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\

Northwestern
Minnesota
Ohio State
Penn State
Indiana
illinois

2·1

1-1
0-3
0-3
0-3
0-4

All Top 25
7-0 2-0
6-1 1-0
4-3 1-0
5-1 0-1
4-2 1·1
3-3 1·1
5-2 0·1
3-3 0·1
1-4 0-3
2-4 1-1
2-5 0-3

PF
146
209
197
226
151
150
118
120

JJJ

154
87
114
146
153

-.uNOIS
~

c2004 Longwing Publications Inc.

131

115

GAME OF THE WEEK

104

161 181
173 181

Michlgaa at Panlae

Average pei- game

. . 255 .3
.. 238.0

. . 228.7
. . 226.7
. 225.7
194.6

ns...oonDIE

.. 168.1

Purdue .. . .

.. .. 153.5

~HIGAN

141.3

ftWALOil£.11!
Purdue . . . .

. . 485.3

. . 461.4

Minnesota ..
Michigan State
Northwestern .

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

. 438.5

Illinois . . . .

.........

. 370.1

. 441.6

Michigan . . .

. . . . . , , ... . . 368.0
Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 355.8

PAII. .O DD DIE
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141.9
180.2
Penn State ... .
195.0
Ohio State. . . . .
199.6
Michigan State ..
..
..
.
....
201.7
Michigan . . . . .
.. 215.9
lllinois . . . . . .
.. 226.5
Iowa

an...O DD'J:IfiE

. 74.7
Michigan .
. 75.5
Iowa . . . ... .
. 77.3
Purdue . . ... . .
. 80.5
Wisconsin
.. 125.3
Penn State
Northwestern . . .
. . . ... . . 132.0
Ohio State. . . . . . . . . .. .
. 141.7

Rlustration by Bruce Plante c 2004

PUrdue's hopes on line

. '1'0'1'111. DD'J:IfiE
Wisconsin . . . . .
. , . . . . . .
Michigan . . . . . . . .. . ... . .
.
Iowa . . . . . . . . .•.•..
.
Penn State ,
. . . • . •.
Purdue . . . . . . ·, • . • . . . . .
Ohio State. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
Michigan State . . . . . . .

221.4
277.4

T

wo team-; remain unddehted in Big Ten play - Michigan
and Wiswn:-.in -· blll since they don't play each oth~r thi s

302.0

305.5

:..ea~on . 11•:-.

321.0
336.7
363.6

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
PIIUIIfO YAIIDIIOE
Kyle Orton , Purdue . . . . .
. .
Brett Basanez, Northwestern . . . . . .
Chad Henne , Michigan . . . . . . . . .
Drew Tate, Iowa.
. ........
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota . . . . . . . .
lack Mills. Penn State ... . . . . . .
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana . . . . . . . .

1.877
1,586
1.538
1.341

1,262
1,183

1,049

DI. . .G YAIIDIIOE
Laurence Maroney, Minnesota
Michael Hart, Michigan . . . .
Marion Barber ill, Minnesota .
Noah Herron, Northwestern . .
Piene Thomas. Tilinois . . . .
Drew Stanton, Michig an State
BenJarvus Green-Ellis, Indiana

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

869
730
678
672

573
Li54
450

IU:cavllfG YAIIDIIOE
Bray\or. Edwards, Michigan . . . . . . . .
Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue . . . . . . . .
Courtney Roby. Indiana . . . . . . . . . .
Mark Phitmore. Northwestern . . . . . . .
Santonio Holmes, Ohio State . . . . . . .
Kendrick Jones, Illinois . . . . . . . . . .
Ernie Wheelwright. Minnesota . . . . . .
Clinton Solomon. Iowa . . . . . . . . . .

781

608
592
533
520
456
Li36
LiOl

'1'0'1'111. Oil DIE
Kyle Orton, Purdue ..
Brett Basanez, Northwestern . . . .
Drew Stanton, Michigan State
Chad Henne, Michigan
Drew Tate, Iowa.
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota .
Zack Mills, Penn State ..
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana

POIIfft
Taylor St'ubblefteld, Purdue , .

. 1,952
1'7 36
.. 1.497

1,468

. . 1,341
.. 1,162
. . 1,184

.. 1,184

. .. 66

Dave Rayner, Michigan State . . . . . . . .
Noah Henan, Northwestern . . . . . ...
Ben Jones, Purdue . . . . , . . . . , .. .
Garrett Rivas, Michigan . . . . . . . . . .
Brayton Edwards. Michigan . . . . . . . . .
Marion Barber Ill. Minnesota. . . . . . . .
Mike Nugent, Ohio State .
. ..
Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota. . . . . . . . .

57
54

52
49
48
48

Li8
48

ilfii:MU IIOD

..

Markus Curry, Michigan .
. .
Tracy Porter, Indiana
. . . . . ...
Jason Harmon , Michig an State
..
Anwar Phillips. Penn State . . . . . . . . .
Ukee Dozier. Minnesota . . . . . . .
. .
Kelvin Hayden, lllinois . . . . . . . . . . .
Seven tied at 2

'/1//)

/', \f,/~

en
SPORTS
• Red Sox complete
comeback, beat Yankees
with ease, 10-3.
See Page 81

After struggling early
~
m the season,
Michigan has turned its fortunes around
with a 4-0 start in the Big Ten behind a
true freshman running back. In last
Saturday's 30-19 victory over illinois.
Michael Hart carried the ball 40 times for
234 yards and a touchdown. breaking his
own true freshman rushing records with
the third-most carries ever by a Michigan
back and the seventh-highest rushing
output.
~HJGAN ST .The Spartans
~
· have found
their quarterback. Last Saturday, Drew
Stanton was responsible for more yards
(410) than any Spartan QB ever in MSU's
51-17 drubbing of Minnesota. Stanton was
19-for-30 for 300 yards and three
touchdowns. He also had 102 yards on 13
carries rushing. and a 4-yard reception
from WR Aaron Alexander.

. 175.6
. 173.1

. . . . . . . .

dating back to 2002, when they closed the
season with a 31-24 victory over the
Wildcats of Northwestern.
lllllrm.JANA Hoosiers wide receiver
......,.
Courtney Roby broke
the school reception record (148) in his
last outing, and will probably break the
receiving yardage record in Saturday's
game at Ohio State, Roby is only 69 yards
shy of the mark.
~A Quarterback Drew Tate was ,
........ the star in the Hawkeyes'
33-7 victory over Ohio State. throwing fo r
331 yards on 26-for-38 passing. Tate
threw three touchdown passes, finding
Clint Solomon twice and Scott Chandler
once .

. 172.6
. 212.9

Minnesota ..
Michigan State
Illinois ...
Northwestern .
Wisconsin .. .

With the 30-19loss to
Michigan. the ntini have

now lost 12 consecutive conferenc;e games

PUI. .OOIIDIE
.. 331.8
Purdue

Michigan . .

Offense an afterthought
in Ohio State's preseason
practices, B2

PA
56

TEAM LEADERS

Northwestern . . . . . . . . . .
Iowa , . . . . . . . . • . , . . .
Michigan State . . . . • .
Michigan . . . . . . . . • .
Penn State . . . . . . . . .
Illinois . . .

Zwick throws on sideline,
Smith gets most of action
at Buckeyes' practice, B.t
'

BIC TEN STANDINGS

Big Ten
Wisconsin
4-0
Michigan
4-0
Michigan St. 3-1
Purdue
2-1
Iowa
2-1

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.(om

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

3

3
3
3
3
3

up tn the rest of thCJconference to beat onl' of

them .
That make"' the Wolverines· mt~tchup with Purdue even more
imrortu m. \vit h only lour ganu:~ re mai uing 111 the n:gular season .
The Boikrma kcr.... who fl.' lito Wi ~c{ m :-. in 1 1-17 Ia.,! wcck, IIIll S!
beat \1 ichigan to . . wy in the runnin ~ for the confercrK't' title .
Mi ~: h igan wa:. ;.~ di:..appointmcnt early in the sca:..on.l osing to

Notre Dame and edging San Diego State, but has since turne~ it s
)ieason aro und. The Wolverine~' defense is much improved . and
true fn:shma n QB Chad Henne has come of &lt;lge. util iting the
Wulvcrinc:..· tup n!t.:civt:rs to make the offcn..,c work.
W1tll w1dc rcccin:r:.. Br&lt;~ y lon EJv.ard:-.. Ja-.un Avant ami Steve
Brca~hm. M 1chigan hw.. &lt;me nf th e mmt talcn tcJ receiving team:-.
in the country. hut they were nol·gcttint! thL' ball as often a~ they
ncc:dcd early in the !lca:-nn . Now, the ball i:- gcning passed around .
and true.: fre :-.hman RI3 Michaelll '-lrt ha~ t;1kcn over as the team·~
UIH.l i~pu ted running bark.
Purdue ·~ offen~e :.. puttered agai1bt the.: Badgers' unrelenting
pn•..,sun.:' in la:-.t week'" lo:-.:-. . QH Ky le Ortnn JiJn't have time to
make d~ci,iuns ;,tnd was fnrn•.d 10 run the ba ll ~evera l times.
fumbl in~ (\vice. Orton·~ fina l fumble was r~L·ovcrcd for a
Wismnsin touchdown. ending the Boilermakcr:-.· undefeated run
and. perhaps. Orton·:-. He is man Trophy h ope~. To win back the
voter"~. 011nO wil l need an impn::ssivc performance a£ainst
M i{.: higan in the Game of the Week.
• Records: Mic higan 6-l. f4-0 Big Ten): Purdue 5- 1 (2- 1 Big
Ten) . • Series: MiCh igan leads 39- 12. • Coaches: Michigan 's

Lloyd Carr (92-27): Purdue \ Joe Til ler (99-6)-1 ). • Kickoff:
2:.10 p.m. CT Saturday. a TV: ABC.
Keys fot Michigan: Pressure QB Kyle Orton . W1s~on~in
cxpmcJ Orton a ~ un~: who coulll makt: mi ~ t akes. forcing th ree
tum mer~ ... . Conti nue fre shman d~:vdopmc nl. The Wolverine&lt;.;
have true freshmen QB Chad Henne and RB Michael Hart q J,rting.
and co ntroll ing their off~:nsc.

Keys for Purdue: A\'oid the letdown. After

l o~i n g

a chance ;,at

ru nn ing the wbk for an unJereated season. the BOilermaker:-. ncell
tq remember there arc plenty of other :-.lakes to play for.
. l mprnve play on the oflen \ivc li ne . The Bn i lcrmakcr~; al lowed

Wi,.cnnsin 10 reac h Onun pl enty. causing
~coring opportunitieS.

turn ove r~

and ruin in~

The Re.t of tlae Matclaaps
and Purdue batl le it out for a chance to un~eat
Wi'ol' On ~m at the top of the conference. the re'\t of the Big: Ten \I,.' ill
hl'gin fi1;ht in£ fo r bowl po\itions.
o
Tl1c Badgers wi ll ho~l a Northwe~tem team that up:..ct Ohio
State only two weeb ago. WisConsi n wil l be without defen!iiVe
end Erasmu.., Jam~ s. but tackles Jonathan Welsh and Anttaj
H&lt;t wlhorne will play and hope to pi ck up the :-. lack:.
Both Mi nne...,ota and Ohio State will II)' to ~nd l o~ing ~~i ds thi:-.
week . The Golden Gopher~ lmt to Mi{.:hi£&lt;m and M ich ig&lt;~n State
back to b&lt;tck for the :.econd '! lraig hl season. This weekend , hosting
Illinois, they will ~Ht cmpt to regain mo'mcntum to clo:-.e out 1he
Whik

Michi~an

~cason .

The Buckeye~. who started the conference sea:-.on 0-3 for the

first time since 1988. hope to end the trend Saturday when they
host Indiana. Coach Jnn Tressel has never been in a losing
situ:u ion al Ohio State, and this game will show how the coach
react s 10 adversity.
One of the hottest team s in the Big Tell is Iowa. which has
depended on QB Drew Tate'~ arm to begin the conference season
2- 1 after upsetting the Buckeyes. This week. the Hawkeyes travel
to Penn State. which is look ing to reverse an 0~3 conference start .

Northwestern at Wisconsin

~NESOTA The Golden
.....,...
Gophers entered
last Saturday's 51-llloss to Michigan
State averaging 301 yards rushing per
game. third in the country. Saturday.
they managed only 102 yards on the
ground. Star runners Laurence Maroney
(13 carries, 54 yards) and Marion Barber
Ill (8 carries, 36 yards) combined fo r 90
yards without a touchdown.

IIIJRTHWESTERN ~~dcats
had a bye week. but running back Noah
Herron got plenty of attention. Herron
was named the Big Ten Offensive Player of
the Week fo r his 19 7 yards and three
touchdowns in Northwestern's 31-24
double overtime victory over Indiana two

weeks ago.
11111o1zn ST.'".,.E For the first time
...,-nu '" since 1988, Ohio
Wisconsin's Barry Alvarez (106-67-4); Northwestern's Rand y
State has started the Big Ten ~eason at 0-3
Walker (Ro-73-5). • Kickoff: II a.m. CT Saturday. • TV: ESPN.
after last Saturday's 33-7loss to Iowa. The
Key for Northwestern: Avoid turnovers. Wisconsin benefited · defeat marked the first time the Buckeyes
from Purdue turnovers and a late fumble return last week. The
have lost three straight games under
Badgers· offense can be slowed. but the defense has been strong .
coach Jim Tressel The Buckeyes
Key for Wisconsin: Pressure QB Brett Basanez. Northwestern
struggled from the start. and Tressel
run~ an offense very si milar to Purdue 's, and Basanez will pick
replaced starting QB Justin Zwick with
apan a defense if he has enough time . Without Erasmu~ James, the
Troy Smith after halftime. Zwick was 6Badgers must find another way to reach the QB .
for-14 for 74 yards while Smith was 8-for12 for 76 yards and a touchdown pass
Illinois at Minnesota
-.an.r ST.'".,.E Despite getting
a Records: Illinois 2-5 (0-4 Big Ten); Minnesota 5-2 (2-2 Big
..,..nn /U
off to a 2-4 start,
Ten). a Series: Minnesota Jeads 30-26-3. • Coaches: Illinois'
Penn State still has not given up more
Ron Turner (4 1-58); Minnesota's Glen Mason (108-106-1 ).
than 21 points and has allowed just nine
a Kickoff: I p.m. CT Saturday. • TV: None.
touchdowns in six games. an average of
Key for 1\Unois: Improved run defense. The 11\ini allowed
1.5 per game.
Michigan freshman Michael Hart to run 40 times for 234 yards in
-.mOUE Boilermakers QB Kyle
a 30-19 loss to the Wolverines last week: .
Jllll'l'"
Orton has been hyped as
Key for Minnesota: End the trend. Minnesota fell apart late in
the
top
Heisman
Trophy
contender. but
a loss to Michigan and was demol{shed 51-17 by Michigan State .
last
Saturday
his
mistakes
led to Purdue's
The Gol~n Gophers must play ~er early, because they are a .
21-17loss
to
Wisconsin.
On
a third down
runn ing te am and have a difficul~ time coming buck.
with 2:36 remaining, Orton took a bootleg

• Records: Wisconsin 7-0 (4-0 Big Ten): Northwestern 3-3 (2- 1
Big Ten). • Series: Wisconsin leads 59-46-8 . a Coaches:

New U.S. 33 opens Friday from Da ·n to Athens
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

DARWIN - The new section of
U.S. 33 between Darwin and Athens
will complete the Meigs Count y_ portion of a macro-corridor lin king two
state capita l cities. The new roadway
is now complete and will be opened
to traffic at a ceremony on Friday.
Judge Steven L. Story of Pomeroy,
who serves as chairman of the
Southeastern
Ohio
Regional
Council 's Route 33 Commiuee, said

Wednesday state funding for and
completion of the new nighway has
been a main focus of the commitee
since 1991 , when the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
a nnoun ced plans to co mpl ete the
macro-corridor
from
the
Ravenswood. W.Va. Bridge 10
Columbus. The Athen s- Darwin portion of U.S. 33 -is part of a larger corridor project which a lso includes the
Ravenswood Connector, a bypass of
Lancaster now nearing completion.
and a bypass of Nel sonville which i&gt;

in the planning stages.
Siory was an outspoken supporter
of the highway during a pre-construction controversy invol vi ng an AI hembased environmental group which
opposecythe highway 's constru ct ion ,
and also lobbied slate offic ials for !he
complet ion of the Raven swood
Co nn~ctor.

The new $73 million roadway is a
:·super two•· highway identical in
d~sign to the Ravenswood Connector.
&lt;opened last December. It is a twolane road on a fo ur- lane right of way.

Pre-natal clinic's mission is
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Denver Frank
• Keegan Duncan
• Cart Henry Platter Jr.

INs'ltiE
• Bush, Kerry fight for
votes in tighf Midwestern
states. See Page 81

POMEROY - Ignorance
may be bliss but it is also
dangerous during pregnancy.
not to mention expensive . To
combat these hazards, expectant mothers of any age or
income are made welcome at
the prenatal clinic located at
th e Mei gs Covnty Health
Department.
The clini c has bee n in
Connie
Littl e,
R.N .,
operation si nce 1983. Despite B.S.N ., directs the clinic and
cutback s of 30% since its one of her many jobs is to
conception. Ihe staff still coordinate cliem care by
strives to provide services arranging doctors appointand enhance the program.
ments, ultraso und s, .Jab work ,
The prenatal clinic is a transportation, ed ucation on
component of Chi Jd and eating properly and the danFamily Hea lth Services . gers of smok in g while pregTheir primary focus is on the nant. L1ttlc, an~ her nght
uninsured and- underinsured ':':!hand man, Beck! Ball even
but ,services are opeft ·to any- do wake u~ calls to. make
one of any income. No one is sure the1r .chents don t m1ss
refused due to an inabilit y to thetr appomtments.
pay.
Little also assists th ese
The clinic provides preg- clients in filling out forms for
nancy Icsting to anyone food stamps and medical
regardless of age by appoint- cards if they qualify.
The clinic supports expecment or on a walk-in basis
without parental consent.
Last year the clinic perPlease see Clinic, A5

threw for more th an 300 yards ip. conse~utive games.
Key for Penn State: Find offensive weapons. Penn State has
fai lcJ to find any consistent source of offensive yardage this 11
season. QB Zack Mill s has tumed the ball over and RB Tony Hunt
ha:-.n' t gai ned significant yardage.

Indiana at Ohio State
• Records: fndiana 2-4 (0-3 Big Ten); Ohio State 3-3 (0-3 Big
Ten). a Series: Ohio Stale leads 61 -12-5. • Coachu: Indiana's
Gerry DiNardo (58-72-1 ); Ohio Slate's Jtm Tressel (1 72-67-2).
a Kickoff: 12 noon ET Saturday . a TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Indiana: Score early . Iflhe Hoosiers get an early lead,
they could break the Buckeyes' spirit and have a chance to hold on

~·~~~)

'Make a Difference Day' project

for victory.
K~y

for Ohio State: Break the streak . Ohio State has lost three

consec utive conference games and must start winning again if it
hopes to make an end ~of-season bowl game.

'
/'HOI IJJ.)' SPO.\ '.'-)OHDJ IH' Till: FO/ .UH\1.\ (; 1H Sf\

~CONSIN Defensive end

~
Erasmus James
solidified his position as the Big Ten's
most dominant lineman in last Saturday's
victory over Purdue, before an injury. In
·the first.half. he had two sacks, forced a
fumble and hit Purdue QB Kyle Orton's

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGilS

Calendars
Classifieds

A3
Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

AS

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio \'sll~y Publishing Co.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

Con!erence _ loo~s to use

tounsm as creat1ve way
to boost local economy
ElY

touchdown, but he threw an interception

r )\/. \:

.

tors and entrepreneurs, and
persons affi fiated wi th or
co ntemplat ing tourism sites,
POMEROY
even is. and experiences.
Connecting agricul!ure. herAnyone want ing to know
itage and nature wiih IOurism more about tourism developfor econom ic vilality and ment and how it co ntributes
building communi ty will be to economic vitality and quathe emphas is of a co nference lity of life is encouraged to
9 a.m. In 3 p.m. Wednesday ~mend .
at the Appa lachian Gateway
The emphasis will be on
Cen ler in Sardina .
learning more about tourism
The w nference is betn g '" a dahle economic develsponsored by the Ohio State op men t strategy. gaim ng
Uni ve rsity Extension Center at mor~ information about the
Piketon and co-sJXltlsored by potcniJal for agri-touri sm,
Ohio's Hill Co untry Heritage what other\ are findi ng sucArea and the Appalachian cessfu l. anJ possible funding
Gateway Center at Southern sources to assist agri- tourism
State Community College.
de,·elopment . acquiring tips
The targci audietKe. accord- and ted1niques for marketing
ing lo !he Mei gs County tourism s il~s. ~vents. prodExtension Scn·icc. is protes- uct&gt; anJ places.
sionals inm lved with tourism
There will also be a disc usorg~mizations. like Chambe rs
""n of opportunitie s in
of Commerce, and local busi- nature wurism and c ulture
nesses. farmers and landown- heritage lourism . along with
ers considerin g agri -touri sm inflmnational displays by
or nature tourism. community t nu ri s m-re Ia ted ex hi bi Iars.
le&lt;lt.krs and public offic ial's · EJuGHional
touri sm
imercsted in economic de' el- resources will be explored
opment strategies .
along with networkin~ with
Others who , sho u1d ·he ot her, interested in tourism
inte re ,ted are crafler' and
Please see Cl'fl!tlve, A5
artists. &gt;mall businc''S ''pc·raCHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

and lost two fumbles.

Boilermakers were held scoreless. In the
third quarter, however, he was forced out
of the game with an ankle injury after
Purdue tight end Charles Davit chopblocked him. With James out of the game,
Purdue scored aU of its 17 points, but still
lost to the Badgers 21-17.

babies

(From left) Connie Little. R.N., director of Child and Family Health Services Prenatal Clinic,
checks in with forme r patient , Sara Allbaugh of Racine who recently gave b1rth to her healthy,
one-month-old daughter, Bailey. "Look what we did." said Little when admiring Bail ey. (Beth

out the clock. but fumbled, leading to a
41·yard fu mble return touchdown by
Wisconsin cornerback Scott Starks. The
touchdown was the winner for Wisconsin.
Orton was 25-for-45 for 235 yards and a

arm to cause an interception as the

heal~hy

•

for a first down, seemingly ready to run

• Records: Iowa 4-2 (2-1 Big Te11); Penn State 2-4 (0-3 Big Ten) .
a Series: Penn Stare leads I0-8.il Coaches: Iowa's Kirk Fcren1z
(48-12 ): Penn Stale's Joe Paterno (341-113-3). • Kickoff: 12
noon ET Saturday. 8 TV: ESPN2.
'
Key for Iowa: Conli nue the offensive attack. QB Drew Tate

Please ne Complete. A5

formed 300 pregnancy te sls
in Meigs County ..
For clients under 18.
parental conse nt is required
to take advantage of the other
services the prenatal clinic
provides such as pap tests
and breast exams by Dr.
Wilma
Mansfield
from
Holzer Clinic who has been
with the program since the
beginning.

.,

Iowa at Penn State

Johnson Construction
:~~~~!e'l':;d the I 3-mile project in two
phases, beginning in late 200 I.
"This hi ghway add resses two
imponanl issues: safety and economic development:· Story said. " We 've
seen the kind.s of inJury and property
damage tha( can come from a road
which had ils ge nesi.s as a wagon and
bu~vv
.. e;.; path."
"The cu rr en t U.S. 33 is not
de signed fo r 20th or 2 1st-century

Karen Werry, Margaret Parker and Debbie Watson. left to right , are check1ng ou t ;\.pickup filled
with new shop lights. paint and painting suppl ies. s inks and commodes , and . lots of miscellaneous items, which wjll be used in the .. Make a Difference Day" project at t~e Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Saturday. The Meigs County Historical Society m cooperatton with the Fair Board
and the Meigs County Commiss ioners will have a wo rk day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .• to improve fairground facilities. Help is needed to clean up the grounds. spruce up the buildings. and plant
bulbs . (Charlene Hoeflic h/photo)

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992~3381

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The Daily Sentinel

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PageA2

DECISION 200

Thursday, October 21,

The Daily Sentinel

2004

Community Calendar
Public meetings

meeting of Shade River
Lodge 1 453, F&amp;AM . will be
held
at 9 a.m. with worl-. in the
Thursday, Oct. 21
Master
Mason de gree follu\\ POMEROY - Salisbury
ing
a
8
a.m.
hreakf&lt;N.
Town ship Trustees will mee t
at I p.m . at th e township hall.
Monday, Oct. 25
POM EROY - The Meigs
Cou nty Lib'rury Board wi ll
meet at 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Sunday, Oct. 2.:J
Library.
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY
- Meigs
Homel'&lt;Hning
will be held at
Coun ty Veterans Service
the
A'h
Street
Church. J'JH
Commission , 9 a.m.. 117
Ash St., Miudlcpurt . Th e
scheuulc indudcs: '! :JO a.m.
Sunday school: J!UO a.m.

Homecomings/
Reunions

~~~:D~nd

morning \Vor ~hi p: noon. din-

organizations

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry of Massac.husetts greets s uppo rters
after a rally at Lorain County Community College in Elyria, Ohio , Saturday, Oct. 9, 2004.
Kerry's· opponent, Pre s ident Bu s h. hasn 't publ ic ly appeared here for more. tha n two
weeks while Kerry has sc heduled five campaign stops in the st ate both sides label mustwin . (AP Photo/ Mark Duncan )

President Bush rolls up his sleeves before · addressing su pporters du rin g a campaign rally
Saturday, Oct. 2. 2004, in Cuyahoga Fa lls. Ohio. Bush, who for a time was making weekly visits to battlegrou nd Oh io, hasn't publicly appeared here for more than two weeks while
Democratic challenger John Kerry has scheduled five cam paign sto ps in the state both sides
label must-win. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Bush, Kerry fight for votes in tight Midwestern states
WATERLOO, loWil (AP)
- President Bush and challenger John Kerry accused
each other of misjudging the
stakes and lacking the leadership to deal with Iraq· and terrorism as they campaigned
60 miles apart Wednesday in
Iowa, a state Bush narrowly
lost four years ago.
"The next commander in
chief must lead us to victory
iri thi's war and you cannot
win a war when you don't
believe you're fightin g onp,"
Bush said in Mason City, a
·nonhem Iowa farming community. "My opponent also
misunderstands our battle
against insurgents and terrorists in Iraq, calling Iraq a 'a
diversion from the war on

terrorism."'
Kerry, campaigning in
Waterloo, said Bush failed to
grasp what the United States
faces in Iraq, where more
than 1,100 U.S . soldiers have
.been killed. "If President
:Bush cannot recognize the
problems in Iraq, he will not
'fix them. I do recognize them
·and I will fix them."
With time running out

before the Nov. 2 election,
national polls say the race is
very close, with some showing a slight advantage for
Bush . Polls in key swing
states like Florida, Ohio and
Wisconsin also show the two
candidates running about
even.
Iraq and terrorism dominated the debate Wednesday as
Bush focused on Iowa,
Minnesota and Wisconsin all states that went against
him four years ago and where
polls show him in a close
race with his Democratic
rival.
After Iowa, Kerry concentrated on Pennsylvania before
heading to Ohio. Four years
ago, Bu sh lost Pennsylvania
and won Ohio; this year the
race is tight in both states.
"The president says he's a
leader. Well, Mr. President,
look behind you, there 's
hardly anyone there," Kerry
said, pointing out considerable ·allied opposition to the,
war. "It' &amp;not leadership if we
haven ' t built the strongest
alliance possible and if
America is going almost

alone."
Saying Bush was trying to
focu s the election on national
security, Kerry said. "I welcome that debate. I believe a
president must be ab le to
defend thi s country and fight
for the middle class at the
same time."
Bush, trying to depict hi s
opponent as lacking the credentials to be commander in
chief, said Kerry was guilt y
of "a fundamental misunderstanding of the war we face
and that is a very dangerous
thinking."
He said the threat posed by
Abu Musab ai-Zarqawi, a
Jordanian terrorist who has
pledged allegiance to Osama
bin Laden and is believed
behind beheading s in Iraq .
"shows how wrong" Kerry\
thinking is.
" If Zarqaw i and his associates were not busy fighting
American
forces.
docs
Senator Kerry think he would
be leading a productive and
useful life ·&gt;" Bush asked . "Of
course not. And that ts why
Iraq is no diversion."

:Cheney accused of hypocrisy
for suggesting nuclear attacks
CANTON (AP) - John
Edwards called the Bush
administration incompetent
and hypocritical Wednesday
after Vice President Dick
Cheney
suggested
an
American city could be the
target of a nuclear attack and
John Kerry was not up to
heading it off.
Edwards, the Democratic
vice presidential candidate,
told about 1,500 people
packed into Canton's civic
center that a Kerry adminis!ration would protect the
United States.
Edwards repeated the allegations of hypocrisy before about
3,500 people who overflowed
the home stands at New
Philadelphia High School's
football stadium. Edwards left
.New Philadelphia on a bus ride
·through the countryside of
eastern Ohio, headed for a
meeting in Steubenville, where
he stopped to buy six
Halloween cookies and six
doughnuts at a bakery.
: In Steubenville, Edwards
&lt;spoke to about 120 people,
:many of them members of
the host United Steelworkers
of America Local 1190. He
told them he and Kerry are

committed to protecting the to effe ctively "sec ure the
interests of working people.
loose nukes in the former
Outside that meeting, about Soviet Uni'on."
50 anti-abonion protesters
Bu sh campaig~ spokesman
staged a silent vigil. Some Kevin Madden responded to
held signs reading, "Abortion Edwards' remarks by again
Hurts
Women"
and questioning the Democrats'
"Protecting the Unborn ability to keep American s
Builds a Stronger America."
safe, saying the candidates
A day earlier. in Carroll in have a pre-Sept. I I mindset .
"They think terrori sm
central Ohio, Cheney defended President Bush's response should be viewed as just a
to the ·Sept. II attacks and nuisance and that threats
questioned whether Kerry frorri terrori sts and rog ue
nations • support ing them
would do as well.
"The biggest threat we face should merely be managed
now as a nation is the possi- and policed like · regul ar
bility of terrorists ending up in crimes," Madden &gt;aid. 'That
the middle of one of our cities is a dangerou s and troubling
with deadlier weapons than mindset to promote when it
have ever before been used comes to protecti ng our
against us biological national security interests."
agents or a nuclear weapon or
Before the rally in Canton,
a chemical weapon of some Edwards met with eight people
kind to be able to threaten the from that area, includin g~ laid
lives of hundreds of thousands off Hoover Co. employee and
of Americans," Cheney said.
union ofticials who denounced
" For us to have a strategy repeated layoffs in the local
that' s capable of defeatin g manufacturing industry.
that threat, you' ve got to get
"At the end of the . day we
your mind around that con- know we can do better,"
cept," Cheney said.
Edwards told the group.
Edwards called the comments
Both sides are fighting hard
"the height of hypocrisy."
for Ohio and its 20 electoral
Edwards said the Bu sh votes. Recent polls show th e
administration also has failed presidential race virt ually tied.

pemoaats disagree with latest provisional ballots directive
: COLUMBUS (AP)
, vision al ballots, Democrats
·Democrats are challenging said in a court filin g late
Sec~etary of State. Kenneth Tuesday.
Blackwell 's latest order on
Democrats sued Blackwell .
: how to; handle voters .who a Republican, earlier thi s
; show up at the wrong pol'ling month after he. iss ued an
order saying voters would not
;place on Election Day.
• Democrats are upset about be allowed to cast a -ballot
:.a proposed requirement that unless they were in their corvoters sign a form saying rect precinct.
they're aware their vote
Carr sided wi th the
could' be discounted under Democrats and . ordered
. state law.
Black well to submt t a pro: This requirement "flies in P?dseMd nedw order, whtch he
·the face" of U.S. District d1
on ay.
Bl ackwe ll says all owing
:Judge James Carr's ruling
last week that Blackwell voters to cast a ballot wherrewrite his directive to co un- . ever they show up, even if
ty elections boards about how. they're .not registered to vote
to handle voters seeki ng pro- there, is a recipe for Elec ti on

Day chaos.
Democrats · say the order
could restrict the number of
poor and minority vo ters,
who move m,ore often. · A
message was left with
Blackwell
abo ut
the
Democrat'· latest court cha llenge.
·In 2(J'OO. about 12 1.!)00 hal lots were ca't by' Ohio l'oter'
·· whp had mm ed and didn't
change ·their voter. rcgistra·
· ··
.
.
·
tton mlormattnn nt w 11ose
names didn't arpca r on the
li st&gt; at .tlieir rcgul&lt;ir r:rccitid.
Of those. about I O~.(JIJ(J we re
co unt ed.

Keeping the focu s on terrorism, Vice President Di ck
Cheney said he wa s concerned terrori sts will trv to
disrupt the elect ions. as ·they
did with train bombings in
Madrid last March.
.. , think if they could get
off a shot. I expect that they
may well try it.'' Cheney said
in an intervi ew on Fox News
Channel. "But at thi s stage to
say we've got specific&lt;evidence of an attack that 's
goin g to happen during a particular window - no. we
can't say that. ..
Wh ile Kerrv and Bu sh
traded chargeS: there was a
moment nf embatTassment and an apology - 'rrom the
se nator 's wife over he r
remark s about fi rst lad y
Laura Bush.
Teresa Heinz Kerry. in an
interv iew published by USA
Today. had said she didn't

know if Laura Bush had ever
had "a real job." She apologized for having forgotten
about the first lady';; 10-year
stint· as a schoolteacher and
librarian.
The White Hou se. mean while. came under critici sm
from Kerry's camp for a flurry of pre-e lection speec hes
being given by Condoleezza
Ri ce, Bu sh's national security adviser. in politi cal battleground states including
Florida, Pennsylvania and
Ohio. Traditionall y. the
national securitv adviser does
not engage in o"vert politics.
''George Bu sh will go to
any length to cling to powe r.
even if it means divcrtin~ his
nat io nal security adviser
from doing her job ... saiu
Sen. John Edwards. Kerry's
running mate .
White House communi l·ations direc tor Dan Bartl ett

defended Rice's speeche s:
"We' re a nation at war, ·we 're
a nation that has troops in
harm's way and the president
has a foreign policy staff th at
helps explain the actiqns we
are taking."
Bush campaign chairman
Marc
Racicot
accused
Democrats of undermining
public co nfidence in the election with last-minute lawsuits. He said legal effons to
change election rules can
"cause problem s for election
officials and bring chaos ...
and circus-like activity th at is
very confusing and difficult
for the American people to
unu erstand ."
Democrats ha ve sued over
alleged hallnt and vo tin g
resttictions in se veral battleground .states. So have indepe ndent groups such as the
Lca~uc of Women Voters and
out side groups alli ed with
Kerry.

ncr and fellowsh ip. I :30 p.m .
. Earthen Vc"e l" 2 p.m . Rc\.
Calvin Minni&gt; speaking: 3
Thursday, Oct. 21
POMEROY - The Meigs p.m Gloryhound Qu&lt;trtct. for merly .luyFM Trio .
Count y Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon.
at Trinity Congregationa l
Church , Second and Lynn
Streets. Anit Moore. volunSaturda y, Ort. 23
teer coordin ator of Holzer
LONG BOTTOM A
Hospice Care 10 speak. For hymn ... ing featuring the
re servations call 992 -32 14 or Golde n Tunes of Pa rkers burg.
949-2601.
will be held at 7 p.m. at the
_ POMEROY - Wild wood ML Olive Church . Lon e
'
Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the Bottom.
home of Betty Milhoan on
BIDW ELL - Gospel conFlatwoods Road.
cet1 will be hclu Saturday at
the Poplar Ridge. S.R. )5.:J
Saturday, Oct. 23
CHESTER
Spec ial ner Biuw ell . The Buikbs

Church services

PageA3

BY THE BEND
Aunt is not wild about this;
Harry's lack of social skills
Thursday, October 21,

Quartet and the Christian
Echoes will be singing. For
more information , call 740593-7390.
POMEROY
The
Hcmlocak Grove Christian
Church will host a fall festival
at 6:30 p.m Saturday at the
Hemlock Grove Grange hall.
Pri'"' will be awrdcd for costumeo..,
and
games,
Refres hments . Everyone is
welcome.
DEXTER The Old
Dexter Church will host an
olu-fas hi oned weiner roast
(&gt;::10 p.m. All food provided.
says pastor Bill Blankenship.
Sunday, ,Vet. 24
.
· POMEROY - A gospel
mus ic fest will be held at 2
p.m. at the Pomeri)y Seventh
Dav
Advcnl ist
Churc h.
Sclied uled to parti cipate are
Rce Facemyer. Ama nd a
Wears. Th e Mclntyre s. Junior
and Rita White , Treva
Ca ldwe ll. and seve ral others.
The church is located at 250
Mulberry Heights.
·
CHESTER - Revival services wi ll be held 6 p.m .
Sunday and T p.m. Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday, at
the Chester chu rch of th e
Nazare ne. Dale Ward of
Florida will be the evangelist.

Racine Methodist women to sponsor bazaar
RA CINE - The Kaci ne
United Meth odi st Women
wi II sponsor a holiday bazaar
on Nov. 20 in the Racine
Methodi st Church soc ial
room.
Handmade . de eorative pil-

lows. tca-toweh, embroiuered
picture s. Chris tm as or na ments. quilts. baby quilts and
much more wil l be for sale .
Also. homemade cand ies.
pies. cakes. cookic.s. mu llins
and other baked ite ms wi ll be

available.
Anyo ne interested in securing a craft table may call 9492.:15-1 . 949-2881. or 949-2530.
Tahles rent for $ 10 each.
Lunc·h will be served starting .at 10:30 a.m.

Smith birth announced
MIDDLEPOIU - Mike Smith and Jeanctl&lt;l Hudson announce the birth of a daughter.
Alexis Blaze Smith. born on Oc t. 4 at Pleasant Valky Hospital. Point Pl easant. W.Va. The
infant weighed l) pounus. I ounce. Granuparents are Penn y Smit h and Anna and Doy Nitz.

Farm bureau recognizes members

.•. .•.. .•.
. . . . ..... .•. ....•
..

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At • . . ••~•. . ••

._. •• ~._. ••

e

:f.
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Send· us a
••••• photo of
'!: your .
favorite
pet and
they
miy ht be---==~~~ •••
••
voted into our
1.!t

.r

2005 .

•••••
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l:

Pet Calendar!

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. Please send or bring this entryJorm along with your photo to

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Daily Sentinel ••

"PetCahindar"
Bl5 Third Avenue
:~ Gallipolis, OH 45631

"Pet Calendar"
200 Main St.
Pt Pleasant, wv 25550

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

1: !'

4':

)•
;'

L

•••~ -:.~ --- -·~-.i-.::.:..-_· ~~- ~.- -.-- ;.-~·.:~~ ;;;~~.-, --- ·:; . .
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hU've ~omevvhere to go if I ran

into more trouble on the road.
Then she escorted me to a
nearby c&lt;~r repair se n ice
where a friend of her' work&gt;.
and askeu him to fix the
minor Jam ;J g~ to Ill } car.· He
did it immcd'i&lt;ttcly withou t
charging a penn) - (lnJ I was
on my \\'a) \\ ilhin " halfhour.
Abby. I want lu ex pre's the
depth of m) gratitude to th i'
woman

h'l'r

name

1~

Su;;mna - fnr her, help and
concern. anu to her friend.
Andrew. fu r fixing 111) car.
They reminded me that good
Samaritan' still exi&gt;~ in thi s
wor ld. I will foreve r be ...
GRATEF UL 101 GEORG IA
Om r ,1. /Jh r is ll'l'iII en IJ\'
Ahigu il Vo;J Ru·ren. als~J
kn011'11 as J ec/ 11111' /'hi/lips.
and 11·as .fo11nded hr ha
11/otha Pa11/ine Phillips.
Wrire
De(ll·
Ahhr
a1
n·1ncDntrAhhr.cnm or PO.
Box 69-140. Lm Angelt'S. (A
90069.

Local Briefs
Hosts haunted
stadium

by the statewide Teamsters
un io n and Ohio·s · Un iteu
Tran srortation Union. He
was enuo rsed
bv
the
MIDDLEPORT
- Big Zanesv ille-base u Sou theast
of th e
Bend Youth Football League Ohio div is ion
Teatmters
~ml
ier
th
is year
will
host a '· Haunted
Sladium·· at 7:30p.m. on Oct. and was endorsed by tl1 e
lmern ational
22 and 29. at the Middleport region 's
Foothall Stadium . Ad mi ss ion· Brotherhoou of Elec trica l
is $3. and includes free hot Workers.
dogs. apple cider and co ffee.

Anderson that was to be held
at the home of Frank and
Jean Ann La,·ell e Oct. 2-1 has
been canceled due to unco ntrollable circumstance' . The
event wi ll not be rescheduled.

;

Shoot planned
for Saturday

Phones out

Anderson
Lang endorsed · Fundraiser
ALBA NY - Pat Lang. Canceled

Recogn1zed for long-term membership in Meigs County Farm Bu reau were: Wilma Parker, Sarah
Caldwell. Mary Davidson . Evelyn Hollon . Raym ond Furbee. and Charles Bush. all 50 years or
more, and Marsha Frecker. 25 years: Delbert Smitl1. Howard Parker, Jan1ce Weber, Roy Hotter,
Wilma Davidson. 'Pau l Reed of Farmers Bank. Ed G1bbs. and Peggy Gibbs. 50 yea rs or more . ·
and Charles Frecker, 25 years. (Brian J. Re edj ph9to)

Democratic cand idate for the
Ohio
House
of
Representati,·e,,
92nd
District. has bee n endorsed

KEEDSVILL EThe
Meig s County Democrat ic
Part y fundra ise r for Ter ry

'

Proud to be apart of
your life.
. Subscribe 1oday • 992-2155

Q%
, Financing
_-- FOr Six Monlhs
~.-.,. ...,.~

-

These members of the Meigs County Farm Bureau were recognized for membership of 50 years
or more at Tuesday's annual dinner. Front. l·r, Barbara Mora . Nellie Michael. Janet Morris.
Pauli ne Atkins. Mary Kay Yost an d Grace Holter. Back. Carl Morris. Don Mora.-Sam Michael .
Ziba Midkiff, George Hotte r. Sharon Jewe ll. Susan Sheppard and Harry Holter. (Brian J.
Reed/ photo)

$449

S.rta

Today in the Sentinel ...

I

Phone: _ _~-----~_.:_;___ _ __

I

ha:-. Jn ··nut."'

~.

.._ Your Name:
~

visil. Th~ pol ite way to do it
is lo ask if a visit would be
conveni ent. "' if it is NOT
conl'cnient. th e potential ho't

•••••

The tlvinning pets will be featured in this
· unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.
-N~~~ ~-t -p~t:-

you \\ill be coming fur a

1.

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

•••••

Dear
Abby

DEAR ABBY: I exper ienced a ranuom act of kindn c "~ and want In ~ hare it wilh
you.
guests.
I wa~ dri ving alone from
Since the world revolves
around Harry. I am 'urc he Atlan ta to a , m,dl town ne•r
forgot to inquire into the state Green sboro. N.C. It was rainof his sister-in-law's health ing hJrd. anu my car
when he ca lled . Now Harry ts hydroplaneu anu slid otT the
refu sing to visit because of mad.
A woman returnin g to work
what he perceived a~
a fter lunch . ~aw my l:ar.•
Milton's response.'
I feel it is time for thi s old stopped. and asked me if I
lady to say 'omething to this was 0"' . I ~s.s ured her that I
se lf-cente red littl e jerk . was fine. hLII felt &lt;I little pan-.
Ho wever. before I put in my ickv about · bcin~ so far from
2 cents· worth. I need to hmi1e. She c:alm&lt;ed me dow n.
know if 36 hours is an appro- helped me out of my car. and
priate time fra me. -- CLUE- invi ted me to sit wi th her in
LE SS IN CU RRY VILLAGE he r car unt il help arrived .
While the poli ce wrote up
DEA R CLUELESS: Harry
needs to polish his soc ial the report and the tow truck
graces becau se he. not yo u. is haul ed my car back onto the
clueless. It is never appropri- hig hway. thi s caring lady
ate to "inform" anyo ne that stood next to me in t he rain .

Plan week's
revival

Subscribe today • 740-992·2155

. . . . .....

keeping me dry "tth her
umhrc lla After the police
were fini shed . ., he insi'&gt;ted
that I come to her ufllce to
catch my hreath and compose
myself.
She telephoned soni~
friends who worked near nly
fntal de,tination (whic;h was
five miles from the 'cene of
mv acc: ident 1 sn that I wou ld

POMEROY -· A live
pigeon shoot v. ill be he ld at 2
p.m . Saturday at the Ohio
RACINE - The cnmmu- Valley Game Birds and
nicatio·;," svstcm"i of the Guides busi ness on Rose Hill
Southern
Loca l School in Pomero v.
Called Pigeon Poker. the
POM EROY
- Mt. Di strict was recen tl y struck
even
t will feature S I000 in
Hennon United Brethren in hy lightening . Many litie s are
Christ Churth wi ll hold a fa ll not working but the prob lem cash and pri/es. Classes will
be for men. women anu those
rev ival at 7 p.m.. through. is gett ing fixed. Anyone
under 15 years of age. There
Oct. 24. Donald Dunn will wishing to reach th e sc hool s
will
· be a choice of chokes.
speak , a1~d ~pec i u l singiil g may cliallJ-llJ-22 U.
The cost is $12 a round using
will be offered each eveni nt! .
#8 shot or ' mailer only. For
more information &lt;.:all ~921072.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
."

DEAR ABBY: How man y
days advance notice should
you give a famil)· member
before advising him that you
will be coming for a \ isi t''
My nephew. " Harry ... called
his brother. "Milton .'' at 6
p.m. on a Sunday to let him
know he wa~ planning to
arrive at hi s home the foll)&gt;Wing Tuesday afternoon for a
visit. (Harry rare ly talks with
Milton. let alone visits him. 1
Harry was off~ndcd when
Milton didn 't "ein th ri ll ed
with the idea . !Mi lton did not
say no : he " tid "OK ... 1
Milton i~ taking care of hi~
wife who is recovering from
surgery and ma y have been
overwhelmed m the iuca of

2004

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�OPINION

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Ohio Valley Publishi!JQ Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Co11gress shall make no law respecting a11
establishmetlt of religio11, or prohibiti11g the
free exercise thereof; or abridgi11g the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmmt for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Oct. 21, the 295th day of 2004. There
are 71 days left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 21, 1879. Thomas Edison invented a workable ele~­
tril· light at h1s lab 111 Menlo Park, N.J
On this date:
.
In 1797. the U.S. Navy fngate Constitution, also known as
"Old Ironsi des,'' was launched in Boston's harbor.
In 1805. a Bnttsh fleet commanded by. Adm. Horatio
Nelson defeated a French-Spanish fleet in the Battle of
Trafalgar: Nelson. however. was ktlled.
In 19-\4, dunng World War II, U.S. troops captured the
German city of Aachen .
In 1945. women in France were allowed to vote for the first
time.
In 1959. the Guggenheim Museum in New York opened to
the public.
1
In 1960. Democrat. John F. Kennedy and Republican
Richard M. Ntxon clashed m their fourth and final presidential debate
In 1964. the movte musical "My Fair Lady," starring
Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison, had its world premiere at
the Critenon Theater in New York.
In 1966. more than 140 people, mostly children, were killed
when a coal waste landslide engulfed a school and several
houses in south Wales. ,
In 1967. tens of thousands of Vietnam War protesters
marched m Washington. D.C.
In 1971 , President Nixon nominated Lewis F. Powell and
William H. Rehnquist to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Ten years ago: Umted States and North Korea signed an
agreement requiring the communist nation to halt its nuclear
program and agree to inspections. Thirty-two people were
killed when a section of a bridge collapsed in Seoul, South
Korea. President Clinton conceded in a news conference that
Democrats would lose seats in the upcoming election. The
wife of CIA turncoat Aldrich Ames, Rosario Ames, was sentenced to five years in prison for her role in her husband's
espionage.
One year ago: Invokmg a hastily-passed law, Florida Gov.
'eb Bu&gt;h ordered a feeding tube reinserted into Terry Schiavo,
a brain-damaged woman at the center of a bitter right-to-die
battle. The Senate voted to ban the practice that critics call
partial-birth abortion. The New York Yankees pulled away
from the Florida Marlins for a 6-t victory and a 2-1 World
Series lead.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Whitey Ford is
76. Rock singer Manfred Mann is 64. Musician Steve Cropper
(Booker T. &amp; the MG's) is 63. Singer Elvin Bishop is 62. TV's
Judge Judy Sheindlin is 62. Actor Everett McGill is 59.
Musician Lee Lough'nane (Chicago) is 58. Fonmer Israeli
Prime Mimster Benjam1n Netanyahu is 55. Musician
Charlotte Caffey (The Go-Go's) is 5 I. Actress-author Carr1e
Fisher is 48. Singer Julian Cope is 47. Rock musician Steve
Lukather (Toto) is 47. Rock musician Che Colovita Lemon is
34. Christian rock musician Charlie Lowell (Jars of Clay) is
31. Actor Jeremy Miller is 28. Actor Will Estes is 26.
Thought for Today: "There are three things which the public will always clamor for, sooner or later: namely, Novelty,
novelty, novelty."- Thomas Hood, British poet ( 1799-1845).

'

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Letters to the editor on the Nov. 2, 2004, general election will not be published or accepted
py this newspaper after Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004.

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Thursday, Odober

21,2004

Right now, Bush scares voters more than Ke.rry
The presidential race
seems to have come down to
this: which candidate can
scare the public most about
his opponent and reassure
people about himself.
Judging by their tactics in
the final presidential debate ,
President Bush and Sen.
John Kerry, D-Mass .. are
each trying to tell voters,
"You're much safer with
me," both in the war on terrorism and in facing the
nation's domestic challenges.
And, judging by opinion
polls, the public is as split
down the middle as it's ever
been - which represents a
gain for Kerry from where
he stood before the debates
began.
Bush campaign officials
think they are about 2 points
up on Kerry nationally, but
they acknowledge that tlve
states Bush carried in 2000
are in danger - in order of
.worry, New Hampshire,
Florida. Colorado, Ohio and
Ne~ada.
,
Kerry campaign strategist
Tad Devine claims that
Kerry, by winnmg the
debates and closmg the
polling gap, has seized the
momentum and will be able ,
to score "saves" in threatened blue states like New
and
Mexico,
Iowa
Wisconsin.
Contrary to analyses that
suggested that Kerry's strategy in the final debate was to
court women while Bush's
was to solidify his conservative base. I thought both candidates sought to reassure
voters about themselves and
pamt a vote for the opponent
as dangerous.
While it's Bush's line that
Kerry is on "the far left
bank" rather than in "the
mainstream," Kerry is also

Morton

Kondan:ke

portraying Bush as an
extreme. radical ideologue.
in contrast to his own pledge
to solve problems in a traditional, moderate way.
And Bush da~med to be a
"compassionate conservative" reformer whose policies
are
succeeding
"Freedom is on the march ,"
he said, the economy is on
the way back. and he will
solve the problems of the
21st ~e ntury .
I think the danger tor Bush
is that his policies- such as
preventtvc
war, Social
Security reform and health
savmg s account &gt; are
novel and risky. '
Kerry. as The Washington
Post's Dana Milbank correctly pointed out. did not
appear in the debates to ful fill the cancaturc sketched
by Bush backers of a "spi neless, vacillating opportumst"
or a "beaded leftist"
Right out of the box in the
tina! debate, Kerry pledged
that he wi II conduct foreign
policy in the tradition of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
Ronald Reagan and )ohn
Kennedy. whereas Bush
"rushed to war, pushed allies
away" and made America "not
as safe as we ought to be."
Bush
has
powerful
weapon s to use agamst
Kerry on foreign policy,
especially Kerry's vote
against the 1991 Pcrstan
Gulf War. But in last week's
debate Bush didn't use them
to deli~er a knockout punch.

Bush did say that "in 1990, this would take away $2 trilthere was a vast coalition put lion needed to pay benefits
together to run Saddam for current retirees.
"My fellow Americans,"
Hussein out of Kuwait. The
international community ... said Kerry , "that's an invitasaid this was the right thing tion to disaster. ... There
to do. But when it came to would be a $2 trillion hole in
the authonzation of the use Soctal Security because
of force on the Senate floor, today's workers pay into the
my opponent voted against system for today's retirees.
... There would have to be a
the usc of force. "
This reads well on paper, cut in benefits of 25 percenl
but Bush didn't set it up to 40 percent."
Similarly, on health care,
properly m the debate, and tt
came off almost as an aside. Bush wants reforms that
Sull to come is an ad that make consumers conscious
features Kerry on CBS' of costs. This, too, is a good
"Face the Nation" last idea. But Kerry is offering
September. declaring it familiar solutions - expanwould be "irresponsible" and ston of Medicaid and tax
"reckless" for any U.S. sena- credits to allow citizens to
tor to vote against $87 bil- buy into the federal employlion for Iraq, "abandoning ee health system.
Bush is trying to scare votour troops" and "cutting and
'
running" - and then point s ers by calling the Kerry plan
out that, a month later. Kerry "government-run health"
that will cost $5 trillion. "I
did vote "No."
On domestic policy, to believe the role of governcounter Bush's dmms that ment is to stand side by side
he's a tax-.and-spend liberal, with our cittzens to help
Kerry sought to shov.. that he them realize their' dreams,
was a moderate champion of not tell citizens how to live
the middl e class who "voted their lives," Bush said.
In turn, Kerry tried to
lor tax cuts over 600 times,
hroke with my party in order scare voters by saying that
to balance the budget" and Bush's judicial appointees
now wants to cut corporate might overturn Roe v. Wade
- something Bush didn't
taxes to create jobs.
Kerry clatms not only that deny. Bush also said he'd
Bush's economic policies save marriage from "activist
have made hun the first pres- judges" by amending the
ident since Herbert Hoover Constitution to prevent gays
to preside over a net loss of . from marrying. Kerry says
jobs. but also that Bush that Bush will remstitute the
opposed an increase in the draft.
minimum v..age while culSo, who's scarier~ I'd say
ti ng taxes for the nch and Bush. because traditionalist
endangering Social Security. policies are 't up to the chalBush plans to allow lenges of the 21st century.
younger workers to diven But, in the voting booth, votpart of their Social Security ers may be scared to face
taxes into pnvatc savmgs those challenges.
accounts. This is a good idea
(Marron Kondracke is
in itself, but Kerry pointed execurive editor of Roll Call,
out that the Congressional rhe newspaper of Capiro!
Budget Office estimates that Hill.)

W flip-flops and will accep~ Islamic Iraq
Rhetorically
speaking,
George W. Bush's most
seductive argument for
invading Iraq is that it's better to "fight the terrorists
around the world so we do
not have to face them here at
home."
That's what he said during
his disastrous first debate
with Sen. John Kerry. You
hear his supporters repeating
the formula every day For
some, it's like this: Arabs
killed Americans, so fighting
terror means killing Arabs.
Unfortunately, like much
of his scripte&lt;j, action/adventure film dialogue, Bush's
false dualism has prevented
people from grasping the
nature of the terrorist enemy,
the vastness of the Arab
world and the limits of
American power.
The obvious problem, as
Kerry reminded Bush, is that
lraq didn't attack the United
States, AI Qaeda did. Maybe
some insurgents attacking
American targets in Iraq are
allied with Osama bm
Laden, maybe not It's
almost beside the point.
Many didn't exist until 'the
United States took down
Saddam Hussein, a glorified
mob boss who tolerated no
·dissent. Now there are so
many guemlla groups that
U.S. military planners can't
keep them stratght.
·
"Unlike a classical insurgency," Brig. Gen. · Erwm
Lessel told The New York
Times, ''these groups don't
offer any'thing. ,They've go t
differmg goals, compet ing
ideologtes. and ·don't offer
anything positi ve "
They agree about kicking
foreign invaders out of Iraq.
p ~ nod .
What \
more.
Les sel's. only refemng to

former CIA client Saddarn or
prepare for total war across
the entire region. .
"Shock and awe," they
called it, like a rock band on
Gene
tour. Intent to prove their
Lyons
theories, While House and
Pentagon philosophers of
empire, most of whom had
never been to war, ignored
Sunni insurgents. Shiite repeated warnings that
rebels. like those loyal to so- 130.000 U.S. soldiers, most
called firebrand
cleric of them support troops,
Muqtada al-Sadr, currently couldn't possibly bring order
negotiating with the govern- to a nation as big as'
ment, have their own jdeas. Caltfornia.
For now, al-Sadr's making
Recent press accounts of
nice; six months out, who Bush administration "planknows?
ning" sessions on Iraq read
Meanwhile, AI Qaeda ter- like "Catch-22." Knightrorists keep plott~ng their Ridder's Warren P. Strobel
hellish schemes on thetr own and John Walcott write of a
mysterious schedule. See, meeting between war planthat's the thing about the Iraq ners and intelligence offiinvasion even Kerry won't cials at a South Carolina air
say: It didn't demonstrate base days before the invaAmerican
strength;
Jt sion. The Army lieutenant
demonstrated our vulnera- colonel giving the briefing
bility. It didn't teach our ene- showed a slide describmg
mies to fear the awesome the Pentagon's plan for
might of the U.S. killing rebuilding Iraq after the
mach1ne. It showed exactly war "To be provided," it
what bin Laden. a cunmng read.
propagandi st, told them :
So. here 's the new ,plan, litAmencans have no com- erally · as I write: According
punction about slaughtenng to the B BC Bush now says
Arabs from the air. l3ut th ey an blamic republic m Iraq
lack the ruthle ssne ss to would be OK if that's what
occupy Islamic countries for vote1 ' 'hoose.
long ..
"I wtll be dtsappointed,"
"(T)here is nothing ·hin. he said in an Air Force One
Laden wuld have hoped for interview "But democracy tS
more thafj the American democracy."
invasion and occupatton of
"that the nip-flop 'o f little
Iraq ." writes. CIA anti-terror- Republican feet I hear' Is
ISt expert "Anony m'ous" 111 that what Bush meant by
his chilling book. "Imperial "M "'Jon accomplished"'?
Hubris" (Bra&gt;Sey's Inc.) Doc; he not grasp that
· Basicall y. he argues that the "blamic " and "republic " go
U S ei ther needs to re'Uuce together like all ·those
fncuon w1 th Mu ;!itm by People\
Democratic
helping 'et tl c the lsi aeli - Republics they used to have·
P~lcstinian dispute. 'toP
in Eastern Europe·&gt; The
propping ur dJ~talor' like 1111nd ree'l ' Would that be a

Shiite Islamic Republic
allied with Iran? A Sunni
Islamic Republic holding tea
parties for AI Qaeda? With
or without veiled women
and mandatory beards~
If that's all the White
House hoped to accomplish,
U.S. troops could have tom
down that statue of Saddam
and pulled out the next
morning. Iraq could have
gotten its now inevitable
civil war started and more
tha11 a thousand patnot1c
Americans would not have
had to die there.
That said, letting the Iraqis
tmpose a theocracy upon
themselves may be the least
bad outcome of the Bush
administration's folly and
incompetence. For months,
I've been directing angry
right-wingers to a Mercator
projection, pointing out that
the "Arab world" stretches
from' Mo~occo to Pakistan.
We simply cannot wage war
upon the entire region; there
aren't enough of us. In terms
even Bush might grasp, Iran
alone, a non-Arab Islamic
republic far more unified
than Saddam's fragmented
kin gdom , is roughly 2.5
times btgger than Texas ,
with much more diftlcult ternun. ·

.But never mind. Fearing
defeat in November, Bush
ha s signaled that he'll
· declare victory and bug out.
Next question: Who gets the
· blame ?
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Ca;:e'lle columnisr Gene
Lyo"' i; a natrona! maga~ine mmrd winner and co-awhor of "The Hunting of
rhe President" !St. Martin 's
Pre.1.1. 2000 ). You can e-mail
Lwn .1

at

genelyons2@

n.com.)

•

'

Obituaries
carl Henry
Platter, Jr.
MIDDLEPORT Carl
Henry Platter, Jr., 61, of
Middlepon died Oct. 19,
2004 at his residence in
Ormond Beach, Fla.
Born on Jan. 22, 1943 in
Steubenville, he was the son
of Carl Henry Platter, Sr. and
Viola Evans Platter of
Beckley, W Va. He was in
the grocery business for
many years and then was a

union laborer for the rest of
his working life.
He is survived by his parents. his wtfe, Kay Platter of
Middleport ; two sisters,
Jeann (Ronnie) Lemon of
Gallipolis and · Mary Lee
(Lloyd Smith of Pataskla; a
brother Jack (Donna) Platter
of Beckley, W. Va. his fatherin-law, Edward Stiles of
Middeport, two sister and
brother-in-laws,
Barbara
(Jim) Fry of Pomeroy, and
Nin;r
Craddock
of
Middleport , and a brother-in- ·
law, Roger (Linda) Stiles .,f

Pataskla, and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by hi s mother-in-law, Eloise
Surface Stiles, and his grandmother Laura Evans.
In lieu of flowers, friends
may send donations to the
Middeport Fire Department
and/or the Victory Baptjst
Church, attention of the Rev.
James Keesee.
There will be no viewing
hours, visitation or services.
Acree Funeral Home is handling the arrangements

Funeral Home m Alliance on
Monday, with burial at
Marlboro Cemete1y.

Gallipolis.
Graveside service will be
held at II a.m. on Friday,
Oct. 22. 2004, at Hoffman
Cemetery in New Haven ,
W.Va. There will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under
the direction of Wilcoxen
Funeral Home m Point
Pleasant, W.Va .

Deaths
Denver Frank
ALLIANCE - Word has
been received here of the
death of Denver R. Frank, 77,
of Alliance, formerly of
Meigs County, on Tuesday,
Oct. 12, 2004.
Services were held at
Cas saday-Turkle-Chn stJan

Keegan Duncan
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Keegan Matthew
Duncan was stillborn on
Tuesday. Oct 19, 2004. at
Holzer Medical Center m

Army reservist pleads guilty at court-martial
on charges in Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) A U.S. Army staff sergeant
pleaded guilty Wednesday to
abusmg Iraqi detamees at
Abu Ghraib prison, telling a
military court that prisoners
were forced to submit to
public nudity and degrading
treatment "fm military intel 1igencc purposes."
Army
reservist
Ivan
"Chip" Fredenck , 38, of
Buckingham , Va , confessed
to eight counts of conspiracy. dereliction of duty. maltreatment of detainees ,
assault and committing an
indecent act. He v..as expected to be sentenced Thursday
and could receive Jt .years in
pnson.
A military policeman who
IS a correcttons officer in
civilian life. Fredenck is the
highest-ranking
soldier
charged m the scandal,
which broke in Apnl wtth
the publication of photos and
videos showmg American
troops abusing and humiliating naked Iraqi detainees.
His lawyer, Gary Myers.
said Frederick agreed to
cooperate fully in further
investigation s and would
testify at courts-martial for
other soldiers.
"I was wrong about what I
did and I shouldn't have
done it," Frederick told the
judge, Army CoL James
PohL "I knew it was wrong
~t the time because I knew it
was a form of abuse."
But Frederick also blamed
his chain of command, saying he was given no training
or support in supervising
detainees and only learned
of regulations against mistreatment after the abuses
occurred between October
and December last year.
He testified that when he
brought issues up with his
commanders, "they told me
to do what MI told me to
do," referring to military
intelligence.
A report this year by Army
Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba
said using MPs to break
down prisoners may have
been a technique imported
from the Guantanamo Bay

prison and possihly deten tion centers m Afghani stan
used to hold suspected terrorists
During the proceeding,
Chief Warrant Officer Kevm
Kramer, a military intelltgence soldier called as a witne&gt;S. referred to an e-mail
from the U.S. command m
Baghdad telling him to order
hts interrogators to be tough
oil prisoners.
"The gloves arc coming
off, gentlemen, regarding
these detamees:· smd the emaiL which was read into
evidence It added that the
"wants
the
command
detainees broken."
Frederick·. who was tn
charge of the night shift at
the "hard site" facility at
Abu Ghraib. west of
Baghdad, said military intel ligence soldters and civilian
interrogators told the guards
how to treat the detainees
That included stripping
detainees, deprivmg them of
sleep or taking away the1r
cigarettes, Frederick satd.
Investigators
wanted
detainee s "stressed out.
wanted them to talk more,"
he satd.
Frederick said that from
his first day at the prison. he
saw detainees "naked, handcuffed to their door. some
underwearing
female
clothes." He said the first
time he witnessed sexual
humiliation used as an interrogation technique came late
last October when he saw
intelligence officers handcuff naked pnsoners togeth er
''Nudity was to humtltate
and degrade them for military mtelligence purposes. It
was very embarrassing for
an Arabtc male to be seen
nude by another," Frederick
said.
During an incident last
Nov. 4 captured on photos
transmitted
around the
world , Frederick said he
helped hook wires on a
detainee's hands and told
him he would be electrocuted tf he fell off a box . An
Army investigator encour-

aged him to abuse the
detainee. saying he didn't
care what was done to the
pnsoner "as long as you
don't kill hun." Frederick
said.
In a Nov. 8 lllcident,
Frederick admitted, he
joined another soldier in
jumping on a pile of seven
detainees accused of rioting.
He also admitted to stomping on their hands and feet.
"I should have stopped it
right there,'' he said.
But the detainees then
were strip-searched and
remained naked , even after
female soldiers arrived on
the scene- which is against
military rules, he satd.
Frederick said he punched
the ringleader in the chest so
hard that the pnsoner needed
medical attention.
Ftnally. Frederick said,
soldiers lined the detainees
naked against a wall with
bags on their heads and then
forced three of them to masturbate.
An Iraqi detainee testified
Wednesday that he had been
forced at Abu Ghraib to simulate humiliating sexual
positions. including masturbating in front of the soldiers.
"! was crymg. I wanted to
kill myself," he said, then
bowed his head on the witness stand for several minutes . "I felt humiliated, but I
had nothing to kill myself
with." he said.
Frederick . is one of seven
members of the Cresaptown,
Md.-based 372nd Military
Police Company charged in
the scandal. · One, Spc .
Jeremy
C.
Stvits
of
Hyndman , Pa., is serving a
one-year sentence after
pleadmg guilty in May to
'\hree counts.
In addition, Spc. Armin
Cruz. 24, a military intelligence soldier. was sentenced
last month to eight months
of confinement, reduction in
rank to private, and a bad·
conduct discharge for his
pan in the scandal.

Iraqi government complains U.N.
doing too little to help in elections;
car bombs wound 11 U.S. soldiers
BAGHDAD, Iraq (A PJ Iraq's interim government
complained Wednesday that
the United Nations isn't
doing enough to help prepare
for January elections, saying
the organization has sent
fewer electoral workers than
it did when tiny East Timor
voted to secede from
Indonesi a.
U.S. aircraft, meanwhile,
mounted four stnkes m
Fallujah on what the U.S.
military said were safehouses
used by Abu Musab alZarqawi 's terror network . A
Sunni Muslim clerical group
demanded that the Iraqi government prevent any fullscale U.S. attac~'~on Fallujah ,
hoping to muster the same
public anger that forced the
Marines to abandon a siege
of the city last spring.
In other violence, II
American soldters and an
Iraqi interpreter were wounded when two car bombs
exploded in Samarra. a city
that U.S. and Iraqi forces
have hailed as a success story
since taking it from insurgents last month. An Iraqi
child was killed and a civilian
was wounded, the Army said.
A suicide bomber in
Baghdad detonated his car
near a U.S. patrol on the atrport road, v..ounding two
American soldters and two
Iraqi policemen. The road is
among the most dangerous in
the capital. Zarqawi 's terror
qrganization claimed responsibility for the attack, though
it was not immediately posstble to verify that the Internet
posting was authenttc.
U.S. and Iraqi forces have
stepped up operations seeking to curb msurgent vtolence
so that Iraqi voters throughout the country can choose a
new transitional government
in January. The elected
assembly is to draft a new
constitution in a major step
toward democratic rule after
decades of tyranny and mthtary occupation.
But Foreign
Minister
Hoshyar Zebar1 complained
that the United Nations has
not sent enough election
experts to help prepare for
the balloting.
"It is unfortunate that the
contributton and participation
of U.N. el)lployees in this
process is not .up to expectations." Zebari told reporters.
He satd the number of U.N.
workers expected to help m
the election was far smaller
than the 300 workers the
United Nations sent for the
1999 independence referen·

1

Reese,
University
of
Kentucky Extenston. Scott
C:ou~ty; "Exploring Agri Tourism as an Agriculture
from Page A1
Diversification Strategy," by
Don Branson , Southern Ohio
development.
Agnculture Diversification
Presentations will include:
Foundation
by
Becky
"Tourism:
A
Viable
Ohto
State
Economtc
Development Nesbitt.
University
E;:xten,ion,
Gallia
Strategy for the 21st
Century,"
by
Leone County: and "Cashing m on
Ohnoutka. West Virginia the Tounst Through Creati,·e
by
Jonctt
University Extension, Wood Markeun~. "
County;· ''The Harvest Trail :- Haberfield of the Ohio Travel
Building a Consensus for Associa1ion .
Sesstons will be conductAgri-tourism ," by Mark

ed by OSU Extenston educators on "Nature and AgnTourism"
and
"Culture
Heritage Tourism."
The registratton fee ts $20
for the program, materials
and lunch. For more informauon or to register for the
conference. contact Deanna
Tnbe. Extension Commumty
Development Specialist, at
OSU ExtenSion Cente1 at
Piketon .1t 740-289-2071.
The deadline for registenng
is Friday

from Page A1
tant mothers for the first 26 weeks of their
pregnancy and then they are referred to their
deli very doctor.
"Sometimes its hard to let them go." said
Little who hopes the support system she creates with her clients can help them sustain a
healthy pregnancy.
The prenatal clime annually services onethird of the pregnant population m Meigs
County. Their goal is to promote a healthy

Complete

family and eommunuy.
A Harvard study estimated that 700.000
women will be hospttahzed for problems
related to pregnancy thts year in the U.S.
which translates mto a cost of $54 billion .
Prenatal care can make a huge dent in that
number and as the old saymg goes. "an ounce
of prevention ts worth a pound of cure.' '
•&lt;We want the public to know that we will
take care of their daughters like they are our
own." promised Little
For more information on the prenatal clinic , call the Meigs County Health Depanment
at 992-6626.

Celebruting special
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740-992-2155

NOW OFFERING BULK FOOD ITEMS
·

o. '- · ...

• enri&amp;tma&amp; ua..tnlt
mdustry io get raw materials into the cownty
dnd easier to tr.m,pon finished product out.
The market !cxlay ts more g!l'!bal than It ever
has been, ant.! the !.Ick of good highways has
from Page A1
h~ld u' hac·k..
.
Siory wtll 'peak at Fnday's ribbon -cuttmg
traffic.
ceremony.
set to bcgm at 10·~0 a.m. Other
"The impact this highway wtlll1ave on eeonomtc development IS nearly as important a' spc&lt;Iker' will include ODOT Dtrector Gordon
its impact on safety," Story 'aid. "Our b1gge't Proctor. Dtstmt I0 Deputy· Diiectqr Geo1ge
enemv In eeonomi.: development in Meigs Collins. D J Grihbins, chid counsel for the
Couniy and throughout southeastern Ohi,, has FeJ~ral lli ghway Athnini,tration. and State
been the lack of transportal ton mfrastructure. · Rep. JII11lll) Stewart. R-Athen' The ceremo"This new htghway wJI!make .it ea,ieF for ny" illlw heldju,l \\C't of Ohio 6RI

Iraqi 1.'' the command 'atd .
It denied witne" report1
that U.S. atrcraft attacked a
women teacher\ college and
a house where a family of &gt;IX
was killed The command
ac(used "a known Zarqawi
propagandtst" of ·'pa"ing
false reports to the media "
The Iraqi government had
been
negotiating
with
FaiiUJah representauves m
hopes of end1ng the "andoff
in the c1ty and allowing the
Iraq i National Guard to take
over sec urity duties there
But the talks .broke do" n last
week over what the Fallujah
ncgouators
called
the
"impossible condition" that
the ctty hand over ai-Zarqaw1
and other foretgn fi ghters .
Fallujah leaders claim al Zarqawt isn't there.
On
Wedne sday,
the
AssoctatJon of Mu slim
Scholars, a Sunni organization with links to some insurgents, demanded that the
government persuade the
Americans to refrain from a a
full-scale ,Jttack on Fallujah
" Iraqi s constder Fallujah
the symbol of their steadfastness and pnde." satd Shetk
Harith al-Dhan. head of the
associatiOn "There is no reaSOQ
to attack Fallujah.
Attacking Fallujah I' th e
wtsh of the occupauon troops
and some interim gm ernment officials ..
Public outrage forced the
Americans tu halt a threeweek siege of Fallujah m
April. a move that led to the
takeover ot the city by
extremist clerics and their
armed followers .
In other development s
Wednesday:
-Staff Sgt. Ivan L. ''Chip"
Frederick, 38, pleaded guilty
to five charges stemmmg
from the Abu Ghraib prison.
scandal. Fredenck. the htghest-ranking soldier charged m
the abuse case, was expected
to be sentenced Thursday.
-The U.S
command
reported that a 26-year-old
male security internee d1ed
Tuesday at the U S -run.
Camp Bucca prison near.
Cmm Qasr in so uthern Iraq .
It said an mvestigatton was
under way to determme the
cause of death .
- Two Egyptian mobile
telephone engineers were
released by kidnappers who
abducted them from their
Baghdad office last month.
their employer said. The
company said the release was
mediated by ai-Zargawi 's
organization.

dum in East Timor.
"Judging by the size of the
process in Iraq and us complexity, we definitely need a
larger U.N. presence in Iraq .
at least to bestow trust upon
the electoral process,'' Zebari
said.
•
The United Nations pulled
its international staff out a
year ago after bombmgs at its
Baghdad headquaners killed
22 people, including the top
U.N. envoy, Sergto Vieira de
Mello
U.N. chief Kofi Annan has
since allowed a team to
return to help with elections
but imposed a ceiling of 35
non-Iraqi staffers. In the
meantime ,
the
United
Nattons is traming lragts outside the country so they can
come back and mstruct other
Iraqis on how to run an election.
Annan said Tuesday in
London that he had sought to
form a U.N. brigade to guard
U.N. workers and facilit ies so
more staffers could be sent
in, but complained he had
gotten no offers of troops.
U.N. officials in New York
said Wednesday that Fiji was
the only natton to respond to
Annan's request and would
send 130 soldiers to Iraq next
month to protect semor staff
and
UN.
offices .
Spokeswoman Mane Okabe
said U.N. offictals also were
talking with the U.S.-led
coalition about providing
troops to protect the peri meter of U.N facilitie s and U.N.
starters working outstde the
U.N. offices in Baghdad.
Since the bombmgs at the
U.N. headquarters a year ago.
attacks on foreigners have
only grown worse. CARE
International suspended operattons in Iraq on Wednesday.
a day after the aid group's
director for Iraq, Margaret
Hassan, was abducted Her
family said Wednesday they
had received no demands
from the ktdnappers.
U.S. officials blame much
of the violence on a!-·
Zarqaw1 's Tawh1d and Jihad
movement. which 1s believed
headquartered in the insurgent bastion of Fallujah, 40
miles west of Baghdad.
The U.S. command said its
warplanes struck more targets Wednesday believed
connected to al-Zarqawi's
fighters.
'&lt;Intelligence reveals that
anti-Iraqi
forces
have
planned to use the holy
month of Ramadan for
attacks against the lraqt interim government and innocent

Clinic

(

Creative

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

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Thursday, October 21, .2004 _

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OHIO

The ·Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 21,

2004

Thursday, October 21, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Stocks

Kou're Invited To The

ACI
33.24
A DAY ON WALL STREET
AEP - 31 .37
Akzo - 37.07
10,750
Oct. 20, 2004
Ashland Inc. - 55 .60
Dow Jones ,,**""''V\7*;-:
;c---- -;;;;il'.......
10,250
BBT - 39.53
Industrials
BLI - 11 .57
- 9,750
·10.69
Bob Evans - 24.00
- JU
- L' - - -A.,UG
. ,-----,SE=PT::---:Oc:::
C;;:-T- 9 '250
BorgWarner- 39.98
9,886.93
High
Low
Record high: 11 .722.98
City Holding - 33.15 ·
Pd. ch8nga
from previous: -0.11
9,895 70
9,804.19
Jan . 14, 2000
Champion ·- 3.52
·
Charming Shops - 7.29
2.200
Oct. 20, 2004
Col-35 .70
Nasdaq
DuPont - 42 .27
-"'~
-.-~
-----:.---- 2,000
·composite
DG - 18.84
Y\T
1,800
Federal Mogul - .1750
•10.07 .
-------~---- 1.600
Gannett - 80.40
1.932.97 ..
JUL
AUG
SEP T
OCT
General Electric - 33.22
Hlgh
Low
R9 ( ord high: 5,048.62
Pet. ch&lt;r1ge
1 ,934.32 1.910 83
from previous: +0.52
IA:~rdl 10, 2000
GKNLY - 3.9.50
Harley Davidson - 56 .47 ~===========--=-=-==
Oct. 20. 2004
- - - - - - - - - - - - uoo .• 1
JPMorgan (formerly Bank
Standard &amp; - - -- - -- - : . -- - 1.1so I'
One) -37.25
~ 1.100 •
Kmart - 90.31
Poor's 500 """'-...v .i,
1
Kroger - 15.00
"'J.43
Ltd- 23.59 .
--J~UL---,--:A~U7
G--=SEC:::P~T--O~Cc:::T1,1036'6
NSC - 31.08
I'ct. change
Hiltt
Low
Record high: 1.527.46
!1
Oak Hill Financial- 36.68
from previous: +0.04
1,104.09 1.094.25
March 24. 2000
'----··----------·---···-- ------ --~-------------1
OVBC - 31.25
AP
Peoples- 27.02 ,
SBC - 26.46
Daily s tock reports are the
Pepsico - 4B .83
AT&amp;T - 15.58
4 p.m . closing quotes of the
Premier - 8.98
USB- 28. 07
previous day's transacRocky Boots - 18.41
Wendy's
32
.15
tions,
provided by Smith
RD Shell - 53.07
Wal -Mart - 52.48
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Rockwell- 39.84
Worthington - 19.85
Gallipolis.
Sears - 36.92

RIBBOM CUTTING

V"C\::r-:;"'--

NewsChannel

of

Between Athens and Darwin

w

~

Weather forecast
Thursdav. October 21
Morning (l a.m.-Nom!)
Cloud y
mornin g.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 55 w ith today's hi g h
of 56 occurring aro und
7: 00am. Winds · wi ll be 5
MPH from the north.

Afternoon {l-6 p.m.)
It wi ll continue to

be
cloudy. Tem peratures wi ll
linger aL 53 . Wind s will be 5
MPH from the north turning
fro m th e northeast as the

Friday, October 22
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will hover at
Temperatures will stay near
5 1. Skies will be mostly clear 49 . . Skies will be sunny to
to mostly clo udy with 5 MPH mostl y su nny with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast.
winds from the east.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will re main
Te mpera ture s will hold
around 49 with today's low of steady around 54. Skies will
49 occurring around 6:00am. range from mostly sunny to
Skies wi ll range ·from clear to pw1ly cloudy with 5 MPH
mosll y clea r wit h 5 MPH winds from the east turning
winds from the northeast.
from the southeas t as the
afternoon progresses.
afternoon progresses.

Some Ohio lawmakers have
been
.
vaccinated, others refusing shots
.

WASHINGTON (AP) So me members of Ohio's
cong ressio na l
de lega tion
received flu sh01s this ye ar.
desp ite the vacci ne shortage.
while others ha ve pledged' to
forgo the vacc ine.
New fed e ral guidel in es
~ncourage 'people over the
age o f 65 a nd ve ry young
children to ge t a tlu shot. but
Capitol
physic ian
J o hn
Eisold rewmmc ndcd th at all
la wmaker s be vaccinated
beca use they spe nd time ' isiting retirement homes . holding bab ies and shakin g
l1 ands.
At least one Ohio lawmak~r listened to Eisol d. Rep.
John Boehner. a We st Chester
Republi can . got hi s shot on
O~ t. 7, two . days after the
shortage was announced.
" He gets a flu shot eve ry
ye ar." spoke sman Steve
Forde said . "He was fo llow ing his doctor's recomme ndation."
Pres ident Bush said he

would forgo a tlu shot thi s
year because of the shortage,
and at least six Ohio co ngress men al so plann ed to
skip the shot.
.. , won' t get a fl u shot . and
neit her wil l anyone on my
staff." sa id Re p. Steve
LaTourette ,
a
Madi so n
Kepu bli ca n. " The a ne nd i n ~
physic ian may have ge nuine
conce rn s about our health,
bu t he' d be far wise r to g iv e
us al l a little bottle of Purell
and donate our llu shots to
se ni o rs. pregna nt wome n.
c hil d re n a nd others at high
risk for the flu ."
Republican Reps. Mike
Ox ley of Findlay and Steve
C habot of Ci nc in nat i. a nd
Democrati c Re ps. She rrod
Brown of Lorai n. . Ted
Strickland o f Lisbon and Tim
Ryan of Niles also have sa id
they will not ge t a shot.
Lawmak ers who have
alreadv been vacc inated
in c lude 68-ve ar-old Sen.
George
' Voinovich
of

C leveland and 80-year-old
Rep. Ralph Reg ula of
Navarre. Sen. Mike DeWine
of Cedarville got a tlu shot
because he has severe asth ma , spokeswoman Amanda
Fl aig said.
Repu bli ca n Reps.
Pa t
Tibe ri of Columbus a nd
Deborah Pryce of Upper
Arlington, a nd Democra tic
Rep. Marcy Kaptur of Toledo
all got their flu shots during
annual physicals that were
he ld before the shortage was
·
discovered.
Briti sh regulators unexpectedly shut down a major
U.S. supplier, Chiron Corp ..
and halted shipment of about
48 million doses after the
co mpany reported possible
contamination.
Between vacc ines a nd
antiviral drugs, enough medic ine will be available to treat
I 00 million people this flu
season, Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy
Thompson said Wednesday.

Watchdog says state executive used
two names to coiled.overtime pay
CO LUMB US (AP ) A
state watchdog said the exec~
utive di rector o f the board
that reg ulates social worke"
and counsel ors concocted a
sche me to award he rse lf hun dreds of hours of overtime
and comp time by using both
her legal name a nd her ma iden name.
Meanwhile ,
Beth
Farnsworth al leged ly was
usi ng her computer for up to
two hours a day to p lay
bridge on Pogo, an interactive game site.
In spec tor Gene ra l Tom
Charles re leased his repo rt on ·
Tuesday, the day after the
Coun se lor. Social Worker
and Marriage {5&lt; Family
Therapist
Board
pla&lt;:ed
Farnsworth, 46, o n paid leave
after she refu sed to resig n.
: C harl es says farnsworth
would app ly fo r the ovenime
payme nts under h e~ legal

•.

name, Eli zabeth Enge lhart,
a nd approve them unde r her
maiden or profess ional na me ,
Farnsworth.
Board Preside nt
Rose
Qui nones-Del\lall e said the
board's execu ti ve committee
wo uld di sc uss Charles' report
o n Thursday.
.
Farnswo rth said Tu es day
she fe lt obl igated to provide a
written respon se to her board
before discussing th e report.
"'!' m ju st s hoc ked," she
said. " I fe lt I' ve been a reall y
good employee. a nd I'm just
surpri sed."
Quinones-De lValle sa id the
con tradict
the
find in gs
impression s he had of
Farn sworth's performance.
"Obvious ly, I can't say it
didn 't happen. " she sa id ,
re ferring to the allegat ion that
Farn sworth frequently played
bridge at work. " She sa id she
was doing he&lt; work du ri ng

that time pe riod. We never
had any reason to doubt her
beca use work was getting

done."
Charles' report is particularly cri tical of Farnsworth
for applying for nearly 700
ho urs of compensatory time
and 59 hou rs of overtime
under the name' Engelhart.
She then approved the payment s under the name
Farnswo rth, usi ng a different
sc ript to sig n the document s,
the report says.
The
report
de ~c ribe s
Farn sworth' s bridge playing
as a "habitual part of her
work day." Between June
2003-and June 2004, investi gators found that she spent
182 hou rs on the Pogo site,
receiv ing almost $6,900 i·n
wages, or $37.73 an hour.
He r annual salary is $78,478.

Proud to be apart of your life.

COLUMBUS (AP) Attorneys for a man charged
in a series of central Ohio
hi ghway
shooting s
on
Wedn esd ay dropped their
attempt to s uppress sta te ments he made after hi s arrest
in Las Vegas.
Defe nse attorneys had cha lle nged
whether Charles
Mc Coy Jr. voluntarily waived
hi s rights when he talked to
authoritie s.
McCoy
is
accused in 12 shootings from
last
October
through
February that took place
mainly along the Interstate

270 outerbelt on the south
side of Co lumbu s. The onl y
person hit was a 62-year-old
woman killed in Nov~mber.
Mark Co ll ins. o ne of
McCoy 's attorneys. ca ll ed
McCoy's state me nt s " innocuous" and said he is focusing
on McCoy's medi c al state at
the time of th e shootings.
McCoy has paranoid sc hizophrenia. according to court
document s and his attorneys.
In Septe mb er. McCoy
changed hi s initial piea of
innocent to innocent by reaso n of insanity. He is charged

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
former judge wa s sente nce d to I 0 days in jail
for having pleaded g uilty
to a sex offen se .
Ja mes P. Kenney, 53, a
former Hamilton County
Mu·ni c ipa l Court judge
who a lso s erved as an
ass isiant county pro sec utor, pleaded g uilty on Au g.
3 1 to a mi sdemeanor
charge of sex ual imposition. Kenney admitted th a t
he inappropriately tou c hed
a 21-year-old ma n in
Februa ry.
On Tuesday, Common
Plea s 1 Judge
Mark
Schweikert
ordered
Kenney to serve th e j ai I
term a nd two yea rs of probation . He mu st receive
coun se ling ·and sub s tan ce
abuse trea tment.
" We served in muni c ip al
co urt
togethe r
and,
because of that , it is a sad
day for me to · hav e to do
this ,"
Sc hweikert
told
Kenney at th e sente nc ing.
The judge also design ate d Kenne y a sex uall y or ie nted offender, which w ill
require Kenney. to re gister
hi s a ddre ss with police in
the co unt y where he li ves
for the next I 0 years.
Kenney resigned as a
prosec utor
after · t he
February offe nse.

WILMINGTON (AP) - .A
woman drivi ng i·n foggy condition s we nt thro ugh
stop
sign and her minivan crashed
into a traC'lor-trailer. killin g
the woman and her son. the
State Hig hway Patrol sa id.
Afte r the accide nt Tuesday
ni ght o n state Ro ute 72. the
mini va n dri ven by Tonya
Kay. 29. of Sabina. went imo
a ditch. Ray a nd Kevi n Ray,
12, were dead :Jt the scene,
in vest igato rs said .
Three other c hi ldrc n in the
van and the truck drive r survived. No charge s have bee n

1O:JSA••• Dignitories will
speak
(Not in order of Appeoronce)

$399

fil ed .
Wilmin gto n is abou t 50
miles northea st of Cincin nati .

'

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ECONOMIC
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COMMERCE

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MEIGS COUNTY
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Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-29S5
112 Easl Moin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ODOT District l 0 Deputy
.Director
• D.J. Gribbins ·Chief Council. of Federal
Highway Administration
• Jimmy Stewart _
State Representative
• Steve Story Co-Chairman SEORC

pl e te. Now that we've
cha nged our plea to not guilty
by reaso n of insan it y. the
state ment s he made are now a
minor portion of the case."
Co llins said.
McCoy. who is being medicated while in Jail. goes on
trial Jan. 7.

EVERYDAY
3 1/2" Doubles

• George Collins -

ical information was incom-

2nd Set F"ree

.....
r

10:30AM••• Welcome

wi th 24 co unt s, includin g
aggravated murde r and murder,
"At the time we made our
mot ion to suppress. our med-

Mother, son killed in
Former
judge gets crash in southwest Ohio
jail term for
a
sex offense

High School

Band

ll_,

Defense attorneys drop protest
over accused shooter's statements

Open Weeknights 'Till9

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HOURS
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BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE

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Thursday, October 21, 2004

www.mvdallvsentlnel.com

AB • The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Garcia wishes. Owens would shut up, Page B2
The Extra Point, Page B3
Big 10 Notebook, Page B3
MLB Divisional Championships, Page B4

Thursday, October 21, 2004

Prep Football

Eagles look to tame Wildcats in road finale .

RivER Crt'IES SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
·oPENS SEASON WITH SuNDAY C
.•
\

'

.

'

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - The River Cities
Cellist Steven Doane~' ts a master performer of
Symphony Orchestra, u~er the direction of Music unusual musical sensitivltyrI!Jld eoverwhelming techniDirector Robert Turlzziani, opens its 2004-05 season cal brilliance. He lias appeared internationally in
with its f!dl conc,rt on Sonday, Oct. 24 at 3 p.m. at the major venues and has sever11l prize winning record:~s3~f~~Sc::hool.
ings. Doane has 11ppeared previously with the River
will
two internationally Cities Symphony Orchestra and in chamber concerts
Doane and violinist in the Mid-Ohio .valley.,
-; .
Double Concerto. ·
Both Mikhaii •Kopelman 'and Steven Doane are
are Howard Hanson,'s senior faculty meniberi; at the renowned Eastman
Jean Sibeius' "Finlandiq." School o( Music In llot~r, N.Y.
will be given ·at · the
Speaking· of. the' Eas'man .S!:bool of Music, this
p.m. Audieoce mem-. ~ntlre concert' has a tla.vor of ·that venerable instituto meet the soloists and lion. Howard Hanson .Was ~!rector' of the Eastman
Ti«:kets for the party will Scb9ol, and also ·one of America's most beloved and
the
.
distinguished comp~r, · · · ·
i~~~;:r; Cltlt$ Symphony ·Orchestra under the . The great Finnish composer, · Jean Sibelius, had
(I( Robert Thrizziani is beginning its eighth . com,mitted. to directing the Ellstman School early in
beanne known as one of the finest region- the 20th Cf.ntt~ry. Unfortunately for the Eastman
ln Wlist Virginia and southeastern Ohio, School, Slbelius couldn't give up his native country he
also. ·directs the uitically acclaimed loved .so' weli~ .
.
in Charleston, and has
His work featured•.op this program, "Finlandia," is
for the West Virginia perhaps the c~~l;lressiol) of his love of
·
and hils become'. tM!FIImish national anthem.
forming the . orchestra
Future s,cbedtltell events ·of the
Valley and from the West Symphooy include a Fall Pops Concert Nov.
·
region. Last season saw p.m., Bll.!l'"erhassett Sc!tooJ,, featuring
.
8y.mp~ony and combined choral Dearth on trombone and Jenny Morris op
the direction or'Marietta College's Dr.
The winter concert Is Jan. 29, 2005, at 8 p.m.,
groups
a memorable performance of Marietta High School Auditorium, will feature returQr
Daniel
Beethoven's
No. 9 to a packed audience at ing solo violinist John Harrisqn to perform the
Marietta
Auditorium. The orchestra is Brahms Violin Concerto.
,,,
hoping to
that event wit!J more outstanding
This concert and also feature choral works
Dr.
performances in
season.
Daniel Monek and area choral· groups.
"
Violinist
is a ~~ndary artist,
On J119e 31'.~;;; at 8 p.m., Shrine Opb MafWta
and his
prlncipatv,i!llinist for the wfltbe'the veJ1ud~t:.::4!1·JJroadway to ~o.lintain Pi)ps!
Tokyo and Borodin String
He bas recorded ~~n.cert1 with Jo~nriy Sta~ts and. ~lle , . ~xery. Boys
extensively and has collaborated with many leading Jommg m, and w1th 11 special appellran~by&lt;,Michael
artists , such as cellist Rostropovitch and pianist "Moon" Mullins, mayor of Ma~tia. ,,,., ,,, ·
Emmanuel Axe.
Upcoming educational p~luns
.i~~lude
appear,,, 'i)'
·-;,.,,,

..

BY BRYAN WALTERS

sports@ mydailytribune.com

:

d

,...tb

-

'-

RogulorSouon

L--..,..,.--by the entire orchestra on Nov. 19, 2004, at
High School and Warren High School. Also a
concert for families is also scheduled on Nov. 20,
2004 at 2 p. ' ., ~onerhassett School.
· The. 've , Citiet,Strlng Quartet will appear in area
schools ·
lY. "\
Ad{il
. l·'flt,slbaday's fall concert is $15 for adults
arulJIIJ, fi " ~dents. Tickets will be available at the
cOn~~Sr "-ajl be purcha~4. in advance at Peoples
Ne~~ .r1en's Photo Celiter, Third Street Music,
Ma · , or online at 'Jp.rcso.us (visit us for information about the RC1!9').
·~Tiils event Is AD~,a'Ccessible. Ir special accommoda·
. lions are needed,,Jjilfase call (304) 485-7068 in advance.
' Corporate ~nsor for this concert is WesBanco.
After-conc~&gt;party SJ?Onsors are WesBanco and mar·
k~ting· sponsor, the G1anfag~a Group. Funding .is l?r~v1ded ;in part by Artsbr1dge, the West V1rgm1a
Com~lssion on the Arts and the National Endownient
fqfllhe
Arts.
-~~

'In the Mood'
town ft_ .. ....ft.
mill for more th11n 100 years.
pjj,de~iliJI ·~~rtamor House at Punderson
CountY has many stories of
are tales of tllckering
Wfli,rin'"" laughter, and the feel
walking thraugh the

near Lake
said to
used to
of
railthe

of a

She intentionally
off a
now known as the Blue
would save her. He didNow on occasion, some
people
the ghostly form of the
Indian maiden appears on the rock only to van·
ish at midnight into the Blue Hole with a ghastly
scream that echoes down the canyon.

.

..:· etJme ,,.,. "*, · ~t~; Bull'
·•

WJgj](J)arg

Today's games

.•

. ··-

{f)}jfa~aa

...
1)Yo Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile 'Nbrth Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge
Mason,.wv 25260
.
Phone (304) n3-5323

.

2400 Eastern Ave.
· (Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
#'7/lnt 446-1711

Attitnla.t River Valley, 5:15 p.m.
S.C- ~ Dlvlllon II
at W.ll.stor&gt; Hitl/1 School
VInton County vs. Gallla Academy,

7:30p.m.
Bocllanolo - Dlvlolon IV
at Alhsns High School
Southern vs. Crook1vllle. 7:30 p.m.

Saturday's Q(lmes
Sec1tonala .,- Dlvlolon 11
at Wo118too High School
Meigs ve. Marietta. 4 p.m.
llol:tlonala - Dlvlolon Ill
at Vllllon Co. High School
River Valley vs. . winner ot Federal

Hockln..,ai_Oocilaoai'!H,.jlll, 6:30 p.m.

B.ctto.••Division IV
at
High School

WATERFORD The
Eastern Eagles look to continue their run at a Division
VI, Region 23 playoff berth
thi s Friday when they take
on the Waterford Wildcats
in a Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division showdown.
·'
EHS (5-3, 2-1 TV C
Hocking) currently sits II th
in the region, and a win
would only improve their

chances in cracking the top
eight spots. The Eagles also
bring a 3-1 road record and
a two-game winning streak
into Friday's contest at
Waterford.
The Wildcats (3-5, 1-2)
had littl e trouble with
Southern last week in a 396 win, the team's first in
Hocking play. WHS also
has a slim play-off chance
alive as they enter "Senior
Night" this week. so the
Wildcats will be eager to
make their final home game

a memorable one.
Led by tailback Jason
Sampson (o-foot- 1, 175
pounds).
who . had
223 yards
·on 14 carries
and
three touchdowns last
w e e k
against th e
Tornadoes,
the Wildcats strive on running the football.
WHS amassed 321 of its

38o offensive ·yards on the
ground and held a comfortable 33 -6 a't halftime
against Southern. includin~
an impressive 19-point sec':
ond quarter swing capped
by scoring runs of 75 and
46 by Sampson.
Jarrod Jenks (5-9, 171)
also brings a bruising running style to accompany
Sampson in the backfield.
Bradley Lang (5-8. 157)
managed a touchdown on 1of-4 passing for 45 yards at
quarterback , but wa s inter-

cepted twice in the win . The
45-yard 'core went to Caleb
Snyder (6-1. 167) early in
the fi"t 'tan/a.
Dale Docbereiner 15-8,
154) had the other fi"t half
'core on a 12-yard run just
before
halftime.
Doebereiner also contributed 69 yards on six
totes.
Wideouts Kyle Kincaid
(5-11. 173). Ryan Paxton
(6-0 .
171) and
Matt

Please see Eagles, Bl

College Football

Zwick throws on sideline, Smith gets
most of action at Buckeyes' practice

Alh~

Eaa1ern

ve.

winner

of

BY RusTY MtUER

Soullleastern/Trlmbl6, 4:30 p.m.

Associated Press

Rio Grande
soccer blanks
Malone, 6-0
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen soccer team. the
NAJA's top rated team,
hooked up with the visiting
Malone
Pioneers
on
Wednesday at Evan Davis
Field and scored a 6-0 triumph.
A pair of goals each from
freShman mid-fielder Ryan
Rus se ll and senior striker
Simon Carey paced Rio
Grande ( 13-0- 1, 4-0-1 AMC
South) to the victory.
mid· fielder
Sophomore
Conar Dawson put Ri o
Grande on the scoreboard in
the 18th minute after receiving a feed from Ben Hunter.
Carey scored his f~rst goal in
the 32nd minute with freshman Ryan Baxter getting the
assist.
Sophomore defen sive back
Tony Griffiths had a shot
carom off the left post from
30-yards away in the 23rd
minute , which would made
the score 2-0 at the time.
Rio Grande would take the
2-0 lead to halftime .
Malone (7-8, 1-5 AMC
South) mi ssed on a ¥olden
opportunity to score m the
closing seconds of the first
half. Forward David Duley
missed wide left on a breakaway as 'the clock was wind· ·
ing ~own. ·
Ru ssell got into the act
with two goals in the second
half, in the 56th and 59th
minutes respectively. Carey
assisted the Maryland native
on hi s !lrst score and Dawson
assisted on the second.
Sophomore defensive back
Courtney Rimmer made the ·
score 5-0 with a header in th e
box 111 the 65th minute .
Sophomore Paul Fiddler was
credited with the assist.
Carey closed out the scoring with hi s second marker of
the game in the 77th minute.
Sophomore Kyle Gilbert
assisted Carey on the final
goal.
Malone had one final
chance to score in the. 78th
minute when mid-fielder
Samuel Peppers was denied
by Rio ·goalkeeper Andrew
Moore.
Moore had one save and
recorded hi s eighth shutout
of the season. Malone goalkeeper Steve LaCroix posted
I0 saves.
Rio Grande out-,hot the
Pioneers. 26-2, with a 13- 1
advantage in shots on goal.
The Red men continue to
build on their incre'diblc
unbeaten streak with the win.
The numbers now stand at 84
regular season games in a
row without a defeat, 60 in a
row overall and 3&amp; straight in
the
American
Mideast
Conference.
Rio Grande w.ill host
Urbana I p.m., Saturday.

COLUMBUS - Injured
Ohio State quarterback Justin
Zwick tossed a football on the
sidelines and did not take an
active part in the Buckeyes'
practi ce on Wednesday.
Coach Jim Tressel said
Zwick is making progress but
still had some pain from a
shoulder injury sustained in
Saturday's 33-7 defeat at
Iowa, the Buckeyes' third
straight loss to start the Big
Ten sea,on.
Troy Smith got around 80
percent of the snaps in practice on Wednesday, with thirdstringer Todd Boeckman the
other 20 percent.
"He (Justin) got a . little
work, but if we were playing
today Tmy would he our guy
and Todd got all the second
reps." Tressel said after a practice at the Woody Hayes
Athletic Center. ''J ustin did a
little work and if you listen to
the doctors. it's a day-by-day
tl1mg."
Zwick injured his left or
non-throwing shoulder. He
ha' started every Ohio State
game this season. although
Smith played almost half of
the game at Iowa.
"It's not my injury, but I
don't know tl1at you'd say
'excruciating pain.'" Tressel
said. "Maybe between acute
anddull.ldon'tknow, I'm not
a doctor either. I would say it's
just not 100 percent but getting better all the time. That's
why I hesitate to say how
much a guy will do or won't
do. What you have to decide
is, has the guy had enough
work to be on top of what we
want done at his position?" •
Fans have been clamoring
for more playing time for

Smith, pointing to Zwick's six
interceptions against five
touchdown passes and .his 50
percent completion rate on
passes.
Tressel said he felt Zwick
would have to get in a full day
of pract1ce on Thursday 1! he
were to be available to play on
Saturday against Indiana.
"Sometimes you have to
make those dectsions as they
arrive," Tressel said at his
weekly news conference earlier in the week. " I wouldn't
want to tie myself to a policy
or whatever and then two days
later feel like the best thing
would be the other."
Tressel said Ohio State
quarterbacks coach Joe
Daniels wi II gi&lt;'e an update on
Zwick's condition after
Thursday's practice.
Ohio State (3-3) is trying to .
avoid its first 0-4 start in the
Big Ten since 1922. The
Buckeyes have struggled on
both sides of the ball, but particularly on offense where
they nmk near the bottom of
the conference in almost every
statistic.
Fonner Ohio State quarter- ·
back Kirk Herbstreit, now a
college t.ootball analyst for
ESPN, has said Tressel needs
to.hire an offensive coordina-tor and step back from the
play-calling. It is Tressel who
calls all of Ohio State's plays.
even though Jim Bollman carries the title of offensive coordinator.
Tressel said he would evaluate that at the end of the sea-

son.

"We like to listen to anv
constructive criticism. We· II
take that to heart," he said.
Then he added, ''Exactly who
we will sit down and make
those di scussions with - it
probably wouldn't be Kirk but we might have those discussions.··

Ohio State quarterback Troy SmitH. left . is hit by Iowa defender Matt Roth dunng the second
ha1f Saturday in Iowa City. Iowa. Iowa won the game 33·7. (AP Photo )

'Does look to slay mighty Meigs looks to spoil
Trimble on 'Senior·Night' Vikes' home finale
BY

ScoTT

WOLFE

Sports correspondent

RACINE
Dav id
sleweth Goliath!
Friday night. the RacineSouthern Tornadoes (2-6)
take on the Goliath of the TriValley Conference in league
leader Trimble. (7- 1) rated
fourth in Di vision VI, Region
23 and well on their way to a
" state-playoff berth.
It will take the confidence
and persistence of David and
perhaps a little luck to overcome the powert'ul Tomcats
of Coach Phil Faires. hut the
incentive of being the last
Southern home game mav
give Southern the boost It
need.s.
The Tomcats. in two of the
last three year&gt;, huve won the
Tri- Valley ·
Conference ·
Hocking Division champi·
onship while qualifying for
the smal1-s~ b ool state play·

nffs .
The second of those teams

was last year's sq uad. which
went 9-1 overall before
falling to Fisher Catholic 3314 in the first round of the
postseason.
In addition,
the
2002 group
came close
to the playoffs. finishing 7·3 and
just missing
'out on playing m week II .
The Tomcats are nearly
intact from last year with 17
letter winners returning. los·
ing only two stm1ers each
way from a season ago.
One o.t', those starte rs wa'
senior standout yuanerhack
AJ. Jenkins. a first-team all·
Ohioan in Division VI and a
all-Sou theast
two-time
District first - te&lt;~m signalcaller. He was named
Offensive Player of the Year
in Division VI last fall. That
loss sounds like a plus for
2004 opponents. however. an

able-bodied Terry Holbert
a&gt;sumcd the reigns at
Trimble over the summer.
Holbert quarterbacked the
Alexander Spa11ans for two
seasons, bu t the syua~ as a
whole strug gled for wins.
His father .:-Greg Holben was the head coach there. but
stepped down when the year
was through and the younger
Holbert
transferred
to
Trimble.
Robbv Jenkins bas stepped
in as the mtmber one ball carrier. Jenkim. anotl1er allTVC- Hocking
selection . .
earned a spot on the all-district team a' an all -purpo,e
player. TI1c &lt;~thletic Jenkins, a
senior. is a dangerous threat
as a nl!iner. recel\'er and kick
returner.
In the season opener
against \1aysville. Jenkins
led the Trimhlc offense with
. ~25 rushing yards (.the first of
ll\e 100-pJu·s yard games) on

Pleas.e . see Southern, Bl

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydaliysenti nel. com

:0.1CARTHL'R - It has been
II year' since Vinton County
has played in week II Meigs looks to make it an even
dozen.
The Marauders will try and
spoil the Vikings' playoH· hopes
Friday when the two meet in a
Tri- Valley Conference Ohio
Division football game.·
Vimon County (6-2) enter&gt;
the game rated No . 7 in
Di&lt;isionlll. Rceion II. and is ·
in fXlSitiOll to eanl its first post 'CaSOll berth 'ince 199.1.
TI&gt;c Marauders (5-J) are still
mathematically ali\'e in that
,ame region. hut currenth ,itling at 18th. ha\e no re.ili&gt;tic
shot.
The Vikings are also entertaining thought' of their first
league title 'in.:c 1999. but ha'
to win out and hope for e1ther
Belpre or Alexander te upset
.front-runner Nel&gt;&lt;.&gt;n,·ilie-YCirk .

Vinton Cnumy is led by .
quanerhack Chli, Bethel. who ·
i., a threat to run and pass. The
'en ior
ha'
for
thrown
633 yards and
six
touchdowns and has
also gained
266 vards via
the ground. ·
Bethel's
favorite target i' 'enior Josh
Ou&gt;le\ : the two ha'l·e wnnected 21. times tor 4 72 yards and
five tuw. : hdtlwn~ .

• ·

Sha"n A\'er\ giw, the
Viking' a weapon out of the
backtield. ha\'ing gained ~t\3
vard, . He also draw, attention
\vhen im the Jefcn'i"e side of
the ball with live· sacks. an
interception and three forced
fumbles .
Another force on the Vinton
Coum~ defen'c '' :JUnior Scott
Bovcr with ,even 'al'ks and a
ha; a fumble and .interception

Please see Meigs, Bl

�Thursday, October 21, 2004

www.mvdailvsentinel .com

Page AS' • The Dailv Sen tim•!

Gari:ia wishes Owens would shut up, Page 82
The Extra Point, Page 83
Big 10 Notebook, Page BJ
MLB Divisional Championships, Page B4

'

I

.Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

I

Thursday, Odober 21, 2004

I..,l(

Prep Football
RivER (IDES SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OPENS SEASON WITH SUNDAY CONCERT
PARKERSBURG. W.Va. The Rin•r Cities
Symphony Orchestra, under the direl'lion of 1\lusi&lt;·
Director Robert Turizziani, opens its 2004-115 seasnn
with its fall concert on Sunday. Oct. 24 at J p.m. at the
Blennerhassett School.
The concert will feature two intcrnationalh•
renowned soloists, cellist Steven Doane and violinist
Mikhail Kopelman, in Brahms [)ouhlc Concerto.
Also on the . program are Hnward Hanson's
"Romantic Symphony" and .Jean Sii:Jeius' "Finlandia."
An after-concert part~· "ill be !(hen at the
Parkersburg Art Center at 5:Jtl p.m. Audience members will have an opportunit~· to med the soloists and
conductor Robert Thrizziani. Tickets for the party will
be available at the door.
The River Cities Symphony Orchestra under the
direction of Robert Thrizziani is beginning its eighth
season, has become known as one of the finest regional orchestras in West Virginia and southeastern Ohio.
Thrizziani also directs the critically acclaimed
Seneca Chamber Orch~stra in Charleston. and has
appeared as guest condu.c tor for the West Virginia
Symphony.
The almost 60 musidans forming the orchestra
come from the Mid-Ohio Valin and from tlw West
Virginia and southern Ohio region. Last season saw
the River Cities Symphony and &lt;·ombined choral
groups under the direction of Marietta College's Dr.
Daniel Monek present a memorable performance of
Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 to a packed audience at
Marietta High School Auditorium. The orchestra is
hoping to build on that ewnt with more outstanding
performances in the coming season.
·
Violinist Mikhail Kopelman is a legendary artist.
and his career includes being principal violinist for the
Tokyo and Borodin String Quartets. He has recorded
extensively and has colla-borated with man.\' leading
artists such as cellist Rostropovitch and pianist
Emmanuel Axe.

Cellist Steven Doane is a master performer of
unusual musical sensitivity and overwhelming techniml brilliance. He has appeared internationally in
major I'Cnues and has several prize winning recordings. Llnane has appeared previous!~· with the River
Cities S,r mphony Orchestra and in chamhn mnccrts
in the Mid-Ohio Vallev.
Both Mikhail Kopelman and Steven Doane are
senior faculty members at the renowned Eastman
School of Music in Rochester,. N.Y.
Speaking of the Eastman School of' Music, this
entire concert has a flavor of that 1enerahle institution. Howard Hanson was director of' the Eastman
School, and also one of America's most he loved and
distinguished composer.
The great Finnish composer, .lean Sibelius, had
committed to directing the Eastman School early in
the 20th century. Unfortunately for the Eastman
School, Sibelius couldn't give up his native country he
loved .so well.
His work featured on this program, "Finlandia,'' is
perhaps the clearest expression of his hive of country,
and has become the Finnish national anthem.
Future scheduled events of the River Cities
Symphony include a Fall Pops Concert Nov. 20, at 8
p.m .. Blennerhassett School, featuring soloists Chris
Llearth on trombone and Jenny Morris on oboe.
The winter concert is Jan. 29, 2005, at 8 p.m.,
Marietta High School Auditorium, will feature returning solo violinist John Harrison to perform the
Brahms Violin Concerto.
This concert and also feature choral works with Dr.
Daniel Monek and area choral groups.
On June 3, 2005, at 8 p.m., Shrine Cluh Marietta
will be the venue for the Broadway to Mountain Pops!
Concert, with .Johnny Staats and the Delivery Boys
joining in, and with a special appearance by Michael
'':\1oon" Mullins, mayor of' Marietta.
Upcoming educational programs include appear-

'In the Mood'
RIO GRANDE - "In the
Mood," a 1940s musical, as part of
its 2004 national tour will be performing at the Fine and
Performing Arts Center at the
University of Rio Grande, for the
second in the series of Valley Artist
Series Concerts, on Thursday,
Oct. 21 at8 p.m.
Season ticket holders already
have their tickets for this exciting
concert. However, individual tickets for the concert will be available
at the door for $20.
Much more than a concert, "In
the Mood" takes a retro look at the
life and time of America's greatest
generation - a generation that
was listening and dancing to the
same kind of music.
With music and dance that
combined up-tempo big band
rhythms to mellow intimate ballads, the mOod was set to inspire a
future filled with hop~. promise
and prosperity. This was a time
like no other in our nation's l;listory, a time when music moved the
Nation's spirit.
Come experience the swing,
rhythm, jazzy, brassy, sentimental
and romantic music of this impor·
taut time.
Bud Forrest Entertainment
began touring "In the Mood" in
1994 following an overwhelming
response from a performance on
the steps of the National Archives
in Washington. For over I 0 years,
"In the Mood" has continued to
impact audiences with sell out performances everywhere.
Through its musical influence,
it became part of the official entertainment for the World USO's
50th commemoration of World
War II ennts. "In the Mood" has

'

"In the Mood"

P'-'rfnrmed and toured both in the
U.S. and Europe, and for the
Clinton presidential inaugural
ball.
"In the Mood" is written and
directed by Washington 's John
Moran, with chore!Jgraphy hy New
York City's Thomas Mills, with creative and musical insights selected
by Washington's musical producer,
Bud Forrest. The revue features the
In the Mood Singers and Dancers
with the sensational String of Pearls
big hand orchestra with arrangements, costumes and choreography
as authentic as it gel~.
Season tkket holders are
reminded of this second concert in
the series of six concerts making
up the 2004-05 season. Those
wanting to purchase individual or
additional tickets m~y do so at the
door for $211 each the evening of
the concert.
For additional information or
to reserve tickets for the Oct. 21
" In the Mood" concert, call (740)
245-7364.

Eagles look to tame Wildcats in road finale

Football - Week 9
Friday, all games 7:30 p.m.

•

Meigs County
Meigs at V1nton County
Eastern at Waterlord
Trimble at Southern
Gallla County
Logan at Gallia Academy
Fairtand at A1ver Vall ey
SOuth Ga!lia at Guyan Valley

BY BRYAN WALTERS

sporls @mydailylribune.com
WAT ERFORD Th e
Eac les loo k lo co ntinue th ~ ir ~ un at a Di \' i-.. io n
VI. Re gio n c.l playoff hcnh
thi s Friuay wh t' n th ey take
on the Watcrforu Wildcat s
111 a Tri-Valle y Conference
HoLkin f.! Di visinn -.how di Jwn. '
EHS (5-3. 2- 1 TV C
Hoc king) c urre ntly sit s lith
i n th e reg ion. and a wm
would only tmpro ve the ir
E a ~ tern

Uaeon County, W.Va.
James Monroe at Poinl Pleasant
Wahama at Tolsla
·
Hannan , bye

Today's games
Steven Doane

ances by the entire orchestra on Nov. 19, 2004, at
Belpre High School and Warren High School. Also a
free concert for families is also scheduled on Nov. 20,
2004 at 2 p.m., Blennerhassett School.
The River Cities String Quartet will appear in area
schools in May.
Admission to Sundav's fall concert is $15 for adults
and $8 for students. Tickets will he available at the
concert or may be purchased in · ad vance at Peoples
News, O'Brien's Photo Center, Third Street Music,
Marietta, or online at www.rcso.us (visit us for information about the RCSO).
This event is ADA accessible. If special accommodations are needed, please call (304) 485-7068 in advance.
Corporate sponsor for this concert is WesBanco.
After-concert party sponsors are WesBanco and marketing sponsor, the Gianfagna Group. Funding is provided in part by Artsbridge, the West Virginia
Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment
for the Arts.

Stories of Ohio's haunted
places are sure to intrigue.
COLUMBUS - Ever hear of the woman who
haunts the old mill at Beaver Crl'Ck State Park1
Catch the story about the dead man who stiU
lingers at the Moonville Thnnel ncar Lake Hope
State Park, his lantern eerily swinging in the
night1
If you are hoping for a creepy encounter this
Halloween, consider a visit to the following
state parks. \\hose spooky tales have lived on
for decades:
The ghost of lovesick teenager Ceely Rose,
who lived in a white house on the grounds of
Malabar Farm State Park in Richland County,
is said to still haunt the home. Ceely's story is
sad and tragic. The awkward lonely girl had a
crush on Hugh Fleming, a boy who lived nearhv. She told nil who would listen that thev were
going to be married. Hugh did not return
Ceely's affection, but to spare her feelings, told
her they could not marry because her family
did not approve of him.
Ceely slowly poisoned her family, and three
months lall-r, they were all dead. Hugh left town
in fear ror his own life. Ceelv was later tricked
into conl'essing to the murders and spent the rest
of her life in a mental institution. Some say Ceely
can still he seen roaming the hallwa~· s of the rose
house, pausing at windows. awaiting her love.
A theatrical production about Ceely Rose is
showing at Malabar Farm on Friday through
Sunday, Oct. 22-24. All performances start at 6
lJ.m. and tickets for the show are $15 each, or
$30 each for the show and a barbecue dinner.
All ticket packages include a wagon lour of the
farm. For more information call (419) 8929745.
\
Down the road, the ghost ol' Paul Lyons is said
to haunt the trail to the falls that bear his name
at Mohican State Park in Richland County.
Lyons, a self-reliant pioneer. lived in the area
with his milk cow. On a dark night, Paul realized the cow had wandered oil' and he searched
for it, barely hearing the sound of the bell
· around the cow's neck. He followed the sound
through the woods to the edge of the falls and
fell 80 feet to his death. A grave marker tiearing
his name now stands at the trail leading to the
falls.
·
Some say that on dark nights. the sound of
the cowbell can he heard on the trail to the falls,
and the figure of a man waving a lantern can he
seen at the top of the cliff. ·
•
Head east to Beaver Creek State Park in

Columbiana County and learn of its days as a
hustling place of commerce - grist mills powered by the Little Beaver Creek ground grain into .
flour, the Sandy and Beaver Canal was being
built; and later, the railroads made their impact.
Today, legend has that late at night, the figure
of a woman, believed to be Esther Hale, can be
seen wandering through the old grist mill. Esther,
a stern Quaker preacher, lived in town and has
kept her vigil at the mill for more than 100 years.
The Punderson Manor House at Punderson
State Park in Geauga County has many stories of
lingering spirits. There are tales of flickering
lights, sounds of mysterious laughter, and the feel
of a sudden. chill while walking through the
house.
Some have seen ghostly ligures of a woman
lloating in the hallways, in the dining room and
kitchen. The ghost of a young girl was purportedly seen walking down the spiral staircase. It's
unclear why there have been so many reports of
ghostly apparitions at the home, but over the
years tragedies are known to have befallen its
various owners.
The abandoned Moonville Thnnel near Lake
Hope State Park in Vinton County is said to
have a haunting spirit. Many materials used to
be delivered to the former mining town of
Moonville by train. One night, a careless railroad brakeman waved his lantern to signal the
locomotive to stop at the station.
The brakeman sway~!(! and stumbled into the
path of the oncoming train and was Instantly
killed. Some say, late at night, the eerie green
and red lights of the brakeman's h1ntern can
still be seen shining and waving back and forth
near the old train tunnel.
Clifton Gorge State Nature Preserve in Greene
County also is known for haunting spirits. Long
ago, as the story goes, a beautiful Indian maiden
tried to steal the affections of a brave away from
the woman he loved. She intentionally fell ofT a
rock into the pool below, now known as the Blue
Hole, hoping the bra've would save her. He didn 'I. and she drowned. Now on occasion, some
people report seeing the ghostly form of the
Indian maiden ap~ears on the rock only to vanish at midni~ht into the Blue Hole with a ghastly
scream that echoes down the canyon.

Two Convenient .Locatiohs:
114 Mile North PomeroyiMason
Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) 773-5323

I

2400 Eastern Ave.

(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
446-1711

Regular season
Athens at River Valley, 5:15p.m
Sectlonala - Division II
at Wellston High School
Vinton County vs . Gallia Academy,
7:30 p.m.

c h ~l tH.: e s in ~.:rac k i nf' th e top a mcm ura h ll' nll L'
et ght spot&gt;. Th e Eagle ' also
Led hv ta il h; tck Ll' on
hri ng a l - 1 roa d r~~..· nnl and Samp -. ull ( h- fuu t- 1. 17)
a two-ga me Wfll lll fl~ ~ tr e a k po un d ' J.
int o Frid ay· , ClH ll e'i at who
had
W:11 erfor d.
· 22.1 ) ;~ n[ ,
The Wildcats f3 -). 1-2 ) on 14 ca rhac! littl e tro uble w ith n e&gt;
anti
South ern last wee k 111 a JY - th ree touch tl Wi ll , the team \ rirs t Ill dow ns la -..t
Hllckin g pla y. WHS a l&gt;o " c e h.
has a &gt;lim pl ay- oil chan ce again st th e
ali ve a:-. th ey ent er ·· s en io r · To r n a U o~.?-..
Night " th is week. so the th e Wildcat&gt; &gt;lri vc &lt;Hl runWi ldca t' wil l be ea ~e r to ni ng the fn &lt;l lha ll.
ma ke th eir fi na l home" ga me
WH S ama » cd .1 21 uf its

JX 6 otte n" i\ 1...' \ a rd -.. o n the
g ro u nJ ;md lwi·J '-' com f tlrt
ahlc .\:l-6 at ha llttlll t'
again -. t St lUih L' rll . 1 1K i ud 1 1 1 ~
an i m p r~:-..,j , e 19-poin t \CC~­
unll quart l' r "\' 1n g La pp cJ
h! -.,cori ng run -.. of 7) ;l!l d
46 b) Samps on.
Lt rrod Jenks 1)-'! . 17 l t
&lt;~ h o hri ng" ~ ~ hrui -. ill !.!. run n ing \l y le to tH.:c o 1l1 ran y
S&lt;tlll [l&gt;On in the had, fi eld .
Bradley L an ~ I:1 -X. 1571
mana ged a Lo uc hdn\\ non 1of--l r&gt;;h -.,i ng for -+5 ~ ,trd-.. .t !
quarterb uc ~ . h LI-t \\ a-., intl' r-

cc·ptctlt\\ icc· 111 tile "111. Th e
-1..) - ~

arJ

-.L-U l l' \\l'lll

111 C ale b

'in1ucr 16-l. lh7&gt; earil in
·
IJ ci lc D u~ht'f~llllf I)-X.
I~ ~ 1 had th~ uthc r It rst hal f
\L'Il l' l ' on t1 12- \ arJ ru n ju-.t
h~ fn r ~
ha llt tme.

tilL'. I11-..t -.. tanta .

J)o L'hl'li,.' llll' r

trihut l' d

(J&lt;J

\

aho
cnn ,trJ-. on · " ix

l O l l.'\.

\\ ttl eu uh K1 lc Ktncaid
1 ~ -I I .
17.1&gt;. R1an Pux ton
171&gt; ancl
Matt
t6·11 .
Please see Eagles. 82

College Football

Sectlonals- Division ·IV

a t Athens H igh School
Southern vs. Crooksville. 7:30p.m .

Zwick throws on sideline, Smith gets
most of action at Buckeyes' practice

Saturday's games .
Sectlonals - Dlvlalon II
ar Wellston High School
Mei gs vs. Marietta, 4 p.m
Sectlonals - Division Ill
at VInton Co. High Schoof
River Valley vs. winner of Federal
Hoekmg/Oak H11l, 6:30 p.m.

Sectlonals - Division IV
at Athens H igh School

Eastern
vs
winner
Southeastern/Trimble. 4:30p.m.

of

BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

Rio Grande
soccer blanks
Malone, 6-0
RIO CIRA N' DE Th~
o f Riu Gn1 1H.ll'

Un i \· L~ r ~ i t v

Rcdm~..·n ·~occe r tea m . t h~..·

NAIA\ lop rated te:tnL
hookecl up with the ';,; ling
Pi nnC"c r-..
on
Malone
Weclne,cl:tv :tl E1 :tn D;tl ;,
Fic ici and -' c.ored a 6-0 tri umph.
A pair of goal ... each from
freshman mid -ftdde r Ry;tn
Ru"cll ami \ Cnior qriker
Simon C trey paced Rio
Granuc i l.l -11- 1. 4-11-1 i\~IC
Sou tit 1 to the 1 ictnfl .
rn"iu-li dder
Soph-onwre
Conar Da\\ \ on put Rio
GranUc on thC" ~corL hoa r J i n

th e I Xth minut e ai'tc r rc cci1in!.! a feed from Ben Huntl-r.
C;.lrc\· ~c ored hi " fi rq l! oal in
the 32 nd m inuiL' with.._ frc-..hman Rvan Ba.x ter f.! l' ttin !.!. th l'
a~s i ~ t. ·
~
...
Snrhornme dcfcthil c hack
Ton v Cirillith &gt; had a \hot
canirn oil the left po' t from
J().yards :tway in the 2J rd
rninu tc. which \\ould made
the score 2-0 at the time.
Rio Grande woulu take th e
2-0 lead to l1al ftim e.
Mal one 17- ~. J . ) AM C
South ) mi,scd on a ~o lden
opportunit y to "cure Lin the
closin !.! \!,.~l'ond .-.. of Lhi.! fir ~t
half. Fmwaru Da1 iu Dulev
lll~&gt;,ed wtcle left on a hrc:t kaway a&gt; the dock wa' ll' indin g down.
Rus~cll f.!Ol intu th e act
with two goah in th e second
half. in th e 56th anu :i'!th
minutes rc-. pccti\·ely. Carey
aS&gt;i&gt; ted the Ma rv lancl nati1 e
on hi :"-~ fir -., t :"-~ Lor~ :tnd Da \\ -..o n
a ~~ i -.t ed on the -.cnHH.I.
Soph ll more cle k ns il·c hac k
Cllurt ncy Rimme r made th e
score :1 -fl "i th " header in th e
t&gt;ox in th e 65th minu te .
Sophomore Paul Fiudlcr W &lt;~&gt;
ncdited with the a" i' t.
Cai·cv ci&lt;l ... l'd oul the "corinu with hi :-. seL·onJ marJ...cr of
th t gam e in th e 77 th mim1tc
Soph ll rn ore Kyle Gilbe rt
a»i sted · Carc1· li n the fi nal
goal.
·
.Malone had nne fi nal
chance to score in the 7Hth
minute when m iu- fielu er
Samuel Pepper&gt; wa &gt; de ni ed
by Rio goltlkecpcr Andrew
Moore .
Muore had one -..an:- and
rec orded his etg hth sllll tu ut
of the Ieason . Mah•n c ~ oal ·
keeper St ew l.aCrcm p&lt;lsted
I0 \&lt;1\'eS..
Ri o · Grande oo t-shot the
Pi oneers. 26-2. with a 1.\. [
at.h"ant;JgL' in -. !HI!'. un ~ n;d .

- Tl1e Redrne n co nt itwc· to
blti ld on their incred thlc
un hc &lt;lti:n "treak \\·ith the \\i n.
The numhers no\\ &gt;tanJ at X ~
regular ~o.~..·£t .-. on ga nk'" in ;1
. row withotlt a ck f~ a t. 60 Ill tt
row o1·cr&lt;t ll and .lX str&lt;tiu lll in
th e
Amer ican
\l t~lc aq
Ct1 nfe rC1 11i~ .

Rio Grand e wil l lt mt
l 't:h&lt;tna I p.m.. Satu rda ).
\

COLUMB US - lnjureu
Oht u State quanerback Justin
Zwick loS&gt;cd a f&lt;xllball on the
sidelin es and did not tak e an
a.c ti H~ pan in the Buckeyes"
prac·tice un Wedne,cJay.
Coach Jim Tresse l saiu
Zll'kk is m.tking progre ss hut
&gt;till had .so me puin troni .1
-.houlc.ier injurv ~ u stain eJ in
Satu rday\ .1.1- 7 defeat at
lm•·a. tile Buc kcvcs" third
\tr~li g ht [o:-,~ to \t ~lr1 thL Big
TL' ll ~~a :-.on .
Trnv Smith ~ot cuound XO
percei11 of the ; ll"fl' in prac·
ti L't.~ on \\:cdnc -.. dav. \\.'ith third&gt;t rin ~ er Todtl B&lt;icckman the
other 20 [&gt;erc·cnt.
"lk tJustin J g••l a little
\\'{1 1'~ . h11l if \\e \H'rC pla y in ~
llK.hl) Truy \\ould he ou r guy
and 'I(Jdd ~ 111 all the 'ec·ond
reps... Tn:,;cl satu after a prac·
ti c·e •tt tile Wood1 Hale'&gt;
Athle tic Center. "Ju;lit l d i~l "
litt k \\Or~ ~mJ 1f \o U listen to
the· Joctor&gt;. it\ a· tlav· bl -Ja v
thilli! ...

~

.

•

1.\i ick inju red hi ' left &lt;lr
tHm-throwiiH!. \ htndd er. He
ha' ' tanetl e\c·•y Ohio State
!. ! &lt;llllL' t h1 ~ ~L'a :-. on. althou 1'h
Smith played almost hair ~.r
tile game at Iowa.
"It \ not 1i n · in jun·. bu t I
don' t know ihat ·v,)u ·u sav
\~x L-ru~..· iatin~ pain .·.. . Tn~s"tel
said . .. Ma\ he hetll'een acute
and du ll. I J ,lll ·t knuw. l'mnol
a dnc tmcither.l W&lt;'u[J,av it "s
ju st not IIKl [&gt;e tw nt but . gGtting he11er all the time. That's
\~.&gt;h y I he ~i t;ll t' hl :-.ay hu\\
mud1 a guy \\'ill Uo or won 't
th What l'llll have In Jeciuc
i~. 11 :1~. th~· guy had enough
l\ork In Oe un top of what we
want done at his po ~ it ion ?"
Fan ~ ha\ c hren damorin c
fnr llWfl.' pL 1~ ing tim ~ f~ ~-

Smith . poinung to Zwtck·, six
i ntl.! rccption ~
again~t
fiYc
toUt:lldown passe' anu his '\()
percent comple tion rate on
passes.
Trc swl ' aiel he felt Zwick
would have to "C I in a full da\'
ul practice on 'fhursdav tl' h~
were In he av~t iL t hlc to play on
SoJtu rtb'r ll !!&lt;IIJI~t lnt.l 1ana.
"Suniet i ~ll' ~ vuu haYe to
make tho~c dccl~ ions a~ thev
atTil·e: · Tressel 'aid at hi~'
weekl y n c\v ~o. c&lt;m terence e:Jrli-

cr in the wee k. .. 1 m•u ldn"t
w:tnt to tic myself loa policy
OJ' whatCIW anJ then tWO Jays
.late r feel li ke the he.st t h i n ~
ll'ould he the other...
'
Tressel sa id Ohi o Stat e
quarterbac k ~
cnach
Jnc
Da1~ieb will g i H~ anupJ&lt;-ill' un
l \\ 1cJ.. \
L'onUit lon
af Ler
ThuNiav\ practice.
Ohio ~tate t.l-.1 1 ;, trvin~ ll•
avuid its lirst 0-~ stan· in-the
Ri ~ Ten &gt;in cc 1'!22. The
Bu"'~,_·kc v~:-. ha\'L' \lrLJ!.!f.!l eLI on

[)(l!h si'des or the h a ll~ hut p;u·tic· ularil on uffcn sc where
thcv ral1k ncar the hottom of
thc.ninfer\.'lll't' in almo"t e H~n
:-.t ai J ~tiL· .

Fonner Ohio St a t~ qu;U1ert&gt;ack Ktrk Herh.slrei t. no11· a
c o ll e ~c foo tball an;tlvsl for
ESPN. has said Tn".sc-1 n~eds
tu hirt: an ulfe n-.i n~ cnonJina1111- anti ' tep bach. from the
[&gt;lay-calling. It ;, Trc"cl who
call s all of Ohio State's plavs .
even thou~ h Jim Bollman c:u-.
rie.s the title of olkth iw u "'rdin:llor.
T rcs.-.e l -.uid he would t'\ aluate that at the end of tllc &gt;Cason .
··we like to li sten to all\

con ..;tructin~ cri ti c i-.m. \\'l' 'fl

lak~ th&lt;tl to heal1 ," he \Cll tL
Then he adtlecl. ··Exac·til ll'hu
we ll'ill .sit down anti · make
those Jisc us.&gt;ion s with - it
prohably wou ldn' t he Ki rk Ohto St ate quarte rb ac k Troy Sm &gt;tll. left . IS htt by Iowa defender Matt Rotr
hut we might ha\ e tho:-.t' Jj...,_
hal f Saturday 1n Iowa C1 ty. Iowa. lowil won the game 33 7. u\P Photo

dur~ o g

the second

'Does look to slay mighty Meigs looks to spoil
Trimble on 'Senior Night' Vikes' home finale
BY

Scon WoLFE

Sports corresponde nt
R..\ Cll\ E
D&lt;tl itl
,[cll'cth Goliath '
FriJav ni eht. the RaL·inc -

S olJt h ~ rn f urna Jne \

( .2 - (1)

lake on the Qol ialh of the Tri Valley Confcrc nyc in leag ue,
lca tlcr Trim ble . t7 -l l r&lt;tleu
fout1 h in Div i.sio n VL R e~in n
2J and \\·ell (\11 their wa\ . _to a
statc·-pl a) oil ben h.
·
It wil l take the confidence
and per&gt;istenc·e of D&lt;tl id .111d
pe rhaps :1 little- luck 1" &lt;ller~,.·{lt ll C th ~..· pu \\ l' rful T o lllL' tl h
of C'oal'i1 l'li il Fauc&gt; . h\tl tilL'
incl...' nli \l' nt hl' ill!.! the Ja-.. t
Sou tlkT11 hnlll l' ~a ml' m;l\

was l;tst ~c·ar's &gt;t[ lllld. 11IW h ;thlc -hodted Terr1 fl ,, [[1,·n
w~t lt 9- 1 n\ ~ra i l h ~..·rorl' d .... -..um~..· d the
,:L'I!.! ih
,11
!'.ti lin!.! tn Fi . . hcr C;llhtllic _
n- Tri111hlc \)\ L'r 1hc ~ u m nh__. r.
14 in' the first rou ml uf the Hoi hen qu"rtcrh.tc·ked th e
po~ hl.! a -.nn .
.1-\k\;tnLkr Spanan-. fpr t\\n
In aUd1 - -..~...· a-.., ll h . l"~u t the . . ~,.l u . td :1-. a
tion.
the \\h ole -. trtJ !.!!.! lc J lo r \\in-., .
2( XJ2 ~nlll [' Hi s Lit her -· fi re ~ Hulhen
came c!o-.c \\ a:-. tht' head i,.'O&lt;.IL':'h th(·rc. hut
to the pill)· ' teppcd do\\'11 " llc'll tile 1\'llr
oil:-. . tin i:-.h- \\a :-. thrP U).! il and ttll' 'Pt lih!er
ing 7- 3 &lt;ll ld ll n\hc rt ~ t r:Jihkrr ~·d
tn
j u:-.t , mi-.-.ing ., Tri 1nhk .
out llll pl ayi ng 111 \\~l' h 11.
Rnhh: kll~lll '- i1 ;1-.. q~,_·ppt·d
Th L· T tlllll' a h arc llL.' :11·h i n : ~-&gt; t il ~.· t lll i lll~ r PIK' b . tl J ~,.·ar­
intat'l frum l:t&gt;l 1ear 1\ ith 17 neT J.:nk tth. ;uH•th c· t allktt cr wi nn.: r-.. r~..:t u rnin !.2. ln-.. - T\'( ' - II PL· kt n~
. . c ]n ·tiHn .
in~ P ili ~ 1\\ n -.tarter~ c; 1d 1 L'.lnlL'J .1 " 11{ 11 -PJJ till' .dl dh
L

\\\ 1\ f rn lll ;t -..c a \11 11 : 1 ~11

l l h.'t ll'alll .h ~ 1 11 , 11 1- pur p~. ,.., ~...

( &gt;Ill' pf thn-..l' -..tarte r-. \\ ;1-.. · pl : 1~ n: rlll' :1t h k·t 1 ~. .· .k·n}.. ln.... .1
-.~ninr -.ta nJou t q u annh:1~,.· k
-..~.:.'1 t i1 \r. 1.., .1 d.lll!.2l'l'i 'Lh t h r L'.Il
~ jq_~v StHJt ilL' rn tile· hoP-.. t It :\ ..1. knki.Jh. ~~ li r-..t-lt.llll ril l- .t ... ,J rt Jil lll'l'. rL·~. ·~..·~ ,~.,· r.t nd \... tl k
need-.. .
Oh i nc~Jl in Di' 1\illn \I and .1 r~..·t u m ~..·r
Thl' ToJn L'ah . in t\\ O uf the t\H I- llllll'
al l-·Snu the .t-..1
In tlw "l..' d '-" 11 n pt lll'r
la-. t t h rc~.· \1..'ar"· h a\l' w o n 'tlk' Dtstrict lirst -te&lt;t lll · , ;~na l- &lt;t ~&lt;l lt h t \l. t ~&gt; l ilk. kn i-.llb
Tri- \'aile\
Conr~rc·nce .-:tiler. He 11 ,1s
n.lme d lc:tlt ill' 'l tlltlhk &lt;~lkn ,,· \li th
th )1..· ~ in ~ · Di \ i-. il1ll d lam pi- (l fkn-.i\l' Pl.l\l' l"llltfll; Yl'.tr 2.25 ru-.lllllt! \ .trd ,l tlwti r-..t lll '
nn . . hip \\ hill' qual l f: in ~ fur in l)i\ i-. l, llll Vi 1 .~-.t !'~ill. Th,ll fi, ~.· 1 00 - l,fu~ ~ .ud ¥;Lnlt!..,J t)fl
the &gt;lll:li[ -,d HI(I[ s! &lt;IIC pl; t~ ­ [o-.-.. 'oPll lld-.. lti-.L ;1 pl u-.. !Pi·
, [[ s .
2004 opp(ltll'll h. IHl\\ l'\ L' 1, .111
Th.: ·.., l' L'Pihl nf thu . . c t ~ ;i ~ l h
Please see Southern. Bl

STAFF

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1

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The \l. u;~uck rs '"II tr\ .111d
'P&lt;•il the \ 'i k in~' pLil ,,fi h"t'-''
Fn d d ~

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t.ulllll~ th1'll~lll ... 1.'1 tlh'll tir ... t
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111 \\lll,1LJI ,md h11j'X' lill . l'llfll'l
lk lpit' 1. 11 -\ ll' \.t lltk r tn tq~-.ct
tn 'lll -n::lne r \ ~..·J . . , 1l1\ ilh..' - l l'l'~

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the ~r(ILJJhl

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1... d \lm.:.tl l1• n111 ,IJld p.t. . . . The

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REPORT

Sr,JOr ts @1 rnyaailysenlttle · C'Onl
·'

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 21,

2004

Redmen hoops
Garcia wishes Owens would just shut up ·picked to be second;
Redwomen fourth ·
National Football League
BY ToM WtTitERs
Associated Press

BEREA - Someday, Jeff
Garcia and Terrell Owens
may connect again .
Someday, the former teammates may be able to talk,
shake hands and repair th~ir
ruptured relationship. And
maybe, just maybe, they can
become friends again.
Someday. Not this week.
On Sunday, when the
Cleveland Browns host the
unbeaten
Philadelphia
Eagles, Garcia and Owens
will be as close in proximity
as they've been since playing
. together for five stormy seasons in San Francisco.
Both players spent part of
Wednesday addressing their
ongoing, mostly one-sided
feud, a clash of personalities
fueled by Owens' repeated
bashing of the Browns ' ·new
quarterback.
'
Garcia doesn't understand
Owens' anger or the relentless criticism from one of the
NFL's most opinionated
players.
In his autobiography and
during interviews, the bfllsh,
Sharpie-wieldin~
wideout
has ripped Garcta' s playing
ability and leadership skills.
Owens has even questioned
Garcia's sexuality.
"I don't know why he can't
let it go," Garcia said. "I
mean,
it's
unfortunate
because I've never looked at
T.O. as being an enemy of
· mine. I don't know where the

anger or the negativity or the
criticism comes from, and
why certain comments have
been made, because he 's
known my situation in the
past.
"He's always known my
girlfriends, things like .that,
and to have the things said
that have been said, I just
don't know where it comes
from."
Garcia insists he· has camera·&gt; This shouldn't be'
moved on, and he just wishes about me and Jeff. I'm not
Owens would do the same.
going to be on the field at the.
Never one to dodge a ques- same time he's going to be
tion, Owens has dished otlt on the field. so it shouldn't
some damaging verbal shots be about us ...
at Garcia since the two partOh. but it is.
ed following last season.
The Garcia vs. Owens
Owens. though, maintains matchup is the fe&lt;ltured subhis comments directed at plot as the Browns (3-3) try
Garcia have been blown out to legitimize another turnof proportion.
around season against one of
"I haven't criticized him as the NFC's powerhouses.
of lately," Owens said. "I
The history between the
think everybody is just get- two stretches to 1999, when
ting reports from the book. after starring in the Canadian
You're the ones that won't Football League, ·Garcia
let it go. I've let it go since replaced Steve Young as the
49ers' starter.
·
training camp."
Not quite·.
In his first season with
In an interview last week, Garcia as his quarterback,
Owens went on the attack Owens caught 60 passes. He
against Garcia again. He said went on have 97, 93, I 00 and
the three-time Pro Bowler 80 receptions the next four
doesn't ~ave a strong arm, is seasons, twice leading the
an inaccurate passer and ,if league in TO catches.
Owens had played with a
Someone had to pass him
better QB in San Francisco the ball, yet Owens seems
he would have better stats.
unwilling to admit Garcia
Owens
defended
his was the one wbo threw it to
renewed assault on Garcia. · him.
"I was answering a quesThe pair went to three Pro
tion," he said. "What do you Bowls and made two playoff
want me to do, stare at the appearances as one of the

league's most lethal passand-catch combinations. But
there were problems, too.
Garcia was constantly trying to keep Owens happy. If
the talented wideout wasn't
complaining about getting
the ball , he was at odds with
the coaches.
Garcia got pulled in both
directions, which is why he
took exception to Owens '
assertion that all the 4\lers'
struggles could be traced to
the quarterback.
"Have somebody step into
my shoes and feel what I had
to deal with throughout that
in
San
whole
time
Francisco." Garc'ia said.
Garcia insists he went out
of his way to tlx things. At
one point, he sought advice
from the team chaplain. But
when Garcia found peace,
Owens would inflame things.
'The dust would start to
settle. and all of a sudden,
more fuel was thrown into
the fire," Garcia said. "It was
such a negative situation."
Garcia hasn't given up on a
positive ending, and said
he's willing to take another
stab at patching up things
with Owens.
"I want to go to bed at
night knowing that things are
all fine," he said.
The way Owens sees it,
things already are.
Asked if he would talk to
Garcia this weekend, OwenS'
didn't sound as if he would
be doing much socializing.
"No," he said. "For what'?"

The
CEDARVILLE
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketball team has
been tabbed to finish second in
the
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
Pre-Season coaches poll. .
The Redwomen ha've been
picked to tin ish fourth.
The Redmen garnered 86
total points by a vote of the
coaches'. Cedarville, the
de tending AMC South champi,
on, is the favorite to repeat. The
Yellow Jackets received nine
first place votes and' totaled 99
points.
Rio returns live seniors and
three juniors. who are all
expected to play big roles for
the Redmen this season. Senior
center Sean Plummer and
senior swingman Matt Simpson
averaged double figures in
points last season for a team
that finished 20-11.
Ohio Dominican (68) was
picked 3rd, Walsh (65) 4th,
Mount Vernon Nazarene (59)
5th, Tiffin (55) 6th, Malone and
Shawnee State (39) tied for 7th, ·
Urbana
(29)
9ih
and
Wilberforce (II) IOth.
Walsh received the other first
place vote.
Daeman (NY) and St.
Ylncent (PA) were picked as
Co-Champs for the north division with · 60 points. Both
schools each received four first
place votes. Both tean1s made
the
NA!A Division
II
Tournament last season.
G,eneva (45) is predicted to

finish third, Seton Hill (41) 4th,
Roberts Wesleyan (26) 5th,
Point Park (24) 6th, .Notre
Dame College (23) 7th, and
Houghton (9) 8th.
The Redwomen have been
selected to tinish 4th with 58
points. Rio returns to AII-AMC
candidates Alk.ia Fountain and
Angel Allen along with junior
post player Titfanie Hager. The
Redwomen compiled an 18-13
record last season.
Cedarville received nine first
place and was picked to win the
south division. The Lady
Jackets accumulated 99 total
points. Shawnee State (88) was
tabbed to finish second and
earned one first place vote.
Ohio Dominican (65) is slated
to finish third.
.
Walsh (56) was picked 5th,
Tiltin (53) 6th, Urbana (47) 7th,
Malone (41 ) 8th, Wilberforce
(27) 9th and Mount Vernon
Nazarenw 6) lOth.
Daemen is the coaches' pick
to win the AMC North
Division. Daemen collected
nine first place votes and garnered 99 tOtal points. St.
Vincent is the choice to finish
runner-up. The Lady Bearcats
had one first place vote and 81
points.
Geneva (78) is the team
expected to fmish third followed by Notre Dame College
(66) 4th, Roberts Wesleyan (65)
5th, Seton Hill (47) 6th, Point
Park (38) 7th, Houghton (29)
8th, Carlow (26) 9th and
Ursuline (21) IOth.

:college Basketball

Offense an afterthought in Ohio State's preseason practices
BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
The
squeak of basketball shoes
still echoes in the practice
·gym at Ohio State. What's
missing is the thump-thump.thump of a dribbled basketball and the swish of a net.
The Buckeyes stumbled
through a 14-16 season last
year, largely because they
·were defenseless on defense.
:Seldom did they even slow
opponents down, much less
bloc~"li shot, cut off a passing lane, take a charge or get
in a shooter's face.
. So first-year coach Thad
Matta, who took over this
summer after Jim O'Brien
was fired for ·· paying a
recruit, isn ' t allowing his
players to be distracted in
practice by something as elemental as a basketball.
Every day, all day, he
stresses defense . Matta's
practices are the very
antithesis of SportsCenter.
"If we don't make a shot
for the first two weeks, as
long as we're defending I'm
going to be happy," Matta
said before the start of the
Buckeyes' preseason workc
outs last weekend. "We've
got to get our defense established because that gives us a
chance."
Matta's teams at Xavier
weren't especially big or
deep or fast, but they made
up for any physical deficiencies with a cloying, annoying
pres sure defense . Nothing
was conceded, whether it
was a simple bounce pass

inside or a kick -out to someone on the perimeter.
The contrast with Ohio
State was stark. Although the
Buckeyes had and have similar players, they had neither
the heart nor the inclination
to play pressure defense.
"It's not a surprise that we
weren't the greatest defensive team last year," said
swingman J.J. Sullinger.
Then he shrugs and says he
doesn't know why the
Buckeyes weren't better
defensively.
The Buckeyes finished
ninth in the Big Ten, allowing 69 points a game.
Matta now has them
relearning how to play the
basics: stopping the other
player and, by exte~sion, the
other team.
"We do have the talent to
do that," guard Tony
Stockman said of the
Buckeyes. who open their
season Nov. 15 by playing
Towson State in a tournament. "That's what coach
O'Brien wanted us to do last
year, was to get after people
and get easy baskets and get
uptempo. If coach Matta can
get our guys together to do
that, I think we'd be good at
i (.. ,
Like Sullinger, Stockman
has no answer when asked
why the Bucke,Yes didn't do
it for their former coach, nor
does he offer any convincing
evidence that they will do it
for their new one.
It is clear, however, that
Matta will provide a nice
spot on the bench for those
who don't work hard on
defense.

Thursday, October

TheOVP

OUR *EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S MATC U.n1 S
I
A look at the region's top
football teams, as voted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)
Team
Prev.Votes
1. Ironton (5)
t
67
2 . 62
2. Huntington (1)
·3. Wayne
3
51
4. Wheelersburg
4
37
5. Williamstown
33
5
6. Frontier (t)
8 29
7. Parkersburg So. 10
24
8. Parkersburg
7
17
9. Sheridan
nr
9
(t1e) Trimble
10
9
Others

receiving

Chesapeake
3-0
2- 1
Coal Grove
2-1
Rock Hill
River Valley
1-2
1-2
South Point
Fairland
0-3
Friday's Games
Fairland at R1ver Valley
Chesapeake at Rock Hill
South Point at Coal Grove

6-2

I

'

1-7

defense. That kind of let us
know that he 's a defensiveminded coach."
Ohio State has not forgot ten the other half of the
eq uation
for
success.
Throughout unsupervised

sum mer
workollts,
the
Buckeyes each pumped up as
many ~s 500 jump shots a
day. ·
Now Matta wants to
chan ge the team's priorities .
Defense first. scoring sec-

.on d.
"This team is not going to
be able to give up easy baskets." Matta said. "You have
to get guys to understand
what you want to do on
defense."

in his ftrst three games. had II
in
the
second
period
Wednesday night as the Cavs
began to pull away, including a
pair of fnie throws that put his ·
team ahead to stay at 30-28 with
just under 7 minutes remainfng.
Cleveland had a 46-39 advantage at halftime and was never
challeAged after opening the
third quarter with an 18-4 run.
With Gooden and Varejo
doing most of the damage, the
Cavs had a 47-40 edge in
rebounding and ·shot 59 percent
overall. incl~ding a 6H·percent
clinic in the second half The
B be" . .
. I d . II · , . ,
o ats strugg e .1 n1ght and
shot only 38 percentt

SEATTLE (AP) - · Mike Hargrove "was
hired Wednesday to manage the Seattle
Mariners and turn around the team after its
worst season since 1983. ·.
Hargrove, previously the manager of the
Baltimore Orioles and Cleveland Ind ians
for 13 seasons, agreed to a thl'ee-year deal
through 2007.
"He has a ttemendous resume and is bal·tle·tested in every facet 'of leading a major
league club," Mariners . general manager
Bill Bavasi said.
· Hargrove r-eplaces Bob. Melvin, who was
fired Oct. I0, a day ~fter Seatlle ended the
'eason at 63-99. That was the third-worst
recprd in the majors and the Mariners' worst
si nce going 110-102 in 1.9!!3.
All of Melvin's coaches except pitching

'

coacl\ Bryan Price
were fired, too .
Hargrove had been
an . assistant
tc
Indians GM Mark
Shapiro . He has &lt;1
career major league
m~nagerial record ol
996-963, including
721-591 with the
Indian s from 199 1-99.
He led the Indian s to five consecutive
Central Division titles in 1995-99, and
World Series appearances in 1·995 and 1997 .
He managed Baltimore from 2000-03.
Hargrove was fired by both the Indianf
and the Orioles, with Baltimore letting him
go after its 91-lo" season 2003.
.

'

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Butfalo

3-0

5-3

2-1

3:5

2-1

3-5

1-2

6-2

Warren
Athens

1·2

2-6

0·3

1-7

1\illl.du .tr

5·3
4-4

3-5

5-3

2- t

3-5

1-2

2-6

1-2
· Miller
· Southern
0-3
Friday's Games
. Meigs at Vinton County
· Eastern at Waterford
: Trimble at Southern
: Alexander at Wellston
· Nelsonville-York at Belpre
Federal Hocking at Miller

2-6

players should be behind the
tcaln and the coaches loo percent."
Zwick had an awful ~ame in
Ohio State's 33-7 loss 'itt Iowa
on Saturday. with Smith coming on to lead the way to the
only 'core hy the Buckeye,.
With Zwick nursing an injured

Off to its worst start in vear:-...
Ohio State ha, decided io cut
otf. media aCl'ess lO it" v·ounQ:cr
players.
"
The Buc·keyes· 'eniors we nt
to coach Jim Tressel last week ~bou l de r and com ing off a
and asked thJt he no lon g~r r~r­ 'eries of bad games. Smith will
mit unc.krclas"men to talk tu likely start again.sl Indiana on
reporter~ . U:-,ually. re puncr ~ l'~l ll Saturday but the sophomore
request almost an) player for a v~as not allowed to talk about
bnel 1nterv1cw alter Tuesday s his lirst collegiate start.
practice.
Backup ~running
hack
Ohio State' i' IJ-.1 in tlw Big Branden Jne ..,aid it wa~ a relief
Ten for onlv th e 'l'C&lt;llld time to nut have undercla,men talksince 19-kl ·
ing Lo reporters.
Freshman offen,ive lineman . "You guys pick on the. young
Kirk Barton ,aid last we;•k he ones," Joe said.
felt Troy Smilh &lt;bcrwJ s&lt;llliC
Other than kicker Mike
playing time at qu arterback Nu~e n l. the team's tew senior
mstead ol til~ :-;truu£dmu Justm starters have not been verv
Zwick. Two wcek;bcr,!re that. good this season.
~
Smith had hinted that Trc&gt;Sel
Tailback l..vdell Ross is averwas showin!.! fa,·oritism 10 aging 57 n~shing vards. defenZwick in thei r hallie for the siH· end Simon Fra~er lm~ a
starting ... pill.
-..u\o tackle per game. · Fox
So with Trc'"'i happily sign- missed 3 1/2 ~ames with a broing o!T un it. .., jx ...eninrs met ken arm and Toe has 1-+ ru shing
wnh report ers.
yards in four games.
"I think a ~II\ sh"uld an,wcr
the question trLithful l).'' ,·orncrSHOWOOWN SATURhack Dustin Fc•x said. "But I DAY: No. 13 Michi gan takes
also think that the gu vs on thi s ' on Nn. 12 ·Purdue on "S;~turJay.
team should he a ll'a 1n QUV and w1th the loser all but dropping
,houltl not have any ,)pil,ions out of the chase for the Big Ten
on how the team should he run. title.
They should allow lhe waches
"Everf.'thing is still up in the
to make deci sinns. ,\nd lhe air... \\ olveri nes cornerback

6-2

2-1

!ames Monrot"
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SHENNIU

FARMHAND

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Buckeyes silence underclassmen

6·2

7-1

'-,,11'11 {, rliJ,, . 1~
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College Football

5·3

3-0

I.JIII t'' \ 1om••L' ,J'.

· Point----f.l emll!

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(740) 448-9777 • (740) 448-2484

All

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BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

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2150 Eastern Avenue (51. Rl. 7) • Gallipolis, Obio .

Gallia Academy
Logan
Marietta
Jackson

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Fairland

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Wahama
Wahanta
Wahama
Wahama
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Gallia Academv

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

Hocking Division

·cavaliers roll over Bobcats Mariners ~hire Hargrove

l.

2-6

All

The Ohio State Un iversity basketball team poses for a photo during media day at Schottenstein Center in Columbus on
Thursday. (AP Photo)

ALl. 1-l. qwnt'llli\t·

[ 1\L:,Ill .It

C h c,.apl·a~t·

2-6

SfQ

. Eastern
· Waterford
· Federal Hocking

Dave Huri:.

Ctl)l\' I drtllt

:-,tJ~ I t ihTII

SEOAL

·rnmble

Paul U. Pukyn

'-.r.ttfWritn
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Trimbll'

3-5

Ohio' Division
TVC
· Nelsonville-York
3.()
. Vinton County
2·1
2-1
Wellston
Meigs
1-2
1-2
Belpre
· Alexander
0-3

Baseball ·

1

5-3

Jan McN e mar

The M,l,knl IJI Lkn

I llt_:,tll .H
Gallia Academy

J\1c'l!.!;' ,!!
Vinton ·county

All

Mr. SLatT.Report

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QILC

flrad Shennan
S11nrh \Vntn

l·.url.r rd .rr

TVC

Pro Basketball
rebounds m
just 22 minutes.
J e f f
McGinnis
j!f~ w .'b 1 r~
added
II
points each
for Cleveland,
Drew
and
Gooden
had
·
seven pomts
and 14 boards.
.
Ftrst-round ctraft pt~k Emeka I
Okafor and Jahtd.l White led the
0·4 Bo~ats w1th 12 ¥km.ts
each. Primoz Bre~ and mar
Slay added 10 aptece.
..
Varejo who totaled 13 pomts

votes:

Wahama 7. Ravenswood 6.
Parkersburg .Catholic 6,
Nelsonville-York 5. Wellston 4,
Vinton County· 4, Jackson 3,
Portsmouth 3, Morgan 3, Gallia
Academy 2, Symmes Valley 2.

2-6

CONFERENCE
Leun Hall sa1d. "The Bi~ Ten
championship is sti ll UJJ for
grahs.··
~ With a 20-17 win at Purdue
on Saturday, Wisconsin shares
the conference lead with
Michigai1 at -+-0. The .sixthranked
Badger&gt;
host
Nonhwestern this weekend.
Neither
Wisc01"in
or
Michigan can afford a slip.
since "they don't play each
other.
After Salllrclav. the Badgers
host Minne,ola (u,J then hit" the
road to play Mi chigan Slate and
Iowa.
~1ithi~an
entertain-.
Michigal1
Stale . and
Northwe.stcrn hd(m~ the ·annual
sea.-..on-cndln!l clash a!lainst
Ohio State in to luml&gt;u.,. ~
Wotv·erines head coach
Llllvd Carr isn·l think in~ ahout
anv· nf that.
._
.~.Yuu"re \\&lt;.tstin g ene rgy and.
time if y&lt;.lll conct:rn yourse ll
with things )'OU have no control
over:· he said.
QUOTABLE: :\1innes&lt;1ta
coach Glen '\1ason. whn&gt;e

team t(,lluwed a 27-24 : loss :n dering if such a letter was on its
Michigan wilh a humiliating way to Madison ...
51- 17 In'&gt; at Mi chigan State: "I
BECAUSE I SAID SO:
don't know how we're going to
play Sa1llrday (against Olinoisl . Penn Siate coach Joe Paterno
We foll e&gt;wed a disappoiming has said for 11eeb thal he
loss with mavbe an even more thinh quarterback-tailbackdi sappoint in¥ loss . because. it receiv·er \1ichael RobiiNln is
wa~ an e mntm·a!-l~ mg perlo~- one nf the nation\ best players ..
"He can do evervthin~. He is
111ilnce hv us.... You don I
know if ihe hangover\ gone ." a great football player." Pat'emo
Even though vou take three s;~d while preparing for
aspirin before :vou go to bed. Saturday s home game with
you don't know that it\ gone No. 25 Iowa. "I' ha\ e c·uached
great football pia) cr' fur 55
until yDu wake up."
vcars. If I tell vou that ~1ic·hael
Robinson
is \me ,,1 the best
BADGER
COMPLAINTS: Wisconsin defen- football players I hav·c ever
sive end Eras1i1us James. a CO&lt;\Ched and one ,,f the lJe,l 111
strong candidale for defensive the countrv·. don't q4estion
player of the year in the confer- me.
ence. 1n1L1red his ankle in the
QUICK-HITTERS:
third qu~trter after Purdue tight
Northwestern
defe1bi 1·e end
end Charles Davis cut blocked
him . James retumed for one Loren Ho\.1 a rd. e 'pee ted to
serie,. then sat out the re't or m1ss most if no1 all the season
with an injured ankle. will play
the !.!a me.
Wi-.con"in coaches thought at Wi sco nsin. ... In the latest
Davis· hlnck was Ino low and ESPN/USA ToJav c(•ache s
said thev 11 otild send a tape to pC!II. fal teri ng Ohio State
recei\'ed t\~'() \ 'Ote'\ .... Bohhy
the Bie Ten .
PurJ uc C(lach Joe Tiller said I" udw~u . Purd ue·' fourtlihe spoke to Big Ten officials le:iding tackler. )1&lt;1d . surgery to
and was' told no tape was sent. repair an inJured th umb on
In 19'JX. Tiller sent in a tape Monday bu1 i&gt; cxpcct~d to wear
compl;lining of late hits by u cast and play .~gamst
Michigan .... Evef\ team 111 the
Penn State.
"When I did lhat I receiwd a Bi{' Ten ha&gt; kiCked at least
scorchmg leiter df reprimand t\\ tee a . . rnanv field ~tKll . . ~:--,
from the Bi~ Ten commission- Penn State h;i, in c(&gt;J1ference
er:· Tiller ,;\id. "Sol was won- game . ; (3 J.

Cardinal
J.um
Cardinal
Wayne
4-0
Herbert Hoover
3-1
Point Pleasant
3-2
. Wintield
2-2
Sissonville
I -4
Poca

DAYIDN (AP) ' - LeBron
James, Zydrunas Dgauskas and
Anderson Varejao had 16 points
apiece, and the Cleveland
Cavaliers rolled to a 103-77
· NBA
exhibition
victory
Wednesday night over the
expansion Charlotte Bobcats.
James, the magnet primarily
responsible for the crowd of
7,589 at the University of
Dayton Arena, played only the
first and third quarters. He went
4-for·7 from the field and 8-for10 from the -line as the Cavs
won for the third' time in four
tties.
.· Dgauskas also played 24 min·
utes. Varejao, a rookie from
Brazil~ got his points and 12

Dut ch Cuuper
Sport' \~i rnn
llcnltd: 3lJ 2-1 .

Friday's Games
Logan at Gallia Academy
· Marietta at Athens ·
. Warren at Jackson

"I know this: la st year
·defense was part of the problem and this year coach
Matta's preaching defense,"
captain Terence Dials said .
"He said the first two weeks
of practice would be mostly

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

21, 2004

0-4

All

Southern

7-0

4·3
4-4
5·2

3-4
2-6

Friday's Games
James Monroe at Point Pleasant
Poca at Wayne
Buffalo it Winfield
Shady Spring at Sissonville

.Others .
Team
Ironton·
Symmes Valley
Wahama
Oak Hill
South Gallia ·
Hannan

Friday's Games ·
South Gallia at Guyan Valley
Waharna at Tols~a
Belfrey (Ky.) at Ironton
Oak Hill at Green
Sym.mes.Valley at Sciotov1lle
Hannan is IDLE

AU
8-0
6-1
6-2
2-6
1-6
0·8

say goodbye to Glouster In receiving Jesse McKnight
Memorial Stadium with a was 3-46, Josh Pape '2-18.
win. Senior tailback Robby and Chris Tucker :1-l I.
Jenkins was credited for all Southern quarte rbac k Derek
from Page 81
fn ur touchdowns on the Teaford aired it out with a
night. He first caught a pass near SO(k passing gam~ at ll21 attempts and three touch- from fellow senior Terry 27
downs. and also ca ught two Holbert, then ran in two and
Leading Southem tacklers
passes for 25 y:u·J, Holben ti nally threw one to junior were Mike Brown and Dav·id
completed three passes fpr 82 Anthonv Dixon.
Mvers with four each.
~ards. including the touchSenior tight end. Jake
Against Eastern, Terry
down pass to ~Schu'l. The Holbert passed for 186 yards Nease missed b st week\
Tomcats totaled 31-+ ) ards in and
three
touchdowns. game with a knee injury and
the ball game.
Trimble also got good pro- most likely will miss thi s
Trimble\ enti re ,,1'fens1ve duction from· tailback Robby week's bout. TI1i' is a hu~e
iine return~ from [a..,t v'ear. .J enkins, who returned a kick blow 10 Southem. hut then "to
anchored bv L-e nter 'i1ikc 93 yards fo r one of his lhree mmpound the matter. '"Pik•Harper (6-2·. 24.\ sr. i and touc hdown s and also rushed rnnre standout Darin Teaford .
tackle Bru ce Fouls 16-3. 2-+5. for 88 yards.
who anchors .th e offe n,iv·e
sr. ). Bnth were all-k.tguc· • As one can see. Tnmb le L.lnd defensive l ine. w;~-.
choices and fir,t-tcam :dl-dis- comes at opponents in many injured \\ ith a ~e \ ere knee
tli'ct pe11·ormcr,. Also retum- · ll·ays. Perhaps a hucket of in)wy ;m,I will be nul indefi ing are botl1 guards· - Derek K1)'ptonite in the Southern nitelv.
For ·coach Boh G111csds
Liskey · 15- 11 . 225. si' l ami huddle would aiel in stopping
Brett Flowers ·15-11. 2 15. ILl - Trimble\ seeminglv superhu- Tomadoes Lo w111 . the\ mu..,l
ha\C a greal game ~111 the
and part-time startin g l;icklc man e!forh.
trenches
on b&lt;•th sides 111' the
. Tony Troi ano 16-1 . !YO. jr.l.
Trimble has kiH.!.ue wins
ball.
Southern
must e~lso he11 e
Another
gu;brd.
Mar~
ov·cr Ea,tcrn 153-1-+l. Federal
a
!:!t\.'at uamt:: fn11ll \ lamhout.
Chri,lman i'f1-o.· 21l.'i. " !· l. Hocking
(2.H-Ol.
and
saw sc,·cral !- paps Ja..,.l -.ca-.un . W;~lerford (49-2 .1. Last \1·e d, ·i.u1"d nit back ~)n dl-.t\} ·
while Matt Chnstm;1n is hac!. S11uthcrn fell In Wat erford. llii'IH'\ 'CI'~.
Addit i&lt;ll1cillv .
Southcm 1.
;h the depe ndable light c·nd
Y!-h .
.
wou
ld
~~~
a
~:lnd
hll\.1'
-11 fn'lll
16-5.215. j1.1.
Sou thern ru:-.lnn-g \\a~ kd &lt; llll lt i1L' t~· ~iln~l pa.-.,1!1~ :!~llllC
l.ast WCCk in a 2~ -() II ill h\· B..l . \1aml1nut "nh a 1-lagainst F,·,kr:il Hocking. .2(, nighl·. D~rek Teaford II). fllll1l Dc,:Ct. Tc·afonl.' '
G;u11e time j , 7J(-l' in
· Trimhlc rL· IiL·d nn ih · -.ctllll!"."' 21. ;u)d J~"e ~lcKni~ht b-1 h.
1

I

to get thL'

IL'ltfll

!ill'll up :u1 t'l

~a cinc•.

Eagles
from Page 81
Townsend 16-0. 169) also
brin ':! -.i!lntftcant stze unJ
dept! , 1~1 the perimet~r
atta c· k.
.Aaron Scholl t5 - ~ . .:'02 l
Jead.s the offensi ve fn1111 at
centt:r. "ith Je-,-.e Lang ( 61. 22.:'1 -a nd Jc- ,s JackS&lt;'n 16-

Meigs
from Page 81

2. 215 ) anc·horin~ 1l1e outside at tackle ,.
Seth 'Smith 15- i. 19-+J and
Adam Hu &gt;k (6-0. ~c-+lman
the guard 'POts .
Defensi' e I' . \\ . :~tcrto rd
·held the T&lt;'l:n,ld,,~, 10 .\7
ru,hing
\ .uch
un
~:-:,
att empt ,. ,ind .II)'"' cd just
'!'! varLis on ·t l-&lt;,f-25 passin g.

Easteru·s plav-nll hopes
l no~ tfl Ol!lllll tl C Frida~ ar
7:JO p.m .

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

Thursday, October 21,

www. mydailysentinel.com

American League Championship Series

2004

Thursday, October 21 , 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

National League Championship Series

\!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\e tster

fled Sox complete comeback, Cards force Game 7 with 6-4
beat Yankees with ease, 10-3 win over Astros in.12 innings
BY RONALD BLUM
Associated Press

grounded to second baseman
Pokey Reese for the final out at
I2:0 I a.m., Boston players ran
onto the field and jumped
to~ether in a mass huddle.
'The greatest comeback in
baseball htstory," Red Sox
owner John Henry proclaimed.
Yankees players slowly
walked off, eliminated on thetr
home fie ld for the second
strairht season.
'' I m embarrassed right
now," Alex Rodriguez said.
"Obvtously . that hurts watching them on our field celebrating."
The World Series wtll start at
Fenway Park on Saturday mght
against St. Louis or Houston.
"We're coming back home
and we're going to party for a
little while, but tt's going to be
a great World Series," Damon

NEW YORK - Cursed for
86 years, . these Red Sox just
might be charmed.
Belteve it, New Englm1d the Boston Red Sox are in the
World Senes. And they got
there wtth the most unbelievable comeback of all, with four
sweet swings after decades of
defeat, shammg the dreaded
New York Yankees.
Davtd Ortiz, Johnny Damon
a11d Derek Lowe made sure of
11.
Just three outs from getting
swept m the AL championship
senes three mghts earlier. the
Red Sox tinally humbled the
Evtl Emptre. wmning Game 7
in a 10-3 shocker Wednesday
night to become the tirst major sa~d.
league team to overcome a 3-0
There were several hundred
pastseason series deficit.
Red Sox fans behind their
· "All empires fal l sooner or dugout on the third-base side,
later," Boston president Larry cheenng wildly as Boston
Lucchmo smd.
players gave one another bear
There ts no torture thts llme, hugs. Trot Ntxo£1 ran out to the
no hour of hurrultation. Better center-field bleachers to greet
yet for Boston fans, tt's the friends, then shook hands with
Yankees who are left to suffer more along the right-field line.
!he memory of a htstoric colNow that the Babe's team
fapse.
has been beaten, Boston can try
"Not many people get the to reverse The Curse, win the
opportunity to shock the world. Series for the frrst ttme smce
We came out and did it," 191 8 and bring happiness to
Boston first baseman Kevm the Hub, whtch can scarcely
Mtllar smd "You know what' believe the tumultuous tum of
We beat the Yankees. Now even1s.
they get a chance to watch us
From Fenway Park to
on the tube."
Faneuil Hall, from Boston
Boston dtdn 't need any of Common to Beacon Hill, the
• the late-in mng dramatics that 11th pennant for the Red Sox,
marked the last three games, the first since 1986, will be
leadmg 6-0 after two innings remembered as the best for one
Ortiz. the series MVP, started it reason: Beating New York m
with a two-run homer m the Yankee Stadium, stte of last
ftrst off broken-down Kevin year's Game 7 meltdown.
Brown. and Damon quieted
None of the previous 25
Yankee Stadmm m the second major league teams to fall
inning with a grand slam on behind 3-0 even forced a series
to seven games. The wild-card
Javter Vazquez's first pitch.
Atier Derek Jeter sparked Red Sox became only the third
hope of a comeback with a run- of 239 teams m the four major
sconng smgle in the th1rd, North American leagues to
Da~non put a two-run homer overcome a 3-0 deficit in a
mto the upper deck for an 8- 1 best-of-seven series and win,
lead m the fourth.
jom ing the 1942 Toronto
Lowe pitched on two days' MapleLeafsandthe 1975New
rest and allowed one hit in six York Islanders.
innings. He st lenced the
'The senes obviously turned
Yankees' bats and boasting 10 that Game 4," Yankees genfans, who just last, weekend era! manager Brian Cashman
assumed New York s seventh said. "Then the momentum
pennant in nine years was all · started going their way and we
but a lock. Pedro Martmez just couldn't hold 'em off."
slillted the seventh. hts first
It had been 100 years since
relict appearance 111 five years, Boston last won a pennant in
and tmmedtately sparked New York on the fmal possible
chants of the now famous day a 3-2 victory m a double''Who's Ypur Daddy?"
header opener at Htlltop Park
Three htts '!-nd two runs got in 1904. New York overcame
the crowd go mg, but the rally the Red Sox by winmng the
stopped there. Mark Bellhom final two games of the 1949
added a solo homer m the sea~on at Yankee Stadium the
eighth for a 9-3 Boston lead, Yankees won a one-game playand the bullpen closed out a off for the AL East in 1978
live-hitter.
behind Bucky Dent's three-run
"It's very amazin,~, I thmk, to homer at Fenway Park, and
do v. hat we d1d, Red Sox Aaron Boone htt the lithmanager Terry Francona satd
mning homer that won Game 7
Cheenng from Red Sox fa11s last year.
could be heard m the nmth,_ and
New York, which dropped to
when pmch-httter Ruben Sterra 10-2 in the LCS, will no doubt

face a bitter winter, with owner
George Steinbrenner likely to
take charge of overhauling a
roster that ha~ been short of
starting pitching since the
spring.
Stembrenner
wouldn ' t
answer questtons after the
game. but before getting tnto
his car he said: "l want to congratulate the Boston team.
They did very, well They have
a great tean1 .
Pitching
did
in
Steinbrenner's band of AllStars, who won the AL East for
the seventh straight season,
wtth the Red Sox runners-up
each lime. Brown and
Vazquez, who faded in the second half of the sea&gt;on. were
booed by the sellout crowd of
56,129.
.
New York had a record $ I86
million payroll, far beyond
Boston, whtch was second at
$128 nullion. The Yankees
captured six pennants m etght
seasons, wmning the World
Series four ttmes. But they
haven't won since 2000 and
couldn't finish off an opponent
in the cool. efficient. ruthless
way they did only a few years
ago.
"It's not the same team,"
Jeter said. "We've had teams
that have been good at it, but
this is not the same team "
The Yankees had a 4-3 lead
in the mnth inmng of Game 4
on Sunday mght, only to have
Bill Mueller single home the
tying run off Mariano Rivem
and Ortiz hit a 12th-inning
homer against Paul Quantnll
They held a 4-2 lead in the
eighth inning of Game 5 before
Ortiz's homer off Tom Gordon
and Jason Varitek's·sacrifice tly
off Rivera, and Ortiz's winmng
single off Esteban Loaiza in the
14th.
Then Curt Schtlling, his tight
ankle held together by three
sutures, beat the Yankees 4-2
Tuesday mght to tie the series
3-all.
Damon, who entered the
game 3-for-29 (.1 03), singled
past Rodriguez at third base
leading off and stole se.;ond but
was thrown out at the plate trymg to score on Manny
Ramirez's smgle. '
That was the highlight tor the
Yankees.
·Ortiz, who had three homers
and II RBis 111 the senes, sent
the next pitch into the rightfield seats to put Boston ahead
2-0.
The Red Sox loaded the
bases with one out in the second on Millar's single and
walks to Mueller and Orlando
Cabrera Damon then lofted
Vazquez's pttch dov.n the
ri ght-field line, the ball landing
in the front row. Jubilant Red
Sox players poured out of the
dugout, jumping and ,yelling.
Damon homered agam off
Vazquez in the fourth, after
Cabrera walked, putting the
first pitch of the at-bat into the
upper deck in right

BY BEN WALKER
Associated Press

ST. LOUIS
Jun
Edmonds skipped around
the bases, jumping into a
cluster of St.
Louts
Cardinals waiting for him at
home plate.
Now, watling for all ol
them is Roge r Clemens in
an all-or-not ht ng Game 7
Edmonds blasted a tworun homer in th e 12th
innmg and the rej uvenated
Cardtnals turned Busc h
Stadium tnto a red frenzy,
beatmg the Houston Astros
6-4 Wednesday to even the
NL champ1onship series at
3- all.
"We all watched TV as
kid s We all, hear all the
stuff you guys say and write
and show us. I finally get to
play tn a Game 7,''
Edmonds satd.
"I thin k how much better
does it get' Game 7 vs.
Roger Cleme ns." he said.
After Jeff Bagwell' s twoout single 111 the ninth off
Cardtna ls closer Jason
lsrin ghause n ti ed 11 at 4,
Ed monds won it v.nh a oneout shot off Dan Mtceli.
Bagwell didn't eve n both er watc htng as Edmond s'
shot sailed way over the S1.
Lout s bullpen 111 n ght fteld.
The star first baseman sun ply wa lk ed across the field
Card mals
while
the
streamed out of the dugout.
"A very winnable game
for us. so I'm dtsappomred.'' Astros manager Phil
Gamer sat d. "Have'n't gtven
much thought to tomorrow's ga me, only th at I had
sched ul ed the Rocket to
go
Clemens ca me out of
re tirement for th e so le pu rpose of pttching hts hometow n Astros mto thetr ttrs t
World Scnc s. Now. the 42year-o ld ace w ill ge t that'
chance Thursday ntg ht
when he start s agams t former Bosto n t eam mc~t e Jeff
Suppan . ·
"What's there to sav·&gt;··
Clemens satd. exc us'111g
htmsell to go watch the Red
Sox p l c~y New York 111
Ga me 7 ot the ,ALCS.
"We've got to win tomorrow.''

It wt ll be wtll Clemens·
fourth career start in a
Ga me 7- he's 1-0 111 those

outings
after
ge tting
knocked out early last year
in the ALCS for the
Yankees
''[' ve never seen htm
pitch when he wasn't tough
to beat," Cardinal~ manager
Tony La Russa said. " It
shapes up to be a terriftc
matchup."
Ri gh ty Julian Tavarez
went two innings for the
vtctory. He pttched wtt h a
left hand that he broke in a
dugout tantrum in Houston.
" It' s my understanding
that it's the fingers that are
broken as opposed to the
hand, so I' m not s u rpris~d.
He did throw v.ell." Garner
satd
The Cardinals won a postseaso n game in extra
mnings for the first ltme
since the 1964 World Senes
at Yankee Stadium
Miceli came on afte r
As tros superman
Brad
Lidge blew away St. Louis
tor three perfect innings,
striking out five. .
"Of course yo u want him
ou t ot there," St. Loui s'
Al hert Pujols said.
Pujols drew a leadoff
walk and one out later
Edmo nds connected for his
second homer of the N LCS .
Pujols got the Cardinals
st.trted v.ith a two-run
homer 111 the fi rst oft Pete
Munro . The journey man
pttched so that Cle me ns
wou ld not have to work on
tht ee day s' rest.
The Card inal s took a 4-3
lead into the ntnth , hut
lsn nghau se n tmmedi atel y
put himself 111 jeopardy by
hitting pinch -hitter Morgan
Ensberg leading off. A bunt
moved Ensberg to second
and Cratg Btggio htt a fly
ball tor the second out.
That brought up the marvelo us Carlos Beltran , and
the Card in als huddled on
the mound A big chee r
broke out 111 the se flout
crowd o f 52. 144 when
catcl1e1 Mtke Matheny sig naled tor an mtenuonal
walk .
Bagwell fo iled the strategy. hitting a hard RBI smgle
on the first pttch . After a
doub le steal, lsnn ghause n
managed to keep it tied hy
stnki ng
out
Lance
Berk man.
In the bottom half, Lidge
relired the ftrst two batters

before throwmg a fastball
over the head of Edmonds.
La Russa came out of the
dugout to discuss the pitch
with plate umpire Ed
Rapuano. Before the game.
the manager angrily confronted baseball disciplinarian Bob Watson behmd the
batting cage. steamed that
Tavarez was fined $ 10,000
for a pttch over Bagwell's
helmet in Game 4.
"The on ly thing I was
upset about was MLB made
th ts ridiculous ruling about
Tavarez," La Russa said.
After hitting only .161 in
three straight losses at
Mtnute Matd Park, the
Cardi nal s quickly found
thetr stroke at Bu sch
Stadium.
Pujols put St. Louis ahead
with his sixth homer of the
postseason, a two-ru n shot,
and later added a double&gt;
and single. He scored twtce ,
and was nailed at the plate
another lime when he ran
through a coach's stop sign .
Beltran, continuing to
build hi s October resume.
hit two balls off the rightfield wall and both times
was held to a single by right
ftelde r Larry Walker's fast
relay. Beltran s~:ored twtce,
and hi s 20 runs broke Barry
Bonds' postseason record of
I 8 set m 2002.
Mike Lamb, starting ·a t
third base in place of the
str ugg ling Ensberg , hit a
solo homer off Matt Morris
m the fourth that made I! 43.
Notes Brandon Backe ,
the Game 5 wmner, struck
out again st Tavarez as a
pinch-hllter in the 12th ...
The Cardin als pi ayed a
postseaso n
extra-i nning
game at home tor the ftrst
ti me since the I 946 World
Series ope ner.
Tony
Womack singled twt ce, but
left after three mnings
because of lo wer back
spas ms. Hector Luna took
over at 2B . La Russa satd 11
was uncertain if Womack
would play Thursday night.
..
lsrin ghau se n pttched
three mnings for the first
time since Sept. 9. 2001,
wi th Oakland .... The teams
have combin ed for 22 home
runs, one shy of the record
for a postseason senes set
by the Cubs and Marlins in
last year's NLCS.

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Reach 3 Counties

Rio Grande volleyball
falls to Malone in four
STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydatly1nbune co m

RIO GRANDE - The
Umversl!y of Rw Grande
Redwomen volleyball team
returned to the cou rt on
Tuesday entertammg the
Malone Pioneers m Amencan
Mideast Conference action.
After a strong start, the
Redwomen lost m fo ur
games, 30-20, 18-30, 14-30
and 20-30.
Rt o Grande ( 10-22, I- l l
AMC South) stormed out to
the lead playing perhaps tis'
best volleyball of the season.
The Redwomen grabbed a 5-0
lead and were never headed.
Rio built the advantage to as
high as 12 pmnts m game one
(29- 17).
The Redwomen
failed to capitalize on their
momentum. losmg the next
three games.
Malone (24-12, 7-4 AMC
South) took control m the second game and never took its'
foot off the throttle. The
Pioneers used the power game
of perenmal all-conference
performer Bran&gt;)ie Beebe, and
Ashley Yocum.
The Redwomen kept th~
ga me close in the fou rth set,
tratl tn g 23-19 Malone put
together a tina! run of 7- I to
wm the match.
Semor
outstde
httter

Chel sea DeGarmo continued
her solid play of late wtth I I
kills and 15 dtgs to lead the
Rio attack. Sophomore middle httter Melissa Doss added
nine kills while junior
Lynnette Kiesling and sophomore Lindsay Urton chtpped
m eight each
Sophomore setter Jess ica
Veach had an outstanding
mght in a losing effort with 27
asststs and, a match-high, 25
digs. Freshman libero Alex
Savage tallied 13 digs and
collected a patr of aces.
Fellow freshman Jodi Smith
added five digs and two serve
aces.
Kt esh ng also contnbuted
two solo blocks.
Beebe led the Malone attack
with I 8 kills and 19 digs.
Yocum tallied 12 kills. Beth
Ianniello posted, a . match htgh, 59 assists and collected
four blocks. Amber Chafins
added 18 digs and Racquel
O'Hara was the top server
with seven aces.
Malone wins the seaso n
2-0,
over
the
senes,
Redwomen. The Pwneers
downed Rio Grande m three
games, Sept. 28, in Canton.
Rio Grande will step out of
conference 7 p.m., today
.when they play host to Central
State. Rio Grande defeated the
Lady Marauders 111 three
games, Oct. 7, in Wilberforce.

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

I

I

I
I
I

..

I

I®allipoli~ Jlailp' {!rribunr The o·aily Sentinel lloint lllea~ant.l\egi~ter I
l.._. ,_.\~!.~:.~~.-.... .•

I

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I

... - ... - ..~~.1.~:.~~.-... - ... - ... -.L~.~.:~_g~,:._... ~.J

..........

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AINIMIIDn

,

Ctutlllrr Uke

"oOne
-..ca.,,

G•lhil Cnwnty 011

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\!Crtbune
Sentinel
~egtster
Your Ad~
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To 446-aooa
or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oearllfiru-

Word Ads

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

Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Ne)(t Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
Frllda1v For Sundays Paper

I ..r___

i

ANNoiJNCEMENili

~

,\Nil

F_OU_ND
_ _..

.

REWARD
Lost Redd1sh brown Beagle
D1d anyone who attended m1x w1th purple collar
the Franc1s E Shauffer's Female, small-med1um s1ze
AuctiOn on 9-1 1-04 f1nd an AnsWers to "OtJu e' Very spe1nstruct10n book and.lacces- Cial fam1ly pet (740)4 4t ·
sones for a Montgomery 1269
Ward sewmg machme.
Model UHT-J 19SO I would
hke to have (need) 1! Call
YAR!l SALt:
Lucy (740)843·5260
Grave Blankets Hand craft·
ad, artrt1cral, aprox 3 It long
Call l740)446· 1714

r

YARD SALE·
GAU.II'OI.L5

Y.~RJ) SALEGALlU'OI .L'
NAZARENE TEEN YARD
SALE. Furniture. clothing
&amp; etc Oct 22 &amp; 23, 8am4pm, Fam1ly Ute Center,
1110 First Ave ., Gallipolis.
=:::-~-----,

AUCTION Mil

AU Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Di1Y5 Prior To

Publication
Sunday

Dlspla., ~

1 : 00 p.m .

Thursday for Sundi1Y5 Paper

POLICIES Ohfo V•ll•y Publlehlng re11rvee the right to edit, reject, or cencel any ad el any time E"o~a muat be reported on the f1rat d•y of pubhcet1on and
''trlbune-Senbnei-Reglater w111 be reeponal ble tor no more than the cost of the apace occupied by the '"or and only the f1rat Insertion We ahllll not be I1Mie
any loss or expense that results from the publication or omlufon of an advertisement Correct1on will be mede 1n the first ave1lsbl• edition
ere elwaye confldentlel • Current rate cerd epp hes • All reel estate advertlaements are subject to the Federal Fa1r Housing Act ol 1968
wented edt
EOE atandardl We will not knowingly acce pt any advartla1ng in 111olat1on ol the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
ANoiHec~

to

c 1-111.-D MAV Be
riM€ WIT!+ 'TH-e

St6.1'1

'SI"e' N I) I /'SI~ 1"oo
!;A ~'1'7 I'T,-t:: 10--' S

lwnght@i(; .net

/

FluM•RKET
RIVERSIDE
AUCT ION
BARN At 7 South, 5 m1les
below the Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm
740 256·6989

GIVEAWAY

0% Down Payment and
hnancmg ava1lable w1th
~:~pproved credit
Average
credit qu&lt;ljlltles you If down
payment has kept you lrom
buYJng, lh1s IS your chance
to own your own home ff
you have a down pa)1Tient
but would like 1o conserve 11 ,
we oHer low down payment
programs also Great Inter-

HOMFS
FOR SAt.F

House 3 Bedroom 1 112
Bath Heat Pump
new
Carpet, Wmdows &amp; Rool
Rrver VteN 12 Sm1th Sl No
Money Down to quahfy1ng
Buyer $425/month why Rent
(304)675-27 4 9

t

2 BR on Sandhill Rd m
Letart, flv1ng room wlf1re·
place k1tchen has dish·
washer . stove &amp; refrldg
cha1n fin k fence carport
glassed 1n back porch
$28 000 f1rm {304) 882·30t 1
ltJ-1-1

~
© 2D04 by NEA, Inc.

WWW COMlCS.COm

~1 'l'l
10~-------, r:'l'l10~------,
HH.I, W\Nil:JJ
HnJ• WANm)

11

Manage r needed lor mobile
hOme park m snaoe send
resume to Country Park
Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh
43138

New H or~zon:; Childhood
110
Ennchment Center 1S rak1ng
HH PW,wu .n
appt 1ca!IOns for Teachmg
Ass1stant &lt;tnd subs trtute
pos 1t1ons New Honzon will
An E&gt;:cellent way to earn
operate
September-May
money The New Avon
Mondays· Th ursdays 9amCall Manlyn 304-882·2645
11 30 am and Serve children
AVON I All Areas' To Buy or ages 3·5 Applicants must
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304· have at least a h1gh school
diploma experience 1n ea rly
675-1429
Child hood preferred For
Bob Evans 1n R1o Grande IS
more mlormat1on or to
look1ng lor exper1enced wall
request an apphcat1on for
staff Apply 1n person
employment packe t call 740
949-2381 or 740·992·2712
CUST SVC REP
Nursing Assistant Classes
beg mn1ng November 1,
2004 thru No11ember 18,
2004 If you enJOY elderly
people aM want to become
a member of our health care
team , please stop by
Rockspnngs Rehabii118110n
Center
at
36769
Rockspnngs
Road
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 and 1111
out an appllcatton for 1he
classes Extend1care Health
Services Inc IS an equa l
opportufllly employer that
encourages
workplace
diverSity MIF ON
-------Overbrook Center w1U soon
be oflerlng the State Tested
Nurse A1de classes If you
are mterested please come
1n and f1ll out an apphcat1on
SPACE IS LI MITED•I EOE
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center 15 now acce pting
resumes tor the positiOn of
D~rector of Soctal Serv1ces
Candidate must possess
strong verbal and wr1tten
commun1cahon
skrlls,
Med1ca1d MediCare and
MDS knowledge LSW With
expenence In tong term care
preferred but not reQUi red
Ouahfred candidates please
con tact
Charla BrownMcGUire Admm1strator at
PaQe
Street.
333
Mladleport Oh 45760, EOE
Poaltlona available nowl
Up to $9.25/hr. with
qualified ewperlencel
Excellent pay and
be nefits.
C~ll

today for more
mformaiiOn
t-a77 -463·6247 ask for
art 2457
POSTAL JOBS •
St4 62·$20 92 hr Now htr·
tng For apphcBIIons &amp; free
government JOb 1nfo call ,
Assoc ot Labor
1-9 13·599·8042 24 hrs
ernp serv

A mer~can

Sa tel lite Ins tallers ne eded
State W 10e (304)671·0058

1

1170

MiscELLANEOUS

.•

3 bedroom older home on 1
acre G1lky A1dge Ad half
v.ay bet.veen Pomeroy &amp;
Ath ens , as kmg $79 000
(740)591-7221 ERA Mart1n
&amp; Assc
3 bedroom lull basement
ga1age approx t acre of
land 5 mlfes from town on
SA 7 @ F1ve Pomts , call
740·416 -0768 or 304-882·
2299

Pnvate owned Beauty Salon
See1r.lng 39 Peop1e
needs styli st to
work
Monday's, Tuesday 's and
Locally
Wednesday 's Will pay 60%
who want to earn money
and w1ll buy all supplies while los1ng we1ght show1ng
Clientele preferred Send
others how
3 Bedrooms, 2 1f2 Baths,
resume toCLABox 555 PO
(740)441-1982
Fam1ly
Room
Full
Box 46 9, Gall1pol1s OH
FREE SAMPLES
Basement, Gas heat &amp; a1r
45631
www tamousnulrrtton com Attached Garage , 2 Car
------------:Garage 1n back w1th furnace
Propane truck driver need- 1180
WAIV IHl
Pnce
Reduced
PhOne
ed for Rutland Bottled Gas. •
To Do
(304)n3-9561

•=-------,

L.-------'

Rutland
Oh1o Must have
resume
COL license and Dr1ver Needs Work Class A
HAZMAT Come 10 the store COL All Endorsements Call
and PICk up application
(740)367-7899
Residential
Trea tment :_.:.:.:..:.._...:....____
Fac11tty for boy now hmng
Youth Worker pos1110n ca11
between 9 OOam- 4 OOpm
(740 )379 _9083
Super 8 IS seek•ng a ma1nte·
mmce person . Qualllled
applicant needs to have
baSIC repa~r and pool knowledge Apply 1n person No
phone calls please
-------TELEMARKETERS NEED·
ED· No Expenence OK $79 Per Hour, Eas y Work 1·
888-974-JOBS
-- - - - - - - Wanted
Expenenced sa lesperson
needed for growmg compa·
ny Salesperson wtll be
expected to ma1nta ln current
customer sales and relation·
ShipS
Salesperson Will be requ1re d

3BR , 2BA 5 129 ac res
Green Towns h1p close to
scnool Pnced to sell More
1nfo (7401446-7377
_.:_......:._ _ _ __

nRY\\ALL
los1all F1n1sh Pa1nt1ng.
Carpententry Bathrooms
Residential Comme rcial
INSURED
NOTHING TO SMALL
Flat Prtees
Steve-(740)388-8731

also two acres land 1 m11e
lrom Rt 7 near Eureka
$65 000
Cal 1740 )256·
9234
-------R1ver property 1 67 ~cres
232 feet shore line , 10 miles
House 1n Kanauga Old south of Gallipolis SR 7
Farmers Ro GallipoliS, Oh Bulld1ng perm1t ava il ab le
$40 000 2 tra1lers. Krodel (740)256-8823
Park
on
Neal
Rd
I! I \ I \ I '
$675/month
Inves tm ent
Both
tra11ers
535,000

_.:::::.::..:.....:.:=::..::.:.::..:...._
Georges Portable Sawmill
dor.l haul your logs to the
mtH JUS! call 304-675- 1957
Let me run your errands for
you locally, also available 2
days a week for data
entry/flilng (740)985-3620
W1ll care lor elderly tu ll or
part lime Nrghl Shift have ref
&amp; exp 304·675-7961
::..:::::::..:.:.:...:.:.:.:..:.:.::..__
Will haul Sand &amp; Gravel
Reasonably
Pr1ced
(304)675·8635

11\1\11\1

Bedrrom Bnck Home 2
Bath , 3 Car Bnck
Unanached Garage 2
tory outbwld1ng Code
2704 or call (740)446·
566
Bedroom 1 1'2 Bath
Full Basement
Yiddleport OH Code
l717 or call (740)992·
in43

PBedroom 3 Bath

Located m Gall1polls over
ookmg the Oh10 A1ver
3000 sq tt on 3 94
cres Code 825 or call
(740)441·0323

p._.er

IJ:IJI MOBIU Uom:s
f'OR S"-LE

l!!r·O
~~~O~PI'O;RnJN;~m~;

11

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES
SO DOWN/ $0 DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT ' BANKRUPTCIES
WE LCOME!

(·
·I

house
for
rent
2br
$350/ month
water and
trash pa1d no pets Depos1t
and reference reqwred
1740)388·1100
3 bedroom basement 2 car
garage newly remodeled
No pels $650 month plus
depos1t (740 )446-4824

3 Bedroom-la rge yard t car
garage-no pets 7 m1les from
R1 o
10
miles
town
(740)379 2540
4 bedroom house lor rent
Portland area totally remod
eled
$500
per
mo ,
17401843·5546

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800.370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

MB 5263

__

14x70 87 Clayton 3 bed· bath central a1r gas heal
room 2 bath C1A new car· $450 month + deposit
c'_4_0i'-4-46_· _
10_7_9_ _ __
pet ceram1c t1le washer &amp; &lt;
dryer, $tO 000
0401

1740)388· Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths WI
base me11 t V1e w ot r~ver

2000 &amp; 2001 Dou01ew10e

Cntr l
AC
$700
mo
both 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Cal l GallipoliS Ferry (7 40)446·
3481
(740)709-1166

2000 Clayton t4x76 M·
Home s1t on 4 62 acres 1n
Mas on County (734)6542237 or (734)693-9696

r.

CLASSIFIEDS

2 story Colon1a1 3 bdrm 1
bath Gas heat Cntrl lt.JC
$600 mo (740)446-3481

40r
m Syracuse
OH
S6001month S600idepos1t.&amp;
tured expando 3 bedroom 3br 1n-Syracuse $475/month
1 5 bath all appliances Hud App roved both no Pets
newer furnace Great cond1· {304)675·5332
liOn 1740)388 0498
C
A-va-'lla'-b-le-N-Ov_1_·_2_8_R_
15

"--,

.-----:S;:--:-H;-:O.-;:P:---,

2
3br Houses lor Rent
$350/ monlh $400,deposlt
No Pets {3041675-6463

1 4J~70 w1th 7x2 t rnanu!ac·

to establish new customers -pr;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
.:_IO~h-'o_L_o_•_os_o_n_'Yc.l_
the In-state area
8
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
Full time position
USII\'FSS
Bea utiful A Frame Style
m0011e homes starting a!
Good company IJenefrts and
Home 8 acres 2 bath la1ge $270 per month, Call 740..
Commission pay based on
whltfpool tub 2 car garage
992·2167
sales Valid dnver's liCensed
110
Clll
All electnc hOme natura!
and transportatton required
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH gas
available
on Make 2 payments, move 111 4
Send resume to CLA Box lNG CO recommends tha Sassatras/Lievlng Ad (304) years on nota (304)736·
3409
548
PO
Box 469 , ou do bus1ness w1th pea 675 6809 after 5 00
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
le you know. and NOT t
New Oakwood mega store
r.:;:50~-~o~
~ "'-~-.
end money th rough th
featunng
Homes
by
;x..~
all until you have 1nvest1
Oakwood , Fleetwood &amp;
..__ _
INsrn_iiiUCTiiiiiiiiiOiiN--' lj!B!!!Ie:;,d!_lh!!e~o~ffe~r'"L-__J
~
G1les One stop shopplnll
only at Oa~wood Homes ol
Galllpoflt CarMr College
All
r
.
.
le1t1t1
•dvertl•lng
Barnoursv1lle WV (304 )736I'Rm'Thl;tONAl
(Caree rs Close To Home)
lo thl1 newap•per 11
3409
SER\1CES
Call Today 1 740-446·4367.
tubj!Kt to the FMM!rll
1-800·2 14-0452
F•lr Mou1lng Ac:t of 1068
S.;VE·SAVE ·SAVE
www gall!pOIHKflr.. rcollege com
whlc:h 1T111k11 It 111eg•l to
TURNED DOWN ON
Stock models at old pnces
Acclt!OIUtd Member Accredilmlj
ed\lertlae "1ny
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
CGUflCII toJ ln d~dam Coll1~11
models arnv1ng Now
2005
preference, limitation or
No Fee Unless We wm1
and Schools 127-48
Cotes
Mobile
Homes
beNd
on
discrimination
1·888·582·3345
15266 US 50 East Athens
r~ce, color religion, MX
OhiO 45701 (740)592 1972
familial statui or netlonel
IH \1 t "' I \II
"Where You Get Your
origin, or any Intention to
make any tuch
Money's Worth'
H1gh
School
Jun1ors
preterene1, limlbltlon or
Ho~tES
Semors and Pr1or Serv1ce
dlacrlmlnttlan."
you can fill vacant positions
FOR SAlE
m the West V1i"gm1a Army
ACRL\GE
Tnlt n•wapt~ptr will not
Nat1onal Guard If you are
knowingly
accept
(2 ) 3 bedroom hOuses for
between the ages of 17·35
advertltemantt tor reel
2 acres on Ingalls Rosa
sale 2 batt)s f1reptaces. on
or have pn0r m1htary serv·
Utili which II In
$15,000 740-245-0t33
acreage Ca ll (7 40)709·
vlcl•tlon of th• l•w. Our
Ice you won 't want to pass
1166
rtt dtora •r• htreby
ttus up ~or OpportuM1es 1n
Informed that •II
2000 sQuare ft Cedar S1d1nQ
your area, call
304·675· - - - - - - - dwellings •dv.rtlsed In
5837
Home Barn &amp; 100 acres 6
Home For Sale
thla rliWiptJ)IIr 1r1
acres tillable property bor
Hand built log home 6 years
1\lllltble on en equal
ders Cornstalk. very pflvete
old Pn~tate w1th 10 acres
opportunity baaea.
dwell1ng •
StlJnn1ng v1ew1 3 Br 1 112
bath Open loft'
- - - - - - , - - - 30 Acres 7 acres 11llable
Homes
fro m
$10 000 1 Hay Barn 48 x60 Metal
Financing available wllh
For closure VA Hud for l1st· Barn 42'll;70 Souths1de WV
NO DOWN PAYMENTI'!
1ng 1·B00-749-8106e,; 1709 25,187 13041675 5490
(7 40 )388-0164
In

Uoi ·sFs

Large 3Br on 1!2 acre Lot
H&gt;R~'f
Mason next to VFW needs
WOfk S30 000 (304)882·
0% Down Payment and
2197
hnancmg ava1lable w1th.
Average
Newly remolded Home approved C1ed1t
Loca1eO m Hartford 2br 1 credit quahftes you If down.
bath computer room, all payment has kept you from
electnc tteat pump. cenlrat buymg th1s IS your chance
a1r $40 000 call (304)882 to own your own home If
you have a down payment
2762 call day or even1ng
but would l1ke to conserve 1t.
we offer low down payment
www.orvb.com programs also Groat 1nter
est rates1 Loca l company.
Home Llstmgs
Mortgage
Locators
L1st you r home b•( calling
1740)992·7321
(740)446-3620

t\'ITE:-ITJON!
GET VOUA LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME I
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME LOANS'

l..m-s &amp;
ACRIW;F:

200 1 mobile home 16x80

~17_40~14_4~1~-5~72~5~------ ~10

Sl-.ll\ I( I· S

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcement ................. ......................... 030
Antlques ..................... .................................. 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale ........................... ................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ...................... ,...... 750
Building Supplles ..................... ................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ................................ 210
Business Training ............. .......................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 190
NEEDED!
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Work From Home
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
800 210 4689
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
$500-$1 SOO!Month
Elect rl ca VRefrigerat1 on, ....... ,...................... 840
Part-t1me
Equipment for RenL. .................................. 480
$2.000-$8 000/Mon th
Excavating ...................................................830
Full·t1me
Farm Equipment: ........................................ 610
Desk cle rk needed Please
Farms for Rent. ............................................430
apply
at Budget Inn
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
Jackson P1ke Gall1pohs No
For Lease ..................................................... 490
phone calls please
For Sale ....................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ..................................... . 590
Dom1no's now h~r~ng safe
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
dr1vers
all
positions.
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
Gall1pohs
Pomeroy
Pt
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Pleasant, S. Eleanor call
Giveaway.....................................................040
store (304)675·5858 tor
apphca!IOns
Happy Ads.................................................... o5o
Hay &amp; Graln ......................................... .........640
Green ..-A cres
Help Wanted ................................................. 11 0
Regional Center, Inc.
Home Improvements .................................. 810
Has an Immediate
Homes for Sete ........: ............... ,................... 310
opening tor: Treatment
Household Goods., ..................................... 510
Instructor
Houses for Rant .......................................... 410
Job Req ulremen1s
tn Memorlam ................................................ 020
H1gh School diploma or
Insurance ..................................................... 130
GED equivalent
Lawn &amp; Garden EqulpmenL ...................... 680
Fult -11me pOSitions ave1lable
Llvaatock .......... ............................................630
Work1ng With MR/DD adu lts
Lost and Found ........................................... OBO
m Var18d settings
Send resume or
Lola &amp; Acreage ........................................... 350
Interest letter to:
Mlacellaneous ............................................. 170
Green Acree Reg ional
Mlacellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Center, Inc
Mobile Home Repair ............ ......... ............. 860
AHantlon Personnel
Mobile Homee for Rent.. ............................. 420
P.O. Box 240
Mobile Homes for Sale ............................... 320
Leaage, VVV 25537
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Fax 304· 762·2862
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheetera .......................... 740
Email.
Musical Instruments .................... ,.............. 570
garc@dlracway.com
Peraonals ................................................. ... 005.
EDE
Pat• for Sale ................................................ 560
Loca l company seekmg a
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... B20
driver with a Class 8 COL
Profeaslonal Servlcea ................................. 230
Wllh HAZMAT IO haul
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr .............................. ,160
propane and bulk fuels for
Real Estate Wantad ..................................... 3BO
home heatmg 011 Two years
Schoola Instruction ..................................... 150
expenence IS preferred
5eed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Benel1ts Include health. den·
Slluatlona Wanted ................ ,...................... 120
tal and l1 fe 1nsurance. 40tK
Space for Rent .............................. ........ , .... 460
Sporting Goods ......................................... 520 ' plan and paid vecat1on
lnleresled
canclldates
SUV' a for Sale ............................................720
should send the1r res ume to
Trucks for Sate ......................................... . 715
UEI Attn Terry PO Box
Uphotllery ................................................ 870
334, GalhpC'.lhs OH 45631
Vans For Sale............................. ..............730
Make 50 "~o selling Avon
Wanted to Buy .......
.. ............................090
Lunl!ed
t1me
ONLY
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ............... 620
FirSt
5
10 Cj\11
(740)446·3358
Wanted To Do ......................................... 1~~.
rf!Celves it Qlft
Wanted to Rant ........................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galtlpolls.................................... 072
Paramed1CS
&amp;
I:MT's
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle .................... . 074
needed Apply, at 1354
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant.. ........................, .... 076
Jackson P1ke Gall1pol s

10

FOR SALE

2 br l1vmgroom, d1n1ng
room k1tchen . t /2 basement
0r1'1 acre ground
l /4 of a m1le on Bud Chan1n
Ad 304·675·3144

mBuv

t

HOMES

est rates! Local company
LocatOrs
Mortgage
(740)992·732 1

Wo\NTill

" ' - - - - - - - · 31amdy, Oct 21·22·23 2560
SA 141 9am-5pm Ant1que
3 young ca ts Fnendly htter sew1ng machme household Absolute Top Dollar US
S1lver and Gold Cams
tramed .
1ns1de
only 1tems &amp; m1sc
Proolsets Gold R1ngs. U S
(7 40 )446 3897
Currency -M T S Com Shop
Second
Ave nue
3 yr old Female Black Lab Garage Sale Oct 22 23 t51
(304)895·3492
K1tchen cabmets counter Gall1pohs 740-446·2842
Mommy Cat &amp; k1nens m1xed top storm Windows, kitchen
ware books PatiO table &amp; Junk cars wrth or Witho ut
w/blue eyes pretty cats ask
cha irs exercise bench &amp; mo tors (740)388·00 11
lo• Shelly 1304)593·1742
betwee n 7-gpm
we1ghts. trller, radiO , tapes &amp; Old m1lk bottles from Gallla
=='---'-"'----- some mens sh~rts 2 m1les Co Da1nes Call (740)446·
Rabbit to good hams lrom c 1ty par1 on 588 &amp; 1714 w1th p11ces
(740)9 92·7380
W1n terplace
P1ck up trucf&lt; topper for
La."T AND
Chevy long bed ~~~verado
Multr -fam1ly and movmg
FOUI\ll
sale Fr1/Sat October 22·23 2002 Call between 3pm 9pm (740)645-0921
8 30·4~ 19 Debb1e Dnve. 2
Reward Lost 1n the Mason miles out SA 141 6 yr old Wanted 213 Bedroom house
area , on Wed Oct 13 2004 , gas range kmg waterbed w/garage Tuppers Plams or
L1ght· Yellow Part Chow ~ frame, J/4 mattress &amp; Chester area Preapproved
female dog was wearmg spr~ngs, 8-pr hke new sz 8 l1nanc1ng (740)949-2194
purple colla r 11 seen call Jeans sweaters rackets
I \It'! 11\\tt· \I
(304 )773·5094
baby gate MORE

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Start Vour Ads With A KeywQrd • Include CQmplete
DescriPtion • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad s Should Run 7 Days

L&lt;st

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In - Column: 1:00 p.m .

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

College Volleyball

CLASSIFIED

LoTS&amp;

Huge Duplex clean 3 bed·
room 1 bath d1nmg storage No oetstsmok1ng $610
Call Kelly (740)446·9961
Large tarmhOuse
3 bed·
room 1 Oath $450 pe1
month
plus
securrty
(7401992·624&lt;
N1ce 1 2 &amp; 3 oearoo m ·
Apartme nts reta1 1 space
also for rer1t 1740]992·3702
N1ce nome on SA 160 1
m1le !rom Holzer $650 per
month (140 )446-6865 or
(740)379-2923
Renta l 1n Pomt Pleasant
$400rmont"' (304)675-5540
or (304)675-4024 ask. fo r
Nancy Homestead Aea ! t~·
Broker

..,. :VIOUIL.E HO\IiS
FORRL""T
2 bedroom tta11er tor ·ent
WID hookup no pe~s $350
month plus oepos1t Cal l
(740)256·1 008
2 Br Mob1le Home fo r Rent
S300/deposlt S325 month, ·
~304\8 82 - 3014 or (304 t882
tW7
3 bedroom mObile hOme no
pels (740)992·5858
Beaut1ful R1verv1ew 1deal tor
1 or 2 people no oets refer
ences (7 40)44 1·0181
Bidwell area clean remod
eied 2BA $4 00 mon th
1ncludes water &amp; sewer
DeDOSitlreferer'lces No pets
1304)576·4037
•

�~age B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 21, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.coni

Thursday, Octo~r 21, 2004
ALLEY OOP

I

In Memory

In Memory

Get Your uusv Acrol8
With A DeilY Seufluel

ln) hll'.. hlind
Charles R. Mash. Jr.

ln

memory of

..... ho pa .....L~ d

tma~

Oo..·toht·r :!I ,

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

BULLETIN BOARD

19H ~

Phillip
Alder

'S'"column
InchSat.
~~:C.ay
' 15"'
column Inch
or

1f I had rhc 'INOrh.l lo f!l \ . ...
rttgnc- II ~c.., and llhlf~ .
to h.:ar ) our \ 011.:c.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

To ..,ct- ~our .. nul~ :.m d ~ft' L' l ~m• mthL' donr.

h hrull' llllf lll'dll' to In,...· you.
l3ut .\tm Lhdn"tl!tl
. a l tlllL',
For po111 \ll u., " Cill \O,t\h ) \lll
Theda~ Gtllll"alkd ~ou
Satl l ~ rm"&gt; .. L'd h)

Thursday, October 21,

2004

Mlddlepon . OH
$20.00 lor 20 games
Held by the G.C . Starz Cheerleaders

Buy ticket in advance gets name in
drawing for basket
• Refreshments • Ooor prizes·
Oobbers available

Copy Editor/Page Designer

See Brent or
M-Fri

e xperienced in both page design and copy
e diting . This person will need to design

8:30-5:00

Antiques

·write great headlines. Experience with

on 2nd Aft
Middleport. Ohio

knowledge

a

PholoShop is
s chedu le is
Send

of

Quark

and

tO

musl Flexibilily wilh work

Goat:.;

a must.

a cover leNer and

Repair-675-7388. For sate ,
re-conditioned automatiC
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators. gas and electric
ranges. arr conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on ma)or brands in
shOp or at your home.

· Ohio Valley Publishing Company
825 third Avenue
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631
Attn .: Jim Freeland

.

.

.

.

. llJ\f;JNJl
I (JIJN (;I.IJJI
'
:()f!N SIIOOT
Sunday
Oct. 24th
1:00 0' Clock
Shot Only
.'

AP.\RTl\ tiNTS
fUR R ENT
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bf!droom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Rivers1de
Apartments in ·Middleport.
From 5295-$444. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

r

COME BY I SEE ME FOR

SPORTING
Goo~

Callaway X-16 Iron set 3-P
$450. (740)446·8239.

f1.emington 1187 12 gaug6
witl'1 deer barrel, $400.
Re'mington 870 Wingmaster
12 gauge 28" vent rib, modiModern 1 bedroom apt. lied, S250.
Phone (740) 446-0390
Beret1a BL4 12 gauge over
and under 30'" lull $800.
One bedroom apartment..
Franchi 48 AL 28 gauge.
no pets
in Pomeroy.
5600 1740)446·2905
(740)992·5858

r

One bedroom garage apartment kitchen turn1shed,
5400. 1740)992-3823

ANllQUP.;

Buy or sel!. Riverine
Antiques. 11 24 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 _
992 •2526 . Russ Moore,
owner
;;:;,;;;::"-------.

AI'ARf\I}NfS

Tara
Townhouse
Apariments. Very Spacious.
1-lJRRE:I\T
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. I
1 and 2 bedroo'tn apart· 1/2 Bath , Newly Carpeled.
ments, turnish §d and unfur- AdU lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio. Start $385/Mo . No
nisl'1ed, securrty deposit
required. no pets, 740·992· Pets. Lease Plus Securlty
Deposit Requi red, Days :

15«1

MISCELLANEOUS

t...-.:~:;,1f;;;:,~;;at\,;,;;::,N;;;D;:IS;;;f;,:_.
-

~ 2 18 .

740-446-3481 ; Evenings: 84 Ford Oiesel 3/4ton . Gas
1 bedrOom apt. W/0 hookup 740·3§7 ·0502.
&amp; Oil well swabber. 14• 10
~~90 month +deposrt . Close 1· -w' in- R-,v-,-,.- 1'
-o_w_e_r i-, -a-cc-a-pl· case diesel tractol. almost
to Holzer Hospital Call 740- ong applications lor waiting new pop · up camp" · Can
J39-0362.
list for Hud-subsrted, t- br. crus her-separa Ies
sI ee I
4
2 bedroom apt. rn Rro apartment, call 675-6679 _c_an_s_._17_4_01_2_5_·_55_3_5_
. __
Grande. $325 deposit. S325 EHO
Cash paid lor Dish Network
month (740)245·9060.
equipment. Have model
\11-.R&lt; II \\ll!SI
2 bedroom apts. 10 minutes ii;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=; number's ready. Toll fr ee
1888)569·28 t 2
tram Holzer Hosprta1 on St
10
HOUSEHOlD
At . 160. Water/Sewer/Trash
('IJ()()I)S
Country Flame woad burnIncluded. $460/mo. Deposil
ing
fireplace
insert.
f'€qurred. Pets allowed.
Automatic control and fan .
1740)441 -11 84 or (740)441$400 . 1740)446·7692.
0194
For Sale Fire Wood
Appliance
3 rooms &amp; bath. stovelrelrig·
(304)882·2537
erator, .down sta1rs, utilities
pa1d. $450/month . No pets.
Warehouse
JET
46 Olive St. (740)446-3945
AERATION MOTORS
App lications being taken tor in Henderson , WV. Pre- Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1vert clean 1 bedroom in owned applrcanes starling at
800·537 :9528
$75
&amp;
up
all
under
warranty,
coumry setting yet close to
town. Washer. dryer. stove. we do service work on all
1ndge rncluded. Water and Make and Models (304)675NEW AND USED STEEL
garbage included. Total elec· 7999
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
tric with AC Tenant pay etec· Formal d1nning room suit
For
Concrete,
Angle,
tric . $300 deposrt, S375 per
~ith Chma cabrnets. 3 piece Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
month. No pets. No smok· livrng room su1t with 3 cherry Graling
For
Drains.
rng. 740-446·2205 or 740·
tables. Well kept. Washer &amp; Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
446·9585 ask lor Vrrgrnra
dryer. (740)446-6865 or Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Apt 4-Rent clean 2or. (740)379-2923
Friday..Bam-4:30pm . Closed
IJ,Vasher/Dryer
hookup.
Fu ll mattress/spring drop Thursd8Y. Saturday
&amp;
Ret/Dep. ~ (304)675- leaf table wlcharrs. coffee/ Sunday. (
)446 _7300
740
5162
end table. Irving room suite.
Pole Barn 30x50.o:10FT
BE AUTIFUL
APART- afghans. (740)446·0897
$6395 . includes Painted
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Good Used Appliances , Metal. Plans. Instruction
PRICES AT JACKSON
Recond itioned
and Book. Slider, Free Delivery
ES TATES, 5:2 Westwooel
Guaranteed.
Washers. (937 )559 _8385
Drive !rom S344 to $442 . Dryers .
Ranges .
and
Walk to shop &amp; movies . Call Refrrgerators, Some starl at Rascal Scooter A230 •
3
i40-446-2568
Equat
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 Wheeled. New Batteries
Housrng Opportunrty
Vrne St .. (740)446·7398
S900 {304)675·1542
'c ONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Mo!lonan Carpet, 202 Clark
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Chapel Road. Porter, Oh1o

Townt10use
apartments.
,1nd/or small houses FOR
nENT. Ca11 (740)441-111 1
lor application &amp; rnlormatron .
EH1crency apt. for rent
$350/month 1nctudes V:ater.
sewer &amp; trash . No pets.
740 446 4313
(
) .
Middleport, · North
4th

..-,._ . Middleport
•e. Ot 45760

Heater. (propane· or Natural) 1"~~~*1«1*~~00.1«10\l&gt;l«*l«i*l«~
Manual Control $143.95
.,;;
Vent Free. 5-Piaque Gas
Heater.
(Automatic
Thermostats
Control)
$239.95
aluminum Fiberated Paint
(Great for Mobile Homes)
&gt;gal. Bucket $29.95
Paint Plus Hardware
675--4084

r___
~

YOUR BEST DEAL ON A

.I.

NEW OR USETJ CAR
Ty Hill

B_UJ_W_L'&lt;G
__
SUI't'LIES

•

Block. brick , sewer pipes,
windows. lintel~. etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call 740·245·5121.

r

PETs

11

r70

FOR SALE

88 Jeep Comanche, 2
IN.~lll\·IENTS
w/drrve, standard, dd player,
·--iiiOiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiio.,J sunroof,
good work truck,
Gui tar Show Sunday Oct $800 OBO. (740)992-0629
24th. Holrday Inn, 600 leave message
Kanawha Blvd .. Charleston
10·4 $5 Adm . 12 17)529·
4x4
6939
FoR SALE

r

98 Sharp Ultra Classic.
Loaded wrth chrome. 103
8 1g Bore, 4,000 miles on
engine, luggage rack. side
I \lniSII'PIII"
racks. 740-446-8972 or 740&amp;11\1"1()(1\.
199 8 GMC Jimmy SLS, 367·0502.
great co ndition, pwr seat,
10
FARM
windows, locks, sunroof.
EQUJPI\tENl
new transmission, 106K
~oiiili{iiiii,---.,;,.1 niites, asking $7,000
(740)446·8910.
1995 2;6 foot lnsbrook

tM~~~

Gu11stream
5th
wheel
2000 Dodge Dakota Sport.
4)(4, club cab, CD. 51,000 camper. Sleeps 6. great
miles, L.C., tilt, Tonneau shape. $5,000 1740)44 t ·
cover, V-8, auto, $12,900, 0804.
For Sate Ear Corn (304)675· call (740)992·2459 or 3041997 Prowl er. 24ft., Sleeps
1506
j!88!Ji2~·34;.;;,07-~----, 6, Mint Condition. $6000.
VANS
1304)675·1784.
~::---~----,
F S
20Ft Bumper Pull Bonanza
~10
Al!I'O'i
ALE
Camper for Hunting camp
FOR SALE
1995 Chevy Astra Van. 3 $1,100 call tor details
·
seater, front/rear AJC $4.700 1304)675·5724
$500! Honda's, Chevy's. OBO C 11 (740.)446 7
· a
-1 14.
SIR\(( I'-.
Ect
Police
Jeep's,
95 Forci Aerostar XLT, .,.,,....;...;;.,_,;;....;.;;;;;,;;;
1
lmpounds Cars from $500
HOME
fer listings 800-391·5227 44,000 miles, one owner,
eKcellent condition. $6,000
IMPROVEI\.lFNIS
EXT 3901
- - - - - - - - - OBO, call (740)985-3571
1988 01ds Oldsmobile, 40
BASEMENT
MmuRCYCLES'
$1 ,200. Call {740)367·0t39
WATERPROOFING
4 WHEELERS
• Unconditional lifetime guaro
__' _17_4_0 _
13_6_7·_7_19_3_._ _ _
1998 Explorer for sale 1984 Honda V65 Magna antee. Local references fur·
nished . Established 1975.
52.000 080. (740}441·1521 Black. 1-owner, new co ndiCa11 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
10
_a_s&lt;__'T
_ i_
m_.- - - - - tion , retJu11t ca rbs, 19.500
0870, Rogers Ba sement
1998 Oldsmobile HCuttass·· miles , $3,800 {304 )882·· Waterproofing .
GLS, V6, Auto, PS, PB, AJC _1_10_2_ _ _ __ _ __

r
I

ro.

"----iiioiiioiiiiiio--"

r10

~

L

89 Honda Civic SBOO
lmpounds/Repo's
from
$500! listings 600·391·5227
ext. c548

I

PUBLIC NOTICE
. NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
.Saturday, October 23,
2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
· public sale will be
held at 211 W Second
St. Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Ia
selling for cash In
hand
or
certified

93 BMW 325i. Cust6m
cover, new · tires &amp; e.~~ tra
wheels. Priced to sell under
blue
~ook,
$3,500
1740)446·9555.

.

'

low as

Q$

..

$25.00 per mo:11th!

tne,

''

'

'

I'

Daily

Sentinel
v

•'

I·

93 Buick Skylark, 3.3L, V6,
auto, 145,000 miles. Needs
some transmission work.
$450 OBO. (740)446·8516.
99 Vottswagon Beetle. Red,
5 speed , CD chan ger,
62.000 miles. S6.soo .oeo.
1740)256·1616 or 1740)256·
6200

check the following
collateral :
1999 VM PASSAT
4
S
WVWMD63B9XE5166
83
1999 CHEVROLET
S14
_
PT
IGCCS14WSX8169146
1996 CHEVROLET
CAV
2D
IGIJC1246T7232804
The Farmera Bank
and
·
Savings
Company, . Pomeroy,
Ohio , reserves the
right lo bid al this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and .
Savings
Company
reserves
the righllo reject any
or all bids submtned.
The above ile&amp;crlbed
·collateral will be sold
" as !&amp;·where Is", wllh
no e_x pressed
or

'

~-

992·2.155

All Din
REPAIRS IN OCTOBERI .

Is u1v1nu

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

1972 Chevy Tow Truck , t 112
ton , excellent working condition. wenct) works off PT,O.
everything
new,
over
$13.000.00 invested. Will
take
$8,500.00
OBO
{740)992-0622
0

1992 Chevy S:10. V-6 Auto.
"Low Miles $2 ,000 OBO
(304)593·1200
Ei99 Chevy 1 ton wrth 11ft
utrhty bed, welder "and a1r
compressOr $15,500 OBO
(7 40)256· I 526-7 40-645·
. 0446. """

(

HOW'S HIS
NOT SO GOOD,
mAININ'
LOWEE2Y !!
GO IN', LUKEY? r-,-::lll

most brands. locale• on Rt l bvlass
OUISldB Pomarov. OhiO

L,.------;,;,;:,..1

THE BORN LOSER

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

p:

warranty

For further information, or for an appolntmenllo Inspect colla!·

eral, prior to sale date
contact Diana Rector
or Randy Hays at 992·
2136.
10120,21,22

Public Notice
Salisbury Township
Trustees on October
23rd II 9 :00 A.M. will
hold an auclion atlha
Township
Garage
next to the horsa
barns at the Meigs
County Fair Grqunds. ·
Items are: 2 Used

P"'(OU ~~~E. I~ P,~'(""
OFFIC£. POOL~,
OO'&lt;OU'?'

\1-\E. W~PU•{.E.
1:':. I':*'I'N-&lt;1 !

P"\)OE.:&gt; II ;)\ILL. C.OUt-1\
GI\Joo\BU 1'-\G lF l
1\l.lo-l/\'iS LO:iE. 7

Po.~ ""

82tl E:t"t Main St.

'Rocky "RJ"

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio

740-992·5232

HERES THE &amp;OTIOM
Lit-lE, Kl D : YOU'vE GOT
TO BE TRUE TO

IMPORTS

Op&lt;n 8:30-6:1HI M -F:
Sat. 8:.10-l :fiO 992-1033
Pio:k-up and Lidl\ c r~ ."~-r,· ro:.:
Now ~'1'\·irin!! Kcro.,cnc Hl'atcr•

High &amp;Dry
Self•Storage

BIG NATE

Hupp

Kal-Air Air Cumpn: ... ~on.

~~~

'tOUR.S.ELF'

~_,.\

Athens

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homt!s • Vinyl

29670 Bashan Road

BUILDERS InC.
Siding • New

Garages

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

PRESSURE? DtD I
CHANGE. THtN6S ABQUT
MYSELF TO SUIT 01 HERS'

11t4/l mo

COUNCIL' SOCIEH. THE
STUDENT COI.JN(fl
I...J L.--l WI\S A BU NCH
OF PORKS.

PRESIDENT~

NO!

~~rnlli~~ Ci~~~~
51-lE WAS TELLING US ~OW
MUCI-1 STRESS Sf.lE'S BEEN
UNDER LATELV. AND THEN
Sl-lE JUST FELL ASLEEP...

•

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

740·992· 7599

pd

4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1·800-822·0417

SUNSHINE CLUB
I HE.AR aD

MAIJ

WIL'Sal HAS B£U.l
WEIGHT

U FTIIJG

#I Chevy, Pontiac, Bui ck. Olds

&amp;

f&gt;'t MY _!UN tOR
'&lt;EAR OF H IGH SCHOOL,
I'D BEEN ELECTED

PEEfl...

NO, THE
•• DUNGEONS
1\ND DRAGONS"

PEANU;f'S

Sizes 5'xtO'
to 10'x30'

COMM E RC IAL an d

"WYs

FR IEN D~

OF
T HIO
STUDE NT

P'-11&gt; OFF, MY

'

45771
740·949·2217

Windows • Roofing

WRITESEL

CU M B TO -1 HE

... AN D IT

Racine, Ohio

• Rcphlt:cm~nt

IIOWARD l.

I WA"&gt; TEI\SEP AS A
K ID, BUT Ptr&gt; r SUC ~

~ l.JOO""'~
•

Dean H.ill
New&amp; Used

*ROOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GmER

Custom Van Dealer"

0) ..j

HE. MET1HE I.OOMAIJ
OF HIS Uf£ ...

~

~

J

'lffraelstlmateh

1

949·1405

~·

10(.2. 1

L-------------~-----------Jo

~ARFlELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
Barn h art

'Builders

•Rl'phtn·mtnl Windm\'
•Rmrl\
( 'nmnwn.·ial &lt;tiHI
Rl·.~oid l'n l ia l

F'rt;e Estimates

7-111-61i7-61JKO

response is traditionally forcing , which
makes it questionable . Maybe he should
have passed. South's two-no-trump intervention was brave with no heart stopper.
(II wou ld have been foolhardy il partner
had also been weak In hearts. But that
was unlikely, since East's bid suongty
suggested shortage in hearts.) A takeout
double looks safer. However, two notrump should have worked out bea ~Jt~ully,
except that South lost his nerve , running
from three no-trump to four clubs.
East won with the spade ace and
returned the queen to declarer's king.
South played a diamond to dummy's
queen, then successfully finessed his
club queen. If declarer had now cashed
the club ace, he would have be'en fine , but
he played a heart to dummy's queen,
e)(pecting East 10 have a singleton.
Disaster! East ruffed anci led the spade
jack, ruffed and overruffed. Next. East
ruffed away dummy's heart ace, and a
later heart loser spell two down ~ not
good , with three no-trump an easy make.

AstroGraph

See

Nt:w Gcncrul StunJh~
Gcncral ing Sy'-lcm ~ ;md

C.AT5 ARE VE'.RY
CL.EAN ANIMAL.!'&gt;

!

'THEY CL.EAN 'fHE'MSE'L.VES
WITH 'THEIR 'fON&amp;UE!l

I

iI
l•

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

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
__ - · - -

• Room A~diti6na &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oe&lt;:ks
We do it all except
furn ace work

61 TirJ
nocuoity
DOWN

21 su11ar amts.

Barracks

23 Fin1sh first

off.

23 Canine pals 49 Famouo
do it
volcano
25 Ancient
51 " Tokyo
Miserabln'
53 ~t. lor Hant
27 Veils
26 Walerlng
55 Pay dirt
place
56 NOW eo~uS&lt;
31 High pt.
57 Pop
33 Frat letter
35 Cartoon

shriek
39 Frat teners
41 Draw oul
44 Aykroyd
and Rsther
46 Dark yellow
47 Bleacher

ll•••••-

I

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remode ling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1611

992·6215
Pome,oy, Ohio
2:t Years Local Ex fience

Stop &amp;-Compare

t=~~~J----~"
tj'~Y"GRIZZWELLS
6.11 \ffi.IE'il:'

'+MI&gt;.i'f Al-l

/o.\.~1'1~\IE

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BU'f NOT

YOU'

D

WE'RE: OUI OF
CONPI'fiONe:.R

-

'illrthdiiY:

Friday, Oct." 22, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol

A more act1ve social calendar could be in
the offing tor you in the year ahead .
Numerous involvements with 1r iends.
both old and new. wm provide a welcome
relief I rom all your mundane activities.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -You always
seem to know what it takes to make olh·
ers haj)py instinctively, and today those
"VhO need a !,&gt;it ot a lift in their lives will be
seeking out your company. You 'll en joy
being popular
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ~ It'll be
more comtortjng tor you today to guide a
delieate situation tl'1at needs attention
!rom. th e background rather than being
up front and direct. Maintaining a low profile aids your purpose.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - This
is one ol lhasa days where the more
people you have around you. the better
you're apt to like it. Seek out places and
SP,Ots where you know the aclion lies and
plan to be part of it.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Things are likely to come together today
in activities that pertain to your work or
career. You can actually end up gaining
more ground and making more money
than you have all week.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Because you'll be better prepared to
accept tile 's happenings philosophically
today. th ings that are important to you wrtt
ultimately work out to your advantage at
thi s time. Remain optimistic
PISCES (Feb. 20-March· 20} ~ As only
you can do when you cl'1oose to. today
you will use your remarkable faculty for
mak.1ng the most out of the least . Those
who real ize this will want to hop on your
bandwagon.
ARIES (March 21-Apr rl 19) ~ Take
advantage ot the good vibes that surround you at thrs moment rn time and get
out and mingle Those you know casualty will begin to be drawn to you and want
be your special friend .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Becauseyou will be endowed with both confi·
dence and the wherewithal to accomplish
most anything you desire today. major
achievements can be realized . Go after
something big.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Although rn
order to bring out your liner qualities you
may require some lorm ol stimulating
cha llenge. chances are you'll be seeking
out just that sort ot game or business
deal today.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Focusing
your altentron and rnterests on your lam·
ily today will enhance your feeli ngs ol
belongrng and, at the same time . con·
tribute to your sense ot well-berng and
securrty.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today you can
derive considerable pleasure by getting
in touch with friends and bringing each
other up-to-dale on all the goings-on in
you r lives. Ring up a pal and have a good
chitchat.
VIRGO (Aug , 23-Sept. 22) ~ Addlr"'g to
your warehouse of belongings could be
conaiderably ennanced . start ing today
and 1asl1ng over tile next few days. The ·
personal compensation for which you're
hoping W'111 be there.

\To? ,"ttlU KI-PW . AH

ALIE'itNt::.I IV~

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shout
48 Ayla's
creator
Jean -

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Ctpt""ter cryp1ogriiTI!i are cre118d !rom q~tabcns t:y 111"1001 peoplt plst I rill prl!lllln'.
Each ltltl!r rn ltle CJ~III" stand$ ta ar&gt;Omer
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The poet mames the language , and out of this

marnage tne poem 1s born .· - W.H. Auden
(C)2004 by NEA. Inc

If you've made your bed, lie in it!

l'tlllll:fl)\

br:..,illl' Lmy':-. Fi·uit Stand

Gravely walk behind : : : : : ; : : : : :
mowers, B .C.S. made ·
ln Italy 14hp walk
behind mower, 3/4 hp.
• Campbell Hausfeld air
c.ompressor,
1984 30 yem up&lt;ri &lt;n«
Ford 250 van, · 2·
14.00X 24 road grader •Ne)"' Uorne!!
tires
mounted,
2- • LoK Uom~~:s
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h oe II res, aII 1·1ems are
used . 2 Stihl weed·
eater.
Oct. 18, 20, 21

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'CLASSIFIEDS

Implied
given.

HERE, OL'
BULLET!!
HEEERE,
BOY!!

PH:l140J

Warranty Rcp&lt;tir •
Lawn Trauor &amp; Pu ... h
Mowers. Chain Saws.
Chain Sharpl'ltl:d
&amp; P:1rt:-.

ridgt
60 Youngsters

What are your thoughts about the auc·
tlon? How do you think that the play
went?
Normally, one opens at the three-leve l
with a weak hand and a seven-card suit ,
but since West was vulnerable, one can
understand his caution. East's two-spade

· BARNEY

2003
Custom
Harley
Davidson Sportster. 3,000
mi tes,
$7.000.
Call
(740)645-3331 .

1'1-AI

.on this poge ~fot

Let me do it for y oul

4

4

'

-

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often than the theoretical 50 perceat. So,
today, let's have a cieal that occurred in a
soc1al game, with real-life bidding and
play, ugly skin growths and all. It was sen1
in by Ralph Carey, ol San Anselmo, Catif.

GUILTY.

1st liter ready.1 0/15/04. 2nd ~;::::;::=~=~~=~;====::!
Iiiier ready t 0/2 1/04 For ~

L~e"

versy. For example , finesses work far less

f4nnette's
J£ouse C~aning Service

:~:~~:,:~~r:f~~~~~~~~~; SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS

h

PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

AKC Black fernie LaO pup·
pies. Shots, wormed &amp; dew
claws
removed.
$200.
(740)441-0130.
--------Wolf/5. Husky pups for sale.

inlormal ion caii:·Parents on
Premises. (740)742-1121
,1!!!741:':0.;.)7_4_2.·3~0~1-9_ _ __,
MUSICAL

l
I&gt;ON'T
ftEL SO

Ta~e the

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

of

Bridge column deals can cause contro-

wAY,

Licensed in

Tree Service

2 male Jack Russell pups- 8
weeks old· first shots·
vet
checked.
wormed·
Ready to go, $175 each.
1740)379·2834

50 Celt's
language
52 Fall
54 Bounced
bach
58 Salon lints
59 Saoo tuoiiiMd

The real world
gives a real deal

T(('( TO von
t.OSE(( ·- TtiAT

740-843-5264

JONES'

fURS...u:

.:I ALwAYS
~'. :FO~ Ttl~

WB hBVB PinS and 8CCBSSDI'I8S lor

REAL ARMY
Pwr Seats. Windows , Dr. 2002 Honda 400 Ex., good .---S=-H.,.,Q"p=---~
CAMOUFLAGE
(740)446-7444 1·877-830· Sam Somervitle"s, Since 1964. locks. Tilt, Cruise. AM f FM condition, $3.500 080. Call
9162 . Free Estimates. Easy b;' Sandyville. WV PO , Satell11es . Stereo, Tape and CD.
256 1 5296 740 645
lnte,ior Alum. 6' :~
.
.
.
tinancrng, 90 days same as TV Sales/tnstal!atron (304)273 · Leather
5655
Wheels
.
Keyless
entry
cash. Visa/ Master Card
E)(cettent Condition inside
Drive- a· little save alot
and out 10t.OOO miles
Yard Sale : 20°ll·50% . 1/2
$4,000 (304)882·2796
mile oft Route 7 on Bulaville
2003
Mercedes-Benz.
Pike
Thursday
thru
II. ,
24.000 miles, Loaded
~S~a~lu~,d~a:!::Y·_ _ _ _ _ _ __..!Itllll'!!!!:!!t!,!lll!!_!!~~
1975 Oldsmobrle Cutlass.
24,000 miles, all original
(304)675·4399

' (740)992·0165

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • ~01 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

1·800-822-0417

East

1 Cache
6 Swl&lt;liah
automobile
10 Roman ohip
12 Congaalld
14 Elvis'
b irthplace
15 Be!Umore
hlner
16 F-docor
18 Common
abbr.
191n(as found)

2.

BOlt 189

Cluscll Tue~.
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp; Ven1 Free, 3-Piaque Gas u_..__9"9:,:2~·5;:.1:.;5:.;2'-_,L.J

resume io·

674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

Rocky Hupp Insurance
.and Financial Services

I-'5N. Second Ave.
Open Dailv 10:00-5:00
Sun. 11 ()().4:00

MtS&lt;-1-J J ANHJUS
MlJ«:HANDJSE

Housmow

A Q2
Q3 2
9 6 53

47 " The Facts

24 Shook- 2 Frat tetter
. 63
. AQJI042
26 Kind of dollar 3 Zurich peak
• K J 10 9 8 7 6 • 29 Use a
4 Took a nap
t 75
t J I061
calculator
5 Dirig ible
. J7
. KB4
lO Cloody
IIIIer
South
32 Wild tusker 6 Mariachi
lit K 9
34 High splr~s
wear
• 54 3
36 Slugger
7 " The
Mel Greatest"
t A K 9 8
37 Wood
8 Bum SOOIIW
... A-Q 10 2
residue
9 Expressway
Dealer: West
38 Ballot
l1 Over 1here
Vulnerable: Both
marks
12 Scribbles
1 40 French
down
South
West North East
article
13 Last mo .
Pass
241•
42 Grande or .17 Mi nd·sel
Pass 3 NT
Pass
2NT
Bravo
19 Edge past
Pass
1 ...
Pass
Pass
43 Pimte captain 20 Te II
45 Team
addendum
Opening lead: • 6
setback
22 Pinch htner

WV Con1rac1ors Lie. #003506

Sun. C l osed

front pages , paginate ins ide pages. and
layout,

Whaley

Brian

8 7 5

•

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

Sat. 8:30-Noon

The Longaberger Company or any of its
sates rep! ~_e_r')tatrves are in no way
con nected to or responsible for this bingo
event.

We are looking lor someone skillep and

Cell Phone

•

West

875-2457

W-21·D4

•

•

Henderson, WV

St. Rt.68l Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Ret~ locking f.n.te Model &amp; huge
and Aller Market Parts

American Legion Building

Help Wanted

MYERS PAVING

Parts

6:00p.m.

\\ ifc Ann. c h i ldr~·n &amp;: gr undchildrcn

Help Wanted

Whaley's Auto

Longaberger Basket Bingo

No

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5

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I attended a civic meeting
and I concluded that it takes
longer to tell what you think

~

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ill

Pilfli NUMBER!D
LErTERS IN SQUARES

.n

UNSCRAMBLE FORI

~ ANSWE R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Kinen. Swish- Pants· Limber- MISTAKES
'I need m o re experience,' the young man told the
boss . "Experience,' he said, "is what people ca,ll their
MISTAKES .'

ARLO &amp;JANIS

.

�'
Thursday, October 21, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Pac• 88 • The Dally Sentinel

Insert today in your
Sentinel:
Emergency Guide

PlUS...

•

OSU lowers sights to just
winning a game, Bt

'

*See dealer for

0

ne

~M-~ ~~ u_~YJ
· NEW

2005 fOCUS

UP TO

S6000 I

2004

~f;~ 2004 FREE~TAR

BATE i

I

REBATES
UPTO

S6QOO

#F0077 .

2oos· roRD soo
&amp; fREESTYLE

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5,222

• Henry's job to shut down,
shut up T.O.. See Page 81

'

~

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~VRY

S6Q0Q $10,500
#E0328

OBITUARIES

~f;~
I
2004 f 150 SUPER CAB 2004 f ORD RANGER
&amp; SUPER CREW
SAVINGS SAVINGS
UPTO
UPTO

I

ooo~(ss,7o

NEW
2004 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR

5000
E

P!!ge AS
• Denzil Beha
• Kate L. Smith
• Mildred Parker Morris

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Bonamassa coming to
Grill Monday.
S!!e Page A6
• Climbers rescued from
mountain as weather
clears up in Sierra
Nevada. See Page A7
• Court rejects
environmentalists'
arguments in Ohio clean
air case. See Page AB

#fOJ20

COME IN TO TURNPIKE
UALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES!

dozen cookies might seem
like a modest gi ft, but as with
any gift. it 's the heart behind
it that counts.
At their most recent meeting,
members of the
Middleport
Community
Assoc iation di sc ussed ways
they could encourage their
Pomeroy retail neighbors
whose bu sinesses -were damaged in the Sept. I8 flood .
Many of those merchants
experienced signticant property dam age and inventory
Joss in the worst tlood to hit
Pomeroy's Main Street since
I 964. On Thursday. members
of the association - Brenda
Merritt,
Brenda
Davi s,
Dodger Vaugan. Brenda
Phalin, Donna Hartson and
Jenny Smith - paid visits to
37
Pomeroy merchant s
affected by the flood, to present a do ze n cookies and the
good
wishes of thei r
Middl eport retail neighbors .
Bruce Fisher of Middleport
used mostl y donated supplies
to bake 37 doze n chocolate
chip cookies. and Sue Stone,
a Middleport retailer, wrote a
verse to accompany each
delivery: "Cookies to cheer
Please see Cook~es. AS

WEATHER

The $500.000 will go
toward the cost of constructing a water treatment plant,
replacing the water tank and
installing 4, I 23 linear feet of
waterline.
While it is the big ges t
piece in the puzzle for funding the new water treatment
plant, it is not the only piece.
Earlier, Racine was approved
for a $375,000 Issue 2 grant
\from the Ohio Public Work s
Commission and there is
~nother $300,000 in grant

money pending from the
Appalachian
Regional
Commi ss ion (ARC). The
recipient • of the ARC grant
s~ou ld be announced in
Novembe r, accordi ng to
David
Spencer.
Racine
Village clerk -treasurer.
The project has an estimated cost of $1.7 million .
. According to Spencer, the vi i!age is in competiti on for still
another gran t but he was said
he could not at thi s time
divulge the grant amount or

the age ncy from which it
might come. Spencer says he
hopes these pendi ng grants
will start to fa ll "l ike dorninos·• now that the $500.000 is"
a sure thing.
The vi llage i~ will ing to
borrow any money needed to
make up for what the grants
do not cover. Just how much
money the village will have to
borrow remains unclear untiI
funding falls into place and
steps toward bidding the project begin s.

Please see Plant. AS

BY BRIAN

(Brian J . Reed/photo)

Brenda Phalin , far right, and Donna Hartson, far left. of the Middleport Community Association
and University of Rio Grande Crossroads, present a dozen homemade cookt es to Jane Harris ,
owner of Dan 's, and Sarah Carleton. store employee. The association de livered 37 dozen cookies to Pomeroy merchants affected by last month's flood , which damaged stores. fixtures and
inventory in Pomeroy's shopping distri ct.

United Way receives donation

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Nascar
Weather

A6
ss-6
B7
A6

A4
A2-3

As
As
Bt
B8
AS

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

195 Upper R.IVar Road
GalliPOliS, OH
'J\''1,

w.turnp,keflm.com

740·44&amp;·9800
1·800·272·5179

r
I

lMERCURY i

LINCOLN
~" I '

c •~

'" ' " ' '

J. REED

(Beth Sergent/photo)

During the United Fund's Thursday
breakfas t at the Meigs Center, the organization was
presented with checks from both People's Bank Corp. and Riverbend Arts Council. (From left)
James Mourning, United Fund 's chairman for the 2005 campaig n, Mary Wise. Riverbend Arts
Counc il, Joan Wolfe, People's Bank of Pomeroy, Hilda Stotts, United Fund president. Jame s
Snodgrass, People's Bank of Midpleport.

POM EROY
- Meigs
Coun ty's application for federal fund s to re-open
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has been rejected for the
fourth time.
County
Com missioner
Mick
Davenport
said
Thursday there has been nQ
con firma tion tha t the coun•
ty's application for funding
through the U.S. Department
of Health and Humari
Services· Fairly Qualified
Health Care Act was rejected,
but said a li st of approved
applicati ons appearing on the
agency 's website does not
include Meigs c;ounty.
The count y's third application was "approved but not
funded"
this
summer,
because the funding round
was dedicated to funding
fac ilities providing health
care to migrant workers and
the homeless .
Davenport said 76 applications were fu nded this round.
at $49 mill ion. including a
new "access point" in Lima,
the only Ohio facility funded.
'

Please see Grant. AS

Grocery distribution for flood
victims will begin Tuesday
BY

'

The new treatment plant
will be EPA approved to provide water for Racine residents. schooh and sewage, as
well as water for the sewage
syste m in Syracuse. The projec t will assist approximately
291 households in Racine and
Sutton Township. Currently, 4
mil lion gallons of water are
processed by the facility each
day. more than doub le what it
treated 10 years ago.

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH @MYDAI LY 5ENTIN EL.COM

..

I •• '. '

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

REBATES , DISCOUNTS
UPTO
UPTO

FOR

"I I"'

BY BRIAN

2004 EXPtORLR

#E0155

" " " " .. d. II I . , ,

:! :! . :! 00-1

Middleport group remembers Pomeroy flood Victims Hospital grant
J. REED
denied for
fourth time
MIDDLEPORT
A

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

BY BETH SERGENT

ssERGENT®MYOAILVSENTINEL.CoM
RACINE - The village of
Racine has been awarded a
$500,000 grant to improve its
water syste m by the Ohio
Small Cities Community
Development Block Grant
Wate r and Sanitary Sewer
Program administered by the
Ohio
Department
of
Development's Office of
Housing and, Community
Partnerships.

18,995

#E0409

I R II • \ \ . ( It I ( ) HI I&lt;

Racine receives $500,000 water plant grant

SPORTS

!

...

2004 CROWN
VICTORIA

Middleport •, Pomeroy, Ohio

POM EROY - Distribution
of emergency grocery boxes
for tlood victims in Meigs
and 19 ot her coun ties in
Southeastern Ohio will begi n
next week
Acco rding to the Ohio
Association
of
Second
Harvest Foodbanks (0AS HF)
distribution in Meigs County
will be handled through the
Meigs Coope rati ve Parish at
the Mulberry Community
Center. 260 Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy. ·
Pre-qualified recipients can
pick up food from 9 a.m. to I
p.m. Tuesday th rough Friday.
Those with questions about
participating in the program
may call the Center ·992-9919
for additional information.
To recei1·e their grocery
box. familie.1 mu1t provide a
copy of the detcrminatinn letter thcv received from the
Mcip County Department of
Joh. and Family Services.

which stat~s they are eligible
and ha\e or will receive assistance.
The Temporary Assistance
for l\'eedy Families (TANF)
disaster ass ista nce funding
was made possible by an
execu ti ve order signed by
Governo r Bob Taft that pro' ided OASHF wi th up to $1
million dollars in fundi ng for
the program .
The grocery box program
will run through Jan. 5, 2005
only in the 20 Ohio counties
that were declared in a state
of emergency by Governor
Taft. The food and grocery
boxes include a shelf-stable
food wpply. personal care
product s and household
cleaning products.
Eligibility i' determined in
accordance
with
the
Governor's Executive Order
and the federa l TANF program as administered by the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services. Eli gible
families include those who
Please see VIctims. AS

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          <elementText elementTextId="18734">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18733">
              <text>October 21, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="797">
      <name>duncan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="212">
      <name>frank</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
