity and
was named Ohio reserve
champion two-ye ar~olo. best ~
ed only by hi s other two-yearold , Our Royal Dancer.
"That was my best year of
ra&lt;:jng. an o I was Ohio\
trainer of the yea(. my
biggest hoitor to oate in racing ." Beegle says.
"I have been raising and
racing horses since I rode my
paint horse to a win at th e
Meigs Coun ty Fair a' a

0

S

aily ·enti.nel

"Pet Calendar"
111 C
ourt 5t.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·

7.• •: _, '"f•' •: T"" ·'••

office 'tall "ill go to Eastern
Elementar) School. 11 here they will
l'OHduct readin g groups. tutor. 'erve
playgrnu~d out y C
illO perform ot~r
ta'k' "' a"igncd h1 the principal.
.. We have alway' trico ro make the
community a better place to live and
work.'. 'aio Paul Rceu . Farmers Bank
pre,ident. "Lending a helping hand i'
real ly what banking i' all ahout. It wa'
our phil o"&gt;phy in I'IIJ-1. and it still i'
tooay. The way we grow and prosper
i' hy help ing other' to do the same."
The bank hope' to make Community
Service D~1v an anm1al event.

J. REED

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport
Community
As'-lot:iation will co 111pkte
final plans fDr Christma'
promotion' in ~o1ember.
ano pl·ans a Moonltght
Madness e\'ent and a pumpkin-themecl conte ., t later
this month.
Meeting
Tue,Oa)
at
Peoples B;mk .. ""ociati on
member" dt..,cu:-.'Jed a ten tatil·e schedule of e1·ent' f&lt;&gt;r
Cllristmas-sca,on promotional e1ents. designed to
encou rage local shnpping.
A

merchant~·

urcn

h\lll\C i~

schcuuled from I to 4 p.m.
nn No1·. 2R. with ··Mr,.
Claus· w hand out treah .
The Chri,rma' Parade will
be conoucted at 6 p.m. on
IJec. -1. and a late-night
.. Frantic Sante~ .. ,hopping

'prce 11 ill be 'P"'"''red hv
partkipating merchanh on
Dec . ~.1.
A l.ongahcrt,:er Bas ket
Rin go gdmP. featuring dou- ,
hk pri1.e., for each game
and a 'pecia\ Snow Bear
designed hy Ohio River
Bear Co. to he awarded to
each winner. 11 il be held at
6 p.m . on Dec. 2. at the
Feen'ey -Bennetl Pmt 128.
American
Legion.
Pnll·ecd' from th~ lundrai'er 11·ill he u,eJ to purchase
"big ti cker " gi1·c·away items
fo r th e in ~ drawing on
Dec. 2.1. lnoi,·idual mer- ·

ch ant drawings will take
place \\cek l~ beginning
D.ec. I.
Brenda :vlcrritt of WYVK
Kadto rl'pnrtcd t lltJt mer-

c·hanh in Gallia and Y!a,on.
W . V&lt;t. c·oulllie' will. also par-

Please see Plans, AS

Southern Homecoming
Queen candidates

Jennings Beegle displ~ys the trophy
to him follow·
ing Beholdanotherbedutno's win. With him from the left are
JOCkey Denny BerryMI and Bi ll Baer who assists in tra ining.
teenager in 1950. Since than I 'till oo a lilt of the ground work
have raced in ~even ~latcs. such as breaking fuals to !call
from New York to Iow a.
&lt;utd line drive. M)· neighbor. Bill
"Stak es races are the tou gh- Bacr. like me a rctireo teacher
est to win. First. the owners &lt;Uld hooked on horses. has dlme
must make a series of pay- almost all the rioing for the pa.'t
ments over several months. tom yem,. until the horse' go to
and the hnrs~s must compete the t&lt;tcctr,tck. LNtally in April '"
in spcetl trials to earn a t:hance tv. o-year-olus. I ;un llntun&lt;tte to
in the final. usually run by the han~ Bill's patience &lt;utd quiet.
ten faqcst quali tiers.
easy approach to these high- Soutt1ern Higll School homeconi, ng week IS underway. At
"It is CS}JCCially gratitYi ng to smutg loals that are breo t(Jr 2 p.m. on Friday tl1e 11omecoming parade wtll make tis way
raise. break. ano tr~lin my hors- s~cd. Rough hano) produce through Rac1ne. Tllen at 7 p.m. the parade floats will ci r·
es here at home bdi1re tltcv haru-mouthed horses. which we
cle the football field before the game and at half·ttme the
e\·er ~ee a starting ~ate or a uy 10 amid.
winne'rs ,of the homecommg court will be al"nounced.
"I want the ·entire breaking
race track. Even if I cuulo afford
il. buying a winning racehor.-.e rr(X.:e~~ tu be plea~ant. gentle. Pictured in the front row {from ·left ) freshman ·attendant.
Morgan Brown. sophomore attendan t. Lmdsey Burrows.
would lllL'an les~ to me lh~m and without fear , 0 lhat Ill\
rai-..ing 1\&gt;al...; frmli my own horses mature illlo calm. tnhi- junior attendatJI. Chelsea Sm 1th. Seco nd row {from left \
ing.animals that W&lt;!n'r panic in . homecoming queen cand idates Ashto n Br own . Brooke
m;tre, here in Meigs Cnunty.
'taning gate. 1\&gt;r in,tance. ano Kiser. Jordan Netgler. Bfltta ny Ph ils on . ~ s hle y Roush .
a
"At 71 ~em-s of age; I seldom
(Beth. Sergentj plloto l
do any of the 1iding~ Ho\\c\'er. I ,elf-Je,tntct.'' Beegk says.

I.

Bring Home
More Bacon! Fo
.
.

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•• •• .&amp;....._ •• · •• ~...&amp; ••

.. .

A3
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···••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••···•·r4•

•• •• ~A •• ·•• .&amp;....._ •• ••
••' • : T"" '1•' •: _, "':'.•

Calendars

Comics

••

the commuhity service project, which
is being held In conjum:tion wi th the
bank's I DOth an ni versary• celebration.
POMEROY -On Columbus Day.
Employees of the Pomeroy bank
Monoa9. Oct. II. Farmers Bank will will be assist ing the Meigs County
be closed.
Cooperative Pari~h with its move to a
It's not unusual for a bank to be
closed on a federal holiday. but what new central \oc~tion at the Mulberry
is unu ,ual is that the bank employees Community Center, formerly the old
ins1ead of just enjoying a day off will Pomeroy Elementary School. The
be spending their time doing commu- clothing parish, the food pantry.
preschool and other function,, includnity service work.
The staff of all four Farmers Bank ing Goo's Net will all be housed there.
The bank employees will help with
offices - Pomeroy. Mason. Tuppers .
Plains and Gallipolis - about 70 the move. as well as cleaning and
employee' in all , will participate In painting rooms at the new faci lil y.

Meigs County horse takes top award

• Jack McCoy
• James Fisher
• Joseph Blazer Jr.

INDEX

:,

STAFF REPORT .

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Quarter horse Beholdanotherbeduino owned by Jennings Beegle took top honors in a $10,000
stakes face in Mt. Pleasant. Mich. Denny Berryhill is the jockey.

Details on Page A2 ·

t

mldail)"·nti,,..J.,·.,rn

Farmers Bank devotes ·a day to community service

BY BRIAN

,.

~" -N~~~ ~t-p~t:---------------- ~------------------

'""'

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTINEL COM

•••

The .winning, pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

:!011-l

Holiday pl'ans under
way in Middleport

WEATHER

\

\\ J:lll\I ·.SIIAY , OCTOIII.R h .

'

.

•••:

Pet Calendar!

clash over Iraq in
VP debate, A2

at

BY NANCY ARMOUR

2005

Edwar~, ·cheney

~

Browns.win ugly, gJad to be 2-2

-.T

•

Certificate of Deposit Rates
15 Month CD: Z.651Mt • Z-69~ .AP'I
40 Month· CD: 1.9Pift • 4.0Mft AP'I
M/tl:num of$ 10,000 to open the Mcount and obtilm the.mnu.;r/ pcret!nt.rge Ytcld f~PYJ Wh!C(I JJ .ucur.HC' .,;. of OrtobN I liJOf 5ub5t.mtl&lt;ll
penillty for e.trly W !tfldr;~witl Advert!5cd ritte ! f .tv.t•I.W/e unpl ttw end of busml.'u O..ry. CXto~t 15, JOo4

'

'

...

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sov111gs Compan y
'Ptr Bank In'+- .

•
•
•
•
•

Pomeroy 992.2136
Mason 773.6400
Tuppers· Plains 667.316 1
Gallipolis 446.2265
Member FDIC
www.lbsc.com

\

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