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                  <text>Wednesday, October 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Fighting brain drain:
Young professionals
network m new club, A2

z.. MJNUTE

•• •• ••
JIG m STMDIKGS
Big Ten

All Top 25

••
•

PF

PA

Wisconsin

3-0

6-0

1-0

125

39

Michigan
Pwdue

l-0
2-0

5-1
5·0

1-0
0-0

179
209

114
66

Minnesota

2-1

5-1

0-1

201

102

Northwestern 2-1
Michigan St. 2·1

3-3
3-3

1-1
0·0

150
146

146
137

Iowa

1-1

3-2

0-1

0-2
0·3
o-3
0-3

3-2
2·4
2-4
1-4

0-1
0·3
0-1
1·1

118
ll3

107

Ohio State
Penn State
fllinois

Indiana

115
154
161

.. .....

• •••

"2 004 Longwing Publications Inc.

•

GAME OF THE WEEK

Wiscoasla at Punlae

Average per game

. 351.2
- 165.3
. 145.5
. - 125.7
- . 119.4
.. 114.8
-- . - 101.0
GAOirlirK.PAE
. . _301.0
Minnesota ..
. 194.3
Michigan State ..
188.5
illinois . . . . . . .
181.1
Wisconsin . . . . . .
!73.1

157.8
130.1

Penn State . . . . .

'WO'I'U. 410ill"li~IDilUU:~

Purdue _____ . _ .

. . 509.0

Minnesota . . . . . . .
Northwestern . . . . .
Michigan State . . .

. 486.2
. . 438.5
. . 409.2

nlinois . . .

- - 389-5

. Michigan . .
Penn State .

. . 361.3
. . 355.8

Wisconsin. . .
Ohio State. . .
Penn State . .
Michigan State
Michigan . . .
Iowa . . . . .
illinois . . . .

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

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Purdue . . . . . • . ·. . .
•

126.3
167.8
180.2
197.7
210.5
241.8
244.5

•

•

•

•

• • 85.2
. . 113.2
125.3
. . 131.8

Illustra tion by Bruce Plante ,. 2004

Battle of unbeatens

'l'e7&amp;DDI
Wisconsin ..
Michigan ..
Penn State
Ohio State.
Purdue

. . 198.3

- . 181.3
- .. - - 305.5
. .. 314.4

- - 316.2
.. 327.0
. 372.0

. Iowa . ,

A

fte r three wed-.

tlf L"\IIJ fcrerK'e pia~ .

the

prc:-tender~

ha,·c

been \~eedcd out anll only twnteam:-. remain unclcfcat~o·d .
Thi.., \\t"l'l-.. tht.· unhe~Ht·n ~ f&lt;II.T oil All eyt:-.. turn 10 \\o\: ...t
Lafa ye th~. !mi .. "ht;re Wi :-.n m:-. in and Pun.iw:. h1 llh r:mJ...r.:J in the
IlfDmDUAL LEADERS
top 10. will hattk f{lf &lt;1 "hare of thr.: B1g 10 le:1d ..
~
For the fir~t tifilL' t'\r.:r. ESPN·.., College GameDay \~ill
1.642
Kyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . .
ori ginate from l&gt;urdue\ campu~ ~~~the l3oilt:rmaker~. with their
.. 1,585
Btett Basanez. Northwestem
hi ghe~ t ranking (No.5) in the Jne 'l"i\ler era. '\ook to holJ off the
.. 1.424
Chad Henne, Michigan ...
Ballger~. It will bt• u hank between the ..:onfcretKc ·~ highc:-.t
- - ... \ ,183
Zack Mills, Penn State . .
powered offense und 11~ tout-;hc st defense.
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota .
. - 1.051
At the bcgi111111l~ of the sea;;.un. both tl"l.lnl~ had Hcismun
Matt LoVecchio. Indiana
. - - . . 1.049
lnlphy
cam.!iJatl'S. Purdut: ·~ Kyll" OrtiH\ ami Wis~.:~m ~ in 's
1,010
Drew Tate, Iowa . ...
Anthon~ Davi s. But Da\ 1s spent three wech 1111 the shdf Wllh an
&amp;
eye injury . ..,u..,taincU 111 i.l bloWtiUI \ ictul") over Central Florida.
815
Laurence Maroney, Minnesota
and finally is hal·k on track. The unfor~seen benefit of thi.! injurY
. 672
Noah Herron. Northwestern .
wa" that when Davi.., "as tlUt. two of his barkul)'l were foro.:d into
. 641
Marion Barber m. Minnesota .
:.JL"tinn
Hoth Bunk.cr Stanley am.l Mall Bt'rnste tn were imprc ~sive
505
Pierre Thomas. nlinois .
and
arc
llO\'v e\ en more confi(\ent in backup role\.
. 496
Michael Hart. Michigan . . . .
At
Purdue.
Orton has played all seasnn and leU th~·
. 450
BenJarvus Green· Ellis, Indiana .
Boi
lerrnaker~
thrnug.h th~ air to hec11mc the Glllft'rCJll'~ · s best
. 419
Tony Hunt. Penn State . . . .
pa~ :.i ng team Orton staned the ~ea~nn \\ ith 17 hJuc:lu..lown:Ui&amp;8~
wi thnut an interceptiun. hut had his own ~truggle" in a 20- 1J
Btaylon Edwards, Michigan. . . .... 763
\'ictory lH'Cr Penn St:ltl' Ia ~ \ week. throwin g twn int l;'rt:c ption ~
Courtney Roby. Indiana. . . .
. .. 592
while gell ing "adcd llnec time~.
Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue. .
. ... 568
This week. Purdue wi ll face one of the most fcar~nme dcfen:-.es
Mark Philmore, Northwestern .
. . 533
in college football. a w·i.. con~in team that ha~ ull(med just 65
Santonio Holmes. Ohio State .
. .. 464
Kendrick Jones, nlinois. . .
. ... 434 . point:- per gnmL' all year. The) arc kJ by linemen Amwj
Hmvthorne &lt;.IIIJ Era..,mu~ Jame .... whnleads 1he Cflnfercnl.'e \\&lt;lth six
Jonathan Fields, Northwestern ....... 363
S:.JCb .
337
Jared EUerson, Minnesota ..
The Badger" lead the Big Ten in\ imwll y e,;Cr) dGfcn,i\·e
TeiJIL •wll"ltn••
category.
They are fi N in sacks. tow! dcfcn:.e. pa"' defe n~L' .
Brett Basanez, Northwestern .
. 1.736
~cori ng dcfe mr &lt;tl1d pas .., effi('iency defen se, and arc "c&lt;.·onJ in
1,704
Kyle Orton, Purdue .
rush in£ Jcfen~e .
. . 1,35 7
Chad Henp.e, Michigan .
Thi ~ i~ the .:la:-.~ic battle of offense again:-t dcfL' Il"C. and the
Zack Mills, Penn State .
- ' 1.184
. 1,184
winner v..ill h;nc the in:-.ide track for the Bi g Ten title .
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .
- 1,091
• Records: Wi ... .;.:nmi n 6-0 {3-0 Big Tent: Pu rdue 5-012-0 Dig
. 1.087
Drew Stanton. Michigan State
Ten 1. • Series: W 1:-.l·onsm lead:-. 36-29-8. • Coaches:
W i~L·on:- 1 11 · ~ B:mv A lvarel ( I 05~6 7-4); Purdue\, Joe Tilla
199-6211 .11 Kickoff: 4:JO p.m . CT Saiurday. a TV: ESPN 2.
Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue . . .
66
54
Noah Herron. Northwestern .
keys for Wisconsin: Pre~~ure QB Kyle Orton without the
48
blitz. D..:fen~ive linemen Erasmu:- Jame:-; and Anltaj Hawthorne
Brayton Edwards, Michigan ..
48
Marion Barber lll. Minnesota.
ha\·c been cffeni'e thi~ ~ca~on. and the Badger~ will need to keep
47
Mike Nugent, Ohio State .
all of their defenM \ e back~ in coverage to ~top the Boilermakers·
47
Ben Jones, Purdue . . . . . .
spread offeme .... Control time of possess ion. Runnin g the ball •
. 45
Garrett Rivas. Michigan ... .
with RB .Anthon ) Do.tvi'~ is the only way to eat up the clock. The
WI * I IW
longer thi Badger~ ~an maintam pos~ession , the le~s time Orton
3
Markus Curry, Michigan .. .
has to tire their defeme.
3
Tracy Porter, Indiana . . . . .
keys for Purdue: Stay patient with the passing game. Orton
3
Jason Harmon. Michigan State
has proven he can make the right decisions to lead the
Anwar Phillips. Penn State .
3
Boilermaker~ to yictory. so they need to keep the game in his
J
Ukee·Dozier, Minnesota . . .
hand~ . ... Play aggressively on defense . The Boilermakers need to
1
Ernest Shazor, Michigan .. 1•
keep eight men mthe box to stop the Badgers' running game.
Chad Greenway. Iowa . . .
2

.... ...

. Michigan State .

o

n-·

··=··

Ryan Mundy. Michigan .. ,
Kelvin Hayden, Illinois . . .
Tru maine Banks, Minneslilta .

Calvin Lowry, Penn State .

1
.. . . . . 2

·. . . . .

DRILL

"

.

The ntini struggled to
generate an offense in
Saturday's 38-25 loss to Michigan State,
and switching quarterbacks at halftime
didn't help. In the first half. senior Jon
Beutjer was 10-for-14 for 96 yards. His
replacement. Chris Pazan, was 5-for-11
for 48 yards. Most of the ntini's offense
came from Pierre Thomas, who ran for
!88 yards and two touchdowns on 21
carries.
While Indiana lost-to
......Northwestern 31·24,
Hoosier senior Courtney Roby put himself
into the record books. With eight catches
for !50 yards. Roby became Indiana's
career receptions leader V(ith 149, one
more than Thomas Lewis. Roby is now
second in the conference in receiving
yardage with 592 yards .
lllm&amp;fA The Hawkeyes had the week
..........
off, but they did take one big
hit. Last Wednesday, Iowa \earned that it
would lose RB Jemlelle Lewis, who has
an injured ACL. for the season. Lewis, the
team's original starter, is the third Iowa
running back to suffer a season-ending
knee injury this year. Marrus Schnoor
and Albert Young are already out, so
Marques Simmons now becomes the

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,~J(I '\ 1 '.. •\ul

,J :\ , 1 ; t 1

11111\"-. J)\\

\'"''~lll\ tl ,nh .., • · H U udr o H•

fUJ()BfHtf ,.• tHtt

Officers seize crack cocaine h1 Pomeroy

SPORTS
• Meigs makes short
work of Vinton County.
See Page 81

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Cpl. Ronnie
Spaun of the Pomeroy Police
Departmenl Iurned a traffic
stop on Liberty Lane into two
arrests and se izure of 8.3
grams of crack cocaine on
Saturday night.
Spaun, a patrolman with
Pomeroy
Police
the
Department, observed a suspiciou s vehicle with a West

FEMA
advises
retailers
on loss
reduction

-..u:-HIGAN ST

. •... 76.0
•

•
""4.

....,...
QB Chad Henne
started the season for Michigan, he was
the first true freshman since Rick Leach
in 1975 to statt his first game. On
Saturday , when he beat Minnesota 27-24.
his numbers were the highest ever for a
true freshman. He was 33-for-49 fo r 328
yards. Henne fo und Tyler Ecker for a
31-yard touchdown to secure the victory.

. 70.8
... 72.0

Iowa . . . . . . o • , ,
Minnesota. . . .
Penn State . . . . . .
Northwestern . .

•.•

-..u:o.HJGAN- When true freshman

DU
Michigan .
Wisconsin

.......

•

team's top rusher.

GDDI P: -

..IF

~

••

•
•
•
•

IIIII.ID.IANA

.

... . .
Purdue .
Northwestern . . . . . .
Michigan . . . .· .
Penn State
Iowa . . . . . . . .
Michigan State . .
illinois .. .. . .

Purdue . . . . . . .

•
• •

•

~·

98
104
151
181

Northwestern .. .

•
•

•.. '

..._.NOIS

TEAM LIIDEBS

..

~

Marauders try to stop
shQrt sldd, Bt

1
1

f !I I~ J&gt; 1(,/: PI&lt; Of /Jf.}

'llle Peat of tlae MetcJaapa
While

Wi sco n ~ in

and Purdue continue to roll. the rest of the

~PO \SORUJ

·,
t:nnkn:IKL' i~ lm1k.i11g tu ptck up the pieces. Michigan lost to Notre
D&lt;llllt' l'arlv hut ha.., ra llied tn a J-0 confcrt'IH.'t' ~t;.trt. anJ the
Wolwn ne" \\ill he It Hlk 111g hll'Ont inu~ tlwir \\ tnntng '~ ay.., ;.u
Illi nois
~linn~.:~nta i~ likl'\\ i... ~.· ltloking to turn ;.1WUild ih fununc" after a
~ 7- 2-lll)S&lt;., tu Mt-.·h igan. tlw Goptcrs· tir:-tlo:-.~ ofthl' . . l';l..,on. Th~~
lfi.l\ t'l tn Mil.'higan S t at~ t h i~ WCI.'~cml.
The hi8~C~t surpri "c ufthl.' early conference ~ea~on i ~ the fall ul
Oh io State. The Bu..:kt.:ye-. ha\'C nuw lo..,t two cnn,e.cuti\e gtune~
,111d an: looking tu g.~t bat.:~ nn th~ \\inning trat.:k in low:~ Cit).

'

l nwi.l

Minnesota at Michigan State
~1innc~ota 5-1 f~- 1 Hig T~.:n l~ Mid1igan State J.J (~ - 1
Big Ten) . • Series: M ichi):'tlll Stall' ll'ad~ :2-1-- 1·-L a Coaches:
Minne .. ota·~ Glen M:..:-on I IOK-105-1 ): M idli~;.m State's JDhn L
Smith l I] 1-fiHl. • Kickoff: 1] nnon ET Smurday. • TV: ESPN.
Key for Minnesota: :\H1iJ the ktdown . Lt:-.t :-.Ci.~:-t)n.losing to
Mich igan hurst the Golden Gophl'rs· nmlilknu~. Thi~ ~e;.t.'oon.
th.:y lost a lead lat~ ag.&gt;~i n . lo~ in g :!7-~-1.. hut the ~ llllht mme nn
The~ h•~t to the Sp;.1rt:u1~ last year, hltl must bt:;.l\ them if tile~ \\ant
tu keep ali\ l' tht'i r chanct:~ for a Big Ten title .
·
Key for Michigan State: Conu:ntrate on ... rnppln~ RB
Laurcncl' Maroney . Thr S partan .~ 111\' ninth in !he Big Ten in
ru~hing defcn:~c. allnwing 174.3 yarJs per gumc. Tlw Gopher"
r~aturc two running bad." who avcrag.t' mnft' thJn 100 yard:- per
g1.1 mt:. so the Spartatt:-. :-.hould ha\ e the 1r hands full .

• Records:

Ohio State at Iowa
s

Records: Ohio S t all:) - ~ (0-2 Big Tt'IJ) : IO\\;J 3-2 ( 1· 1 HI£! rc n) .
• Series: Ohill S t ~ttl' kmh -12·1 ~-~. • Coaches: Oh i(l State'" Jim
Trt~~d LJT.:!.(,h- ~ ): In" a·" Kir\o.. Fen:: nil (.p. 12 ). a Kickoff: 1:)0
p.m . CT S~llurda~ · • TV: ABC .
Key for Ohio State: Break the "treak The Bud eye~ h&lt;Jve lo ~t
two ~traig ht games. to North\\ estern cmd Wi sconsi n. and mu't
break the slidt' to n:main in th~: top half of thr conferen~:c.
Key for Iowa: The rn:tturity nf QB Drev. Tate. With RB
Jermellc Lc\~ i~ out with an ACL tear. the Huw keyes · Offen~e
dcpenUs. on the sophumorc play c.d kr .

Michigan at Il\inois
ill Records:

Mich tgan 5-l (J . Q l:!tg Ten): lllinot&gt; 2-4 10- 3 Btg

T en). • Series: Michigan lc:.Jds 64.21 ·2. • Coaches: Michig•m·s
Lloyd Carr 191-27 ): lll inoi &gt; Ron Tumcr (41 -57). • Kickoff: I I

a.m. CT Saturday. • TV: ABC.
Key fo't Michigan: Moti, miun. The

~partans oB
....,...
· Drew Stanton
has shown that he can pass and run for
touchdowns, but in Michigan State's 38-25
victory over Illinois last Saturday. he
fo und a new way to score - as a receiver.
WR Jerrarny Scott took a pitchout and
threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to
Stanton. who was 21-for-28 for 199 yards
and three touchd·owns.

lllflNESOTA Gophers
When the Golden
fell to
Michi gan last Saturday, they lost out on a
golden opportunity to win their first

conference title since 196 7. since they
don't have Purdue or Ohio .State on the
schedule this year. Minnesota hasn"t
beaten Michigan since 1986.

IIBRTHm;STERN ~~dcats
have won with the passing game of senior
QB Brett Basanez so far this season. But
in Saturday's 31-24 victory over Indiana ,
it was the running game that made the
difference. RB Noah Herron ran for a
career-high 197 yards and three
touchdowns, including a 16-yard
touchdown run in the second overtime
that secured Northwestern its second
consecutive or victory.

-.u_n

ST'"'TE

When the Buckeyes
"
lost 24-13 to
Wisconsin last Saturday. it ended their
18-game home winning streak. The backto -hack losses were the first for coach Jim
Tressel. It is the first time Ohio State has
opened the Big Ten season at 0·2 since
1992 .
~

STATE

~N
While the Nittany
....,.....
Lions suffered a
20-1lloss to Purdue. they did give the
Boilermakers a surprisingly close game.
Wh en Calvin Lowry intercepted a Kyle
Orton pass, it was Orton's first
interception of the season and also the
Boilermakers' first turnover. Hawaii is the
only Division I teaP1 without a turnover.
Penn State's Anwar Phillips intercepted a
second pass later in the game.

POMEROY - Pomeroy
retailers lost inventory. fixtures and revenue in the Sepl.
18 Ohio River flood. and at
Page AS
least one has announced it
• Rolland D. Smith
will not re-open because of
• Charles L.
the extent of the losse&gt;.
Those businesses might
'Bud' Bickel
qualify for assistance-through
the
Small
Business
Administration, in the form
of loans to replace or repair
real estate, machinery, eq uip• Polymer bridges slowly ment and inventory destroyed
by the wor&gt;l llooiling on
making inroads in niche
Pomeroy's Main Street si nce
markets. See Page A2
1964.
Economic Injury
• Onge conducts Ohio
Disaster Loans are also avail able to small businesses
Valley Symphony.
unable to pay bills or meet
. See Page A3
• Jones boys do good at · operating expenses.
But what can a business do
archery contest.
to help redu(e losses should a

0BfTIJARIES

INSIDE

Please see FEMA. AS

New Syracuse
Fire Department
officers are
announced

WEATHER

Senior WR Taylor
Stubblefield became the
Big Ten's all-time leader in receptions,
breaking the record of 266 set by Purdue's
John Sandeford last &amp;eason. Stubblefield
caught seven passes for 63 yards and a
touchdown, upping his career total to

ha ve the
~CONS
When the Badgers
tendency to play down to thdr competition and do ju~l enough lO
. ..,.....
beat Ohio State
win. They did bure ly enough tO beat Minnesota 27-24la~t
24-iJ, it was Wisconsin's third
weekend. Illinois should be an easier win. but the Wolverines
cori.secutive victory at the Horseshoe in
mu~t maintain a sense of urgency.
Columbus , the first time a visitor has won
Key for 1\linois: Getting QB pre~~ure . The Wolverines'
tlnee straight there since illinois in I g88·
freshman QB. Chad Henne, has sho wn the ability ro throw for lot ~ · 94. Wisconsin had never before won even
of yards, but he is also mistake-prone . If the lllini give him too
twice in a row at the Buckeyes' stadium
much time to make deci~ion s. he will connect.
dating back to 1913.

IN

IJ Y Till:' FOLIJJ \rJ.\'(j /lC.'-,'1\'/:'S.'"'/:'S:

class three felony carrie' a
sentence of 18 month' or
more in pdson.
Also arresteu with Thabe-t
was Chris D. Ward. 38. of
Pomeroy. Ward was abo
charged with possession of
drug paraphernalia.' and an F3 felony for possession of
crack cocaine.
Ward also had outstandin&amp;
warrams from the Pomeroy
Department
for
Police
domestic violence. posses -

' lcln of crack coca ine attu
_weupott' uttuer u"abilily.
Sgt. D.tnny Leo nard anu
Deputy Jim Stacey from the
Mcig '
Counl)
Sheriff',
Dcpartmcttl took Ward into
cu,lmly. \\here he "'" later
incarcerated at the Middleport
hil. Thabc1 '"" incarce rated
atlhc St&gt;ulhea'l Regional Jail.
Both men \\'ere arraigned in

cnunl y court on MonJ:ry "ith
Please see Cocaine, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- Jim
Cundiff of Racine operates
the
Maplewood
Lake
Christian Campground. His
business involves several
components, including a bait
shop , paid fishing , and ca mpsite rental s. He hopes lea-rning to create spreadsheets
will make his business easier
to manage and more success·
ful.
Janet Craig of Middleport
hopes improving her comput·
er skills will help her realize
her dream of a secretarial job.
Cundiff and Craig are two
of six students ·taking a fourday compuiCr class aboard
the Techmobile, a rolling
computer laboratory operated
by the University of Rio
Grande Crossroads/Work Net
program. It is parked at Ihe
Church of Christ Family Life
Center in Middleport throu gh
Oc1. 21.
Robert Taggart. the technology coordinator at the
URG/Rio
Grande
Community College Meigs
Center, is the instructor for
the itermediate class now
Please see Lab, AS

Robert Taggart of the Univers ity of Rio Grande/RIO Grande Communtty Co llege Meigs Center.
standing, instructs Janet Craig and Jim Cundtff on the creation of spreadsheets dunng a computer class in the URG Techmobile, parked in Middleport for two weeks. (Brian J. Reed/ photo )

'Bend Area Crank it Up' Eastern homecoming

candidates and escorts

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

SYRACUSE- '\lew oiTicers of the Syracuse Fire
Department were annOtmced
Oetallo on Pa&amp;a A2
al last week's meeting of
?yracuse Village Council.
They are Larry Ebersbach.
president: Mike Hoffman.
vice
president :
Donna
2 SECflONS- 12 PAGES
Peterson. secre tary : Tammy
Bable, assistant &gt;ecretary,
Calendars
A3 and
Eric Cunningham, trea·
Classifieds
B3-4 surer.
Named fire chief was Jack
Comics
· Peterson. with other officers
being Bill Roush. assistant
Dear Abby
A3 chief:
Bud la vender, captain:
Babic. first lieulenant:
Editorials
A4 Jeff
and Don Whan and Doy Nit z,
A6 second lieutenants.
Places to Go
Wood
Mayor
Mony
Obituaries
As appointed Kenny Buckley as
B1 the village·, project manager
Sports
·and representative to the

INDEX

Bs

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohlo Valley Pui)UshinM Co.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

then sent to Bureau of
Criminal Investigation to
verify the resulls.
The driver of the vehicle
was John F. Thabel, 41,
Mason. W.Va. Thabet was
charged with DUI , failure to
signal. possession of drug
paraphernalia and possession
of crack cocaine. Because the
amount of crack cocaine was
between 5-l 0 grams, the pos'ession of crack cocaine was
classified as an F-3 felony. A

A computer lab·on wheels

See Page AS

., 'ROUE

271.
Wol verine ~

Bv BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.CO M

Virginia license plate on
Liberty Lane. When the driver
failed to signal, Spaun pulled
the vehicle over at II :04 p.m.
on Saturday.
Pomeroy
Patrolman
Christopher Pitchford arrived
to assist Spaun. Both officers
then found what appea red to
be crack cocaine. Preliminary
tests done at the Pomeroy
Police Department confirmed
the substance was crack
cocame. The substance was

Please see Officers, AS

Bend Area Crank It Up will take place from 4 to 8 p.m.
Saturday OQ Pomeroy's parking lot. At last year's event. about
300 people turned out to listen to the stereo competition.
·BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - For those
into car stereo svstems with
quality and intensity of
sou nd, Pomeroy's parking lot
where the "Bend Area Crank
it Up" will be staged may be
the place you want \o spent
your Saturday, 4 to 8 p.m.

Anyone and everywhere
can COmpete in the ·_judged
event where .plaques will be
presented to the winners in
the classes of best in class.
best light system, best instal latio n. best of show, and people's choice.
This is the second annual
Crank it Up which attracted
Please see Crank It up, AS

Homecoming queen candidates and thetr escorts from
Eastern Htgh School are. left to nght: Kayla Nave and Robert
Cross. Morgan Weber and Ryan Sm ith . Ctlelsea Young and
Adam Dillard . Abb te Chevalier and Andy Franc ts and Knsta
Wh tle and Cody Di ll. The quee n wtll be 'crowned at halft tme
Friday evening. A hdmecoming parade is planned at the school
for 6 :30p.m. on Wednesday. IBrian J. Reed ' photo I

LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE !'tOMES • HOSPITALIZATION

'

I

-*

· Bank
~~:u:..
'

196 EAST SECOND ST. • POMEROY, OH

992-3381

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; So
Company
vtrgs

�PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentjnel

Fighting brain drain: ·Young

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Community Calendar

Local Stocks

Public meetings

ACI- 33.99
AEP- 31.85
Akzo- 35.29
CLEVELAND (AP) · -Ashland Inc. - 54.77
City and state leaders have
BBT.,.... 39.49
been working to keep their
BLI-11.43
best and brightest from leavBob Evans - 26.39
ing for career opportunities
els.ewhere. Now a group of
BorgWarner - 42.10
young professionals is pitch- ·
City Holding - 32.19
ing in on the effon to prevent
Champion - 3.65
"brain drain" with a new
Charming Shops organization, the Twenty7.24
Thirty Club.
The group formed in 200 I
Col- 35.83
has 265 members who work
DuPont- 42.84
for more than ISO companies
DG -18.87
in the Cleveland area. Its misFederal Mogul - .1800
sion is to provide better
Gannett - 81.90
opportunities for networking,
education, philanthropy and
General Electric social contact.
33.71
A redesign of the club's
GKNLY - 4.000
Web site this year has helped
Harley Davidson promote it to potential mem58.72
bers. Since February, the
Twenty-Th irty Club has
JPMorgan (formerly
added almost 200 members
Bank One) - 39.24
and is receiving five to 10
Kmart87.25
applications a week.
Kroger - 15.02
in
A similar group
Ltd- 23.06
Pittsburgh was a role model
for the Twenty-Thirty Club,
NSC- 30.72
founding
member- Luke
Oak Hill Financial Elsass said.
36.46
Elsass, 29. an. assistant vice
OVBC- 31.51
president for commercial real
(AP PhotofThe Plain Deater, Lonnie Timmons Ill)
estate with LaSalle National · Luke Elsass. shown on Tuesday. started the Cleveland Peoples - 26.94
Bank, mtually had the tdea to Professionals Twenty·Thirty Club. The Twenty-Thirty Ctub was Pepsico - 48.05
stan the club. He satd he formed in 2001 and has 265 members who work for more Premier - 9.31
envisioned an organization than 150 com panies in the Cleveland area. Its mission is to Rocky Boots - 19.19
where people Ill the early provide better opportunities for networking, educat1on, phil an·
RD Shell - 52.12
stages of thetr careers could thropy and social contact.
Rockwell - 38.55
grow protesstonally and one
that would help new arrivals Dealer published in February areas: ' he said. "We want Sears- 37.65
who don ' t feel at home right 2003 found that more than 70 them to l!et plugged in . When SBC- 26.63
percent of tl)e 490,000 people people teet a sense of comaway.
Elsass said forming friend- who gradua\ed bet ween 199 I munity aml get involved in AT&amp;T -15.53
ships is the best way to keep and 2001 at 23 Ohio public businesses. we think they USB- 29.09
young professionals in town. and private colleges and uni- lwve more of a connection Wendy's - 35.08
The group is focused on versities examined still called and might be less likely to Wai-Mart - 52.55
young professionals in their Ohio home . But those with pursue something elsewhere.'' Worthington - 20.00

professionals network in new club

20s and 30s. with the average
age about 28, said Brandon
Davis, the club's education
director and business manager with Washington Group
International Inc.'s office in
Cleveland.
The age range is pan of a
population group that has
been declining in Ohio,
according to U.S. Census figures released in September.
Ohio lost 79,011 people in
the age group 20-to-44 since
2000, a drop of nearly 20 percent, according to Census
population estimates.
An analysis by The Plain

advanced degrees were more
likely to leave the state and
pursue careers elsewhere.
Brain drain is a reason club
membe'rs feel their new organization is important, Davis
said.
"There is always a certain
allure to places like New
York City apd Chicago, if
you can 't find ways to keep
people here," Davis said.
"We try to focus on the
~raduate-type students commg out of colleges so they
don ' t leave , and there are
young professionals who look
to the Sun Belt and other

If young professionals
might look to leave Ohio.
Tricia Somoles sees herself as
goi ng against the tlow.
" I went to college at
Syracuse. and I'm one of
those who actuall y came back
to Cleveland," said Somoles.
31, a commercial lender at
LaSalle National Bank and
one ofthe club's founders.
The club "is representative
of all different types careers,
instead of somethmg like just
young lawyers or . young
accountants, so it better
enables each of us to network,'' So moles said.

Polymer bridges slowly making
inroads in niche markets
JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DAYTON
Bridges
made with fiber-reinforced
plastic are having success in
niche markets that appreciate
the quick installation, long
life and corrosion resistance .
Traditional concrete or steel
bridges cost half as much as
the bridges that use polymer
composites for the bridge
deck and sometimes the · supports.
"They are increasing in
popularity, a lot along the
lines of niche-type bridge
installations," said 1ohn
Busel , of the American
Composites Manufacturers
Association , a trade group
representing more than I, I00
member&gt; from the composites
industry.
Many polymer bridges are
being built in rural areas,
where constructing or replacing conventional bridges can
force drivers to make detours
of up to 40 miles for long
penods ·of time. Polymer
bridges can be assembled
offsite and quickly installed.
Lou Luedtke, president of
the National Composite
in
suburban
Center
Ketterin g, said conventional
bridges last about 20 years in
Ohio and other northern
states before they have to be
replaced . Testing indicate s
that polymer bridges can last
more than I00 vears, he said.
"It doesn't allow water and
salt to seep down , so there is
·no corrosion,'' he sai d.
Busel said polymer bridges
have replaced conventional
drawbridges in California
and Oregon because their
light wetght takes pressure
off motors and gears used in
the lifting.
.
"Instead of carryi n~ a 50pound backpack, you re carrying a 10-pound backpack,"
he said.
Polymers also have been
used m the renovation of historic bridges because their

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

Sunday, Sept. 17
Sunday, Oct. I 7
RACINE: Rcpuhlican
MIDDLEPORT- Earthen
Party meet the candidate' pro- Ves&gt;els will be singing at the
Monday, Oct. 18
with tree hotdogs II :30 "vviddleport Church of the
;;ram
CHESTeR
--C hester
to
I
p.m.
on Third Street.
Nazarene
6:30
p.m.
Township Board of Trustees
Refre;hmcnts will be served.
meet at 7 p.m. at the Chester
Monday, Oct. 18
POMEROY -- Revival serTown Hall.
CHAUNCEY
-A
Region
vices
will be held at th e
RACINE -- Racine Village
14
Youth
Counci
l
mcctinu
.
Enterprise Church 7 p.m .
.Counci l will meet in recessed
Mond ay
and
sess ion at 7 p.m. at the wtll be held at ~ a.m. at the Sunday,
Athens
Department
of
Jobs
municiipal building. Quote
Tuesday. Rev. Jim Lambert
forms on painting the win- and Family Services on State will be the sipeaker. There
dows in th e building can be Rout e 13 in Chauncey.
will be special music. Arland
p1cked up at the treasurer's
King iS' pastor.
office.
MID DLEPORT Rob
Combs will be sipeaking at
the A&gt;h Street Ch urch. 398
Ash St. Middleport , I0:30a.m
Sunday, &lt;kt. 17
worship serv ice.
POMEROY
Homecomin~ will he held at
Thursday, Oct. 14
Saturday, Oct. 23
th
e Morning Star United
CHESTER --Shade River
LONG
BOTTOM -- A
Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30 Methodist Church. There will hymn · sing featuring the
p.m. at the hall. Refreshments. he a basket di nner at 12:30 Golden Tones of Parkersburg,
and a song service in the .dh:·r~
. TUPPERS PLAINS
wi ll be held at 7 p.m. at The
VFW Post 9053 will meet at 7 noun. John Gi lmore is pastor. Mt. Olive Church. Long
CHESTER
p.m . A dinner wi ll be served at
Homecoming will be held at Hottom .
6:30p.m .
HENDERSON
- The the South Bethel C(&gt;mmunity
Marine Corp League of Church on Silver Rid~e with
Meig s. Gallia and Mason Sunday .'Chool at &lt;J a.r\1.: basCou nties wi ll meet at 7 p.m . ket dinner at n01111. Jnd an
Friday, Oct. 15
aftl'nllHIII ~ong '-C IT ICC at I :30
.at
the
llenderson
POMEROY - A staff
Comm un ity
Ce nter
111 p.m. Singers wi ll b~ Jerry and member of Senator George
Henderso n, W. Va. All Lisa Queen. Cooh·ille. the Voinovich will hold office
l)'l arines and former military Martin s, the Christys. and hotlr' from II a.m. until noon
Kevin Damewood. Linde~
personnel are welcome.
at Meigs Multipurpose Senior
POMEROY -- Alpha Iota Damewood is p:~stor.
Cen ter
in
Pomerov.
Masters Chapter of Bet a
to
discU!;s
federal
Opportunity
Sunday, Oct. 24
Sigma Phi Sorority will travel
legislation or to seck assisMIDDLEPORT
Castle.
to
Ravenswood
tance
with federal agency
Homecnming will he held at tl1c
Hocking Hill s near McArthur
casework
iss ues. Call Cara
for lunch. Mem bers are to Ash Sued Church. 3YX Ash St..
Di ngus. ~41-6410 .
meet at the home of Carol Middlepm1. The 'chedule
include&gt;
:
lJ:.\0
a.m.
Sundav
McCullough at II a.m. to
school; I0:.10 a.m. mom in~ wo1:_
Saturday, Oct. 16
leave.
ship; noon. dinner and fellowCHESTER
-- A ge nealogy
POMEROY -- Republican
ship,
I
:30
p.m.
Earthen
Vessels;
fair
will
be
held
from 9 a.m. to
Party meet th e candidates
with free hotdo~s. II :30 to I 1 p.m. Re\o&lt;. Calvin Minnis 'i p.m . • at the Chester
speaking; 3 ' p.m Glory bound Courthouse for beginning and
p.m. on the park! ng lot.
Quartet, lim11crly loyFI\1 Trio.
experienced
re searchers.
Genealogist
and
vendor
tables
Saturday, Oct, 16
Gin be reserved for $10. The
POMEROY
event
i' co-spo nsored by the
Buirlirgham
Modern
Chester-S hade
Hi storical
Woodmen. potluck dinner.
Saturday, Oct. 16
and
the
5:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY - Comempomry Assoc i ~ tion
Historic al
Hotdogs. pizza. cider. donut s service. 7 p.m. Saturdav at the St. Bedford/Lodi
and table service provided.
Paul Lutl1enm Church.·
Group.
~

Clubs and ·
organizations

Homecomings
/Reunions

Other events

,
Thursday, October 14
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will be a clot1dy morning.

Temperatures will
hold
steady around 55. Winds will
be 5 to I0 MPH from the
west.
Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
It will remain cloudy.
Temperatures will rise from
57 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 62 at 3:00pm as
they drop back down to 60
later thi s afternoon . Winds
will be 5 to I0 MPH from the
west turning from the southwest as the afternoon progresses.
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
It should continue to he

cloudy. There is a slight
chance of rain. Temperatures
will dimini sh from 56 earl y
this evening to 50. Winds will
be '10 MPH from the southwest turning from the so uth
as the evening progre sses.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It will remain cloudy. Light

rain is forecasted. The rain
should start by I :OOam .
Accumulations of 0. 13 inches
are predicted. Temperatures
will liriger at 51 with today's
low of 48 occurring around
6:00am. Winds wi II be I 0
MPH from the south turning
from the sou the as t as the
overnight progresses.
Friday, October IS
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morn -

ing. We arc predicting moderate rain , hut watch out for a
brief hut locally heavy down pour. The rain could reach
0.34 inches by this mornin g
in some spots. Temperatures
will hover at 51. Winds will
be 10 MPH from th e east
turning from the west as the
morn1ng prug re~~e~.
Ajlemoon (1-6 p.m.)

It will remain cloudy. A bit
of fog and drizzle is expected. Temperalllres will remain
around 51. Wind.- wi ll be I0
to 20 MPH from the west.

Church services

Rick St. Onge is shown
conducting The Ohto
Valley Symphony In
John Phtlllp Sousa's
"Stars &amp; Stripes· ·
Forever" after winning
the annual Maestro for
a Moment contest
Saturday night. Almost
$12,000 was raised to
help support the OVS .
Other candidates vying
for the honor were Jeff
Adkins and Clyde
Evans. The next concert
will be November 6 and
wilt feature the award
winning violin and viola
duo of Marcolivia. For
more information, call
the Ariel Theatre at
740-446 ARTS (27 87).

... ........
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Send us a
I
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your
I favorite
••• pet and
•••
they
\ might be ---===:::~~~ •
•••
•••
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voted into our

· stren~ enables bridges to bear zation that works to find
heavter traffic without having applications for advanced
to erect steel or concrete struts materials th at are lighter but
that take away the structures' stronger than conventional
classic look, Busel said.
matenals.
Last week , the center was
The Federal Highway
Admini stration is pro moting awarded a $1 million federal ~:
the use of pol ymer bridges.
grant to build up to five
"CompoSite bridge materi- polymer
bridges
in
als can shave years off con- Washington. D.C. , for pedesstmction time and even help trian and bicycle traffic.
Luedtke satd he expects the
older bridges withstand the
effects of an earthquake," said ,Washington project to spark
FHA Administrator Mary interest in the bridges from ~:
Peters.
other ·states. Increased orders
But the cost of the pol y- eventually should reduce the
!'J!
mer bridges has kept them as cost of making the bridges to
only a small portton of the about 1.5 times that of conmore than 578,000 bridges ventional bridges because of
on public U.S. roads.
production effi ciencies, he I
Of the more than 135 said .
~,.
The state spent $7 million
polymer bridges in 19 states.
about 93 have been installed to replace a conventional
.
brid ge in Dayton with a
smce
-?OOQ .
" I could see why the people polymer one.
in the Rust Belt would be
But when the polymer deck
interested,
sa id
Jim panels separated, the state had
Richardson, associate profes- to close the bridge for a year.
sor of civil engineering at the contributing to an addiltonal
Deadline for en.tries is: November 15, 2004
University of Alabama. "The $2. 1 million cost for the probig deaf is the corrosion. Ject.
That's just a huge bugaboo. I
"We are not proposing any
don't see any problem with it addi tional cnmpoSi tes at thi .,
other than expense."
time:· said Tim Keller, state
S. Ahmad, a spoke,man bridge engineer. "The cost is
for the American Concrete very hig h. And we had some
Institute, said 99.9 percent of learning difficulties on our ~:
.
bridges are made with con- fiN one. "
cre te, a low-cost material
However. polymer bridges
with a proven track record of have their supporters among
I
~
safety and durability.
county engi neer., .
I
When Montgome ry Cou nt y
"Over the last 100 years.
~---------------------rein(orced and pre-stressed Engi nee r Joe Litvin was
~
·~~A
~o n c re te bridges . have fer-. speaking at the Farmersville
formed exceed in glv wei to Rptary Club a few years ago
service the transportatiDn abou t a new polymer bridge
~------------------I
industry." Ahmad said.
that was insta ll ed in the
I
'~I Phone: ----------~~~-----------------------------There . were 12 polymer Dayton area in 2000. one lisbndges mstallcd m Oh10 1n tcner was a tough sel l.
2000-200 I after the state · ·'Some woman sai d, ' I was
Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
)•
offered comm unit ies a $4 reall y disappoi nted in that. I
I
'
l ·
mtllton ~ ubs 1d y to help wllh drove 10 miles out of my
co.sts. Smce th en three more way . to gn ove r that bridge.
Daily Sentinel ·
bndges have been mstalled. and 11 fe lt ltke any other.·
wtth another schedul ed for
''Ma'am." Litvin replied.
"Pet Calendar" ·
"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
2005.
.
.
"that was our goal. "
825 Third Avenue
200 Main
111 Court St.
1'
Most of- Ohio 's bridges
Litvin said he is happy
were butlt and installed with the bridge. wh ich shows. :~ Gallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pleasant, wv 2 5550 Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·
u~der the supervision of the no sign. of w~ar and tear.
.Nati onal Composite Center,
"We check it out all the · ·---~---------------------------------------···---~
a 40-persnn research organ.i - time. and it\ fine," he 'aid.
f

·•

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•.·•

2005

·••••••

•·o:,f.

Pet Calendar!

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

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Name of pet:
.

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Dear
Abby

letter from a woman cl aiming
ihat my hu shand we" the
father of her ch1ILI. She said
~he W4J~ v. illing to lc:.t\C town
and not embarr&lt;h' u,. hut
needed monc\ to do '"· I did
nul contact a Ia\.\ yer - I
called the police . The) contacted the f'BI and the 11 oman
Wa"l GJUgill .

to scan pictures and digital!\
alter them. even to the point
of merging them with other
pictures.
If the husband was cle ver
enough to have kept hi' affair
and the child hidden for 20
years. and he wanted to help
the et• irl wi th co\koc tuition '
don't you think he'd ha\'e
devi sed a way to pru1 ide for
her linancial securily'.' And if
that girl was rea ll y hi s daughter. don't you think 'he'd
have been more se nsitive than
to have approached hi s widow
at a time like that '' - BEEN
CONNED IN \11SSISSIPPI
DEAR CONNED: I agree
wi th you. There are better
ways to approach .1omeone
tl1an to tell the person the I:Jst
20 years of her marriage was
a lie. And one of them is
through an intermediary.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: My 37-yearold husband was kill ed by a
drunk dri1·er. His picture
appeared in the newspaper.
My husband was a very handsome man who had been successfu l in sales.
When I returned from his
funeral. 1 found, mixed in
with the condolence notes. a
~·

It was a "·am that 'he had

used succe"full y before . I
recommend that " Hean,ick "
call the police. and certain!)
demand a .Df\:A tc'l. heforc
gi\ ing the ""oman anyth ing .
SY\1PATHETIC
I~
HAWAII
DEAR SY~1PATHETIC:
You're a quick thinker. ReaLI
on :

DEAR ABBY: Your ad1 icc
to "llcartsick" " . a, right on
the mone: Here ·, ho\\ I han died the 'ame ' itu utiu n after
being contacted hy an "adult
t.laughlcr .. a. . king me to ··~hare
something to help her rcmemhe r her dad ... I told her I' cl be
glad tu. I pliotocopied the
funeral bill and 'cnt it to her
immediate!:. with a request
.&lt;he pay her port ion in ca,h.
I know it ma: '-IUUllli na~~­
but I nner heard from her
agmn.
1\0BODY'S
FOOL.
BROOKSVILLE.
FLA .
Dear i\bb) '' 11ri1ten by
Abigai l Van Buren. al"'
known as Jeanne Phillips . and
was founded b1 her mother.
Pauline Phill ip,. Write Dear
Abby at \lll'w.DearAbbl .com
or P.O. · Box 69~~0.' Los
Angeles. CA 90069.

Keeping .
'··· Meigs .
li informed .··· Sunday ·
. Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992·2155

Greeting c~rds I/~ Prl'ce
New Selections '
Russell Stover Peanut
Butter Ghost or Chocolate
Brownie Witches Ret 39¢

First birthday

On jy 21 i

~

ssell Stover

•••

1:·• Your Name:.____
··~

DEAR ABBY: I agree with
your advice 95 percent of the
time. However, I disagree
with your comments to
"Heartsick in N.Y.," the
widow who sa id a young
woman had shown up on her
doorstep claiming to be her
deceased· husbanu 's illegitimate daughter.
That young woman didn't
ask to be born from an affair.
Al though I'm sure the widow
is heartsick. there is no way to
easily break that kind of news
to anyone. It is a sad situation ,
but neither side is at fault. If
"Heartsick" is unsure about
paternity, a simple DNA test
can be done to prove the truth.
--CHERYL IN SAN ANTONIO
DEAR CHERYL: That's
true. And that is why I advi sed
" He art sick" to contac t her
lawyer righ t away. Howe ve r,
my gut told me that some,
thing might be am iss. And
here's why. Read on :
DEAR
ABBY:
"Heartsick's" letter had "con
artist" written all over it.
Please inform her that there
are people who check the
obituaries every da y for the
names of people who die.
They ge t all the personal
information a~d show up
when the su rvivors are not
thinking clearly.
PiCture s can be doctored.
and the information about the
husband being in the sports
field, l ' m sure, was public
knowledge. It 's a simple matter, with today's technology,

1.

•••

t!

DNA test will prove truth
of woman spaternity claim

•·

I

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Onge conducts Ohio Valley Symphony

Proud to be apart of your life. Subscribe today. 992-2155
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PagcA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Isabella Fisher

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RACt'NE
Isabella
Fisher, daughter of Damon
and Joni Fisher, celebrated
her first hil1hday on Sept.
25 wi th a "He llo Kitty"
party. Fami ly including her
brother. Jake. and friends
attdtded th e observa nce.
Isabella is the granddaughter
of Charli e and Sheila Hill
and Libby Fisher of Racine.
and the late Bob Fisher .

Vtsitus
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
111

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

Congress shall make no laiV respecting an
e$tablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tltereof; or abridging the freedom
of speec/1, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday. Oct. 1-l. the :&gt;88th day of 2004. There
are 78 days left in the year.
.. Today 's Highlight in His tory :
Forty years ago. on Oct. 1-l. 196-l. ci\ il rights leader Mat1in
Luther King Jr. was named winner of the Nohel Peace Prize.
On thi s date:
·
In 1066. Normans under William 1he Conq ueror defeated
the English at the Battle nf Hastings.
In 1890. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Jolth president of the
United St;'ttes. was lwrn in Denison. Texa.s.
. In 191::&gt;. Theodore Roose\clt. c·ampaigni ng for the presi'dency. was shoi in the dwst in ~ lilwauk ee. Despite the
wound, he went ahe:~J \1 ith a ,cheduled specc·h.
In IY33. Nazi Germany :mnnum·ed it \\a~ vrithlirawing rrom
the Lea2ue of ~;JtiLms .
In 194-+. German Fiel·d ~lar.shctl Erwin Rommel committed
-suicide rather than face e\ecution !'or allegedly conspiring
·against Auolf Hi tler.
In 1960. th e idea of a Peac·e Cc1rps 'was first suggested by
Democratic presiden ti al eandidBte John F. Kennedy to an
audience of students at the· Uni' ersi ty or Michigan.
In 1968. the first li'e telecast from a manned U.S. spaee.craft was transmi tteJ from Apollo 7.
In 1987. a real-life drama t&gt;cgan in Midland. Te.xas. as IS month-old Je." ica McClure .slid 2::&gt; feet do"n an ab&lt;Jnduned
well at a private day cart• c·en ter. Hundreds of rescuers worked
58 hours to free her.
In 1990. composer-conuuctor Leonanl Bernste in died in
New York at age 72.
Ten years ago: The Nnhe l Peace Prize was awarded to PLO
leader Yasser Arafat, Israel i Prime Mimster Yitzhak Rabin and
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Perc&gt;. Kidnapped Israeli sol.dier Nachshon Waxman was killed when Israeli commandos
raided the hideout of Islamic militants in Jerusalem. Ncibel
Prize-winning writer Naguib Mahfouz was stabbed several
times on a Cairo street: Musl im militants were blamed in the
attack.
Five years ago: Pres ident Clinton accused Senate
.Republicans of recklessness and irres ponsibility for defeating
the nuclear test ban treat y, and pledged the United States
would refrain from testing despite the treaty's rejection.
Japan's Sumitumo Bank and Sakura Bank announced they
would merge. Julius Nyerere , Tanzania's first president. died
in a London hospital at age 77.
Today·s Birthdays: Former Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop is 88. Actor Roger Moore is 77. Movie director Carroll
Ballard is 67. Former Whi te Hou se counsel John W. Dean Ill
is 66. Country singer Melha Momgomery is 66. Fashion
designer Ralph Lauren is 65. Singer Cliff Richard is 64. Actor
Udo Kier is 60. Singer-musician Justin Hayward (The Moody
Blues) is 58. Actor Harry.Anderson is 52. Actor Greg Evigan
is 51. TV personality Arleen Sorkin is 48. Golf Hall-of-Famer
.Beth Daniel is 48. Singer-musician Thomas Dolby is 46.
·Singer Karyn White is 39. Actor Jon Seda is 34. Country
. musician Doug Virden is 34. Country singer Natalie Maines
: (The Dixie Chicks) is 30. Actress-singer Shaznay Lewis (All
: Saints) is 29. Singer Usher is 26. Actor Jordan Brower is 23.
Thought for Today : ''N inety-nine percent of fa ilures come
·from people who have the habit of making excuses.'' :George Washington C~rver, American botanist (· 1864-1943).

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Letters to the editor on the No\'. 2, 2004, gen:eral election will no/ he published or accepted

by this newspaper qfler Tu esdaY, Oct. 26. 2004.
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Kerry skewered him there.
too.
"M&lt;1ybe someone would
call it " character trait ,
maybe somebody wouldn't."
he ot&gt;served. "But this issue
of certainty: It 's one \hing to
be certain. but you can be
cerlain and be wrong."
Kerr~ gave a list of poll tested c\amples. from foreign policy to global warm-

ing

~tnd st~m-ce ll

research.

on which Bush is t&gt;oth dead
certain and dead wrong.
Since the debate. BLtsh's
response hus been equally
cha ructc ri\lic. Buck in side
the \\' !.trill cocoon of invitation -o nly
campaign
~, · cnh. he ~e i zcd upon a
phrase from th e dehute and

io n ~

uf Man-kin&amp;!." It\ no

su rprise that &lt;1 ctii0\1 illlJ1•~'·
tor like Bthh prctc'nds Ill
misunderstand him .
(Arkan .w.\
f)emo t·rurGa:eue nJ/HIHHisr (;j nc·

Lyons is n nurimwl magu ;,ine award 1rinner awl ('f) author of' "Tile Hunting of
the Prtsidnll ' (.'it. Mc~rtin ·,,
Press. 200,0). }(,u cun c-11111il
Lrnns
ill
®rs.cmn. /

Bush, Kerry trade charges over jobs, health care, taxes
MARY DALRYMPLE

Rolland D. Smith

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LIMA -Rolland D. "Rollie" Smith. 75.
died Wednesday. Oct. 13, 2004 at the
Springview Manor Nursinyhome.
Born on Jan. 17, 1929 in Washington
County. he was the son of the late Herman
Smith and Ella Hedelson Smith. He was the
retired director for the six county waste.district.
Mr. Smith was the former business manager at Apollo Joint Vocational School. He
was the fanner public works director for the '-.-~...:
city of Lima. was a construction enuineer for Rolland D.
Ohio Power in Beverly and Lim~; former "Rollle" Smith
Elida School Board member. and appointed
. to th e Apollo School Board.
He served in the U.S. -Navy during World War II was very
involved in the Republican Party and voted Lifetime Young
Republican. was a member of #390 F&amp;AM Masonic Lodge in
Washington County. recipient of the Boy Scouts Silver Beaver
Award; and a former member of Eastside Lions Club.
He is survived by hi s wife, Dorothy Werner Smith of Lima,
two daughters, Martha "Marty" (Michael) Murray of
Cincinnati , and Diana (Greg) Bowers of Elida; .two sons.
Randy (Linda) Smith of Dublin, and Howard (Michele) Smith
of Elida: a sister, Ronm Smith of Marietta; 14 grandchildren.
and seven great-grandchildren.
Beside his parents he was preceded in death by a granddaughter, Leann Smith, a great-grandson, Brady Bowers, a
sister, Erma Smith, and three brothers, Dean, Delmar and
Homer Smith.
Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Chamberlain-Huckeriede Funeral Home . .The Rev. Doug
Adams will officiate and burial will be in the Walnut Grove
Cemetery at Delphos, Friends may call aHhe funeral home
from 4 to 8 p.m . on Friday, Oct. 15.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Lung
Association. On-line condolences may be sent to chamberlainhuckcriede. com.

Deaths
SOUTH CHARLESTON -Charles L. " Bud" Bickel, 64.
of South Charleston, W. Va., formerly of Meig s County, died
Oct. 7. 200-l at the University of Virginia Medical Center in
Charluttesvilk. Va.
He is survived by his wife. Carol Pool Bickel.
Funeral services ·were held Oct. I0 at the Snodgrass Funeral
Home in South Charlestpn with buriul in the East Lawn
Memorial Park at Reno.

CHESTER
- Chester
Township will close West
Shade Road between Spencer
Road and Skinner Road from
8:30 a.m. to -+:30 p.m. on
Thursday for repair.

Basket party
planned

Readers View
Pre-emptive
strike
Dear Editor:

~aw

a coon tratk -

I

hclicve I wou ld ha ve to con·Ciudc that there weren't any.
If we are safer today. why
i&gt; the terror alert qill
_&lt;ir&lt;tnge'! They thou ght .July 4

would be a good time for an
attack. They thought the
Olympics would be a good
target ; also the Democratic'
and Republican conventions.
Never happened.
Remember Patrick Henry''
Nathan Hale'? They were
heroes of the time when we
were trying to throw off the
yoke of Great Britain.
Remember when we were
chasing the American Indians
off tl1eir land'' We called them
"savages," blood thirsty killers.
Now we are calling those Iraqi
people "insurgents." They are
fightihg to rid their country of
an invading anny. One man's
"freedom lighter' is another
man's terrorist.
All the military might, all
the killin g and wounding on
both side s. had very little to
do with the overthrow of
Sadaam ·Hu"ein . He was
turn ed' in for the reward
mon ey. Couldn 't "c have
tried that first'' It would have
been much cheape r. And
th at. my fri ends. is the
(Lon g) Bottom Line.
Henry E. Bahr
Umg Bottom

Vote
Remember
marriage vote
near Editor:
On Septemher .10. tile

Federal
Marriage
Amendment
to
our
Constitution. stating that
marriage in the United States
"shall consist only of a man
and a woman," and went on
to inc!Ltde that neither the
U.S. Con~titution or any of
the state constitu'tions "shall
he construed to require that
marriage or the legal inci dents thereof be conferred
upon any union other than
the union of a man and a
woman·· was defeated 2271Rri. Ohio repre se ntatives
Sherrod Brown , David
Hobson , Marcy Kaptur,
Dennis Kucinich, Deborah
Pryce, Tim Ryan, Ted
Strickland, and Stephanie
Tubbs Jone s. were among
the 2'2.7 who voted to defeat
thi s amendment and thereby
supported homosex ual marria ge. Do they represent
yo ur voi ce·&gt; If you want
homosexual · marriage. vote
for these re presentatives to
speak I'm you. If you want'

women who are to he
responsible to the n&gt;tcrs
and who will be our votce
in government. As our governing law. we have The
Constitution of the United
State s of America. The repre se ntatives in all levels of
our fifty state and local

Cocaine
from Page A1
bonds set at $25.000 each.
A holder from the Jackson
Adult Parole Authority took

Lab
from Page A1

league. " the conservative
senator from Ma&gt;.&gt;.achusells ."
Undeterred.
the
Democratic challenger said
many of the nation's ills can
be laid at Bush\ feet.
He "regrettably rushed us
into war" in Iraq , Kerry said,
and pushed "alliances away
and as a result America ... is
not as safe as we ought to
be."
On employment, he said,
"This is the first president in
72 years to preside over an
economy in America that has
lost jobs. Eleven other presidents, six Democrats and five
Republicans had wars, had
recessions, had great di fficulties. None of theiJ) lost jobs
the way this president has. "

A&gt;. for health care, the
Democratic senator 'aid, "5
million Americam have lost'"
coverage
under
Bu&gt;.h\
watch. 'The president has
turned his back on the wellness of America, and there is
no system and it's starting to
fall apart," Kerry said.
Kerry and the · president
also debated abortion. gay
rights. immigration and more
in a 90-minute debate that
underscored their deep differences only 20 days · before
the election.
This debate was similar in
format to the first _ the two
rivals standing behind ·identical lecterns set precisely I0
feet apart. Bush was on better behavior, though , and

there was no grimacing and
'cowling thi' time when it
was Kerry\ turn to speak.
The debate was also a policy wonk's dream _ a blizzard of facts and figures. reference; to "budget caps" and
other terms meaningful only
to Washington insider,.
Taxes was a particular
flash point between the two
men.
Questioned by moderator
Bob Schieffer of CBS, Kerry
said he would follow through
on hi s plan to roll back tax
cuts · for Americans who earn
more than $200,000 a year
while preserving the reductions that have gone to lower
and middle income wage
earners.

custody of Ward at 7 p.m. on
Tuesday and transported him
back to Jack son County
where he was already on
parole.
Pomeroy Village P.olice
Chief, Mark Profitt said

"Anytime officers setze
drugs off ihe streets they
have my highest respect.
Drugs in Pomeroy will not be
tolerated ."
Profitt also commended
the Meigs County Sheriff's

Department for their cooperation and added "We want
people to know Pomeroy is"
not a bad place to live but we
are seeki ng out drug dealers
and prosecuting them to the
fullest extent of the law."

This is the third computer
training session WorkNet has
sponsored for adult Meigs
County residents'. Work Net
IS a grant-funded program
helping individuals with
short-term training opportunities.
post-secondary
schooling. career exploration
and assessments. financial

assistance with uniforms and
tools necessary for employment and skills such as
resume writing, mentoring
and coaching activities.
The program also link's
faith-based organizations and
community-based agencies
with the Meigs One Stop
Center. Its cooperative agree-

ment with the Church of
Christ in Middleport is one
example of how Work Net
collaborates with faith-based
organizations.
The next computer class
will be from 9:30 to II :30
a.m .. Oct. 18-21 in the church
parking lot.

nation of Eber Pickens, Jr.
It was noted .that repaving
bf Carroll Street has now
been completed. The street
was damaged when heavy
equipment was moved over it
to reach the site of Pomeroy's
new water plant. Pomeroy
village assisted with the cost
of repamng the damaged
roadway.

Trick or treat was set for 6
to 7 p.m. on Oct . 28. The
siren will blow to begin and
end th~. Halloween observance.
Abuse of facilities at the
tennis court was noted and it
was decided by Council to
put winter hours into etl'ect
and add some use restrictions. Nets have been torn

down and skate boarding has
been takinf place on the
courts. it was reported. The
hours for use will be posted .
Coun cil members at the
meeting
were
Mike
VanMeter. Mike Deem.
Donna Peterson , Jennie
Hatfield.
and
Eric
Cunningham.

and contents if the communi·
ty participates in the National
Flood Insurance Program.
Home businesses are not cov·
ered under a homeowner's
llood insurance policy, but
can be insured separately.
• If computers are essential
to the business, protect data.
Back up any computer system at least once a week.
Make at least three copies of
essential information and
store the back-up disks in a
safe place off site.
• Maintain a current list of
assets, and keep track of critical suppliers and repair service providers, and keep this
information and other irreplaceable information, such
as payroll and tax data. off
site in a secure location.
• Consider storing minimal
inventory on site. One rec·
ommendation is to maintain
just three to five days' worth
of inventory on hand. so
when a disaster occms. the
loss is minimal.

Crank it up

which registers a number on
quality. intensity and volume
used in determining the win-

Charles L Bickel

Road ·closed

.

TEMPE, Ariz. - Sen. John
Kerry said Wednesday night
that President Bush bears
responsibi lity for a misguided war in Iraq . lost jobs at
home and mounting mi II ions
without health care. The
Republican incumbent tagged
his rival in campaign debate
as a lifelong liberal bent on
raising taxes and government
spending.
"There's a mainstream in
Afnrrican politics and you sit
righ\ on the far left bank ,"
Bush said in the final debate
of a close and contentious
campaign for the White
House. '' Your record is such
that Ted Kennedy, your col-

underway in the Techmobile .
Students include a retired
teacher, a business owner.
and a young woman eager to
find an oiTice job.

CHESTER
- Chester
Town ship Board of Tru stees
will hold a meeting at 7 p.m.
on Oct. 18 at Chester Town
Hall .

eve n

Our main concern in all stories 1s to be
accurate. II you know df an error 1n a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·

stances.

twisted its meaning .
"Senator Kerry last night
said that America has to pa\S
some sort of global test." he
told a jeering audience in
Allentown, Pa .. "before '"'
can use American troops to
defend ourselves .... Li&gt;ten .
I'll continue to work with our
allies and the international
community. But I will never
submit America's natiomtl
security to an international
test. The use of troops to
defend America must never ·
be subject to a veto by cmmtries like France."
Almost needless to say.
Kerry said almost th e opposite. He ;tffirmed that "the
president always has the
right and always has had the .
right for preemptive strike."
He said he would never
compromise that. but wou!J
act in a way that "passes th e
global test where your countrymen. your pwple. understand fully why you're doing
what you're doing. And you
can prove to the world that
you did it for legit imate rcasons. "
·
In short. Kcrrv thtnks th e
president shou!Ll act like the
leader of a JemocT&lt;tl'\'. with
what the Declarati.on uf
Jnuependem·e called
"
decent re spect for the opin -

Obituaries

Trustees meet

~2 Wee 'f.'-

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

war, what Kerry called his
"colossal error of judgment,"
would be hard to imagine . A
shrewd debater would have
seen it coming. Of course,
hardly anybody imagines
that this President Bush has
read his father's book. As
Junior has scornfully told us.
he doesn't do "nuance."
Besides, Kerry's the kind of
person he has openly resented all his life - born to privilege like him, but with
many of the virtues of his
cl&lt;tss. intellectual achievement and physical courage
among them.
Bush never really recovered. He spent most of the
debate praising his own
dckrmination and repeatedly condem ning "mixed mess&lt;tges." like a parrot with a
stunted vocabulary. The
effect was to magnify his
worst faults: his inability to
mlmit error or change his
mind in altered circum-

HAVE YOU CoNSIDERED
THREATENING THEM WITH

THE FLU?

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs

Inside Meigs County
13Week"
.'30. 15
26 Wee ks
.. ~60 00

Correction Policy

and who's failing?

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 10Gene
run "mercy" rule. If it had
Lyons
been a college football
game. sportswriters would
have chided John Kerry for
scheduling a pushover like
"You know the presidem's
George W. Bush.
father."
Kerry said. "did nut
Anybody who thinks Bush
"won" his first encounter go into Iraq into Baghdad
with Kerry is probably still beyond Basra. And the reain the market for Chicago son he didn't is, he said, he
Cubs playoff tickets. It was- wrote in his book. because
n't simply that Bush lost the there was no viable exit
argument. He made the most strategy. And he said our
fundamental political mi s- troops would be occupiers in
take of all: He believed his a bitterly hostile land . That's
own - well. "propaganda " exactly where we lind ouris a word I can get into the selves today. There's a sense
of American occupation."
newspaper.
Kerry accurately summaUnprepared for an opponent of Kerry's ability. rized Presidem George H.W.
Bush let his inner punk Bush's book. "A World
show: smirking, sneering. Transformed" (Alfred A.
rolling his eyes and &gt;lump- Knopf. 1998). Invading Iraq
ing over the lectern like a during the 1991 Gulf War. he
petulant teen . At times. the wrote. "would have incurred
pre sident appeared visibly incalculabl e human and
angered that anybody, political costs .... The coalimuch
less
the tion would ins tamly have
Massachusetts senator he'd collapsed. the Arat&gt;s desertmocked as a "tlip-flopper" ing it · in anger and other
to invitation-only crowds of allies pulling out as we ll .
GOP activists. was allowed Under the circumstances.
to contradict him. At times. there was no viable 'exit
he looked visibly confused. strategy' we could see.
I'm not much on psy - Had we gone the imw·.inn
chodrama. but given Bush's route. the United States
personal history. the most cou.ld conceivably "ill he an
telling moment may have occupying power in a bittercome early in the debate. ly hostile land. It would ha ve
when Kerry. a tall. ari sto- been a dramatically dillcrcnt
cratic New Englander: Ivy - and perhaps barren out·
League scholar, athlete and come."
It was a telliilg blow. ;\
war hero, paraphrased the
words of a former U.S. pres- better description of the catident with a biography much astrophe caused t&gt;y President
like his own. ·
Junior's rash stampede Ill

There has been a lot in the
news lately about a "pre·
emptivc strike." We should
take the fight to them. Better
to tight them on their territory than in U.S.A.
Let's look at it. A preemptive strike is what a school yard bully does to take some
kid's lunch money. A preemptive strike is what a
mugger uses to rob some little old lady. A preemptive
strike is what Japan did to us
at Pearl Harbor. It was called
a "cowardly, sneak attack".
The 9111 attack was a preem ptive attack.
Judge Judy says "the first
one to strike another is th e
agg ressor and guilty. " I
t&gt;elieve a swift and sure
retaliation would be a better
choke. I don't think yo u
should paddle. a child until
he doe~ \o mething wrong.
The War on Terror'' If I had
a pack of the finest cnon'dous
and I hunted three vears ~u1d
ncvc'r ca ught a cooti' - never

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Who's passing the test

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

MIDDLEPORT The
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Department will hold a basket bingo at the Middleport
legion hall Thursday. Doors
will open at 5 p.m with
games to begin at 6 p.m.

Correction
POMEROY
The
Rutland
Volunteer
Fire
Department was omitted
fromThe Daily Sentinel's
Fire Prevention Week information. The station is located
on Ohio 124. Dave Davis is
the chief, and the emergency
contact telephone number is
992-6663.
That is the telephone number for fire emergencies in all
Meigs County townships.

Correction
POMEROY- In Sunday 's
article "Health Care Crisis. In
Meigs County" Holzer Clinic
Athens was incorrectly identified as offering services on
a sliding fee scale based on
income. None of the branches
of Holzer Clinic bill for services on a sliding fee scale.

Officers
from Page A1
Federal
Emergency
Management .
Agency
(FEMAJ meetings. Buckley
was earlier appointed to
Council following the resig-

FEMA
from Page A1
disaster occur in the future'!
In a press release issued in
flood-stricken counties on
Wednesday, FEMA offers the
following tips to business
owners who might face
another devestating flood or
other natural disaster:
• Do a risk analysis for the
most probably type of disas·
ter: flood, wind, snow, fire:
• Develop both emergency
and recovery plans for the
business. Plan in 'lldvance
what to do if a disaster
occurs.
including
what
employee assignments might
be. Practice the assignments.
Create a plan to recover after
flood waters recede. or conditions return to normal.
• Purchase tlood insurance .
Any business owner can buy
tlood insurance for structure

MIDDLEPORT - Jeff Jones
and sons, Bradley and Taylor, of
Middleport competed recently in
the International Bowhunters
Organization
W9rld
Championships 3 D archery competition at Snowshoe Mountain
Resort. W.Va .
Bradley 14. who finished tirst in
2003, repeated his world championship in the Youth Male Fingers
class of the tmphy division. He is a
member of several archery tmmutactures shooting staffs ~md is cLtrrently a
freshmen at Meigs High School.
Taylor I0, competed for hi.' tl1ird
year in the Future Bowhunters Cia."

governments are under th L:

rule s and gu ide lines '\Ct
forth
in
thi s
U.S.
Constitution . The po wer.
privilege. and responsibility of voting is ours. Plea .se
find out . what you r other
representative · voices arc
'speak ing' for yo u. Jr yo u
don't agree, simpl y go to
the poll November 2 and
replace
I hat
\'Otc·e.
America's destiny trul y tS i11
the hands of the \'Oicr.s .
Gerri Tate
New Haven, »: H-1.

rc~idc~

in :.r hody of

citi 1 e n ~

cl)titlcd to vote &lt;111d is cxcreised hy clcctc&lt;l repre scn tatil cs rc·sptH1 , iblc to th em

Celebnding spedtll
· days with you!
•

Sunday Times-Sentinel (740) 446-2342

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Show Off Your "~umpkin" ~

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In The Sentmel

PUMPKIN PATCH~
Thursday,
October 21

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Headed for
communis111?

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t.e.

Th is co untry '"" foull&lt;l,·d
as " Republic . Whc'll ""' II

IJI...' Ill~&gt; CI.tL~ ' \)
/\m~ri can:-;· oi~Cil . \\\..' in ~ Ol'l ~llt·..., lll' \r ~,_ \'&gt;~'
'-11) \\L' li\~ in a dcnwnacy.
headed for L' OIIlllllttl l" ll t· 1
Hob 1'/romp.w n
l'omeroy

Taylor.Jones was the reci pient of a mountain bike for
h1s high score in the Future Bowhunters Class . He IS Brad ley .Jones. left. displays h1s Youth Ma le Fingers trophy won at the
pictured with his father Jeff.who has been involved in · Snowshoe Mo~ntain Resort archery competition . His father, Jeff. won
a trophy in the Male Bowhunter Fingers class.
arche ry contests stnce 1990.

- -··-----·- - .

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Khloie Billings

per Ad

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Think'

Qn\y
$8.00

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IHIIIe\cr. this i.s not til e
cctsc·. \\'e. ctre a Lkmocratic·
rc·puhlt c. We elect mc·n and

He said quality, · intensity
and volume determines the
score generated on the computer screen which the audience can see. Doors to the
cars are shut during the judging
process,
Quickel
explained, adding "it's not
real loud like you think it
might be."
While pre-registration is
preferred it can be done
Saturday before the judging
begins.
First Southern .will have a
booth serving hotdogs and
other refreshments, and
Pepi si has donated pop.
For registation information
call 992-6677 or 992-6485.

of the lBO. He smred a 99 out of a
100 and received a boys mounlltin
bike from lBO president ken Watkins
as a prize. Taylor has been a member
of Bm•1ech Archerys Team Rascals · ~
and is currently in the 5th gmde at the
Meigs lmennediate School.
Jeff. who has competed in 3D
·~
archery contests since 1990.
placed third in the Male ~
Bowhunter Fingers trophy class at
the same lBO shoot.
· ~
All three archers are members of ~ Pictures will run:
th' Chester Bowhunter and
Thursday,
Archery Club and the lBO and are ··~
October28
aftiliated with Five Points Archery ~
of Pomeroy owned by Bill Sim.
·~
'
.;,: Deadline for Entry:

tllld ~ ()\&gt;.' l"lllll~ aCl.'Ordin,;.; IO · L'hallgl' Ill! \
li.t\\ .

ners."

29 cars last year and a crowd
of about 300. It is sponsored
by First Southern Baptist
Church, K92 The Frog, and
Mountain Dew.
The competition will be
run by rule of MECA, and
the judge will be the owner
and operator of a stereo shop
in Jackson.
Bill Quickel of Southern
Baptist who is actively
involved in plans for the
event described the judging.
"Contestants can play their
own song or a CD provided
by the judge. The microphone is put inside the car
and hooked to a computer

Jones boys do good at archery contest

the trad ilional one man. one
' \\olll:lll tn arriag~, vOte them

out of oll ice.
The word democracy
mean.s ru le of the people. A
rcpuhlic is a government in
ll·hich supreme · ·power:

from PageA1

tOne subject pe

r Pum'tl\cln)

"Love l'a! ..
Montnt)' &amp; l)addy

Mail or drop off at the Daily Se.ntinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy OH 45769

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From :
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�Page

Thursday, October 14, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.com

A6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel .

INSIDE
The Extra Point, Page 82
Prep football standings, Page 82

Bl

•

Thursday, Ol."tober 14, 2004

Prep Schedule
Thu111day, October 14

Linda Maxey and ·Galaxy Percussion
on stage.at Ariel on Saturday ·
GALLIPOLIS An explosive
evening of exciting percussion comes to
the Ariel Theater, with one oft he world's
leading marimbists, Linda Maxey.
Maxey will be joined onstage with J)l!r·
cussion trio, Galaxy Percussion: Roger
Braun,Tony DiSanzaand Michael Udow.
.I'
'
'{'his virtuostic and inspiring music will .
dazzle and amaze the audience.
Linda Maxey and Galaxy Percussion
will take to the Ariel stage on Saturday,
Oct. 16 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $10 at the
door. A student is admitted free if
accompanied by a paying adult• ·.
This "once ·in a lifetime" perfor·
mance opportunity is pJ'!!Iiented as part
of the Great Artist Se~ies, with proceeds
benefiting · the ~prris and Dorotb~
Haskins Ariel;fheatre.
., '; ·,,,
.
History will be made at the Ath:l ' ,,: ·
Linda Maxey
Theater, Due to the excellent al:qrstics~ for Broadway touring shows.
Anthony DiSanza, an active interna·
the Ariel will the site of a profesSional
recording featuring Maxey and Galaxy tiona I performer and educator, has per·
Percussion during the days leading up formed, presented clinics and held resi·
to the benefit concert.
Linda Maxey W!lli the first marimbist d~!f~Cies throughout the U.S. and Japan.
on the pn!,Stigious' roster of ColumbU.· Michael Udow is principal percussion·
Atrtists Management in New York and ist with the Santa Fe Opera, and has
has perfobnl!!i hundreds of community headed the percussion program at the
concens in almost every state in the UniversityofMichigansince 1982. Udow
union •. S~e has performed ton National has received numerous awards, as weD as
Public · Radio, United '' States and acclaim for composition including a
European televisioni with the U$. Fulbright-HayesFellowshiptoP(lland.
DepartmentofDefellse,andmanymore.
Music lovers of all ages are encour·
Roger Braun, associate professor and aged to take advantage of this rare and
director of percussion studies at Ohio unique opportunity to enjoy four
University, al~o has performance expe· world-class performers live. Tickets
"In the Mood"
rience that spans idioms of con tempo· will be available at the door.
rary, classical, jazz, popular and world
For more Information, contact the
music. He has performed with many Mqrris and Dorothy H1111klN A,riel
RIO GRANDE - "In the Mood,"
year~. "fn' tli~ Mood'' has conlinued to well-known artists, and 1!;;'; 1 per~lonlst
Theatre at 7 40-446-ARTS (1787),
~
'
I
~
1940s musical, as part of its 2004· nation· impact audiences with sell out perfor·
aJ tour wiU be performing at •\le, J!:in~ aQd . manc.es ev.erywhere.
Performing Arts Center at tbe University
Through its musical influence, it
.l
,,,
of Rio Grande, for the second in the became part of the official entertainment
'
POMEROY - Wadclle Mitchell and the'Cantl'ells will appear in concert at
series of Valley Artist Series Concerts, on for the World USO's 50th commemoraThursday, Oct. 21 at 8 p.m.
.
tion of World War 11 events. "In the Jorma Kaukonen 's F!Jr Peace Ranch at 8 p.m. Saturday.
Tickets are $18 in advance and $20.at'the gate. They may be obtained from
Season ticket holders already have Mood" has performed and toured both in
their tickets for this exciting concert. the U.S. and Europe, and for the Clinton The Court Grill in Pomeroy or by phone with major credit cards by calling
(740) 992-6228.
'
However, individual tickets for the con- presidential inaugural ball.
cert will be available at the door for $20.
".I n the Mood" is written and directed
Much more than a concert, "In the by Washington's John Moran, with
Mood" takes a retro look at the life and choreography by New York City 's
time of America's greatest generation - Thomas Mills, with creative and mii.Sical
a generation that was listening and dane· insights selected by Washington's im!islcal
POMEROY- The Mudfork Blues Band will play at the Court Street Grill at
ing to the same kind of music.
producer, Bud Forrest. The reVIle feu9 p.m. Saturday. The cover charge is $5.
With music and dance that combined lures the . In the · Mood Singers and
For more information call 992-6524 or email jackie@courtstreetgrill.com
up-tempo big band rhythms to mellow
Intimate ballads, the mood was set to Dancers with the sensational String of
inspire a future filled with hope, promise Pearls big band orchestra with arrangeand prosperity. This was a time like no ments, costumes and choreography as
other in our nation's history, a time when authentic as it gets.
Season ticket holders are reminded of
music moved the Nadon's spirit.
McARTHUR -The anngaJ Leaf Peep sp&amp;nsored by the Vinton County Pilots
Come experience the swing, rhythm, this second concert in the series of six
jazzy, brassy, sentimental and romantic concerts making up the 2004-05 season. and Booster Association will bj: held at the Vinton County Ail:port, five miles
Those wanting to purchase individual or north of McArthur off Ol;lio 93 on Airport Road, beginning .at 11 a.m. Sunday.
music of this important time.
Residents will be giveil the ol;iportunity to·•'J;leep,. at\ tbe C:Ili!DltDg tolor of
Bud Forrest Entertainment began additional tickets may do so at the door
leaves from the alr. ,J.~ 14d!tlon to taking airplliM rides, food will be serv~d.
.
touring "In the Mood" in 1994 following for $20 each the evening of the concert.
For more inrongatton eall Vinton County Pilots and BOc!stel'fl · ~tion
an overwhelming response from a perfor·
For additional information · or to
president
Nick Rupert · at (740) . 357-0268, or the alr!Jott · at ' (740)
mance on the steps of the National reserve tickets f11r the Oct. 21 jtn the
596-2588.
. '
.
.
Archives in Washington. For over 10 Mood" concert, call (740) 245-73 .
''

'40s musical will put audience 'In the Mood'
a

Weekend concert at FUr
Peace
Ranch
.
~:;'•

Mudfork Blues Band to play

Pilots ,offer 'leaf peep' from sky

Gallipolis to celebrate
GALLIPOLIS
The annual'
Founder's Day celebration is scheduled
from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 16 1n
the Gallipolis City Park.
The event celebrates the founding
of Gallipolis and the signifi cance of
the founders.
The event will feature free beans and
cornbread for all. The French Art Colony
will be painting faces for kids and adults.
There will be musical performances by

local high school bands and choirs, a barbershop quartet, the Down by the Banks of
the Ohio dulcimer group, Evans Smalley,
who will sing the French national anthem,
and Samantha Barnes, who will sing, "The
Star Spangled Banner."
Barry Williams will display his arrow·
head collection and other Native
American artifacts, all the while appear·
ing in character. A quilt show will be held
at the Our House during the day.

Founder~s

Revolutionary War re-enactors will be
present with demonstrations from Gen.
Lafayette, Col~ Robert Safl'ordandothers.
Kara Lewis, . director of Welsh
Studies at the tlni versity of Rio
Grande, will ba.ve a booth set up .dis·
playing tbe area's ricb·Welsh heritage.
Many of the organizers for the event will
be present, dressed in circa 1790 clothing,
to answer any questions anyone might
have of Founders Day.

Day .
There will lie many door prizes,
donated froQ}'area businesses, raffled
ofh.v ery bour.
.
"It's lmportnat to remember where we
came from," said Bob Hood, director or
the :,G allla f;,:ounty Convention and
VIsitors Bureau. .
For more information on Founder's
Day, contact the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors Bureau at
(740) 446-6882.

·Bridge
Mason, WV 25280
Phone(304)773J.5323 ,

t'

· ·· 2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMi'f'1) .
Gallipolis, Ohio 4$831
.
(740) ~&amp;:1711 '
\

VOlleyball
Gallia Academy at Mariana
South Point at River Valley
VI nton Cou nty at Meigs
Eastern at Trimble
South Gallia at Ha nnan
Southern at Federal Hocking

Soccer
Alexander at Gallia Academy
F~d.,Y,

October 15

Soccer
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian
Volleyball
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian
Saturday, October 1 6
Cross Country
Gallia
Acad(imy
a1
SEOAL
Championships (at Rio Grande)
Rl\ler Valley at OVC Meet (at Fairland)

Votloyboll

Eagles return home for Hocking showdown
BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydai lytribune .com
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eag les return to East
Shade Ri ver Stadi um this
Friday when they host the
Miller Falcons in a critical TriVal ley Conference Hocking
divis ion showdown.
The Eagles (4-3, 1- 1 TVC
H ockin~) are coming off an
impress1ve 27- 18 victory over
Federal Hocking and still have
h i~ h hopes of ,reaching the
Dtvision VI playoffs.
Conversely. Miller (2-5, 1-1)

enters this week off a 35-6
drubbing of Southern last
Friday and has hopes of continuing its fonunes in league
play.
The Falcons are led by new
head coach Mike Schlosser,
)Who brought in a new offense
and defense to a team that had
a combined 3-25 record entering this season.
Miller runs a hybrid of the
Wing-T and the offense is led
by a four-year starter at quarterback, senior Curt Mauro (6foot-2, 170) and running back
Jordan Gottke (5-7, 140).
Last week again st the

Tornadoes, Mauro threw for
IOS yards on 3-uf- 10 passing
and Gottke had eight carries
for I00 yards.
Fullback Justin Aichele (6-0,
220) had a breakout pertormance last week, amassing
134 yards on I0 carries.
Wllh a pair of dynamic
threats in the backtield for
· MHS, the offensive front
returns three starte rs from a
season ago in Dustin Mitchell
(5- 11, 175). Aiex Reynolds(62, 250) and tight end Ryan
Bice (6-3. 205 ). Filling t!Je
holes up front are Bill y
Appleman (6-1. 209). JJ.

Hatfield (5- 11 , 165) and Adam
Bragg (6-0. 280).
Jared Bolyard (6-0. 160) and
Jeffrey Connell (5-g. 145)
complete the Miller offen'e at
wi ng back .
Defensivel y. Miller run' an
unconventional 3-5 attack thar
features a multitude of blitz
packages.
The Fa lcons are led by inside
linebackers Ail:hele , Mitchell
and J.R. Irwin (6-0, 170). Zach
Osborne (6-0, 150) and Bice
round out the outside linehackino corps for MHS.
·
Miller is big· up front on
defense with Bragg. Jason

Ohio Valley Christian at ACSI Reg ionals

Shom (6-:! . :!'10) and Re\ nul d,.
leading the interior attalk
Mauro returns at , afety. and
Gottkc and Bolyard man the ·
co rner

po ... it ion ~ .

Co nnell

'er ~c '

a' 1hc nid .Je back.
Miller allowed 205 yard' on
the ground la.., t \\r'CCk against
Southern and :! 52 O\ Crall.
while the Falcon' racked up
360 yard' of total offen'e en
route to ib vil:tory.
Miller also accumulated 90
yards of penalties last week. so
they have a propemity to make
mistake. . .
Kick-off i' 'chedul ed for
7:30p.m.

Monday, October 18
Valle~ ball
Gallia Academy at Ri¥er Valley
Ohio Valley Christiall al Hannan

Tutoday, Oct- 19
Soccer
Teays Valley at Ohi o Valley Christian

Volleyboll
Southern , Meigs at Rive r Va lley
Teays Valley at Ohio Valley Christian
Tuesday, October 26

Soccer
Cross l,anes at Ohio Val ley Chnstian

OSU preseason
No. 1 pick of Big
Ten coaches
COLUM BUS (AP) - The
Ohio State wo men's bas ketball team. coming off a 2 110 record and a tri p to the
NCAA to urnament. was
picked Wednesday to fini ' h
first in the coaches' Big Ten
prese ason poll , beating out
Mi chi gan
State
and
Minnesota.
In medi a balloting. Purdue
was pi cked fi rs t. th e
Buckeyes ' second and Penn
State No . 3.
In additio n, Oh io Stat e
sophomore ce nter Jess ica
Da ve nport , selected as the
Big Ten's top freshman a
year ago. was selected to
both the media and coaches ·
pre season
all-co nfe rence
teams.
Dave nport averaged 12.5
point s. 5. 7 rebounds and 2.6
bloc ked shots per game last
season.
The Buckeyes return fo ur
starters for the 2004-05 season . including Dave nport
and second team All-Big Ten
selec tion Ca ity Matter.
Coach
Jim
Foster's
Buckeyes fin ished third in
the Bi g Ten and made it to
the second round of the
NCAA tournament.

Gibbs hires
Leffler, adds
third Cup entry

.Meigs makes
short work of
Vinton County

"

·~

.'

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- -

..........

one. The lead grew to 17-9
BRYAN WALTERS
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com before the Vi kings were
forced to use a timeout to
the MH S momentum .
ROC KSP RI NGS - The stop
Garnes made sure the
Meigs volleyball team made mom entum
wouldn 't
short work of the Vinton change
hands, as she served
County Vikings on "Senior six straight points for the
Night'' Wednesday with a
25-9 game one win.
resoun d in ~ 25-9. 25- 15, 25Me igs wasted little time
9 victory. ~
in
game two. opening a 10The Marauders ( II -7. I0- 4 lead
after Garnes came up
6 TVC ) celebrated the
a kill for Meigs. The
caree rs of se niors Emil y with
Ma raude rs would extend
Ashl ey. Mega n Ga rnes. their lead to as much as 2 1Cass ie Lee. Renee Bailey, 10 be fore eve ntuall y cl osi ng
Erin Cullum s and Justine the ga me with a kill by
Dow ler hefore the ga me
Ashley for a 25- 15 win.
with a video presentat ion
Up 2-0 in the final game,
tha t covered the girls' play- G"rnes serve d Meigs out to
ing uays back to jumor l1ig h.
a 6-0 "dvantage.
The emo ti onal footage
Juni or Samantha Co le had
ser veu as ins pi rati on to
an
"ce to extend the lead to
those in attenda nce. and 10-3.
then Bailey foll owed
part ic ularl y the six senior' with "kill for an 11-3 edge .
who have been so dedi cated
The lead grew to 17-5 folto the MHS program. And
lowing a big kill by Brittany
their response was exactly Hyse ll. forc in g the Yi kes to
what Meigs coach Ric k Ash use a timeout.
wa nted for a ha ppy ending.
Th e pause didn' t kill the
"It wa s a highly-e motion- momentum. it just proal pre-match ceremony hon- longed the inev itable .
orin g the six. se ni or~ ... said Following another Ga rnes
Ash. "They we nt out and kill that made 20-7 in favor
beat a very good Vinton
of Meigs. the Marauders
Co unt y team and o ur ·we nt on a 5-2 run that was
se ni ors were ready to pl ay
capped with a defensive
t o ni ~ ht. We wanted to ~o
bloc k by Cole for the fina l
out ()11 a good note and
point of the night.
just dominated. and I was
Cole Jed MHS wi th 10
very pleased with the whole kill s and fi ve blocks , and
team effort toni ght. "
Meigs got dow n to busi- also added six poi nts in the
ness early and often. openPlease see Work. Bl
ing a 6-2 lead earl y in game

•.

we

Meigs · Renee Bailey spikes the ball during her team ·s stra ight games victory ove r V1nton
County Wednesday. (Bryan Walters/ photo)

Marauders try to Southern, Waterford both
stop short skid seeking third win Friday

CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP)
- Jason Leftl er will dri ve a
third Joe Gibbs Rac ine e ntrv
next year in the NA~SCA R
BRYAN WALTERS
Nextel Cup seri es .
bwalters@
mydailytribune.com
Team president J.D . Gi bbs
th at
said
Wedne sday
Leffler's Chevrolet will be
AL BANY - The Meigs
sponsored by FedEx. Leffler
Marauders travel to Albany
will be a teammate to returnthis week still in search of
ing former serie s champions
their
first
Tri- Valley
Tony Stewart and Bobby
Conference Ohio victory of
the year when they take on the
Labonte .
Alexander Spartans this
The deal with FedEx came
Friday.
together th rough team ow ner
The Marauders (4-3, 0-2
Joe Gibbs, who returned to
TVC
Ohio) are sti ll mat hethe NFL th is season as coach
matically
ali ve fur a piayolf
of the Was hington Redskin s
berth
and
desperately need a
and whose team plays at
wm to keep those dreams a
FedEx Field in Landover.
real ity, and Alexander has traMd.
dit ionally been a good place to
The 29-year-old Le ffl er
start back on the wi nni ng
has competed in all th ree of
track.
NA SCAR ' s top divisions as
The Spanans (3-4, 0·2) are
a com hined 0-37 in Ohio diviwell
as
the
2000
sion play. but this year 's squad
Indi ana poli s 500. He · won
ha' not been the normal AHS
three consecut ive U.S. Auto
team that people have come to
Club natio nal midget title s
know.
from 1997- 1999 and the
Led by tirst-year coach Eric
I 998 USAC Si lver Crown
Stephens,
Alexa nder has
championship. ·
exceeded
mo.
,t e.xpectations
Leffl er · scored hi s first
this year with three wi ns over
Busc h Series victory in Ju ne
Athens. Miller and River
at Nas hville Superspeedway
Valley early on and are lookand has made 33 Cup ; tarts ,
ing to. cont inue the win ning
including 30 for Chip
way"' thi:-. ye ar.
Ganass i Racing in 2001.
Alexander runs a West
Dave Rogers. race engi- ·
Coas{, 'iyle otknse and likes
, to . spread opposing defense'
neer fo r Stewart,' wi ll be
out to open up oppo11unities
Leftler' s crew chief on the
No. II car. ·

Watert.ord trai ku for most
of the game a~;unsl Miller.
but the- Wi ldcat s rallied to
score three touchdown s in the
fourth quaner and do\\·ned
Miller.' 33-21 . in that TriValley Conference game.
In the fi nal quarter.
Waterford scored on a 16yard nm by Jarrod Jenks. a
66-vard run b; Ja,on
Sanips&lt;'&gt;n and' a 33-)·ard in terception by Jenks with four
m1 nutes to play tha t g;l\ e the

Scon WOLFE
Sports correspondent

tor hi s young squad.
Alexander is led by quanerback Zach Hedrick (5-foot-6.
135 pounds). who reclai med
the po&gt;it ion last week after
spendi ng most of the season at
wideout. In his return last
wee k against Vinton County.
Hendrick had a rough go of
things with a 37-yard performam:e on 3-ot~6 passing.
He replaced Tony Costanzo
(6-0. 165 ). who moved to
wide receiver last week and
had two catches for 26 yards.
Costanzo was joi ned by Rylan
Ki rkendall (5-1 0. 150) and
Corv Bean (5-I0, 140) on the
outside.
the main thr.:at out of the
backfield i&gt; tai lback Sina
James (5- I0. 160). who
amassed just 24 yards Oil
~eve n l'.i.UTie... last week a gain~t

Please see Meigs, Bl

I

RACINE - Thi s Friday
night Southern take s its
troops on the road to
Washington Coun ty where
the Tornadoes will rumbl e
with the Watert'ord Wildcats
(2·4, 1- 1).
Last week. the vi siting
Miller Falcons spoiled the
Southern Tomadoes ' Home,comi ng 35-6 at RogeF Lee
Adatm Memorial Field.
Southern (2- 5. D-21 he ld
tough tmtil halftime. but a
'econd .hal f surge h) the
Falcons (~ -5 . 1-11 1umbkd
the Tomadoes. Miller was 5.1245 ru s h i n ~ overal L
There are two common
opponent' betwee ti the two
schools. Waterford defeated
Franklin Furnace Green 14-9
in the third game of the season. and defeated Vl iller 332 I. Southern lo"t to Green 3J7 and lost to Miller last week
· 35-6. Waterford defeated
Mil ler handi ly. so one wou ld
expect "game over" ri ght''
Not exactly 1 Sout hem ha'
come too tar in both m&lt;&gt;rale
and improvement this season
;rnd refu&lt;e' to go down ea, il ~· :
and perhaps Watertord w11l
let down it' ~ u ard .
·'

I
·~--------

u.

,...--. - - - -

\Vild cat s an insuran ce

-

+

-·-

~core .

Southern "i ll ll J \ ~ to face
''' o ptnverfu l runner " tn
Sampson and Jcn~ ' - who tln ·i, hed the Mi ller game " 1th
n c a r~y
tl stic~

ha..,
been )...no\\ n· fur ' tro ll c''
.

lunuamental football dOJ ah o
ha., rn calcd 'omc tric k
offenses or gadge1 plavs he
has had up hi., ,Jec\e. ·
Southem lllJtches up hener
with Waterford than i1 did
wi th enher Fede ral H oc~ ing' s
speed or \1 illcr's size.
Wat erfnrd. howe,·er. does
ha,·e 'nme athlete&gt; th;rt must
be kept in d1eck
La&gt;t " cc k. Southem was
led h\ anot her ''tll&gt;tandi nu
nmni tl!2 :!ame fnm1 fre"hmafl
Huh.: h . _ \l arnhuu t. \\ht' ~ ~ne
trcmendn u. . " l'L'll ll J a 11 J lhu·d
clfol1' Ill r'hling illl J~ - 1 7 9
ru . . hinl.! ~;!Ilk' h~..· h'l\' !.:.C tt i n~

idcn1i ca1 runn in~ ~ la ­ 1,n_ilm.~ a In tlw third rcrinJ
,dl-pu rp{)..,c
as Samp . . un Larricd 21 \ Llrnh tnll·..,

tinic' for 163 vard' ;md Jenb \ard:.H!l' ' etJt h1 rn \\~II tl\l'l
ru shed n ti mes fo r 16 1 ihc c( ltl~ \ ard 111.111 tor the
\! J ill\." !&gt; the
rc"t .,,! the
varJ:- .
· Bradl cv Lang " the ~ou th L~rn Qruund 12anw ~ar ­
Waterford qua rterbac ~ . He ncreJ unh... 2h ~_nt?ra\ 1 ,Jflt...
does a ~re a l 10b nf s i ~ n a i L·all­ anJ -+7 ' ai·d, pas,1ng . ·
inu. is "s mm1th in the. transi"
~ 1 arn h o ut.
h.,,\\C\ ~ r.
1..,
tion. and can al &gt;i&gt;pa" we ll.
quc,tinnable '"In " hethcr he
Agai nst Miller Lah ~ " "' 3- can (\llll~ h ad·~ tUII . . trenf!th
1~ wi th several near nl i»e' to after 'tra 1 n i n~ hi.' k ft rot~tor
recei vers Kvie Kincaiu 1-7, cuff. Al"l. il1j ured i' 'emor
Ryan Paxt oti 1·34. and \latt ll~hl enJ tmd defe nsl\·e
Townsend I-3R .
,,;·pn ~ lh&gt;ld J.r k ~ :-o;ea,e. " h0
That trio is ' e 1~ capable ·" ,uftcl·cJ . a J..nee 1n jur' At
well as ho1h JenJ..s anu in iJ -\\ cl'k. '-:i:(I,C is' hc;peful
Samp,oo out of the h ac ~
fie ld. Coach Dou g BaiJ\1 in
Please see Seeking. Bl

.
.,........

'

�.f

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 14,

www .mydailysenrinel.com

Thursday, October 14, 2004

2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.
+l'
'

The OVP

utrlbune - Sentinel - l\eglster
CLASSIFIED
We Cove

M"''IP Counl1 0 11

Meigs, Gallla,
And .,eson
Counties Like
No One ,
Elftl Can!

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S MATCHUPS

.

A look at the regton's top
football teams, as voted by
Ohto Valley Publtshtng Co
staffers. (First-place votes
1n parentheses)
Team
Prev. Votes
1. Ironton (5)
t
66
2. Huntington (1)
2
62
3 Wayne
3
46
4 Wheelersburg
5
38
5. Williamstown
6 35
7
28
6. Wahama
7. Parkersburg
.9
21
8 Front1er ( 1)
nr
18
9. Jackson
3
13
10. Parkersburg So 8
11
(tte) Wellston
nr
11
(tte) Tnmble
10
t1
Others receiving voles:
Sheridan 8, Ravenswood 6,
Portsmouth 6, Gallia Academy
2, CrooksVJIIe 2, Parkersburg
CatholiC 1

rP~~ lfQxo~rrrr
Standings ISchedule

Butch Coope r
Spom Wrttt•r
R ecord -lY-21
La~r Week 1- 1
(Ptck m Wllil)

Brad Sherman
Sport~

I \\[ Wt'L'k 9 1
( P~c k " ' h.!llil)

Wt( k 111 lullil)

Gal!ia Academy

Gallia Acade m y

Galha Academy

G allia Academy

at WJrrc n

,It \!il,t rr~n

,JtW.tnl'll

Jt Wam:u

Waha rna 11
Tr,ul

Bulkqc Tn1 l

l'omr l' ll· .t~.lll t

Po jnl Pleasant

Wahama

\\'.t h ,lllLJ .It

8(1~k c,,,Trnl

!'mat Pl e~~.111t
1t Ravenswood

Point p le asant

. Mric1

Coal Grove

2-0

Rook Htll

H

South Potnt

1-1

Fatrland

o-2

Rtver Valley

G-2

5-2
5-2
2·5
2·5
1-6
1-6

.sEQ

AD

Gallta Academy

2.()

4·3

Jackson

1·1

&amp;1

Logan

1-1

2-5

Manetta

H

Warren

H

2·5
2·5

Athens

G-2

1-6

Friday's Games
Gallta Academy at Warren
Athens at Logan
Manetta at Jackson

TVC
'

Ohio Division

TVC

A!!

Wellston

2·0

6·1

Nelsonvtlle-York

2·0

Belpre

1·1

4·3
4·3

Vinton County

H

5-2

Metgs

Q-2

4-3

Alexander

Q-2

3-4

Hocking Division

TI'C

AD

Trimble

2·0

6·1

Eastern

1· 1

4-3

Federal Hooktng

H

2·5

Mtller

H

2·5

Watertord

1-1

2·5

Southern

0·2

2·5

Friday's Games
Metgs at Alexander
Mtller at Easten
Southern at Watertord
Wellston at Nelsonvtlle·York
Belpre at Vinton County
Federal Hooktng at Tnmble

Cardinal

Gama Academ)

Gallja Academy

Gallia Academy

G allia Academy

at Warrt' ll

Jl W1rru 1

11 \'~hrn·n

Waharna at
Buc kc)e Tr,u l

Wabama Jt
But k&lt;.:\\: frJd

But k ~H Tr.u l

Point Pleaunt
at R 1\'~llS\\Ood

Pomt 1-'l e a~ mt
,Jt Ravens wood

Pmnt l'l ta~.Hll
,It Ra\·cmwoo d

Ra'\'en swood

11

1\.

Jt

IH'mwnod

.Jt

Warrt' n

Waham a

at R1 vaV: Jik·~

11 RnerV.tlk·~

11R1HI Vdl tl

So utl l(' rn .It
Waterford

S()uthl rn 1r

".uurllt rn .tt

Southl'TTI .n

Waterford

Waterford

Waterford

South Pomt

1t R J\&lt;.rV Jlk t

1r R lllrVtlk,

II l li\ Ll VIII&lt;)

Southt·rn Jt

Sotl11t~·m ,\f

Snu thl'rn .tt

Waterford

Warerford

Waterford

Southern ,II
W.ttt rtortl

lnmtn n It
Portsmouth

Hamhn n
1

Hamlin .n
Suut h (;,dh 1

Hamljn .H
Smn h &lt;~&lt;~lh.1

Hum.1 tr

!-It \Ill 111
Jt Buffalo

1-l illl\,lll

J-i!l!l I Ill

,11 Buffalo

Ironton 1t
l l&gt;lrt.,I1Hl1 l lh

11

Buffalo

11

Iro nt o n ,Jt
Pnl t&gt;tlln ll th

Buffalo

Iron t on It
l\irt,lllOllth

.M_tW It
AIt x llldt•r

~outh )Jolrlt

South Pomt
tt ll nerV.tl k\

rn

Ironton

Jt

l 1ort,t noJ tl h

!-IJrnlt u .1\

South Gama

H amlin

.11

\ntH II

I lu1t1 m

.n lluJTalo

Ironton It
I'ort'lll o Ll th

Ironton 11
l'"rt,l1lc'\lth

liM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BEREA
Chad
Johnson played hts tdea of
a sick joke on the
Cleveland Browns.
The Cmcinnati Bengals'
wtde rece1ver, known for
his qutck feet and bold predictions, sent each of
Cleveland's four defens1ve
backs a package contammg
a handwritten note and a
bottle of medtctne to seule
an upset stomach.
''lthmk some of the guys
are taking tt persondl: · said
Browns cornerback D,tylon
McCutcheon. who got a
good
laugh out of
Johnson \ gesture . " But I
think for the most p.u1, he
ts not an 111-your-face guy.
He JU St ltkes to ha; e tun .
He enjoys playmg footb.tll.
He's a JOkester...
At 2-3 and commg off .t
34-23 Joss to Pittsburgh.
the Brown s already are
fe eling queasy enough
about thetr season. They
host Cincmnat1 on Sunday
and might not find the joke
espectally funn y
But thai wasn' t going to
stop Johnson, who smiled
when asked about hi s prank

from Page 81

Potnt Pleasant

3-1

4·3

2· 1

3-3

Wtnf1eld

1·2

4·2

StSSOnVJIIe

1·4

2·4

o-3
Friday's Games

2·5

#Potnt Pleasant at Ravenswood
Wtnheld at Poca
Stssonvllle at Oak H1ll
Wayne at Tolsta
#Herbert Hoover at Logan

# · Counts at league game

Others
IHm

AD

lnonton

7·0

6·1
5-1

2·5

South Gallia,

Q-6

Hannan

G-7

Frtday'l Ga11111
Wahama at Buckeye Trail
Hannan at Buffalo
Hamlin at South Gall1a
Ironton at Portsmouth .
Valley at Oak Htll

Saturday's Games
Symmes Valley at Notre Dame

Buffalo

Iro nt o n 1t
I'&lt;Ht,mnu th

•
..

FARMHAND

Bengals' Johnson sends
Marshall player gets
Browns message and bottle community se·rvice,
suspended sentence
BY

on the Browns. He satd he
stmpl y v.anted to "cure
them of their sickness" and
suggested "they' re going to
get tired of co,ering me."
lnstde
McCutcheon' s
box, Johnson tossed in a
note that satd : " Daylon,
Ju, t wanted to add a little
col or and reli ef to your
week. All the be st, Chad."
Anthony Henry, Robett
Griffith and Earl Lmle also
recetved F~dEx dehvenes
from Johnson The fourth year wtdeout personah zed
each package, signing the
notes and mcluding his No.
85 next to hiS stgnature.
As tf the Browns needed
the remmder. Two years
ago, Johnson guarunteed a
win over Cle\ eland and
nearly backed n up before
the Beng.tls losl 27- 20
Johnson IMd tour catches
for 103 yards, mcludmg a
72-yard TO
Las t season. Johnson had
the fir st two-touchdown
ga me of hi s career in which
the Bengal s defeated the
Brov.ns 21- 14
Thts se.tson. Johnson has
just one TO catch - 111 the
season opener - hut has
been double-covered more
lhan before and opposing
secondan es have made sure

home f1nale. Ashle y and
Garnes each lm t&gt; hed thetr
fmal home game wtth four
ktlls aptece, wt th Garne&gt; leading the team with 20 pomt s
Ashley had etght pomts m her
fwal contest at MHS .
Renee Bailey and Enn
Cullums each had stx pOints
for the maroon and gold, wnh
Bailey adding seven kil ls and
Cullums contnbutmg three
assists
Cass1e Lee had four pomts
m her finale for Met gs, and
Joey Haning led MHS wtth 20
asststs
For the evemng, Met gs was
70-of-73 at the service line,
and added 30 kill s, 24 ass tsts
and six blocks in the vi ctory.
The junior varsity team also
won its 2004 home fi nale m
stratght games 25-9, 25-8 to
Improve to 17- 1 on the season
Me1g s will conclude its regular season Tuesda y in a tn match at Ri ver Valley The
Marauders and Ratders. along
wnh Southern , will beg1n at 6
p m m Cheshire.

he doesn't get behind them
deep
Johnson , who led the
AFC with 1.355 yards last
season, says the Browns
tend to isolate thetr cornerbacks, and he·, hopmg they
try to cover hun with just
one dclender.
'" I see a lot of man-toman on all the tllm I've
watched thts year. then
every time I get out there.
tt"s somethmg ditterent."
he satd "Hopefully I wtll
gel what I'm seeing on the
ltlm and be able to expose
that."
McCutcheon ts keepmg
thts whole eptsode m perspecttve.
"He 's a good guy,"
McCutcheon satd "We
h,tve a good relationship off
the tootb,dl fteld. He \ a
character. He likes to keep
the game fun . and that's the
way it should be. lt" s about
competition, but he likes to
exptess themselves."
So, will McCutcheon be
scndtng
an ythmg
to
Cinetnnatt the next few
days · labeled·
Chad
John son. One Paul Brown
Drive, Cincmnatt'1
'" Nah. " he said. "I'm JUSt
going to go play on
Sunday ..

Meigs
from Page 81
the Vikings. Fullback Josh Rush !5ll, 21 0) bnngs a brutsmg style to
the backfield v.hen Ale xander
needs to run the footbal l.
The most experience for AHS IS
at the offensive hne , as Core y
Dixon (5-9. 180), Wes Hollon (6-1,
235), Justin Shaulis (6-2, 200) and
Matt Weaver (6-3, 240) all return
from a season ago.Enc Cottenll (60, 230) and Cohn Rtce (6-0, 175)
also see stgnitieant ttme for the
Spartans' offense.
Defenstvely. N1ek Roa' h (5-ll ,
165) and Cody Richards (6- l, 165)
are the bookends for u tiesty defensive front, wtth Hollon, Shauhs
Weaver and Bryn Smathers (6-2,

Seeking
from Page 81

M e1gs' En n Cullum s sets t he ball du r1n g her
team's w1n Wedn esday. (Bryan Walters/p hoto)

ANNOUNG~\IIJVJli

I..OSIANI&gt;
FOUI\1)

74

of playing, but is indeed questtonable.
Also, last week Southern's Jesse
McKnight and Chns Tucker had
fumbl e
recovenes
Ry.m
Donaldson rushed five tunes tor
16 yards, wht le Nease ca ught two

•

Y ·\ IW S \I .I··

Po\11 um /~ lillllll

Dally In-Column: 1 ; 00 p.m .
Monday ~ Frlday

for In5ertlon

In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday Fo,. Sundays Paper

lollov.ing IllS arrest on Jul y 17.
Whil e .tttendmg summ et
school d .ts ses .11 Vtrrr in ta.
Brdds!ht W wtt . ., chargedLwith
unl.mlul purchase .111d possesSIOn of alcohol. possession ol
.m open con t.uner ol aiL'ohol
and ohslructing JUsttce The
obstiuct!n g JU stu.:c c h ~tQ! e wL1s

Iedu cecl

to

ll' SJ slln g a rres t

under the plea agree ment
A true lres hman. Bt adsha-.; "
Matsh.dl 's second l ea dtn~
rusher thi s sc.tson. ga111111 g 160
yards on .14 carries 1n three
gam es He mtsscll two ga mes
hec.tuse" hi gh ,mkle stra111
M.trshall co.tch Bob Pruett
sd1d he 1s g ldd th e ('harges
aga111s1 Btad sh.m have been
resolved.
"That 's behtnd h1111 now and
we ' ll go lmw,ud,'' Pruett satd

190) rotate at the tackle positions
The l111eb.tck111g corps " made up
ol \1au Dcmosky !6-0. 175), Di xon
and Rush, whtle the secondary consists of Costanzo and Ktrkendall at
safety and freshmen Ad,un
McC.uty .1nd Aaron Bach anchor
the comer spots.
The injury bug has al ready taken
a toll on AHS thts seaso n, as pre,
season starter Nick Malesko was
lost at quanerback to a broken leg
and last week kicker and wideout
N tck Bolin wa; lost last week for
the season with a leg inju ry.
Malesko made hts way back tothe
tield last week.
Alexander managed JUSt 54 yards
of total offense last week tound
themselves down 34-0 late in the
third before addmg two touchdowns to bnng the score back to
respecubih ty (34-14).
passes for 38 yards before Jeavwg
the game, and Marnhout one for
len yards.
Derek Teaford has been the stg·
nal caller and commues to hold
that posttton go mg dov.n the
homestretch of his senior year.
Teaford was 4-8 paS&gt;tng last week
for 48 yards and1 had two passe;
intercepted
Ga me tune " 7 30 'p 111 at
Waterford on Fnddl'

•

All Display : 12 Noon 2

Bus!nes&amp;

Days Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

110

HH P W.wn:n

~~-~s-o:~~~~~~~ -n~~:~l~n:

Ft.l"l

r

TM

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

oisplav Ads

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Are you conce rn ed abo ut
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Octobnr 16th BAM 4PM
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Lost Male black &amp; while Tree stand 'Opper lor S- 10 AI lnloClslon you can earn
For 1nformat1on leading to Australian Shepard has colup to SB/hour wh 1le helptng
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Garage and •ns tde rnov •ng
Female Coo n Hound found sa le Frtday SMUiday and Ab sclu te Tor: Ooll&lt;lf US Candtdat e must possess
m June Owner may have Sunday October 15 16 17 S lver ana Go d Cotns strong verbal and wrttten
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Wanr ed 2 3 Bedr oom house Quahfted candidates please
Charla Brown·
w garage Tuppers Plams or conract
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
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r:mo

CHARLESTON , W.Va (AP )
-Marshall Universit y runnin g
back Ahmad Bradshaw won't
have to serve any time 111 Jatl
for charges 111 Virginia tf he
completes commumty ser'lce
and other requi re ments
Brad sha:w pleaded guilty
Tuesday m Charlottesvtll c
(Va ) General Di strict Colli ! lo
reststlng arrest and under.tge
dnnkmg under a plea agreement. An open cont,un et
charge was d1 smi ssed. satd
Commonwealth
Ass1sta n1
Attorney Joe Pl at.1111a
Bradshaw. a nativ e ol
Bluefield, Va, v.as sentenced
to I 0 day s in Jttl ,tnd .t $200
fine on the reststin g arrest
charge but both penalt1e s were
suspended He w,ts sentenced
to community servtce on the
underage dnnkm g charge and
ordered to attend alcohol
awarene ss cl asses, Pl.n .mia
sat d.
''Aftet one yea1. tf he has
done everythm g requtred of
hun, that charge wtll be diSmi ssed," the p10secuto1 s.tid
Bradshaw jOined Marshall\
loot ball team as a walk-on alter
he was dt smt ssed ft om the
Umverslty ot Virgtma"s team

VISA

How you can have borders and graphics
.....,_.
oddedtoyourclassifiedads
(.~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
f!ii11
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES' Ohio Valley Publlthlng ruervel!l the rtght to 11dtl, ri!Jf!CI , or c ancel any ad " ' an~ lime Error s must be reported on the f•r sl da~ oi
Tnbune-Sentlnei-Reg1ster will be reaponal ble lor no more than the coat of the apace occup 1ejj by th!! error &amp;nd only the firs! me.ertr on We
an y ro.. or e•penM that fiSUUs l rom the publh:atto n or omlaslon of an advert.eement Correction will be mode 1n th e l1rat avarlable edltiOf'l
are always co nfld&amp;ntlal o Current u11te ca rd applies o All rea l esta te advertn;emanta are subtect to tl'le Federal Fatr Ho uamg Act of 1968
accepts only help wanted ada meet1ng EOE standards We Wi ll not
I
advertrs10g m vtolat•on ol the law

r

ll illlll!l
I!

&amp;-"*flY

St. Rt. 7) • GaiUpoUs, Ohio

Word Ads

H

( , t!li 1

Previous Champions- 200 I: Butch Cooper--- 2002: Butch Cooper --- 2003: Brad Shennan.

6·0

Helbert Hoover

Mdnday th.-.u Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Oeacltiru-

R jvrr Valh;:y

Hamhn

Jt

Sout h ( .. Jlh.l

H lllll.m
Dutfa lo

11

Off.tee 11o~&amp;'

R avenswood

So uth Po mt

s..,uth P mnt

'iou 1i1 (,,1111

Jt

South Point

South Pomt

E.J\tL

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Pll·.t~JIII

Mrlkr .It
Eastt'rn

South Point

Hamhn .tr
Su LLtlt ( ,,11111

Pomt

Mdlu It
E aster n

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Mr. Staff Report
T tw M.t~ke d P1cker

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Rt•cnJ d =i\-JL)
I ,1q Wed: H-:!

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Bryan Walters

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Apartments lor Rent. ..... ...... .... , .... 440
Auction and Flea Market...... ................. ... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ... ... .. ..... .... .. .. 760
Auto Repair............ .............. .......... .. .......... 770
Aulas lor Sale .................... , ....... ........... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ........... ................ 750
Building Supplies .. ............ . ...... ..... .. 550
Business and Bulldtngs ....... ...... ....... 340
Business Opportunity. .......... .... . ..... ...210
Business Training ............................ ........ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes...... .. ........... .790
Camping Equipment ................................ ... 780
Cards of Thanks ... ..................... ........ OtO
Chtld/Elderly Care .. ....... .......... ........ ........... 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgerallon ... ...... .. . .. 840
Equipment tor Rent... ................................ 480
Excavattng .... ....... .... . . ..
.. .. 830
Farm Equtpmenl.. .. ............... .. .... ..............610
Farms for Rent ... .............................. 430
Farms for Sale ................................ ......... 330
For Lease .... ....... ..... ..... .... .. . . 490
For Sate .. ....... ......... ........ "'""", .............. ,.. ,.. 585
For Sale or Trade ......... . ... ....... . .... ...590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ...................... ........ ...... 580
Furnished Rooms ............... ..... ...... ...450
General Hauling ...................................... .... 850
Giveaway............... ...... ..... .. ... ........... 040
Happy Ada ............................. .......................050
Hay &amp; Grain ......................... ..................... 640
Help Wanted ........................................ ....... 110
Home Improvements .................................. 8t0
Homes lor Sale .......................................... 310
Household Goods .......................... .......... ... 6t0
Houses lor Rent... .......... ......... .. ................ 410
In Memorlam ................................................020
Insurance ....................................... .......... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. .................. ... 660
Ltveatock.. .... .. .... .. .. ......... ..... ...... .. .. •.. ..... . ...630
Loot and Found ...... ........ ................. ............ 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................. ............ 350
Mlacellaneoua.............. ,........ ......... ,........ ,.... 170
Mlscelleneous Merchandise .................... 540
Mobile Home Repair............................ ..... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... ............... ...... . .. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate ................................ 320
Money to Loan...................... ............... .... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers . . ................. .... 740
Musical Instruments.... .. ..... . ..... .......... 570
Personals..... .......................... ................. .. 005
Pats lor Sale ................. ......................... . 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .............. ......... ......... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...... .......... ....... , ... 160
Real Estate Wanted .............. ...................... 360
Schools lnatrucllon. ... ..... . ...... .. .... ...150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
• Situations Wanted ..... ...... ...... ...... ... t20
Space for Rent ....................................... ...... 460
Sporting Goods ... , ..... . ..
..... .. 520
SUV's tor Sale ....... ..................................... 720
TrucksforSale ... ........
.. .. 715
Upholstery ............................................. ... 870
Vens For Sale....... ..... .... ...... .. . . .. 730
Wanted to Buy ............................... ........ 090
Wanted to Buy · Farm Supplies . , .. .
620
Wanted To Do ........................................ t80
Wanted to Rent.. . ....
. 470
Yard Sate· Gallipolis .............................. 012
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard ~ale-Pt. Pleasant.. ........
076

I· \I PI 0\ :\II· ' I
,,. R\ H T:,"\

110

An Ex.CP.IIent way to earn
monB)' fhe New Avon
tall Manlyn 304 882 2645

II

10

H.:t .PWAJ•ITm
POSTAL JOBS

$ 14 62 $20 92/hr Now htr
tng For ap phcattons &amp; lree
gover nmenl JOb 1nlo cal l
Amencan Assoc ot Labor
1-913-599-8042 24 hrs
emp se rv

Psychologist
T tred of the hassles of the
pr 1vate pract 1ce want a
steady mcome or IUS! l'leed·
a change? We are one of

'"Q

th e fasrest growing na trona!
dea l,n g w'lh
Gen atrtcs we oHer a great
starttng salary wtth a 40 1K
plan If you have a doctorate"
&amp; a re licensed &amp; want to

Co mpan,es

WA NTEOTI
Full ltme
Appotnt ments Clerk needed
lo work wtth peop le wtt h
ment al retardatton at two
QfOUP homes tn the Btdwell
area Duttes rnclude schedulrng and transp orttr"rg to
appotntments Hours 9am5pm Mon Fr1 High schoo l
dtploma!GED valid drtver s
license three years good
drtvtng e11penence ade·
quate automobtle msurance
covera ge and wt lling to dnve

Posing Da,te Octobe• 6 201)4

RECORDS OFFICE
SECRETARY
Tho Ur vers tl y of Rto
Grande mvttes appltcattons
for the pos1t1on of sec retary
tn the Records Ofltce

Respo nstbllil tes of th ts 40
hOur per week postt lon
rnclude but are not hmt1ed
to , prov!dtng general secre
tartal, clencal and tech111ca1
assrs tanca lor the Records
M anagement Depart men t Sta l l whtc h
lnfoC•sron
Corp Is curr enlly accap11ng mc lude s entertng student
applrcat tons at our Gal l•polt s
da ta regtstratiO n tnformatl on
Jocat1on Ouallhed appli· and
grades
matntam s.
cants should be stab le htgh · updates and archtves al ec·
ly mottvated mdtvlduals w1tll trontc and hard copi es of
good commumcat ton sktlls transcnpts and other docuWe offer a lull bene' Its pack·
men ts
Complete
JO b
age a ld 4011&lt; (50°o CO· descrrptton avail able upon
match) after ntnety days request from the Human
Severill scheduling optiOns Resources OHtce
to choose 'rorn No prevtous
exper•erce •s necE'ssary We Must ilave h1gh school dtplo·
are !he pro fessional differ· rna or equtvalent Prefer rwoence m te leserv1ces and year secretarr al sctence
need great team players to degree
Prevtous olltce
101n us• In terested ca nd t· experience preferred Good
dates please call 1 877 -463· oral and wntten commu~tca·
6£4/ e~t 2456 Appl)&lt; tn per· !ton sktlls requ1red Must
SOil "t 242 Thtrd JW9l1Ui3 work well w1th the publiC '
GalltpOIIS
or
online
De sk clerk needed Please
apply
at
Budget
Inn
Ja ckson Ptke Galltpolts No
phone calls please

All applicanls must subm1t a
tetter
of rnterest and resume
LAB ORATORY
TECHNICIAN lmmed1a te ooer;~rng • 1ncludtng the names and
addrssses of three referfor a Med rcal Laboratory
Tec1n Ctan Days only no ences on or be tore October
22 2004 to
ntQ(1t~
or
we~kend s
Contact A tnens MediCAl
Ms P~ ry•II S Mason SPHR
Labora 10P{ 400 E State
D1rector of Huma n
Ath e'ls P too~'le t740l593
Resources
8~ 4 0
PO Bo)( 500
Pom t
PIPasanl
Mease
Rt o GrMde OH 45674
Lvctge now dcceottng apphemarl pmason@rro edu
cru•nn-. lor a Bartender &amp;
EEO AA Emoloyer
WM ress 3PPIY a! the Moos e
Looqe betM'H E 3C 1prn Cll
Hr ~ rnar•csto1 f~ 1

0° 1o 'Down Payment and
ftnanctng avatlab •e wtth
approved ved tl
A~EH&lt;~ ge
credtt qualitieS you If down
payment has ~ept you from
buymg thts tS your chance
to own your own home tf
you have a aown payment
but w oul d hke to conserve t
we after low dow n payment
prog rams also Greal rnter
est rates! Local company
Mortgage 1
locators
{740}992 7321

rn

heavy conges l ed trattrc
areas requtred Must have
e11cellen t
communtca tton
and organtzalronal sktlls
$7 OOJh r Excellent benef•ts
package Pre·employmen l

KUL"IIOI\

WWW ~allrpoi!SColi!)&amp;I'COIIege CO ff\
Wit h a successful and pro·
Accreo 1e0 Member AccreOrllng
gress1ve dealersh ip
Ccwnc1l tor lndepennen r Colle9es

......,

'iro

OLDER HAVE OWN CAR

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT

llo~tl ·$

VOL AND A CLEAN
CRIMINAL RECORD
EXPERI ENCE IN

SECURITY OR LAW
ENFORCE MENT

PREFERR ED

Seeking 39 People
Locally .
who want to earn money
whtle lostng werght showtng
otllers llow
(740)441 · 1982

FR EE SAMPLES
w~~&lt;.w_ famousnutrltlo n

ADVANCE MENTS

PAID VACATIONS HE ALTH
BENEF'ITS
OFFERED
IN CEN TIVE PROGRAMS
PLE ASE CALL
MON·FRI
9AM·3PM
1·800·869· 8975

CONTINENTAL SECRET
SERVICE BUREAU INC
EOE

com

Wwn:u

1M

To Do

WE PROVIDE

FREE UNIFORM S
PAID TRAINING

Dnver Needs Wor k (' &lt;J. '
COL All E ndorseme nt~ Cfl

(7 40)367·7899
Georges Portable Sawmttl
don't haul your logs to the
mtll JUSt cal l 304·675 1957

I wo uld like to babys11 your
children 1n my home on Std e
Hill Ad tn Rutland I m LPN
&amp; mother ot tour (740)742·

2257
11\\\t 1\1

TELEMARKETERS NE ED·
ED· No E)(penence OK 57·

2 br hv•rgroom drn mg
room kttchen 1/2 basemen!
on 1 acre ground
1/4 of a mtle on Bud Cha't1n
Ac:l 304 675 3144

WANTED
Part-ltme postliOn avarlable to asstst wtth
tndlvtduals wtth mental retar·
datron at a group home tn
Btdwell
1) 35 hrstwk 11 pm 8 30am
Thurs 1Frt
Sat 7pm-9am
Sun
21 31 hrsrwk ~- 8 30p Th1Fr1
1· 1Op Sat/Sun ,
H1gh School dtplomaiGED
vahd dnver s li cense and
three years good drlvtng
requtred
e)(penence
$7 OO rhr Pre-emp loymenl
Drug Testtng Send resume
to
Buckeye Comr.nuntty
Servtces P 0 Bol\ 604
Jackson
OH
45640
tor appl•ca nts
Deadline
10,20104 EQ~tal Owo tun tty
Employer

o

Boll' ":;~":~.:.::1
Thts r

350

Ho\ 11.,
HJK S \II

t-J::~use 3 Bedroom , 1 2 R1ver pro~erty 1 67 acres
Bath Heat Pump
1eN 232 feet shore ltne 10 m• •es
Carpet W rndo ws &amp; Root south at GallipOliS SA '
R1ver V•ew 12 Smrth St No Bu ild•ng oermtl av a••dble
Mone~ Down to Qualtfytng I 740 )256-8823
Buyer 5425/momh why Rent
(304)675-2749
11.1'1\I.S

House 4 Sale 9yrs 010 !br
Corner Lo t Ou •et-wo:Joed
area
tn
C lifton
WV
(304)882·2 626 or t304 t88 2

2969

10

HOI 'SI:'
lO R RJo\ ' 1

Psyme flt an-~
avaLiat E "'lt~
appravej cred 1
r'l~terage
S40 000 2 traile rs Kroae1 crea1t auahlies lfOt. It dov.n
Park
on
Neal
Rd
payment ras kept you lrcfT'
$675 month
rnvestme'l t buym) thr~ &lt;; your cnd"IC E:
Bot "I
trade 5
535 000 to CVV'1 tour own home It
(7·10)441 5725
r~ou !'lave 01 down pa)o ""'lent
- - - -· - - - -- but wculd lrke to conserve 1
Ranch style horne wtth f•n
we offer low dvwn pay -ne nt
tsned baseme nt 3 bedprngrflms also Great tnterrooms 1 oath large hv1ng
est rates' Local corrtpan)o
d d
room an
tn tng room Mortg age
locators
k•tchen w•th 2 car garage
17401992· 7321
anached &lt;~nd a 30~60
garage and a 16x24 shPI!er
2 oedroom hou~e r Eure~a
hOuse t 5 mtles :)U t Cherry NeV~~ Iy ·er-r ?deled
S400
RtOge Rd on !he ' •g'lt mont~-&lt; $400 depos•t No
i401245 5102
pets 740 256 6408 740
441 ·058€3
320 l\ IOHII llo\IJ·~'-1
D0 c

Hout.e

1rr Ka n:Juga Old
Farmers Rd GallipoliS or

Dm\ ':l

' ranc ng

1

S \I 1-

2 srory Colcnral 3 bdrrn 1
bath Gas neat Cntrl A C
14~70 87 Clayton 3 bee- 5500 mo t7 -10 )4J6-348t
room 2 bath C A new car
2br
l-ouse
lor
rent
pet ce ram1c 1110 washer &amp;
S350 r"on'h
water anc
dryer S1 0 000 ( 740 144 6·
trash pa1a no pets Deposr!
4233
and relerence req urreo
(740 !388 1100
1987 14)(70 mobtle home
3BA 2BA 5 129 acres 3BR 2 brlth applrances 2br House m Nf&gt;\\ Haven
Green Townshtp close to some turn1ture Senous calls
ppl ances Furn1 srea Nc
school Pnced to sell More only sa ooo (740)245
Pets
SJJO Oe:lOS II
tnto (740) 446-7 377
$325 month 1304\882-3652
1991 11h?O 3 bedroom 2
A Aflordable 2-Bedroom bath heat pump A. C calrte
3 o::!-m house- 1 5 baths
Home
Everythtng new dral cetllngs deck S 11 OOJ
close ·o 10S;J•tal oft Jackson
Pos:o tble no Money down to Needs moved 13C.:l18E2
P1ke $600 re1 ' w 5600 se.:::
qua ltfymg Buyers (3041674 3682
deP Yo u pay all u\il1 l res
51 11
Reterences requ•red Cat
Ma ns ron
1993
174QI &lt;146· 364d tor a;:t[llica
Horne-t 4X60 2 t eu &gt;om 1
.\t"I'L"s riO's!
t.cn
haln lot n. f' ~ctrrr GOOd
GET YOUR LOAN TO
cond1' en cer1 ra1 a•r stove
- ::ee!room 1 b&lt;~t'l 1u1 oa~e
BUY OR REFINANCE
'e tr gerator and m1cr:;,~'a"e -.oer t detac~'~ed garaoe
YOUR HOME'
ncluded
58 50C OG ro ,rwy setttng 5 m1nutes
" FREE ' APPROVED
•74 01 949 9016
fro!" Rro Granoe 10 .,',nu•
HOME LOANSt
eo •-om nc sp,tal S7 0C
1995 Redman 1-1 ~ 70
"'0' \h • dePOSit 17 4 01 44~
NEW PURCHASES
owr~er non srno-..e C€"1\' a
j051
REF INANCES
&lt;ltr nter the rn' gas I&lt;J n 3
SO DOWN SO DOWN
ton Cclernan heat purnp 2 J BedrCC"' H:.use rn Maser
CASH OUT HOME
pressure treated decks &amp; Cent a H.-.at ~ · All Eleclnc
IMPROVEMENTS NO
appliances t7-10!2-l5 50"''
SJ 50 f'10"'t~ ::.3)0 depos•1
CREDIT BANKRUPTCIES - · ' - ' - - - - - - - - - 304i882·2E"&gt;8
WELCOME1
2000 Cl aytO'l 14x76 M
Hotne s•t or 4 62 acres r 4U r
11
Sy .;~ru&amp;e
OH
Mason CoJnty (73-lr65-l S6 CO r'O'~th S600 deoosrt &amp;
UNITED SECURITY
2237 or (734 •65J 963o
3br &lt;'~·S~ract.. se $J75 mo1tt"
MORTGAGE
H ~o Aporo ..ed batn no Pets
1-800-370-4965
28x52 Doublew de •co·we•'
JUJ1675 · 5332
CA LL TODAY
£K1 to re.'ll esta te! ?. beo
STAFFED BY US
rcarTI 2 !'at" eat ,.. .., tc•,er
:onao 3 bdn 2 baths "
vETE RA NS
5+ ac'E'S Bar 'l w•t"1 tenced ::~asemenl Vre\\ of ·r~,rer
1n lot shea carport P r~ vate Cntrl
AC
S.. OO
mo
MB 52€3
sett•ng on Adamsvtlle Road Ga llrpolis Ferry (7401 446
Must see to apprectata 348 1
(Ohto loans On!~ )
$85 000 1740)245·5157
NICS 1 2 &amp; 3 bedroorFor sale or rent- 2 bedroom Apartmen ts retar• s:tace
mobtle norres start tng at also 101 rent {7401992·3702
5270 per month Call 740·
992. 2167
Ranta
n Po rN Pteasa n·
5400 ffiO"lth t304 )67S 554 C
Make 2 payments f'"IOve •n 4 or (304 •6-.5 -4024 ask lo•
A.tl reel ettate adver11tlng
years on note (304 )"'36 Nancy Momestead Rea •v
In th lt newapaper 11
B r::r~er
3409
stJbjecll o tl'le Federal
Fair HOutlng A.et of 1968
New Oakwood mega store 420
Ho\lt.li
which makes It Ill egal to
featunng
Home~
cy
HJK
Rt:st
adver11aa · any
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
preference, lim itatio n or
Giles
One
stop
shoopmg 12X65 Tr'l, 1 1n Country a11
dlacrlmln at lon ba"d on
on!~ at Oakwooo Homes of E ec1
race , color, re li g ion , ltL)(
4.
Hand1cat:
Ba rboursvrlle WV (304 )736· rea:,
t• ml llel stetua or natlon• l
5200 ,ant"
3409
ori gin or any Intention lo
1304 tE-.:. ~ .,(1
make any auch
SAVE SAVE SAVE
preference, li mitation or
14::..70 2 be::•Jor C 4., tc a
Stoc11 models at old prrces
dltcrlmlnatlon '
electric
$35 0 deoosr t
2005 mocels arrrvmQ No....
$350 re'lt Ca ll 1-.4 0)245·
Coles
MoiJ •I e
Homes
Th lt newapeper will not
9491 No calls after 9rrr
know ingly eccap1
15266 US 50 Eas t Alher'ls
please
adve rtlsamenla tor real
0"110 45701 t 740 \592 1972
estate whrc:h Is In
Whe1e You
Get '-ov r 2 t"&gt;ed•oorr 1ra 1er lcr rer!
violation of the law Our
Mo ey s Worth
W D hOOkuP "0 pe·s $35 C
r11dar. . ,. hartrby
mon1n plus deoos 1 Ca
Informed th•t all
l.&lt;rrs &amp;
t7 40)256·1008
HJl-t

\lomu:

9 Pe r Hour, Easy Work, 1·

888·974·JOBS
Wa n ~ed Live In nann y to r
elementary age child In a
Chnstt an home Only nonsmokers please room &amp;
ooard mcluded tn add111on to
salary Please send resume
and references lo PO Box
33 Pomt P le asant WV
25550

3 10

HlK SAI. E

work
par t
ttme
call Drug Te stmg Send resume 3 bedroom brrck tront
Psychologtst Transitions ro
Buckeye Community
877-73 4·2031 or tax resume Se rv1ces PO Box 604 Ranch Ne\\er roof vmyl
heat
pump
SmtlhS
877 734 2030
Jackso n Pike OH 45640
Deadli ne lor appltc ants Cabtnets 1 car garage pn·
vate !nne off SR 160 1 8
Sales .
10/20/04 Equal Oppo rtuntty
Emp loyer
acres S92 000 1740 )388•
8676
Are you lookmg lor a new
career wtt h an unt•m tted Wheel chat r !ruck drtver
3
bedroom
h ouse
1n
opportuntty tor advance· needed Must have htgh
Syracuse wt'h garage on
school dtploma/GED Clean
ment?
mce lot Ftna nctng avulablc
dnvtng record 25 years old
No down payment w•t h
740
-446
7930
Would you ltke to be recog·
approved cred rt 1748\992
n1zed as a professional 150
3595
S&lt;WK&gt;IB
salesperson rn one of the
I~S"I
country s htghesl patd occu·
3 bedroom 2 bat1 lrvmg
patro ns?
room dt rntng room fur
Gallipolis Career College ntshed kttcren
2 car
If so our sa lespeop le earn (Careers Close To Home)
garage 2 outbutldt1gs 6
an excellent mcome -.and Call Today• 740 446 4367
plu s acres close to schools
, -800-2 14·0452
en1oy the beneftts of workmg
S94 000 (740 )7 42·7200

IN GALLIPOLI S
$8 00 PER HOUR
MUST BE 18 YEAR S OR

675-1429

'«11,_'('1 tnfoCISjOn C.QI!I

itO

•

'"~
' f~~h~
oo~·~·~
,,~,'~
If you re senous about a new ~
career and are Jook1ng for
1\'ll';(;tlJ.ANEOl'S
the l ratmng an d gutdance
that are essenhal for tong·
term success we d li ke 10 Htgh
School
Junrors
talk to you
Se n• ors and Pnor Servtce
you can Itt! vacan t poStttons
&amp;
EMT s
ParamediCS
Please stop tn tor an tnter· tn the West V1rg1ma Army
needed
Apply at 135 4
vrew
Nattonal Guard II you are
Jac~son Pike Galhpohs
be tween the ages of 17·35
Norris Northup Dodge or have prtor n11lr tary servChrysler Jeep
ICe you won 1 want 10 pass
thts up For Opportumt•es ttl
SECURIT'I OFFICERS"
your area call
304-675
5837
'
FU LL TIME POSITION

AVON• All Areas To Buy or
Sell
Sntr ev Spears 304Codtng
Professtonal
Needed Full·t1me 2 year
degree 111 Med1cal Recoras
Requtred
Knowledge ot
lCD 9 CM Ccdtng and DRG
ass 1~ nment expertence pre·
ferred E)(cellenl Beneftls
Pa ckage
Fie) •ble
Scheduling Send resume
to Camden-Clar k Memor•al
Hos:.•tal
Human
Res ources PO B ox 718
Parkersburg , WV 26102 Fax
(304) 424 ·2825 or apply on
lrne at www comh org

l

o

"'

"'

HIO VALLE Y PUBLISH
ou do busmess wtth peo
le you know and NOT I
end money thro ugh th
ail unt 1 vou '1a Je rnvest•
ated 11'16 c f1&lt;"t tn

PIUl! l~......O,\L

SFR\ ICf,,
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee un'less We Wtn '
1 888·58:2·3345

Kl \1 ISI\11

pto

dw1lhng1

advt~~rt l sec:l ln

th lt newtpaper are
t val1tbla on an equa l
opportunity ba.. s

:

How:'

Home Fo r Sale
Hand but II log home 6 years
old Pflv ate w tth 10 acres
(21 3 bedroom hou ses. tor Stunntng v•ew• j Br 1 1 2
sale 2 bathS r reol eces on bath Open loft'
Fi nancing available w ith
acreage Call (7 40)709
NO DOWN PAYMENT!"
1166
17 401388·0164

nm S,\U

At11EAGI'
2 acres on Ingalls Road
$15 000 740-245-0133
2001 mobt le home

16~80

also two ac •es land 1 mtle
from Rl 7 near Eureka
$65 000
Cal
(74 0!.256 -

2 bedroom all elec! nc' 4
m•tes nort l" of Holzer S350
rrt onth ... sec: deposn 8 ret
erences , -.J0\446 6865 or
.. .1 0)379 2923
3 bedroom mot:) te home '1C'

~ets (7 40lq92-5858

923-1

Ca1ut11tH~
Mob rle Home
FS Aporox 25 Ac•es M L Par!l call 304 6"'5 3818
Pr •vate
rerl'ote
rough
access good hunttng no Applrcatrons accepted lor
Homas
from
$10 000 1 House tor sate to Move marlo.eta ble·lrmber Mt Alto nrce two bedroom on prrvate
Forclosure VA Hua to· IISI 56500 080 !304)675-23 1 6 area S35 000 13041895· lot No pets $4 00 p r..!:&gt;
1ng 1-800-749·8106 e" 1709 alte r 500 ordeposn (7 401 446 -689 0
3390

- - - - - - --

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 14, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Get Your Menage Across
'8"'ooltJmn
inchSat.
~~~~~J~da~
Column inch
or

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

•j l

for Racine Vol. Fire Dept.

Located on Second Ave . in
Middleport Mason ic temple
(Formerly Dan 's)
Approx. 3600 sq. ft. of floor
space plus storage,
2 bathrooms, heating and
cooling

Doors open 5 pm
Games at 6 pm
$20 - 20 games plus specials
50/50 drawing &amp; Door Prizes

Whaley's Auto
Parts

MYERS PAVING

Sl. R1.6K I Darwin. OU
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
l~wiO&lt;"kil!lJ /.ale .\kJdel 1m IHl.lJl'
nnd . . lrter .\lu rlwl HH·Is

875-24&amp;7

Antique&amp;

~

Op&lt;n o.,;,{ 10:00-5:00
Sun. 1_.()()--J.OO
Clo~l!d Tuc .~.

AI'AIIT\IEI••I~

Help Wanted

WANTED: Position available to
assist an individual with mental
retardati on who resides in the Meigs
High .School Area. 20 hours/week.
split shift (befroe and aft er sc hool).
Must have high school
diploma/GED. valid driver's license,
three years good driving experience
and adequate automobile insurance.
$7.00/hr. Send re,ume to: Buckeye
Com munity Services. P.O. Box c104,
Jackson. OH 45640. Deadline for
appli cants: I 0/20/04. Pre-employment drug t e.~ tin g. Equal Opportunity
Employer.

Beautiful Riv9rvlew 1deat for Pleasant Valley Apartment
1 or 2 people. no pets. refer- Are now taking Applications
ern::es. (740)441-0181
for 2BR. JBR &amp; 4BR .
Applica t10ns
are
taken
llidwell area, clean, remod- Monday thru Friday. lro'm
eled. 2BR. $400 month 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Ott1ce 1s
includes water &amp; sewer. Located at 1151 Evergreen
· Deposit/references. No pets Dnve Po1nt Pleasant WV

1.3_0_4~15_7_6-4_0_3_7_ _ _ _ . Phone No is {304)675-5806 .
E.H.'O
For Rent or Sale 2br. 2ba , - - - - - -- - Mobile Home in Mason Tara
Townhouse
j304)773-5751
Apartments. Very Spac1ous.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. l
l'rai1er lor Rent $400/month
t /2 Batf"l. NeWry Carpeted.
Ius/depOSit (304)576-224t
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patio. Start S385 Mo No
APAifi1\!E~"
Pets. Lease Plus Secur1ty
FOR RE~T
Oepos1t Reqwed. Days
740-446-3481. Even1ngs ·
l and 2 -bedroom apart740-367-0502 .
ments. furnished and unfurnished, secun)y depOSit Twin Rive" Towec" accept·
required. no pets. 7&lt;10-992- mg &lt;1pplit18110n::: for wa1 1ing
2218_
liS! lor Hud-SJbSJZed.
1- br. -.
apartment
call 675-6679
1 bedroom apt. WID hookup EHO
$290 month + deposit. Close
~lt. Kl ' H.\~IJIS~.
to Holzer Hosp1ta l. Call 740-

f440

339-0362.
1 br. second floor, apartment
in Ftoint Pleasant water &amp;
trash p1ck-up included m
rent . call 304-675-2144
before 4:00 call 304-675 3653 after 4:00

/5 10

Uot ":1101.1&gt;

Goons

Appliance

2 bedroom apts 10 minutes
from Holzer Hosprtal on St
Warehouse
At. 160. Water/Sewer/Trash
Included $460/mo. Depos1t 1n Henderson , WV
Prerequired. Pet s allowed owned applicanes start1 ng at
(740)441-1 184 or {740!441- $75 &amp; up all under warranty.
019 4.
we do service work on all
Make and Models (304)6753 rooms &amp; bath. stovelrefng7999
erator. down. stairs. utilities
paid. S450Jmonth. No pets. Beddmg queen &amp; lull. 2
46 Olive St (740)446-3945
large rugs . 6 small t11row
rugs new mattress set. cupApplications be1ng taken for
board 304-675-2801
very clean 1 bedroom 1n
country set11ng yet close to Good Used Appliances,
and
town . Washer . dryer. stove. Reco nditioned
Washers.
fridge included Water and Guaranteed
garbage included . Tota l elec· Dryers.
Ranges .
and
tric witl1 AC . Tenant pay etec- Refr1gerators. Some start at
lric. $300 deposit. $375 per $95. Skaggs Appliances . 76
monlh. No, pets. No smok- V1ne St (740)446-7398
ing. 74().446-2205 or 740Molloh an Carpet. 202 Clark
446-9585 ask for Virg1n1a .
Chapel Road. Porter. Oh10
BEAUTIFUL
APART- (740)446-74 44 1-877-830MENTS
AT
BUDGET 9162 Free Est1mates. Easy
PRICES AT JACKSON f1nanc1ng. 90 days same as
ESTATES, 52 Westwood cash . V1sa1 · Master Card
Drive from $344 to $442. Drrve- a- little save atol.

~:;::;:;:::=====~;;;==;:====~

~740)446-996 1

Chest-a-drawe rs. 4 large
drawers (unlrn1shed), good
c.ondi tion . from Sears. $50
firm . (740)949-2607

1!""-------I
·r,

Middleport .
North
4th
M·nQUES
Avenue , 2 bedroom , fur- ~-------·
nlshed aparlment. Deposit
and references . No Pets. Buy
or
sell.
Riveri ne
( 740)992-0 165
Ant1ques , 1124 East Mam
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy 740 N ice upstairs apartment , 992-2526
Russ Moore.
owner
quiet area. (740)992-6849
One aedroom Apartment for
Rent $325/month. Landlord
pays water &amp; trash , call

1304)675-6668

~ ]\1JsCEU.A~fuUS
MEROIANDISE

1304 )862·2537

COME BY$ SEE ME FOR
YOU!( BEST DEAl ON A
NEW OR USED CAR

Ty Hill
1-800-822-0417
10

AIIInS

1996 Bu1ck Century, 94.000
good
shape
miles.
(304)675- 1506

•

best offer call (304!8923773 or (304)895-3045
88 Chrysler Fifth Avenue
Body good, new t1res
breaks . shocks. batte ry. rur1s
good . $1.200
740-645-

Pole Barn 30x50x 1DFT
$63.95. includ~;ts Painted
Metal , Plans, ln strudlon
Book, Sl1der. Free Delivery
(937)559-8385
REAL ARMY :
CAMOUFLAGE
Sam SomeNille's. Since 1964,
by Sandyville, WV PO. Satellites.
TV Salesllnstalla110n 13041273-

Butt baby calves. $100 each.
No Sunday calls. (740)3888524.

r

OBO (304)675-6986
1995 Chevrolet Lum1na :
Ong1nal owner . looks and
runs greatl $2 .200 080 Pn ·

17401245-0135
1999 Mercury Coug8r LS
V6. loaded (7401446-0946

MY PAP COULD
PLAY TH' JUG
LIKE NOBODY'S
,.-~::---:c..:::--;;" BUS' NESS

'COURSE, HE HAD TO EMPTY
A FEW FURST, FER TH' SAKE
OF INSPIRATION !!

THE BORN LOSER
'"'i rt.E:.LI''E.\JE:.IZ\~ 1 DO
YOU

,..NO-YOU \ZNOW 'IOU'RE
JU:'&gt;T "'- f-\W'Oc.t\00\)RI~r..Hrr

Tl~lf\K

\_ r'\IGf\T
f'J&gt;.-Vf_ :)011\f..'illlf.IG

i
fi

j

'ferry's Engines
;o-.~H ( :a•-1

'"'' I'U.J\? WE.LL, f.\'iP00.\0f\DRi r-.(::, 00 GET
SICK, TOO, YOU KNOW I

1'- 1~~1/-~\
T

; '§

\l.u11 \t.

p,,llll'l'! '\

Warranl ) RL'p&lt;~ir •
Lt" ti Tractor &amp; Pu ... h
~hw, ('I' ... ChJin s~IWS,

See

Ch;rin Sharp1..'thXI

Rocky."RJ"

&amp; Part~

Hupp,

IMPORTS

Athens

I'H.: L-rrp .1ml d~ II\L'r~ ~~rll&lt;'l'
\!till "er1 1\_·int: KL'fll"l.'fli.' Ikner"

BIG NATE
THE FAC.T IS, ii,LL O F
u S .A..T ONE T IME . 0~
ANO&gt;HER ARE TEASED
ASOLlT SOMETHt&gt;J6 '

DO "(O U
THINK. I

HAVE
W'EIR..D
HAIR -:&gt;

E&gt;&lt;AC:T .
r1Y WHAT'

'/

1740)992·0622

1986 5th wheel Wi lderness
Cimarron travel trailer. 36
1989 Dodge 1/2 ton pick up. feet tong several new parts.
a rt. bed. 318. VB . eo .oo.o (740)446-1759
miles, new rubber, towrng
package. new paint excel- t995 26 foot tnsbrook
terit condi110n, 3 speed over- Gullstream
5th
wheel
drive....
S3.250 .
Call camper Sleeps 6. great
(740)446-4514 Bam-5pm shape . $5,000 (740)44t740-446-3248 atter 5pm .
0804

2000 N1ssan p1ckup. 5 2003 32 f1. Cougar camper.
speed. AMIFM a1r. Super 1 slide qut. used 2 mon. exc.
Condition. $5,500 . (740)446- cond ., at a good price 3044782.
675-38 t8
2001 Dodge Dakota Quad
Cab . '"'4x2. Call 1740)44107~2 .

20Ft Bumper Pull Bona nza
Camper for Hunting camp
$1,100 ca ll for details

1/DJI.l 'R~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

BISSELL
BUilDERS InC.

Ne\\

Home~

1

Vinyl

Si din g 1 New Garage!'
ReplaCe ment
1

Windnw~

Hill's Self
Storage

4x4

45771
740·949·2217

• Ronfin!!
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENT IAL

Sizes 5\x1 0'
to 10'x30'

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours

740-992-7599

7:00AM· 8:00PM

ton , 5

engine. Ru ns good. good
t~res . 304-675-1295 or 740446-3344. $1,300 finn.

ACTUALL'(. T~E'f DON T
I-1EAR ANVT~ING!
1

LOVE SONGS, BUT T~E'f DON'T
REALLY ~EAA T~EM . DO T~E'f?

1114 1 mo pd

miles. wintecized, tuned up.
new tires &amp; brakes. s65oo .

Center.

(740)949-2700
1999 Ford Expl orer XLT
4X4 . Red , CD, excetlen tcon-

dilion . 54.ooo miles. s9 .8oo .
(740)367-7090.

'·

Dean Hill

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

1996 F-150, 4x4. e~etended ..-~:"::,.,::::-:-:;:--,
caP. 5.o auto. 102.ooo
.

Service

MUSICIANS PLA'f A LOT OF

810

Unconditional lifetime guar1987 Ford Bronco 'II 6cyl .
antee Local references fur4x4 w/air. 4-speed w/overnished. Established 1975.
drive,
runs
good
Call
24 Hrs . (740) 446$1,500/0BO 1304)675· 1408
0870 . Rogers Basement
or (740)4 18-0790
Waterproofing

Rac ine

PEANUTS

SIK\UES

FOR SALE
Chevy 1/2

•o

Racine, Ohto

HOME speed, flat bed. 4WO, 350 . L_..,;hiilliil'iiRO-Viil.-liiiMiiiF.N'
-1&gt;0,._.1
1971

..

29670 Bashan .1oad

1304)675·5724

ADVERTISE
YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

New&amp; Used

HOWARD l.

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

WRITfSfl

1-800-822-0417

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMLESS
·GOnER

SUNSHINE .CLUB
SOOIJ~ IJI(I; 'IJIUARD
&amp;I~ DI&lt;AGGEtl.IN10

SOME GVY W~ 10

TRADE- HIS BLA&lt;.K AIJD
WHITE 1\1 A~D HI$ Rflvt·
tNG'R).lJ ~\URIW&lt; ...

1HE .zdi' (eJli.Rr'

*freelsUmateb

949·1405
GARFIELD

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, October 16,
2004, altO: oo a.m. , a
public sale will be
held at 211 W Second
51, Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Ban~ and
Savings Company is

1994 Pontiac Firebird 6Cyl.
runs &amp; looks good. $3 ,000

I SHOULD SAY SO!!

:'£~IOU:'&gt; 7

HAY&amp;

I R \ \"'I'Of{ I \ 110\

BARNEY

I · 7 40·843-538~

~~-~~~~--,

Sol1d maple 2 pc hutch, ____
GRAIN
good couch , writing desk, 3
pc table set w/solid marble For Sale Ear Corn (304)675top . glider cha1r wronoman, t506
rew Zemtf-] color TV. micro - - - - - - - - oven ne~ Nlntenoo game in . Round bates and squares
box call (7&lt;10)992 -752 7
bales. Call (740) 441 -7390.

992-2166

No Job to Big or S111all
Serving: Meigs. Mason,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

Open 8:,111-6:011 ~1-F :
Sal. X:J0-2:011992-IOJ.I

20 beef cows, 2nd calf to 8.
year old. 15 blacklb aldies, 5
reds . Bred to a black MainAn)ou bull . $1,000 each.
(740)245·9315.

--~

1

Cl~ll'f:R~

·-------•

..
MUSICAL FOLKS
IN YORE FAM'L Y,
UNCLE SNUFFY ?

At USSORII'~

selling lor cash in
hand
or
cerlllled
check the following
collateral :
2003 ODYSSEY PON·
TOON FRUA7385A303
2003 ELK TRAILER
5F4BB20103E001 715
2003 MERCURY 90 HP
ELPTO OT7331 03
1992 MARINER BAS S
S K E E T E R
STER0241F192
1992
SKEETER
TRAILER
1991 MARINER 150
HP MOTOR 00079836

The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company,

PomeroyJ

Ohio, reserves the
rlghl lo bid al this
sale, and to 'withdraw
the .above collateral
prior to sale. Further.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company
reserves

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

HOW 'S THE

described co ll ateral
will b e sold " as iswhere is" . with no
el(pressed or implied
warranty given.
For furrher informa tion, or for an appoint ment to Inspect collet ·
era l, prior to sale date
con tact Diane Rector
or Randy Hays at 992-

I1
]

•

L_-~~~:.JI-W....-I~_,J...;.~......
YOUNG'S

2136.
(1 0) 13. 14 &amp; 15·3TC

•( 'nrnp!\'ll'

H;(• modl'lin~

•K t·pl: u·r·nu nt \ \ i1-1do\\~
1 k ool.,
• .H111111t'I'Cial-

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• &amp;
Rem odelin g
1 New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roof ing IJ, Gutte11
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Paint1ng
• Patib and Porch Decks
We do it aU except
furnace work
1

• Lu~ II ntnl·~
• 1•n-.1 Vranll'

II&lt;

l{t•.,idl·ntiHI

Free 1·\timalt ,
7.t0-h6 7-MIXO

HAVE ELEVEN LUNCHE5

I

Barnhart
Builders

•'\~:u 11 o m~:.'&gt;

I 171D, HOWEVER,

GREAT'

DieT C$01NG-1'

the rlghllo rejecl any
or all bids submilted.
The
above . JO) cur., C:4pc ricncc

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
.
'

• New Homes

·Garages
• Cnmplele
Rernodelmg

V.C. YOUNG Ill

140-992-1611

992·6215

·Stop &amp; Compare

'" neroy: Oh io
22 It u &gt;~ ocal Ex erience

East

+

Pass

2

GRIZZWELLS
~-(K-if J '.'

ALL i\4\S
L\iTE~'·'

ltlOK

A.'

1 Thumper's

46 Nearly

48 Pollee

pal

6 Gulllrblllletlna
11 Tralllc algn 50 Wearing
12 ParaHina cowl
based
54 Falefut card
13 More
55 Maoon' a

Pas.~

3 NT

All pass

+4

private eye

15 Theater
56 Rival
16 Perlumod
57 WM•facod
bag
18 Land parcel
DOWN
19 Stick out
21 In vogue
1 Tournament
22 Sizable
paso
2 Pitch In
20 Tranlc
purae
23 Melodrama 3 nlyorAyan
no-no
25 Tongues
4 Jogger's
(hyph.)
bane
don
22 Cookbook
28 Book
5 Sudden
qty.
thought
24 Stadium cry
lacktl ad
30 Minora dig It 6 Tease
25 Take notes
31 Frat latter
7 Sallow
26 Vet to come
32 " Aye, aye"
8 Eddie
27 GourMurphy's
follower
mand's
33 Car buye&lt;'a
-Foley
malady
concern
9 Flcllonal
29 Luxury car
l5 Farewell
captain .
34 Becomes
37 Callie
10 Peaky bug
tiresome
enelosure
l4 Mounties'
36 Bill payere
38 Distort
org.
39 Milne bear
40 Coupd'- 15 Evergreen
43 Cepshew or
41 Soulheasl 17 La""r
Moas
Asian
Image
44 SplrHedneas
42 Oyaler'a .
19 Actress
45 ".~rlmal
abode
AngelinaFear" star

46 ABA

47
49
51
52

member
Soft drink
Gypsy man
Nota dh
-out a
living

53 Hideaway

Every now and then , someone produces
clever declarer-play (or defense) to
make (or break) a contract. If the opponents· couldn't do anything abOIJI it. the
bright spark will have a chance to win one
of the annual awards given by the
lnternatiqnal Bridge Press Association.
Today's South didn't receive a prize,
because East made a clear-cu t error.
Even so. he d1d find a pretty play. What
would you have done? You are in three
no-tr ump West leads the diamond tour:
e1ght, queen. _three. East shifts to the
heart three: queen. king, two. West
returns a d1amond to East's king , and a
third diamond is taken by dummy·s ace.
How are you go1ng to win nine tricks?
Sitt1ng South was Michel Lebel , playi ng
for France against Slovenia in lhe 1993
European Championsh ip. His one-no trump opening was hardly textbook. No rth
used a transfer bid. then jumped to three
no- trump to show game values with
exactly five hearts.
It is important to agree with your partner
that a fou rth -highest lead guarantees at
least one ho nor in that suit. So. here, East
snould have known that his partner. not
South, had the diamond jack. At trick two,
he should have led the diamond king.
which would have defeated the contract.
(South could still make it, but he wouldn't.)
,
However. once East erred, declarer took
full advantage. On the third round of dia-·
monds, he discarded his heart ace! He
continued with dummy's heart 10 to drive
out East's jack and lost only four tricks:

MOSSP ."

two hearts and two diamonds.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ' A woman is her molher ' - Anne SeX:&lt;IIl

a

5lnnette S
Jfouse Cfeaning Service

:\l''' (il'!lL'r:il S1.mdh\
Gl'tk·ratinl.! S\ ~tcnr- ai1J
R11l -.-\ir Ail- c'nlll[HC!--~or~

s

FOlJN/) AN

OUISI•a P011erov. OhiO

Atrm PAtrl~_&amp;

Pass
Pas~

North

If they err,
cash in

Y~S ---.I. FINA£.LY

WUZ THAR ENNY

200 t Caravelle Interceptor.
21FT. 56/hours. 9 passenger. like new .call {304!6740102 or (304)882-2840

West

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WI hoe pam and accessories tor

l-OR SAn:

&amp;
MumR Hmll·:'

South

Opening lead:

mostbnnds. located on Rt 1 bvaass

&amp; MtJ'ID"'S
50 Bo.•TS
"'
n..;

60

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: North·South
1 NT

Is Diving 10% OFF All CHAINSAW
REPAIRS IN OCTOBER!

t978 GS750 Suzuki Faring.
backrest and new seat, 14K
m1 1es. Excellent cond 111on.
$ t .200 (740)44 1-0638

e

• A
3 2
• A Q
•• 3
. K Q 853

AL£. Tl'l~ I'IOLES
IN MY fl.~SlJMe!

4 WHEELER~

,. LO 4

South

EMPLOY~fl. WI'IO'S
IMPfl.~S$~/) fY

liNDA'S PAINTING

3- P265x7DR17 Goodyear
Wrangler RTS .
30 4-67 5-3354

rld

J6 5 42
K Q 7
... J 6 2

Let me do it for youl

h:.:~idt: L&lt;~n~ \ l ·;u 11 Sl&lt;i wJ

r

J 7 6 3

•

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

95 Chevy Blazer. 4X4, 4.3 4 new BF Goodwrench
Vortex. all power. auto. run- P235- 70-R16 tires. wheels
ning boards $3.500 00 and
chrome
hubcaps
2 beautiful male Siamese
(740)992-6864
wneels
111
late
model
Ford
tabby po1nt kittens. pet qualIty. $25 ; othe rs available, 99 Voltswagon Beetle. Red , F- I 50 5~75 (740)446-6137
(740)992-6236. 740·992· 5 speed . CD changer,
Look ing for cng1ne or tran s7680
62 ,000 miles. S6.500 OBO
mi SSIOn? Gfve me a call at
(740)256 -16ta or (740 )2 56 1740)446·0519
2 miniature male Donkeys. 6200
$300 eacn. Born on Mothers
Used tires 4- LT 26511.75
Day. (740)446-0118
or 715
TRt&lt;Ct.:.'
R1 6 Firestone AfT
(740)367-3331 .
mRSAU:
4- P245x7R17 Michelin LTX.

r

!J 1 6 4

•

K 4

+

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

FOH: SALE

.. :

•

•

2•

Middleport
. .;, 45760

,1~

1740p88·1520
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Good. loving homes. Du sty,
Repa1red, New &amp; ReOu llt In We1maraner. 1 'year, lots of
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- fu n on the run': Brody,
800-537-9528
cnocolet Lab, neutered.
loves water &amp; retreiving.
waiting to be your loyal
Kales Insulated Metal build- lr1end. 740-992-3354; Benji,
ings in Hartford WV. Special Temer brotne s Bert &amp; Ernie.
8x8 $895.00 or 10x12 t year, very smart &amp; loyal;
$t295 .
740-667-9712. (Donation)
Completely furn1shed 1ns1de
&amp; out. Floor ,wa ll &amp; rool
FoR s.~l
made wr 1 3f4 1nch metal
panels, 5/8 plywood on
2in x6 rn treated floor joints. Firewood lor sa le _$30 picK4x4 treated runners for easy up or $50 delivered. in mbst
moving. 2 metal doors for areas
Delivery
starts
easy access. different styles Sept6. {740)388.-8738.
&amp; sizes. will build to your
spec .. panels are pnmered I Seasoned OaK firewood for
ready to paint, fiancing ava il- Sale Split and Deli vered
able 1-304-532-8943.
Locally $50 a truck load
1304)675-3508
NEW AND USED STEEL
I \R\1 "il 11 1'111 "i
Steel Beams. p 1pe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
~\11\1-.,IIHh.
Channel . Flat Bar . Steel ~!!""--,.,..---...,
Grating
For
Drains.
FARf\1
or e a &amp; w lk
L&amp;L
"~•~. ·••·•~
IV w ys
a ways.
~--·....,...iiliiiil'iiii~.'ii~iiii"--"
1 0 pen M on day.
crap Metas
T
d
wednesday &amp;
yes ay,
F d
8
4 30
Cl
d
n ay, am- : pm .. ose 'i;;,:.;.;:;:::;:.,~;:::;:~::~;:;.:;;:.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; c
sooday. 1740)446-73oo
LIVFSTOCK

Easl

Box 189

••

A 10 8

West
• K J 5

and Financial Services

t998 Pontiac Grand AM . 4 0 oor. Ps. PB. AC , 97.000 2001 Kawasaki- 300. 41(4 ,
miles. Excellent cond1t1o n excelle nt condition. $2,700
inside and out, $4,500 or f1rm. (740)446-6t15

Block. brid. sewer pipes. 1165 .
windows. lintels. etc. Claude
Winters , Rio Grande. OH 93 BMW 325r. Custom cover
&amp; extra wheals . $3.500
Call 740-245-5121
(740)446-9555.
o.

r

MONTY

Rocky Hupp Insurance

40 MOHIRCYCI.FS/

llJK SALE

AKC Boston Terrrer pups
Hamilton Railway spec1at
1972ChevyTowTruck , 11 /2
Pocket Walch- 950-B. 23 Shots &amp; wormed.- Black &amp; ton. excellent work1ng condiwh1te. $250 . ~740)388-87 43 .
jewels $995: also black bear
IIOn . wench works off PTO,
rug has felt backing. With Border Collie mil( pups, everything
new.
oyer
head and claws- $250 black &amp; wl1ite. $50.
$13.000 .00 1nvested w1ll
(740)533-3870
Pygmy Billy goats, $25. take
$8,500 .00
OBO

'27' TV. treadmill. bar stools, 5655

6- 16: tO ply tires . Apsen
One bedroom apartment .. wood stove, Troy tiller. 8'
no pets, rn
Pomeroy. slate pool table . tow bar. 2
J740)992·5858
bikes, 1955 cub tractor
bne bedroom garage apart- Pf"lone (7401446-1352
ment , kitchen fu rnishe d For
sate
F1re
Wood

!;4oo, 1740)992·3823

SIJ I'I,J~~

1888)569·2812

Thompsons

:S!II
)

B uii.IJINI;

M ERO!A~IJISE

Cash pard for Drsh Network
equipment
Have model
numbers ready. Tol l lree

3456

Appliance &amp;
Repa~r-675-7388 For sale.
re-conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrrgerators.
gas and electr1c
ranges , atr conditioners, and
wr1 nger wa shers. Will do
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedrepa1rs on maJOr brands 1n
room apartments at Village
shop or at you r home.
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments m Mi~dteport. Used Furniture Store t30
From $295-$444. Call 740- Bulaville Pike Dressers .
992 -5064 _ Equal Housing couches. mattresses. reclinOpportunities.
ers. refrigerator, washer.
dryer. gas. electric range,
Huge clean. 3 bedroom , 1
bath, dining , storage, aprox . Grave1 Monuments. much
more
(740)446-4782
2 .500 sq. ft . No petslsmok·
Gallipolis, OH Hrs. t 1-3 (Mitlg, $610.
Call Kelly

M1sn:u &lt;1Nmus

Ant1que wicker couch &amp;
cha1r oak sideboard. old
poster bedroom suite and
fdt1es era 4pc bookcase.
bedroom SUite, yellow/brown
Phaltzgra H stoneware 614
St. Rt. 32G south, R10
Grande . (740)245-5845

Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call Tabte and 4 Cha1rs. good
740-446-2568.
Equal cond1t1 on $75 call !304)675Housing Opportumty
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townh ouse
apar tments.
and/or small houses FOR
11
RENT. Call (740)441·1111
tor application &amp; 1nformat1on.

Help Wanted

llJR RE~T

•

43 Frat-party
order

nervous

... A 97

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

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

on2ndAYO
Middleport. Ohio
l ~5N . Sc~· ond A\--C.

10-14-04

Q 10

. 1 09852

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

99:!-5152

RJ.:Nr

•

Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675,2457

Cell

Sal. 8:30-Nnon
Sun. Closed

7 40-446-9800

North

Henderson, WV

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00

Call Scott Reuter

HIR

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

.BASKET BINGO
Middleport .Legion
Thursday,
October 14th

BUSINESS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
RENT.

MORin: HO\IF.~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Sunday, October 17, 2004
Hours: 9 a.m .• 4 p.m.
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
North Route 7
Free Admission

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Wllh A. Dally Sentinel

•r

Thursday, October 14, 2004
ALLEY OOP

G

AstroGraph
- . . 'lllrthde,y:

Friday. Oct. 15, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
There's a possibility that you could end
up teami ng with someone in a commerCial vent ure in the yea r ahead who you
have prevtously Known on ly soc:ta1ly The
catalyst wi ll be a tal ent you both have 1n
commo n.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Co nd1t1ons
are parttcularly favo rable today for
launchrng 1mag in at1ve and creative
undertakings that cou ld maKe you qu1te
pop ular rn certa1n circles both soc1atty
and in busrness
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Anybody
who is rnv1ted to you r house today Wlll be
entertained rn a most pl easant fash1on .
You seem to know JU St th e right thing s to
serve or do tor your guests to make them
feet welcomed .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 I - A
secret adm1rer you didn 't even know you
had, because th1s person has been too
shy thus lar to express h1s or her feel ings,
may transmit some subtle Stgn a1s 10 you
today. PicK up on them
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- This
might be one of those days when once
again th e subtle approach to business
will be more effec tive than be1ng ove rly
assertive or pushy. Be la1d back for best
results.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Act in
accord w1th your h1ghes1 morals and
standards today and success rn all your
endeavors
will
be
substa ntiall y
increased. Yo u can get away with berng a
dreamer. but not a demander.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Charitable impulses shou ld be heeded
today·because they could take a umquety favorable turn . Instead of merely being
a g1vor. you could end up being the
largest rec1pient ol all ,
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- A situation
may ansa today where you could lend
moral support to a triend who rea lly
needs lt. Knowing you'ro thore Wi ll give
you r pal th e necessary confidence that's
tack1ng Without you .
TAURUS !April 20-May 20) - Do your
pan to maintain good relationships with
co-workers today. By cooperating with
one another. substantial progress can be
made. Eacn wilt be able to help the other
.
in key ways.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - You may oa
in the position today to defuse a potentially oxptosive Situation between two factions With your co ngeniality and skilled
control, everyone will become friends.
not foes.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Not only
are your ideas imaginative and creative
today. they could' a lso be real money, makers as well. Trust yoursel f ana fippty
them instead ot filing them ·away where
they'll only gather dust.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) - Close assoc iales Wi ll be will1n'il to do a Hnle extra for
you today, because they've· exper~enced
your ·generosity and know If the rol es
were reversed you'd do at tent as much
for them .
VI RG O (Aug . 23-Sept 22 ) - Someone
with wl1om you are presently auoclateo
(who 111 rather fortu nate In material areas )
may picK you up and c•rry you along on
h11/her wings today for a free rlde to the
bank

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce!etlf![V CIJ)her cryptOgr~ms are createcl ~om qoota110ns t1f IM\OUS P!0!J1e pa$181\'ll)fewll
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Engage. Bri.~g- Chive- Action- ANOTHER
Good motto to live by. "Gving advice is like coo~ing
you should try 1! before g1vi n~ 1! to ANOTHER."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

\
WT IJOW ~T AY TUIJE:D
FOil AIJ IIJTEJIV!E:W WITH
THE: t..Are:e,r iJ;UY Fllle:D
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SOUP TO NUTZ

I

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 14, '2 004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeyes still don't know who they are on offense
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS - It wasn't
so long ago that when Ohio
State faced a critical third
down , it just handed the ball
to Pete Johnson or threw the
ball in Cris Carter's direction. Then the first-down
arkers were moved ahead
I
ards and play continued .
In 2002. the Buckeyes
could give the ball to
Maurice Clarett. Ju st last
season. quarterback Craig
Krenzel always seemed to
find wide receiver Mkhacl
Jenkins on every big play.
Stuck in a two-game skid.
the 2004 Buckeyes (3-2. 02) are still searching for a
play or playerto go to when
they absolutely have to gain
a few yards for a first down.
Quarterbal:k Justin Zwi~k
·was at' a loss when asked
earlier this week what he
considered the strength of
the Buckeyes' offense .
After a pause of several
seconds, he said, " I think

we do, really, we do whatever we need to do to move
the ball in certain &gt;ituatiom.
When you have a 'ituatinn
it's what you need to do Ill
move the ball ami we don ' t
really "'Y we throw the hall
better (or) we run the hall
better. It ' s whalevcr we
need i-; whar we're ~uoitH.!.' to
do ."
If that sounds as if Zwic k
is co nfused . !hen he· s not
alone. Most of hi' !cammate s hem and haw hecause
the y don ' t ha\'e a handk on
what the y are capable of
doing.
Wha1cvcr the l'Oaching
staff is calling - and how~
ever the players arc execuling it little is being
ac~ompl ished.
The
Buckeyes are las! in the Big
Ten in total offense and
97th of the 117 tea m&gt; in
Division 1-A.
When the Buckeyes ntn it.
they're managing just 112
yards a game. I Otlt in the
conference and 92nd in the
country. When !hey pa" i1.
they are eighth in the Big
Ten and 70th in the nation at

195 yanb a game.
"We need to get our act
together." said Kirk Barton,
wiio will make his first start
at right tackle at Iowa on
Saturday in place of Tim
Schafer. "Honestly, I'm
embarrassed that people
'like (ESPN unalvst and
local
radio personality
Kirk) Herbstreit say. 'Well.
their defense i~ w great and
their offense ts like a big
pillow fight and they can't
move anybody off !he line.'
That\ embarrassing. You
lta\'e to have pride. If you
have tha), it makes you
angry.
Cen ter Nick Mangold
acknowledged that the currenl Ohio State offense does

Purd·ue's Orton nearly
sacked by .his classwork
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

.

Professors were as much the '"use of
Kyle Orton's first off game as pass rushers and defensive backs.
The Purdue quarterback went through
the first four games without throwing an
interception . Then came a difficult week
of tests and papers in class- and a tough
Penn State defense- and the result was a
rather ordinary day for Orton in Purdue's
20-13 win on Saturday.
"The thing about college i.s. when you
have a test. you have four tests ... Onon
said. "It was a tough week last week.
mainly because of academics .
It's
funny, all the professors seem to save the
tes.ts for the same week."
Orton had to write an English paper and
tl!ke tests in History and also Race and
Gender, all while preparing for a road
game at raucou s Beaver Stadium .
"It was a verv demanding.'' coach Joe
Tiller said. "He had a very challenging
week, but didn't let on. He really subscribes to the theory. 'never ' how weakness."'
Orton wasn't as sharp against Penn
State, throwing two fourth-quarter interceptions and missing a wide open Taylor
Stubblefield on one play that wou ld have
gone for a ga me-breaking touchdown.
Still, he managed to throw for 275 yan.h
and a touchdown , and the Boilermakers
stayed perfect on the year to climb to No.
5 in the nation.
"I thought I played a sol id game." Orton
said. "They were dropping nine guys into
.
coverage an d there wasn I muc 11 room lo
squeeze the ball in there."
WHAT UPSETS ARE MADE OF: lt"s .
.
a f amt']'tar pro bl em f'or the ha'es- tgnoring the have-nots until it's too late. ~
Michigan knocked o tl unbeat en
.
ta 1as 1 wee k . Th e nex t b.~~ garne
M mneso
on all the Wolverines' list is in twl~ weeks
·t th e re ·.
1 v.•l li lt' t1nts
·
ts o Y
at P urd ue. Bu,t f..trs.
(2-4 0-3).
"It'•
s toug h.not to over 1oo k· games. .. 1·uII back Kevin Dudley said.
Coach Lloyd Carr p'reaches that hi s
players keep the big picture in mind when
they're preparing for non-marquee ga me s.
" If you have big goa ls, aspirations for
doing something special. you better be
improving as you go," he said.
Defensive tackle Gabe Watson said it's
a different playing at places such as
Illinois, where just 50,000-plus people
will be in the stands instead uf the more
than 100,000 the Wolverines play in front
of at home.
"You can't let your guard down" Wat son
said. "That's how Opsets are made ."

NO HISTORY BUFF: Iowa quarterback Drew Tate doesn 't get hung up on
history - at least football history.
He doesn't know much · ahout Iowa' s
victories over Ohio State or th e quarterbacks who led the way in those wins. All
he knows is that he ' d like to join that
group when the Buckeyes '' isit on
Saturday.
"[ (jon ' t look much at what has happened here," Tare said . "] probably

should. That might be important . I understand the respect for th e older guys who
have heen around and thin gs like that. but
I don't rea ll y worry or care much about
that kind uf stuff."·
Of course. it wmtldn ' t be hard to memorize the list of Iowa quarterbacks who
lw ve bemen Ohio State because there
hav~ only been three in the past 41 years:
Chuck Long ( 1983 ). C hu ck Hartleih
1 1987 l and Matt Rodgers t 1991 ).
TV TALK: Former Purdue and NFL
quarterback Gary Danielson , now a co llege football anal ys t nn TV. has strong
opinions on wh~it's ahead in the confercnce r&lt;.tL'e .

On Wiscon sin's schedule: "They have
Minnesota at home and they don't play
Michigan. They've already beaten Ohio·
State . So if Wisconsin wins this week (at
Purdue). I dnn'l know who they lose tn."
On Purdue's soft side: ·'Purdue has the
type of ol'knse that, usually they have a
week where it all doesn't click. Usually
there's a week where vnu need to grind it
out and kind of· play di-rty football . ~ nJ the
other schools have th e advamage ur being
able 1o do that."
On the strelch run: "Wisconsin, Purdue,
Michigan and maybe Minnesota arc sti ll
in it. It' ~ ~ti ll a good four·team race.··
COUNTERFEIT BUCKS: After a 3-0
start thm took them 10 No. 7·in the nation .
Ohio Stale has lost at Northwestern 33-27
in m ·ertime and at home 24-13 to
Wisco nsin 10 open !he Big Ten wilh consecuti\C lossc.s fur the first time in a
doLen vea rs.

Fur ;, pro gram gro wn haughty by the
~002 nati onal championsh ip and a No. 4

ranktng la st year. it has been an appalling
sltde.
"W - b
k' ' J r
·1 d tl 1 t f
e.. ve ee n · rn
spot e ~e as ew
years . . lullback Branden Joe s~ud.
. The Buckeye s sav·. 1.theyd are e mbarrassed.
lrustrmcd and humt tate ·
Others hope· lor a turnaround
· 1
S
· at Io wa
t"d o n
1
1
1
1
. altHC ay. w 11 e nn e res 1man ~' co n 1 en t
that there ts nolhtng bu t good limes ahead.
Th
·' fl
·
·
.. . e way I see 11. at-out. we re go m,g
to wtn them &lt;Iii trom here on out. There ,
!!Oing to he no l ea m that Cafl stop us.'" tail bac k· Tony P'tt
t mat 1 sa ·d
t .

°

not have a go-to guy like
Carter or Clarett, Johnson
or Jenkins.
"We don ' t have the one
thing, I guess. that a lot of
teams would have." he said.
"We've kind of developed
what we need to be. That's
the best thing to say about
an identity for .us . We're
going to do what we think
we need to do to win."
The problem is. the
Buckeyes are not producing
nor are they winning. In a
33-27 loss at Northwestern
two weeks ago. they managed 308 yards but many of
them resulted from having
to play catch-up from a I 0point fourth-quarter deficit .
In Saturday 's 24-13 home
loss to Wisconsin, coach
Jim Tressel opened up the
playbook with five-receiver,
no-bat:k sets, a Statue -o fLiherty run and other trick ery.
And Ohio State still man aged just 224 yards, totaling
minus-3 yards rushing. 52
passing yards and four first
downs in the second half
when the game hung in the

balance .
Mangold said he wasn't
sure what Tressel -· who
calls all the plays - might
call on a third-and-4 pia~.
Whatever it would be , he
said, he was sure it would
be successful.
"If we need that four
yards, I'm sure coach is
going to call the play to get
that done," he said.
The statistics dispute that.
The Buckeyes are dead last
in the Big Ten in third-down
conversions, getting first
downs less than 30 percent
of the time - exactly half
the success rate of unbeaten
Purdue.
Offensive coordinator Jim
Bollman who doesn't
even call the plays - has
been taking a lot of flak
from critics for what they
see as an unimaginative
offense. Tressel has long
acknowledged that he is not
a risk-taket on offense ;
relying on defense and special teams to win games
rather than to breeze past
oppqnents with a high-powered offense.

Zwick. who hasn't com.pleted even half of his passes in the last three games, is
also being singled out,
along with tailback Lydell, ~ _
Ross, who has averaged 3.3
yards on 83 of his carries
not counting the 68 yards he
had on one burst in the season-opener.
Iowa is tied for ninth in
the country in rushing
defense, permitting just 85
yards a game. Unless Ohio
State finds a way to shake a
runner free every now and
then, it cou ld be another
long day for Tressel, Zwick,
Ross and Co.
"We have a lot of things
that with ju&gt;t one tweak
here or there might be a
good play for us," Zwick
said. "We're continuing to ·
work on those things. We're
not going to ~et our goals on
one play to get us four yards
every time because it's not
going to happen. So we
have to continue to work on
eve rything we have and
hopefully we'll be able to
find some thing that will
help us move the ball."

Browns' war of
word: Garcia and
Davis in debate
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

BEREA Jeff Garcia
doesn't mind being called
mobile. shifty or quick on his
feet. Don't call the Browns'
quartcrhack
"skitti,h."
th&lt;\ugh.
Garcia's a little sensitive
about th at word.
Browns coach Bmch Davis
knows that now, two days
after he referred to Garcia as
being "skittish" during a 3423 loss, against Pittsburgh . last
Sunday.
''I don't have a reaction to
that." Garcia said Wednesday
when asked how he felt about
Davis' comment. ''Until he
(Davis) plays the quanerback
position. then he can underqand · where I am co ming
from."
Out:h. The Bush-Kerry
presidential debate may not
deliver a juicier line.
Based on his salty delivery.
Garcia meant 10 say "can't
understand." But it's not the
first mixed message coming
mtl of team headquarters as
the Browns (2-3) try to salvage a season that's show ing
signs of slipping away . .
Cleveland\ offense enters
thi s week's game against
Cincinnati ranked 30th in the
NFL. Theories abound to
what's at the heart of the
Browns· inel'ticien~y . Is it the
lack of a running game'' b it
Garcia. who can't seem to
stand still in the pocket 0 h it
the offensive line'' Do the
Browns have enough play makers?
Garcia offered his take on

Wednesday.
saying
the and the protection doesn't
Browns are simply missi ng hold up, you will get skittish.
too many chances at big plays. That is no reflection on him."
While watching game tilm.
Garcia acknowledged there
Garcia finally sees the open have been times when he has
receivers he's not seeing left the pocket too early, and
downtield on Sundays. He's said that he is still "in a learnseei ng receivers not coming ing mode'' with the Browns.
back to the ball when he
He's still adj usti ng to his
scrambles, and watching new team . Slowly.
potential touchdowns tum into
''I'm not saying that I had
field goals.
better protection in San
"That is what is disappoint- Francisco, but I knew exactly
ing," said Garcia. in his first where to go with the football
season with, Cleveland after pretty much 95-to-99 percent
signing as a free agent. of the time," he said. "I knew
''Because it's not like we are a how to get the ball out of my
bad team or a terrible otlense. hands quickly and make
The plays are there to be things happen."
made. We're not making · While he was with San
them. and that's me included." Francisco. Garcia said the
On Monday. Davis said 49ers spent a po"rtion of every
Garcia. who has been sacked practice working on scramble
13 times this season and was drills . . They simulated game
running from Pittsburgh's conditions so that when
blitz on virtually every snap, Garcia fled the pocket the
needed to trust his protection. other offensive players knew
"The quarterback has to what to do.
He suggested the Browns
have confidence . that the last
time he got hit was an aberra- should do the same.
lion," Davis said. "He can' t be
"Maybe that's something
skittish. He has to sit in the that we need to fo~us on a lit-.
tie more here hecause that's
pocket and make throws."
Following
Wednesday's the type of player I am," he
practice, Davis was told that said. "We can all get better
Garcia didn 't see m happy when those situations arise."
about the ''skittish" comment.
Notes: OL Enoch DeMar
" He probably sbouldn 't will replace Paul Zukauskas at
have been," Davis said. starting left guard this week. ·
"That's one of those things ... RT Ryan Tucker (quadriwhere the media takes one ceps) and DL Gerard Warren
word out of 12 paragraphs and (chest) are both listed as quesparaphrases it when it is taken tionable for Sunday's game.
out of context. Jeff and I Davis expects both to play....
talked about it and laughed U.S. national sec urity adviser
. Condoleezza Rice will visit
about it.
"I will still say that when a the Browns on Thursday. She
quarterback gets hit, when he spoke to the team last season
thinks that he has protection in Baltimore.

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SPORTS
• OSU defense hopes
to take out frustration
on Hawkeyes.
See Page 81

J-1{1 II\)

. I)( ' ] I IBI.H 1:;. :.!IU'-1

"'"' ·""''·"'"' '""""' ·' "'"

ODOT to open U.S. 33 on Oct. 22
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAllYSENTINEL .COM

DARWIN - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
will cut a ribbon to open the
new 16-milc stretch of U.S.
33 between Darwin and
Athens on Oct. n.
ODOT Director Gordon
Proctor will attend the ceremony. which will begin at
10:30 a.m., just west of the
junction with Ohio 681.
ODOT District Director

George Collins said local
elected officials from Athens
and Meigs Counties have
been invited to attend the ceremony. The Meigs Higtr
School Band will perform at
10:15 a.m.
Construction on the new
highway began in late 200 I.
Smith
and
Johnson
Construction completed the
project in two phases. at a
total cost of $73 million .
The new roadway is a
"super two" highway identi-

cal in design to the
Ravenswood
Connector,
opened laq December. 11 is a
two-lane road on a four-lane
right uf wuy. whic h allows
ODOT lo expand the road to a
four-lane hi ghway. if truftic
coums warrant it. wi thout
acqumng additional real
e-rale. Collins said.
The new highway's design
includes 12-foot driving lanes
and 10-foot paved shou lders,
and left and right turning
lanes at each of its tive inter-

sections. There are eighl
bridges. Col lins said. While
the roadway is designed for a
65-mph speed limit. the limit
will be 55 MPH in accordanc,·
with state law.
"The continued development of U.S. 33 is so important route because it connects
to 1-77 in West Virginia and
helps move traffic throu gl\
Ohio in a north/south direction," Collins said. "Thi s is a
major corridor, with a large
amount of truck 1raffic. and

our goal in L·ompleting tht'
corridt1r from Ka'vl'll "'\ l~lH.I .
\\. '. V;t. I ll C t) lumhu ~o, j, to
incr~;1..,e ..,;tkt\ ;111d lll(Jhilit\
fo r mo ltm ..,h. \\ hilc pro' 1Jing
'outhea,tcrn Ohio opport uni-

ty fo r gr~al~r an:c ...... and eco·
nomt c· de' elopmcnt."
ODOT
Spokesman
Stephanie hlsun 'aid 111c publ i ci~ L'llcuurugt!Ll to uttemJ the
upt&gt;ning

'~oint $Heagant iReglgter
(304) 675-1333
- '

@a!Hpohs Jlallp a!:rlbunr
(740) 446-2342

next'' erk.
11

ill be

Please see ODOT, AS

Senior Citizens Center hosts. annual plant exchange
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOE FLICH@MY DAIL'r' SENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - What will
you have 0
Dahlias or day lilies. hardv
begonias or hydrangeas, a huttertly bush or sp ider plant perhaps. Or will it be geraniums
or grasses.
Perennials and tuberous
roots with stems ready to set
into the ground, potted house
plants to enjoy during the winter months, and stems ready
to be rooted in water, were
among the table full of plants
brought to the Senior Citizens
Center Thursday for the annual exchange.
While the event is called an
Page AS
"exchange" · - that 's where
• John Boyd
you bring plants from home
and exchange them for some- Juanita Roush, assisted by master gardener Connie McCambridge, left.
. thing different - it was more selects several plants for her home flower garden. (Charlene
than that for many who had Hoeflich/photo)
nothing to share. It was a time
Right: Here Hal
to
get a start for a new plant.
• A Hunger For More.
As an educational part of the proKneen talks about
Those attending were encourdged by the gram. Kneen talked about growing
SeePageA2
how dahlias. the
master gardeners, Alice Thompson. Alice dahlias and some of the other plants
• Meigs Girl Scout diary.
tuberous root. which
Wamsley, Shirley Hamm. and Connie included on the excha nge table. He
See Page A6
if planted this fall will
McCambridge, who hosted the exchange. gave tips on selecting the right lot:a• Judge rejects bid by
flower next summer.
and Hal Kneen. Meigs County Extension tion and soil for specific plants. the
and the care the
Jackson defense to throw educator. to pick and choose from the many use of fert ilizer. the role of pinching
in
by
those
who
had
varieties
brought
plants require.
to stimulate new growth, and care
out indictment, reveals
plants to spare. Many left with plastic hags to be given during the winter
(Cha rlene
details. See Page A7
tilled with a variety of plants.
Hoeflich/photo)
months.

OBITUARIES

..

INSIDE

WEATHER

First Baptist Church of Racine building more than a legacy Elderly flood .
BY BETH SERGENT .

,

BS ERGENT@M YDA ILYS ENTIN El .COM

RACINE - "If you build
it, they will come.''
That famou s line of dialogue from the tihn 'Field of
Dreams· could apply to the
new building being constructed by the · First Baptist
Church in Racine.
The multi-purpose buildDetails on Page 48
ing is first and foremost for
church members but also for
community memhers.
'The biggest thing is we want
to reach out to people,"
explained Pastor Rick Rull
2 SEctiONS - 16 PAGES
about the church's new addition.
Calendars
A6 'The Baptist Church is not just
Classifieds
B4 -6 for a select group of people. We
Comics
87 don 't care where vou are in life."
Rull hopes 'the building
Dear Abby
A6 will house activities that will
Editorials
A4 appeal to the elderly, handiFaith•Values
A2-3 capped. teenagers and whole
families.
Movies
As . There arc plans to use the
Nascar
88 building as a walking facility
Puzzler
Insert during inclement weather,
as a meeting place for a
Obituaries
As and
new ministry geared toward
B!. handicapped children .
Sports
AS
Weather
Please see Building. AS
© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

victims offered
assistance
· Bv

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

H O EFLI CH@ ~ ~DAii..lSE~TI"-tS -.

CO M

P0\1EK0)
\lcig&gt;
Count\·.., !lund 'ictirn--. age
60 or -n, ('r urc b~.:·in~ ntfe rect
"Pe(ial Jj,a,tl"r r~lic-1 -.en iLe\
hv the :\rca Al.!l'n'-·' 011
.{gin§! .~~ program t7! Ru~·keye
\ ,rile\
~ De' L'l1lpr11eri1

Hi JJ,- H ucktn~

R e~iPn;d

D"u·ic l.
Thi, 11 et'l-; !)1' .-\r~a -\gene;
on A~inl.! ~llliH'Lllh.:cd that
elderi\ tlonJ 1 ic titm in
.-\then'}.
\lei!.!'- \1onn)l.!,
\-1or~an. '\nhJ,·. Per r\ and
\\·a..,fllll~ton n .Hillllr..';, :.ire cli2:ibk fc1r . . ome . . ~n in~ . . free

of

&lt;

•

Pastor Rick Roll stands on the staircase leading to the 'mezzanine of the new multi-purpose
building being built by the First Baptist Church of Rac1ne . The building is so large it will have a
high school regulation size basketball court. (Beth Sergent/photo )

I

char!!e t hl\llt ~h the .-\rca
Ae.e nl\.
':". In ~in t:ffurt to '-~''bt tho~e
in net:J . ._·a . . e m,Hlclt!t'r..., from
tht! .-\rea Af.!enn 0n .-\~inc
will \ i . . it inc.li\'idiJ ~d-, in ~~rde..r
to 1dentlf\ n~ed .... llh.l ih"-hl in
cnnncl l ill~ th r..'m \\ tth .._·ommunit\ ._re-.Pur~.'l.&gt;· . . aid
Rchet:-~a Lau ghlin. -\ gt'nC!

1

1

Please see Assistance, AS

Emergency Nurses
Week
is October 1b - 16

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 .

~.:eremon)

amllha t traffic control

INDEX

QUOTABLE: Jim Tressel. philosophiLing on foot ball and life at his weekly news
confe ren ce: '·Everyt hing is a part of
everything."
QUICK·HITTERS: Purdue coach Joe
Tiller goes for career win 1\o. I 00 a!!cainst
Wi sconsin. ... Purdue WR Taylor
Stubblefield became the Big Ten 's career
receivin g leader, with 271 catches ....
Wiscon sin's Jim Leonhard set a ~onfer­
ence mark for career pun1-return yards
with 1.185 .... Duslin Fox, a three -yea r
starter at corncrbat:k. returns for Ohio
S!ale after mtssin g 3 l /2 games with a
hrnken ann . ... Purdu e is 5-0 for the firs t
time since 1'1:15 .... E1·e ry national ly
ranked Big Ten team but one hit&gt; the road
S&lt;tturday: Nn. 20 Minne,ota at Michigan
State . No. 14 Michi gan at Illinois. No. 25
Ohio State at Io wa and No. 10 Wi scons in
at No. 5 Purdue .

British paper solicits
letters to ·
Ohio voters, AS

Holzer Medical Center salutes our
Emergency Department nurses during
this ~pecial · observation .

+

MEDICAL CENTER
DiSC'()ll('l' the J-lolzcr nif.f'ercncc

www .holzer .org

•.

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