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•
Wednesday, October 6, 2004

www:mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

J

Agent: Ricky Williams
Bengals' Justin Smith
wants to rejoin Dolphins charged ·with DUI
Bv STEVEN WtNE
Associated Press
MIAMI - Mavbe Ricky
Williams is tired oi· traveling.
Maybe he has run out of
books to read. Or maybe he
doesn't want to pay the $8.6
million he owes the Miami
Dolphins for breach of contract.
Whatever the
reason.
Williams wants to rejoin the
Dolphins and has asked the
NFL how soon he can return.
his agent said Tuesday.
It"s unclear whether the
2002 NFL rushing champion
must serve a suspension the
rest of this season for repeated violations of the league
drug program. He has asked
the league for a hearing to
clarifv his status. but no date
has been set.
A Dolphins source speaking
on condition of anonymity
said the team "s understanding
is that Williams can"t.play this
"')fear because of the violations.
f
Williams left the Dolphins
reeling when he retired just
before training camp in late
July. and they're off to an 0-4
stan. their worst since 1966.
His agent. Leigh Steinberg.
declined to discuss Williams'

change of hean.
"'All I can tell you is that
Rick\ ha' a,ked me to
explore and to try to facilitate
his return:· Steinberg said.
"He ·s ~'cited and in ~ood
shape and misses footbalL"
One likely fador for
Williams· re,·ersal: On Sept.
24. an arbitrator ordered him
to repay more than SK.6 mi Ilion to the team for breaching
his contract.
Steinberg and the Dolphins
declined to say whether there
have been recent c"mi,ersations between the two partie,.
·This is an issue between
the player. his representative
and the league:· Dolphins
genera l

manager

Rick

Spielman suid. "Accordingly.
we don't have a comment on
the matter." .
Last week. coach Dave
Wannstedt said he hadn ·r
talked to Williams in about a
month.
NFL spokesman Greg
Aie llo declined to comment
on the situation.
Sin.:e retiring. Williams has
trave led to Asia aml Australia,
but Steinberg said he "s. now in
the Cmted State&gt;.
··He's in excellent shape:·
Steinberg said. ··He has been

working out regularly and
looks great."
William' and the Dolphin s
traded Jon~-di s tancc barbs in
the day' after he quit. But the
Dolphin&lt; poor stan would
likely make them more
inclined to take him back.
The 27-year-old running
hack has given many reasons
lor retiring. He expressed a
desire to travel. read und c.:untinue· !'-moking marijuana. He
said he wa&gt; unhappy about
his contract. a workload he
c.:on,idaed excessive and
Miami's nev..· ot'fensive coor-

dinator Chris Foerster.
He acknowledged testing
positive fur marijuana three
times. Under league rules, a
player in the NFL's drug program face·s suspension if he
returns in tl1e calendar year
after he announces his retirement. If he returns after a
year. he faces a Jesser suspen-

DAYTON
(AP)
Oncinnati Bengals defensive end Justin Smith wSs
arrested early Tuesday and
charged wi'th drunken driving after he failed a breath
test.
the
Monlgomery
County sheriffs department
said.
Smith . 25. was stopped
because his truck was weav ~·
ing. He told police he had
five beers. the arrest repon
said, and he swayed while
trying to walk during a field
sobriety test.
He had a blood alcohol
level of 0.152. the report
said. nearly double . the
state's legal limit.
Smith told authorities at
the county jail that he was
unemployed.
Maj.
Ed
Copher said.
Smith. who faces a maximum six months in jail and

$1.000 fine for the misdemeanor, was released on
bond. Typically, first-time
offenders are put on probation and ordered to attend an
alcohol education course.
He ·was scheduled for
arraignment next Tuesday in
Kettering Municipal Court.
Smith was the Bengals'
tirst-round pick -the founh
overall - in the 200 I draft.
He set a team rookie record

for sacks with 8.5 that year,
but his total has 1!5,clined in
the last two years .
A message seeking comment was left for Smith's
agent, Jim Steiner.
" It' s not appropriate to
comment until the matter is
legally re so lved," Bengals
spokesman Jack Brennan
said.
Bengals players met with
coaches Monday afternoon
to review their 28-17 loss in
Pittsburgh, then were off
until Wednesday morning.
According to the police
report, the deputy who
pulled over Smith said he
smelled alcohol and that
Smith had bloodshot eyes
and a flushed face. Smith
missed when he tried to
touch his nose with his index
finger during the sobriety
test. the repon said.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,I I

I \. I ·'"' • \

t

0

The Dolphins might be
headed toward their first losing season since 1988 . They
have scored only two touchdown&gt; in four games without
Williams. who rushed for
3,225 in two seasons after
being obtained in a trade with
New Orleans.

• Meigs downs WHS in
three. See Page 81

Turner. Jr. , Jg. was killed
along with 12 other soldiers
in an attack in Balud. _lmq.
POMEROY - Memorials,
Turner had attended Meigs
like people, come in many High
School
with
· shape' and sizes. Memorials. Schneider"s sister and their
like people, are made unique families have known each
by their intentions.
other for years.
Beth Schneider's inten'T ve Jo,t people but I've
tions for a gumdrail that never lost anybody in a war."
snakes up Pro.) pect Hill near she said. "I don 't know how
her home was to siri1ply show those people cope:··
her patriotism. She painted it
Reflecting on the loss of
red. white and blue eight Sgt. Turner this winter
inspi.red Schneider to · start
years ago.
With time the paint began from 'cra1eh on her patriotic
to weather and fade while the but faded gL•ardrail. When
war with lwq became a stark spring came she began creatreality seen in living color on ing a memorial to all the solTV. Still. TV is not reality diers from Ohio who have
and coulunot compare to this lost their lives serving in Iraq.
Schneider first cleaned the
winter when the war hit home
for Schneider after Staff chipping paint from the
Sergeant Ro ger Clinton guardrail with a wire brush

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

992-2155

-"

Andretti gets Nextel Cup ride
CONCORD. N.C. (AP)John Andretti and ppc
Racing. one of the top teams
in NASCAR"s Busch Series.
will get together on a Nextel
Cup team that will begin racing Oct. 16 at Lowe's Motor
Speedway.
Andretti will run five of the
·last six events of the season.
excluding Martinsv ille. Va ..
and the entire 36-race schedule .in · 2005. the team
announced Tuesday.
··A lot of people have been
working hard to .put thi s program
together:·
said
Andretti. a two-time winner
in the Ncxtcl Cup series. "'It's
pretty exciting to have everything set and ready to go. and
to know we are going to be a
very competitive race team:·
The ppc team . owned by
Greg Pollex. won the Busch
Series championship in 2000
with Jeff Green and also has

four runner-up fini shes . The
Nextel Cup team will be
sponsored hy Victory Brand
LLC. Sunoco. APlus convenience stores and Ford.
Victory Brund is the second cigarette company to
sponsor a car full time in
NASCAR.
The
R.J.
Reynolds
Tobacco
Co.
Camel hrand w'" the sponsor
of· a car entered in the 1'!90s
bv TraYis Carter.
·RJR pulled out as spolNX
of the top NASCAR series
les.., than a year ago and
Victory Brand CEO Steve
Swick said his company is
well aware of the pressures
of government regulation
and financial setbacks that
Jed to RJR ·, withdrawal.
"For· years. stoc k car racing
was pretty well closed to cigarette manufa\(turers. but we
jumped when we saw this
opportunity:· Swick said.

Bucks

Holmes had a 63-yard punt
return for the Buckeye'· only
touchdown of the tirst 41 minutes. Ohio State had 'evcral
peni1lties. missed blocb and
mi&gt;Sed tackles on kick coverage.
'~ Good plays don "t necessari ly erase the bad ones.
Zwick finished 18 of 3R fur
21 1 yards with one interception and one touchdown. With
Ohio State trailing 27- 17 early
in the fou11h quarter. under
cun,tant pressure he completed 6 of I~ passes (or 90 yards
the rest of the way. He also
made plays wi th his feet, gaining 18. II and 8 yards on three
big carries to lead the comeback that forced overtime .
Still. Zwick had an interception and was sacked twice dur· ing that 'pan for 20 yard_:; in
· lo"es. And he also lost a first·
half fumble that resulted in a
Wisconsin field goal.
""That " de!initelv not £ood
enough:· Zwick said. '·It"'
something that"s going to happen and it\ so methin~ you
have to learn from. That s li fe.
You ' re not going to be perfect
all the time. But I definitely
fee I bad about puttins our
team in that situation Ill the

from Page 81
''If you put together all of
the parts of what you need to
do to win the ~ame. we didn't
do those. so it s not a mystery
to me whv we didn "t win. ·
Tressel said.
Still, his team lost even
though it was favored by two
touchdown s. hadn "t lost to
Northwestern in Evanston in
46 years and had1i "t been beaten by the Wildcats anywhere
since 1971.
Defensive ta ckl~ Quinn
Pitcock said the Buc ~yes did
not look past Northwestern to
this week's showdown with
No. 15 Wisconsin !5-0, 2-0).
At the same time. he acknowledged he and his teammate'
may not have been focused on
the job at hand.
"Maybe there wasn't as
much heart as they (the
Wildcat&gt;) may have put into
it." he said.
Tressel said the Buckeyes
will need to summon all the
hean and talent ·thev have to
keep from falling .to ·o-2 in the
conference for the flr&gt;t time
since 1992.
•·It wi Jl be a great challenge
for us to see if we can understand the difficulty of the
task," he said of the Wisconsin
game. "(We have to) u'nderstand what needs to be done if
we're going to win the football
game and climb back in the
race in the Big Ten."'
To do that. the Bu·ckeyes
must improve dramatically in
·several areas. Tressel sai,d.
-The Buckeyes didn't get
their kicks. Punter Kyle
Turano averaged just 39,yards
a kick and the Wildcats averaged 12 yards on their two
punt returns.
·
"We need to be superior in
our sr,:ciaL teams." Tressel
said. 'Unfortunately, we had
our poorest punt production
that we've had all season."
In addition. kicker Mike
Nugent missed a 40-yard field
goal on Ohio State\ on ly possession in overtime.
Even though Santoniu

game."

- - The defense was manhandled fur the most part.
appearing to be confusecl at
times as Northwestern mixed
a variety of mi sdirection and
counter plays with stra•ghtahead runs that netted tailback
Noah Herron 113 yard' on 33
carries and two touchdowns. .
In the overtime. after
Nugent W&lt;JS.just wide ri ght on
the k"ick that might ·have given
the Buckeyes their only lead
of the game. Northwestern
took over possession ·and
needed just four plays to notch
the winning TD.
' We always talk about playing relentless defense if you"re
gomg to .win on the road,"
Tressel 'Said. "We probabJy
didn "t have as good a perfor:
mance there as we· vc had all
season. which is ohviously
di&gt;appointing...
.
The Buckeye~ have little
time to get things turned
around for one of their toughest tem of the season .

'

N ASCAR
spokesman
Mike Zizzo said Victory
Brand is welcome to join the
'enes.
·'When RJR was the title
sponsor of the series. other
cigarette companies were
prohibited as part of their
entitlement."" Zizzo said.
··With
RJR no
lon~er
involved in the sport in that
capacity. the category is
open."
Andretti. 41. lost his fulltime
ride
with
Peny
En terp ri ses midway through
last season and ha~ driven
sporadic&lt;illy for several other
teams si nce. He has star.ted
just five races this year. finishing 16th at Chicagoland
Speedway on July II in a
DEI car in his latest ' tart.
He is one of the few drivers
to have won in Nextel Cup.
Indy cars and endurance
sports cars.

\\ . (H

I () B l

I{ -. ;.! \\C)....

\\\,

\~

tll\\1. !1 h "l.'IJ1 uu~l.nnn

Local woman creates memorial for fallen Ohio soldiers

SPORTS

Subscribe today.

--.

I I ' l ItS n

I. .-,,. ' 0 . t ~

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

sion .

Marauders look· to
rebound againt
Buckeyes, Bt

Eastern set for
Hocking showdown
with I ancers, Bt

and a garden hose . The
guardraii' i, so long that the
garden hose couldn't reach
all of it and s\le"d have to
carry buckets of water down
the hill.
Arter the cleaning was
done 'he primed and then
painted the sections of

r '-'

guardrail with two new coats

'I

of red, white and blue. Her
black Jab Sophie even helped
by fetching masking tape to
save her mistre" from walking up and cJown Prospect
Hill.
•
Schneider labored on the
project after wiJrking all day
at Dairy Queen in Middleport
where she i' the manager. She
explained that after a hectiC
day she looked forward to 'it~lease

•

Beth Schneider and her dog Soph1e take a rest near the
guardrail .on Prospect Hill that Schne1der turned 1nto a memo·
rial for Ohio's fallen soldiers fro m the Iraq war. (Beth
Sergent/photo)

see Soldiers, AS

IDAY,
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, Odober'2oth.

OBITUARIES

To Have Your
Business Included ...

Page AS
• Charles Hensley
• Margaret Kincaid

~oint .t)lragant ~rgigtrr
(304) 675-1333
&lt;l@allipolig ilaailp \lrribnne
(740) 446-2342

Lo'I'fERIES

The Daily Sentinel

, Me1gs homecoming candidates are from the left. Amanda
King. Kat ie Reed. Amanda Ho yt. Ashley Baylor. Just1ne Dowler
and Renee Ba iley. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photoJ

Ohio

Pick 3 day: 2-2-4
Pick 4 day: B-B-5-4
Pick 3 night: 8-3-7
Pick 4 night: 8-6-2-0

(740) 992-2156 ·

Local Car Dealer Stuns Community
And blows away the competition

West Vll'ginia

Sharon Stewart of Rivertown Artwork tags items to be taken to the Bob Evans Farm Festival
thiS weekend. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Dally 3: 7-5-4
Dally 4: 2-6-0-3

"WE'RE SELLING CARS FOR $99.00"

Powerball: 5-6-19-44-50 (28)
Power Play: 4

the lowest possible price. There
will be cars as low as $99.00; yes
that's right, ninety- nine dollars.
This is not a mistake. Some
valued as high as $3500.00 up to
$4000.00 for $99.00. There will

be a tremendous selection of
vehicles on hand.
All vehicles will be on display at
Norris Northup Dodge with pre-

enough that this is a one-day
only sales event." Once our

inventory
ts
Neal Peifer offers a , . . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . reduced, the
simple explanation Today's automotive consumer wants more slashed prices
Ior
this
come off and it's
unprecedented
than a good deal - they want a great deal! back to business
sale: "We are "With cars as low as $99.00 it doesn't get any as usual. It's
overstocked with
also first come,
first senie, so it's
trade-ins, off-lease, better for the serious car buyer."
and programmed
critical to come
early to get the
vehicles so we are
vehicle of your choice.
making available our entire
registration beginning today. On
inventory of over 250 cars, trucks,
Saturday, October 9th registration
vans and sport utility vehicles. It'~
begins at 9:00 AM. By 11 :00 AM
Of course, there is more to this
that simple." Mr. Peifer adds:
prospective buyers will have been
sale than just reducing inventory.
"During the sales event, we will
given a personalized pass
Mr. Peifer explains: "We are
allowing them to inspect the
always looking for ways to give
offer -unbelievable values on our
used inventory and some vehicles
vehicles that interest them . At
back to the community that has
will sell for as low as $99.00!
11 :30 AM the s)a.shing begins.
given so much to us." They felt
Expect retail prices to be slashed
T~ Slasher will the11 begin
that giving their friends and
by $3,0000 up to $!'1,000 if not
slashing posted prices on the · neighbors in the area a chance to
more:'
vehicles. Who ever is sitting
save on these vehicles was far
Mr. Peifer also points out that
behind the wheel of the vehicle
more desirable than taking them
when the price is slashed will,be
these prices will be "As low or
to auction and selling them to
lower than vehicles sold at
given the first opportunity .to
total strangers.
auctions in many cases. The purchase the vehiCle at that price. I Those wishing to beat the rush
problem with auctions is that the · "We believe that people will not should
get
pre-registered
bidding often leads to inflated
only enjoy getting d great deal beginning today at Norris Northup
prices thereby eliminating
but they will also have fun doing Dodge 252 Upper River Rd.
savings:'
During the super
it." Says Mr. Peifer. Local bank
Gallipolis, OH. 45631.
Slasher Sale , every vehicle will representatives or business For further information on this
be on sale. Sales are on a first
managers will be on hand to
amazing sales event or to get
come, first: s'!rve basis and there arrange low cost financing on the
pre- appro_ved today, please call
viiill be no bidding thus affording spot. "Most of all we've got .over
(740) 446-0842 or (800) 446buyers the prefect opportunity to
two million dollars worth of
0842. (B~d Credit no problem.) " '
purchase a quality Pre-owned at
inventory-that's over 250 cars,

'

and yard sale finds into decorative sit-arounds.
Sharon who has a passion
for painting has a way of
MIDDLEPORT
Loading her cargo trailer and using her artistic: talent to
getting down to Rio Grande take thing ' of little val ue,
so that she can unload and even old trunks or chests in
setup for the l!loh Evans F.~rm Jess than good condition. and
Festival tii (s weekend i' - make them int o beautiful
everyt hin g
on
Sharon keepsake,.
Stew&lt;Jrt 's mind rigilt now.
Anything and everything.
This is the third year for big or little. in multiples or
Stewart
of
Rivertown one-of-kihd. which can be
Artwork in Middleport to be decorated for every day or
a featured artist at the festival seasonal use will be included
which annually attracts a in her coll ection''" display at
crowd of about 40.000.
the festiva l. Keeping up with
Demon.strating her creativi- tuday's trends. Sharon is
ty. she will be turning galva- painting Jots of fruits .and
nized buckets into beautiful !lowers on household items
gift and !lower. containers these days. With the holidays

&lt;HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

couldn't get any better for the
serious buyer."
Mr. Peifer reminds prospective
buyers to act quickly if they want
to take advantage of these
incredible savings. "I can't stress

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

WEATHER

trucks, vans~ and sport utility
vehicles to choose from. "It

Details on Page A 7

INDEX
a SEcni&gt;Ns- t6 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

bear Abby
Editorials

....

POMEROY
Homecoming will be held at
the
Meigs
Marauclers1\'elsonville York Buckeves
game Friday night.
·
The candidates for home ·
coming queen nominated h:
the senior clas, and voted nn
by the MHS student body arc

local artist oft to Bob Evans festival

Area Shoppers Express Disbelief but Local Dealer Remains
Optimistic as Saturday, October 9th Sale Date Approaches
N.orris Northup Dodge announced
plans' today for a one-day sales
event that will feature over 250
cars, trucks, vans and sport utility
-vehicles-some for as low as
$99.00. The event, named the
super Slasher Sale will literally be
slashing prices on used cars right
before buyers' eyes this Saturday,
October 9th 2004, Rain or Shine.

Meigs to crown queen
at Friday's game .·

Rolling Cash 5: 3-4-20-31-33
SUperl..otto: 1·13-24-39-45-48 (5)
Kicker: 2-2-5-3-8-5

STAFF REPORT

A3

A4

RACINE
A LOll"
Bottom man was killed in "'a
motorcycle accident early
Wednesday on Pine Grove
Road in Meigs County. the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reponed.
The victim was identified
as Charles E.· Hensley. 40,

A5

Places to go

AS

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

said Lt. Ric-hard Grau. comnulllder of 1he G-M Post.
Troopers .said Hensley
was northbuund. north of
Wipple Road. at 3:35 a.m.
wh en the JlJ 81 Kawasaki
650 motorcycle he operatell
drifted off the right ,ide of
the road into a ditch before
re-entering the ruau and laying down on the road.
The driver was pro-

Please see Queen, AS

featuring Ji.Lncing snowmen

and other items which can be
perso naliled.
.
The Bob Evans Fe,tival is
one of the eight or I0 large
shows where Sharon displays
and demonstrates. She's been
to Connedicut and Virgii-tia
alread y and ha' another ~ix
shows over the next three
months .
"This i' really my big season and I work toward this all
year:· said Sharon .

,
I

·Crash kills Meigs County man
NEWS@MY DAILYSENT INEL.C OM

Obituaries

just around the corner. lot&gt; of
'Halloween and Christmas
themed designs are included.
Remaining big sellers for
Sharon are the decorative
buckets and watering cans

Amanda King. Katie Reed,
Amanda
Hoyt.
thhlcy
BaYlor. JLhtin e DPwler and
Rci1ee B:~ile\ . The announcement and cro v.n ing of the
queen 1\ ill tak e rlac·c in pre~ ame l'C I"(.' I1l0nlt..~.., ,

Kathryn Hart and Ann Zirkle present a truckload of grocery
items and a cash donatron toward flood ret1ef to the Mulberry
Commun1ty Center. The centers d~rector. K€1th Rader. accepted · the donated 1tems from the Rac1 ne Area Community
OrganizatiOn 's pres ident aPd treasurer afte r a food dnve 111
Ra ci ne held on Monday. (Br•an J. Reed 'photo)

Llcad at the scene.
and was rclea,cd to Fisher
1-"uncral Home in Middleport
nounc~d

for arrangements.

Flood relief trickling in

Grau said the accident is
the third rural traffic fatalit1·
in Meigs for 200-t and the
fourth ' in the pnst" s two- '
Bv BRIAN J. REED
.:ounty coverage area. There '· BREED@ M YD ~ILYSENTINEL .CO M
were I0 fatal na,hes in the
area in 2003 with 10 killed.
RACINE - RL·,idcnt&gt; arc
he added.
mt.JJ...ing O.:t)J11r ihwiuJh indi 1

I
1

1 iduall) and !hrnu ~ h churdlC"&gt; and nrga nito.Hit'll' h' local
1l ond . rc 11 cI. " Jill fnnd for

Please see Relief. AS

\

~

The HMC Diabetes Support Group will meet Sunday, October 10 fiom
2:00pm · 4:00 pm"at lhe HMC French ~00 Room.
Norm Sfrickland, Medtronic MiniMed Diabetes Management Consultant, will disnm
"Advancements in Insulin Pumps"

Diabetes Self-Management Program - October 25, 26 and 27
4 PM · 7 PM • HMG French 500 Room
Please bring a list of home medications to 'Closs and hovti! prescription from your physioon to attend

Fibromyalgia Support Group
This FREE support group is sponsored

by fhe Arthrifis Foundation and Holzer A- 1edtcal Center

Tuesday, October 12 • 5 30 PM :, 8:00PM • HMC Educolion &amp; Confere~ce Cenler Room AB
Top1cs dtsCui$eCI w,llmdude pom control, e~erme 1 elo~oh 00 fallgoe depres~K:tl ond doc!of/ pot1ent rP-Iallonsh,p

For more i~formation , or to

'I

call Mi ssi Ros's at

1-SCXf-816-5 131 .

MEDICAL CENTER
Uiscot •c r· the H o/;e r llft/(&gt; 1'encc

www.holzer.org

�PageA2

•

NATION • WORLD
Groundswell for safety review Watching and waiting, Washington
residents
eye-Mount
St.
Helens
of other pain relievers like
Vioxx; FDA declines comment

. The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 7,

2004

\

BY SHANNON DININNY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv MARILYNN
MARCHIONE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

The safety of Celebrex and
other pain relievers was questioned Wednesday as scientists
in the United States and regulatory agencies in Europe said
· they feared such drugs might
raise the same risk of heart
problems as those blamed on
the arthritis medicine Vioxx.
One key researcher charged
the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration did not do
everything needed to make
sure the dmg was safe and
called for a congressional
review of how Vioxx was
approved.
Heavily advertised as an
arthritis drug, Vioxx was
pulled from the market last
week after its maker said a
study showed it doubled the
risk of heart allack and stroke.
But the FDA said similar prescription drugs were safe.
The European Medicines
Agency in London announced
it would review all drugs of
this type. And researchers
writing in the New England
Journal of Medicine voiced
their concerns as well with
such drugs as Ptizer's popular
Celebrex and its newer drug.
Bextra.
The medical journal published two repons on the issue
Wednesday on the Internet more than two weeks.ahead of
their planned print publication
- to help infonn doctors and
patients considering whether
to stop using the drugs.
Studies done live years ago
when Celebrex and Merck &amp;
Co.'s Vioxx were approved
suggest that the same mechanism that inhibits intlammation and makes the dmgs easier on the stomach than traditional painkillers also blocks a
substance that prevents heart
problems, according to Dr.
Garret
FitzGerald ,
a
University of Pennsylvania
cardiologist. FitzGerald led the
studies. which were designed
by him but funded by the drug
companies.
"I believe this is a class
effect," he said. meaning that
the problem also applies to

Cclebrex ·and Bextra, which
remain on the market.
Pfizer's medical director, Dr.
Gail Cawkwell, insisted that
its drugs are safe.
"The data for Cekbrex is
robust and exceeds, in the
length of patients in studies
and in the size of studies. the
data Vioxx has." she said .
She called FitzGerald's COiltentipn "an interesting theory."
but said. "there is no evidence··
of increased risk of heart problems among the 75 million
Americans who have taken
Celebrex. Long-term studies
are not yet available on Bextra.
which was approved in 200 I .
Celebrex is the ljth most
popular drug in the' United
States, with annual sales uf
$2.7 billion, up 5 percent in a
year, according to IMS Health.
a company that tracks drug
industry trends.
In a separate report a! so
released by the medical journal. Dr. Eric Topol of the
Cleveland Clinic chastisell the
FDA for not requiring Merck
to do studies investigating
heart problems with Vioxx
when hints of them first
appeared years ago. and for
allowing the company to blitz
consumers with TV ads touting the drug.
Vioxx was the largest prescription drug withdrawal in history, "but had the many waming
signs along the way been heeded. such a debacle could have
been prevented," Topol .wrote.
"Neither Merck nor the FDA
fultilled its responsibilities to the
public... I believe there should be
a full Congressional review of
this case."
An FDA official said the
agency would have nn immediate comment.
When Merck voluntarily
withdrew Vioxx , FDA officials
said heart problems were
unique to that drug and that the
mechanism underlying them
wasn' t known.
But FitzGerald and colleagues published two studies
in 1':199 and another in 2001
suggesting that by selectively
blocking one of the two substances called prostaglandins
that lead to inflammation.
these
so-called
cox-2

inhibitors were sparing the
stomach at the expense of the
he an.
"There's
a
good
prostaglanllin and a bad
prostaglandin as far as the
heart is concerned." he
explained.
Suppressing both. as older
painkillers like aspirin and
other non-steroidal antiintlammatory
drugs,
or
NSAIDS do. helps the heart.
But shutting down just the
"good'' one raises the risk of
high blood pressure. hardening
nf the arteries and clotting. he
rep011s.
FitzGerald also challenged
Pfizer's contention that no science shows increased risk
from Celehrex. The original
repon from one study involving Celebrex' found no
increased risk of heart problems. but it covered only six
month&gt; of a year-long study.
according to the cardiologist.
A look at the full data "reveals
signs of increased cardiovascular risk ." he writes.
The medical journal will
publish the n'w reports in its
Oct. 21 print edition.
Meanwhile,
Republican
Congressman Tom Davis of
Virginia. who chairs the House
Gol·ernment
Reform
Comminee. "sent a letter to
FDA's acting commissioner.
Dr. Lester Crawford. giving
him two we.eks to answer
questions about how FDA
tracks problems with drug
safety. how it dealt with issues
surrounding

Vioxx ,

and

whether the agency will study
potential risks in similar drugs.
"In light of Merck's withdrawal of Vioxx from the market and other rece nt news storie' examining FDA's review
of the safety and efticacy of
antidepressant llrug use by
children. I am concerned
whether FDA has been sufticiently aggressive in monitoring drug safety," Davis wrote.

EDS: Associated Press
writer Linda A. Johnso11 ill
Tre11to11 colltributed to this
report.
Ortthe Net:
www.nejm.orl$

Man on trial cuts public
defender with razor blade

•

BATON ROUGE, La.
(AP) - A man on trial for
taking a kindergartener
hostage leaped up in court
Wednesday and slashed his
public defender 's face
with a razor blade.
_ The state di strict court
: was. ~ n session and the
defense wa,s about to rest
when Barbette Williams
wrapped his arms around
his court-appointed lawyer
Bert Garroway and cut him
on the neck and cheek.
Officials
said
the
. wounds .were not lifethreatening , and Garroway
walked out of the courtroom , hi s shirt red with
blood, to go to a hospital
for treatment.
Deputies were&lt; investi: gating how Williams got
the razor into court. .
Despite the attack, prosecutors say they will fight
any attempts by the
defense;,for a mistrial when
court resumes Thursday.
It was not the first o"ut . burst in the trial. Tuesday .
while the jury wa' out of
the room. Williams threatened to shoot the j~dge.
the prosec utor and the
· court-appointed attorney . .
; Those threats came as
: Williams complaim;d that
his
electronic · ankle
restraint was too ti ght.
Judge Todd Hernandez
asked him if it was uncom fortable.
A trial transcript quotes
· William s· expletive-rid dled reply. a' he told the
judge he was goi ng to
·shoot him, the di st rict
attorney and his · 0\~n
lawyer in the head .
" I' II keep that in mind,
Mr. William s," . the judge
rep! ied. "Now bring the

jury bac.k in ."
Williams , 48 , of New
Orleans, has pleaued not
guilty by reason of insanity. He is charged with second-degree
kidnapping
and attempted first-degree
murder ol 6-year-old Ben
Smith IV, who was taken
from his class in the incident March 2003.
He · is also accused of
shooting at officers. barricading himself in a house.
and using the boy as a
shield during a 12-hour
standoff that ended with
the child's release .
Authorities say Williams
carjacked two vehicles and
tried to carjack two others.
winding up at Capitol High
School. where a sheriff's
deputy followed him next
door to Park Elementary.
When
the
principal
o(dered him out. he
grabbed the boy. holding
him across his chest while
runnin g and shooting at
poli ce officers . The nfficers did not return fire.
Williams
al'o
fac es
charges in New Orleans.
where the day before the
events in Baton R~ugc he

allegedly shot and kiUed a
51-year-old man during a
robbery.
His lawyer told jurors
Williams "ought to be otT
the streets and getting help
in a mental institution,
where he can be medicated
and calmed down."
The child's teacher, Kyla
Oliver, testified that she
offered
herself as a
hostage,
but Williams
turned her down because
he couldn't carry her. She
said she told the child it
was a terrori'st drill like
others at the school.
'' He looked over at me
and kind of whimpered,"
Oliver te s tified. ·'A tear
never fell. but he looked
Iike he wanted to cry. ,J
told him not to cry ur we
would lose the drill."
She
also
be gged
Williams not · to hurt
Smith. to which Williams
replied: ''I'm not going to
hurt llim ; I just need hin'f."
Garraway said Willi ams
had taken a combination of
crack an.d Ecstasy. is mentally disturbed and was
unable to distinguish right
from wrong.

Celebrating special
doys with you!
Sunday limes-Sentinel
992-2155

RANDLE, Wash.
Outside the Highway Junction
Thrift Store, a thin fflm of
gritty ash coated the bottom
of a Mount St. Helens coffee
mug.
Price for the mug: $5. The
ash inside it was free - for
now, shop proprietor Anna
Baker said with a smile
Tuesday, hours after the
mountain blew steam and ash
into the air.
Cloudy weather obscured
the top of the volcano
Wednesday morning, making
it difficult for visitors to the
Mount St. Helens National
Volcanic Monument to see the
Todd Cullings, assistant director of the Coldwater Ridge
crater.
Scientist s dropped the Visitor's Center, tells visitors to prepare to move inside if the
alert level Wednesday, say- wind shifts, and the cloud begin to drift towards ttiem after
ing occasional steam blast s Mount St. Helens blew off a cloud of steam and ash, Tuesday
and possibly some erup- morning, at Mount St. Helens National Monument, Wash. (AP
tions of fresh volcanic rock Photo/The Olympian, Tony Overman)
co uld last for weeks or es. Ash then fell as far away ping in both magnitude and
months.
·as Montana.
frequency, said Bill Steele.
"We no longer think that an
In Randle, a community of spokesman
for
the
eruption is imminent in the 2,400 about 20 miles north- University of Washington
sense of minutes or hours;· east of Mount St. Helens. se ismology lab in Seattle.
Willie Scott, a geologist with . postmaster Paulette Hedlund
"We don ' t really know what
the U.S. Geological Survey, gave her two mail carriers it means at this point as far as
said after announcing the drop face masks to ward off anv a prognosis," he sait.l.
from the highest alert level.
airborne ash. Wearing the
Farther east, officials in
Since Friday. the southwest masks is up to them. she said. Franklin County reminded
Washington volcano has been
·'Jf you've been through it. residents to prepare 72-hour
venting steam and small you know enough to shut your disaster kits. including food
amounts of tine volcanic ash. windows. turn off the air and water. a tla~hlight and
Tuesday's blast threw ash pumps, don't let the kids play matches.
thousands of feet into the air, . outside," said Hedlund. who
The reminders w e issued
lightly coating cars and busi- wore out three vacuum clean- not su much because of connesses miles away to the ers cleaning up the abrasive cern about ash, but more
northeast.
ash in the year after the val- because the volcano offered
Geologists have said the cano's dramatic 1980 erup- an opportunity to get the wort.l
most likely scenario is weeks tion.
out &lt;Jbout being prepared, said.
or months of small-scale ventScientists said Tuesday' s John Scheer. director of the
ing, with the possibility that steam burst opened two small Franklin County Emergency
some lava could enlarge the new vents in the crater's tloor. Management Office.
dome within the 8,364-foot and that the floor continued to
At the Highway Junction
mountain's gaping crater. In lift. a sign that magma was Thrift Store. Baker doesil.t
the last several days, the still building beneath the val- expect her Mount St. Helens
roughly I,000-foot-tall lava cano.
coffee mug to last lung. Small
Since Sept. 23, thousands of jars of I ':ISO ash were on sale.
dome has risen by about 150
feet.
tiny earthquakes have shaken and Baker planned to double
Scientists are predicting the mountain, the most seis- the price of nine $10 T-,hins
nothing like St. Helens' May mic activity at the peak since airbrushed with an image of
18, 1980, eruption, which the months following the Moum St. Helens erupting.
"I've had a run on everykilled 57 people, stranded 1980 blast.
Earthquakes trailed off thing Mount St. Helens."
thousands of travelers and
closed schools and business- after Tuesday 's burst, drop- Bak er said .

Judge says Kobe Bryant's accuser
must be identified in civil lawsuit
BY ERIN GARTNER
ASSOCIATEll-Pti(ss WRITER

DENVER (AP) -A federaljudge on Wednesday rejected a request from the wom:fri
accusing Kobe Bryant of rape
to remain anonvmous in her
civil lawsuit ag;iinst the NBA
star, saying the public's interest in open court proceedings
outweighs her desire to shield
her identity.
"The parties appear as
equals before the court and
that fundamental principle
must be protected throughout
these proceedings," U.S.
District
Judge
Richard
Matsch said.
Matsch said allowing the
woman to remain anonymous
could be misconstrued as a
prejudgement in her favor.

Attorneys for the 20-yearold woman had asked Matsch
to protect her identity, saying
she has been the subject of
death threats and sordid publicity for more than a ye:1r.
Attorneys for Bryam opposed
the request earlier this week,
saying she shouldn't be able
to bring a "false accusation"
in her civil lawsuit without
being identi·tied.
An attorney for the woman.
John Clune, said he had not
seen the ruling and had no
immediate comment. He said
there were no plans tQ drop
the suit, which seeks .unspecified damages for what the
woman says has been
ridicule, pain and sutl'ering
since the .incident.
Prosecutors dismissed a
felony sexual assault charge

The Daily Sentinel

again~t Bryant. 26. li.t\l month
after the woman said she no
Iunger wanted to participat~
in a criminal trial. Her identi ty has been splashed aero"
the Internet in part because of
mistakes by courthouse stall
in posting case filings on a'tate Web site.
Bryant has always insi sted
the encounter between the
two at a Vail-area resort last
summer was consensual.
No trial date has been set in
the civil lawsuit.

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your life.
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Y, -OCTOBER 29th

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
-Public
meeting to discuss the initiative petition campaign to
bring full health care to all
: living and working in Ohio
. and bnng E.R. and medical
: transportation services to
: Meigs County, 7 p.m. ,
· Pomeroy Library. Contact
Bob Smiddie, 698-3415 or
Linda Dye, 698-6050.
Holzer
• POMEROY • Hospice Meigs County will
: have its dinner with friends
:outing at 6 p.m. at Craw's
: Restaurant. For more infor- mation ca11992-7463.
Sunday, Oct. l 0
CHESTER
A
: Republican rally will be held
·from II :45 a.m. to I :30 p.m .
: Sunday at the Chester
Commons. Candidates will
be there.
Thesday, Oct. 12
BEDFORD
-Bedford
Township trustees, 7 p.m.,
regular meeting, town hall.

:Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 7
CHESTER- The ChesterShade Historical Association
will have a planning,meeting
at 7 p.m. at the old Chester
Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS- The
VFW Ladies Auxiliary will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the hall.
Saturday, Oct. 9
POMEROY ·_
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution , will meet at I
p.m . at the Pomeroy Library
social room. Rae Moore will
be the speaker. The program
will be on getting acquainted,
telling a family experience.

Homecomings/
Reunions
Sunday, Oct. 10
POMEROY
The

Carleton Church of County
Road 18, Pomeroy will have
its annual homecoming with
dinner at noon and special
services at I :30 p.m.
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Church of Christ will
celebrat~ its !75th anniversary with a homecoming.
Worship and communion will
begin at 9:30 a.m., a carry-in
dinner will be held at noon,
and afternoon services will
follow at 2 p.m. with special
music by the Gabriel Quartet.

Church services
Thursday, Oct. 7
CARPENTER - Revival
services will be conducted at
6:30p.m. through Oct. 10 at
the, Union Baptist Church
near Carpenter. Dr. David
Rahamut, founder of World
Christian Outreach Ministries
and pastor of the End-Time
Harvest Church in .Jac!ID;on
will be preaching. Formerly
of Trinidad, Dr. Rahamut was ·
converted to Christianity
from the Moslem faith. There
will be special singers. Pastor
is Oavid Wiseman. 742-2568.
Friday, Oct. !I
COOLVILLE
Fall
revival
at
Carthage
Community Church, 7 p.m .
Friday and ,Saturday. Pastor
David Fields and Builders
Quartet on Friday, Pastor
Sam Anderson and 16 yearold accordion and piano player Andrew Prather on
Saturday. Information at 6673593 ur 667-0606. Church
located on U.S. 50 W., six
miles from Cool Spot 570-A.
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m. at the Faith Full Gospel
Church. Rogie Bissell and
Just for Now will be providing the music.
Saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene will
have a harvest party at 6 p.m.
on Saturday. with a hay ride ..
wiener roast. and games.
Sundav, Oct. 10
BIDWELL- _ A special
service will be held at the .

Poplar Ridge Free Will
Baptist Church, 2 p.m. with
Sincere of Huntington, W.
Va. to provide the music. For
more information, call John
Elswick, 593-7390.
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn
sing
featuring
Delivered will be held at 7
p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church,
Long Bottom.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene will
hav.e Burgers and Bible
Study at 6 p.m. on Sunday at
the church.
POMEROY - The group
Earthen Vessels will perform
at 6 p.m. at Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.

Other events
Saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE
The
Carleton
School/Meigs
Industries will be sponsoring
their 2nd Annual Community
Olympics from 8:30a.m. to 4
p.m. It is a fundraiser for
Marvin Cooper who is battling cancer. Cali 992-6681 to
register a team by Oct. I.
Friday, -Oct. 15
POMEROY -A staff
member of Senator George
Voinovich will hold office
hours from II a.m. until noon
at
Meigs
Multipurpose
Senior Center in Pomeroy.
Opportunity to discuss federal legislation or to seek assistance with federal agency
casework issues. Call Cara
Dingus, 441-6410.

Support Groups
Friday, Oct. s·
POMEROY - Widow 's
Fellowship meets at noon at
KFC/Long John Silver's.

Birthdays
Wednesday, Oct. 13
LAKIN , WVa. - Douglas
R. Roush will celebrate his
93rd birthday. Cards can be
se nt to him c/o Lakin
Hospital. I Bateman Circle.
Lakin. W.V.. 25287.

Alfred UMW hears about Cuba-US relations
ALFRED - A program on
. relationships between Cuba
and the United States was
given by the Rev. Jane Beattie
at a recem meeting of the
Alfred United Methodist
Women held recemly 'lit the
church.
"Building
Bridges
of
Understanding" was the
theme of Beattie's program.
. She gave gacts about Cuba.

The group then participated in
a skit of a tele1·isinn interview
with Cuban church leader,.
Mary Jo Barringer condw:ted the mect in£. Officers
reports were givei1. Roll call
was taken with 48 friend ship
calls being reponed.
Mary Jo Barringer and
Sarah Caldwell will be
attending lhf UMW Annual
Day in Ma~~- The prayer

PageA3
Thursday, October 7,

Hairdressers get clipped
by clients who don't
tip
..
DEAR ABBY: I'm writing
in re sponse to ··curly in
Chesterfield, Mo.," who
asked for guidelines on tipping hairdre sse rs who rent
their statio·n s and keep I 00
percent of the fees they
charge. "Curly" was of the
opinion that tipping is only
for people who work on
commission.
You correctly advised her
to ask her hairdresser If tips
are accepted - and advised
her that the usual amount is
15 to 20 percent of the bill.
Speakin g as a hairstyli st
for the last 20 years, I cannot
believe the number of people
who don ' t know how to tip.
Whether the · stylist is an
owner, manager or just a
hairstyli st. that person is still
giving the customer a service . Many ,2f my clients
give more tlian that , and
some still give nothing .
People should remember
that when they giw a tip,
they are say ing, "Thank
you." - STYLIST IN WISCONSIN
DEAR STYLIST: Not
everyone agrees. Read on:
bEAR ABBY: I disagree
with your reply to "Curly.''
My hairdresser rents her station from the salon owner.
She sets her own prices and
hours. I typically pay her
$100 for a cut, style and
highlights, which takes her
about 2 I/2 hours. The
woman makes more per hour
than I do, at a business she
basically owns'
I only tip people who work

pay, we mu" also purt:ha\C
all of our uwn tool,. chemi cals ·and product\. Our ' ci'sors alone t:ost ut lca' t ') 150
- mmt of the time more.
Dear
When they neeu 'harp~nin g .
it costs $25. We have no bcilAbby
efits. We mu't pay for I00
percent of llUr i11,urance. II'
our kids get ' ick and we
·can't work - we llon ' t get
for someone and earn m"ini- paid . We arc cnn'!t.lerct.l ,elfmum wage. I don 't tip employed. so we pay all of
restaurant owners, and they our Soci'al Security. 1When
don't expect it. They want
my return business. _ you are employcll h~ '"meRENE IN SAN PEDRO
one else. the employer pay'
DEAR RENE: And that's half.) Wh en a cu,tomer
your privilege. Read on :
stands us up, we are not only
DEAR ABBY: I am a self- out the money, but we are
employed hairstylist, and I'd also out the tim e "'c ullucat -·
like to respond to "Curly." ed for that cu,tomer.
We may take home 100 perIt is amazing to me how
cent of our fees, but after we those who ha1·c the mo"
pay for rent, supplies, taxes money are the ,tingieq tipand the salary of our sham- pers _ and the people who
poo girls, we keep only
1
about 50 percent of what we have little are so ge nerous I
make. 1 would love not to feel that when you treat cusdepend on tips, but in the tamers with love and cater to
town where I live, hairstyl- their need s. a tip is their
ists .c an't command large response to how well we are
fees. I am very grateful for doing our job . MISS
my clients' generosity.- M. TRESS IN KA!\KAKEE.
IN VIRGINIA
ILL.
DEAR M.: You are not the
DEAR MISS TRESS : And
only person who wanted to so d 0 1.
explain the financial facts of
Dear Abby is writtert by
life regarding the beauty Abigail .v an Buren, also
business. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Th;mk you known as Jeanne Pltillips.
so much for your response to and was fourtded by her
"Curly." Customers think mother, Pauline Phillips.
that because we pay rent, we Write
Dear Abby
at
pocket all our income. www.DearAbby.com or 1~0.
Wrong! People don't realize Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
that on top of the rent we 90069.

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caletidar birthday card was
signed by all for Jeanne
Gauna of Albuquerque, N.M.
Refreshments were served
by Th elma Henderson to
tlmse named and Mary Jo
Buckley. Ruth Brooks and
Janice Weber.
The next meeting will be
held Tuesday.

·President of ORTA speaks
to Meigs members
POMEROY
Don
Hornickle, President of the
· Ohio
Retired
Teachers
Association, spoke to the
Meigs
County · Retired
Teachers at a recent meeting
held at Trinity Church . in
Pomeroy.
Hornickle congratulated
the group for staying active
and being involved in working together to have better
retirements. He also di scussed health care issue s and
the importance of staying
informed on current legislation by using the ORTA website.
Hornickle went on to sav
that those without a computer
can usually have access provided at the local library or

share information by tele- Thank vou cards were read
phone. He encouraged eve ry- from the staff at Serenity
one to attend the hiennial House and youngsters at
meeting scheduled to he held God's Net.
A barbershop quartet,
at
the
Ohio
State
compo,ed of singers from
Fairgrounds.
Bill Downie reuu "Rise in both the Unde{'Construction
Progress'' as part of his devo- and Just Maybe quartets of
tions. Cards were signed for Athens and Gallipolis, enterNellie Parker. Maurita Mill er. tained with a program of
favorite selections, greatly
and Bernice Carpenter.
by the audience.
enjoyed
Carol Ohlinger. treasurer.
Flowers
donated
by
reported that Fenton and
Jeanie Taylor. Ina Meadows. Pel;;!bie Roush were present·
Michael Elberfeld. and Dixie ed to Beth Hornickle, Eileen
Buck. Vinas Lee, Helen
Sayre are all new members.
Joan Corder announced · Maag; and Dave Enterline.
The next meeting will be
that the deadline for scholarship applications was Sept. • Thursday, Oct. 21 at Trinity
30. Gay Perrin , pres ident. Church. Anita Moore of
asked for volunteer&gt; for new Holzer Hospice Care will be
officers for the coming year. the speaker.

Flea market _preparation
John Ralston of Gallipolis
sets up his collection
Wednesday at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds to
sell in French City 500 .flea
Market this weekend. With
help from friends. it takes
Ralston three days to set up
and three days to tear down
his display: consisting of
thousands of items. ranging
from everything between
antique apple peelers to
gtant iron kettles. Ralston
has been a vendor at the
French City 500 Flea Market
for over nine years.
(tan McNemar/photo)
•

2004

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The Daily Sentinel

PageJ\4.

OPINION

·Thursday, October 7, 2004
•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.my,dallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

READER'S

VIEW

Freedom
Cover both sides
Dear Editor:
We are living in America where there is something called
freedom of speech and expression. I notice thai most of the
papers and the three major networks are liberal. They attack
the president relentlessly and. by the way. most of their information is either compromised or just plain lying . .
The liberals are allowed to say anything they want about the
President but it is a crime if he retaliates. If the Republicans
say anything . and the liberals give us plent of ammo without
the Republicam having to make anything up, the Democrats
cry like babies.
The media needs to play fair, including this newspaper, and
allow both sides to be covered. I am glad for great Americans
and Democrats like Zell Miller. who look toward the future,
regardless of se lf gain. and keep the greatest country on earth
a free countrv with rights for all.
Thankful for America. ·
l'odd Bissell
Lo11g Bottom

Moderately Confused
HOW COULD
WE EVfR
CoMMUNICATE

OUR

THUMBS?

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Lell&lt;:rs to the editor on the Nov. 2, 2004,' general election will not be published or accepted
by this newspaper after Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004.

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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Exl. 12
RePorter: Brian Reed, E)(t. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, E!(t. 13
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Charlene Hoef11ch, Ext. 12

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13 weeks
.. .'30, 15
26 weeks ..... . .... . . .'60.00
52 Weeks .
. 1 118.80

·-

To get to the bottom line
right at the top: Sen. John
Kerry more than held his
own on Pre&gt;ident Bu,h\
turf. Kerry reinvigorated hi,;
discouraged suppot1ers and
may have swayed some
independents . Thi&gt; election
race is not over. So. rhetorically and strategically. Kerry
won. the first dehate.
Three netW&lt;Jrk in&gt;tant
polls agreed that the
Massachusetts
Democrat
won Thursday night's debate
with President Bush. thmq;h
two of them indicated that
Bush remained out in front
in the presidential race and
on foreign policy issues.
However. going into the
debate. a psychology had
developed that Bu sh had the·
potential to "put Kerry
away'' by trouncing him on
the iss ues where Bush ltcld
the advanwge - the war on
terror and lr~q.
T.here was no put-a w:~ y on
either side. De&gt;pite hi s
record. Kerry seemed for 90
minutes a credible commander in chief.
So the race goes on and
may get tighter. The next
two debatesowill move on to
domestic turf. where Kerry
has been running either even
with Bush (on the economy)
or ahead (on health care).
Bush will have to use
speeches and ads to recast
himself as a better leader in
the war on terror. And.
undoubtedly. he will.
Substantively.
Bush \
biggest mistake tn the
debate was not to exploit
Kerry ~s 30-year record of
weakness on foreign policy
and be specific about
Kerry's inconsistencies on

troops were lacking at the
outset.
Moreover, on Sept. 14,
2003. in an answer to a &amp;JJeci lic que&gt;tion on the"$87 bilMorton
lion vote on CBS' "Face the
Kondarcke Nation," Kerry said, "I don't
think any United States senator is going to abandon our
troops and recklessly leave
lr&lt;tq to - to whatever follra4 and the war on terror.
Bu sh wa&gt; at his best early lows as a result of simply
in the debate - before he cutting and running. That's
seemed to tire. run nut of irresponsible." On Oct. 17,
prepared material and get he cast his vote against the
tes ty - in asserting that money. Bush never mcn"thi s nation of ours has a t ioned that quote.
For months, Kerry has
solemn duty · to defeat this
ideology of hate " and. even seemed trapped by the fact
if pcDple don't agree with that Democrats are divided
him. they "know where I on the war on Iraq: Most
think the United States never
stand."
Bush failed to point Olil should have wageu it and
Kerry 's support for the want to withdraw as swiftly
nuclear freelc movement in as possible. even as a sizable
the I '!80s. which would minority helieves that victohave left the Soviet Union ry ts necessary.
As late as Wednesday
with a nuclear monopoly in
Europe: his votes for deep morning in an interview with
cuts in defense budgets and Diane Sawyer on ABC's
his vote against the 1991 "Good Morning America,"
Persian Gulf War; or to fully Kerry seemed confused on
take ad vantage of Kerry's the war. unable to say
\Ole agaimt Bt1 sh's $R7 bil- whether it wa&gt; "worth it"
lnlll In finance nperatioth in and whether the United
States was "better off' with
Iraq.
Bush Jid bring up Kerry\ ( Saddam Husse in out of
famous comment. "I voted power.
But in the debateJilu'i"day
for the $R7 billion hefore I
voted a:;ainst it. " but Kerry night Kerry was adamant
came hack with an effective that "I've had one position.
rejoinder: "J made a mistake one consistent position. that
in how I talk about the war. Saddam Hussein was a
But the preSident made a threat. There was a right way
mi:-;takc i n in\·ading Iraq . to disarm him and a wrong
way. And the president
Which is worse''"
Bush didn't return to the c hose the wrong way." Now,
$87 billiun i;sue after that.. Kerry said. "''m going to
Kerry .is ueeply vulneptble lead those troops to victory."
Bush tried to counteron the poim: It paid for the
body armor and the armorep argue that United Nations
Humvees that Kerry said inspections of lmq would

JiVho 's passing the test

WITHOUT

Department extensions are:

Kerry wins debate and stays alive

Ouialde Meigs Counly

13 weeks . ...........

lso.os

26 Weeks . .... . .... . .'100.10
52 Weeks . .... . .... . '200.20

If the first presidential
debate had been a prizefight.
they'd have stopped it on a
fourth-round TKO. If it had
been a Little League game.
they'd have invoked the I0run "mercy" rule. If it had
been a college football
game. sportswriters would
have chided John Kerry for
scheduling a pusho v.er like
George W Bush.
Anybody who thinks Bush
11
11
WOI1
his first encounter
with Kerry is probably still
in the market for Chicago
Cubs playoff tickets. It wasn't simply that Bush lost the
argument. He made the mo&gt;t
fundamental political mi stake of all : He believed hi&gt;
own - well, "propaganda"
is a word I can get into the
newspaper.
Unprepared for an opponent of Kerry's ability. Bush
let his inner punk show:
smirking, sneering, rolling
his eyes and slumping over
the lectern like a petulant
teen. At times. the president
appeared visibly angered
that anybody. much ie s; the
Massachusetts senator he'd
mocked as a "flip-flapper" to
invitation-only crowds of
GOP activists. was allowed
to contradict him. At time&gt; .
he looked visibly confu,ed .
I'm not much on psychodrama, but given Bu&gt;h\
personal hi&gt;tory. the rnmt
telling moment may have
come early in the debate.
when · Kerry. '' tali. ari&gt;tocratic New Englander. Ivy
League &gt;&lt;:holar. athle te and
war hero. paraphra;ed the
words of a formef C.S. pre&gt;ident with a biog raphy mi1ch
like hi s own. "
·

Thursday,
October 7, 2004
,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

•

Obituaries

Two-vehicle accident

(Brian)
Underwood
of in a motorcycle accident.
He was born on Aug. I 0,
Augusta, Ga., and Tommy
(Gina) Davis of Madison, 1964. in Parkersburg, W.Va ..
Wis.; six great grandchildren son of John and Barbara
Fields Hensley. He was a
and
several nieces .
MIDDLEPORT
heavy
equipment operator for
Services will be held at I
Margaret
Kincaid,
84,
American
Car Crushing in
Middleport, passed away on p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9,
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004, at 2004, at Fisher Funeral Marietta.
Besides his parents, he is
Barfield Health Care Center Home in Middleport with
survived
by a son, Charles
Rev. Lawrence Foreman offi in Guntersville. Ala. · ·
She was born .on Dec. 30, ciating, and burial to follow Michael Hen'sley, a daughter,
1919, in Middlepon, daugh- at Riverview Cemetery in " December Dawn Hensley,
and a brother, Matt Hensley.
ter of the late Charles and Middleport.
Friends m'ay call from ·II · He was preceded in death
Hattie Shoemaker Wilt. She
was a homemaker and a · a.m . until the time of service, by two daughters, Cynthia
member of Rejoicing Life aild may send online condo- Hensley and Ada Leona Bliss
Church.
.
lences to www.fisherfuneral- H~nsley, and a brother, Paul
Hensley.
In addition to her parents, homes.com.
A graveside service will be
she was preceded in death by
held at 2 p.m . on Friday,
her
husband ,
Herman
Ch~rles
October 8, 2004, at Sand Hill
Kincaid; a son, Tom Davis;
Cemetery in Long Bottom,
two sisters and a brother.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
w'ith Rev. Gear~ Horner
Surviving are a daughterin-law, Pat Kitchens of Charles Eugene Hensley, 40, officiating.
Friends may call from 4 to
Scottsboro, Ala. ; three grand- of Tuppers Plains, died
children: Tammy (Barry) Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004, as 8 p.m. on Thursday at White
Chandler of Scottsboro, Lisa . the result of injuries suffered Funeral Home in Coolville.

from Page A1

Margaret

not have worked. but he has
yet to master the best case put forth at the Republican
National Co'nvention by Sen.
John McCain, R-Ariz. that France. Germany and
Rtl ssia likely would have
ended sanctions agaihst Iraq,
allowing Hussein to reconstitute hi s weapons progra ms.
.
Kerry repeated again and
again. "I have a plan"~ for
Iraq. for homeland security.
for defeating terrorism. He
alleged that Bush did not .
Bush should have said in
response, "Here's my plan
and here's why it's better..
than Senat,or Kerry's. . .. "
Bush did lay out a list of
activities he's ~ursuing. but
he let stand Kerry's charge
that he lacks a plan.
Rhetorically. I thought
Kerry won the battle for
sound bites - for instance
when he said. "Thi&gt;. president
th.ought it was more important to give the wealthiest
people in America a tax cut
rather than invest in homeland security .... I believe in
protecting America first."
Abo, Kerry won the bodylanguage battle because
Bush didn't seem aware that
TV cameras would show
reaction
shots.
whtch
allowed viewers to see him
looking annoyed.
I'd expect some weak
Bush supporters to move to
undecided and some undecideds to move to Kerry. The
net effect: Kerry will gain,
but Bush still will lead. The
fight goes on.
(Morto11 Ko11dracke is
executire editor nf.' Roll Call,
the 11ewspap••r of Capitol
Hill.)

·'

and who's failing?

"colossal error of judgment."
"Senator Kerry last night
would be hard to imagine. A said that America has to pass
shrewd debater would have some sort of global test," he
seen it coming. Of course_ told a Jeering audience in
hardly anybody imagines Allentown. Pa. , "before we
Gene
that thi s President Bush has can use American troops to
Lyons
read hi s father's book. As ,iefend ourselves .... Listen,
Junior has scornfully told us, I'll continue to work with our
he doeqt't do "nuance." allies and the international
Besides. Kerry 's the kind of community. But I will never
"You know the president's person he has openly resent - subl)ljt America's national
father." Kerry ,aid. "did not ed all his life - burn to priv- security to an international
go intL&gt; Iraq into Baghdad ilege like him. but with test. The use of troops to
beyond Basrn. And the rea- many of the virtues of his defend America must never
son he didn't is·. he sai&lt;;l. he class, intellectual achieve- · be subject to a veto by counwrot e in hi&gt; book, because ment and physical courage tries like France."
there was no viable exit among them.
Almost needless to say,
, &gt;tratcgy. And . he said our
Bush never really reco\'- Kerry said almost the oppotroops would be occupiers in ered. He &gt;pent most of the site. He affirmed that "the
a bitterly hostile land . That\ debate praising his own deter- president always has the
exactly where we find uur- mination and repeatedly con- right and always has had the
.&gt;eivc&gt; today. There\ a scn&gt;c demning "mixed messages. " right for preemptive strike."
of American occupation."
Iike a parrot with a stunted He said he would never
Kerry accurately &gt;umma- vocabulary. The etfect was to compromise that, but would
rilcd President George H.W magnify his worst faults : his act in a way that "passes the
Bu; h's book. "A World inability to admit. error or global test where your
Transformed" (Alfred A. change his mind in altered countrymen. your people,
Knopf. . 1998). Invading Iraq . t:ircumstances.
understand fully why you're
during the 1991 Gulf War. he
Kerry skewered him there. doing what you're doin~
wrote. "would have incurred too.
And you can prove to the
incalc ulable human and
"Maybe someone would world that you did it for
political co;ts .... The coali - call i! . a character traiL, legitimate reasons."
tion would instantly have col- maybe somebody wouldn't,"
In short. Kerry thinks .the
lap&gt;ed. the Arab' de.&gt;erting it · he observed. "But this issue president should act like the
in anger and other allie&gt; of certainty: It\ one thing to leader of a democracy. with
pulling out as well. Unde r the be certain, but you can be what the Declaration. of
circutmtances. there was no certain and be wrong."
lndcpendetice called ''a ·
viable 'ex it 'trategy' we &lt;;o uld
Kerry gave a list of poll- decent respect for the opin~ec .... Hc.iJ we gnne the invi.l - tested examples. from ' for- ions of Man-kind ." It's no
'ion route, the United State.&gt; eign poli cy to global warm- surprise that a callow imposcould conceivably still be an ing and stem-ce ll research, tor like Bush pretends to
occupying power in a bitterly on which Bush is both dead misunderstand him .
ho&gt;tile land. It would ha\·e certain and dead wrong.
(A rkun.Hn
De moe rat been a dramatically different
Since the debate. Bush\ Ca~l'/le columnist Gene- and perhaps barren OLll- re&gt;pon&gt;e has been equally LYOI!.\ is a 11ational magacome.
dtaracteristic. Back ·i11side ::_in e ClH·ard ~~ · mner rmd cnIt "'" a telling blow. A the warm cocoon of invita- alltlwr o( "The H111lli11 g of
better de&gt;cription olthc cat - tion -on!'} L'ampaign evenls. tlte Prnident" !St. Martilt's .
astr&lt;iphc caused by Pre,idcnt he sci led UP.On a phra;c from Press. 2000). You m11 e-mail
Junior\ ra&gt;il 'tampcdc to the debate and twi.sted it s· L ron1 Ill .~e n e l,,·rms 2@
•
war, what&lt; Kerrv
C.~ . Cl/"1.)
. . Called Jm me ani ng.

.

•

Activitie' g"t under11ay
today with a par&lt;llie at :; p.m.
from th~ count) garage to the
high 'chool. foliollo.~d h; a 6
p.m. cool-out. and a Po,\der
Puff football game· on the
practice field hetwecn the
junior and . . enior girl. and
concluding v..ith :1 honfire at
k p.m.
A dance will he hciJ "I
K: :Hl p.m. Saturd") in the
high &gt;c hoo l cafeteri a With
Tom Hunter a&gt; th~ D.l.

Kincaid

Hensley

Local Briefs
Plan dinner
. LONG BOTfOM - A fall smorgasbord dinner will he held at 5 p.m. on Saturday at the
Long Bottom Community Building. The cost is $6 for the all-you-can-eat dinner, with everything included. A meet the candidates event will also be held.

For the record
Civil suits

Foreclosure

POMEROY - Personal
injury lawsuits have been
filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Benjamin Upton, Reedsville,
against
Black
Top
Contracting.
Inc ..
Nelsonville. and by Tina
Smith. Marietta. against
David Persons. Middleport.
and others.

POMEROY -A foreclosure was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
to Beneficial Ohio. Inc.,
againsl Marvin L. Friend. and
others.

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce
action has been filed in

Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Stephen B.
Shuler, Syracuse. against
Alicia D. Shuler, Syracuse.

Marriage license
POMEROY - A marriage
license was issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Joe
Edward
Lantz.
69,
Reedsville, to Marjorie Hope
Drake, 73, Long Bottom.

,Sharon adviser says Israel's Gaza wi(hdrawal plan
meant to put Palestinian statehood on hold indefinitely
Bv JOSEF FEDERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JERUSALEM A top
adviser to Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon said in a published
interview Wednesday that
Israel's planned withdrawal
from the Gaza Strip is meant
to delay the establishment of a
.Palestinian state indefinitely,
and claimed the United States
supports the policy.
• The blunt assessment by
Dov Weisglass. Sharon's point
man with the Bush administration, came a week into a
broad Israeli incursion in
Gaza that has killed 75 people.
Weisglass · comments, published in the .Haaretz daily,
contradicted the Israeli government's assurances that it
remains committed to the
U.S.-backed "road map,"
which calls for an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel. but has been
stalled for months amid violations by both sides.
Weisgiass' remarks angered
the Israeli left and prompted
Sharon's office to issue a
damage-control
statement
saying Israel remains committed to the road map. However.
in a newspaper interview last
month, Sharon · said Israel is
no longer following the plan .
In a mdio interview Wednesday,

Soldiers
from Page A1

Weisglass said his comments were
taken out of context.
Haaretz said the quotes
were excerpts from a full
interview it plans to print on
Friday. The intervie;.v included the most far-reaching comments by a senior Israeli official on Sharon's pol icy
toward the Palestinians .
"The significance of the
disengagement plan is the
freezing of the peace
process." Weisglass was quoted as saying.
"Effectively, the whole
package called the Palestinian
state with all that entails has
been removed indefinitely
from our agenda. And all this
with authorit~ and permission
- ali this wnh a presidential
blessing and the ratification
of both houses of Congress."
"What I effectively agreed to
with the Americans was that
pan of the settlements would not
be dealt with at all," Weisglass
was quoted as saying.
Sharon has proposed withdrawing from Gaza and four
small West Bank settlements as
pan of his disengagement plan
meant to separate Israelis and
Palestinians after four years of
fighting. Sharon refuses to
negotiate with t~e Palestinians,
claiming the current leadership
is not a serious peace partner.
Sharon has said he hopes the

withdrawals, planned for next
year, will enable Israel to consolidate control of large blocks
of West Bank settlements.
Palestinian Foreign Minister
Nabil Shaath said Weisglass
revealed ISl'ael's real intentions.
''Weisglass claims that the
Americans are supporting him,
and I would like once again to
hear an American response on
that matter," he said.
In
Washington,
State
Department spokesman Adam
Ereli said the United States
remains committed to the
road map and believes that
Israel is too. However, he said
Washington had expressed
concern to Israeli officials
over Weisglass' statements.
Weisglass'
comments
appeared largely aimed at
courting Israeli hard-liners.
Sharon has lost his parliamentary majority over the plan.
and has not been able to
broaden his coalition during
the summer recess. Parliament
is reconvening next week and
will vote on the Gaza withdrawal in coming months.
Weisgia&gt;~ spoke as Israel's
military waged a major military
campaign against Palestinian
militants in the northern Gaza
Strip. It was· launched a week
ago in response to Palestinian
rocket fire that killed two
Israeli children.

city that has lost soldiers in these are,'' she said when
Iraq. Sb far, 21 cities are rep- leafing through her list.
resented such as Columbus, "Nineteen. twenty-one, twenCleveland.
· Mansfield. ty·six."
Also present on the casualCanton, and Pomeroy.
Although one map of Ohio ty li&gt;l are six Ohio soldiers
represents all the cities, the who have died in Afghanistan
other map of Ohio which sits during "Project Enduring
on the far end of the Prospect Freedom. " . Schneider has
Hill guardrail singles out decided to include them on
Pomeroy with its lone dot·. her memorial as well. "Yeah.
Next to this map Schneider I need to get them on there."
has written with a paint pen, she insisted.
guardrail'
With
the
"Staff Sergeant Roger C.
Schneider's intention was not
Turner."
Schneider gets her infor- to say the Iraq war is right or
mation on war casualties wrong, just affecting people
from' Ohio from the Internet. , in Ohio , the living and the
"Look how young most of dead.

ring outside on her cushion in
the seclusion of Prospect Hill
while she painted.
"I liked the peace and
quiet," she said, as if the project ~~ere an exercise in meditation. She estimated that
she spent 70 hou.rs creating
the tribute .
After the guardrail was
p&lt;tinted, Schneider still felt
something was missing. "I
needed to do something different ," she explained.
She decided to paint a siar
on the guardrail for each sol- ~ · ~
:.&lt;liM"
.au"·
'Ai. J
.~
AI.. 4
. A!.Y¥
....Gill!'
dier from Ohio who has been
killed in Iraq So far. she has
Thursdays &amp; Sundays
painted on 33 stars. Each star
Doors open @ 4:30 Bingo @ 6:30
_
.
takes about 20 minutes ·to
Bring
A
Regular
Garnes
$80.00
Bnng
apply.
Friend ~
,
Schneider also painted the .,;j Friend, Computers $15.00@ I ·Lirnil2
~
.
e
each
puck
$5.00
R
.
'
state of Ohio on both ends of ·. Re&lt;:e\V
No Computer 1st pack-$10.00
ece,ve '
the long guardrail with each
A
Free
each add!tionul $5.1111
A
Free ~
county stenciled in and reprePack
ProgresstH B.onanza
. Pack
.
sented. Her hu sband had the ·
Progressive Coverall
idea to paint a blue dol on the
·
• ·
Bingo Hall # 992-1171
map to identify each Ohio

,
I
I

..... o ·..,. a··'!dt
a·· ·•
Pomeroy Eagles Bingo ,

A~

1.8 Ytb'8 Y . . . .~ . . . .Y .~

Queen

'•

A two-vehicle accident on Ohio 143 Tuesday was invest1gated

by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol . Details
on .the crash, which occurred sometime around 3 p.m .. were
not immediately available. from the patro l before presstime.
(Dave Harris/photo)

Proud to be apart of

GCC achievement list
for summ~r quarter

Subscribe today • 992-2155

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
Career College has released
the list of students named to
the achievement list for
Summer Quarter 2004.
Those students obtaining a
perfect 4.0 grade point avemge
were P&lt;un Alkire, David B&lt;unes,
Summer Bias, . Cassandra
Brumfield, Angela Collins.
Natasha Daniels, Christina
Denny, Fred Dougherty, Kelly
Eichinger, Pat Gay, Garnett Gill ,
Xanthe Glassburn,
Brian
Hartman, Angela Jeffers, Jessica
Knapp. Kevin Kuhn. Phil Lee.
Jay Mitchum. Chandm Moon.
Jon O'dell, Amy Pearce.
Melanie Qualls, Angela Shafer,
Linda Sibley. Lora Smidt, John
Spencer. Shirley Thacker. Leah
Truance and Nancy Vanderberg.
Students achieving a 3.5 or
better grade point average were
Hope Cochran, Aimee Conklin.
Susan Cox, Tiffany Culpepper..
Jessica Davis, Nvoka Hairston.
Nina House. Kelley Klein.
Donita McClintic, Christina
Mitchell, Amanda · Morrison,
Leslie Richard, Elizabeth

Robinson, Pansy Robinson.
Linda Scott. Enca Thnrntnn
and DomnWilliams.
Those stuJents who achieved a
3.0 or better gmde point average
were Beltnda Bates. Mark
Bowen, Belinda Brown, Amanda
Combs. Teresa Combs. Rrenda
Cook. Vicki Cox. Alice
Cremeans. Delorse Elliott. Marv
Ezeonu. Veronica Fleming s.
Denise Fmnce. T&lt;mtmy Garber.
Dale Gibbs. C1ystal Gibson.
Ltlenya HaJt~la. Amy Harden.
Christopher Ha11shom. Sharon
Hun. Kunberlie Jackson. Christie
Johnson, Michelle King, Santh ·
Ltyne, Misty Masters, Stephanie
McKenzie. Linda Mttchell.
Heather Moore. Taminy Moore.
Amanda Mullins. John Piggon,
Tmcy Price. Beth Rocchi. Ju"ica
Roush. Sharon Rutherford.
Britany Settles. Tonva Stapleton.
AngelaStewan. Heather Sturgill.
Tina Tompkins. Elana Tyree,
Crystan Vance. Sandra Weethee.
Ju(ie Wiilia~ns and Trina Young.
For infonnation about classes
or prol'mms at GCC, call 740446-4J67 or 800-214-M52.

GMFactoty
Program .can

ReUef

the parish food pantry. The
parish is serving as a provider
of "ttnmet needs" in the community in the wake of the
devastating tlood. Rader
said.
A special fund has been
established to receive contributions for local flood relief
through the parish. Rader
said those who wish to make
tax-deductible donations mav
do so at Farmers Bank and
Savings Co . and Home
National Bank. or through
the parish , directly. Those
donations will be used to provide long-term flood relief to
those who have lost their
homes or belongings as the
result of the flood.
The Middleport/Pomeroy
Rotarv has donated $2,000 to
the fund. and Sacred Heart
Catholic Church contributed
$639 from a special offering
for tlood victims last weekend. but contributions have
been &gt;low to come. Rader
said.
Rader &gt;aid over 40 applications ha,·e been recei,ed
from tlood victims seeking
assistance. Applications arc
available through the center
from 9 a.m. to I p.m. weekdays.
"Any co ntrit&gt;ution s " ill be
used fur direct assi .stance to
those who need it." Rader
said. "Thi&gt; i' something
we'll be work i n ~ nn for the
next several month~ ...

GT2

from Page A1
local food banks and cash to
a special bank account.
"This is a lot of food for a
small town like Racine," said
Kathryn Han. president of
the .Racine Area Community
Organization on Monday.
She and Ann Zirkle. RACO
treasureio&gt;.,delivered .278 grocery ite&lt;fus and $600 cash to
the Mulberry Community
Center in Pomeroy on
Monday. representing the
generosity of Racine-area
residents at a food drive held
earlier in the day. According
to Hart. RACO ordinarily
holds two food drives a year
to benefit
the
Meigs
Cooperative Parish, but the
drive usually
held in
November was moved up a
month in light of the
increased need caused by last
month's flooding.
'
··we decided to change the
date so the people of Racine
could help those who were
affected by the recent flood."
Han said. "We knew it was
needed."
Rev. Keith Rader. Director
of the Parish. agreed. The
community center has been
offering flood relief to residents affected by the Sept. 19
flood. including food from

your life.

Reconditioned •
Set'f(lced

'04 Cavaliers
Welt equipped

$(900

'04 Grand Prix
011ly 4,000 mile.1

'03 Pontiac
Aztec

$14,000

'02 Cadillac DeVIlle
27,000 mtles

'02 Buick
Rendezvous
2 all wheel drives Loaded

··o1Cadillac Deville
New Car Warranty

$19,000

!~! .M!J:!1J!~~~~!

·oz GMC Envoy

'!g ~,.Ml!

26.0&lt;50 miles

$18,000

Octoher 9th/Starting at 4 :00 pm
• Live musil: • Grc&lt;H Food

Corne Celebrate with us' .
It will be a rootin -tootin good time.'
Lorat~d

on Main Street in dtmntnwn

l'lliiiL'r"~ ·

992-0099

Many more in stock!
. Good work cars

3,000 to '5,000

5

0mtth

!Zlfiioi f!Jonli/b;
446-2282
1900 Eastern ftue.

'

�/

The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND
.

Understanding·Recent Changes
in Overtime Exempti·ons
D

benchmark for the exemption.
Anyone earning less than
this amount is entitled to
overtime pay regardless of
his/her duties
To be conSidered exeinpt.
Llll employee must be p.1id at
least a $455/week salary and
"c ustomanly and regularly"
perform une 01 more e~empt
duties or responSihiiilies to
quaiJfy as an exempt executl ve. admimstrat1ve, or protes:;Ional employee
The new regu lations also
establish a new category. the
"highly
compensated
employee." defined as someone earning at least $100,000
per year. In the past. a hi ghl y
paid employee who me_t certain criteria co uld be eligible
for overtime. For example.
the department head of a
retail store may have qualified for overtime it. m addition to managing. he or she
)pent more than 20 percent of
the time selling. Now, such
an
employee
earning
$100.000 or more would be
exempt, regard less of the
amount of time spent on ordinarilY "non-exempt" tas ks
Sm1iiarly, the regulati ons
now recognize that a "busine" ow ner." someol1e who
has at least 20 percent equity
Interes t 111 the enterprise he or
she IS actively managing. IS
not due any overtime compensatiOn. eve n 1f he/she
meets the salary test requirements
High ly p.ud "blue collar"
employees such as non -managemen t-level btlllcllng constr uct ion em ploy ees are
alv. ays non-exempt no matter
how hi ghl y ·t hey are pmd.
Si milarl y. emergency Iespu nders such as po li ce officers
and firefighters are spec iii cally ex.cludcd trom th ese
regulations "regardless of
rank or pay level."
Q.- When do an employee's
duties trigge r the exec uti ve
exempllon? A.: To be considered an exempt "executive,"
an employee must:
, • have the primary duty ot
manaumg the cnterpnse or
one of its recog mzed departments or subd ivisions,
• customari lY and regularly
direct work oi· two or more
employees:
• ha ve the authority to hire
and fire other em ployees or
to make intluent1al recommendations.
The new regulati ons recogmze the concept of "co ncurrent duties. " those that fal·l
11110 but~ "exe.mpt" and

"nonexempt"
categories.
Therefore, an employee who
performs typically nonexempt tasks while managmg
an enterprise sti ll can be considered an "exempt" employee. For example. an assistant
ma11.1~er at a fast food restaurant can he considered an
exempt employee eve n
though he ur she is taking
orders and servmg customers
as well as managing.
Q.: When do an employees· duties trigger the administrative exemption?
A.. For an employee to be
exempt as an "administrau ve
employee," he or she must:
• have the primary duly of
performing office or nonmanual work directly related
to the management or ge neral
business operatiOns of the
employer or the employer's
customers (such as work m
the areas o f tax. finance,
accounting. quality control.
purchasing.
marketing,
human resourGes, employee
benefits and similar activities); and
• customarily and regularly
exercise discretion and independent judgment (meanmg
that the employee is mvolved
m comparing and evaluating
possible courses of action,
•md making deci sions that
mvolve JUd gment , and not
Simply followin g established
procedures or standards).
Positions requiring mdependent judgment include msurance claims adjusters who
in vestigate and evaluate
claim s and negoti ate settlements. financial &gt;e rvice
employees who evaluate
clients' ussets and determme
whi ch t1nancwl products
meet their needs and executive/admiiiistrative assiStants
who.
withou t
spec iilc
instructi ons . deal with sign:fICartl matters.

POINT PLEASANT Chnsl Epi&gt;copal Church will
be sponsoring a Community
Pet Bles;in~· at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. t 0
The custom of Blessing of
Animals began many years
ago in remembrance of St
Francis of AssiSI, patron samt
of animals and ecology. who
had a great lov:e for all creatures. He loved the larks tlying about his hilltop town He
wrote a Canllcle of the
Creatures. an ode to' Gnd's
hv1n g thmgs. "All praise to
you. Oh Lord. for all these
brother and sister &lt;:reatures ..
A pet can be a true companion Many people arnve ~ome
from school or work to tmd a
furry friend overjoyed at their
return. The bond between person and {Jet IS like no nth~r
relationship, becau~e the communtcation between fellow
creatures is at its most basic.
This Blessmg of the Pets ceremony w1ll allow commumty
•member' the oppmtumty to
take their animal companions to
church for a specml blessing.
Church is the place where the
bond of creation "celebrated.
As a spec ial prayer i,
offered, the pet will be gent ly
sprinkled w1th Holy water.
- A special tree will 'be established and people who wiSh to
have a deceao;ed pet remembei\.'XI
may add a mm1e to the pet tree.
A freewill offerino Will be
accepted for the pel blessmgs

L(/\\' You Can U.1e 11 a
1\'eek/\ wrJs11111er legal u~for- ·
matw·n column prol'!ded to
thl\ nelnpaper a.\ ll puh!Jc
len·ice of the 0/uo State Bar
A 11ocimwn and the Ohw
Swte Bar Foundattml. Th11
a rude. 11 a.\ prepared b1
attorne\ Thomas H. Bamard
of the (:ie l'eland .firm Ulmer
&amp; Berne LLP. Article&gt;
{1/'fJeanng tn thi.\ colwnn are

tlltended tfi prorule hroad.
gene ral Hifonnatwn ahout
the lml' Before app/1'111/!, t/111
u~formmwir to a 1peci.{rc

/ego/ prohlem, readen are
111 ged to .1eek the adl'ice o.f a
llcenH!d attorney.

Michael Crites joins Rio board

I

RIO GRANDE - A new 1993 as we ll holding the
member of the University of posll;ons of ass"tan t ~ U S
Rio Grande Board of Trustees attorney, f~rst asstslanl prosesa·Id he plans to bring hiS cutmg attorney fur Delaware
knowledge and expenence to County, assistant prosecuting
the board, and hopes to help attorney for Allen Co unty and
the umversity continue to prosecutor fo r the city ot
Lima.
grow and thrive .
·' ] have also bee n \ery
~ D.
Michael Crites of
Powell , Ohio . JOined the acuve m different non-profit
;board in July and is exclled orga ni zallons." Cntes smd.
He has held poSillons wi th
;about h1 s new position.
· "I am delighted to have the public and pri\ate boards.
_:opportunity to serve,the Rio such as the Olentangy Local
-Gran de commumty, Cn tes School District Board of
: smd. "I come from a long Ime Education. the board of
trustees at the Wellmgton
.- of educators"
Crites' father. grandfath er School. and the Oh10 Board
:and grandmother all worked of Btuldmg Appeals, a posi:in education in pos iti ons such tiOn that he was appOi nted to
; as teacher, principal. supenn- by Go\ Bob Taft.
A Vietnam veteran, Cntes
;·tendent and professor.
has
been honored wnh sever· ·'J was raised in a fami ly
: where education has always al per&gt;onal awards and deco: been a high priority," Crites rauons, and. in 2000. he was
mducted Into the Oh1o
.' said.
.: . Crites is an attorney. spe- Veterans Hall · ot Fame He
:cwhzing in liugation. public currently IS workm g on the
Memonal
·law and business and corpo- Veterans
F.
o
undauon.
a
group
workmg
; rate law.
.
to
raise
money
for
a
veterans
He currently serves a; a
: partner m the law firm R1ch. mefnonal built to honor veter: Crites &amp; Wesp, LLC, based 1n ans from northern Frank lm
and
'ou thcrn
·Columbus. Cntes also se rves Countv
: as the law director/prt;&gt;secut- Del aware County
Crites has little pleVIOU'
: mg. attorney for the CII1es of
with
th e
: Granvi lle, Pataskala and experience;
Un
iverstty
of
Rio
Grande.
but
: Harnsburg In addit ion. he IS
he
has
le-a
rned
a
lot
recentl
y
:currently servmg as the acting_
· law director for the clly ot about the unl\ersity and i,
excited 10 be a part of 11.
::Hilliard.
"ItiS an ab,olutely beautiful
: Cntes is a 1970 graduate of
:the U.S. Naval Academy and campus." Cntes sa1d " I am
.1 1978 graduate of the Ohto very, very Jm[Jressed w1th the
: Notthern Umversi ty Sch no l dediCallon and qualificaii&lt;IIl'
nl the ,tall ..
; of I .•IW.
While he has not had. the
Amo ng the many du!Ics 111
· h" c,treer. Crites served dS the opportunity yet to meet wnh
· {] S .1ttorney fm the Southern many protessors or 'tudcnts.
: DisiiiCl ul Ohio I! om I'JX(, to Crlle~ 1~ anxiou~ to ge L lO

know more people on the Ri o
Grande campus and play an
active role in helpmg the umversit y continue to grow.
" I would like to serve in the
fm ance area." Cntes said
when asked about what areas
he would enjoy workin g on
with th e Board of Trustees. "I
am glad to serve in any area
that they want me to serve on.
on any committee ."
Cri tes and his wife.
Maureen; recently celebrated
their 30th anni versary and
they are the parents of three
children,
Shannon.
24.
Allison, 22 and Amanda, 17
As the newest member of
the Rio Grande . Board of
Trustees, C ntes sa1d he IS
anxious to contri bute to ll and
be a strong member of the
board.
"I am JUSt excited abou t
havmg the opport uni ty to
serve." Cntes said .
For more mformauon on
the programs offered at the
Univei'Si ty of Ri o Grande. call
toll-tree 111 Oh10 at (800) 282720 I. or log onto the R10
Grc~ndc
Web
&gt;Ile
at
www.no edu.

Father Ray Hage, miSSioner of the Rtver Bend Mtntstnes and
pnest fot Chnst Episcopal Church 111 Pomt Pleasant, wtth
Maggte- Mikala Criste. Samanl11a T11orne and Batley Calandros,
ftn(lltze plans for the Pet Blessmg the churcll ts hostmg at 2
p.m Sunday (s ubmttted photo)
All moneys rcce11·edin add t- 1no ,ni.III. or tnn unusual. Pets
tion to a don all on I' om the mu . . t he m .1 tr.t' cl c,lge. on a
mem bers of Chri't Church
wi ll he donated to the Ma,on k:l\h. "' 111 ym11 dtms. The
County Animal Shelter lm the ,.tkl) ol all pc•ts ami the11
care of homele" pets
owner" ts tmport ant
Anyone WIShlllg to have
.lo111 '" in ihts wonderfu l
theu pet bl essed should btJIIg
th em tu th~ churc·h at Rr~ c·elebialton ul Ble"ing of the
Main St. 1\o p~t " too large. Pel\

I'm looking forward to
your support in the
November Election.

joe Kirby Sr.

~

liliOll ~hllll[ th ~ t(' g !IHl, ~llld
..,)lc ILl '- ltl\cd ~et t1n~ to
~
'
~1111\\ Jile j'l'lljlk ill'll'

" I IIIII he· ka 1111g \lith

d

I ha\e people

herr.: ~' ll\1 I ~,_· pn,ILkr \crv.

L~"

\\!Ill
.. tthl

,,

Ohioans may
not be able to
receive flu
shots

··

Ill , t,t\ 111 touch
he' I IIICIId' i111 C.llnpu'
111 tlh' , Pmm unJt~. and
11

.11-.,1 pl.11h lu d(l \\hate\t.'l
-..ih.' l,lll \II l!t.•lli \he 1\l.H]og

-.,!11..'

Ct.'l!k r

(

LIIIL.'llth

-.. he

'"

,l,\\-.llllg Ill tile 'L'. IICIJ lUI d
IlL'\ \ di!CL'hll

· \\ c 11,1\c' hc:,·n ctL'lt~el\
\C,\IL'Il rn~ lor ,r n:pl.u.:c-mc-1it

huth 111 \\,d e' .tnd 111 the
l s
I e11 ts ,,n d "The
\l.1do~ ( en1e1 ll," 1ec~l\ed
\ t)lliL' ~ l tppll L~tlllllh

,tlre,H.J y.

hut tilL' L'L'Il lt.'l 11... 'lt ill ILlkmg
.q&gt;pllC .II IUih .
..\n1 nne· Illterc\lc'd tn the
pusnlun c.lll c.tll Lewis .It the
\ l.1du~ Center .11 2-\5-7 186.
lnt cie~tcd pct:--Oih l\tn ,,1 -...o
c.dl Pll\ I Its \1.~sun director
ul hun 1.~n rc...,o urce . . at R1o
u1 .mde .11 2-l5 -722K Le\\ IS
.1 1\d \1asun ,·an also be ,.
tcuc:hcd toll-lrcc 111 Oh10 at
it\00 1 2K2 -720 1 AdditiOnal
Ini&lt;Hm.t!Ion .thointhe direc tor
r&lt;"IIIon .tnd tl1e Madog
Cen1e1 c,nJ .11'" he tou nd onlrrh.: h\ ~tl iiH.! to the R1o
c,, :tt1de , We\, stte at
\\\\ vv no L'du .111d d ilklng on

the ltn ~
Cente r.

lur

tile

~

..

$8.00 .

MadL&gt;g

:,·

Khluic Ilillings
"l.nH' \a!"

~--'~':.:;"::;11.::".::",;.).;;&amp;:.'.;;1);,:;":;;"::;";;.'-...J

Mail or drop off at the D:1i1;1 Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, OH 45 769
~

I

~

0
vt·

.• .

. '

MEIGS CO. SHERIFF

l

Phone
Ads mus t be pre pa 1CI
.l-----"-,---- - - : -c---- - - --

'

•

Ch ild s Name ___ _
From
Your N~ mr

--.1&lt;

Temperatures will hold
steady around 70 with
today\ h1 gh of 72 occurnng
around 4:00pm. Sk1es will be
mostl~ sunny wuh 5 MPH
wmds from the cast turnmg
from the southeast as the
afternoon progresses.
Eve11ing (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will drop
frnm 64 early this evening to

57. Skies will be mpstly
cle ar wllh 5 MPH wmds
from the southeast.
Overnight (J-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will linge r at
55. Sk 1es will be most ly
clear With 5 MPH winds
from the southeast turmng
from th e south as the
overnight progresses .

State: healthy Local stocks

h~.!\'\ lll'.tll Pll llla11\ l'llUIHs:·

on\y

Ajdtr· ,',

"

Thursday, October 7
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will diminish
from 47 e,Irly thi s morning
to the low for the day of .:16
at 7:OOam as they nse back
to 64 late morning Skies
will he sun ny to mostly
sunny w1th 5 MPH winds
from the e.~s t.
Afterrwoll ( 1-6 p.m.)

PUMPKIN
PATCH
~
------""'''

'

the Candidate.

Weather forecast

'llldy al K1o (ir.Inde..
.
"I Icc• I 1c11 much a part ot
th e eotlllllllllll\' I ' 'e lived a
couple ot pl.tc~' 1n Wales .1ml
I' 1 c nc1 ct !'eli thiS much a
p.111 ol !he ,·nmmunny .
l e\\ ~-&gt; ' .tid
ll11ou ~h lll'r 1&lt;&gt;h. Lew ts
l1a " mL't.._ nn tn t k""i people

\1..'1' !!lltlf..lln~..·,h.l'

2004

attendrn~

anillher college.
sa1d she mude social \'Ism to
M1am1 University recently.
unaw are that LandiS wa&gt;
allowed back .
"It's ternlying ... she sa1d
" I don't even know what I
would h.1ve done if l1an mto
him ..
Daniel Carter. VICe president ol Sccunty On Campus
Inc .. a national orgamLation
that promotes college 'tudents' safety on campus. ~aid
hi s group is considering askIll£ 1he U.S. Department of
Education to inve stigate.
Carter s;ud Mtami was previou;ly found 111 ;iolatiOn of
federal law ,md pledged 111
I g97 to provide to
accu,er' and accused- written final results ol student
dtsc iplmary action 111 all sexual-assault cases.

Cincinnati says federal supervision
of police no longer needed _

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ·~
In The Sentinel
~.l:

lndependant Candidate
Paid for

OXFORD (AP) - Miam1 of Troy. wa' indicted
Umverslly could face fman- Wednesday on a felony rape
cml penalties for failing to charge and wa' bemg held m
notify a former student that the Butler County Jail He "
the man who sexual ly &gt;ched uled lor a preluntnar}
attacked her last year was heanng Thursday 111 Oxford.
allowed back on campus, a 1a1d h1s lawyer, Jon Paul
school spokesman said.
Rion.
Landis pleaded guilty in
The university is reviewmg
November
2003 to Imsdeus files to dctcrmi nc 1f 11 had
previously failed to provide meanor charges of sexual
the written notice to other Imposition and aggravated
sex-crime victims, umversity trespasSing alter entering the
spokesman Richard Little former student' s dorm room
said. Federal law requires while •he slept and fondling
colleges and universities to her. The 20-year-old woman
sa1d he was a stranger to her.
disclose such informatiOn.
The woman sa.Id umverSily
The government could tine
the university $25.000 tor otlicials to ld her Landis was
barred from campus until
vio latin ~ that requirement,
2005. Little swd the umversiLittle sa1d Wednesday.
The former student learned ty gave LandiS a document
that her attacker. Jason that lifted hi s susp'en;~o n
Landis. 25. was back on cam- from campus 111 August 2004,
pus after she heard that he but there is no record that his
was accused of rapipg anoth- victim was sent a copy ot 11.
The 2003 vic ti m. now
er woman last week. LandiS.

URG Madog Center director to return to Wales

I.e'\\ j, sc11d

Thursday, October 7,

Miami University says it failed
to notify sex-crime yictim

NewsChannel

RIO GRANDE The ne...,~. Pcopk .tre aware llf u~
Madog Center tor Welsh 110\\l,
One ach ievement of wh1ch
Studies at the Umverslly ol
Rio Grande/Rio Grande LewiS IS pHlutksl of is the
Communit y College w II I esiahliShmcnt ol the stuJent
soon say goodbye to its cui- exchangl' jlll)g r.tlll wllh Rm
rent director and welcome a G ranlk·..., . . r...,IL' I mstrtutmn.
Tnni11 Cc&gt; l k~e 111 Wales The
new le.1der.
Kara LewiS. director of the pt\lgr :1111 \\ a,'" hcrn~ disc us-,cd
Madog Cen ter. ann ounced when LL''' 1..., wuk t}\el a . .
recentlv th at she is l eavm~ Jin:ctn1. hut :-.h..:' ,,,t, ,1blc to
the M,\dog Center at the encl help Ji,·,clop the pro~ram
of th e year and returnin g to :111d tn. tkc 11 ,1 rc.Illl\
"1\jn\\. \\ C., t' 1u~l ...,tartL'd
Wales
the
I,Iutltl p.11l Ill the
Lew IS has he en at Rin
Grande for five years. Her l'.\clrall!..! L'. I L'\\ r-., ..... ud . ''I'm
first year at the univerSit y. she lll'l pk:ascd 1h,1t 11 11 til CPilwas a stude nt who came to llllLII.: 111 lhl' llltll ll' ,llld glll\\ ..
DuntiU her lime :11 Rr o
R1 o Grande as a recipient ot
the Evan E. and Elizabeth F. GltiiH.k ..... Lt'\\IS ll.t .... bt.:L'll
Davis Scholarship The schol- 1111pres,cd wnh ho11 ckdtc:uarship pays fn1 a student trom ed the Rio (i t'&lt;t tllk l.t,· ttll\ .111cl
Wales to 11 ave l In Rio Grande '1\.1!1 .!ll' IP dut tH.: til Lt l 1oh'
and live and 'tudy on c.Jmpus .1nd \~) h L'l iCllll ).!. ' tlw llhtltll tmn
dunng the school yea1
··Th~te .nl.' . . unll· \L'r~ dcdtAlter h~r year a·, the Davts
Scholarship reCipient . LewiS f..'dtL·d peopk u n llw.. l' .LillJ1lh.
became director of the Madog Le\\ I" ._;ud ··S tll ll~ pl'uple .tTL'
Center. She has served as the \('I"\' ~L'IlllJ11L' Ill lhl'\1 L'lllk c\ \
ce nter's directOI for the last ors: and I lc,dll .tpprec lalc
tb,ll ...
ll
four years.
In ,tddllt&lt;&gt;ll lD 111 1'M~ the
Lewis has loved her t11ne at
R1o Grande. but felt that the time Rto Gr&lt;~ndc ldcUII\. , t,t11 ,mJ
was right for her to leave fm IJel - ,tudenw\1!'&gt;'-i .c\\ ts s,i1d 'he 11 ill
;!l...,o ~r~.11h 111 1 ~:-. the m~uw
sonal tmd profess"mal re&lt;t,ons
"ProfessiOnally. I thmk th.tt lrien&amp; '~"· h,Js made 111 th~·
it's ume for me to do some COill!llllllll\
" I am I.CI\ th.tnklul t&lt;~ tlw
othe r things," LewiS smcl.
''I'd like to do some different 'VI.'t:. ]sh-;-\ lllc!l IL'i.l ll l I Hllllllllll I\.
thin gs in Wales. It will be dlld thche people who aie'll.l
good for me to be back there. Welsh whn ate Jthl 1cry Illlcr~ '·for the Madog Cente1. the estcd th i' culture dnd the center's \\oi'k." Lc111' ,,ud ·]
move can also be a
positi Ve because a new wo uld not h.t\'C hecn ahk to
director will bring 111 new dn ihme thin~' th.ll I h.t\'C
done 11 11hout tJ1osc people ...
Ideas," Lewis said.
While she has enjoyed. her .. -] he I C,ISOn the fvJ.uJog
time m America at R1o Cente r " such a success ...
Grande, Lewis is also anxious Lcwi' ,,ud. "is the combinato return to her home country tion of COI11111tlllll\' aS\Ct' ,tnd
" M}' fam1l y is hack there. the peop le who" "ork and
and I do plan to man·y sometime:' Lewi s said .
LewiS IS proud of the work ~·
that she ha s done at the
Madog Center, &gt;ta rt 111g new ~ ~!
programs and building upon
the proud traditions of the ~ ~
center
,
"We have broken a lot of ' .
ground here.'' Lewis ,aid. ' ;.;
~ Pictures will run:
"We have formed whdl the 1,,
Madog Center is and ,ort of ' ; ,.,.
Thursday,
stabili zed that."
• I~
October 2S
Among the many changes ~
in the center that Lewis .'7 .
supervised was the move to :-·· Deadline l'or Entry:
~J~
Thursday,
the center's new home
··we have a wonderful loca- a-,
~
October 21
tion with displays." LewiS . ..
said. "The center has also col- '' .I
..
lected a tremendous .1mount ~
~
of data over the last tou r 1-,
yea~·s.'' sl\e added
"The center h:IS also done "
g1eat deal of out1eac h."
per Ad
LewiS said " I thmk we have I I
er Dumpl&lt; !n}
(01"11' subject p
built up that level of .1ware-

PageA7

OHIO

The D~ily SentiJ;leL

Thursday, October 7, 2004

Local church hosts 'Biessi.ng of Pets'

LAW YOU CAN USE

Employers pay overtime to
employees based on the1r
employment status accordmg
to the Fair Labor Stand.1rds
Act (the federal wage and
hour Jaw). Employees who
·are entitled to overtime pay
,Ire called "nonexempt"
employees: those who arc not
entitled to overtime pny are
cnlled "exempt" employees.
Over the years. there has
been some confusion--espe. cially concerning executive
and administrative employees-about who is covered
under the Act and is. therefore, ent itled to overttme pay.
On August 23. the U. S.
Department of Labor revised
the regulations defining the
"white collar" exemptions to
the Fmr Labor Standards Act.
"W hite collar exemptions"
deal w1th execut ive. adm im stralive and professional
employees
Q.: Has the basic structure
·of the tes ts to meet the
:exemptions changed?
.
A.: No. To prove a p311Icular employee is exempt fn~m
the overti me reqUirements of
the Act, an employer sttll
must show that :
• the employee " pmd on a
salaned basis:
• the salary meets regulation requirements: and
• the employee's duties
meet the requirements.
Q.: When is the employee paid on a salaried baSIS'1
A.: An exempt employee
must regularly rece ive a "predetermi ned" salary amou nt
that mav not be reduced
"beca use" of vanations in the
quality or quantity of work
performed." With a few idenlifted excepti ons. a salari ed
emp loyee must receive this
p1edetermi ned amo unt 111 any
week he or she performs .IllY
"ork
One Important exception is
"dLJCkmg " Under the new
Iegulauons. an employer may
"dock," for one or more full
days. the pay of an otherwise
"exe mpt'' or salaried employee who breaks written workplace conduct ru les (for
example. by VIOiatmg 111aJOr
safety rules or engaging in
sexual harassment or workplace '.Iolence).
Q.
What salary amount
IS
high enough for an
employee tu be conSidered
"exempt ...,
A.: The new regulations
eliminate the "short" and
"long" tests for determuung
who has "exempt"' status ami
establish a $23.660 annual
salary ($455/weck) as the

PageA6

COLUMBUS !API
The state is ask mg healthy
OhiUdlls to skip flu shots
tlus year because of &lt;I
sholla ge
that c ut
the
Un1tel States vaccme 'upply 111 hal f.
The st:ne is also askmg
doctors 111 pnvate practice to
g1ve their supplies ot vacci ne only to those at highest
risk of getting the tlu . .
"We are ask ing them to
defer vaccinati on this year
so we can stretch th e
;wadable vaceme to go to
on ly thos~ at the highest
risk lor mfluenza and lls
assocmtcd
conditions,"
der artment
spokesm~n
Kn stophet
WeiSs
sa 1d
Wednesday.
The state buy' its suppl y
of vaccines from a different company than th e
BntiSh linn that had its
license suspended because
of manufacturing problems.
But those vaccmes go to
hcaltll departments and a
federal program servmg
poor. ch ild re n and are
meant only for h1gh ri sk
individuals. mcl ud1n g the
eld erlx and people w1th
chromL health conditions.
Public he.1lth flu shots represent Dn ly I0 to 20 percent of vacc111all ons. WeiSs
said
BritiSh Ie~u i.J tors suspended the license ot th e
Chit&lt;&gt;n Corp.. nuker or the
Flu vin n vacci ne. because
of manulacturinf" prohl em'
at ns L11 e1pn11 . Engl.md.
plant
The slate purcluses about
270.000 doses from Aventis
P&lt;Isteur and pnJVIde' them
·to local health dep&lt;n t menls.
It buys another I00.000
doses rot " fedcr,II program that 'erves poor children. children wn h ltttk 01
110 he,tl ih III , Utdnce ,111JI
Amcitcan lndi.t n children .
Those shots .trc mca11l
1or people 65 and o Ide1.
very young children. pregnant women. people who
surfer lllllll . fii SCdSeS IIkC
u'thm,I dnd diabetes. and
health cure worker&gt; "hn
ha ve di1ect l'lln'tact · Wit h
patiem'. We1" ,,11d.
We1" '"td the state ts
aho u1gmg p~oplc to wJ.. c
other ml.!a "'un:~ to ''wd uti
the flu. Including hcquent
and tiH&gt;rnngh hand wash lllg . ealtng we ll ,md .getting
CIHJUt!h IC"t .tm.i t'XCI"l'l"e

ACI AEP Akzo Ashland
AT&amp;T -

BLI -

Ltd . -

36.57
32.40
36.16
Inc. -

NSC Oak Htll

57.52

15.20
12.15

Bob Evans 26.93
BorgWarner 44.02
Champ1on 3.85
Charmtng
Shops

7.60
City Holding 33.53
Col - 37.17
DG - 19.98
DuPont 44.05
Federal Mogul .19
USB 29.37
Gannett 85 .62
General
Electric

34.38
GKNLY
Harley

4 .20
Davidson

60.78
Kmart
Kroger -

21.88
30.84

87.22
15.55

F1nanctal _

36.72
OVB - 31.25
BBT 40.47
Peoples
27.24
Peps1co - 49.30
Premier 9.20 .
Rockwell - 39.99
Rocky Boots 20.12
RD Shell 52.7 4
SBC -- 27.15
Sears - 39.27
Wai-Mart 53.98
Wendy 's - 34.93
Worthmgton 22.71
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p .m . closing
quotes of the previous
day's transacttons, provided
by
Smith
Partners at Advest Inc.
of Gallipol iS.

Ohio ~es~ist killed
by land mine in Iraq
MAYNARD (A P) - An
ea,tern
Oh10
Army
Reservist was killed in Iraq
when he drove a Humvee
ove r a land m1~e . famil y
members said Wednesday.
Staff Sgt. Richard L.
Morgan. 38, of Ma ynard,
se rved
111
the
fi(,Oth
Transportation Com pany
based in nearby C&lt;Idiz. He
had been stationed In Iraq
Since December 2003
Bonita Girty, Morgan's
sister. descnbcd hun as a
lovmg faih er and devoted
husband
"He just was a spec ial
person." G1rty saul " He
had many f11 ends .111d many
people lik ed h1m. Hi s
whole reserve unil , th ey
just were ve ry. ve1y c lose"
MIIII,Irv offiCials notifi ed
Deanna ·Morgan. Richard
Morgan's w1fe , Tuesd.1y
morn11lg t~t th e nu Js rn g
lwm e where she works.
Girt) said. Morgan d1cd
Tucsd:~y after hilling th e
land mine Monday
FncnU.s
say
Morg.1n
jumed the Army n ght utter
he ~raduatcd from St
C latl ~ll ll c 'H1gh Sc hool in

1984. He served in the Gulf
War and was in hi s second
tour of I rag when he was
ki ll ed.
" He JUSt loved what he
did ... G1rty s;ud "He wan ted to "0 back and he s:ud if
"' - '
no one wanted to volunteer
he would go b.tck ..
He met and n1.1rried hi s
wil e Deann,1 while sl,Ilinn ed 111 Gern1any. Girty
said. ,1nd Morg,ul retu rn ed
from Jr,Iq 111 August for two
weeks to celehr,nc h1 s 16th
wedd in g anniversary and
Deanna's birthday.
Morgan aho lee_" e.., t\vo
cli 1ldre n. ages 12 and 15
Maynard " ,I bout I 0
mil es wes t of Wheeling.
WVa

CINCINNATI (A P) The mayor aske d the federal gove rnment to end its
supervision of Cincinnati
pollee abo ut 2 1/2 years
early. say 1ng th e departmen t has met goals to
reduce use of force and
promote police 1ntegnty.
The
Amencan C1vil
L1bert1e~
Union . which
pressed fur th e federal
super vision after three days
of race riot s in 200 I. says it
is too soon to end the oversight.
~' It 's rmt just premature,
it 's also co unt e rprodu cti ve." ACLU lawye r Scolt
Greenwood
sa id
Wednesday. "Part of the
fo cus IS on reforming the
police department and
bui !ding pol ice-co mmunit y
relationships. That can't
happ e n 1f th e c it y only
g1ves lip serv ice to the ide a
of re for m."
The Justice Department
will re'lew Mayo r Charlie
Luken's lett er req ue slln g
the end of · the overs 12ht
when 11 1-s received. depi!rtment
spokesman
En c.
'11olland sa id.
Holl and
declined
to
respond to cri ti CISms by
Luken and the Clncmnati
police uniOn 's president.
Sgt Hany Roberts. that the
Ju sti ce Department IS "nitpicking" by reqLuring extra
w~itten or taped reports
from police superv isor s
Luken asked the Justice
Department to examine
Cincinnati police operations aft er the riotin g that
occurred when 'a white
police off1cer shot to death
an unarm ed black man who
ran from pollee and was
wanted on miSdem eanor
charges. Th e officer was
cleared of charges at trial.
Luken and
Attorney
General John Ashcroft
signed an agreement in
2002 req uiring the Justice
Departmen t to spend fi\e
years overseeing officers·
condu ct and their use of
force and police dogs. The
dep.1rtment -also manages
the Investigation of Clll Len
complai nt ; ag,Iin't police.
The ci ty simu lldncous ly
s1gned ~m agreement wtth
th e ACLU and black
activists to settle ,t law sull
accuSing th e pol ice of 30
years of harasS! ng bl .1ck
people. The police union
denied th o,e allegatiom
hut Sig ned th.It doctllnenl.
which In,c orporated the
lCfi11S Of the C: lt V\ a1!reelllCIII \1 Ilh th~ Ju~tic'e
De pan ment.
. The pol1ce ha\C made
substant ial p1ogre" ,md the
cttv should now be ftee to
eoJlllllliC tile work "IlhDul

feder&lt;II overSight , Luken
wrote 111 h1 s letter Tuesday
to Ashcroft.
"The police department
has aggressive Iy pu rsued
the stated goa ls of th e
agreement." Luken wrote .
Cincinnati police now
have stun

gun~ a~

a non -

letha l option when force
must be used. That h,IS
helped 1educe the use ot
phySical force. chemtca l
spray and shotgun-fired
beanbag rou nd s and lo wered the number of lnJUIIes
to police and suspec ts.
Luken and th e police unio n
say
The number o l lim es
police dogs have bitten suspects is within Justice
Depa rl ment-e"" bIt' hed
guid e li nes. Luken wro te.
And police received 2 perce nt fewer complaints
offtcers
from
dgdt11~l
January through i\ttguq
this year than i11 the saine
pennd in 2003. he wrote.
Poli ce superv iSot' ha\ e
been meeting a re4uirement
to fi ll out forms summanzing their findin gs when an
otficer has us.ed nummal
force to make an arres t.

such as grabbing peoples'
arms lu Ioree them into a
pollee l'ar. Roberts said
Justice
Now.
the
Department \\ants a longer
narralii'C tha i will co nsume
time thai super\ isors cou ld
better u' c to fight .cnme.
Rnberh sa1d
The J ust1ce Department
also wants police supervisot s ttl collec t and file
trom
l.tped slate ment&gt;
ever) one Involved .rny time
a stun uun ts use~. rather
tha n j u~t when it leads to
serloth tnJUI '· Roberts
sa1d. •
"It's JUst ndictdous."
Roberts s:11d "We spend
thousa nds and thousands of
hours doing these reports to
sl\ ow what we do and how
we do 11 We're 1'e1y happy
to report wh.It we do. But
there comes a lime when
it'' 01 erk ill."
City uftrcials. Ju sti ce
repr ese ntaDepartment
tives. th e ACLU and 01hers
meet mont hi} to re,iew the
uty's progre.., ~.o. but t t t\ too
soon to
whether that
wil l trans l ~te Into longterm change. Greenwood
s,ud

'"I'

Today in the Sentinel ...
"\

"q?~ac~ f€; ~ f5
Tlrmg~ f€; ;f)€;"
Your guide to weekend

entertainment in the bi-state

WalleYe Fish FrY
All YOU CAN fAT!
$6.00
DRINKS ARE FREE
Rutland American Legion
Octoher 10, 2004
llam-Spm

Kennetn McCullougn, R. Pn.
Cnarles Riffle, R. Pn.
Prescription Ph. 992 -2955
112 East Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Fri Bam - 9pm

Sat. Sam - Spm

Sun. CLOSED

�•

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

Thursday, October 7, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Redman soccer downs Cedarville, Page 92
Dawson gives Browns a kick, Page 92
MLB Playoffs, Page 93
Le~ron James becomes a dad, Page B4

Thursday, October 7, 2004

Prep Football
Bob Malone at Court Street Grill on

Bob Evans Farm Festival

34th Bob Evans Farm Festival opens Friday

R

IO GRANDE - The blacksmithing. wood turning,
34th Annual Boh Evans corn grinding, herding and sheep
Farm Festival will enter- shearing are all demonstrated as
tain thousands of guests with they would have been odone
music, traditional arts and crafts. decades ago," he added. "More
farm contests and demonstra- than 100 craflers and artisans
tions, children's activities and show their wares - inany made
more Friday through Sunday.
using tools and techniques nearly
Square dancing tractors, !urn- forgotten today. "
berjack shows, an equine-mo~JntContinuous music entertained drill team, bluegrass music ll).ent is offered oq the Homestead
and clogging will be featl'!ed in Stage, which includes bluegrass,
the mix of, entertainment .•!!~ 'the .:. Qix1eland jazz, country arui other
festival which runs from ?,a.m. acts. More than 700 c\oggers and
to 5 p.m. each of the three days at · .line dancers appear throug~OU1 the
the Bob Evans Farm in Rio weekend at the Clogging Stage.
'There's something for everyGrande. ·
Festival admission is $3 per one and fun for all ages ," said
person and parking is free.
McKinniss.
School groups are admitted at
Attractions include horseno charge. A complete schedule drawn wagon rides, herding
of activities, entertainment and demonstrations, horseshoe pitchdemonstrations is available at ing and chainsaw carving.
www.bobevans.com.
Returning for the fifth year is
"The festival is a unique event an equine-mounted drill team
that offers guests the opportunity performing musical routines
· to sample pioneer life as it was and tricks on horseback.
decades ago at the same time Returning for the sixth year is
they enjoy a farm harvest cele- the popular tractor square danebration of today," said Bob Evans ing, which features eight farm
Farm Manager Ray McKinniss. tractors "dressed" in costume,
'Traditional sorghum making, while performing square dance

. routines in the farm's arena.
~' It's the type of unique entertainment visitors can only see at
the Farm Festival," said
McKinniss.
Children's activities feature a hay
bale maze. barnyard animals, face
painting, lead horseback rides
and horse-drawn wagon rides.
The farm 's nearly I ,000
rolling acres also proyide a perfeet backdrop for hiking and
other outdoor activities.
.
Primitive tent and RV camping for the weekend is ., available
at the farm. For Information
about the festival, visitors may
call (800) 994-FARM or visit the
Web site at www.bobevans.com.
The Bob Evans Farm in southeastern Ohio was home to Bob
Evans. founder of Bob Evans
Farms Inc., and hi s wife Jewell
for nearly 20 years. They raised
their six children in the large,
brick farmhouse known as the
Homestead.
The Homestead, once a stagecoach stop and an inn, is now a
corpor!lte museum·and historical
center. It is open daily during !he
festival and adm}ssion is free.

'Maestro for Moment' kicks off OVS on Saturday
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Valley Symphony, under its
music director, Ray Fowler,
kicks off its 2004-05 campaign
with "Ametica the Beautiful," a
program qf classic and familia~
music by' American composers.
The rail)' gets under way at 8
p.m. "SaiUrday, Oct. 9, in the historic A[iel Theater.
One .highlight of the evening
will be the selection of the 2004
"Maestro for a Moment."
The candidates competing for
the chance to condpctlohn Phillip
Sousa',s . "Stars and Stripes
Forever" are Jeff Adkins, Clyde
Evans and Rick St. Onge. The
candidate who. raises the most
money by the end of intennissicn
gets to conduct the Sousa favorite.
The program, the first in the
orchestra's 15th subscription
series, starts with an arrangement
of the "other" U.S. national
anthem,
"America
the
Beautiful." That's · followed by

Morton Gould's "American
Salute,". a dramatic musical
miniature on the·war between the
states and the South's marching
song, "When Johnny Comes
Marching Home."
The most famous U.S. classical
composer and perfonner, Leonard
Bernstein, gets a salute with the
sparkling overture to "Candide,"
the Broadway musical version of
Voltaire's classic political satire.
Witty Broadway political satires
from a quarter century before from the hand of America's greatest songwriter, George Gershwin
-close outthe concert.
The OVS plays overtures to
Gershwin's ;'Strike Up the Band"
and "Let 'Em Eat Cake."
For the heart of the program,
Fowler and the OVS turn to the
jazzy sounds of America's first
. successful black composer,
William Grant Still. His
Symphony No. I. "AfroAmerican," was the first sym-

phony by a black composer to be
played by an American on;hcstra.
Audiences today still love its
exuberant 1920s sou nd.
The public is encouraged to
attend rehearsals for free from 7
to 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 8, and on
Ito 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 9. OVS
Saturday dress rehearsal s are an
excellent way to introduce young
children to symphonic music . .
The Ohio Valley Symphony is
sponsored in part by the Ohio At;ts
Council. a state agency that supports public programs in the arts.
"America th,e Beautiful" is funded
in part by Holzer Health Systems,
Wyngate Assisted Living in
Jackson and Gallipolis and the
Ann\=. Dater Foundation.
Tickets for the 8 p.m. concert
are $22, $20 for seniors and students, and are available at
Tawney Jewelers, Purple Turtle
and Oak Hill Banks. For more
information call the Ariel Theater
at (740) 446-ARTS (2787).

POMEROY - Critically
acclaimed pianist, songwriter
and singer Bob Malone returns
to the Court Street Grill for
one night only at 8 p.m. Friday.
Last July. Malone played
Pomeroy's popular Rhythm on
the River concert series, as
well as appearing on the prestigious Arches Piano Stag~ at
the Cincy Blues Festival. '
His 2003 CD release "Malone
Alone," distributed in the U.S. ·
by Burnside Distribution, spent
a month on the Roots Music
Report and Living Blues radio
charts. It was also on the 2003
Grammy entry list for· Best
Bob Malone
Contemporary Folk Ajbum. ·
Most of the CD was recorded live at Unison Arts Center during
Malone's last appearance there in · 2002. Music Connection Magazine
says of the new disc, "The masterful storyteller and musician at his most ·
entertaining;" and Roots Music Report calls it "a pure joy to listen to."
Malone's music has a rare timeless sound that is pure Americana: An intoxicating distillation of uptown bl\.les, gutbucket New Orleans ragtime stomp,
and classic singer/songwriter pop Stlngcraft, delivered with a wry lyrical eye
for detail, and the ferocious energy of a great rock and roll piano man.
An extraordinarily talented [lerformer and classically trained virtuoso
musician, he bas been best described in review as "a raconteur of the
human condition." Malone's songs span the musical spectrum from fulltilt boogie to the seamless melodies of great ballads that linger like classical standards, all sung with his one-of-a-kind whiskey-cured voice.
Malone tours extensively, both as a headliner and opening art for major
artists such as the Rev. AI Green, Boz Scaggs, the Neville Brothers, the
Bobs, Patti Larkin, Average White Band, Eric Burdon and Manhatt'!n
Transfer. He has also been featured on NPR radio programs such as
"Acoustic Cafe," "Car Tal," and "Rock and Roots," and network TV
shows "JAG," ''Young and the Restless," "All My Children" and "Cupid."
His 2002 release "Like It or Not" won best album in the mille
singer/songwriter category out of a field of over 8,000 entries at the JPF
Music Awards in Los Angeles. Malone is also a recent recipient of the
ASCAP Plus Award for independent musicians.
Court Street Grill is at 112 Court St.,Jomeroy. For tickets and infor;
mation, call (740) 992-6524 or www.coflrtstreetgrill.com

rAvea cornfield Maize

open fov Season ··*"' "
RIO GRANDE- With no UFO sightinks reported in Ohio this y~,ar.
the mystery remains as to how an interesting barn with a cow drivtn&amp; a
tractor destgn has taken. shape in a.•Rio Grande cornfield, bringing the
maze craze to the little college town.
Creative Nook and Farm will unravel the mystery for the second year
in a row, an intricate network of twists and turns carved into nine acres
of corn. Opening day was set for Sept. 18t, but do to the road being
flooded on the 17, opening day wasn'tuntil Sept. 19.
Creative Nook and Farm anc,l Srett Herbst, the world's leading designer of 625-plus corn mazes WQrldwide, hopes to challenge the wits of
those seekmg to find the one exit from their mind-bogging puzzle, a
unique source of good farmin' fun for adults and kids alike.
Tile MAIZE wtll give Tri-State residents the chance to "get lost"
(Sept. 18-0ct. 31 ). Hours of operation are Monday and Wednesday
closed; Tuesday and Thursday by reservation only; Friday 5 to II p.m.;
Saturday, noon to II p.m.; and Sunday, noon until 8 p.m. Last person
admitted at listed closmg time.
.
Field trip hours are available by reservation. ·The location is from
Gallipolis, Ohio, you take U.S. 35 to Ohi(f 325 (Rio Grande exit) and
turn right, take a left onto Buckeye Hills Road and then turn right on
Pleasant Valley Road (second ariyeway) on the right.
The cost is $6.50 for ages 12 and up, $5.50 for a~s 5-11, and free for kids
4 and under. Field of ~creams JlllCC is the same. Do both for $9.50.
Discounts are offered for gr,oups. For more information or to make reservations, call cell phone at 7(740) 645-0643 or visit www.cOI;Ilfieldmaze.com.
Ways to enloy the Maize are: . ·
In an effort to ensure that the Maize experience offers something for
everyone, the public wiU find a varie~y of ways to ex~rience th~ maze:
• Open both day and mght, the MaJZC .caters to school field tnps during the day and has created an elem~:~ntary education cllll!pllign that
includes: Ag-in-tl;!e·classroom lesson plans and attiv'ity ~hee(l,•for.teach­
ers, and :in agrictiltllral "passport" that integrates ~ucation'. intO&lt; the
maze ex.peri~nce and helps ,guide students alonglthe cquec~ ~wa~.
Teachers can access curnculum materials and field triP' iilfonnation
online at www.comfieldma'ze.com.
.
· • · :
.,;,
A series of "passports" are available for church groups, girl and boy
scouts. 4-Hers, corporate groups and the general public. Each containing I0 questions that quiz the user on one of a vartety of'subjectS, those
who answer the questtons correctly wiD .receive.ciU\)S that.guide them
along the correct path to the exit.
· .·
·
Beginning in October, every Friday and Saturday night darl&lt; until closing,
one pha.~e of the Maize will be turned into the Field Of Screams. Even bigger' and better than last year. In addition to the spooks that will be lurking m
the corn at night, farniltes can bring .the kids out to enjoy ''Trick-or-Treat"
Saturday, Oct. 30 during daylight hoilrs. Make sure to wear your costumes.
The public may also enjoy CowCroctuet, no left turn maze, and a hay
mound , plus more. For an additional price go on a hayride, launch a
pumpkin or shoot the corn cannon. Don't forget to pick up some pumpkins, gourds, crafts and other fall decor.
·
The Maize represents the newest trend in outdoor entertainment for
aoults and children alike.
.

Today'• games
VOI~I

I!Mtern at Milar .

Soulhem at Waterlonl

-

LDgon al Gallla Academy
RlVtr Vollev al Coat G"""'
CNC sl Sou1h Clat1la
•

Point F&gt;leaoant, W.Va. "' · Galli a
Academy

Frtdoy't-

Footboll
Nel8onvllie-York at Meigs
Eastern at Fedora! Hocl&lt;lng
MlleratScutharn
Gaiia Acadomy at Jackson

Rock Hill at River Valley
South'GaiNa at W.ahama, W.Va.

Crew puts out
Fire to clinch
home field
CHICAGO (AP) - The
Columbus Crew won their tirst
Eastern Conference title and
extended their unbeaten streak
to an MLS-record 16 g&lt;mJes
with a 1-0 victory over the
Chicago Fire on Wednesday.
Columbus (12-5-11) earned
home-field advantage in the
playoffs, and extended its
unbeaten streak to 8-0-8. The
Los Angeles Galaxy set the
previous record over two sea~ons (1997-1998).
Simon Elliott set up Edson
Buddie's 25-yard goal with a
short pass on a free kick in the
59th minute after Fire defender
Evan Whitfield fouled Jeff
Cunningham.
Buddie is tied with five other
players with a league-leading
II goals. Elliott leads the Crew
with 10 ru.~ists.
The defending Eastern
Conference champion Fire (812-9) are in danger of missing
the playoffs for the first time
since their inception in 1998.
With one gmne left, Chicago
is three points ahead of the
New England Revolution for
the final playoff spilt in the
East.

NASCA A
hands out 12·
tnore penalties
. DAYTONA BEACH. Fla.
CAP) - A day . after hitting
Dale Eamhardt Jr. with a
$1 0,000 line and the loss of 25
points for cursing during a pastrace TV interview, NASCAR
~anded down 12 more penalties for rule violations at
Talladega Superspeedway.
The hardest hit Wednesday
was Roush Racing, which
received four of the penalties
for making unapproved rear
spoiler adjustments on the No.
16 Ford of Greg Biftlc.
Bi ftle was penalized 25
points, and car owner Geoff
Smith, also the Roush team 's
general manager, lost 25 points.
Also, crew chief Doug Richert
was fined $25.000 and crew
member Michael Hillman Jr.
was suspended until Oct. 20
and placed on probation until
Dec. 31.
Biffle remained 21st in the
standings, falling to 46 points
llehind 20th-place Jeff Burton.
: Evernham Motors ports was
handed three penalties for an
unapproved spoiler modification to .the No. 9 Dodge of
Kasey Kah1fe, the top rookie
in the Nextel Cup series.
Kahne and team owner and
car owner Ray Evernham
were docked 25 points apiece
and c rew chief Tommy
Baldwin was fined $25,000.

Sports City U.
tryouts coming
Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) 773-~323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.
(740) 446-1711

·Marauders look to 'rebound against Nelsonville-York

HURRICANE. W.Va . Sports City U WiJ.l_pe holding
a try-out camp for all middle
school players going out for
basketball Oct. 26, 28 and 30.
The camp will help to prepare for try-outs the following week .
Times for the camps are
6:30-8:30 p.m. on Oct. 26
and 28, and I :30-3:30 p.nf
on Oct, 30.
To register. call (30~) 5622421

the defcndin~ champion
Buckeyes {3-J. 1-0 TVC
Ohio) ended a three-game
slide with a physical 20-14
victory over Vinton County
on Saturday.
And this week's contest
will be another pivotal war
in the hunt for the TVC
Ohio crown.
"Ne lsonv ill e is a very
solid football team. They arc
physical and they don't
seem to ha ve very many
weaknesses." commented
Meigs coach Mike Chancey.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydaily1ribune.com

POMEROY- The Meigs
Marauders look to rebound
in the win column this week
against the Nelsonville- York
Buckeyes in another critical
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division football showdown
at Bob Roberts Field. r
The Marauders (4-2, 0-1
TVC Ohio) came up short in
a hard -fought 31-28 loss to
Well sto n that en ded a fourgame winning stre ak, while

''We feel it 's
going to be
a very competitive and
physical
footba ll
game."
N Y H S
manhandled
the Vikings
last week in its league opencr. outgaining VCHS 325161 in tota l yards. The
Buckeyes acc umulated 223
yards on the ground in the
victory and have a physical

offensive line that lea&lt;h the
ollen,ive attack .
The offensive fro111 ;,
spear-headed· hy returnint!
tackle' Joe Martin ((1-fool.
2:17 pounds) and Mi~ e
McClain t6-5. 29X). alon ~
with three-year qarter~
Ernie Perkins 15- 10. 2221
and Jon McCulloch 1·5-X.
192) at ~uards. \1artin is a
four-year starte r and an AllDi .,trict se lection from a
season ago.
Although it is the big guys
that makes the Buckeyes go.

the , J..ilicLJ po,ilion ' hring
ano!h cr I.l imen,ion 10 the
Nel""" Ilk &lt;iliac~ .
Sophomore yuancrback
Ja1 Edw ar&lt;h 16-0 . I X71 i' a
mu lti -plll'J11"C threat !hat
rJn

run o r

thro\~

in the

potent
1'\YHS
attack .
Edward' wa' limiled to 17
ydn.l"l la"t "cek against
VCHS. hut threv. for 102
yarcb on li-of- 12 attempt,.
including

running

and

throwing for a touchdow n. ,

Please see Rebound, 82

Eastern set for Hocking showdown with Lancers
BY BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@mydaily1ribune.com

TUPPERS PLAINS Despite
Federal Hocking's 2-4 records. one has
to be weary of these Lancers.
Federal Hocking showed it was capable of pulling up some impressive oftensive numbers after a 76-22 win over
Southern last week.
In that game, the Lancers grounded out
the ball.
Tyler Jarvis had 262 yards rushing on
only 13 times, .an average of 20.2 yards
per carry.
Jarvis' teammate. and quarterback C.J.
Williams. put up some impressive numbers of his own on the ground with six
carries for 115 yards for the L1ncers (24. 1-0 TVC Hocking).
Now. it'll be up to Eastern 'I:1-3. 0-1
TVC Hocking) 10 try to contain Jarvis.
Willi ams and the Lancer offense when
the two teams meet Friday at Stewan.
· The Eagles gave up 53 points to area
Division IV power and detending TriValley Conference Hocking Divi sion
champion Trimble .
Since Federal Hocking coach Keith
Price took over the program in 2002. his
Lancers have seen a slight improvement.
. During Price's first yei1r. Federal
Hocking, which_ moved up to Division
IV that season. limshed 3-7.
Last year, the Lancers were 4-6.
During the Eagles loss to Trimhle.
Eastern was able to put the ball in the air
as quarterback Ken Amsbary threw for
116 yards on 7-of-15 passing. but was
picked oH'twice.
The Eagles were held to 22 yards rushing by the Tomcats.
·
Federal Hocking defeated the Ea~les
32-27 Ja,t year :-n East Shade River
Stadium.
Eastern's last win against the Lancers Senior quarterback Ken Amsbary (101 and the Eagles will look to run past the Federal Hock1ng Lancers Friday night
when they collide in a TVC Hocking matchup at East Shade River Stadium. ( ian McNemar/ photo l
was in 200 I. a 45-6 decision.

Prep Volleyball

Prep Football

Meigs grounds WHS in three
Southern to
host Miller in
Homecoming tilt
STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune .com

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

RACINE - Friday night
is Homecoming at Ro~cr
Lee Adams Memorial Field
in Racine. where the
Southern Tornadoes ( 2-~. 01) meet league foe Miller
( 1-5. 0-1) for the annual
grid-iron tilt.
The Falcons. who went 19 in both 2002 and 200 I.
appeared to start to turn the
corner in 2003. Miller went
3-7, but won three stra ight
games
ill'
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hockin g
Division play and finisl1cd
tied for second in the league
standings. Last year. Miller
defeated Southern 53-2~ .
Miller and Southern have
nne common opponent in
South Gallia. Both defeated
the Rebels. Two weeks ag&lt;•.
bolstered hy three first-half
tou chdown s. \1i'ller captured a 2R-6 victory over
South Gall.ia. The victory
was the first of the season in
five start s for Miller and
new head coach Mike
Schlmser. Southern defeat ed South C.allia for its fiN
win in the ll1ird ~a me of the
season. 12 -9. • Sout hrrn ·
amassed 16 2 vards in that
gam~ and ~.~,~~ up 17 ~ tn

South
Gallia.
Comparat ively. Miller had
366 Inial yards offense (212
ru s h ing.
I .'i-1 paS&gt;ing)
and
South
Gallia had
125 .

Miller is
led by the
ru shing of
Z

a

c

h

Oshurn and Jordan Goltke
who rushed for 66 ami 62
yard.s re,pectivcly last week
in a 33-21 los.' 10 Waterford .
'&gt;1iller led thai game 1~ -6 at
the half before squanderi ng
away the lead .
·
Senior Justin Aichele (60. 220 pounds) i' entering
his fourth sea.,on a&gt; a starting inside linebacke r for the
Falcons, while fellow senior
Cun Mauro (6-2. 170)
returns for a third season as
Miller'&gt; starti ng quancr·
back.
Mamo\ favorite target i&gt;
Jared
Bolvard, who
grubbed a 70-'yard touchclown reception last week ·
again&gt;! Waterf&lt;•rd . J.R .
Irwin i&gt; another kc1 rcceil·er. The Fuln'n' iwtl ,~!Jc
wwl )ard' Ia'! wed . 160 on
!he ground anJ IJ2 in the

Please see Southern, Bl

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Mei gs volleyb&lt;ill team
ended a two-game slide
with a straight game victory
over
Wellston
Wednesday by a 'core of
25-16, 25-1 I. 25-21.
Tit~ Marauder&gt; ( I0-6. 9-5
TVC ) welcomed bad middle hiller Samantha Cole.
who has mi ,scd the las t two
games due to an illness. and
her pre"ence was felt
almost imm ediate ly .
Cole led the team with
·five bloch and I 0 point&gt;.
while addi ng six kills and
14-of- 15 ;erving in the victorv.

Erin Cullums also had 10
point&gt; . a perfect 15-nf- 15
service performance and
chipped in fi1·e assists in
the Mei~s win.
Emily A'hle) added ei ght
point&gt; anti four kill&gt;. while
Megan Game&lt; contribfucJ
fi1c poin" and eight kill; to
the 'Marauders .
Renee Bililcy led MHS
11i1h I I kill;, with Joey
Han ing leading the team in
a"i'l' with 20.
The Meigs Jllllior 1ar;ity
team &lt;IIso 'wept the Lady
R&lt;•ckcl' b) tt sn•re of 25 1:1. 2:1 -'1 . 15 - 1.
Tl1c ~larauder' 1ra1 cl w
Bclpre 'Tu,·,Ja) for ~mother
TV(' ,howdown. "ith game
time 'clicdulcd fm &lt;1 p.m.

•

+

rvje1g s sen1or Cass1e Lee 1231 scored fou 1 po1PtS dun ng her
Lady Marauders· st ra1 gh t ga'mes v1cto1 1 ove1 Wellston
Wednesday 111 Rock springs . The v1ctor; 1mproved Meigs·
record to 10·6 overa ll. 18r )'an Walters pho to !

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Redmen soccer
downs Cedarville

Dawson gives Browns a.kick

Rio &lt;&gt;oalkeeper Andrew
Moor/and missed wide left.
The Redmen put the game
out of reach in the second
'RIO GRANDE - NAIA half with three goals in a
No. I Rio Grande returned span of six minutes. Hunter
home after a two-game road scored two ot the goals 111
trip to entertain Cedarville the 52nd and 58th minutes
in
American
Mideast respectively. Carroll picked
.Conference South Divg;ion up his second asSJS_t ot _Ihe
soccer action on Wednesday game 011 Hunter ; t 1rst
afternoon at Evan Davis marker. Calion ass1sted on
Fielcl The Redmen blanked Hunter's second goal.
&lt;f'
the ~!Wow J.1ckets. 5-0.
Sophomore 'midfielder
Rio Grande ( I 0-0 , 2-0 Paul Fiddler made the score
AMC South) scored a pair 4-0 with a goal in the 53rd
of first half goals to lead 2-0 minute. Senior defender
at halftime. Freshman mid- Mark Fahey was credited
fielder Ryan Russell scored with the assist on the play.
the firsJ goal of the game on
Rio
Grande
Ollt-shot
a pass fro m John Carroll that Cedarville 15-5 with a 12-3
made its way through sever- edge in shots on goal.
al players' leg s before getMoore tallied two saves
[ipg .to Russell. The goal for the Redmen while
occurred in the seventh Howdyshell sto·pped eight
minute and would prove to shots for the Yellow Jackets.
be the only tally the Redmen
Rio Grande will travel to
would need.
Mount Vernon on Saturday
Jun ior midfielder Ben · and put its' unblemished
Calion notched the second record and No.1 ra nkin g on
goal_in the 26th minute -~fter the line against the Mount
rece1vmg a teed from Ben Vernon NaLarene Cougars .
Hunter in traffic and driving Kick-q!T is set for 2 p.m .
Prior to the game. the !atthe ball past Cedarv1He
goalkeeper
David est NAIA Top 25 poll was
Howdyshell.
released with Rio Grande
CedarNille (7-6. 2-2 AMC remaining in the top spot.
South) m1ssed out on a gold- ~io received all 13 lirst
en opportumty to score 111 place votes and garne red
the 35th 1mnute. Freshman 325 total points . Lindsey
forward Ken Dav1s had a Wilson (Ky.) is the new No.
one-on-one chance agamst 2 team with 303 points.

BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

STAFF REPORT

from Page 81
atr.
Miller is bigger on the line
than Federal Hocking. but
does not have the speed and
athleticism oT the Lancers .
Yet. Miller is capable of the
· big play. both on the ground
passmg-w1se.
.
With a line that is
anchored by 280, 250, and
290 linemen, Miller is hard
to move in the trenches.
Aichele will be at the center
of ihe defense, with returning starier Dustin Mitchell
(senior. 5-11. 175 ) at Lett
linebacker and returning letter winner J.R. Irwin
Uunior. 6-0. 170) at tho
Right linebacker. Taking up
·the outside linebacker spots
will be letter winner Zach
Osborne U~nior. 6-0, 150)
and returning \ starter Ryan
Bice (se nior. ' 6-3, 205).
Another letterman . junior
Billy Appleman (6-1. 209),
can fill in as needed.
In the secondarv, Mauro
will be at safety, while let ·
termen'Jordan Gottke (5 -7.
. 140) a1;d Jared Bolyard (60, 160) will man the cor. ners : Providing depth will
be
sophomore
Jeffrey
Connell (5-8, 145 ).
Along the line. returning
senior starter Adam Brag!!_
· : (6-0, 2~0) will play over the
·. center. and returning letter
winners
Jason
Storts
(senior, 6-2, 290) and Alex
Reynolds (senior. 6-2, 250)
will be at the defensive
end/tackle spots. Jared
Weiner Uunior. 5-7, 145).
Cory Spencer (jun ior. 5-11.
160) and J .J. Hatfield
(sophomore, 5-11. 165) will
be the reserves.
Southern seniors Jake
Nease , Derek Teaford. Kyle
McKeever, Chris Tucker,
and Jon McDaniel will be
especially pumped for their
last Homecoming tilt. ,
Teaford (5-7 , 130). plays
bi g for hi s size and has a
never-give- up attitude at
quarterback
for
the
· Tornadoes .
Nease (6-2 ,
."257) is a great target at t i~h t
.. end and can catch anythmg
within his range . Nease,
however, banged up his
shoulder once again, a
shoulder he had major
surgery on last year, which
prompted his move off the
line to tight end.
McDaniel (5-9, 174) has
played some great defensive
games this season and helps
anchor the offensive line at
gua rd .
Tucker
. and
. McKeever are prom1 s1ng
: utility and special teams
· players. who can sub- 1n ·tn
the backfield as we ll .
Tucker is also a key target
for Teaford in the SHS. pa"ing game.
Josh Pape (5-9. 120 Jr.)
· has been " great defender
for the Tornadoes anu a

'

prime offensive target. Terry
Bell (5-9, 230 Jr.) has been
an outstanding defender for
Southern along with Darin
Teaford (6-2, 230 Soph. ),
McDaniel, Weston Counts,
and Mike Brown (5-8, 217
Fr. ).
·
· Ryan Chapman (5-I 0. 180
Fr.) has served time in many
roles and is the Southern
place kicker.
Running
backs Jesse McKnight and
Butch Marnhout have been
the offensive workhorses
for Southern. Marnhout has
had several I 00-vard rushing games to far in 2004.
Last week. another promising runner. Ryan Donaldson
was out with an injury to hi s
back.
Also last week, Butch
Marnhout was 19-115 rushing and Derek Teaford .was
8-24. Jake Nease caught a
pass for 41 yards. and
Tucker another for 19 yards.
Southern will have to sure
up its defense against the
Falcons if it entertains
thoughts of a win on Friday.
The defense had been a
stronghold most of the sea-.
son. despite see ing a lot ol
field time and field fatigue
at the l1ands of a sometimes
woeful offense. Southern's
defense had previously

•

Pro Football

sports@ mydailytribu ne.com

Southern

Thursday, October 7, 2004

www. mydailysentinel.com

CLEVELAND - Except
for hi s politics, Phil Dawson
keeps things straight down
the middle .
The Browns' kicker hasn't
mi ssed a field goal attempt in
nearly a year. making 18
straight since Oct. 19. 2003
- the longest current streak
in the NFL.
"That's a credit to the
whole team," the modest
Dawson said Wednesday. "It
means I0 other guys are
doing their jobs."
.
True. but only one IS
re~1uired to boot the ball
throuoh the upnghts 111 sun,
snow~sleet and rain off playino ,urfaces tom up for three
h&lt;~urs by JOO"pound linemen.'
Dawson. who is 8-for-8
this season, has given the
Browns an offensive weapon
that wach Butch Davis
couldn't imagine being without.
"It would be tou gh to envision anybody any better than
Phil ," Davis said.
·
On or off the field .
The 29-year-old Dawson
stands out among his teammates for ·more than just his
powerful right leg. A father
of two boys, Dawson 1s
good-natured, polite. charitable. insightful and well read
- not exactly your typical

made several big stops in
every game, stopping noteworthy oppon~nts deep m
the red-zone.
· Offensively. Southern has
also shown signs of being
able to play with any opponent. Hopefully, this Friday,
Southern fans hope the "A''
team shows up and plays
fike it is capable.
This past Friday against
Federal. however. Southern
was caught off-guard and
out of position in a shabby
tack ling performance. Ryan
Donaldson's absence in the
defensive backfield was a
factor. but . not the main
focus of concern. ·
Miller's lack of speed at
key positions may give
Southern a point of attack
offensively. Hitting the ini·
tial hole in the line quickly,
and taking advantage of the
second an d third efforts
Marnhout and McKnight
have posse"ed all season,
may be enough to pull
Southern through for the
Will .

Only time will tell.
Game time is 7:30 p.m.
Friday with floats and
homecoming
fe stivitie'
beginning at 7 p.m. The
crow ning of the queen will
take place at halftime.

pro football player.
He's up on current eve nts ,
and willing to debate why the
co untry
should re -elect
President Bush, a fellow
Texan.
"He's as rock solid as any
player I've seen," Davis saict .
" He's squared away m. h1s
marriage and career. He s a
pro. He prepares. He can
make any kick you want a
kicker to make. He has 1ce
water in his veins."
Dawson was not drafted
out of college and had brief
stints with Oakland and New
England before signing with
the 'Browns as a free agent m
1999. He remains one of two
starters
cornerback
Daylon McCutcheon is the
other
left
from
Cleveland's expansion team
roster.
Be¥ond the six game-winning kickS in five years,
Dawson also scored the first
rushing TD for Cleveland at
the new Browns Stadium

Rebound
from Page 81
Tailback David Jolley (60 170) led the rushing
attack last week with 93
yards on IS carries. and fullback Bear Lewis (5-I 0, 197)
added 76 yards on 19 carries
and a score .
Jolley also hauled in a
touchdown catch and joined
Charlie Wend (5-10, 161)
with two catches apiece.
Jolley had 29 yards. while
Wend grabbed 28 yards.
Eric Davis (6-0. 190) led the
in
receiving
Buckeyes
yardage with 38 on one

·•1:•••

IB'1.115

Cooling System
Flush Special

,., .,.,.,.

Ocalate t:leuer and t:ompletllly Bat:lr
'

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Sp,t:ial

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IJJt:ludft Completely 11uBh t'lans. B
,.,....•• CDDier and Flll81. lnclud•
Connrter, Include• Neceuary Amount of

••, """'· IB.f.B8

A Meigs win wo~ld keep
its TVC and playotf hopes
alive . but a loss may put the
Marauders out of contention
in both. The same can be
said for Nelsonville- York.
The pressure of that scenario has not been present 1_n
preperat1on tor th1 s. week s
critical con test With the
Buckeyes. at leasl according
to Chancey.
"We have had a good
week of practi ce and our
kids are exci ted about the
challenee of playing another
good t~lOtball team." said
Chancey.
·
.
Kick-off is scheduled tor
7:30 p.m. at Bob Roberts
Field . ·

..... ......_ .....
@
._T _.......,._T

:f.
1:

•·

;~

•·

•••••

Pet Calendar!

1:
..

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

\

•·

•••

~!

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

•·

:f.
•••
1:
;f.
---------------------------------~----·--------~
)
1: Name of pet:
I

I

·~ Your Name:

•: ·

•• I

I

~~ Address:
I

.

·1

I
•

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•••

~

1

I

Phone:

1
I

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

•; ~allipoli~ tmnilp
··~

ij1;ribunr

1

"Pet Calendar"
825 Third Avenue

~oint tll~a~nnt
..

:ll\rgistrr
"Pet Calendar';
200 Main St.

):

f

!

Daily Sentinel ~
"Pet Calendar"
111 Court St.

~
~

:$_':_a~l!~o~i~:. ~~ _4_5~~!. !! ~~e~~~~t:. ~-~5-5~?_. ~~~~r~!·. ~~ -4~~~~ ~:
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.&amp;......., ·~, ..:.•. . -~ •· -.,
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BY MtKE FITZPATRICK
Associated Press

'

Bv PAUL NEWBERRY
Associated Press

ATLANTA - The Killer
B's didn't have to go it
alone. Roger Clemens and
the powerful Houston line. up made sure the Astros
: got off to a good start in
their quest to finally win a
playoff series.
While Clemens continually pitched out of trouble,
Brad
Ausmus, . lance
. Berkman, Carlos Beltran
and Jason Lane homered
for the Astros to lead a 9-3
rout of the Atlanta Braves
in Game I of their NL
division series Wednesday.
The Astros set a fran , chise record for runs in a
. postseason game. They
twice scored seven while
' losing to Philadelphia in
the 1980 NLCS - the firs!
of their seven straight playoil series losses.
· Hou ston dropped three of
its last four po stseason
· series to the Braves, most
· recently in 200 I. Much of
th e blame fell on Craig
I Biggio and Jeff Bagwell tbe heart of the "Killer
B's" for more than a
decade.
Bagwe ll finally came
through with his first postseason extra-base hit, an
RBI double that put the
Astros ahead for good in
the third inning. But he
and Biggio played a secondary role in beating the
NL East champion Braves,
who . hardly looked like a
team that won its 13th
straight division title.
The Astros carried over
their momentum from the
regular season. which they
closed by winning 36 of 46
games to claim an improb-

able wild card.
Game 2 is Thursday at
Turner Field, w.ith Houston
sending 20-.,ame winner
Roy Oswalt "'to the mound
against former Astra Mike
Hampton. If the visitors
wi n again, they ' ll have two
chances to wrap up the
series at Minute Maid · Park.
where Houston has an · 18game w)nmng
strea k,.
· ·
Ausmus led otT the third
with the fir'! of Houston's
three homers &lt;iff · Jarct
Wright; tying the score at
1. Bagwell's RBI double
was followed by Berkman's
two-run homer into the
Braves' bullpe~ for a 4- 1
lead .
Beltran
knocked
out
Wright in the fifth with
another two-run homer.
11 . 1 d 0 ff
Bagwe
smg e
new
1't h
K
·
Gryboski
and
P c er cvm
came all the way around to
score on Jeff Kent's double
to left.
Clemens
showed
the
effects of a stomach virus
that knocked him out of
his last start of the regular·
season. The Hall of Famerto-be walked six _ all in
the first four innings and
the most he's given up in .a
game since 199~.
But Clemens also displayed plenty of grit in
winning a Game I start for
the first time in his postseason career. Tbc Braves
stranded nin e runners in
the first four innings.
, Clemens lasted seven,
throwing 117 . pitches. giving up two earned rll'hs and
,striking out seven. Not bad
for a 42 _y ear-old who
briefly retired after last
Seaso n. but came back to
help .the hometown· A
. tro
E·
reach their . first Wo d
·
Senes.

.,

2004

double to left-ce nter on Nathan··s
49th pitch. tying the score at 6
with hi ., fourth hit of the game.
It gave him three RBis in the
game. and made him. 6-for-1 0 in
the series.
Sheffield
was intentionally
walked before l.C. RonJero
ANAHEIM, Calif. I AP)
Pedro
M art1nez
·
,,
replaced Nathan .
re b oun d e d ,-rom a "re 1c 11cu
With the outfield drawn-in,
September ·by pitching 'Cien cfkc1i1 c
Matsui hit a liner directly at
innings and Manny Ramire1 hit ,.. goright fielder Jacque Jones that
ahead sacrifi ce fly that sent the "ild -ca r&lt;.l
appeared to be too shallow to
Red Sox over the Angels for a "-0 edge 111
score Jeter from third.
their AL playoff serie~.
But Jeter tonk off for the plate,
With two wins at Angel St.J,Iium. the
u··nd
'
Ju 11es' throw didn't have
Red So•~ .w1'11 try to swe•'t'
the hc\1 -of-five
much on it. First baseman
matchup on Friday at Fen11 a~ Park.
Matthew LeCroy. who entered as . Bronson Arroyo starts aga111\( Kclnm
a pinch -hitter in the I Oth,
Escobar.
relay ed the ball to the plate, but
Angels reliever . Fran c i,co Rouriguez ,
Jeter slid in safelv.
who won a record -tying fi ve post&gt;cason
Paul Quantrill got one out in
games two years ago to help Anaheim win
the 12th for the win , retiring
the World Series, threw a wild pitch that
rookie Jason Kubel with two on.
set up Ramirez 's sacrifice fl y in the 'evJeter led off with a long ball,
enth · for a 4-3 lead.
Boston broke it open in th e ninth .
and Sheffield "and Rodri guez hit
their first postseason homers in
Ramirez doubled, Trot Nixon hit an RBI
pinstripes to help the Yankees
single and Orlando Cabrera lined a threebuild a 5-3 le ad after seven
run double off Brendan Donnell -v.
innings
Martinez lost hi s final four starts la st
h.
All S
· T
Wit
two
- tars 111
om
month. But he gave up three run' and 'ix
Gordon and Rivera at the back - hits , striking out six and walking ~ . _He
of the bullpen. that was supposed
retired hi s last seven batters and left after
to be the Yankees' foolproof for. , ,.
. .
116 pitches.
mula for playoff success. But
Mike Timlin took over 111 the Cl~h th With
they co uldn 't put ,this one away.
a one-run . lead , gave up a single ~to Darin
The Twins tied it at 5 in the
Erstad and struck out Vladimir Guerrero.
eighth. rallying against Gordon
Red Sox manager Terry Francuna then
and Rivera. Jones reached on a
summoned Mike Myers, who struck out
wild pitch afte.r striking out, and
Garret Anderson. Next up. Keith Foulke
Hunter sing led.
relieved and fanned Troy Glau' to end the
That was as long as manager
inning.
Joe Torre could wait to go to
Foulke finished up in the ninth for a
Rivera , who had been 12-for- 12
save.
in postseason save chances at
Guerrero's first postseason hit - a twoYankee Stadium. But he gave up
run single with one out in the fifth - put
a bloop RBI single to Justin
the Angels on top _1. , ,
3
Morneau, cutting it to 5 -4 and
The Red Sox tied it in the sixth on Jason
leaving runners at the corners..
Varitek's two-run homer aft er a two-out
Koskie then came through with
single by Millar.
an outstanding at-bat, fighting
The Red Sox took a _ lead in the see10
his way back from an 0-2 count.
ond when Ramirez drew a two-out. basesChoking way up on the handle
loaded walk off Bartolo Colon. who
jL1st like Diamondbacks slugger , worked six innings.
Luis Gonzalez did ag2ain0slt RWiverlda
The Angels tied it in their half on an
in Game 7 of the 0
or
b
k' D
M PI
Series, Koskie sliced a 3-2 pitch
RBI single y roo le a 11 as
c ler"'n
before Martinez pitched out of a tiHHln.
into the left -field corner for a
no-out J·am.
double,c tving
the score at 5.
•

NEW YORK _ The New York
Yankees waited all season for
h
h
h'
f
AI
1 at
uge
It
rom
, ex
Rodriguez.
Boy ' did he deliver J'ust in
time .
Rodriguez hit a tyingDdoukbJie in
12
the
th inning, thH~nd k_erMe et_:r
dashed home on 1 e 1 atsuJ s
sacrifice fly and the Yankees
bailed out Mariano Rivera with
M' posiseason
another improbable
76
comeback. beating
mnesota Wednesday night to even their
series at a game apiece.
The Yankees responded wit~ a
champio nship-caliber rally a ter
' falling behind in the 12 th on
Torii Hunter's home run.
Corey Koskie keyed an eighthinning rally with a tying double
against Rivera, who blew a save
in the postseason for only the
third time in 33 chances.
3 in the best-of-five AL
seGame
1··1e,o w·JII be Fr'1day n'1ght at the
'
Metrodome,
Wl.th Kevin Brown

1 0

starting for the Yankees against
Carlos Silva.
Jet er, Rodriguez and Gary
Sheffield homered earlier in this
ga me. and it went to extra
innings tied at 5. It stayed that
way until Hunter connected on
the · 49th pitch from reliever
Tanyon Sturtze, who had worked
2 2-3 hitless innings to that
point.
But Joe Nathan was running
out of gas, too. The Twins closer had made 43 straight appearances without going more than
one inning. but manager Ron
Gardenhire sent him out for a
season-hi gh third inning in hopes
or finishing it.
After a strike , Nathan walked
Miguel Cairo and Jeter on eight
straight pitches with one out in
the 12th. bringing up Rodriguez,
who stru gg led in clutch situations for most of hi s first season
.h h y k
Wit t e an ·ees.
He' s chan gin g all that in
Octoher. A-Rod hit a ground-rule

~

•

.

NATIO,NAL

Anaheim va. f't eb, 1
Wednetday'a Aelult I
Boston 8, Anaheim 3, Bostoo leads series 2-o
Friday'&amp; Game
Anaheim (Escobar 11-12) at Boston(~ 10.9), 4:09p.m.

$t Lpult VI. I

sports@ mydailytnbune.com
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio. Grande
Rcdwomen vo lleyball team
hooked up with Shawnee State
on Tuesday eve ning at the
·Newt Oliver Arena with the
Lady Bears winning a thriller
m tour games, 32-30. 30-26,
25-30 and 35-33.
Rio Grande (9-17, · 1-6
AMCS) fell behind 6-2 and 12.- · 7 in the first game only to
come back to take a 26·22
advantage. The Redwomen
could not llnish the game as
Shawnee State (7-9, I-4
AMCS) roared back to win
game one.
Game two was also a thrilla-minute as Shawnee State

.

LEAGUE

~'

Analtlel

Biffle remained :21st in the
standin gs. falling to 46 points
behind 20th-place Jell Blli10n.
Evernh am Motorsport' was
handed three penalties ti1r an
unuppruveu spoiler modilica-.
tion to the No. 9 Dodge ot
Kasey Kahne. the top rookie
in the Nextel Cup sene,.
Kahne and team owner and
car ow ner , Ray Evcrnham
were docked 25 pmnts ap1ecc
and crew chief Tommy
Baldwin was lined $25.000.
The loss of points . dropped

7 • ,.. ""'eeton

.

' .'

1'ollliP Glme

Hculan{Oewllk20-10)aiMna(HarrfJioo 13-9), 4:09 ~.m. · "

Subscribe today.
992-2155

denied victory four times.
Rio was led offensively by
sophomore outside hitter
Lindsay Urton with 16 kill s.
Her play late in the match rallied Rio Grande. Junior
Lvnnette Kiesling and sophoniorc Melissa Doss added 14
kills.
Freshman
libero Alex
Savage accumulated 27 digs to
lead · the
Redwomen .
Sophomore setter Jessica
Veach distributed 32 assists.
Shawnee State's otlense was
led by Kristi Twyman and Kara
Miller with 19 kills each while
Dancin Gastelum added 18.
Kelsey Se'wards handed out 56
assists.
·
The two schools will tangle
again in Portsmouth, October
26.

NASCAR hands out more penalties
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - A day after hitting
Dale Earnhardt Jr. w1th a
$10,000 line and the loss of 25
points for cursing . during a
TV
Jnterv1ew,
postrace
NASCAR handed down 12
more penalties· for rule violations
at
. Talladega
Superspeedway.
·
The hardest hit .Wednesday
was . Roush Rac1 ng, wh1ch
received four of the penalties
for making unapproved rear
spoi ler adjustments on the No ..
16 Ford of Greg Biffle. .
Biflle was penalized 25
points and car owner Geoff
Smith: also the Roush team's
ge neral manager, lost 25
points. Also. crew ch1ef Doug
Richert was fined $25.000 and
crew
member
Michael
Hillman Jr. was suspe nded
until Oct. 20 and placed on
·probation until Dec . 31.

t

'
, .,.~ fiMutl
Houa*t ..,...,.. 3, lioulblleads series t-o

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rio volleyball loses thriller
Stormed out to a 16-9 lead but
the visitors could not sustai n
the momentum
as
the
Redwomen firm ed up their
play and captur~d a hrief lead
at 22-21. SSU put together one
tina! run to \vin game two .
lt was Rio Grande .,·ho controlled game three from the
outset, Shawnee State closed .
the margin several t1mes to
within a point but ne1er cou ld
get the lead.
Rio jumped out quickly to a
lead of 4-0 in the fourth game
only to hav~ Shawnee State
fire back to tie the game at6-6.
The game then went back and
forth with both sides shanng
leads.
Shawnee State grabbed a 2926 advantage and ,was on the
brink of victory. but was

P'

'llleoday's Resu~
St. Louis 8, Los Angeles 3, St. Louis leads series !..()
Today's Game
.
LA (Weaver 13-13) at St. Louis (Ma~quis 15-7), 9:19p.m.

College Volleyball
STAFF REPORT

S••••
' t

MAJOR LEAGUE BASE.B ALL DIVISIONAL '
Wednesday Aelult
New Yo11&lt; 7, Minnesota 6, t 2 innings, series lied 1- t
,Frida); Game
t:lsw Yo11&lt; (Brown 10-6) at Mlnn9sota (Silva t4-8), 8:09p.m.

•••

2005

Thursday, October 7,

Clemens and the Yankees even series with\ Manny,
B's take opener Twins in 12 inning win
BoSox
blank
•
'
t
B
agal ns raves
Angels in
second game

Hew York VI, Minoeoolll

Send us a
photo of
your
favorite
•
••
pet and
f.
they
might be--~~~~ •••
voted into our
;f.

I

BASEBALL.

-The Daily Sentinel

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~·

e

,,

11'1.115

grab.
Defensively, the Bucks
return eight starters from a
season ago and feature a 50
base set. Led by linebackers
Lewi s and Wil McClain (64, 212), the Buckeyes use a
swarming ~ly le that is
designed to force .turnovers
and limit options for opposing offenses.
Also back for Nelsonville
is Martin and McCulloch at
the tackles , with Perkins
anchoring the no se guard
position up fmnt. Steve
Young (5-6. 142) and Jarrod
Taylor (5·8, 163) fill out the
defensive front at the end
spot. Davis, Wend and
Jolley make up the 'ccondary backfield for NYHS.

~·

:f.
1:
f'ire
B Wheel
Rotation Front End
Special Jllignment

when he took a pitchout on a or Lee Suggs staying healthy
fake field goal attempt a~d just yet. BLJt when he sends in
scored on a 4-yard run m Dawson, it's a good bet the
1999.
Browns will get three points .
It remains one of his career
He's the most accurate
highlights, righ~ up there ~ith kicker in Browns ' history.
a 39-yard k1ck as t1me converting 92-of-111 - 83 .
.
.
expired in ' 99 at Tllree percent.
Rivers Stadium to beat the
''The best thmg about Phtl
Steelers 16-15, avenging th~ -is that you trust him," Davis
Browns' 43-0 loss to said. "He will tell you what
Pittsburgh in their first game he can do. He's not a guy
back.
who says, 'Yes coach, I can
"That seems like a lung make it.' when you know it',
time. ago." Dawson said. " It a 50-50 proposition. He'll tell
was so big for so many rea- you if he can make it. He has
sons. We were all 1mplants mal\e a 51 -yarder against the
here and we didn't under- wind ''
stand how big the rivalry is.
To beat Pitt&gt;burgh in ' 99.
We do now.''
Dawson had to drive his kick
Dawson will 'face the through the teeth of a stiff
Steelers for the II th time as wind artificially enhanced by
the
Cleveland-Pittsburgh the Steelers, who intentici~al­
rivalry will be renewed this ly opened doors behind the
Sunday when the teams play end zone to create more a1r
for the IOSth time.
tlow.
Behind new quarterback
Dawson's
try
sailed
Jeff Garci;1, Cleveland's through the posts. hit a wall ·
offense has struggled throu gh of wind &lt;tnd dropped straight
the first four weeks this sea- down - but good.
son. Fortunately, the Browns . "E:'ven to this day. that's the
have been able to rely on biggest kick I've ever had." .
Dawson, who has kicked a Dawson said. "The game was
field goal in four straight on the line for the first time.
and I showed that
games.
·
p I1 could
: The Browns are yet to make the kick. eop e saw
score a TD in the first half. that this guy who wa&gt;n ' 1
getting IS points on five field expected to do much, could
goals from Dawson.
do halfwav decent every now
Davis can't co unt on and then .''
Garcia's
arm, . Quincy
And be perfect for a while.
Morgan holding onto the ball too.

Page83

Kahne from 14th to 15th, eight
points behind Bobby Labonte.
Pat Tryson, crew chief for
Mark Martin's No. 6 Ford,
was hit with fin~s totaling
$15.000 for two separate violations. NASCAR dunned
Tryson S I0.000 for an unapproved air direc.tioftal device
and $5.000 for an unapproved
windshield mounting on the
Roush-owned car.
Peter Rondeau. crew 'chief
for Kenny Wallace's No. I
Cheyrolet. was fined $10,000
for using unapproved spring
mounting plates and bolts:
Michael McSwain , crew chief
for Ricky Rudd's No. 21 Ford
\\'a' tined S 1,000 for using
unapproved windshield clips
and Doug R[Jdolph. crew chief
fm ·Scott R1ggs' No I0
ChciTnlet, was assessed $500
1\&gt;r using seat belts with an
ex pi red manu faL·turer \ date.

&lt;Ill

'('""-· C3MC
T"o-d &amp;

...

t~~or~-a~

Hour1 :
M Mon ·Frl
!1-4 SoiUrdoy

~-

•I

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 7, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 7, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rihune

The OVP

- Sentinel - 3Re

ter

CLASSIFIED

We Cove·-""'
Meigs, Gallla,

•

And MaNn
Counties Like
NoOne
ElM Canl

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S MATCHUPS
A look at the regton's top
football teams, as voted by
Ohto Valley Pubhshtng Co
staffers (Ftrst-place votes
tn parentheses)
Team
Prev.Votes
1 Ironton (4)
1
64
2 Huntington (1)
2
61
3 Jackson (1)
3
45
(lie) Wayne (1)
4
45
5 Wheelersburg
7
39
6 Wtlliamstown
6 34
7 Wahama
9
22
8 Parkersburg So 10
13
9 Parkersburg
5
11
tO Tnmble
nr 10

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

Others receivong votes:
Front1er 9, Portsmouth 8,
Parkersburg ·Catholic 6
Wellston 5 Cholltcothe 4
Shendan 4, Nelsonvtlle·York 2
Crooksville 1, Metgs 1

Burch Cooper
Sports \Vnter

Brad Sherman
Sports Wnt t r

R t·cord -1--J.-1 h
L.1~t Week Y-1
(Pltk 111 h2hl)

Reco rd -1-7-lJ
Lt~ t Wet'k ltl-0
(I'll k Ill h!lli!)

GJ!hJ \ cJdc m\

GJ ibJ A.adom

Tnmble
1·0
Federal Hockrng
1·0
Watertord
1·0
Eastern
Q-1
Southern
0-1
Mtller
0-1
Friday's Games
Nelsonvrlle-York at Metgs
Eastern at Federal Hockrng
Miller at Southern
Vrnton County at Alexanl:Jer
Wellston at Belpre
Watertord at Tnmble

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Pomt Pleasant

20 12 Jackson P1ke Name
'
brand c lothes , computer
3 3 mon Old ChOw/German chair, household 1tems Fn &amp;
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tor, TV pnnler fall: , more En·
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Support Waterbed Mattress (112 mile from At 7 on
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Georges Cree k Ad )

Southern
H 11111 AI1

" l:lllit
Coal Gr;ove

F 11rl md

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do:·

Mason said the idea th at his
team is out for redemption
when it takes on the No. 14
Wolvennes 111 the Btg House
on Saturday ts downn gh t
laughable
"Thts tdea of revenge, you
waste ume thinking about last
year and all those kind of stlly
things, you ' re not going to
have a chance," Mason satd
"That (revenge talk ) ts all
rhetonc It all sounds good
unttl the first play when you
get punched m th e mouth,
then you forget abo ut that
stuff and it's back to playing
football "

,_._.

sendrng 1n rl tps In the Bog Ten
otftce
Desprte .til th,tl.
WtsL&lt;ll1sil1 opponent; h," ~
hccn tlltgged fm utlcn~l\ c.
hoJd111g jU St DnLe
Led by end Er,t"nus Jc~mes.
CONFERENCE .r twn-I ome Rrg Ten dctens tve
plc~yct
ol the \\Cel the
Wrsco11s1
n dclense " tops 111
The game woll lrk ely
revolve around th e elemental the nat1on 111 &lt;.,cotlllg ddense
subpl ot of Monne so tc~ Wcl lltrn g and tot,ll defense. gtvtng up
to run the ball and Mr chtgan JUst J&lt;J.1 ) ards per g,tmc The
Badgers h,11c 15 s,tcks. ha1 e
wanung to stop them
The Golden Gophers &lt;tre torced srx lumhles and pre ked
muscling thetr \hi)' 10 323 ott three fM:-."'c"' 111 11\e gdm~'
Yet no one ' ' c~pparcniiy tryyards a ga me on the gmu nd .
lo gl't g1~t bhy w nh the
thord best 111 the co untry They lllg
Bltdge1 . . &gt;
hav e the na\1011 s top 1-2
"Jus! keep pl.tymg because
punch 111 Laurence Matoney you're gotng to be held ,""
and Mano,. Barbet Ill. ill th A. lvarcz s.ud he told lm lrneand etghlh . re&gt;pectt.,ely on men.
the co untry.
Michtgan pe11111h JUSt 47
AMONG THE GREATS'?:
rushmg yards a game - not Ohtu St,tte UldLh Jrm Toc'Sel
even a producllve "dm•e for 1~ stu.:k1ng' \\ nh 4u.trtcrbw.:k
Ihe 13Ih-ranked Gophers.
Juslln b\lc k. even "'ht le the
"That's going to be mott.,at - ~ophomorc "'tJ uggle ~ to promg.'" Wolvennes safety Ry.tn tect the h.dl
Mundy sard "We w,mt to stay
Zw tck h.is show n moments
No 1."
ot htli lr.rnc&lt;: ba.Lanccu by
tunes "hen he looks ltke a
UNWELCOME HUGS: Iyp t cc~ l lrrst-ycat slarter los!
Wi sco nsm
coach
Ban y and confused. He has lurned
Alvarez has a srmple message the baJJ 0\ et at iCdSI Ill ILC Ill
for ht s defenstv e lm emen three ol the Buckeyes' fpur
Expect to be he ld
g.r mes. tncludtng a cmt ly
Alvarez satd he 's done all tum ble ,rnd .111 onterccptrn n 111
he can to bring auentton to th e the
sltlllll111g
upsel
dt
problem, talkmg wt th the Northwcster n S,lturday nrght
head official each week and
Is Tre ssel look mg, at g.etl tn g

more lime lot lellow sophomooe Troy Smtth' Is he eval u,\1 1ng Ihe postl\011 1
H.ndl y He•e's wh,,t Tre"el
s,nd tins week .rbout Zwoc k.
who grew up nut lar ftom the
Pto Football Hall ol F.tme.
'"One (ll the gte,He st thongs
t ll c~l " cvolvong
" Ju stm
Zwtck qepp111g up and maktng th1ngs happen w tth the
loothall 111 hts h,mds Thai's
why Kyle Orton\ so good.
Th,H \ why &lt;Nort hweste rn
qudrtcrb.rck Bretl ) Basancz ts
so good. Th.t!' s why Elv-.ay
w,ts so good That's why Joe
Monlana 11 ,ts so good Thai's

Call (740)992-7335
German
Lostblack
Shepherd red collar mtsstng s1nce Ocl 2 Hysell Run
Jeffers Ad Happy Hollow
area Rewa rd (740 )992-

wh)

Fll \ r~

was so good··

IOWA'S INJURIES: Iowa
coac h Krrk Ferentz has analy;cd rt !rom every angle, he
has t.tl ked 11 over wnh lm
med tc:rl st,tll. Ht s concluSion:
he c.trl"t ltnd anythmg that
cou ld have been done dtfferently to prcvc111 the slew ot
tn_1uncs th at have hll Ihc
Haw keves thi s season.
"llhl.nk we've had 10 surg·
enes alre,tdy thrs season.''
sa td Fcrentz. whose team ts
olf tillS week "It\ JUst one ot
those tou gh srtuattons"
The l.tlesl to go down was
starttng tarlback Jermelle
Lewis He tore the ACL 111 hts
11ght knee rn last Saturday 's
38- 16 vrclury over Mtchtgan
State Lewts, the team·s lead-

Lost Black &amp; white Border
Coll te,"Maggle · red collar
w1th tags Mulberry Avenue
area
Saturday
Reward

[740)992 -1901

QUOTABLE: Joe Pateono,
who hds been coachmg at
Penn Stdte s mcc 1950, on
Purdue f1flh-year senwr wtde
recetve r Taylor Stubbl etield
'"( He) has been there tor I 0
yec~rs. maybe '"
St ubbl elt eld needs t\Vo
catches c~ga m s t Pmcrno and
Ihe Nittany LIOns on Salurday
to li e former teamn1.1te John
9t,mdetord's Brg Ten career
receptiOns record ot 266.

YAR!l SAu,G\u.u~&gt;t.L'

102 Debb1e Or Galhpohs
Ohto Fnday Oct 8 &amp;
Saturday Oct 9 Hours 9am·

5pm
744 2nd Ave
Saturday Only

CLEVELAND - LeBron
James l)ad a good reason for
missing practice Wednesday.
He became a father.
The Cavaliers ,star guard
and hts longttme gtrlfnend_, a
19-year-old Akron woman,
had a baby boy Wednesday.
No other, details were available.
James left the team's traming camp m Columbus 10 be
wtth her and hts new son. He
was expected to reJOI11 the
team Thursday as he prepares for hts second NBA
season
Durmg the learn's medta
day Monday at Gund Arena,
James wouldn't comment
when a;ked if he were about
to become a father He has
al~o~ays been guarded about
hts pnvatc ltte.
I

refurbr~h ·

James

basketball
, couns and
yo uth com nwnoiy centers m
Akron He has also donated
suppli es to the cny\
schools
James was raiSed d S .tn
only chold by lm mothet
Glona, who v-.as estran~ed
from James' father 11hen' hc
was a youngster
"That 's ·my matn goal to
try and be a better I,tthcr

than the one I had.'" Jame'
told the Akton Beacon
Journal .. , drdn"t know hun
I dtdn ' t kn ow the "tuatton
he was tn But I'm gomg to
do my JOb Ihe be&gt;~ way I
can ..
The tdenttl ) nf Lunes'
falher ha; al ~o~.t) s been mystenous The r.rpet I eportcd
he has dted
Anorheo 1,1\hcr lt ~ urc rn
James· lile, Lddr&lt;: J'J,·kson.
IS &gt;crv mg a thr_
ee-ycar pr tsfl ll
\e.,.,.or 11101 tg,1ge and mc~rl
fr,ouu
On Monda). J.tmcs s c~HJ he
matured as d rc ;u ll ot h ,111 n~
played .t yc.rr 111 1he prr" and
becc~u~e of h1.., L'\ JlCr'Jence of

betng on the I 'i ( ll ymptl
te.rm He knm\' h\'111~ ,1 cl.rd
\oltJJ tn dkc h1111 ::t(l\\ \.tpe1Cil
more
"" 1"111 C~lll l' d ,t\111111 11 , \tc
s c~td
"II s d llllndctlul
llJljlOr\Uill\1 111 Jt\e .

COLUMBUS
(APJ
Cleveland Cavaliers guard
DaJuan Wagner lefl tra im ng
camp on Wednesday Io atte nd to
a personal tss ue, the team satd
Wagner retu rned to ht s home
tn Camden, N.J., but the team
dtd not gtve a reason for hts
deparlure. The Cavaliers don '!
know when Wagner wtll be back
tor pracl ices th rs week at Capt tal
Ut1t vers tt y
The club woll be there untrl
S,Jiurday before playmg a scnmmage on Sunday tn Akron
Phtladelphtd Ielev tston stauon
KYW teporteu Wednesday mahi
that Wagneo\ st&gt;ler was lllJufed
Tuesd&lt;~y when she tell out of a
school hu '
The stal ron reported she was
t,d{en to Coo per Umversny
ll nsp tt.ol on Camden A nur; tn g
supe t' '"" there told The
,\ sst&gt;LI .otcd Press that Ihe gtrl's
p.lo cnts requested no tnformalt on he rcle,tsed .tboul he1 condo-

The Coune r- Post of Cherry
Hill reporte(l for Thursday's
newspapers that a 17-year-old
Camden gtrl remained in crill·
cal, but slable , condJtton
Wednesday wnh a fractured
sku ll suffered when she fell
from a rear emergency door of a
school bus
Pollee satd Ihc bus "'as tak mg
stud en ts hom e from
the
Pennsauken Campu s of Camden
Vocational and Tec hntcal Htgh
School when some ~e nt s
started Ihrowmg nems around
the vehicle
The dnver radioed that he "'as
havmg trouble and was told to
return 10 the school , pultce -~;md
As he did. several st ud ents
opened Ihe rear door of Ihe bus
and the girl fell. Lt Mtchael
Lynch told the ne wspaper
Wa!!ner, who "as selected by
the Ctvalr ers in the first rou nd
ol the 2002 dr,dt. has had sever,JI setbacks dunng lm briet pro·

! 1(Ill

k\'·llnna! career

• All ads must be prepatd•

You owe 11 to yourself' Cut
your taxes 1n half LneKpen·
s1 ve Tax Savmg mtorma t1on
1·688·277-4912 Ext 77492
WWW Ratntree TaxWayz co
m

402 4th Ave
Toots furmture, clothes,
appliances lots of goodtes
Perennial Cat Shelter 3390
SA 325 Frt &amp; Sat 9 6pm
Dr1ed flowers, carousel
horse &amp; m1 sc household
1tems

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC IAL SECURITY /SS J?
No Fee Unless We W1n'
1·888·582 3345

IU \I l.'il\11

10

Ant1ques

Announcement

.....•.•... ... .. . . ... 030

Antiques.... .... . .. ................. . . .
530
Apartments lor Rent.. ................................ 440
Auction and Flea Market.............................OBD
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... ,760
Auto Repair .... ..................................... no
Autos lor Sale .. .. ............... , . .. ... . 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate. ............ .. , , . .. 750
Building Supplies .................................. 550
Busoness and But Idongs. ..............
. .. 340
Busoness Opportumty................................. 21 0
Business Traoning ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...........................790
Camping Equipment.. ............................... .780
Cards of Thanks , ......................... ...... 01 D
Child/Elderly Care . .................... , ....... .. 190
Etectrlcat/Relrtgeratron......... . ............... 840
Equipment lor Rent ................................... ,.480
Excavating.... .. ........................................... 830
Farm EqulpmenL.......................................610
Farms for Rent ...... .....................................430
Farms for Sale., ......................................... 330
For Lease .. ............................. .. ... .. . .. 490
For Sale ..................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade............ .. .. ..................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........... ,............................ 450
General Hauling ..........................................850
Giveaway..................... , ........................ 040
Happy Ads.............. . . .. .. .......................050
· Hay &amp; Grain.............. ...... , ......................640
Help wanted ............................................... 110
Home Improvements ...... ..........................810
Homes for Sala ............................................ 310
Household Gooda ...................................... 510
Houses for Rent.. ........................................ 410
tn Memoriam ................. ,, .............................020
lnaurance .................................................. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment... ..................... 660
Livestock............. , ..................................... 830
Loot and Found .......................................... oeo
Lot• &amp; Acreage ........ .................................... 350
Mlscaltaneous ................................... """'" 170
Mtaceltanaous Merchandtae ..................... 540
Mobile Home Repair ................................. 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sate ................................ 320
Money to Loon .............................................220
Motorcycle&amp; tl4 Wheolers .......................... 740
Muo\callnetruments ................................... 570
Personals ................................................... 005
Pets for Sate .................. ............................. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ........ ,...........................820
Profeootonal Servtcee ........................... ...230
Rodto, TV tl CB Repair .............................. ,180
Reot Eetate wanted, .................................. 360
Schools tnatructlon .................................... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............................. 650
Slluattone Wonted ............................... 120
Space for Rent.... : .................................... 460
Sporting Goode ,................................ 520
SUV'e for Sole ........ ,,, .........,.. ... ...
720
Truckelor Sata ...... , ................................. 715
Upholstery .... .......................................... 870
van• For Sale.. .... ........................... .. 7~0
Wonted to Buy ,
.................... ... .. .. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ...... ... , .. .' 620
Wonted To Do , , , .. .................. """" 180
Wanted to Rent ..... .. ............ . .. ........ 470
Yard Sole- Gallipolis..............
. ........ 072
Yard Sale•Pomeroy/Mtddle ..... . .· .
074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................ .
. 076

{2) 3 bedroom hOuses for
sale 2 baths l treptaces ~on
acreage
Cal l (740)709
11 66

oo

to --r

~
© 2004 by

Yard Sale Thursday-Fnday
St At 850 Btdwell

YARDSALE·

PoMF.Rm!Mmm£

, Inc.

AliC!lON AND

Ft.EA MARKET
RIVERSIDE

AUCTION

BARN AI 7 Souttl 5 miles
below the Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
Spm

(740 256 6989

W&gt;\NTEII

mBuv
Absolute Top Dollar U S
SLiver and Gold Coms
Proofsets Gold Rmgs US
Currency ·M T S Cotn Shop
151
Second
Avenue
G II • I 740 446 2642

I \ll'llll \11 \I
"'I IH I( I "i

110

'
1

HEtPWANnD

O"o Down Payment and
fmanc1 ng availAble
w1th
approved cred1t
Averaqe
credtt Ql.!B hf1 es you It down
payment has ke pt you from
buymg thts +S your chance
to own your own home II
you have a down payment
110
but would l1ke to conserve 11
WANTED
_
we offer low down pa yment
ptograms also Greal mter
Need mght shtft donut The Easte rn Loca l School est rates• Local cornpany
Locato1S
maker for local bakery Exp D1strtct cs seek1ng quali ty Mortga ge
pre! not nee Bring resume app hcants to serve as (740)992-7321
to 454 2nd Ave
coaches for the followmg
3 bedroom briCK front
wtnter sports positions BO)• S
Ranch Ne ..... er roof Vl~'"~yl
Juntor Vars•ty Basketball
hea t
pump
Sm11/ls
Coach Boys Jun1or Htgh
Cabtnets 1 car garage pr1
Work to protect our Gun
Basketba ll Coach (2) G1rls
vate la1e olf SR 160 1 8
Rights and get paid lor 1t'
Vars1ty Baskettall Coac h
acres S92 000 \7 40 )388
Jumor
Vars1ty
Gt rls
l:i676
W1th electtons nght around Baske tball Coach
G1rls
th e corner now IS your
Jun1or
Htgh
Baske~all 3
beoroom
house
1n
opportunity to make a
Coach (2) Interested per· Syracuse wtth garage 01"1
d1fferencet
sons should con tact Jon n1ce lot Ftnanculg available
ltnder Prmc1pa! or Pam No do wn 'payment wt th
To schedule an 1nterv1ew
Douthitt AthletiC D1rector at approved credit (740)992·
call 1 877-463 6247 ext
Eastern High ~ hool
3595
2311
Tudors B1 scu1t Worl d now 3 bedroom 2 bath 11vmg
Nurs1ng Asststant Classes htnng at Pomt Pleasant WV room d1nnmg room fur
beg1nntng October 4 20 lbcat1on Store Hours 5 30 to n1sned
kitChen
2 car
2004 thru October 20 2004 2pm app ly w1thm or call garage 2 outbutldtngs 6
II you enJOY elderly people (304)675-6166
plus ac res close to schOols
and want to become a mem
$94 000 (740) 742·7200
150
ber of our health care team
Srn!XM.&gt;
3 bedroom 2 baths eaHn
please stop by Aockspnngs
IN~TRUCtlON
k1 tchen co lcrete pa!1Cl a1d
Rehabthtatton Center at
front perch 5+ acres -car
36759 Rockspnngs Road
GallipoliS Career Co llege port slled barn on county
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 and f1ll
(Careers Close To Home )
black topped 10 ad E~tr a
out an apphcatLo n for the
Call Today' 740 1\46-4367
mobtle home lo t Beautifully
classes
16002 140452
landscaped
$85 000
Extendtcare
Health
www galhoohscareercolleQe com
(740)245·5 157
Servtces lnc 1s an equal

___

._
1_ HELr

_. 1110

NRA Recruiters

32984
S1dehtll
Road
An Excellent way to earn
Rutland
Ram/Shtne
money The New Avon
October 9th &amp; lOth 9AM
Call Mantyn 304 882 2645
4PM Freezer grtJJ organ oil
tamps canntng Jars dishes AVONI All Areas 1 To Buy or
cookware fats ol good m1sc Sell
Shutey Spears 304675-1429
Cozart res1dence, t t /2
m11es east or Harns Farms Babysttter to co me tn my
on SA 124 Portland lots of home tn Maso n Co WV to
ntce m1sc Items clo thing Sit lor tl-month old must
and books Oct 7 B 9 from have references &amp; be mfant.
opportunity employer that
9am-4pm low pnces
ch1ld CPR cert1f1ed call
encourages
workplace
6-9 (304)57 6-3353
G1ant - G1ant • G1ant Yard
diversity MIF ON
sale October 9th 2004 5 Cod1ng
Professional
tam1!y s sale, all together Needed FuiHLme 2 year Overbrook Rehab Center IS
New Joys, games tools fiSh· degree tn Medtcal Records currently accept1ng apphca·
tng equipment , furniture, ReQUired Knowledge of t1ons for responsible and
clothes, all s1zes and much, ICD-9·CM Codtng and DRG canng LPN s ALL SHIFTS
much more l 365 10 Sate ass tgnment e)lpenence pre- If you are mterested please
Route 7 out 143, 3 m1les tarred Ell:cellent Benef, ts come tn and f11l out an applt
cat1on at 333 Page Street
corner of Wollpen &amp; 143 Package
Flex1ble
Can t ffiLSS •I Don 1m1ss th1s Scheduling Send resume Middleport EOE
yard sale
to Camden Clark Memonal ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
Human needed Apply at 1354
Huge multt famtly yard sale Hospital
10 4 Thurs Fn Saturday Resources. PO Boll: 7 18 , Jackson P1ke Ga!hpolls
women 's men's children s Parkersburg WV 26102 Fa)(
Partt1me RecepiClerk need·
clo thmg
scrubs
Home (304)424-2825 or apply on
ed for Denial OlfLce m Pt
line
at
www
comh
org
lntenor kitchen Items lots of
Pleasant
Please
send
new Items , some th ing tor Gallipolis Bob Evans now
resume to
everyone corner of Hysell acceptmg applicatiOns lor
Dental At! OH1ce Myr
Run Road &amp; Twp 175
expenenced Sales Staff
3984 lnd•an Creek Road
ElkVIeW wv 25071
Oct 6 7 B Umon Avenue Apply 1n person
close to Route 7 New cloth·
Independent camer needed
POSTAL JOBS
1ng teens clothes baby
for deltvery of Harotd $14 62-$20 92/h r Now h1r
N1ke Tommy clolhes Adult
D1spatch 1n Gallipolis area
1ng For appltcaMns &amp; free
Mtsc Coffee and end tables
Est prOfit $1 200 montt1
government JOb mto can
Amencan Assoc ot Labor
October
7
8 &amp;
9 Cal l Andy Martin t·800·88B1-913·599·6042 24 hrs
Crossroads 124 and Batley 2834
emp serv
Run Road 1st house on left
lnfoCtslon
Management
October e &amp; 9 Colle~e Road Corp ts currently accepting Staff Development Nurse
Overbrook
Rehab
&amp; S1xth Street, 1n Sy-racuse applications at Q.l.lr Galhpohs LPN
Clothes odds &amp; ends, toys location Qualified appll· Center 1S looktng for a self·
cants should be stable. htgh- mottvated team player wtth e
baby clothes decorations
ly motivated Individuals wtth h1gh energy level to JOin our
Route 143 October 8-9 Lots QOOd commumcatton SkillS management leam Must
of stuff Come and see We offer a full benefits pack en10y work1ng w1th people
9AM·5PM
age and 401 K Seve ral traLnlng and develop1ng steff
qu iCkly
to
Sa t Oct 9 9 3 Dave scheduling opt1ons ava tl· respondmg
able No prev ious exper i- staltmg needs, mon11ormg
Spencers 605 Mam St
perfor mance
Racine adult cfothes teen ence ts necessary: We are employee
lnserv(c1ng
end
&lt;;:punsel1ng
the
professional
dlfterence
wtnter clothes teen leatller
m teteserYiceiS and need employee Must possess
Jacket household ttems
great team players to join us I E~~:ce ll ent communLca1Lon
Interested
candtdates and mterpersonal sk1 1l s
· YARD SALE·
please
cal
l
1·877
463-6247 Presen latron sk1lls and the
PLFAsANT
ext 2455 or apply online ab11Lty to work under pres·
sure Demonstrated pla n·
www !olocls!On com
Rummage Sale
nmg
and orljj antza tJonal
Scared
Heart
CatholiC lookmg for expenenced
sktlls Crthca l tht nktn g and
Church Hall 2222 Jackson HVAC
helpers
Call problem solvtng sk1lls The
Avenue Thurs Frt Sat' · Oct (740)441 1236
ab1l1ty to follow through on
7th·6th -9 th 9 00 1111 ?
MaKe 50% sethng Avon g1ven tasks Tra1n the Tra1ner
Yard Sale 2420 Lincoln Ave Llmttecl
11me
ONLY and Human Resource/ Staff
smell House 1n rear
(740 )446 3358 FLrSt5 to call Development expe rt ence
preferred bul not requtred
Wed· Thurs li Fn
rece 1ves a g1tt
Please send resume w1th
Manager needed ·for mob1le cove r le11er to O verbroo k
~lo-n e park 1n Shade send Aert ab Cen ter c;o Mtchelle
res um e to Cou ntty Park Gilmor e AN DON 333
lnc PO I 033 logan Oh Pa9e St Middleport OhiO

beoween

r

A ~trt!dlh!d

AccretNtng
Counc!! lor lnr::Jependen! Collli1J!!~
Membt!•

and Scnoo1s 12746

170

1\!L';Ll:t JAI'EOLJS

SO'ENTION!

Seeldng 39 People
Locally
who want to earn money
Whi le loSing we1ght ehowmg
others how

{7 40)441 1982
FREE SAMPLES

www famousnutrltlon com

Georges Portable Sawmill
don't haul your logs to the
mt!l just call 304 675 1957
Small Carpentry work
Underpm n1ng Pa1nt1ng
Po rches &amp; F-orch Decks

(304 \675 6473
W1H oo housecleaning 8 1g
Of Small fObS cail (740)446·

4,5760 EOE

Hmn.,
mRS\U

NEW PURCHAS ES
REF IN ANCES
SO DOWN/ SO DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
IMPROVEMENT S NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES
WE LCOME '
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-aoo-37Q-496 5
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U S
VETERANS

All real estate Bdvertlsmg
In thiS newspaper ls
subject to the Federal
Fa1r Hous•ng Act oi196B
whtch makes u 1!1ega1 to
adverttse any
preference hmtiBtLon or
d1scnmmat1on based on
ra ce. color religion. sex
lam that status or national
or1g1n or any Lnlentlon to
make any such
preference, tJmltatLon or
d!scrtmlnatt on

11\\\11\1

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Start a Second Lncome Very
lltlte out ol pocket cost Free
COMPUTER
t 688 279
8322
EXT
77 492
WWW Ra tnlree MoneyWays

com
~

ut
pH lO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO re&lt;:;ommends tha
~ou do busmess w1!h peo
Ia you know and NOT t
~e nd money through th
mali until YOU have 1nvesl•
loated the oltenng

Rf:\'1 \l.S
10

IIOLSf,,
H&gt;KRI'l

0 o Down Paymf'nl and
ltna,..ong avatlab c W1!1
app :LJea credtt
Average
creatt ouahiJeS )OU If do...,n
payment 'laS Kept ;cu !rom
t.uy1ng th1S 15 ~our cha1ce
to own ;'Ju' own rome If
(OU have a cown pay..,ent
but .vou o lt~e t:::. conserve,,
we o'er 1c1. Clowr payf'ler t
progra'TIS also Great 1n1e1
est rates' Local compary
House 3 Bedroom 1 1 2
Locators
Mortgage
Bath Hear Pump
new
1740 )992·7321
Carpet WtndO\\ S &amp; Root
R1ver V1ew 12 Sm1th St No 2 bed•oorr, 'lc,,se 1n Eureka
Money Down to quah ly1ng Newly
emo::1e•ed
$400
Buyer $425fmonlh why Rent mont'&lt; 5400 depostt No
304)675-2749
pets 740·256 640B 740
House 4 Sale 9yrs old 2br ~41·05863
Corne Lo t Ol11e1 '"O~deC 2
bedrooms
Pomeroy
area
1n
Clifton
WV $275 00 per montr, plus
1304!882 2626 or (3Qdl802- depo!:&gt; t 174Jt992·0 175

2969
2 story CoiOr'lt,11 3 tJO•m 1
Mason WY Ban,.;ed Owned bath Gas heJt C11·r1 A C
Home 2 be dr oom Flat Lo1 5600 mo t740)4 ~6 348t
S24 900
M1Ke Stack 010
Co!o'ly
GMAC
Real!y 3 bdrm hOuse 1 5 baths
close to hosp1ta1 oH Jackson
(30 4)542 5888
P1!o.e 5600 rent w $600 sec
Rental tn Potn t Pleasant dep You pay all uttilt1es
S40Q,month (30 4)675 5540 References req1wed Call
or (304)675-4024 ask lor (7401.146-3644 tor appl!ca·
Nanc y Homestead Realt y !to n
Broker
3 bearoorn house Naler fur
Why ]:lay rent? 3 bedroom 1 n ~1-Jec no pets $400 rent
bath
remodeled h.,ome $400 Je~osn
r7 40 245
Mason WV $35 000 00 No 506'
calls
after
9 OOPM
3 tedro JfTl 1 bath lull base
(740)696 7002
ment
ietacheC ga·age
320
How:~
counl") setfllig 5 m1nutes
'rom =ltC\ Gran::le t 0 m1nut
H1K S\LE
e:1 •rc·m hOSpili'll S70U
14)(70 87 Clayton 3 oea r:1Qnth .- dtPOSLI !7'40)4 46

Monn .F

room 2 bath C A ne\\ car
pet ceram1c t1!e ~~asher &amp;
7-lO j.f6
dryer 510000
4233

3051
3 bedrocms

Mlnl?rsvLtle
$400 00 per month ph..s
aepos t r740L992 0175
4 Bearoor1 n Syracuse
OH
S600 montt'l
SbOO aeoostt
No
Pets
!30416..,.5 533L

Cor::lo '&lt; Ja r 2 baths w
97 mobtle home 16x80 oaseme ' V1e · of r1ver
3be l2 ba v1nyl s1de sh n Cntr
~ C
S700
mo
gled roof fro"! and bac k Gai!t~ohs Feny (740)446·
deck (740,9 49 370C
3481
For sare :;Jr ·ent 2 bedroom M ddlep ort : rooms 'IC
mobile names start1ng at oets ocpostt ~ references
S270 per montr Ca f 740 17401i42 2424 t740 t992
992 2167
3439

Make 2 oavments mo"e 1'1 4
years on note !304 736
3409

N1ce 1 2 &amp; 3 bed•oom
Apartments reta!l soace
also to• '"ent 1:'40)992 3702

New Double W1de and 1 ~
acre of lard S78 000 (OBOl
call (3041675 7561
New Oakwooo mega store
by
featurtng
Hcmes
OaKwood
F eetwood &amp;
Giles One stop sr.opp,.,G
only at Oakwood Homes ot
Barbours..,11!e WV (304\736·

3409
SAVE SAVE SAVE

Stock mod els at olo pqce~
2005 models arr1v1ng Now
MB 5263
Cotes
Mob1!e
Homes
15266
US
50
East
Athens
(Oh1o Loans On ly)
OhiO 45?01 (7 40)592 1972
House for sale l:ly owner 4.,. Where You
Get Yo,;r
bedrooms 2 5 oathS large Moneys Wortn"
country kttcnen 1 5 story 2
LOTs&amp;
car attachea ~srage plus
large
outtl uliamgs
two
Blacktop drtveway man~
extras St29 000 with 713 2 acres on lngai1S Roao
acre lot or $159 000 w1th ai"' St5000 7402450133
addiMnal 3 485 acres ol llat
ground Very close to town 2 300 Homes te tn Upscale
on Spruce St e~tens1on Oevelopment 41"11 from
Cal t (740)59 1 0437 anytime P1 Pleasant on Sandhlll·RCI
S29 900
Senous 1nQu res
Ranch style home w•th f1n only
130415 ... 5·3648o•
shed basement 3 bed• (61 4)7 47-0998
rooms 1 bath large h111rtg
room and dm1ng room 2001 mob le home 16&gt;-60
kitchen w1th :2 ca1 garage also two acres land 1 m !e
attached and a 30ll:60 from R! 7 near Evret..a
Call 1... 40 1256
garage and a 15x24 shelte $65 000
hr,,se 1 5 m1les out Cherry 9234
Rmge Rd on the nght
.17401245·5 102
Hom es
tram
$10 000'
FO&lt;closure VA Hud tor 11st
1ng 1·800·7 49·81 06 eli 11'09

Land on McCorm1ck Rd 2
targe ots 1 2 acre eacn
(mere or less) Electnc ard
water O'i one sut table for
bL.L!dtng or mobLIC hOme
(740 )367 7R86

ThiS newspaper Will not
knowmgl y accept
advertLsf!ments tor real
eslat, WhiCh IS In
vtotatton of the taw Our
readers are hereby
1ntormed that all
dwellings adverttsed 1n
thts newspaper are
ava tlable on an equA l
opportumty bases

\CRUo,l

131 0

lA&gt; Pi&amp;
AlKL\(,f
Commerctal tJu ldtng plus
1 5 acres m G ·een Twp
Central heat b ~tr bath and
complete kitchen Sl65 000
Call Clifford ReAltors 740
446·7702

3BR 28A 5 129 acres
Green Townsh1p close to 1990 Smg!t: WtCIC Trr:uter
schOol Pnced to sell More 3 bedroo""
1nto 17 40)44 6 7377
2 full c.,ze oatns
Ne.., Haven WV
A Affordable 2 Bedroor11
Home
Everyth1ng new t304)882 2355

Htg h
Sch ool
Juntors
Senters and Pnor Sef'J LCe POSSibl e no Money dOWO !C
you can 1111 vacant pos1t1ons quallly1n g Buyers (304)674
1n the West Vlrgm1a Army 51, 1
National Guard lf you are
between the ages of t7 -35
or have pr1or m1l 1tary serv
GET YOUR LOAN TO
tce you wont want to pass
BUY OR REFINANCE
thiS up For Opportuntt1 es 1n
YOUR HOME 1
your area call
304 675
FREE" APPROVED
5837
HOME LOANS'

Pr.

43138

10

0l'I'OK!l!Nff\

lwrtght@ltc net

Yard Sale 4253 State Route
141 (Across tram Graham
Schoo l Rd ) Fn 8th 9 oosat 9th 9 00·5 oo
5
BOOKS GALORE lurn1ture
&amp; mtsc ttems

VISA

Now you can have borders and graphics
..._,.
added to your classified ods
(.1~.
Jr1&lt;&gt;
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S 1.00 for large

Btl51NIS'i

Yard Sale 825 Ball Run Ad
off Sk1dmore D1shes tools
Garage sale 6 miles south mens dress sh1rts (med )
of Gallipoli s on AI 7 Oct 7 lots of m1sc
8-9
Thursday
Fnday,
Yard Sale Clothes golf
Saturday
clubs ga ll balls Jewelry
Garage sale Fr1 &amp; Sal 614 kerosene heater toys play
St At 325 south ol A10 house walkers play pen,
Grande AntiQUes glass· mtsc Fn-Sat 322 St At 7
ware men &amp; womens cloth· Gall1polts
across
fro m
mg (extra large! Stzes El hot ts Appl 1ance
books
shoes
baby &amp;
hOusehold Items old lurnt Yard sale Help a famtly New
serger rockers leather jkts
ture &amp; Phaltzgralf dtshos
n1ce
collectibles
many
Huge yard sa le
1616 th1ngs Sat Oct 8 9-5 Rt 7
Jackson P1ke Fnday &amp; S &amp; Lovers Lane
Saturday 9·5pm
Yard Sale Ocl 6·9 9·5pm 2
Large yard sale 559 Jay Dr
fa m1ly No early sales 3356
BICycles lots ol good stuff
Georges Creek
Thursday &amp; Fnday

4&gt;4's For Sate . , . . ... ........... . . .. ... 725

--

Thur•day for Sundays Paper

51 AI 141
Oco 8-9, 8-5

CLASSIFIED INDEX

QUICK-HITTERS: The
Lillie Brown Jtig. the oldest
ga me trophy 111 coll ege fool ball. rs up tor grabs when
Mmncsota and Michtgan
meet tor the 90th ttme on
Salurday
Wt sconsm 's Jr m
Leonh.ud needs JUSt lt\e
yards agamst Ohto State to
become the Btg Ten's career
leader 1n pun! return yardage.
.. Northwestern 's 33-27 overIt me stunne r over No 7 Ohto
State was the most vtewed
co llege tootball telecast on
ESPN2.
This week\
Mt nnesota- M tchtgan gam e
wrll be show n lt ve on ESPN
Clas&gt;rc , prompting the queslton how do they know tt'll
be a classtcry

Publleatlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m.

Oct 7 8 9 Aatn or Sh1ne
Basement &amp; ya rd sale 1464

74

Wagner leaves camp
LeBron James becomes a dad for personal reasons
Fatherhood should fit
James well. The reigm ng
rookte of the year, who turns
20
Ill
December,
IS
most
relaxed
when he "
among chtl dren Tht s
summer, he
donated
money to

Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To

F]rst time mqlft lamJIY vard
sale &amp; baked goods
Dctoper 9th B oo 5 qo
1463 SA 160 bes1de Elli e Saturday Sale by Church at
Looks
beauty
salon Gnff1ns Upper At 7 9-?
Children &amp; mens clo thing More thmgs added
womens plus s1ze tools
Yard &amp; Bake Sale
burner
msert ,
Saturday OCtober 9
m1crowaves exe rctse bike
9am-2pm
and much morel
Honeysuckle Drive ,
AddiSOn River of Life
En-Sat-Sun, Oct
8· 10 ,
United
Method iSt Women
Mu!tt·famtly yard sale, 55 4

Jay Dr , Spnng Valley All
s1zes clothm!}"coats IncludIng boylg1 rl tnlan Vtoddlers
teen Large vanety of ttems
11nenslcurta1ns housewares,
2556
books beames stuHed amLost 2 German short-haired
mals co llectibles desk
Pointer dogs Vtc1n1ty of SR
9am -5pm
141 &amp; 775 (740)446 3547
days {7 40 )379 236 1 alter Enday &amp; Saturday 6929
State Route 588
7pm

mg rusher. v.as the thord runnong back the Hawkcycs have
lost Iht s seawn Io an ACL
tear.

Display Ads
All Dl•play : 12 Noon 2

r

-

675·5234

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

wood

Gtve Away Bunny to a good
nome about 3 months old

SHENNIU

Pro Basketball
BY ToM WITHERS
Assocoated l"ress

FOUND

1002

Year-old failure still stings Gophers
"A year later, th e memory
still stmgs Minnesota coach
Glen Mason.
The unbeaten
Golden
Gophers v-.ere dommating
Mtcht gan by three touchdov-.ns with a quarter left, yet
ended up losmg 38-35.
"Do you really thmk thai I
have to remind Ihem we blew
a 21-pomt lead m the fourth
quarter against Michtgan last
vear? I don ' t !honk so," Mason
satd "That's not somethmg
we are ;ery proud of, but
that 's not Mtchtgan's tault,
that's our tauit. M tcht gan dtd
what they were supposed to

L!Nr AND

Fo und
Young
German
Shepard dog 1n Wayne
Nattonal Forrest (740)643-

College Football - Big Ten Notebook

BY RUSTY MILLER
Assocrated Press

GIVEAWAY

~~~~ I

~--------,.1

Milltr .11

It

rI

c~----....,
\\ '\ Ill '\II \11 \ l "i

Wahama

Jt

\'('arr,•n

lf P, 11

(740) 448-8777 • (740) 4411-2484
3-3

Wahama

Pomt Plnsant

F ml.11hl

2110 lllttra llllllll (81. II. 7) • Oallipala, Ohio

6·0

\tHith LJllJJ

l:::l.ilr..U

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, ,INC.

All

StliHh ( .,Jih.l

Word Ads

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

(304) 675-1333

Oecultf;,~

Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.rn. to ·s:oo p.rn.

R.iyer Vtlley
h:dt ral Ho• kin!'!,

Mill&lt;r"
\I•LLI !JL Til
I\

Offee lloar~

It

Ft·dn 1! Ht•Lkmj.!
It

Pomt Plyasapt

R(l Lk Hdl

Eoillm ,,

l'nc,\ ,H

Jt

Po int Pl!!.tsant

"'

Register

Sentinel

992-2156
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To
992·2157

(, til! 1 Ac.Hl( my
't J.o.&lt;lu&lt;m

Eastern 11

South G alba
It W.lh l tl\,1

1

Wahama

Lt

~L)uth~l II

II

Hdl 1t
Rj\ er Valley

tl

\nuth (, Llh

Your Ad,

Lik - Y1•rk

}l.._o ~_ k

m:rthune

To Place

Mr R.1dto Guy

"M&lt;i&amp;i

\ .din

Miller ,11

.I:::I..1U:..u

NLl~uL J\

Ruck Hdl 1\

Jl

[\ lllkr tt

A.!h..!:.m.

A.thcm 11

Andrev. Carter

.Milltl ,1(

Coa l GrO\.c
It J- m )Jnd

C oal Groye

Wahamu

Dave Harris
Ad Rqm'Slll tl\ l'

( Lili.1 ~L L~k !\\\

&amp;:!g II

PoL.I .11
Pomt Plnsant

HJ n iiJn

( u.d Grove
,U Fajr)and

II

Paul U. Pokyn
Cnp~~ Fduor
Rl'ullll ·W -]0

II licbt111

~

!l .lH£1uon

Rock Hill 11
Rl lu \,1 \,,

II

2-4

_
Others

Friday's Games
South Gatha at Wahama
Hannan at Harts
Portsmouth West at Ironton
'
Oak Hill at Sctotovrlle
Symmes Valley at Valley

Rock

Riyer Valley

Poca Jt
Pomt Pleasant

4·2
4·2

Ieim
Cardinal
All
Wayne
4·0 6-0
Potnt Pleasant
2-1 3-3
Herbert Hoover
1-1
2-3
Wtnfteld
1-2 3-2
"Srssonvrlle
1·3 2·3
Poca
G-2 2·4
Friday's Games
Poca at Potnt Pleasant
Wrnfteld at Grafton
Srssonvrlle at Herbert Hoover
Wayne ts IOLE

Hannan

(, 1lh l \ l tclt Ill\
.H Jackson

{I ' ll k Ill

11 M LI).\'

A!!

Cardinal

Ironton
Wahama
Symmes Valley
Oak Htll
South Gallra

111 bold)

iJ_j

Nelso!l\'llle- York

Suuthl:'fll

Ohio Dovision

TVC

J ,J•{'J.hLk

\X.I rHt r
ltl'tord -1-2 I H
L 1't Wt•t:. k •)- I

II M t:. l~'!i

Mill.tr .It

TVC
Team
TVC
Wellston
1-0
Belpre
1-0
Nelson ;~lie- York
1-0
Metgs
()-1
o-t
Vrnton Ccunty
Alexander
Q-1
Hocking Division

Rt•t md J ~ D

~t.dl

NeJsonullc-York

Rock Hill

SEOAL

1·0
0·1
0·1
Warren
0-1
Friday's Games
Ga\ha Academy at Jackson
Athens at Warren
Logan at Manetta

,,J... ~·d P ll k L'l

Jr Mt&gt; t ~s

ovc

SEQ
1·0
1·0

M

Nelsonyille- York

STANDINGs/SCHEDULE

Team
Jackson
Gallia Academy
Manetta
Athens
Logan

( l'~ck

Th ~·

Ian McNemar

di.J&gt;&lt;kwl

Prep Football

Chesapeake
1-{)
Coal Grove
1-0
South Potnt
1-0
Faorland
0·1
Rover Valley
0-1
0-1
Rock Htll
Friday's Games
Rock Htll at Rtver Valley
Chesapeake at South Pornt
Coal Grove at Faor\and

Sport\ \Vntcr
1\.ec onl il- 17
L 1~t Wn k 9- \

Mr. Staff Report

JI.J&gt;&lt;kwl

Federal Hockmr

!lli;

Bryan WahPrs

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

'\'loHII.E HO\I~:"'
FOR R1::,
1

14X70 3 bedroo ....
approved No Pels
onty i7 4 0)74~ 2714

HUO

-&lt;uo

2 bedroom 14x 70 1,ear Cia)
school Trash and water
tncludec 5350 -.onth S350
depoSit 7401256·t66G
2 t&gt;edroorr all elecl -IC 4
mtl es north ;;;f Ho zer $350
month . _ secona JeDOStt S.
reterences , ... 40\446 6865
or ,·40)445 € S9
2 bedroc..... G•ee~ scr-oo
.:l!Stnrt $300 'T'C deDOS I &amp;
reference ... 401J6 ... 0632
3 bedrO.J'"" rnobtri '"'orne no
pet&amp; ... J Q 892 :;,,958
Beautii J ~ ve \tl'W oaa l f0
1 or 2 peopLe PO Jet~ rete
ences ~ -40JJ41 0181
Clean mob1le "''orre 'or rent
n the cou'"ltry 17 401256
6574
-\P\W I'1FX'~

HlR Rt-YI
l and ~ bearcom apar l
, ents 1urn1s11ed and untu·
... sr £Cl
sec~Jflt'r
deoos•t
·ea,.ured no rei~ ..,.40 992
2,116
1 bedroom recentt ~ u~)dat
ed HUD aoorovea S28ti 00
per rnont.., !886t514 0192

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

r

APAKIMEI\T.&gt;
FOR

I

RENr

1 bedroom apt W/0 hookup

$290 mon1h + deposit Close

\II HI II \\IU-..1

rlb

H &lt;JU&gt;,'EilOUl

Gooo;

.

I

~--------,.1·

~aid,

Bas1c TV.

--No pets 1n or out (304)674·
1l031

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Complete set o{ used
K•tchen Cabmets, Wase &amp;
wall, counter top , s1nk &amp;
stove top &amp; wall oven . Good
cond1t10n App 15" $350 Call
740-446-4514
8am-5p_m
740-446-3248.

~~i ~
frGncr ...

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. RLfiR I Dam 111 . OH
7 ~().992-70 1.1 or 74(J.'l92·W1J

Rt-sloekin.g Ia ll• l/o(k•l .';a /1 a_qt•
.and i\flrr .\lu rkrl Pu t"l"

CANCELED

Mollohan Carpet . 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter. Ohio.
3 rooms &amp; bath, stove.lrelr•g- (7 40)446-7444 1-877-830erat or. down stairs, utilitieS 9162. Free EstimateS. Easy
pa1d $450/mon th . No pets. l1nancing. 90 days same as
cash . Visai M aster Card
46 O l•v;e St (740)446-3945
Dnve- a- little save alot

4467 ask for Faye or L•sa.

4 room &amp; bath apt Stove.

refng . water, sewer. trash . Thompsons Applrance &amp;
$400. Porter, Ohio 740-367- Repa•r-675·7388 For sale,
re-cond•t•oned
au tomat1c
7746-740-367-7015.
washers &amp; dryers, refngeraApplications being taken lor tors, gas and electric
very clean 1 bedroom rn ranges. air condi tioners, and
country settrng yet close to wnnger washers . Wrll do
town. Washer. dryer, stove, repa1rs on major brands in
fnd ge included. Wa~er and shop or at your home.
garbage included . TOtal electnc w•th AC Tenant pay elec- Used Furniture Store 130
tnc. $300 deposrt. $375 per Bulaville Pike. Dressers.
month . No pets. No srno~­ couches. mattresses. reclin·
ing. 740-446-2 205 or 740· ers, relngerator, washer.
dryer. gas, electric range .
44 6-9585 ask tor V•rgin1a.
Grave Monuments. ' much
BEAUTIFUL
APART· morel
{740)446· 4782
]-tENTS
AT
BUDGET Gallipolis, OH Hrs 11-3 (M·
.PRICES AT JACKSON S)
ESTATES,' 52 Westwood
Dr ive lrom $344 to S442 .
Alvi1QUf:5
Walk to snop &amp; movies. Call
740-446·2568 .
Equal
Housin g Opportu n.ty.
Buy
or
sel l.
Riverine

Ladies, do you
like to sing?
Join us l or an exciting

run th ru Nov. 16th, at

600

Gallipolis,

.,._ooioiiiiiiolii_oioi_ _.

i

~~ul~a~~o~~wt~a~:rp~~e~:

,
ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS
I

Full blooded St. sernard

1 9 6

f~:g ;;; !~ ~~1e

\ 'o ur

certified check the
following collateral:
1994 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE
IJ4GZ58S1 RC280928
1996
FORD
: ESCORT LX 3FASP·
· 11·J5TR126446
The Farmers Bank

and

Savings

Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right 10 bid at this

sale, and to withdraw
ihe above collateral
prior lo sale. Furlher,

Ri~lot

Ty Hill
1-800-822-0417

~,r___~-~-·~-~--' r

communicate with or

t :30 o'clock p ·. m In
the Probate Court of .

one year. A hearing
on lhe petition will be
held
on
Friday,
September 17; 2004 at
9 : 15
a .m .
If
you
objecl, you should
appear and lnlorm the

Court. The Court Is
located In lhe Meigs·
County · Courthouse
allhe comer of Court

The

above

described collateral
will be sold -·as is-

J

Where Is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given .
For further Information, or for an
appolnlment
to
Inspect
collaleral ,

prior tq sale date con·
tact Diane Rector or
Randy Hays at
992·2136.
10/6,7 ,8

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ADOPTION OF
DUSTIN RAY BURNS

Floor ol saill court·

house.
Judith R. Seslon
Probate Judge/Clerk
8126
9/2,9 ,16,23 ,30, (tO) 7

Public. Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
.COUNTY,
OHIO
'
In Re : Change of ·

Name

of

Dalton

an
for

change of Name In

4x4
FoR SALF:

Last year 2nd cut Round 1996 Suzuki Side K1 ck.
bale hay S6. New 2nd cut 65,000 miles, auto, air, covt.
_
hay
516
hard top excellent conditi on.
851 Ford Tractor. good con- low miles. $4,000 (740)256n.
~
.- ...~rs
~ditron $3.200. Ph. (740)446· 6890
t'ORSALE
. 7787.
l.o--ooiiiiiioiiiiiiiii--"
1997 Ford F-150 Lariat. oxt.
I. \II\ ~\. (, \ 1&lt;01 "\ h ) I II'. cab, s~ep-side . exc. condiChihuahua. ct1ocola te and
ti on. 4-wheel drrve. $ 1 2.~00 .
tan. registered female 1 yr. 4-Sale 03 Gravely 148 Z
740-367-7762 or 740-367o ld, very lovable. $175. Zero turn , riding mower, 48
7272.
(740)379·2601
1n cut, 2"1hp . Kawasaki
engine, $7.000 new only 65 1999 Fo rd Exp lorer XLT
Olc:l Engl1st1 shee pd og pups. hrs. 55 .500 080 call 4X4 Red . CD. excellent conlovable. shaggy dogs. first {304)377 ·5598 leave mes- dition, 54 ,000 mrles $9.800.
shot &amp; wormecl, price $250, s
(740)36H090
•
call (7 40)985·9823

I K \'\SI'OI{I \110'\

10

30

1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme
{304)675·8604 or (304)675·
8720

&lt;10 :\1UIUROl:I .Es'

4 WHEELER.~

1993 Black Camara. w/CD 2000
Harley
Davison
Sportster 883 Hugger. Lots
player.
good
cof'ICIItron ot extras . Day s 740-645·
$2.500 (304)773·5668
3248. eve nings alter 6·30pm
~;~~ ~~~ ~ n~oader phone 1994 Burck S 1.000. Good 7 40-256-6589
shape. call for more mforma2000 Harley Sponster 883
tlon (740)256·9234
cus tom lact01y i'lstalled
85 Celebrrty Chevy wagon .
1200 cc. 14.000 mrles.
t995 Chevrolet Lumma . e&gt;ecellent cond 1!10n. pearl
2 mrn1ature male Donkeys. Ongigal owner: looks and whrte w1th chrome. S6500,
$300 each Born on Mothers
runs great! $2 .200 OBO Ph: (304)675-3220 alte r 6pm
Day.
(740) 446·01 18
or (740)245·0135.
2002 Honda 350. 4)(4
(740)367·3331 .
Rancher 4-wheeler. $3.300.
1996 Buick Century. 94 ,000
Call (740)446·6876
Snort Horn Fa ir Ste er. miles.
goo d
shape
Raised
1n
Galha
Co. (304)675· 1506
2004 90 Arctic Cat 4 wheel·
(7401256-6574
- - - - - - -- - er $1 .650 Call (740)3882000 Olds Al ero, 135K
9088.
lhY&amp;
miles.
$2.500
Call
GRAIN
(740)388·9088.
99 Hond a Shadow Ace .
6.200 miles. excellent condiFor Sale Ear Corn (304)675· · 200 1 Sliver Hyunda1 Accent. tion $4,300. (740)446·19-18
low mileage
1506
call after 6:00pm
1193 green Dodge St1adow,
good colidi!•on . (740)388·
BOXI~ &amp; ~IUIONS
983 1.
F&lt;iR S,\LE

r

16 2 4

r

Life ,

Health

Annuities

78 Cao1llac Eldorado Good
body, la•r 111tenor. eng1ne &amp;
fr6nt end needs work
$1 .500 firm. Call {740)4461704 alter Spm

&amp; 93 BMW 325i. Custom cover
&amp; extra wt1eel s
(740)446-9555

10/7

$3,500

200 • · Carave lle Interceptor,
21 FT. SB.Ihours. g passenger, like new cal l (304}67-10 102 or ( 3 o4j_~ 82·_ 2840

60

Nathania!
to
Dalton

Nathaniel

Matson

Fisher. The hearing
on the application will
be held on the 81h day

of November1 2004 at

Meigs County, locat·
ed
at
Second

100

East
Slreet,

Courthouse,
2nd
Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769'.
Jay P. Flaher
476 Sycamore St.,
Middleport, OH 45760
(10) 7

Public Notice

'

insurance

busl·

Nathar'lial · Matson to
ness In sld State and
Dalton
Nathaniai
as such I hereby corMatson Fishar
lify that I'ORTISIN·
Case No 32383
SURANCECOMPANY
NOTICE OF HEARING
Is authorized to lrans·
ON
CHANGE
t&gt;F
act lhe ·business ol
NAME
• insurance under the
Applicanl
hereby
lollowirig sections of
gives notice 10 all • the
Ohio
Revised
interested persolis Code :
and thai the applicant
Seclion 3911 .01

BARNEY
WHEN DIDJA

WUZ

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR

STYlE ..

·~

tl!JJ

In

.

Witness

Whereof, I have here-

1995 Dodge Dakota 4x4
prcku p
120.000
m11es
$3.700 Call (740 )379·2409
alter 5om You wo n-t fmd a
de~ I like lh•s lor a •h :ll l

unto subscribed my
name and caused my
seal to be affixed at
Columbus, Ohio , this 1996 F-150 4•4 extended
rd•y and dale .
cab , 5 0 auto
102 000
Ann
H.
Womer m11es. wrmerrzed tuned un
·Benjamin
new wes 8 brakes $6500
director
Rac 1ne Serv1ce Cent er
(10) 7
{740 )949-2700

TH'

ONE FER

TH' FURST TIME WE
I&lt;ISSED

l

AN' THAT AIN'T

FELT Lii&lt;E

I WUZ FLOATIN'

NEVER

CHANGED ··~-'-·~

MY
NEVER
TOUCHED TH'
GROUND!!

ON AIR!!

:4nnette)s
Wouse Ckaning Service
No ](lh t o Big or Smal l
Sc n ·in g: f\k igs. Ma son.
Gal lia &amp; i\th cns Cn.

THE BORN LOSER
'I'VE. LEI\RJs((.t&gt;, [ 1-\\Gf.\T ~ ""'l
WE.LL MN:..t:.

V'[ NO\ IC£ YOU t.\1\IJ( /&gt;..
f\E.I\LTI-l'1, nF · &gt;1--:::.. ._ •.,1

OCPRE.CI\\1

FUN 01'
('1\'(SE.LI',.

:X:.NS(. OF

"'"&amp;.FORE
E.\JE.R.Yt::i!'IE.
E.L.SC: tx!E.S I

1-\Ur-\OIZ 1

'felly's engines
K.)l L . t~t \l.t111 .\ 1
j •, lll\L." l"l l\

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS.
SOMETHING
'FOR YOU!!

West

North

East

Pass
Pa~s
· Pass

2¥
3•

Puss
Pass

Pass

Pa!SS

2

Rocky ''RJ"
Hupp

Ci~·rKr.tl Sl.mdh~

(jL" IIt:JalJ\1!.! S\,lL"IIh

.tml

.1nd ,klt\ ,·n

CAN I

A rt.w

(t!ltlpr\'~~~~r~
Opt•n Joi :.'O-fd)(l \1 -F:
Sat. K:.\0-2:00 1J1J2- IOJ.\

Ali

AstroGraph

See

Clwin Shaqwncd
&amp; Part ~

QLJEsnoNs

IMPORTS

FOR

Athens

-~~, ~~\

~~~
High &amp;Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy. Oh1o

740-992-5232

-... 'lllrthmlf:
OK
WHO ~NA S H-IE
6UY IN' THE 51 LVE:Pi!.
LEXUS WHO

'·" CL~SS ­

MY ~C.HOOL
(:,OSS! P

BISSELL

Hill's Self

\lL'\1 1\l l l\ll'" • \"111\l

29670 Bashan Road

\L'\\ (

Raci ne , Ohio
4577 1
740·949·2217

i,tr.t_:'L'"

• R l'jli,IL"\.'Illl'll!

\\"indt)\1 ~ • Rllllltrl ,:&gt;
COMMERCIAL

Sizes 5'x10'

ana

to 10'x30'

RE S IDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

PAUSE. .

1N0 AT
TOO A..M &gt;

COLUMN ~

l..,C"
~~

,....

Hours

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
1 141on o pd

PEANUTS
15 M'f REPO~T
ON AVTVMN W~EN THE
LEAVES BEGIN TO FALL
!=11.0M TI-lE TREES ...
T~IS

If= T~EV FELL FROM
ROCKS, WE'D ALL 6E
IN TROUBLE!

·HA HAHA
HA HA!

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

SUNSHINE CLUB

1-800-822-0417

*HOOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GonER

&lt;"h&lt;'\'V. Pontl ;w. lhti&lt;·k. Ol d s

&amp;. C ustom \ 'an lJf'a ler""

•frBBIStlmBIBS•

949-1405

;:~~~~~~~~

GARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
Barnhart
Builders
Jn \"C;u...; cxpc rit·n.:c
llomc.o,;

• Log llumc.,

• l'o.,l Franll'
•( umpll'h' ~t·nwrldfn g ,
·l~tpl.i l\ 1111 n1 H inrl••ll ~
•·l{n -rf ,
( 'llll! l ll "1 ( l.il '
l ~c, i rkul ia l

Frc~- Er..;timalc..,

7~(1 . (,6 7 -IIIIHII

1 NOW PO
WEIC:!Hi

ANt:'

FORTUNES

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Aoonr Add1t1ons ~
Aemode1•ng
• New Garages
• Electro ca l &amp; Plumb ng
· •R(lo i·"'J '!. Gu111..-.~
' \".:1(: 1'11N1 ~. J.:. I '"(,&lt;

•P.11n&lt;V·t1F·. &gt;~ch j,. k~
We ·Ju 11 ntl e)(cept
fur nac-e work

V.C.

YOUNGJU

992'6215
.Pomeroy Oh10
22 Years Loc.at E~ erll!nce

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garage s

• C mple te'

. Re modeJing

740-992-1671
Stop

~·

Compare

GRIZZWELLS
WHAT 1\'i&lt;.t: \tl.l '7\ll"ib5f:D
1o (P \I'" '(Q.I
CA'A'1 MAkf.
f,. t:\.\0\C.S
o~ '&lt;OUR
0+1~ ?

!

[ PReC'ICi

&lt;,lQU'RE'

OOOD

!

.,.OU'RE C.OING10 STOMP
Me FL.A1'

I

By Bernice Bede Osol

A

Storage

BUILQERS InC.
Srdtn~ •

AFrER

SLJG HT BUT
':J((:, NI FtCA.NT

OFF AT
SC.HOOL
T~IS !10RN -

C HA11 EF!.":

Friday, Oct. 8 , :2004

... SHE SAID ,

VKOPPED "YO

ROOM

\/,111 -.alk "l~ f...~ n··,·n\· lk;tl~r -

•\,c\\

9 5

·, I nul \1.md

W ;ttT,t lll ) R.._· pair •
Lt \1.11 Tra~..·ttll" &amp; Pu~ll
J\.hm ~.:r.,, Chain S;n\ ·"·

~.o-..;,iiii.-iiiiiiiiioioor

$134,171 ,565.

Dalton
Matson

• 74 3

Yesterday, I gave a deal rn whrch th e
declarer would have been laydown with a
3-2 trump break. but could also accommodate a 4-1 split. which happens nearly
one time 1n tt1ree . (As a brief interlude, rf
you grve the cards only a curso ry mrxing.
tt1e odds of a 4-1 split decrease. Do
seven nffle·shuffles.)
In this deal , shou ld declarer try to handle
a 4·1 spade spirt, .or is there someth ing
else to fear? Again st lour spadeS. West
leads the heart two East w1ns w1tt1 the 10
and taps the dummy by continuing with
the heart ace. How snou ld Soutn contmue?
North's two hearts was a Mrchaels Cue·
Bid. promising at least 5·5 1n spades and
one of the min ors His three-club fol low·
up guaranteed a strong hand .
Declarer played a spade to his king and
took the spade finesse . However. East
Won with the queen and led a third heart
Atter ruH1ng, dummy Mad only the spade
ace left. South led a diamond to his king
and ran the club nine. but East won witn
the ~ing and played a fourth heart.
Besides the spade and cl ub a! ready conceded. declarer still had to lose either two
nearts or another spade and a heart"
South would have been right 1f We ~ t had
had four trumps . but he risked his contract wt1en the trumps were 3·2. wh1ch
was much more likely.
At trrck three, he shou ld lead a diamond
to his krng, then lake the club finesse
East w1ns and taps dummy w•tt1 another
heart. but declarer ripostes by taking th e
two top trumps, then playmg on clubs .
When threatened wrlh a forcrn g defense.
establist1 your side surt first

FEET

l'~tl..-up

... K 4 2
South
• K 52

Is the break
good or bad?

TtttS ttM ~~~N A nsT Of Ttt~
/
~M~I(G~NCY IATtti(OOM
11,WAI(NING SYSnM ....

Acn~"N&gt;IUI·:"'i

of

requesting
th"e
change of name of

3\

YOU '!'

kl'l ·.\tr

8 5

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Advertise
in this
liNDA'S PAINTING
l140J 985-4180 space for $1 00
per month.

:\ o:11

•

Opening l ea d : •

A trill PII!!S &amp;

OHIODEPART·
MENTOFINSURANCE
CERTIFICATEOFCOMPLIANCE
NAICNo. 69477
Gallia Counly
Issued 813104
Effeclive 4/2104
Expires 411/05
I
Ann
Womer
Benjamin, hereby corlily that I am the
Direclor of Insurance
In lhe Slale ol Ohio
and have supervision

Meigs County, Ohio,

z•

Pass

Let me do it for youl

h~·,iJL· L;~n\

Qlll7

'IIA KQJIO

I.
4• .

fUR SALE

6f t Black Chevy Topper ,
Century
Sl,OOO new. w111 seil
98 Olds Delta 88. Loaded ,
119.000 mites needs intake lm S500 (304)882·2790
Public Notice
$2 ,600. (740)682-7512.
Looking for engine or lrans92 S•lverado, 2x2, shortbed ,
miSSIOn? Give me a call at
of loaded, 54,500.
.
Certillcale
(740)446·0519.
89 Silverado. extended cab.
Compliance
Sill\ II 1.~
2x2, 95 drivetrain $5 .500
NAIC No. 65080
(740)682·75
12
.
Meigs County
18 10
Hom:
Issued 08/04/04
For Sale 1948 Chevrolet .
ll\WROVEM£:1\~P.'J
Effective 04/02104
Five Passenger Coupe. new
Expires 04/01105
muffler system , t• res and
I,
Ann
Womer
BASEMENT
safety stic~er (304)576·2288
Benjamin , hereby car·
WATERPROOFING
15
tlfy 1hat I am the
Unconditional li1etime guarDirector of Insurance
antee Local rel,ences lur·
In the State of Ohio
nished . Establrshed 1975.
and have supe.rvlslon
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1989 Dodge 1/2 ton pic~ up. Call
of Insurance busl~
8 ft. bed. 318 . VB . 60.000 0870, Rogers Base ment
ness In said State and
Waterproofing.
miles. ne-w rubber. towing
as such I hereby cer·
pacKage, new paint, excelllfy that John Alden
lent condition, 3 speed over•
Life Insurance comdrive. ..
$3,250 . · Call
pany Is authorized to
740)446·4514 Bam-Spm
transact the business
SUVs
of Insurance under j120
the following
secFOR SALt;
1ion(s) of the Revised
Coda:
Section 1994 Chev rolet Suburban.
3911.01 Life, Heailh &amp; All leather seatmg
All
Annuities .
power. Equipped lor tra.ler
John Alden Lila . towing Can be seen at t:!S
Insurance Company Frrst Aye ., Gall•polrs, Ohro
certified In lis annual Phone (7401446-2561
statement
to
this
4x4
Department
as . of
FoRSALl:
December 31 , 2003
lhat II has admitted
'
assets in the amount 1987 Ford Bronco II 6cyl .
of $669,547,131 , lia· 4x 4 w/air. 4-speed w/overruns
good
bilities in the amount drrve.
of $535,375,566. and $1,5001080 {304)67 5· 1408
surplus of at least or {740 )418 -0790

the Probate Court of

South

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

V.\NS

1999
Ford
Mark
Ill
Convnrs ron Vrm w11h wheel
1983 Cadillac. 66.000 miles.
cnarr 11 11 93.000 miles
e)(cel lent condrtion . Call
515.000. Phone {7 40)388·
(740)44 Hl!94.
9017.

.

!I R
8 5 2

Dealer: East
Vulnerable : Both

Ta~e

FoR S,ILE

AlJIO:i

•
•

4

i

l"uhl k N oolio· ~-. in No· " " P"I'•· •·o;.
lu K""""' · lh•lh.-._., .._,&lt;1 f.ti~ht hi \ 'our Uuur. ·

has
filed
Application

:The . Farmers Bank . Street and Second
·and
Savings
Street In Pomeroy,
:Company reserves
Ohio. on the Second
the righllo rojecl any
or all bids submitted.

$200. Call

CASE NO. 33141
TO:
TIMOTHY
MARC REED
Last Known Address:
824 Elizabeth Drive
Lancaster, OH 43130
A
Pelltlon
for
Adoption of Dustin
Ray Mohler has been
liled with the Meigs
!:ounty
Probate
Court,
Case
No.
33141. It Is alleged
you have failed to
support the minor
child for more than

. Box 189
_
Middleport
~")
45750

COME BY i SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST DEAl ON A
NEW OR USED CAR

A 3
AQJI08

t K 7 4 2

andWV

OH

6

t

•

740-843-5264

Dealers Welcome

Tara
Townhouse For
sa le
Fire
Wood
PElS
Apartments. Very Spacious. (304)882-2537
FOR SAU·~
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA.. 1
~~---liiii.iiiiiiiiioo_,..
For Sale New And Used
Doors and Windows call 2 miniature male Donkeys .
$300 each . Born on Mothers
Pat io. Start S385f Mo. No _13_0_4_!6_7_5._4_53
_4_ _ _ __
Day.
(740)446-0 118
or
Pets. Lease Plus Secunty
JET
(740)367 ·333 1.
Oeposrt Reqwed . Days:
AERATION MOTORS
740-446-348 1. Evenmgs: Repaired . New &amp; Rebuilt In AKC Bla ck. Lab puppies
740-367-0502
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· Shots. wormed &amp; dew claws
removed $200. (740)441800-537-9528
Tw.n Rivers Tower rs accept0130
1ng applications for watlmg - - - - - - - - - - - , - - , - - - - - - - , .
list lor Hud-subs1zed . 1· br, Long wood burner insert, AKC Black Lab. pupptes
apartment, call 675-6679 $250
PhOne (7 40)446· Males &amp; Female s. born
EHO
3897 .
9111 104
$200
each
(304 )773·51 03

. for cash In hand or

and Financial Services

p .m .

•

East

... 7 8 3

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

r

and
Savings
• Company Is selling

on 2nd A..

12th and

AJ643

. Q J I 096

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

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Sun . 1]:00--kOO
Clo:.cd Tu c~.
t)lJ2 -5152

Gallia County Fairgrounds

12x20 buildmg with 8ft. ov er-

MONTY

Ul·07 04

.

Wt!st

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Open D&lt;tilv I 0:110-5:00

$60 each Buggy wheels. NEW AND USED STEEL
$55 each Pt1 (740)446- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
7787 .
For
Concrete,
Ang le,
Ct1annel, Fl at Bar, Steel
Antique wicker couct'1 &amp;
For
Dra ins.
cha1r, oak sideboard, old Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkway s. L&amp; L
poster bedroom suite and
Scrap Metals Open ' Monday
frlties era 4pc bookcase ,
Tuesday, Wed nesday &amp;
Huge clean . 3 bedroom. 1 bedroom sui te. yellow/brown
Friday. Sam-4:30pm . Closed
batt1. dinrng. storage. aprm:. PhaltzgraH stoneware. 614
Tt1ursday.
Saturday
·&amp;
2.500 sq. It No pets/smok- St. At. 325 south, Rio
Squirrel Dogs lor sale
Sunday (740)446-7300
Grande.
(740)245-5845.
rng. $610.
Call Kelly
(304)675-6132
Jess
(740)446·9961.
Black fiberglass topper used Pole
Barn 30&gt;CSO&gt;e1 OFT Hultman
Mercerville:
bedroom . on Chevy short bed truck. $6395. includes Painted
I HOISI PJ•UI·S
$250 w/deposit. no pets . Rees e hitch used on 9? Metal , Plan s. Instruction
,'\. LJ\ I · ~ 10( "
Chevy truck. used 1st gen- Book. Slider, Free Delivery
water included. WID hookup.
era!IOn Musta ng parts. 2 (937)559-8385
Cal l (740)256- 1245
j610
Fr\Ri\1
used computers and print8 UILI)IN(;
E\)UII'I\IENT
One bedrOom apartment. . ers. (740 )4 46-7751 after
SUI»t»t..IES
no
pets,
1n
Pome roy, 4pm
(740)992·5858
7 II. Intern ational Bush Hog.
Cash paid for Dish Network Block, brick, sewer pipes, 3 po1n1 hitch . good condition
One bedroom garage apart- equipment. Have mode\ windows, lintels. etc . Claude 5600. (7 40)446-0118 l or
ment. ~itchen furn~shed . number's ready. Toll free Winters, Rio Grande . OH (304)675-3331
S400. (740)992·3823
1,888)569-2812
Call 740·245·6 121

The Farmers Bank

lluy $5.110
Btulomza ( ;el
S FREE

OhiD
1-l.'iN . Sn.:ond A\ c.

Flea Market

Grac1ous living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Man or
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportun ities

2004, al10: 00 a.m. , a
public sale will .be
held at 211 W Second
St, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Hrin~ lhi~ l'Olii10II

North

Fax 304·675·2 4 57

Antiques

Fri- Sat- Suri
Oct. 8, 9, 10
French 500

·
No p e1s. No hang . Too many items to list. ~!:::""':'~~--~~,
S •• 1opprng.
S
k·n
$2 95 00
elec $2.500. Call after Spm. 7401
rno
g
·
+
·
Mt~I.L·\NEOUS
441 131
.Jrrc
Reterences $200.00
·0
·
Mt:.Rl.""HA:\IIlL"iE

Saturday, October 09 ,

of

e'er, month

Ce ll Phone 674 ·3311

Second Avenue

l.o-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioor

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on

L o1~t Thur.~oria~

2001

.

675-2457

birds st:~rt
1.:.1(1

M iUdkp(H"t,

weeks o l

7

"

Henderson, WV

Grace United M ethodist Church

-and/or small houses FOR io~wiin,;;e'~------,
:RENT. can (740)441·1111 p40 ML'iO:LLANWl~
for application &amp; inlormation.
Mt:.:Rt:HANUL~ot~o~

_8_p_a-dd_e_d_c_
h-ur-chpe_w_s_.-,2-1-1.

Ocl.

They will begin on

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Antiques. 1124 East Main
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740:rownhouse
apar tm ents. 992 "2526
Russ Moore,

:::'eposit (3041675' 265 1

E.arl~

·:.

MYERS PAVING

Doom OtJrn ~ :30

FREE vocal le sson s.

r

Close to PVH and

6

Ponwroy Englrs
IIIN(;O 2171
E1·cr) Thursda.v
&amp; Sundu)

A II pack $5.00

Sec Brcm or Brian Whaky
M·Fri 8:30·5:00
SaL R:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

for Friday,
October 8, 2004

.

Phillip
Alder

October&amp;,

FLU SHOT CLINIC

HAS BEEN

I

·NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACRoss ·

0

Paris,

The Daily Sentinel · Page B7
BRIDGE

~

(I

BULLET''~

Oepos11 RequnM, (740)446·

apt.

www.mydailys~mtinel.com

ALLEY OOP

--,_
BOARD DEADLif,E
,:;
: 2 00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION' ::
-----Holzer Clinic Meigs
-

2 bedroom apts 10 minutes
hem Holzer Hosp•tal on St.
Rt 160 Wateri SewerfTrash
Included. $460/mo DepoSit Good Used ' Appliances .
and
requ1red . Pets allowed. Recond•t10ned
Guaranteed
.
Washers
,
(740)441-1184 01 (740)441 Dryers
Ranges
and
0194
Refr•gerators Some start at
2BR.
Close to town. $95 Skaggs Appliances 76
$435rmo. water included Vine St., (740)446·73~8

F urmshed small 1 bedroom

Thursday, October 7, 2004

'8"' column inch Wll4tkdays
•15'" column inch Sat. or "'"nn••v

, -Bedroom furn•shed Apt.
-\Jt d111es

Thursday, October 7, 2004

BULLETIN BOARD

to Holzer Hospital Call 740- 30" electnc range. self clean
oven, e&gt;ece11ent condrt1on .
339·0362
(740)446·6278.

:}550/month, S500/depos•t.

-

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

You"re apt to bS e&gt;e tremely discriminating
about your choice ot compa nions rn the
year ahead. spending time only w1th
th ose w1th wt1om you feel you nave much
in common. Mix•ng in a bit o f divers•ty.
however, w1ll help you grow.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23)- You"re rarely
at ease w1th people wl"lo have limited
pers,pecllves and today wt ll be no different. Seek o_u t companionship w1th
lnends wl"lo are optlmtshc and l"lopelul 11
you WISI"l to nave fun
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov 22) Don 't
pussyfoot around today in matters th at
require sw1tt ac!IOn. If you truly w1sh to
achteve your oiJrectives. bolder methods
than usual will be requ•red . Give it your
best shot.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec. 2 1) - Get'
out of the doldrums and have fait h rn
yourself today. It wrll make wh at you
hope to accomplish more probable , add•tionally, your behav1or will rnspire those
wtll"l famter hearts.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22- Jan 19) -Yo u
do have !he wh erewtthal to bnng about
benefici al changes loday Even obs tacles that a t f•rst appear Insurmountable
can be breached if you are determ1ned
and stand firm.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Even rf
someone you know isn "t one ot your
favorite peop le . lag thi s person for your
laam 1f you believe 11e or she could be of
great help 1n swmg111g over an 1mportanl
matte r tor you today.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)- tf you "re
teellng a b1l useless today, gCJ\Ioul ot your
way to dn what you can tn be helpful lo
others. parti cu larly loved ones Smcere
se rvices rendered will not reaOily b e l orgotten
ARIE S (March 21· Apn1 19) ~ Don·! sit
there thmkin g no one has ca ll ed you to
do something tomghl. get Ofl th e phone
yourself and hne up a pal or two. Much
en joym en t can be denyed from soc1al Stt·
ua hons today
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) - II you ·re
lookmg lo Include othe rs 1n a worthwhile
S1 tu al1on you re 1nvolved 1n . mak.e your
gestures botl"l lo f&lt;~m•ty members and
ou tside rs II 11 s a good lhmg. 11 s good tor
everybody
GEMINI 1May 2 1·June 20 ) - Chances
are you co'uld be feel•ng a. bit reslless
today Out when lookmg to busy yourself .
make certa111 yout l1me IS spent on a pro·
duCI1 ve acttv1ly. Tackle two 1! you li1Hlk
you can handle 11 .
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) - It won 't
be sell1sh to focus on th1ngs that cou ld
spell personal 9&lt;'.111 for you l oda~· Once
you have acl"l•eved your goal you ll l1nc1
ways to share !hat wh tcl"l you acqwred
LEO (Ju ly· 23-Aug 22l - It 1sn ·1 ll~e you
10 be shy, but for some reason todav you
m1ghl feel unwanted. ll" s a fal se prem1se
onCe you enter a soc1al scene. your Oub·
bly persm\ahtV wtll be wetco111ed b~· all
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221 - l1m1ghl 'b e
11ghl tor you to be a b ot ca utiOU S today
w1\h pAop le wtlh whom yo u have r'o
strong emol 1omll bonds. ~ul whe n 11
comes 10 ll"lose yau love &lt;~ndtrusl lay all
your cards on tt1e table

1 Inch along
6 EucalyPtus
eater
11 Partly
1!1eited
12 Caughl
13 Daddy 's
sister
14 Shade
plants
t5 High
plateaus
16 Pierre 's
head
t7 Malden or
Menninger
19 Frieo.
23 Nero's 102
26 Crevice
28 Fail to
keep up
29 Debarked
(2 wds .l
31 Mr. KtJrosawa
33 Happen
34 Chopin 's
homeland
35 Admiring
sigh
36 Blvd.
crossers
39 Rx givers
40 Popular
shift
42 Essay
byline

44 Famed
sergeant
46 Flow out
51 Lemon or
lime
54 Trinket
55 Wa~up
56 Like
corduroy
57 Lure
58 Circle sizes
DOWN
Sherlock 's

must
2

Howard and
Perlman
3 Movie

mavt&gt;e

pooch
4 Brush off
5 Wood ash
product
6 Lumber ftaw
7 Camel stops
8 Music or

dance
9 Meadow
10 Magazine
fillers
11 " Cheers "
bar owner
12 Bookcase
part
16 Part ofTNT·
18 Sandy 's
reply
20 Trojan War

the Seine
Rorem or
Beatty

51 Domestic
animal
52 Fury
53 Back· fence
yowler
54 Car grill
cover

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - I never lee! lonely on Ihe krlchen . Food rs very
frrendly . Just lookrng at a_.potato, I like to pat it' - Julra Child
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc
10·7

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SCRAM.LETS

Little · Chess - Kinky. Strata • SIT on IT
I had made a rea: mess w hile repaintin g the living room.
C!eanii1g L:p is always a chore. 1found th ebes~ way tu get
fresh paint off a sea: is to SIT on IT

ARLO &amp; JANIS

C\

ANDReW ... foci1liaLL IS

TEaM Sfbi&gt;T... REMElo\80&lt; ,

)) _..,..-,;;-;--.,

50

by Luis Campos

Yo.J GUYS &lt;:'!R£ aLWOh'S

ITS

meas.
37 Doggerel
38 Wapili
41 Waffle
topping

49 Dots in

Celebnty Clflher a~atogr8ms arl'J creal~ lrom qoolatons t)y lamO!Js people pasl and presenr
EBch lellet 1n tt-e t1pher sla nds lor anot1er

HO&amp;:;tn' THE BdLL a ND

N°T FaiR'i~ ,- - ---'

34 Air-pump

43 Oil·well
capper
Red 45 E1pel
47 Hayseed
46 Mr. Eban

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.SOUP TO .NUTZ

N~-..0&lt; "T~f:,W To ~

slory
21 Repairs a
tear
22 Yikes!
23 W inter
warmer
24 Scralchy
25 Debtor 's
letters
27 " - Te
Ching "
29 Beneficial
30 Monk's title
32 Dutch
airline

iHE.R£5 NO "f IN l"EA.M''

�. Thursday, October 7, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 88 • The Dally Sentinel

PlUS...

Marshall not looking
past Bobcats, Bt

at

MERCURY
________ ---

~----·-----·-··

... .
·

--~-·--

.,

,

rtEW

2005

fO(:U~

$12,995

\".f.~ 2004

UPTO

s&amp;ooo

2004

REBATE

FREESTAR

......

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.l&lt;l l I "\I" • \ ol. .).1 .

\11 .

SPORTS

REBATES
UPTO

..

S6Q0Q

• Off and running, Browns'
Suggs ready to start See
Page B1

.

2004 SABLE
STARnNGAT

.20 JS fORD 500
&amp; fREI:~STYlE

~~~

Cards take 2-0 lead
over Dodgers, B3

5,222

2004 CROWN

VICTORIA

S18,995

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#E0409

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

I Hill\\ . 0(' I OBI I{ N. :!00~

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FEMA to tour flood sites; dumpsters gone after this weekend
Bv BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - FEMA will
hold two meetings on
Wednesday for townships.
the county engineer and village officials.
The purpose of both meetings is to allow FEMA representatives to tour actual sites
where tlood damage occurred
as well as help with paperwork.
The first meeting will be at
9 a.m . at the Courthouse
Annex for townships and the
county engineer only.
The second meeting will
take place at I :30 p.m. in the

Senior Center Conference
Room for all other village
officials that suffered tlood
damage . These officials may
include (but are not limited
to) representatives from
churches, schools. the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department. EMA . officials.
EMS officials. and independent lire departments.
Individuals who suffered
flood damage are encouraged
to call FEMA's toll free number 1-800-621-3362 to be eligible for assistance.
' Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Bob Byer wants to

remind re sidents that even
thm1gh lluod victims have
registered their names with
local EMA or EMS ugencics.
they must call the FEMA
~UU-number to start the
paperwork to receive government assistance .
According to Bycr. the
flood crested in Pomeroy at
52 feet and caused major
damage to 45 homes in
Meigs County.
Byer also advises that the
EMA dump s te~ hat have
been disbursed throughout
Meigs County to collect
tlood debris will be removed
after this weekend.

UPTO

S6Q0Q

RACINE
Steps
toward getting the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) to provide funding for flood
damage expenses incurred
by the village were taken at
this week's meeting of
Racine Village Council.
Mayor Scott Hill and

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DISCOUNTS
UPTO.

clerk Dave Spen cer were
authorized to prepare the
nece"ary forms and submit them to FEMA .
During the meeting
Council authorized advertisi ng for bids for scraping ••
priming and painting of the
first floor windows in the
municipal bu.ilding and the
replacement of several
Please see Council, AS

5

prubahl ) &lt;WI he rc cei ' ed
Ullli I J anuarl .

POMEROY
- The
Gallia/Mei gs
Cmnmunil v
Action Agency will sec k
Grant s Adm im&lt;trator Jean
funds to provide jobs for the
Tru"ell
a public
unemployed in a twrH·ounl) hearin £ onconducted
the Ne\\· Horizon~
tlood cleanup program.
Grant - program. '" ail able ·
Arnott
met
George
through the Ohio Dep"rtment
Thursdav with Mei~s Countv &gt;~I Dne lupmc nl. The proCommi;sioner~ tl; di~cu . :-.
~ram
funJ~J
•t
Teen
funding through the Ohi&lt;' Toleranc e pro~ra111 i ll local
Department of Job and hi~h ~choob Ja..,t \ L'ar. ..t nJ
Family Services for a one- Trussell said tilL' · progr&lt;un
year employment program would he npanded in to the
similar to one just completed middle scflllol le' d if fundunder the CAA's ''1pervision. ing is appr,nved .
The program would place the
The cuuntv wrll 'eek
unemployed on t1ood clehri s ':&gt;,15.000 tl1rough . the procleanup work, and would gram.
provide up to 1.040 hours of
Commi~~ioner~ also:
work per employee. at a wage
• c\prrmecl fLmJ, tran,fers
to be determined .
·
for the Common Pka' Court
According to Arnott. the and sheri If and tahled tr~ms­
agency received $700.000 fer requesh from Engineer
from the National Emergem:y Eugene Tripktt .
Grant program to clean up
• Set a' ie\\'ing for 10 a.m.
area,; in both Gall ia and on Oct. cH on a proposed
Meigs Counties followin g the road ci&lt;hin2 on Salem T.R.
February. 2003 ice storm. and _1~7. · Sh ~ h
~oad.
at
· rhat employment program Tripkt r·, rt•yucsl.
\Va~ l'ompletell thi' summer.
Prc,cnt
were
Similar funding is likely for Cornmi ...... illth.'r"'
!Vlick
thi~ new program. Arnott
Da1·cnpor1 &lt;md .lr n Sheets
said. although funds will "ml Clerk Gloria Kine,.

Other business

10,500

t\~'\\1
· 2004 f150 SUPER CAB "'{.~
2004 FOR.D RANGER
&amp; SUPER CRf~W
SAVINGS SAVINGS

UPTO

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CM proposes new job program

iiE0328

~EO I 55

Council seeks assistance on
flood damage from FEMA

LUXURY

2004 EXPLORER

REBATES

\\\\\\ ,nl\lla ih"'"liolt'l.o·um

OBITUARIES
Page AS
.• Ronial L. Morrison

UPTO

ss,

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 7-4-0
Pick 4 day: 2·9-1·3
Pick 3 night: 3-6-8
Pick 4 night: 1-2-3-8
Rolling Cash 5: 10-11-14·26·27

West Vuginia

Patrick Wood

Pomeroy man publishes book of poetry
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Dally 3: 2-7-6
Dally 4: 2-0-6-7
Cash 25: 3-1 0·11-19-20·22

POMEROY - '' I have
just one thing left to give
you - my legacy of love."
Those words were included in touching poems written by Patrick Wood of
Pomeroy reflecting .on the
growing-up years of hi s
children. Lori and Danny.
They are titled "Ode to a
Daughter" and '·Ode to a
Son."
They are among 66 selected poems. including one
written as a tribute to hi s
late wife. Audrey. called

WEATHER

'· My Queen of Hearts"
which have now been put
into a booklet titled "The
Collected Works of Patrick
Wood ."
"Puttin g th em in a book
was a way I could leave
something to my children
and grandchildren." said
Wood. now 7S. who has
been wri tin g poetry for
nearly JO years.
Pat is a member of the
I nterDational Society of
Poets: and in 2000 participated in a celebration of
poets held in Washington.

D.C.
For the fifth straight year

he has been a first place
winner in the Are" Agency
Aging's
se nior
on
essay/poetry contest l1eld on
the campus of the Uni1·ersity
of Rio Grande. His most
recent win was "The Voyage
With Faith."
Over the years his works
have been printed. read at
-..ocial
gathering s.
and
enjoyed by many.
L·ast
month one was selected for
use in ' the bulletin for the
Ohio Grand Order of
Eastern Star..,· annu'-l l con vention.
"Poetry is my way or
expressing things," sard Wood.

Details on Page 'As

Family fall festival set for Saturday
INDEX

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SR,'IONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials

(

Bs-6
B7

As
A4

Faith•Values
Movies

A2

NASCAR
Obituaries
\

B8

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A8

As

© 2004 Ohio Valle)· PubiL'Ilhlng Co ..

POMEROY - Residents
will be given the opportunity to cony· ibut e to an out reach mini\try for teens
while enjoying a family
outing at the community
fall festival to be held
Saturday at Trinity Church.
The festivities will be
from 4 to 8 p.m. and will
be held both in th e church
basement and on Second
and Lynn Streets just out·
side.
There is no
charge to take part in any
of the activities. according

to Mic)lelle Nohle. chair-

Other prires will include
woman .
two $50 sav ings bonds and
Area churc hes and busi- a karaoke machine .
nesses · tire 'sponsoring the
A carved pumpkin confestival with it!! proceeds test has again this year
to go to th e Mulberry · been included with pri1es
Commttnity Center. "There to he awarded in three "ge
will be indoor and outdoor L'i.l LL·gorie~ . The fir~L ~ec­
games. prizes. food and und and third place win candy, clowns and face ners in each division will
painting, even a dunking be dctcrmi.ned by a simple
penny-a- \·ote method .
booth , saicf Nob le.
"It's a fun and· easy 1\ay
Amon g the prizes .. will he
a · 27-inch color te levision to rai .se money.
said
Noble.
··Ju
st
hring
.
you
r
to be awarded at the end of
the evening to the winner carved pumpkin and wc "-11
of the "G u.es' th~ Weight of put it on the .table with the
the p·umpkin " uintest. rest or them ."

ODOT: Stay off new highway
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTI NEL COM
DARW!f\i - The ne\\
section of U.S. 33 from
Darwin to Ath~ns will prclhably be opened In tr&lt;ilfic·
later thi s month. hut the
Ohio
Department
of
Transpnnation is L·nnc~rneU
that some care lc:-, .. Jri \' t' r~
are Urivim.! on it alrl'w.h
Bv doinu so. those drl1e rs
th re-a ten their ,afely and
that of their pa,~cngc r ~ and
crew:-.. wor~int! nn the ro ad.

Stephanie Filson. publ rc
informat ion
(ll'ficer
fDr
ODOT in ~ldrictta . 'aid
GlfS

travcl itH! on the n~w
L'. S. .\ .1 i, . an

section of
incrca~ing

prPbkm a.., the
road':-.. opening appn)ach~'·
The Ohi11 Stale H i~ h" ' "
Patro l has hcer 1 . i.'Cllltac·tcJ
and j.., munit uri ng traffic un
the ne11 hi~hw a 1. but 1\ ork er:-... are still uln(crned Jhl)Ut
their safety. Filson said .
"We j ust can't hal'e pri \ate c iti1en' Jrirm e. on tlw
mad at 1!1is time . ' It\ nor
,afc." Fibcm said . ··we h&lt;lle
a lut nf \\(lf~ \Ct to hL· .
J &lt;'nC he fore thai road II a\ i'
open to traffiL·. e'pcci":rlil ·

worl. rclatin~ Ill public
safet1. The stripi ng hasn't
heen completed. there are
no retlectclr., in place and
. . omc o r the- hridi!C'" ha\'e
nnt ~ ct ht.:'t' ll cornpTctcJ ...
hhnn

. . aid

dn,·ing

h&lt;ll~

th&gt;l IL'I been filkd can
· hnth
~.:ar
aJH..l
hrid ~c:. &lt;llld c\lliSC pos,ible

dtll'll~I !..:C
IO_llll" ~

thl.:" , drl\('r~o,

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www.turnpikeflm.com

740·446·9800 .
1·BD0-272·5 179

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\\ hik \\otlin!!. llll the

rrc)l,"l'l. "nd arc nc{t ,·xpectin~ Olh..·omin!! tra tliL·.
c"Thne ar~- lt&gt;ls of crews
' till worktng fu riou'l) l'\Cr)
d,t~
m ,n'dcr tn. l"\)lllplete
th 1' prnjec'l ... hl,ll n 'aid.
"' Th e 1&lt;~...,1 t h111~ lhl'\ rwcU 10
Jp i' turn a ~·,,rnc.r and hit
a prj' ,ttc t lti ;c n lll·aJ llll. ..

Fil,on ,,11d ODOT hth not
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~ ) remn ~.
in~ Ja t~

A ll'nt:tt i\l' open ·

&lt;&gt;f · 0'1. I:; 11 ill
rroJ&gt;ahl\ nut hL' rC,Jilled.
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a rihhnn - ~' tlllin ~ •.-crellllHl\

Farmers
Bank
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195 Uppar RIVar Road
GalliPOliS, OH

vn

tho-..L' hrid1Zc' \\ h~rc ~joints

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