<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5541" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5541?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T23:53:01+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15471">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2c610a6ea1d8255fc35e8242b95db576.pdf</src>
      <authentication>62fbbcb98d9c1d057ee3e9094080fd0a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18741">
                  <text>::tunaay, ucto.Der 24, 2004

t'omeroy • M1aa1epon • uampoua, un1o • t'Oint Pteaaant, wv

Bush says full safety
from terror strike 'up in
the air' as race enters
final week, A2

Schillin~ overcomes

pain to lift BoSox, Bt.
'

ne

&lt;.Present
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,ll l l \ l ..... •\11!

-)-l "tl

SPORTS
• Meigs splits at sectional.
See PageB1

''

ber3d
~

\J()'\Jl\', , ()l}());ll{_! ,), ;!(\() . ~

ll

\ \ \ \ \ \ l l l\o/li/1-.,lo'lt l• l l o l lll

Pomeroy begins process toward applying for distress grant
demolition of abandoned stru~tures,
and parks and recreation facilities.
As a part of the preliminary process
POMEROY- The tirst of several a survey titled "What's Your Vision for .
public meetings, a step toward apply- Our Community?" is being taken.
ing for an Ohio Department of Survey forms are currently available at .
Development Community Distress the Pomeroy Water Department, some
Grant of up to $300,000 for revitaliz- business, the Senior Citizens Center,
ing Pomeroy neighborhoods, will be . and the Mulberry Community Center.
held this week.
About I00 were collected during the
Pomeroy Mayor John Musser said Stern wheel Riverfest, Musser said.
that the first meeting will be held at 7
"Input from the public is a key factor
p.m. on Thursday in the Bethany in getting a grant," said Musser who
Building of Trinity Church.
urged residenls to complete the survey.
He urged altendance by anyone
Jean Trussell, grant administrator
interested in seeing improvements in for Meigs County. will be handling
the neighborhoods where they live , the grant application for the village.
including street and sidewalk repair, She said that Thursda~ night's meetlighting, expanded street parking , ing is one of a mimmum of three
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

which are required where the goal
will be to get feedback from residents
on what they feel are the most important needs in their neighborhoods.
She said projects have to be targeted
to nei ghborhoods, not downtown.
The areas in which community distress grant money can be spent must
be where 61 percent of the population
is low to moderate income . Pomeroy,
Trussell said, has 69 percent in that
calegory which means the village
qualities to apply. Earlier this year
Middleport was awarded a community distress grant .
'While the application deadline isn't
until February. it is imponant to start
the process early in order to get enough
meetings in. correlate the information

collecteu to determine what the majority wanh. ami decide on three or four
or five projects:· said Trussell.
She said some mat~hing money is
required but that another project could
very well be a pan of the match. A
point system is used to determine
grant recipients. Trussell explained,
which means that the higher percentage of points. the better prospect for a
grant. That includes input from the
public. what match money is available. and what agencies are involved.
"The driving force," she stressed,
''is selection of the projects by the
re sidents. not the village." . An
emphasi s should be on holding meetings in differen1 IO&lt;:ations in order to
reach more people. she said.

National Forestry honors
a Reedsville resident
of American Foresters (SAF)
and the Canadiiln Institute of
Forestry at il four-day conference held. thi s monlh in
Edmonton. Alberta.
The award recognize~
foresters who have displayed
uncommon talent and innov:
ative methods to achieve a
record of excellence in the
application of forest manage:
ment.
'
"Forester practitioners an!

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

REEDSVILLE - David
A. Schatz of Reedsville has
been honored by the Society
of American Foresters with
its Presidential Field Fore ster
Award.
Schatz along with I0 other
award winners representing
various regions of the country were honored in a special
ceremony held during a joi nt
meeting between the Society

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• James O'Brien
• Denzil Beha
• David Lance Stewart, Sr.

DD£UNCH

Please see Schatz, A5

SPEClA£

¥Sandwich
¥Chips
¥Drink

..,,.,.

D!fference

.Is

INSIDE
• Internet users not as
safe online as they
believe, researchers
report. See Page A2
• Moore presents DAR
program. See Page A3
• Low-income children
may have to wait for
· flu shots. See Page A6

~,.,.,_

about .

~8~ Colonial Drive

lfidwetL Ohlo'll~6.14 •

or call 'tio-446-5001

F B Farmers Bank
V:..JtJJ We're YQur Bank for Cife.,

Sat. &amp;DfliJ Spa

~

·--

Downtown Gallipolis

LENDER

AT GALLIPOLIS
11ursmg &amp; Rehabilitation Cen1er
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446-7112
ExTENDICARE
www.e)\tendicare.com
Provider of

·

Mason, WV 30"4-773·6400
Pomeroy, OH 740-992-2136
Gallipolis, OH 740-446·2265
Tuppers Plains, OH 740.667·3161

Nursing center

2 SECTIONS -

Jll Bwck Rid

t

Rd. • Bidw&lt;/1, OH •

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon
~

.! ' . •

I

•

• • • •

I

•

•

Nutritional Counseling • Personal Injury
Workers Compensation
·
.
Most Insurance Accepted Including United Health

740-441.0200 1 888 451-:2225

I

: ~ II

1

STAFF REPORT
12 PAGES

· A3
B3-4
Bs

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

40 446-7159

lk'

2112 Sl Rl 7 North

Ohio
441-9100

A3
A4
As
B1

. A6

© 2004 Ohio Valle~· Publishing Co.

Courtside Bar&amp;.. Grill

Rocchi's Pool U

• caD for an Appointment

who gave us things to auction
off. We're just so grateful.''
The single item bringing in
the most money was a 1994
Chrysler Town and Country
van donated by Bob Kincaid
of Racine. It sold for $2.100.
Dan Smith donated his
time to auction at the sale,
and his wife, Donna Jean. did
the clerking . Numerous other
volunteers as well as Center
employees were there to help.
Someone even donated
wagons to move the sale items
from the hospital building
where they were being stored
to in front of the senior center
where the auction took place.

TUPPERS PLAINS . The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved supplemental contracts and staff
substitutes
during
Wednesday 's regular meetmg .
Dorothy Faulkner, Noah
Goss, Karlt Houridge, Steve
Little, Wendell Morri son,
Shannon Roth. Kevin Shima,
Megan Whitman and Brian
Zeit were approved as substitute teachers, pending proper
certification.
Belinda Adam s. Beverly
Allen , Lyn·ne Arms, Melissa

Barringer, Tina Brooks,
Dorena Card, Linda Dunlap,
Mary
Freeman,
Shirin
Nuggud, Diana Sue Phillips,
Sandra
Russell.
Aaron
Schaekel,
Cheryl
Six.
Charlisa Slusher. Connie
Soulsby and Cynthia Stanley
were approved as substi tute
aides, pending proper certifi cation.
Harvey Bartimus. Becky
Betz,
Robert
Combs.
Charlene Davis. Howard
Lawrence, Becky Max&gt;on.
Kimberly Sampson, Dennis
Sargent and Shelia Westfall
were approved as substitute
bus drivers, pending proper

certification .
Jame s
Morris
was
approved as a substitute custodian and food service
employee pending proper
certification .
Supplemental
contracts
were awarded as follows:
Chris Lyons. assislant boys
basketball coa~h; Jeremy
Casto, assistant boys basketball coach: Josh Fogle.. seventh-grade boys basketball
coach: Rick Edwards. head
girls basketball coach: David
Weber. assistant girl s basket ·
ball coach: Cathy Edwards.

Please see Bo1rd, AS

Head Janitor Jeff BeaVl;r makes use of the elevator that was
put in at Southern High School. Two handicapped students
use the e levator to travel between classes and the staff uses
it to transport equipment. (Beth Sergent; photo)

Renovations at·Southern
Thi s summer. the roof was
replaced. rcstH&gt;oms were renO\ ated. shower' were made
RACINE - Old school handicar-access ihle as were
buildings often fall into ruin the sidewalk' between the
because of lack of funding or high school and elementary
the consolidation trend. Not &gt;chool.
Another one of the major
so at Southern High School.
project;, wa&gt; the installation
The huiluing that houses of an ek\'ator. Southern High
Southern . High School is 4 1 School is home to two freshyears old and is home to fac - men "'ho are handicapped
ulty. staff. and 240 &gt;tudents
Please see South~m. AS
this year.
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYS'ENTINEL.COM

An Online Well ness Center .

JfAUOWHN YWny
~~turda y.

could be ordered.
She reported $6,655 from
the·auction, more than enough
for the match, and another
$2,500 or so from the sale of
food and other fund-raisers
carried oul during the day.
"With what we made we
not only have enough money
for the match on the van, but
to carry out the Christmas
remembrance program for
homebound seniors."
Shaver said that area residents and businesses were
very generous in contributing
items for the auction. "We
couldn't have done this without the hundreds of people

Eastern board approves subs, coaches

INDEX

• Rehabilitation • Respite

G61Jjpolis Chiropractic
· Center
7?11
··
- ·• Personal
? ..........
Diagnostic:
X-Rays
Rehabilitation

Shaver was talking about
the Make a Difference Day
auction held Saturday at the
Senior Citi~ens Center to
raise money to provide the
required $6,500 needed for a
match before a much-needed
new van to transport seniors

Detallo on Page A6

We Focus On:
TA~DEM • Dementia • Hospice

~ tl•oll.t.l.....

.BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

get a new van."

Scenic·Hills
A.

Auction nets enough for new van
POMEROY - "It's just
wonderful. The staff worked
so hard and we're · all so
pleased," said Beth Shaver,
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging. "Now we
have money for the match to

WEATHER

Member FDIC

Senior citizens will nde in a new vim and the homebound elderly will have a Merry Christmas.
thanks to the successful Make a Difference Day auction Saturday. Here Dim Smith auctions off
a bucket of pa int donated by a Racine business. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photo)

42 Counstreel Downtown

•

At Your Fingertips!

HMC Community Health and Wei/ness
"Dedicated to Promoting Wei/ness "

O'tobcr 3Nb

•

''

Gallipoli s. OH

http://holzer.wellsource.com

1583 ,S t. Rt.l60 • GaiUpolls, OH

,,,,
F

.
'

·--

.

'

.
"

'

:! .

.

.

-

'
'

'

- ~-

.

.

�,

-

'

PageA2

NATIO~ • WORLD
Bush says full safety from Internet users not as safe online
as
they
believe,
researchers
report
terror strike 'up in the air'
as race enters final week

The Daily Sentinel

FORT LAUDERDALE.
Fla. (AP) - President Bush
and Sen. John Kerry stayed
on the offensive in swing
states Sunday as the presidential race entered its final
full week. In a television
interview, Bush said it is "up
·in the air" whether the nation
can ever be fully safe from
another terror attack and suggested terrori sts may still be
contemplating ways to di srupt the election.
For the fourth consecutive
Sunday. Kerry spoke at a predominantly black church. this
one in Fort Lauderdale in
heavily Democratic Broward
County. and promised worshippers their votes would be
counted this time. The county
saw some of the worst of
·florida's 2000 vote-counting
abuses. ''I want you to turn
out." the Democrat said.
Kerry pre ssed hi.s attack on·
the president· s record in new
television ads. while on the
campaign trail he sought to
strike a more inspirational
tone. saying in a speech on
faith that values he practices
as a Roman Cathollt: "will
guide me as president.''
The Democrat took on
church bishops who have
criticized his support for
abortion rights and expanded
embryonic stem cell research
and who have said lie should
be denied Holy Communion
for not auvancing church
teachings. "I love my church.
I respect the bishops. but I
respectfully disagree." Kerry
said.
With polls showing the
race still tight. the campaigns
were focusing their efforts on
fewer than a dozen states that
remain highly competitive.
·with both camps making lastminute scheduling decisions
to reflect realities on the
ground.
The Massachusetts senator
was
headed
to
New
Hampshire after campaign
stops in Florida. Bush won
both states in 2000. The
Republican incumbent was
campaigning in New Mexico,
which Democrat AI Gore narrowly won in 2000.
In a taped interview with
Fox News Channel, Bush
was asked whether the nation
would always be vulnerable ·
to another terror attack and
whether Americans would
always have to live with that.
"Yes. because we have to

~onday,Ckiober25,2004

date offering messages both
hopeful about the future and
sharply critical of Bu sh.
" I believe our future
belongs to freedoni not to
fear ... Kerry says in one. In
another, he accuses Bush and
Vice President Dick Cheney
of "misleading Americans
about what I said."
Kerry's campaign said the
ads make up $10 million of
the $ 12 million it will spend
over the next week on advertisin g in 14 states. More than
halr'of that is devoted to just
three - Florida, Ohio and
Pennsy lvania. top priorities
for both campaigns. Bush
won Florida and Ohio in
2000. and lost Pennsylvania.
Meanwhile.
former
President Clinton's plans to
campaign for Kerry in
Philadelphia on Monday and
Florida the next day - hi s
tirsi public appearances si nce
heart bypass surgery in early
September - drew attention
from both camps. with
Democrats claiming he could
be a big help with swing vot-

President Bush
be right I00 percent of the
time in disrupting any plot
and they have to be right
once:· Bush said. He said the
nation is safer from terrori"n.
but "whether or not we can
be ever full y safe is up - you
know, up in the air...
Bush said he was sure terrorists still "think about" trying to disrupt the Nov. 2 elections. citing the March II
train bombings in Madrid
that killed 191 people ri ght
before Spain's national elections.
"I don't want t(l alarm anybody because ... there's nothing specific at thi s point in
time - a kind of eeneral
intent." Bush said in the
interview. to be broadcast
Monday night.
Bush caused a flap at the
GOP convention in New York
in late August when he said
of the war on terror: "I don't
think you can win it." The
comment. made in an interview with NBC. compliqted
GOP efforts to portray him as
a resolute leader.
The presiuent quickly
backed away from the earlier
remark. asserting that the war
on terror could be won. even
if not in a conventional sense.
and that he "probably needed
to be more articulate."
In the Fox News Channel
interview taped Saturday in
Florida, Bush also was asked
whether a nuclear. chemil:al
or biologi~al attack in the
United States is a real possibility. "Yes it is." Bush
replied. "That's the bigges t
threat we face ."
Closing its $150 million ad
campaign. Kerry's camp said
it planned to run a series of
previously released television
commercials with the canpi-

ers.

But White House communications
dire~tor
Dan
Bartlett. interviewed on ''Fox
News Sunday." said that
while he w'ished Clinton
welL "the fact that John
Kerry's going to have to roll
him off the surgery table and
onto the campaign trail
demonstrates a revealing
aspect. that he 's underperforming in key parts of his
own constituency."
Meanwhile. Gore, on a tour
of mostly black churches in
Florida. told blacks embittered by his narrow loss in
the 2000 presidential election
that "it doesn't have to be this
way" and urged them to turn
anger into energy at the poll s.
"Don't turn it into angry acts
or angry words," the former
vice president said in
Jacksonville.
Polls showed little movement, with the rdce essentially even nationally and in the
major swing states. New
polls showed an even race in
Arkansas.
Florida
and
Nevada. with Kerry up slightly in New Hampshire. New
Jersev and Maine.
Kerry strategists. meanwhile. canceled plans to visit
Colorado this week. suggesting hi s campaign wa~ gi'"v ing
up on that stat~ . even though
Kerry was just there.

WASHINGTON (AP) Internet users at home are not
nearly as safe online as they
believe, according to a
nationwide inspection by
researchers. They found most
consumers have no firewall
protection, outdated antivirus
software and dozens of spyware programs secretly running on their computers.
One beleaguered home user
in the go,vernment-backed
study had more than 1,000
spyware programs running on
his sluggish computer when
researchers examined it.
Bill Mines. a personal
trainer in South Riding, Va.,
did not fare much better. His
family's 3-year-old Dell
computer was found infected
with viruses and more than
600 pieces of spyware surreptitiously monitoring his
online activities.
"I was blown away." Mines·
said. "I had a lot of viruses

appear remarkably unprepared
for the dangers they face.
The study being released
Monday by America Online
and the National Cyber
Security Alliance found that 77
percent of 326 adults in 12
states assured researchers in a
telephone poll they were safe
from online threat~. Nearly as
many people felt confident they
were already protected specifically from viruses and hackers.
When experts visited those
same homes to examine computers, they found two-thirds
of adults using antivirus software that was not updated in
at least seven days.
Two-thirds of the computer
u'sers also were not usin g any
type of prot~ctive firewall
program, and spyware was
found on the computers of 80
percent of those in the study.
The survey participants all
were AOL subscribers selectd ·
··
d
b
e 111 22 ctt!es an towns Y
and other things I didn't an independent market analyknow about. I had no idea sis organization.
things like this could hapThe alliance, a nonprofit
pen."
group. is backed by the
The Internet always has had Homeland
Security
its
share
of
risky
neighborDepartment
and
the
Federal
.
hoods and dark alleys. But Trade Commission, plus leadwith increa~ingly sophistical- ing technology companies.
ed threats from hackers. virus- including Cis~o Sy stems.
es. spam e-mails and spyware, Microsoft. eBay and Dell.
The group's chief, Ken
trouble is finding computer
users no matter how cautious- Watson. said consumers sufly they roam online.
fer from complacency and a
The technology industry is lack of expert advice on
feeling the pain. too.
keeping their computers
Spurred by the high costs secure. "Just like you don't
of support calls from irritated expect to get hit by a car, you
customers- and fearful that don't believe a computer
frustrated consumers wi II attack can happen to you,''
. stop buying new products Watson said.
Internet providers, software
"There really is quite a percompanies and computer- ception gap," agreed Daniel
makers are making efforts to W. Caprio. the Commerce
increase awareness of threats Department's deputy assistant
and provide customers with secretary for technology polinew tools to protect them- cy. "Clearly there is confusion.
selves.
We need to do a better job
Still, many computer users making information and prac-

SUbscribe today¥ 992-2155

tical tips for home users and
small businesses available."
Wendy Avina, an interior
decorator in Lansdowne, Va.,
said researchers found 14 spyware programs on her barrowed laptop and noticed that
her $50 antivirus software was
not properly configured to
scan her computer at lea11
monthly for possible infections.
"We don't go in funny chat
rooms. I don't open funn y
mail." Avina said. "If it says
'hot girls,' 1 delete .it. We do
everything in the right way. so
how does stuff get in there'"
She complained she was
misled believing " her commercia! antivirus and firewall
programs would protect her
from all varieties of online
threats; most do not detect
common types of spyware.
"It is very complicated for
the average home user," said
Ati Schwartz, an expert on
Internet threats for the Center
for
Democracy.
and
Technology. a Washington
civil liberties group.
"There's a lack of accountability all around, ·from consumers who don't believe
they should have to do this to
companies who blame the
consumer. It's finger-point ing
back and forth ,"
Schwartz said.
Microsoft's chairman. Bill
Gate s. said the company
spent nearly Sl billi9n on its
recent upgrade to improve
security for customers using
the latest version of its ·
Windows software ,
AOL purchased full -page
advertisements in major
newspapers this month
pledging ·better security for
its subscribers. Dell has
begun a campaign to educate
customers how to detect a·nd
remove spyware themselves.

t: 1: tA ~f i• ... ~, i• .... ~, i. e\r ~f i. , ~f ;f.

l

.

·~

:t:,. e a en ar
•••••
··•••

!

The Daily Sentinel

...
••···

·••••
0"
Financing

•·

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

.
, ~:························-················

.

: Name of pet:
·~ Your Name:
~Add~~:

$349

"'

t --

- ... .....•239

·~.

...........

... _

.....'99
101 .... 1 379

wnh family

!:

\f.
...... .
~

$1

,.,
~
~

"

.

Phone:--'---------'---- - - - -

,.,.; ... .. .. •349
...... ...... 1399

- ... .....•399

,.,. ... ......'469

FLAIR

FREE
· Parking
TUI·Sat 9to5
Mon &amp; Friday 9-6 . '
CloMCI Sunday to be

- ...

•·

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

!:

-....firm

••
•••

F,URNITURE

Gallipolis Ferry, WV

_POMEROY - The Meigs
County L1brary Boaru will
meet at 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
L1brary.
- Meigs
POMEROY
County Veterans Service
Commission. 9 a.m.. 11 7
Memorial Dr.
RACINE -- The Southern
Local School Board will
meet at S p.m.

RACINE
-- Marjorie
Grimm had a program on miracles. with each member ; haring a reauing about a miracle.
when the Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society met
recent ly. wi th Lillian Hayman
as hostc.".
Attcnuing wae: Hayman .
.Marge Grimm. Mildred Hart ,
Naomi Stobart. Mary K. Yost.
Mabel
Brace.
Nondus

RIO
GRANDE
Exec uli\'e Dire~tor Pam~la
'&gt;1atura anlliiUilccs !hat !he
.~-\rc&lt;l

Agent:y

on

Aging

Distric·t 7 Inc. iAAA71
Se11i01 EXPO .:'00:1 at tile
FJirgrnunU~

in Lucilsville had a recordhrcakin!!• attci1dance nf over
r
2. 1()(} people and exhibitors.
Exhibito r' anu senllHS
.dik e warmed up lo thi s
year\ theme.
"EX PO in
l'araJi,c :
A
Tropical
Celebration." with colorful
lei-.,

~hirt~.

and

Ure~se~.

a:--

well as island-like decoralions .
A wonJcrful cvem geared
lowaru uluer auults and now
in its 351 h yea r. Senior
EXPO 2004 boaqs four levels or 'ponsors who &lt;.:onlribute greatly to its ; uccess.
Platinum sponsors include
McNclly-Patrick Insuran ce.
Response Ability Systems.
Ultimate Health Care Inc .
and Life Ambulance. Golu
"pon~or~
are Alternative
Home
Care.
Everyday
Home carc. Dr. Tsuyoshi
ln(i,h ita. Ohio Vallcv Bank
anu Family Senior Care .
Silver sponsors include
USSA Inc. Multi-Purpose
Senior Citite ns Center. Elks
Cou ntry Club. Pepsi-Cola
Bottling Co. and Scioto
County Join! Vocational
School. Bronze sponsors arc
Best Care Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center.

DEAR ABBY: My motherin-law, "Sharon," and I had a
wonderful relationship until 1.
gave birth . Almost overnight,
Sharon became extremely
overbearing about how I
should raise her grandson,
"C harlie." (He is now 8.)
Recently, Charlie contracted a com mon childhood illness. Although I had been
takjng him to the pediatrician
regularly, Sharon kept insi,ti ng that I wasn't caring for
him properly. One afternoon
when she was baby-sitting,
she went so far as to take
Charlie to his pediatrician
and tell the doctor that I wasn' t treating hi s illness. When
the pediatrician didn't tell
Sharon what she wanted to
hear. she took Charlie home
with her and gave him some
medicine she had at her
house. When I found out. I
was horrified. (What if he'd
had an allergic reaction?}
When I called Sharon to
discuss the matter, she hung
up on me . So I se nt her an email and told her how devious I thought she had been.
and that she was no longer
welcome to baby-sit Charlie
at her house, although she
co uld visit him at our home if
she wished. No response.
Two days later our doorbell
rang. It was a visit from Child
Protective Services. Charlie's
pediatrician had to be contacted as well as his school
counselor. It was very embarrassing. After an investigation. the matter was dismissed.
Sharon has never denied

have ;ex. and he doe&gt;n't.
That's why I ended it .
I diun 't want things to go
past kis;ing , but because of
Mike's pushing. prodding
and relentless arguing. it did.
I would ;ometime' have to
Dear
use force to get him to stop.
Abby
My mother adores Mike
and made me keep all his
gifts and pictures in the hope
that we'll get back together.
that she called CPS, nor has She doesn't know that we
she made any effort to apolo- were I inch from losing our
gize. My husband and I have virginity. Should I tell her
no wish to speak to her until what happened'' And what
she does. Are we right to shoulu I do with the gifts 0 -avoid her, and shou ld we wait ASHAMED IN DECATUR.
for her to come to '"' We GA .
DEAR ASHAMED: By all
hate to be in a feud. but we
means
tell your mother why
worry that she may try something like this again if she you broke things off -- espedoe sn't see there are conse- cially the pressure to whi ch
qtlences for her a~tion,. -- you were subjected and the
EMBARRASSED IN NEW fa&lt;.:t that Mike wouldn't take
no for an answer. She needs
YORK
DEAR EMBARRASSED: to wake up. stop idealizing
Grand111a may have thought him. and recog nize that you
she knew best, but she should were nearly raped.
Return the gifts and
have quit after consulting
Chari ie 's pediatrician. For mementos. As long as you
her to have given her grand- keep them. Mike will think
son leftover med s without the door~' open. It' s not. and
authorization from you or his for good reason.
P.S . That boy's parents
doctor was child endangerment. If you wait for Sharon should be notifi ed. so they
to come to you. Charlie may can teach their son about
not see his grandmother boundaries hefore he winds
before he reaches adulthood. up in serious trouble.
Deur Ahhr 1s &gt;rr.iltm hr
And in your case. unless
Ahigoil
V"i' 811rm. &lt;d.,(,
there are strict ground rules.
that may be the safest thing knoll'/1 '" lellnne Phillips.
ond ll 'l/S j{111nded hr her
for your son. Hang tough.
DEAR ABBY: I'm 15. and mother. Put~line Pliillips.
Dear
Ahhr
at
recently broke up with my Write
wwll
·
.
DearAh/J\·.com
,;,.
PO
.
boyfriend, "Mike." I believe
i.n waiting for marriage to Box 69440. Lr•s A11geles. CA
90061).

POMEROY - Rae Moore
presented a paper about Iraq
for members of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
Daughters of the American
Revolution during the group's
recent meeting.
She touched on Iraq before
Sept. II, 200 I, the War in
Iraq. the fall of Saddam
Hussein. the allied peacekeeping force. high-tech
equipment. the troops now
serving in Iraq, and the status
of Iraq now.
Patricia Holter. Regent.
gave a few fact s on Iraq in
Biblical times: Most people
think of Iraq as a rich oil
nation. ruled by an evil dictator for 30 years. Mesopotamia
was the Bibli cal name. "Iraq"
means "between two rivers

with deep roots (between
Tigris and Euphrates rivers) .
It was once the cradle of civilization . The Garde n of Eden
was in Iraq . Adam and Eve
were created there, Noah built
the ark in Iraq, and Babylon ,
Ninevah , and Ur were all
cities in Iraq.
Holter presided at the meeting. which opened in ritualistic form. Members recited the
Pledge of Allegiance and the
American· s Creed. Mary
Powell offered prayer.
Pauline Atkins read the
minutes of the June 12 meeting. and Karen Werry.
Treasurer. gave the financial
report. An invitation from
Gallipolis Chapter to their
anniversary dinner was read ..
New program yearbooks

COL.UMOUS (AP)
Sixty
conc:rete
barri ers
in.st.!llt:u around Ohio State
Uni1e r,ity\ nuclear r.::actor
luboratnry are there lor a rca'&lt;'11 other th;m to hlock illegal
parking on footb;ill S;qU1·d ;1ys.
The
U .S.
Nuclear
Reg ulatory Commission has a
tcrror i,m alcn in pla&lt;.'C ft&gt;r
Saturday

againq

, poJ.:c,lll&lt;lll
Jan
"ould 1wt c·ommcnt

hul

,aiJ

l" "'u~d

Jirc ctive'

IICrC

tn ;dl reac tor opcrahH...,,

were distributed.
October was designated
''Ge t Acquainted Month'' for
the benefit of n new members.
Each person to ld smnething
Of their family background
and their pre sent employment
status. Next month. members
will report on hobbi es or trips.
The November meeting
will be at Chester Courthouse.
A Thank sgivi ng luncheon
will be held at noon. with a
meeting at
I :30 p.m.
Members are to bring gifts for
the Veterans Administration
Medical
Center
111
Chillicothe.
Refreshments were served
to those named and Eileen
Buck. Phylli s Skinner. Nancy
Grueser and Mary Yost.

Daughters of America plan events

From left. Pamela Matura, executive director of the Area
Agency on Aging District 7 Inc .. presents plaques of !IPPreciaMary Jo Barringer is selling regular form. and refreshCHESTER
- Chester
tion to platinum sponsors. Kay Brock. representing Response
pecans
for the state Ways and ment s. were served to: Opal
Council
323,
Daughters
of
Ability Systems of Muskingum County, an&lt;J Pat Ball, repreMean s Committee.
Hollon. Charlotte Grant.
America.
discussed
upcoming
senting McNelly-Patrick &amp; Associates of Jackson County.
Hoi ter. Mary Jo
Garv
It was reported that Erma
ewnts when member&lt; recentCleland is sick. Margaret Barring er. Esther Smith.
ly met at the hall.
Hallmark Health Care Inc.. pant s donated door prize s
Those events include a Amberger is hospitalized at Everett Grant. Helen Wolf.
Smith.
Julie
Interim
Health
Care. that were randomly awarded frienuship potluck dinner at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Ruth
Dorothy
Myers
Flemming.
is
hospitalMr.
and
Mrs.
McNamara Pri nting and to Se nio r Expo 2004 visitors noon on Nov. 13, an Oct. 30
pancake breakfast. to be held ized at Charle.ston. W.Va .. and Arden Depoy. Jean Welch.
Paper Inc. anu AAA South throughout the day.
at the hall. and a catered Laura Mae Nice and Everett ln1y Newell. Thelma White .
For more information Christmas dinner on Dec . 4. Gmnt are out of the hospital. Laura
Central Ohio.
Nice ,
Goldie
Boyd County Ford contin- about Senior Expo 2004 or at $8, with a $3 gift exchange
The meeting dosed in Fred e ri ~k and Mary Holter.
t.les as the car show sponsor. to tind out how to partici- at 6 p.m .
Goldie Frederick presided
AAA 7 recognizes the pate in Senior Expo 2005,
importance of all of the call Sharon Bowman at the at the meetins. Members gave
the Pledge ot Allegiance. and
booths and displays to the Area Agency on Aging the Pledge to the Christian
'
Senior EXPO 2004 and the District 7. Inc . at (800'1 582- Flag. recited the Lord 's
Subscribe today • 992-2155
man y sponsors' contributions 7277.
Prayer. and sang the "StarThe Area Agency on• Spangled Banner."
to the day of festivities.
This year's theme. "EXPO Aging District 7 Inc. serves
111 Paradise: A Tropical 10 counties in Ohio: Adams.
Federal Consumer Protection has confirmed the fuel saving claims in this advertisement.
Celebration" had visitors Brown , Gallia. Highland .
treated to tlowers. leis. and Jackson. Lawrence. Pike.
many colorful, attractive dis- Ro". Scioto and Yimon.
Boston - National fuelsaver an engine is pollution, this Gas Saver than the 22%
plays celehrating the tmpics. Servi~es ar~ rendered on a
Corp. has developed a low 22% of each gallon claimed by the developer."
In addition. most partici- non-d iscri 111 inatnry ba,is.
'
cost automotive accessory normally bums when it
'
In addition to the fuel
called the Platinum Gas reaches the platinum of savings, the Gas Saver has·
Saver which is guaranteed the catalytic convener.
m:eived pa!eDlS for cleaning
to increase gas mileage by . However•.the convener's out carbon and raising
22% while meeting all platinum bums this fuel in octane, making higher grades
emission standards.
the tail-pipe. where the heat of fuel unnecessary for
With a simple coMection and energy produced from most vehicles.
mc luding Ohio State's.
haw rc&lt;.Ju ircd upgraded sec uEarle Holland. Ohio State ', rity at nuc lear plants. includto a vacuum line, the Gas this fuel cannot be harnessed
Joe ROOimoo. the deYeloper,
ing
research
reactors."
direriOr ror re . .e:m.:h cornmu Saver adds microscopic to drive your vehicle.
was quite surprised at the
Hlliland said the harriers
nicution s. "ai d thl_J uutcr
quantities of platinum to the · But when the Gas Saver market research: "We have
perimeter \\'&lt;! ., rcinfor&lt;.:cd in wcr~ installeu "because there
air-fuel mixture entering allows the air-fuel mixture sold a half million Gas
ea rl y September as a prcl'en- W(&gt;u ld be 'ix home football
the engine.
to
the platinum into Savers. To our surprise, as
tative measure bccaus1' th~ games t&gt;n ..:ampus . We have a
research reactor wa:-. ··one stadium of 100.000 people a
Since platinum allows the engine, 22% more of many people buy the Gas
potential target of oprnrtuni - stone's throw away."
non-burning fuel to bum. each gallon bums inside Saver because it extends
1y.''
The 11-\·car-nld re search
the Gas Saver's platinum the engine so that 22% engine life by cleaning out
.Holl anu and Kohen C. readur u~e:-. low -enricheJ
increases the percentage fewer gallons are required the abrasive carbon as buy
Glenn. 'poJ.:csman for the uranium fuel. which is not
of fuel burning inside the to drive the same distance. it to increase gas mileage
Ohio
Emergency c·nn,id~rcd near ly as hat.Mana~c·mc nt A !!&lt;.:!K\. 'aid arllt1u' · a' ' pent fuel from
·engine from 68% of each
After a five year study. or to raise octane."
in . . pcl~tnr . . frnm t~c ~Rc \·i-..- ro lllm~ IY i J I rc;l(t'Of'· thai gengallon to 90% of each the government concluded: For ~ infmnation call:
itcd Ohio Stale·, rcactnr to erate' c·kctri cit\ . It&gt; nuclear. gallon, a 22% increase. "Independent testing shows
1-800-LESS-GAS
fud co re i-., ·. , uhmerged ._ in
il""e'"' it-. ...ecurit y. ·
1-800-537-7427
Since lll!bumt fuelleav ing greater fuel savings with the
''There have heen nu targe t- wuh.'l tn dj~..,ipate heat and
ell threat&gt; ... Strasma 'aid. "We pro\'llk radiation 'hicldm~ .

Proud to be apart of your life.

Device may increase gas mileage by 22 '?!o

Barriers keep Ohio State reactor
off limits to football crowds

nn -..cc uri ly recomJ~lcndation-.,

•

spondencc from Murrow
Indian Chiluren's Home in
Muskigie. Okla.
It was announced that the
group's White Cross quota
will be fill ed. A work day to
cut muslin squares will be
held soon.
Mary K. Yost closed the
meetincrb with praver
and
"
•
blessed the refreshments.

Pamela Matura, executive director of the Area Agency on Ag1ng District 7 Inc., presents plaques of
ap preciation to gold sponsors, Tony Staley representing Ohio Valley Bank of Gallia County, Jewell
Hunt representing Family Senior Care of Gallia County. Peggy Bennington representing Alternative
Home and Nursing Care of Sc1oto County, Vicky Cierley representing Everyday Homecare of Brown
County. and Dr. Tsuyoshi lnoshita representing T. lnoshita M.D. Inc. of Scioto County.

~tra,ltl&lt;l

•'

Hendricks.
Martha Lee
Beegle. Linda Grimm. and
Margaret Yost.
Mary K. Yost opened the
meeting with devotions from
Psalm 9: l0. "The Spirit of
Christ. "
Stobart had roll cllll. read
minutes from Lhe lao.;l meeting
anu gave the treasurer's
report.
Mary K. Yost read a corre-

October 25,2004

Moore presents D.A.R. program

Indi ana
01 RC

I .

Thesday, Oct. 26
POMEROY - Childhood
immuniLation 9 to II a.m and
I to 3 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs
County
Health
Department. Take child's
' hot records anu medical
cards if available . Children
must be a~companied by a
parent/legal
guardian.
Donation accepted.

c

FREE

1371

Other events

Senior EXPO 2004 draws
more than 2,100 people

)lllllll'

il~-

Sunday, Oct. 31
CARPTNTER
-One
heart wi II present concert at
the Mt. Un ion Baptdist
church near Carpenter, 6:30
p.m. Refreshments to follow
in fellowshp hall. Call David
Wiseman for more information. 742-2568.

~onday,

Reaction to grandsons illness
causes major family headache

Society holds program

unin~r:-.ity rc ~c arch rl!actur~ .
The Buckey~s playcu at

· ' BRAND NAME FlJRNITVAE AT Dl!tCOVNT PRICE!&gt;"

Ate

Public meetings Concerts and
plays
Monday, Oct. 25

... : .. 1 799

Layaway

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Scioto Coun ty

Send us a
photo of
your
favorite
ret and
hey
m.i ght be-----::::~~~~ •••
voted into our
;f.
2005
~
Pet Calendar!
•••

_:..For~~···
•

- .......... •69

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

carry

....

�OPINION

_The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today ts Monday. Oct. 25, the 299th day of 2004. There are
67 days left tn the year.
Today's Highlight m Htstory :
One-hundred-fifty years ago, on Oct. 25, 1854, the "Charge
of the Ltght Brigade" took place during the Crimean War a~
an English brigade of more than 600 men, facing hopeless
odds, charged the Russian army in the Battle of Balaclava and
suffered heavy losses.
On thts date:
In 1400, author Geoffrey Chaucer dted tn London .
In 1760, Britain's King George Ill succeeded his late grandfather, George II.
In I 918. the Canadian steamshtp Pnncess Sophia foundered
off the coast of Alaska; nearly 400 people perished.
In 1929, former Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall was convicted of accepting a $ 100.000 bnbe m connection with the
Elk Htlls Naval Otl Reserve in California.
In 1951, peace talks aimed at endmg the Korean Conflict
resumed in PanmunJom aftet 63 days.
In 1962, U S. ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson presented
photographic evidence of So&gt;iet missile bases in Cuba to the
U.N. Security Counctl
In 1971 , the U.N General Assembly voted to admit mainland China and expel Tat wan .
In 1983, a U.S.-led force mvaded Grenada at the order of
President Reagan. who satd the action was needed to protect
U.S. citizens there.
_
In 1993. Canada's Liberal P,trty ended mnc years of rule by
the Progresstve Conservatives in national elections. Liberal
leader Jean Chretten became pttme mmister, succeedmg Kim
Campbell.
In 2002, U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., was killed in a
plane crash 111 northern Minnesota II day s before the election
Ten years ago: Susan Smith. of Union, S.C., claimed that a
black carpcker had dnven off with her two young sons (Smtth
later confessed to drowning the children in a lake, and was
convicted of murder) Three defendants were convicted in
South Africa of murdering American exchange student Amy
Biehl. President Clinton began a ftve-day tnp to the Mideast.
Five years ago: Golfer Payne Stewart and five others were
killed when their Learjet flew uncontrolled for four hours
before crashing in South Dakota: Stewart was 42. Republican
presidential candidate Pat Buchanan bolted the GOP to mount
a bid for the Reform Party nomination.
One year ago: To chants of "Impeach Bush," thousands of
anti-war protesters rallied in the nation's capital and delivered
a scathing critique of President Bush and his Iraq policy. The
Florida Marlins won the World Series 111 Game 6 against the
New York Yankees, 2-0. Tramer Richard Mandella won a
record four races at the Breeders' Cup. Florida State's Bobby
Bowden became the winn111gest coach in major college foot. ball history with his 339th victory as the Seminoles beat Wake
Forest 48-24.
Thought for Today : "It is an undoubted truth, that the less
one has to do, the less time one find••to do it in." - Lord
Chestertield, English author and statesman (1694-1773 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor on the Nov. 2, 2004, general election will not be published or accepted
by this newspaper after Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader· Services
Correction Polley
Our mam concern m all stones IS to be
accurate If you know of an error tn a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922156.

Our main number Is

(7 40) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News

•·

Editor: Charlene Hoe1hch, ElC.1 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13

Advertising
Outside Salea: Dave Harns, Ext 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Dav1s Ext 16
Claoo./Clrc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Pubhshed e\lery afternoon Monday
through Fnday. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Oh1o Second-class postaga
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assooated Press and the
OhLo Newspaper AssociatiOn
Poetmuter: Send address oorrectLons
to The DaLly Senhnel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

One month .......... . .'9.57
One year .......... . .'114.40
Dally ..................50'
Senior Citizen rates
one month ............•a. 70

One year . . ........ ...'96.70

Circulation

Subscnbers should remit In advance
dlrec1 to the Da11y Sentinel No subscnpllon by ma1l perrnttled m areas where
home carrier SOMCe IS avwialje.

District Mgr. : Jason Patterson . Ext 17 ·

Mall Subscription

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12

E-mail:
news@mydaLiysentLnel com

Web

www myda•tysent1nel cQm

PageA4

Inside Meigs Counly
13 Weeks
.. '30.15
26 Weeks
.. '60 00
52 Weeks
. . .'118.80
Outside Meigs Counly
13 Weeks
'50 05
26 Weeks
'1 00.10
52 Weeks
'200 20

Monday, October 25,

"Absolutely,"
most
reporters want John Kerry to
win the election, declares
Newsweek's Evan Thomas,
commenting on the media
bias he says translates into
"maybe" five extra points for
the Democratic ticket at the
polls. That's down from the
15 points Thomas first predicted Fourth Estate favor
would bestow on KerryEdwards, but even five
points could ltp a race as
close as this one.
Which is a chilling
thought - but also a golden
opportumty. It means that a
vote for Bush-Cheney ts not
only a vote against KerryEdwards, but also a vote
against
Kerry-EdwardsCBS-CNN-New
York
Times. Are you incensed
over Dan Rather's crude
attempt to influence the
presidential electton with a
sheaf of pathetic forgeries'!
Appalled by "Nightline"'s
Ted Koppel for using di ctatorship-vetted sources in
communist Vietnam to contradtct the testimonies of
decorated American veterans? Outraged by ABC's
head-office directive to its
reporters to go easier on
John Kerry than George W.
Bush, and not "reflexively
and arttfictally hold both
sides 'equally' accountable"?
Don't get mad. vote
Republican.
The fact ts, never before
have mainstream media
(MSM) organizations- and
I mean the hunters and gatherers of news, not tts cooks
and consumers - sunk so
deep in the tank for a
Democratic ticket. The elec-

Diana
West

tion is days away but vital
questiOnS
about
Kerry
remain not just unanswered
in MSM outlets. but unasked
- evtdence of the efficiency
with whtch the only-selectively adversarial media
have embraced the role of
Democratic star-maker, not
newsmaker.
"It's up to Kerry to defend
himself. of course," ABC
News political director Mark
Halperin admits 111 a "1984"style directive leaked to the
Drudge Report. "But as one
of the few new s organizations with the skill and
strength to help voters evaluate what the candidates are
saying ... " - gee, thanks a
lot- "now ts the It me for all
of .us to step up and do that
right."
And how's that done - bv
covering for Kerry? Given
what we still don't know
about the cand1date after his
practtcally incessant blathering, includmg three debates.
this becomes the inescapable
conclusion And I don't just
mean de-emphasizing such
Kerry facts as his inexplicable fatlure to attend threequarters of hts public Senate
Intelligence
Committee
hearings. Or failing to ponder the cotncidence that
Kerry coustn C. Stewdft

whether he sti II reviles the
Reagan years as a "moral
blackness."
We don't know because no
one in the MSM has asked
him. This glaring failure
makes a mockery of the
media. It leaves u~ gasping
for facts. It also explains the
volcanic eruption of alternative sources of campaign
information - Swtft Boat
Veterans for Truth, the
newsies of the blogosphere,
and a slew of independent
ads and documentaries,
including "Stolen Honor."
Such activity has 111Jected
vital blasts of oxygen into
otherwise stilted coverage.
But in the land of the free
and the free press, we
shouldn't have to rely on the
unique gumption of, say, a
John O'Neill, the Swiftee
spokesman who went so far
as' to write. a best-selling
book about John Kerry,
"Unfit
for
Command"
(Regnery), to publicize crucial information the MSM
ignored. I remember well the
veritable news blackout on
the Swift Boat vets when
they first assembled last
in
downtown
spring
Washington . The Associated
Press didn't even send a cor-.
respondent, calling the
group's press conference
"old news" - before tt happened.
Whatever the final tally on
Election Day, we, the people
need to take a good hard
look at the MSM scorecard
the day after.
(Diana West is a co/umrmt
for The Washington Time~.
She can be contacted vw
dianawest@ venznn.net.)

Democracy will work if we ·are itiformed
James Fishkin's oftice ts at
the end of Palm Drive on the
Stanford Universtty campus,
inside a beautiful colonnaded
building
called
McClatchy Hall. To reach it,
you walk past chatting students and biking professors,
and past beds of flowering
rosemary that make you
slow down, breathe deeply
and question why you ever
left college for a real job.
:rhis is life as it would be
if we could climb into a
favorite book and shut the
cover behind us.
Only in such an idealized,
hopeful
place
could
Professor Fishkin hold fast
to a belief that fltes in the
face of everything we have
come to expect about modern Amenca. He believes
that, given half a chance,
people prefer to choose presidents and policies through
measured, fact-based discussion rather than screamingmeemie sound bites from
TV and radio.
"The public collectively is
very smart," Fishkip said,
sitting amid stacks of books
and research in his offtce at
Center
for
Stanford's
Deliberative Democracy.
"But normally they're not
paying much attention and
have mis111formation . It's
often in the interest of the
politicians to give them misinformation. But if you give
people a chance to be wellinformed, they ulttmately
are very smart."
He bases thts confidence
111 ordinary citizens on years
of research, the late st of
which can be seen in an
hour-long program call ed
'Ttme to Choose" which
aired recently on PBS stations around the country and
WtJJ be rebroadcast hy some

Joan
Ryan

stations.
Fi shkin's
Center
for
Deliberative Democracy, in
partnership
v.ith
MacNeil/Lehrer
Productions, brought togeth·
er randomly selected voters
in 17 cities on a recent
Saturday, paying each a
stipend
and . traveling
expenses to encourage participation. The voters have
been given balanced briefing
documents ahead of time on
the two topics of dtscusston
national sec unty and the
economy. They were polled
in the morning about their
grasp of the facts and their
opinions on the issues.
After a full dav of di scussion wtth people ·from different backgrounds and pomts
of view, and after an opportunity to ask experts questions on the tssues. they
were polled again. Few completely changed their mind.
But most of those who
arnved with sharp-edged.
polarized opinions became
more
moderate.
partly
because they listened toothers, and partly because they
became more mtormed
"People began scctng
nuances and complexittes."
satd Ft,hk111 . who observed
the group that had gathered
111 New Haven. Conn. ''Thcv
saw the ot her side"
·
. Gat! Leftw 1c h ~ the dtrel'l&lt;ll
of
the
proJect
for
MacN e t l/L~hrcr

unavoidably limtted by hts
or her life experience and
biases.
This is also why we have
juries instead of simply
judges. Judges might be
smarter than many of us and
better able to grasp complex
legal arguments, but we
have faith that reasonable
people from different walks
of life, when given solid
information and lime to
deliberate. will make fatrer
judgments than a judge.
Which brings us to the
Nov. 2 election.
What is shown on "Time
to Choose" is a ptcture of
how voters reach conclustons about candidates and
issues when they become
senously engaged in thinking about them. It is a wondrous thing, given the state
of television today. People
talk , and other people listen.
Actual facts are presented as
components of arguments.
Thinking ensues.
As we try to export
democracy
around the
world, we might do well to
revisit how tt 's going here.
Democracy works well only
when the electorate makes
an attempt to 1educate itself
and thmk for ttself. We can
blame Tucker and Chns and
Rush for our ignorance and
radicalism. Or we can sign
on to Profes sor Fishktn 's
belief that we have the
capacity as diverse. thinking
peopl e to make the best
choices for our country, it
we only would be willing to
be paragraph people in a
bumper-sttcker world
he he' c d lt~I gc g1 oup of ordi (Joan R\"WI ts a colunmill
nar: Ull/t:ll\. more limes for the San Franci.H o
than not. '"I I nMke better Chron icle. Send wmment1·
dec"''"" th,m an rndtvidual In Iter 111 &lt;are of tins newspatulet. "ho. though perhaps per or .\ end her e-mw/ at
CuUCdtCU and even Wtse. tS joan ryan@ .1jch I'Unicle. com.)

Productions. went to the
Ptthhurgh gwu p.
· It );t\l'S ylllt an mcredible
sense ol \\' hat's posstble. "
she s,ttd "You see that peork ye.u n to come together
- not to reach consensus
but to t&lt;~lk to each other. It's
,, lu xu ty today. People don't
have the time or the opportumty to do thts."
Fishkin's belief in the
power of ctvJI discourse to
improve the qual tty of political decisions dovetails with
the theory of "collective
intelligence." This dictum
says that a large group of
dtverse, informed, independent-th111ktng people will
almost always deliver the
right answer to a question.
There ts the famous story of
English sctenttst Francis
Galton's visit to a livestock
fa11 in 1906. Visttors were
asked to guess the wetght of
an ox after it had been
slaughtered and dressed. No
on~ guessftd the correct
wetght ot I, 198 pounds, but
the average of the 7~7 guesses came to I, 197.
Closet to home, a study
showed that the studio audtcnce for "Who Wants to Be a
Millionaire" gave the right
answers to questions 91 percent of the time, beat111g out
the
su pposedly
wcllintormed friends that contest,mts were allowed to call.
The fnends got just 61 percclll of the answers correct.
The theory of collective
tntelli gc nce ts the theory of
demDcr &lt;~cy.
We
value
democracy not only because
it I' fa11 but because we

.

Monday, October 25,2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

A vote against the entrenched media
Forbe,· company won a
$900 million contract from
Vietnam after Sen. Kerry
pushed to normalize relations
Here we are, on the brink,
possibly: of electing a man
who. as an American officer.
parlayed wttll the enemy, and
there have been no questwns,
no stories tn response. No
thoughts, no curiosity. We
comcmplme a new wartime
leader
whose
political
epiphany the famous
Christmas 111 Cambodia,
"seared. scared" mto Kerry's
memory - never happened.
Stones in the MSM? It's
tough to lind even one. We
consider trusung our very
li ves to a man who has conststently hewed to the wrong
stde or history, favoring
appeasement and dtsarmament over democratic principle and strength, but we know
nothtn u of his current thinking on'those old positions.
How, for mstance, does
this American prestdenttal
candtdate explain his place
of honor in a Vietnamese
war museum dedtcated to an
American defeat'' Does
Kerry believe the anti-war
movement in which he ftgured so prominently bears
any mor.tl responstbtlity for
the mass brutality - execu1ions . 1e-ed ucation camps,
boat people - that marked
Hanoi's vtctory? Indeed,
does Kerry still believe
North Vietndm "liberated"
South Vietnam. and that the
contl ict itself was not a front
tn the Cold War? We saw
valedtctory comments from
Kerry on Ronald Reagan's
de.tth . hut we have no idea

..

•

Obituaries

As. t~ns of thousands of Japanese huddle in shelters, off1c1als battle to restore quake-crushed lifelines

James O'Brien

OJIYA, Japan (AP) Yoshikazu Ogawa stood outside the ptle of rubble that
was once hts home. poking
around the plaster and wood
that had sudde nly come
crashing down on his two
mmivans when a series of
earthquake s hit northern
Japan, killing at least 23 people and injuring some 2,000.
"We've got nothing," he
said Sunday, one day after a
magnitude 6 .8 quake flattened his home and neighborhood m Ojiya, a town of
40,000 about 160 miles
northwest of Tokyo. "Our
house ts destroyed. We have
no electrictty, no totlet. no
telephone ..
Like some 64,000 other
people, Ogawa said he and
his family planned to spend
the night in one of hundreds
of makeshift evacuation centet s - school gymnasiums,
parking lots, even street corners - set up m the region
as officials struggle to
restore its battered lifelines.
Early Monday, a 5.6-magnitude aftershock hit the
region, jolting survivors huddled in makeshift emergency
shelters. It hit near Ojiya, the
epicenter of Saturday's temblor. No damage or 111JUries
were tmmedtately reported.
Prime Mmister Junichiro
Koizumi pledged that the
government would set aside
fundmg for reconstruction.
But offictals estimated it
would take weeks to rebuild
roads,
bridges and homes
COOLVILLE- Denzil Edward Beha, 67, Coolville, went
and
restore
essential ser"home" to be with the Lord on Wedne sday. Oct 20, 2004.
vtces.
He was born on Dec. 15, 1936, m Leachtown, W.Va. , son of
The quake hit just after
the late Clyde and Catherine Emrick Beha.
Denzil was a graduate of Carthage Troy Htgh School, Class
of 1955 , and served in the Ohio National Gtwrd. He founded
the Beha Insurance Agency of Coolville in I 981, from which
he later reured. He was a lovmg husband, father and grandfather, who is already missed by all.
He is survived by his wife of 48 years, Carol ltllene
ARKALYK. Kazakhstan
Stmmons Beha; six chtldren: Steven (Mary) Bcha of Albany.
A Russtan-U.S.
Greg (Beth Greenless) Beha of Glouster, Ann (Ron) Clark of (AP) Waverly. W.Va .. Denise (Mark) Highland of Coolville, Lynne crew returned to Earth from
Beha of Coolvtlle. and Jody (Keith Dupler) Hart of Amesville; the international space statwo brothers, William (Betty) Beha of Punta Gorda. Fla., and tion Sunday in a pinpoint
Wilbur (Ruby) Beha of Coolville: 21 grandchildren and six landing on the Kazakhstan
great grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
steppe. and NASA's chief
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by his broth- satd the United States wanted to continue the joint relaer, Cecil Robert Beha.
Follow111g his cremation. friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 tionship on future missions
to 8 p.m on Sunday at Whtte Funeral Home in Coolville. A to Mars
memorial service will he held at II a.m on Monday, Oct. 25,
Russian rockets and the
2004, at the funeral home, with Rev. George Horner official- non -reusable Soyuz space
craft have been the onlv wav
mg .
Memonal contnbut1ons m&lt;~y be made to the Metgs County NASA can get to the "space
Specml Olymptcs. 1310 Carleton St., Syracuse. O~lO 45779. stalton and back smce the
or Athens County M.R. Speci,tl Olympics. 801 W Umon St., U S. shuttle tleet was
Athens. Ohto 4570 I.
grounded after the Columbta
burned up on re-entry in
February 2003, killing all
seven astronauts aboard.
The bell-shaped Soyuz
MASON - David Lance Stewart. Sr.. 52. Letart. W. Va. TMA-4. carry111g Russian
died Saturday. Oct. 23. 2004 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
cosmonauts
Gennadv
He ts survived by his wife. Wilma Lee Stewart of Letart. Padalka and Yuri Shargin
W.Va.
and American astronaut
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Wednesday at the Mrke Fincke. parachuted
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason. Burial will be down to the landing site.
Baden Presbyterian Cemetery, Letart, W. Va. Charles some 55 miles north of the
H,trgr&lt;~v es and Greg Collins wtll officiate. Friends may call at
Kazakh town of Arkalyk,. at
the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
4 36 a.m (8 36 p.m. EDT
Saturday)
The
return
marked

POMEROY James Bryon Brent
O'Brien, 88, of Pomeroy, well-known local
attorney, passed away at hts home on
October 23, 2004. He was surrounded by
the love of his famtly.
J-!is father, Charles, came to Gallipolis,
Ohto from Ireland 111 1900. He married
Oretha Ketsler. Jim was born on August 14,
1916. He graduated from Greenbrier
Mtlitary Academy, recetved his undergraduate degree from The Oho State University
and his doctorate of JUrisprudence from Oho James O'Brien
Northern Umverstty. Jim married Roberta Cornwell on June
29, 1941.
. He served 111 Wo!ld War II as a captain in the infantry statiOned m the Pact!tc . On returning from the war, Jim joined
wtth h! s brot~.er, Harmon~ forming the law practice "0' Brien
and 0 Bnen. Wearmg ht s trademark bow tie, Jim practiced
law for 58 years, both in private practice and as a Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney.
' An avid sportsman, he belonged to the Forked Run Gun
Club for many years. Jim hunted, fished, and spent many
pleas_!!nt hours at hts cabm on Shade River. Golf was his passion though . He played in many tournaments throughout the
•
area.
He is survived _by hi s devoted wife of 63 years, Roberta, son
and. da~ghters-m - law, Mtchael and Mary O'Brien of
Gallipolis; son, Patnck O'Bnen of Pomeroy and special
fnend, Tara Humphreys; daughters and sons-m.Jaw, Peggy
and Rohert Ham s of Newburgh, lndtana, and Pam and John
Rosenbaum of Springboro, Ohio, eight grandchtldren, and
five great-grandchtldren .
He was preceded m death by his parents. brothers, William,
Charle_s and Harmon. and sister, Mary.
A pnvate gravestde memonal service will be held at Mound
Hill Cemetery in Galltpolis at a future date.
In lieu of !lowers, contributions may be made in Jim's
remembrance to Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy. Ohio or
the Pomeroy Fire Department.
The family wishes to thank all those who remembered Jim
in their thoughts and prayers.

Denzil Beha

sunset Saturday as many
people were sitttng down to
dinner in the scattered towns
and rice paddy-ringed villages in N1igata state on the
of
northwestern
coast
Japan's main island.
Several strong quakes followed through the night as a
near-total
blackout
enveloped about 280,000
households, and aftershocks
continued JOlting the area
Sunday.
The Japanese government
said 23 people were killed
and I ,232 were injured. The
dead mcluded five chtldren,
the youngest a 2-month-old
infant. Public broadcaster
NHK reported that some
2.000 people were inJured.
The injured overwhelmed
local
hospitals,
where
patients were being treated
in the hallways. Saturday's
quake also flattened dozens
of homes, tore through th~
pavement of local roads and
htghways and caused landslides that left whole vtllages
cut off from the outside
world.
Two trains derailed. but no
injuries were reported. One
was a bullet train, the first to
jump its tracks since Japan
began running such trains in
1964.
Military helicopters airlifted stmnded villagers from a
riverside hamlet. Shiotani.
that was cut off when the
bridge connecting it to Ojiya
was toppled. Several other
villages
were
tsolated,
including Yamagoshi , a
mountain village of 600,
where a landslide swept

year-old daughter. mother-mlaw and several netghbors,
had i:amped out on the floor
of the city hall in nearby
Nagaoka. " It 's exhausting
But at least tt \ warm:·
Wnh most areas sill! not
getting electricttv {&gt;r water.
many restdents 1ier~ expect;ng a long haul - and were
buying up suppltes wherever
they could be tuund
Dozens of people lined up
outside one of the few shops
111 thts hard-hit city on
Sunday. a home -and -garden
center strewn wtth the shards
ot broken ceramtc t lower
pots and toppled plants.
Most bought plastic containers for water, hottles of tea
&lt;~nd ga' cookmg stoves.
'The roads to my house
are c losed. so I might be livmg in my car tor a while.''
Tomoaki Watanabe said. "I
frgured I'd benet get suppiles whtle I stt ll can ..
The temblor\ came JU St
days after Japan's deadliest
typhoon in more than a
decade left 79 people dead
and a dozen mtsstng
Japa n. which .rest&gt; atop
several tectonic plate s. is
among the v.orld' s most
earthyuake-prone countries.
A mdgmtude 6 4uake can
cause ':'tdespread damage to
homes and other buildings if
centered 111 a hea&gt;tly populated area
The ""' btg quake to
shake Nitgata prefecture was
a magmtude 7.5 temblor tn
1964 that left 26 dead and
447 hurt. a Metemologtcal
Agency spokeswoman scud

away the on Iy road and
upended homes and cars.
Restdents awatted airlifted
food and other suppltes.
··carrying out rescue
efforts is the most important
task right now," Tsutomu
Takebe, secretary-ge neral of
the
ruling
Liberal
Democrat tc Party, sa1d on a
talk program at red by N HK.
"The government ts makmg
all the effort to assess the
extent of the damage."
The quake was the most
devastating to stnke Japan
smce 1995, when more than
6.000 were killed in the port
city of Kobe.
"We were completely isolated,"
said
Takejtro
Hoshino. who was evacuated
by military helicopter along
with dozens of others from
Shioya, a small mountam
hamlet. Hoshmo v.as uninjured, but hi s 12-year-ol d
grandson was ktlled when
their home collapsed
Attesting to the power of
the quake. the cement tubing
of a manhole had been dnven upward and stood some
3 feet above the surrounding
pavement on a street near
one flattened home Power
lines sagged to the ground
from teetering utility poles
Japan 's
Meteorulo~1cal
Agency regt stered 309 aftershocks - most too weak to
be felt - and warned that
another temblor of similar
power could hn the regton
over the next week.
"We came here because v.e
were afraid to stay home.''
said Mamie Otam, a housewife who, along wtth her 1-

Russian Soyuz capsule carrying Russian-U.S. crew lands in
Kazakh steppe; NASA chief wants to continue cooperation for Mars

David Lance Stewart. Sr.

For the record

an outstandmg balance subCivil suits
JCC! to judgment in the
amount-of $24.990.13.
POMEROY -A ctvil
Foreclosure actions have been
action for mecham c·s lien has tiled by Peoples Bank, Rutland.
been filed 111 Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by against Kim Mttchell. Pomeroy.
Haynes
Construction. and others, alleging default on a
Middleport. against Joseph mortgage agreement in the
Loftis, Pomeroy. and others. amount of $27.386.06. and by
Home Q Ser; icing Corp ..
in the amount ot $32,551.02
A civil suit has been ftled by Raletgh, N.C. against Royd H.
Daimler Chrysler Services. Cleland, Ruthmd, and others,
North America , Lisle . Ill.. alleging default on a mortgage
agamst Stanley C. Davts. agreement 111 the amount of
Athens, and others, allegmg $22.954.16.

Schatz
from Page A1
the true foundation of our
said
SAF
profession,"
Pre sident John H. Beuter.
"They often operate in complete
anonymity. Thei r
actions are the smgle most
tmportant contnbution to the
viabtlity and understanding
of our p10fession. This is
where forestry truly happens
and 11 is tmportant that we
recognize those who perform
the science of forestry each
and every day. "
Schatz began hi s forestry
career m 1962 with the Ohm
Department
of Natural
Re sources
Dt vts 1nn
ol
Forestry and served tn a variety of position s. mcluding
forester. district forester, and
servtce/urban forestry coordmator. unul hrs retir~mentrn
1998.
Regardless
of hi s title and responsthtlt-

ties, Schatz always found
time to help Ohio's forest
landowners achieve their
objecttves
management ··
through sound forestry techniques and provtde leadership to the division's urban
and service foresters.
Today, Schatz continues to
practtce forestry as a consultant. as a part-time employee
of Rural Action Sustainable
Forestry. and as a volunteer
on several forestry-related
millallves. As a result of hts
considerable experience. he
is well known for his ability
to apply hts knowledge of
forestry pnnctples to a wide
variety of situattons, accoding to Beuter.
An active member of SAF
for more than 40 years,
Sch"t' has served the Ohio
stall' 'ociety as sec retarytreasu rer ( 1972-1974). chair
( 197\l ). and as a member of
scver,tl comm ittees. Schatz
jntncd SAF 111 1962 and was
elected SAP Fellow tn 1987

-·

___ ., ___

- ·---·

_,

Board
from Page A1
volunteer asststant gtrls basketball coach, Rebecca
Evans, asststant gtrls basketball coach; Carly Haye s. seventh grade girls basketball
coach; Sue Arnold. eight
grade gtrls basketball coach;
Jan Holter, co-advisor, Class
of 2008. Joyce Werry. coadvisor. Class of 2008, and
Susan Parsons. elementary
music director.
The board approved an
a~reement with Jaune Duck
to provtde athletic traming
services for the current
school year.
Board
member
Greg
Batley was recogmzed by the
Southeast Regton Ohto
Scbool Board Assoctatton

Padalka's and Fincke's first
experience wtth gravity after
a six-month stay on the
orbital ourpost. Shargin spent
eight days on the station
after arriving Oct. 16 with
the station's new two-man
crew. Ru ssian Salizhan
Sharipov and American
Leroy Chiao.
Search crews took just 14
mtnutes to reach the Soyuz
capsule after tts landtng,
compared with the average
90-m111ute search after nighttune arrivals. said Vasily
Tstbliyev, head of the
Cosmonauts· Tnumng Center
at Star Cny, outside Moscow.
The Soyuz's return flight
"was another successful
effort for a continuous presence on the international sta·
tton ," o· Keefe said at
Russian mission control outside Moscow.
NASA Administrator Sean
O'Keefe praised the Russian
space agency workers. espectally the helicopter-based
search and rescue crews. for
their "tremendous professionalbm ...
Prestdent Paul Mock for I0
years of se rvice as a board
member.
The board also.
• Recogmzeu Robert White
for 15 years of scrvtce as a
bus dnver. wtth a reception
• Approved donatinn of
$1,500 trom the athlettc
boosters. a don allon ot a
Selmer CL 300 clarinet. and a
donatton from the Mei sg
' County
Dtstnct
Public
Library.
• Approved reimbursement
of post-secondary enrollment
option students for mtleage.
if those students meet qualifications.
.
• Approved advertisting for
a new 71-passenger bus.
• Set the next meeting for 7
p.m. on Nov. 17 in the
Elementary
Ltbrary
Conference Room. with a
work sess ton at 6 p.m

He also satd America . had 111 long duratton space
o· Keefe sat d.
wants to further that cooper- flights."
alion by drawing on the Rosaviakosmos
is
the
Ru ssian space program's Russian space agency
extensive experience in long
After bemg helped ou t of
duration fltghts when NASA the capsule by the ;earch
embarks on mi ~stons beyond team. the three flier' sat in
chair,. sipping hot dnnks
the moon and to Mars.
"The f,irst international and bundltng in blankets.
partner we see to collaborate and then underwent ·bnef
wnh most is our colleagues medical che&lt;ks tn a nearby
Rosaviakosmos. given the tent before flym g to Star
vast expenence they have City.
tor the repatr- !tom the Ohto
School
Faciltues
Commission.
Of the S-t27.000 that the

Southern
from PageA1

renD\' i.Jllon~

b;J\

c

t:Osl.

and require the use of the ele- Southern Luc,tl Schools
vator to get to thctr class· Dtstnc·t c·ontnhutcu S 124.00
while the remaintnu balance
rooms.
·
"It's something we wanted was p,tiu b) the Ohio School
to do earlier. but we didn't Facilities Commt'"on.
The molle) tr&lt;~t l fot the
know how." said Princip,tl
$12.:1.000
"as lollow&gt;
Gordon Ftsher about the
!rom
Parttv Atd.
S65.000
recent renovation ~
The elevators also ha1 e $35.000 from Perin&lt;~nwt
been useful in tran sporun~ lmpro, ement Fund. 5 19.000
equipment and material~ from the Gener.tl Fund. and
between tloors. as well as $5.000 from the Matntenance
tran sporting stude nts who Fund .
Next on Grucsc r' ' wtsh ltst
have been lllJured and requi re
imprm ements
for
of
the use of crutches
The renovattons th" sum- Southern H 1~h School are
mer were links in a chain of new v. mdnll'.:- .md central rur
improvements to the building cund ttt omn~ lor the butldtng,
that go back to 1999 These ulthouuh the fu11dtnu t' not
improvements
include a\ailable at thts umc~
"The ktJ, re,tc·t positively
asbestos removal. ceilmg trle
·rep lacement and replacement to the reno1 ,ttlons. and they
a ion ~ 11 rth the ,wtf take care
ot the coal ftred boilers.
Supenntendent
Bob ol the hutlurng ... ,,~ , d Grue~r
Grueser and the Southern about the "" ner,h tp the stuLocal Board of Education dent&gt; ,mJ lacult\ fee l
have worked to secu re funds lO\\ard' thctr ":honl ·

Tul~sd~•v

Night Cooking
Series led by dietician Angie Rhodes
TUesday, October 26th
"Afldns, Soudl Beach, The zone-Where

s•

a

,

October 24th - 27th
6:00p.m. Sunday &amp; 7:00p.m. M, T, W

does the truth lie?"
Sorting through Carbs vs. Fats
vs. Calories

· Tuesday, November 9th
"l!xlleme Recipe Makeovers"
Reducing tat and calories without sacrific·
tasle.

Evangelist Dale Ward of Florida
as Speaker

,.........-J!'JWcl

CHESTER CHURCH
~ OF THE NAZARENE

Today 992-6606

Center

Welcome to come a11d
Wonllip witii1H!

E~eryo11e

________________ ______________
,

_:_

____ --

'

�•

PageA6

REGION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 25, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep scoreboard, Page 82
OSU football notebook, Page B6

Low-income children may
have to wait for flu shots
COLUMBUS (AP)
Some low-income children
who qualify for flu shots may
have to wait for their vaccinations because of questions
over doctors being reimbursed through a Medicaid
program.
Kent Ware, vaccine adminthe Ohio
istrator for
of Health ,
Department
recently sent doctors and
health departments a letter
saying they should not use
privately purchased surplies
for Vaccme for Chtldren
patients.
Because of a national vaccine shortage. the state couldn't guarantee repayment or
reimbursement
through
Medicaid, the state-federal
health care program for the
poor, Ware's letter said.
One of the two main vaccine suppliers to the United
States, Chiron Corp., has had
trouble filling orders due to
part of its supply being contaminated.
The Ohio Department of
Health is waiting on its shipment of I00,000 doses for the
Vaccines for Children program. agency spokesman

NewsChannel

VVeatherforecast
Monday, Ol·tober 2S

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
TemperaiUres wil l drop
from 47 earl y thi ., morning
to the low lor the day of
46 at 7:00am as they ri se
back to 60 late mornin t! .
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds frnm the
northwest.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m. )
· Temperatures will stay
near 64 with todav 's hi~h nf
66 occurring arou1id J:IXJpm.
Skies will be 1unnv with 5
MPH winds from the no11h-

west tumin~ from the north winds from the n01theast.
Thesday, October 26
as the atiernoon pr~j,!resses.
£~&gt;euing (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)

Temperatures wi II fall
from )7 early this evening
to 51. Skies will be clear
"ith 5 MPH winds from
the north tuming from the
nort he as! as the evening
pr~) g rc~~~s.

O•wnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will drop
lnlln 50 e~u·Jy ovemight to 48
IJ; -+:()(Jam then chmb back
up to 5~ late overnight. Skies
will be clear with 5 MPH

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

Temperatures will hold
steady around 53. Skies
will be sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast.•

Afternoon (I -6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise
from 55 early this afternoon to 57 by 3:00pm then
drop down to 54 late afternoon. Skies will be sunny
to mostly sunny with 5
MPH winds from the
northeast.

Prosecutors allege teacher
continues to contact student
PRINCETON. W.Va. !API Dcbonih Garton immediately hea'ring·fof 11 a.ut., Nov. I 5.
- A former substitute teacher asked the court to revoke He set Collis' trial date for
Jan. 25.
has been in contact with a 15- Collis ' bond.
In an unrelated case also
Garton
said
telephone
logs
year-old boy she is accused of
molesting. a violation of her reveal that Collis called the involving a former Mercer
bond. Mercer County prose- boy at least once in County Board of Education
employee, Frazier scheduled
September.
cutors have alleged.
Collis' attorney, Robert E. a Feb. I trial date for Danny
Alicia Renee Collis. 23. of
Princeton. was arrested on "Roh" Holroyd. said that he Perkins, 49, of Kegley.
Perkins, a former teache~ at
Aug. I. and charged with was aware that "the young
Lashmeet/Matoaka
Middle
man
called
her."
but
noted
third degree sexual assault.
Collis" was indicted earlier that since he is now living in SchooL was arrested in late
this month and pleaded not California. the likelihood of April and indicted this month
on Ig sexual assault counts
guilty to the charges Friday additional contact is remote.
"The young man is 3.000 and two child pornography
before Mercer County Circuit
counts.
Court Judge John R, Fratier. miles away." Holroyd said.
The alleged victims are five
Frazier continued Collis'
Assistant Mercer County
students.
bond
but
scheduled
a
bond
Prosecuting
Attorney

Fire marsha/locks up former Weston Hospital
CHARLESTON.
W.Va .
(APJ With its future
already in question . the former Weston State Hospital
has betln shuttered by the
state fire marshal's office fur
a ''long list" of code violations. forcing its three mu seums and souvenir shop to
find new quarters.
The massive. Ci vil War·cra
building doesn't have enough
emergency exits , lacks proper lighting and has too many
extension cord,s. Assi q ~lll t
State Fire Marshal Edse l
Smith said Friday.
"Things I had prev iously
required had not bee n followed through.'' S·mith said.
"The big , big problem is exi ting. There were some i" ues
with safety in getting people
out of there. so I decided to
close the hospital."
The buildin g's ground

fl oor has housed the
Mountaineer
Military
Museum. the West Virginia
Tov Museum and the West
Virginia Mental
Health
Museum as well as a retail
shop. "said Joy Stalnaker,
chairwoman of the Weston
Hospiwl
Revitalization
Committee .
" I Smith) had a long list of
things that were wrong .''
Stalnaker said. "S0me of tHe
things he told us about last
year. but I thought we had
time to tix them. Sqme of the
things I didn't even know
about .''
Lewis County voters will
be asked tn decide on the
No v. 2 hallot whether to
approve a plan to convert the
form er hospital irito a resort
and gue&gt;t-only casino. Even
if voters approve. the
Mountaineer Group LLC

would still face several hurdles for its proposed $300
million renovation project.
The revitalization committee has been working for several years to fix the former
hospital. which closed in
1994. Proceeds from the
store and tours have helped
fund the effort. A recent
study estimated ,$7.2 million
in repairs and upgrades were
needed to .restore the building.
Smith said he checked on
prior violations after learning
that Stalnaker's committee
has planned lantern tours of
the building and a haunted
maze on its grounds during
the
Halloween
season .
Stal11aker said that with the
hospital shuttered, the committee still plans to host the
haunted maze as well -as
scheduled hay rides.

Kristopher Weiss said .
Doctors can order vaccines
for privately insured patients
through drug makers, but
because the shots for
Medicaid patients come
through the government.
low-income children could
be denied the vaccine even if
it is available.
Dr. Martha Geib, a pediatrician in London, 25 miles
west of Columbus, has told
some Medicaid patients to
come back when a flu vaccine
shipment
arrives.
Currently, she only has
enough on hand for privately
insured patients who are considered high risk.
Angela Presley said the
vaccine shortage amounts to
discrimination against her Iyear-old son, D'Angelo, who
suffers from a chronic respiratory virus and asthma.
While he was sent away
without a shot on Oct. 16,
Presley saw " kids were coming in and walking back and
getting their shots."
Marshall Geib, the doctor's
husband and business manager, said the privately insured
patients who received their

Report: Army denies
most compensation
claims by Iraqis
DAYTON (AP) - The
Army has denied most of the
thousands of compensation
claims Iraqis have made
against the U.S. military,
determining · most people
were hurt or killed or property was damaged in combat,
the Dayton Daily News
reported on Sunday.
The newspaper's analysis
of 4,611 civil claims in lra4
- hundreds alleging abuse
and misconduct by American
military personnel- showed
just one in four resulted in
some type of payment.
The Daily News gained
access to an Army database
through a Freedom of
Information request.
Iraqi claims in the database
seek compensation for at
least 437 deaths and 468
injuries, but those numbers
are likely just a portion of the
actual totals, the newspaper
said.
The military does not pay
claims for incidents deemed
to be caused by "combat
operations," which could
include checkpoint shootings
and other incidents involving
civilians.
In response to a man who
claimed that his two brothers
were ki !led and his parents
injured on March 29, 2003.
when · coalition
forces
bombed the AI Tajiya area of
Babel city, the mihtary concluded: "Coalition forces
dropped ordnance during
Operation Iraqi Freedom on
legitimate targets. Your family was in an area that was
being legitimately targeted
and therefore regrettably
harmed."
Another case involved a
·man driving to get his infant
daughter who became ill
while staying with his wife's
parents. The man was killed
when soldiers opened fire on
his car at a checkpoint. His
family's claim for compensation was denied.
Victims and their families
also filed claims for homes
destroyed in bombings and
confiscated property. In 29
cases, Iraqis claimed the military left a so-called "unexploded ordinance" that later
detonated, killing 14 and
injuring 25.
AcwnJing to the analysis
of the database, the average
payment for a death in Iraq

was $3,42 I. In addition to the
formal claims system, Iraqis
were sometimes given up to
$2,500 in sympathy payments without any paperwork. said attorney Jack
Bournazian, who held seminars to show Iraqi attorneys
how to file the claims.
About 78 percent of the
claims were for incidents that
occurred after President Bush
·declared major coinbat operations over on May 2, 2003.
"When we first got there.
the Iraqis were glad to sec us.
I believe things changed
because there was disrespect
to the people," said Elizabeth
Wisdorf,
of
Colorado
Springs, Colo., who &gt;erved
for nearly a year in Iraq as a
member of the Colorado
National Guard's 220th
Military Police Company.
"There were a lot of acci dents; a lot of deaths."
The Daily News sought to
sample attitudes through
interviews with Iraqis.
"Our point of view toward
the Americans has changed.
You can feel the fury inside
you,.'' said Ami r Shleman.
who lost a brother who was a
father of a 7-year-old boy and
13-year-old girL "If they
treated people like human
beings, no one would take up
weapons against them."
The day after his brother
was ki lied. soldiers left
$2,000 near the pillow of his
widow. money the family
was told was for funeral
expenses.
When the family filed a
claim for compensation for
the children, they encountered months of delays before
finally receiving a letter
denying the claim, the Daily
News said.
Army Lt. Col. Charlotte
Herring said the Army, which
handles civil claims for all
three service branches in
Iraq, has given out $8.2 million si nee June 2003 and budgeted $10 million in fiscal
year 2005 to help Iraqis deal
with losses suffered because
of war.
"It 's a way the local commander can try to keep good
wi II ,and come and amend a
somewhat tragic situation,"
said Marine R,eserve Capt.
Sean Dunn , a platoon commander who also supervised
claims payments in Iraq .

shot were high risk patients.
He said the flu sedson usually
hils between December and
March, so the state supply of
vaccine should arrive 111 time
for children covered by
Medicaid to receive their
shot.
Mary Kahn , a U.S.
Department of Health and
Human Services official, disputed the state and said doctors don't have to wait fur
their Vaccines for Children
supply if they want to give a
Medicaid patient a shot.
"If they don't have their
VFC supply, they are to bill
the state Medicaid program,"
Kahn said . "These children
are entitled to these shots.
There 's no need for anybody
to wait."

Kahn said she plans to send
a memo to state officials,
restating the policy.
Medicaid patients can get
their shut immedi&lt;llely if they
sign a letter stating that they
will pay for the vaccine, said
Jon Allen of the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family Services.
Consumers e&lt;m pay as little
as $20 for a flu shot. he said.

PROUD
TO BE A
PART OF
YOUR
LIFE.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

~

• Friday, November 2. 2004
• Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
• Light refreshments will be provided
• Public is ~orc!ially invited
• Ol .

Educational Information,
Promotional Items &amp; Door Prizes

T~ Top 25 teams in The Associated
Press college football poll, with first-

place votes in parentheses, records
through Oct 23, total points based on
25 points for a first-place vote through
one point for a 25th-place vote , and
previous ran~ing :

Rec. Pts
1. Southern Cal (50) 7-0
2. 0klahoma(13)
7·0
3. Auburn {2)
8·0
4. Miami
6-0
5. Florida St.
6-1
6. Wisconsin
8·0
7. California
5·1
8. Texas
6·1
9. Utah
7·0
10. GeoJgia
6-1
11 . Tennessee
6-1
12. Michigan
7-1
13. Virginia
6-1
14. Louisville
5-1
15. West Virginia
6-1
16.TeJ&lt;asA&amp;M
6-1
17. Purdue
5·2
18BoiSeSt
7-0
19. LSU
5-2
20 . Arizona St.
6-1
20. Oklahoma St
6-1
22. Virginia Tech
5·2
23. Iowa
5·2
24. Minnesota
6-2
25. Southern Miss. 5-1

l'vs

1,610
1,567
1,486
1.441
1,266
1,265
1.234
1,125
1,103
1,039
1,006
985
765
728
686

1
2
3

639

17

553
552
461
425
425
289
191
93
39

12
19
18
21
22
23
25

4
5
6

7
8

9
10
11
13
14
15
15

Others receiving votes : Basion
College 37, South Carolina 34.
Alabama 14, N . Illinois 14, Pit1sburgh

11, Missouri 7, N.C. State 7, UTEP 5,
Georgia Tech 3, Michigan St. 3, Navy
3, Ohio Sl. 3, Texas Tech 3, Toledo 3,
UAB 3, Florida 1, Oregon 1.

USC, Oklahoma
are fixtures
atop Top 25
No. I Southern California
and No. 2 Oklahoma have
been the top two teams in The
Associated Press Top 25
since the preseason, a ninepoll run that is the longest to
start a season in nine years.
There were few changes in
the media poll Sunday with
no movement among the first
II teams.
The Trojans and Sooners
both improved on Saturday to
7-0 with blowout victories.
The last time the preseason
top two went deeper into a
season unchanged was 1995,
when Florida State was No. I
and Nebraska was No. 2 for
the first I 0 polls.
Not only did USC and
Oklahoma's places in the poll
·stay the same, but this week,
so did their points.
The Trojans maintained
their 43-point lead over the
Sooners. getting 1.610 points
and 50 first-place votes.
Oklahoma got 13 first-place ,
just Iike last week, and I ,567
points.
No. 3 Auburn agam
received the other two firstplace votes.

Rev snap Crew
unbeaten streak
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) Avery John scored his first
career goal in the 25th minute
to help the New England
Revolution
snap
the
Columbus Crew's 18-game
unbeaten streak with a I -0
victory Saturday in the opening round of the MLS playoffs.
New
England, which
entered the postseason at 813-9, handed Columbus its
tirst loss since June 26. The
second game of the twogame, total goals series is Oct.
31 in Columbus.
John sent a left-footed shot
from 25 yards into the top left
corner of the net, catching
Columbus goalkeeper Jon
Busch by surprise.
Columbus, the Eastern
Conference
champions,
almost evened t!te score in the
final seconds of the first half,
but New England goalkeeper
Matt Reis tipped away a direct
kick in stoppage time.
During the second half,
Columbus had two more scoring ~hances. Reis stopped a ,
shot by Kyle Martino m the
77th minute. Then in the 88th
minute, Frankie Hejduk sent a
shot just wide of the post.

Coaches
reminder

'~Living Life Witli 'Diabetes"
Vendors, FREE Healthcare Screenings,

Prep Volleyball: Division IV Sectional

TheAPTop25

Eastern off to district tourney again
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydaitytribune.com
THE PLAINS - For the ninth
consecutive year, the Eastern volleyball team is headed to the district
tournament after an impressive 2520, 25-22, 25-16 victory over
Trimble at Athens High School
Saturday.
EHS ( 17-4) claimed its ninth-

PLEASANT
VALLEY .
HOSPITAL

Varsity tootball coaches are
reminded to send us their season football stats and recommendations for OVP 25 and
district teams as soon as the
regular season · is completed.
You may e-mail them to
sports@ mydai lytribune.com.
fax them to 446-3008 or drop
them off at our Gallipolis office
on Third Ave. Deadline is 5
p.m .. Nov. I0.

straight sectional crown with a
steady dose of aggressive offense at
the net and a relentless defensive
approach that has Eastern set for a
match-up with Portsmouth Clay in
the Division IV semis Wedne sday at
Wellston High School.
. Led by senior Jennifer Hayman's
14 points and six blocks, the Eagles
made short work of their Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking division colleagues en route to the victory.

Morgan Weber and Darcy
Winebrenner also had stron g days at
the net , producing 10 and eight kills
re spectively.
Eastern was also strong at the
serving line. going 73 -of-74 on the
night.
Brittany Bissell and lillian
Brannon each added nine points in
the title game , while Erin Weber had
an astounding 12 blocks up front for
Eastern.

Jennifer Anne' added five points.
and Casey Smilh chipped in four
kill ' for the Eagles .
The Panth er-. a three-seed,
otdvan ce d by defeating Leesburg
Fairfield at Pikewn. and top-seeded
Adena face s Miller in the other half
of the district bracket.
Eastern plays Clay in the second
match at 7: 30 p.m., while the
Falcons and Warriors kick-off the
DiviSion IV semis at 6 p.m.

Prep Volleyball: Division II Sectional

Meigs splits at sectional
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
WELLSTON - You win
some, you lose some - an
adage that picked the wrong
time to show up for the
Meigs volleyball team in its
2004 Division II sectional
Saturday.
The Marauders started its
tournament run with a 25-16,
25- 16, 25- 18 victory over
Marietta in an earlier semitinal, then dropped a heartbreaker to Northwest 25-19,
25-15. 25-19 in the championship game.
The loss to the Mohawks
concluded Meigs' season
with a 14-8 overall record.
Led by a solid frontline
attack that produced 26 ~!Is ,
·the Maroon and Gold consistently
dissected
the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League school apart 111
straight games. They also had
a lot of fun doing so.
Junior Samantha Cole
spearheaded the MHS middle
charge with a 15 points, six
kills and a game-high ei~ht
blocks, while senior outs1de
hitters Renee Bailey and
Megan Garnes added 12 and
three kills, respectively. in
the win.
Garnes also had a teamhigh 24 points, followed by
senior Emily Ashley's three
points and two kills. Bailey
and her fellow classmates,
Cassie Lee and Erin Cullums,
Please see Melp, B:Z

Meigs senior Emily Ashley dives in front of Justin Dowler, left, for a dig Saturday in the
Division II sectional final at Wellston High School. The Marauders lost to Northwest in
straight games 25-19, 25-15, 25-19. (Bryan Waiters)

Falcons
stop
Ohio
runners
ATHENS 1AP1 - Omar
Jaoobs passed for 389 yards
and two touchdowns and ran
for a score to lead Bowling
Green to a 41- 16 win over
Ohio on Saturday.
Jacobs completed 28 of 44 ·
passes with touchdowns of 3
yards to Charles Sharon and
16 yards to Cole Magner. He
also scored on a I -yard run in
the first quarter for the
Falcons, who never trailed .
Steve Sanders caught nine
passes for 185 yards for the
Falcons 15-2. 3- I MidAmerican Conference).
Bowling Green's offense
rolled up 481 yards behind
Jacobs. who directed scoring
drives of 71, 80. 78 and 99
yards. The redshirt sophomore. in his first year as the
starter. has 20 touchdown
pa"es thi' season against
only two interceptions.
Bowling Green held Ohio
(,1-5. I-.J l to 65 yards rushing
on 30 carries and didn't allow
a touchdown unti I the fourth
quarter. when Justin Riley
caughl a 14-yard scoring pass
from Aust~n Everson to make
it 3-1-16.
Stafford Owens scored the
Bobcat s' other touchdown
when he ran hack a blocked
punt 4.J yards 1n the s~cond
quarter.

.

Schilling overcomes· Hendrick plane crashes
en
route
to
NASCAR
race
pain to lift BoSox
BY HANK KURZ, JR.

Associaled Press
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press
BOSlDN - The bloody sock is
now the very symbol of these Red Sox.
a rdllying cry in the shape of a stitchedup right ankle.
Pitching again through so much pain
it put. his start in doubt, Curt Schilling
helped .Boston move halfway to snaring its most elusive prize: a first World
Series championship ~ince 1918.
Backed by another big hit from surprising Mark Bellhorn and unfazed by
a defense that still had trouble getting a
grip. ti)e Red Sox beat the St. Louis
Cardinals 6-2 Sunday night to take a
commanding 2-0 lead.
"''m a little sore. but it don't matter
right now," ~chilling said. "Hopefully. I
won't have to pitch again, but I guarahtee you that team believes in themselves as much as we believe in ourselves."

-COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR-

e!Oa.m.to2p.m.

Monday, October 25, 2004

Jason Yaritek's rare triple, Orlando
Cabrer«'s single off the Green Monster
and a booming double by Gwne I star
Bellhom drove in all of Boston\ runs
with two mils - enough to offset four
errors. including a Series record-tying
three by third baseman Bill Mueller.
Pedro Martinez will try to make it a
3-0 lead on Tuesday night when he
faces Jeff Suppan in Gwne 3 at St.
Louis. The C.rrdinals are a pertect 6-0
at Busch Stadium in this pnstsea'"n .
and Supptm outpitched Roger Clemens
there in Game 7 of the NLCS.
"We like playing on the road,"
Cardinals manager Tony .LaRussa said .

"We love playing at home. We're disappointed we didn't get a gwne here."
Getting stronger with each pitch.
Schilling held St. Louis to four hits and
an unearned run fur six innings .
Doctors once again used sutures to
keep a tendon in place. as they did
before he won Game 6 of the AL chmnpionship series at Yankee Stadium. ~md
he looked even better tltis time.
That stained sock has become so
much a symbol - and target for TV
camems - that Schilling turned it imo
a billboard of sorts by writing "K ALS"
on his right shoe - shorthand f(lr
"Strike out Lou Gehrig's disease."
"I just wish everybody on this planet
could experience the day I just experienced," he said.
When he woke up, Schilling w&lt;tsn 't
sure he could pitch.
"I couldn't walk. I couldn 't move . I
don' t know what had happened. But I
knew when I woke up, there .was a
problem." he said. ·
Schilling willed himself to the
mound. combining w1th three relievers
on a live-hitter. and kept focused on the
main job of shutting down ~he St. Louis
slugger&gt;. Despite Alben Pujols getting
Ple•se see Schilling. B:Z

MARTINSVILLE. Va.
A
Hendrick Motorsports plane crashed
Sunday on its way to a NASC AR
race. killing all I0 people aboard.
including the son. brother and two
nieces of the owner of one of auto racing's most successful organizations.
The Beech 200 took off fro 111
Concord. N.C. , and crashed in &lt;he
Bull Mountain area seven miles from
Martinsville's Blue Ridge Regional
Airport about 12 :30 p.m.. said Arlene
Murray. spokeswoman for the Federal
Aviation Administration.

It was 0\'crca;,t and foggy when the
plane went Jown. but the cause of th~
cra.sh was not immediatelv known:
NTSB spoke,man Keith "Holloway
,aid investi gators were on their way to
the ' ite . wh ich wa' in rough terrain,
and wou!J begin their investigation
Mondav.
Ril"k ·Hendrick owns the teams of
Jeff Gordon. Jimmie Johnson. Terry
Labonte and Brian Vickers . who raced
Sundav in the Subwav 500 in the
Nextei Cup Serie.s at· Martinsville
Speedway
Hendrick \lotorsports iuentified the
Please see Hendrick. B:Z

Akers boots Browns in OT
Bv TOM WITHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND - With the wim1
whipping in off Lake Erie. kil'ker
David Akers told Philadelphia ' s
l'Oaches that 50 yard' was hi' limit
for a field £oal . \1ax .
He needed everv l :~st inch .
Akers· 50-yard ileld goal slithered
L1\er the crossbar 9:5H into mcrtime
as the Eagle' stayed llltdefeated with
a 3.J-J I vil'ton over the Clewland
Browns on Sunday.
"Whew." Akef' said of his ga mewinner. "I was scared I had pushed
the ball. Luckil y. itl was just go&lt;&gt;d .'.·
Donovan McNabb matchcJ a
career high with four touchdO\\ n

pa'Se s - two to Terrell Owens and the Ea ~ le s 16-0 1 overcame· the
upsct-n1indCd Brn\\ '" 1.1 -.J) to
remain !he ~FC's lone unbeaten
team .
After bltm in g ""' their first tive
oppnuem s h~ an a\ eragc of neady
15 poi.nls per game. ihe Eagles were
test~d for the first t1me this season·
ami re , pundcd .
"The) ·re lllll all gllln g to be easy,"
Aker' sa id.
De , pite getting 27 first downs.
.N-1 yard' of offense and being the
first team to lead the Eagles in the
second half !hi' scaso11 . Cleveland
c:nuldn 't quite pull off ihc upset.
"Th ey just Sl'ored last ," said
· Please see Browns. B:Z

�www mydallysentlnel com

Monday, October 25, 2004

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 25,

www mydatlysentmel com

Prep Scoreboard
Otlio High Sehool Football Sco~t
Week•nd Results.

Cha don 35 Mad son 20
Chardon NOCL 49 Ely a Ca h 2
Chesapeake 20 on on Rock H I 14

Saturday 1 Retultl

20T

Akr Buchtel 35 Ak N 0

Ak Garle d 35 Ak Eel 14
Can McK nley 49 N Can Hoove 17
Cn St Xave 13 Cle St gn at us 10
Ce Co l nwood 28 Cle S 0
Hu on 7 SandusJcy St Ma y 0 OT
K ngston {Pa ) Wyom ng 7 Hudson

WRA3
Lakewood S Edwa d 4

C n Moe e

17
Lancas e

F she

Cat h 20

Newa k

Ca1h 3
Lora n Southv ew

3 Bedfo d 7

Malvern 39 Bowers on ConoHon Va ley

6
Ma on Cath 22 T oy Ch stan 21
Ma ns Fe y 27 New Conca d John

Glenn 7
Mento Lake Ca ho c 28 Garf e d H s

T nty 7
Mddle ed Cadna 21 Gates Ml s
Hawken 0
Pa ma H s Hoy Name 21 Cle VASJ 7
A chmond Hts 27 Bea ch wood 0
Shadys Cle 56 B dgepo 0
Shake H s 35 Lakewood 0
Sou h ngton Chalke 38 Ash abula S s

John and Paul 26
Steubenv lie Cath

Ce n

42

Cn

Ha many 4
Tol Ottawa H s 60 You ngs Ch s an

27
To Scott 25 To Woodwa d 6
To Sta I 55 To L bbey 30
Tusca awas Cen Ca h 20 Magno a
Sandy Va ley 13
V enna Ma hews 39 C e H s Lu he an

Ches e and W Geauga 40 W ck ffe 6
C n A ken 28 C n Ta 14
C n Cole a n 56 Cn OakH sO
C n E de 48
Day Cham nade
Ju enne 4
C n F nneytown 35 C n Made a 7
C n GenEse S Bat av aAmea7
C n Ha son 54 Cn Wanu H s20
C n HIs Ch si an 4 ~ Ham ton Badn
4
C n lnd an H 27 C n Wyom ng 0
C n LaSa e 69 C
Pu ce Ma an 0
C n Readng39 C n Dee Pa k 19
Cn SycamoeH M fod7
C n W h ow 48 C 11 Hug hes 30
C c &amp;\li e 34 Cos Ham lton Twp 15
C c ev le Logan E m 20 Ashv e
Teays Val ey 4
C a ks v e
C nton Masse
55
C emon NE 7
Cayon No hmont4 G eenv l e7
C e Bened c ne 46 Cle Rhodes 0
C e Cent Ca h 24 Thomp son
Led gem on 0
C e E Tech 12 Ce John Ma shal 6
Ce Genv e 35 Ce JFK 2
C e Hts 10 Euc dO
C e L nco n Wes 20 Cle E t 8
C yde 28 Ca sta a Ma ga e a 25
Co dwate 49 F Recove y 6
Co s Beechc ott 72 Co s E o
Cots Bexley 49 Hebron Lakewood 18
Cols B ggs 47 Cos Af cent c 4
Co s B ookha en 48 Co s Whe s one

9
Cols
C.ols
Co s
Co s
Co s

E 0
Wa en
Ha d ng
5
Mass on
Wash ngton 2 20T
Youngs Mooney 55 Young s U su ne

C usade s 43 WI amsbu g 0
De Sa es 21 C n MeN cho as 4
Eastmoo 21 Cos W 4
G and v ew 27 M e spo 0
Ha ey 35 New M dd e own

27

Sp

Friday s Results
Ak Coven y 32 Wooste T way 20
Ak Hoban 13 Cuyahoga Fa s Wash
Jesu 7
Ak Kenmo e 31 Ak Cent a Howe

Cos
Ma on F ank n
9
Cos
Independence 13
Co s No h and21 Co s Lnde nO
Cos Ready 70 Day Ch s an 0
Co s Wa e son49 Cos S Cha es o
Columb ana C es v ew 35 E Pa es ne
4
Columbus G ave 58 Pau d ng 36
Cop ey 49 ad C ove eat 2
Co an d Lakev ew 27 New on Fa s 7
C es ne 40 Mt B ancha d R ve da e 7
C ooksv le 36 Zanesv e Maysv e 8
Rocky Ave
Cuyahoga Hts 21
L he an W 7
Day Ca rol 28 Day Stebb ns 7
Day Je e son Twp 45 C n Woodwa d

18
Ak Manches e 4 Nava e Fa ess 6
A ance 54 Can T mken 0
Amanda C ea c eek
28
W ncheste 4
Am he st Stee e 35 Bay V lage Bay 7
Am:love
Pymatun ng Va ey 28
Fa po 1 Ha bo Had ng 18
Anna 56 Un on C y M ss ss nawa
Val ey 6
Anson a 42 New Pa s Na ana T a 2
A canum 48 W A e)Cand a Tw n Va ey

s

7
A ngton 21 Lapse 7

Ashand2 Be v eCea Fork7
AshandCesvew34 GeenwchS
Cent 6
Ashtabu a Lakes de 26 Conneau 20
A caSeneca E 38 N Batmoe 36
Atwa e Wate oo 4 St eetsbo a 2
Avon 49 Obe n 0
Avon Lake 44 Was lake 31
Ba mo e L be ty Un on 30 Summ
Sta on L ck ng H s 0
Bascom
Hopewe Loudon
7
Sycamo e Mohawk 0
Ba ava 28 Mt 0 abWese n B own 7
Be book 16 Ge man own Val ey Vew

3

Be efon a ne 19 U ba na 8
Be evue 36 Uppe Saridusky 29
Be o t W B anch 24 M ne va 20
Beea2 N Roya ono
B uffton 40 Lafayette AI en E 20
8 ado d 4 Cov ng on 7
B unswiCk 3 Pa rna Va ey Fo ge 20
Suey us Wynfo d 29 New Wash ngton
Buckeye Cen 6
Bu on Be ksh e 17 0 we G and
Va ey 9
Byesv le Meadowb oak 2
Wa saw
Ave Vew 4
Ca edon a R ve Va ley 20 R chwood
N Un on 0
Camb dge 41 Uh chsv e C aymon 6
Can G enOak 26 Youngs Aus ntown

F 1ch 6
CanS 4 A ance Ma ngon 17
Can eld 35 Po and 15
Ca ey 21 T n Calve 20
Calse34 Waynesv eo
Ca ol on 3 Cana Futon NW 28
Casstown M am E 26 Sp ng NW 19
Cen e v le 35 Hube H s Wayne 27
Chag n Fa s 42 Au o a 3

Hendrick
from Page 81
dead as Rtckv Hcndnck R1ck
Hendnck s son and a reured
NASCAR
dnver
John
Hendnck R1ck Hendnck s
brother and president of the
orgat1tzatton Ktmberly and
Jenmfer Hendnck
John
Hendnck s 22 year old twm
daughters Joe Jackson an
executtve w1th DuPont span
sor of Gordon s car Jeff
Turner general manager of
Hendnck Motorsports Randy
Donon the team s chief
engme bu1lder Scott Lathram
a ptlot for NASCAR dnver
Tony Stewan and p1lots D1ck
Tracy and Ltz Mornson
NASCAR v. tthheld the
news about the plane from the
Hendnck dnvers unttl after the
race NASCAR spokesman
Jtm Hunter srud The Hendnck

g 6

20

Meigs
SVSM 36

ndependence 56 Co umb a S a on
Co umb a 24
anton 3 1 Be frey {Ky ) 10
Jackson 49 V ncent Wa en 12
Jet e so n A ea 29 Pa nesv le Ha vey 8
Johnstown No h dge 20 Danvn e 0
Kent Rooseve 10 S ow 6
Ke nton 42 L rna Shawnee 7
Ke ner ng Alte 34 St Be na d Aoge,r
Bacon 28
K ngs M 1s K ngs 23 Ham lton Ros s 2
K and 37 Newbu y 0
La ncaste Fa r1 e d Un on 44
Ca o 4
Leav sbu g LaB ae 35
Cha mp on 0
Lees C eek E Cl n on 15 B ancheste

7
Lew s Cen e Olen angy 17 Ch I co he

12
ex ngton 41

M e sbu g W Homes

6
Lbe ty 28 B ookf e d7
be ty Twp Lake a E 38 W Chaste
Lako aW15
l sbon Beave 38 East ake N 6
t e Mam 6 Goshen 3
ock and 26 C n Coun y Day 14
Loga n 43 Ga lpo s Gal a 13
London 3 G eenl e d McCia n 7 OT
La a n C ea v ew 42
LaG ange
Keys one 2 1
Lo u sv e 54 Ak Sp ng 0
Lo u sv e Aqu nas 35 Ve m I on 28
Lucas 7 N Rob nson Co C awlo d
4
Macedon a No don a 36
yndhu s
8 ush 27
Man ua C estwood 35 Ravenna SE 21
MapeH s 21 Wa ensv e Hts 14
Ma a Sen Ma on Loca 24 S dney
Leh man 8
Mar e a 14 At~ ens 6
Ma onE g n 46 Mo a A dgedale 33
Ma on P ea sa nt 26 M G ead 2
Mass I on
Jackson
4
Youngs
Boa dman 0
Mass on Tus aw 28 E Can 12
Maumee 28 Ho and Sp ng 7
MeA he V n o n Co 42 Pome oy
Me gs1 4
McComb 30 Co y Rawson 0
Meehan csb g 40 S Cha es on SE 3
Met:! na Buckeye 4 Su van Back
Ave 7
Met:! na H gh and 24 Wadswo th 2
Men o 35 Lo a n Adm a K ng 6
M ddlelown Fenw ck 20 W Ca 0 lton

3
M dd etown
Mad son
27
Day
h dge 13
M ne a R dr;Je 35 McDonald 6
Mogado e F eld 20 W ndham 13 JOT
Man oev e
3
Co ns Wes e n
Rase ve 2
Mon pel e 34 Me amo a Eve g een 22
N Co lege H I 33 C n Summ t Count 't
~o

Day Meadowdale 37 Day Be man 14
Day Oakwood 48 Ea on 35
Def anee 27 Ottawa G andorf 23
Delawa e Buckeye Va ey 31 Ga on
No thmo 6
Dola Hard n No the n 48 Pando a
G lboa 0
Dove 64 Gnadenhutten nd an Va ey

28
Dub n
Co man
42
Th omas
Wo hngon 3
Dub n Scoto33 G ove C y 14
E L ve poo 21 Zanesv I e 14 OT
E mo e Woodmo e 49 M lbu y Lake 2~
Ey aS 48 PamaS 20
Fa bon 39 Mamsbu g 32
Fa r eld 40 Ham ton 4
F nd ay l be y Ben on 62 Van Bu en

Day 0
N
Jackso n
Jackson M ton
40
Loweve14
N L ma S Range 45 Be In Cen e
Waste n Rese ve 7
N Omsted 48 Fa vew Pa k Fa vew

21
N Adgev e2

Foso a41 Galon6
Frankfo
Adena
27
Ch co he
Hun ngton 12
F emont Ross 30 F nd ay 4
Gahanna 23 G ovepo t D
Garled H s 38 E Cle Shaw 16
Gar ettsv I e Garf e d 36 Mogado e 25
Gates M Is G mou 35 Book yn 0
Geneve. 49 Ash abu a Edgewood 20
G ouster T mble 66 Rae ne Southe n 0
G af on M dv ew 69 Obe I n F elands
8
G ove C y Cen C ass ng 35 Mt
Ve non 21
Hamer Pa r ck Hen y 46 De phos
Je e son 0
Hanove on Un ted 42 l sbon 2
Hav and Wayne Trace 31 Edge on 20
Heath 35 Wh teha I Yea ng 0
H ad Davdson 48 Weste v eN 0
Howa d E Knox 48 F ede cktown 4
Hubba d 56 G a d 28
Hudson 35 Ba be ton 0
Hun ng Val ey Un ve sty 39 Ak

Becksv le7
Napo eon 21 Ma on Ha d ng 0
Ne sonv eYok28 BepeO
New Albany 24
Gahanna Cos
Academy o
New B emen 26 De phos S Johns 0
New Le11 ng on 20 D esden T Va ley 7
New
Ma amo as
F on e
4
Woods eld Man oe Cen 7
New Ph ade ph a 52 Coshocton 8
New A chmond 3 Be he Ta e 0
Newa k 24 HI a d Da by 7
Newa k Lckng Valey 4 G anvle 6
N les McK n ey 27 Sa em 20
No hwood 42 Lakes de Danbu y 3
Norwa k 20 She by 13
No wood 36 C n Tu p n 21
Oa~Habo 18 PotC nton 12
0 d Wash ngton Buckeye Tra 32
Bea sv e 20
0 entengy L be ty 28 Pataska a
Watk ns Memor a 6
Onta o 48 Suey us 6
0 egan S ch 20 To Ch stan 4
0 vIe 4 Mansf e d Mad son 27
Pa ma No mandy t 3 M dd ebu g H s
Mdpa k 3
Pa rna Padua 48 Sedfo d Chane 7
Pembe v le Eas wood 55 Genoa 0
Pe y 48 0 ange 4

dnvers were then summoned
to the NASCAR hauler and
Johnson who won was
excused from Vtctory Lane
Hendnck Motorspor1s 1sks
that those affected be kept 111
your thoughts and pr tyers u d
respectfully requests th 1t pn
vac) be constdered thrm1ghout
this dJtltcult ttme the compa
ny sa1d m a statement released
late Sunday
NASCAR had also spoken
wtth Rtck Hendnck who d d
not travel to Mmtmsvtlle for
the race because he w 1sn t
feeltng well
I was hopmg I d never hear
thiS Mark Manm a dnve
for Roush Racmg told the
Speed Network after the race
Mar1m s father stepmothe•
and halt s ster dted n 1998
when a pmate plane hiS tathe1
was ptlot ng crashed n
Nevada
I JUst feel so bad 1t s unre
al satd Martm h1msell
plot

Dnver Rusty W!I lace also a
p1lot told repor1ers after the
r 1ce T;lladega md thts place
rre the two most dangerous
app1oaches on the ctrcutt I
teel bad that this happened
Maybe the states wtll ftx
somcthtng
Hcndnck h 1d been on a sea
son long celebrauon of tts
20th
anm versary
n
NASCAR s top senes The
orgamzatton has won five of
the senes top titles three
truck senes tttles and one
Busch senes crown
The team has over I00 Cup
senes w1ns nakmg Hendr ck
JUSt the second team O\\ ner n
NASCAR s modern er 1 to sur
pass th 11 n rk
R ck Hendr ck recently
beg 1
groommg
R1cky
Hend 1ck lor a larger role w th
the company
R cky be 0 an hts career dn
v 110 a Busch car tor hts father
but rettred 111 200? because of
a shoulder tnjury caused by a

,e

Schilling
from Page 81
three htts the tno of Lany Walker Scott
Rolen and Jtm Edmonds went a combmed
0-for II
Schilhng 1mproved to 8 2 hfettme n the
postseason and became the first startmg
pttcher to wm m the Senes for three dtffer
ent teams havmg al so pttched for Anzona
and Ph1ladelphm
You could see he was battltng wtth h s
llilkle Boston mllilager Terry Fmncona
said We all know what the ctrcumstances
are He wa' very very good
And Sch!ll111g hobbled most of the way
About the thtrd mnmg I thtnk I tweaked
my h1p flexor a httle btt he satd
Red Sox fans would be happy 1f they d1d
not see thetr team play at Fen way Park any
more th1s year 01 the 33 teams to open the
Senes wtth two vtctones at home 2R have
gone on to wm the champ onsh1p
Then agam Boston led 2 0 111 It&gt; last
appearance wmnmg tw ce at Shea Stadtum
m 1986 before losmg m seven games to the
New York MeLs
Somehow the Red Sox have won tw1ce

desptte a pa r of ~mr eno pertonnances the most e\ e1 111 the open ng two games ot
the Senes
The Cardmals were !lawless n the I eld
on a mtst; 48-Jegree evcnmg vet thetr
baserunn ng was shaky A miSstep by
Reggte Sanders - he stepped O\er second
and had to retrc t - cost them a chance to
score early
Vantek ha.s htt exactlv one tnple m each
of the last hvc regular ;,ea., ons He pte ked a
good lime tor t bonus three bagger
Worktng on three days resl Morns
ret1red hts ftrst two hatter be tote w !lktng
Manny Ra n1 ez u d Dav d Orttz on lull
count pttches V 1f tek then law ched a
dme to Ihe deepest p 1rt ul he park lUI
tow rrd tl e d111 t11angle 1t the 420 I lOt
mark and tore h s p mt w th a sltdc nto
thtrd
For the Cardt l tls 11 was a ltm1l1ar and
unfor1unate pattern In the1r II 9loss n the
opener four runners swrcd alter reach ne
on walks
Bellhnrn made It 4 I 111 the lm r1h Kcv u
Mtllar wa me ked b) t p1kh Mt eller d• u
bled u d Bellh&lt; m h1t d1 vc &lt;II the b e ol
the w 111 111 de 1d centc
OrttL thou 0 ht he d 1dded tw • more runs
n the ltfth whe 1 he h
sh t at Pc kv
Pole n r ght held A day c I cr h1S dr vc

P c~e ngton Cent 34 Westerv I e
Cen 10
P eke ngton N 35 Oubl n Je orne 7
P qua 48 S dney 27
Pian C ty Jonathan Aide 47 W
Jelfe son 0
Plymouth 48 Ashland Map e on 6
Procto v Ia Fa rland 34 Chesh e A ver
Va ley 6
Ravenna 14 Cuyahoga Fal s 7
Aeedsv I e Easte n 27 Waterfo d 12
Reyno dsbu g 44 Ga loway Westland

18
RICh eld Rave e 39 No on 0
Rocky A ve 43 0 ms eel Fa s 42 OT
Rootstown 51 Pen nsu a Wood dge 22
Rosso d 24 Sy van a No thv ew 10
Sandusky 44 L ma S 24
Sandusky Pe k ns 26 M an Ed son 13
Sa ahsv I e Shenandoah 30 Beverly
Fl FyeO
Sheff e d B oaks de 20 We I ngton 17
Sherwood Fa v ew 8 De ance T no a

9
Sm thv lie 49 Je omesv le H sda e 0
Soon 30 Mayle dO
Spa Ia H ghland 27 Ca d ng on
Lnco n 20
Sp ng Ken on A dge 40 Bel e onta ne
Ben am n Logan 3
Sprng N 28 Xena 3
Sp ng NE 34 N LeWisburg li ad 14
Sp ng S 29 Beave c eek 28
Spr ng Shawnee 35 New Ca Is e
Tecumseh 0
Sp ngbo o 33 Lebanon 2
St C a sv I e 17 Ba nesv e 0
St Hen y 24 Ve sa les 17
St Ma ys Memo a 35 L rna Bath 7
St Pa Is G aham 60 Enon G eenon 0
Steubenv e 26 Can Cen Ca h 0
Stewart Fede at Hock ng 20 Co n ng

M le 19
St asbu g F ank n 17 W Lalaye e
R dgewood 7
St ongsv e 48 Med na 21
Suga G ove Be ne Un on 40 Cols
Ha vest Pep 6
Suga c eek
Ga away
68
Newcome stown 0
Sunbury B g Walnu 52 Co s F ank n
Hts 27
Sy van a Sou hv ew 33 Bow ng G een

13
Ta madge 3 G eensbu g G een 2
Tho nv I e She dan 58 McConne sv I e
Morgan 3
Tffn Coumban44 Wlla d 18
T pp C y Bethel 34 Lew s own T
CounyN 7
T pp C y T ppecanoe 27 Lew stown
nd an Lake 6
Tot Cent Cath 24 0 egan Clay 0
Tol St F anc s 31 To Bowshe 0
Tal St Johns 40 To Wa te o
Tol Wh tme 27 To Rage s 6
Tontogany 0 sago 35 Bloomda e
E mwood 28
Trenton Edgewood 40 F ank n 22
'f oy 31 Kette ng Fa mont 12
Tw nsburg
RB
Chambe I n 14
Ba nb dge Kenston 13
Un ontown Lake 28 Mass lon Pe y 18
Uppe Arl ngton 34 Lancaster 33 OT
Van wet 14 Elda 10
Venda a But e 7 T o wood Mad son
4
W L berty Sa em 33 Spr ng Cath
Cent 7
Wapakoneta 20 Ce na 7
Warren How and 3 Struthers 6
Wa en JFK 32 Campbel Memo al 20
Wash ngton C H 20 Mad son P a ns o
Wash ngton C H Mlam T ace 49

H1sboo 13

Wauseon 6 A chbold o
Waynesf e d Goshen 26 M tord Cente
Fa banks 8
We stan 39 A bany Ale)Cande 8
Wes ervll e S 49 Ma ysv le 7
Wh tehouse An hony Wayne
8
Pe ysburg 13
w am sport Westfall 34 P keton 28
W I oughby S 34 Pa nesv le A ve s de

20

w 1m ngton 36

C n NW 7

Wntesvle ndanCeek 9 Welsbug
(WVa) B ooke 12
Wooster 35 Mansf eld
10
Wo th ng on K lbourne 42 De awa e 13
Zanesvl e Rosec ans 19 Ca dwel 7
Zanesvl e W Musk ngum 26 Ph lo 6
Zoa v lie Tusca awas Va ey 20
Cuyahoga Fa IS CVCA 14 OT

s

racmg acctdent Hts father
then made htm the owner ot
the Busch car Vtckers drove to
the senes champ10nsh1p last
season and that Kyle Busch
currently dnves
Hendnck cmplovs more
than 400 workers at the
Charlotte
N C based
Motorsports
compound
whtch mcludes race shops and
a 15 000 square foot museum
and team store
Deputtes barncaded the
entrance to the Hendnck shop
111 Charlotte tllowmg only
team employees to enter the
compound Twenty or so pea
pie could be seen 111 the park
111g lot mstde
A small bouquet of flowers
had been placed at tile
entrance gate
(A5souated Press wmers
Jemta Frver and Paul Nm&gt;ell
111 Charlotre N C and Larr,
0 Dell and Sue Lmdse\ 111
Rtchmond comrrbured to tlus
report)

towered above the marker tor a three run
homer
Thts t me tt looked foul to most every
one except Ort1z He walked halfway to
first base spreadmg hts anns w1de and ges
tunng showmg how the ball hooked
around the pole F1rst base coach Lynn
Jones made sure Ort1z dtdn t get too angry
and Francona talked to the umptres who
huddled bnefly before correctly saymg tl
was mdeed t fau I ball
Pujols htl h1s second double of the game
11d scored m the fourth when Sanders
two hopper bounced off Mueller s chest
C 1brera s two run smgle made tt 6-1 m
the stxth Rolen had t sacnhcc tlv tn the
e1ghth olt a ttmc when St Lout' needed a
btg hn
The Cardmals threatened m the second
when Sanders drew a one out walk and
w,ts runnmg on Tony Womack s smgle to
nghl center Sanders stepped over the bag
however and scr tmhled hack to second
I th nk we re r 1e at the best b 1senm
1mg te tm f \e ever seen LaRussa smd
He J tst mtsscd 1t
I a Russa called tor a double steal and
both rupners got a good JUmp Only one
prohlc 11 M1ke Mttheny h t a I 1e dnve
nj!ht mMueller \\i;JO tagged Sanders tor a 1
c tsy dt ubk play
~

from Page 81
each had two pomts Cullums
added three ktlls and Ashley
chtpped m two more 111 the
VICtOry
Joey Hamng led the pass
mg attack wtth 19 asststs and
Justtne Dowler provtded
another steady dose of back
row defense m advancmg to
the fmal
Meigs was 71 of 74 at the
servmg ltne m the tnumphant
effon
The Marauders sat back
and watched Nonhwest take
down another SEOAL school
(Athens) m the other semtfi
nal settmg up a showdown
w1th the Mohawks for a benh
111 the dtstncts
And 1lthough Metgs had
mother
game
effort
Northwest would make the
most ol 1ts opportumty
We were close but JUSt
not sharp enough wtth our
passmg (agamst Northwest)
commented MHS coach Rtck
Ash
We had too many
unforced errors tn that last

'

2004

match and tt cost us
The Marauders were 49 of
54 servmg and had 21 ktlls
versus NWHS but never
seemed to find thetr rhythm
agamst the Sctoto Valley
Conference school
As a result Ashley Garnes
Lee Batley Cullums md
Dowler fimshed thetr stellar
playmg careers m maroon
and gold
The semors have been a
great bunch of gtrls to work
wtth Thetr lam1ltes too
satd Ash I wtsh them noth
mg but success tn thetr
futures
Garnes led Metgs wtth 13
pomts m her final contest
and Batley added a team
h1gh seven ktlls tn her finale
Ashley h 1d SIX pmnts and
five k1lls for MHS
Lee was 3 for 3 m servmg
agamst the Mohawks and
Cullums fm1shed wtth a ktll
and a patr of pmnts
Cole had three pomts ltve
k1lls and ftvc blocks 111 the
loss whtlc Hamng con
trtbuted 17 asststs Brtttany
Hysell had three kills and
three blocks collecttvely on
Saturday

I found them humorous
he satd It kmd of fueled me
We all thought they were
from Page 81
tunny
Owens came out for
preg 1me warmups escorted
Browns tackle Ryan Tucker
by securtty personnel and
McNabb ltmshed 2~ at 43 was the last Eagles player to
for 376 yards and one mter take the held after tntroduc
ceptton But tt was hts legs t1ons He m •de 1 qutck
that set up Akers wmner a mpact catchmg a 39 yard
28 yard scr llllble - Phtlly s TD pass to g1ve Ph1ladelph1a
longest run of the game a 14 7 lead
that got the ball to mtdfield
He celebrated by t r ng the
There s one reason I d1d ball agamst a bed sheet that
tt McNabb sa1d I was satd TO has BO
open I prefer not to run but I
In the second quarter '
have to take full ad\ antage ot Owens got behmd corner
every opportuntty
back Anthonv Henry tor an
Owens \\hose feud wnh easy 40 yard TO to make n
Browns quarterback Garc1 1 21 I 0 ThiS tune he r pped
- h1s former San Franctsco mother stgn olt the wall was
teammate - dommated the flagged 15 yards tor exces
preg 1me hype had lour sn e celebratton and got an
catches for I09 yards
earful t rom Eagles coach
Owens seated two TDs n A 1dy Red
the first half and after each
I thought that was ntt
the flamboyant w1deout who p1cky sa d Owens All
has etght TO catches already d1d was tear down a s1gn I
thts season took exceptton d1dn t see any harm m 1t
wnh two stgns emblazoned
Garua went 21 tor 36 wtth
wtth derogatory comments 236 y trds and lied 11 II 31
dtrected tt htm that hung \\ nh "10 seconds to go m reg
over the end zone walls
ulatton on a 4 yard run

m:rtbune Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

Your Ad,

Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342

I \IJII 0' \II\ I

friH \\\i\V

Ca

LOSl ANil
FOlJNil
y n e es ed
ea ng mo e abou wha
s ke ese days o seek
hap o emot ona omena
hea
C"~ n ce ns and we
wou d e y much ke o hea
you s o y Whcthe you
e)C pe en e vas pas ve
nega ve a m )Ced bag o
camp e e)' neu a wed s
ove o aa om you
o
g omeew h a
me moe
h s esea ch
ea m desc be "'ha yo
ec en fl)(pe ence o he p
seal&lt; g was ke pease
co ac e he Be sy Randa

(304) 675-1333

s

Los b ack ca ye ow eyes
name of MaJc tam y pe
m ss ng s ne e De
5
L nco n H a ea Rewad
call 17401992-3695

70
YARll SALE

110

AU ad• must be prepaid

GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REF NANCE
YO UR HOME

FREE APPROVED
HOME LOAN S

P ocess ng o rna f om
hom e
Gen ne oppo un ty
FREE su pp es FT PT
00" S al sfact on
Gua an eed
Cat (702 933 4666
(24 hou s)

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1 800 370 4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED B~ US
VETERANS

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED!

@2004

$$$Great Pay $$$
R VE RS DE

AU CT ON

HHt \hmTJl

HI L1 \hNll D

Rae ne
Nu s ng Ass stant C asses
bog nn ng No embe
1
200 4 h u Novembe
8
3 04 34
38 5
200 4 f you en1oy e de y
740)256 6989
banda @hsc wvu edu o
peep e an d wan o become
Ma yn Sm h ( 304)342
a membe of ou he a th ca e
4275 A ep es w be he d
eam
pease s op by
n hes c es can dace
Rocksp ngs Rehab I a on
Tha k.s ve y much o you Abso u e Top Do a U S Ga po s
ca Cen e
a
36769
n e as
n sha ng you S ve and God Cons
Rocksp ngs
Road
0
s o y and we ook o wa d o P oa ses God R ngs U S
Pome oy Oh o 45769 and
hea ng
Cu ency MT S Co n Shop
ou an app ca on o he
5
Seco d
Aven ue
Green Acres
c asses Ex end ca e Heath S eels n Rae ne a
Ga po s 740 446 2842
Regional Cente Inc
Se v ces nc s an equa Mun cpa Bu ld ng Pease
Has an lmmed ate
oppo u y emp eye tha a ach sa a y equ rem en
open ng for Treatment
app ca on
ercou ages
wo kp ace w h
2 a. urn nun so m doo s
App a ons w be accept
lnst ucto
d esy MF O'V
w sc een &amp; g ass one 32
ob Requ eme s
h sday Novembe
ed un
w de
o e
36
de
H gh SchOo dl'p om a o
a on 1 2004
740 9 2 3669
GED equ va en
Ce e s now accep ng - - - -- - -- Fw me pas ons ava ab e esumes o he pos on o Waned
Wo k ng w h MRIDO adu s 0 ec 0 0 soc a s e ces Expe enced sa es pe so n
ca d da e must posse ss needed to g ow ng compa
n Va ed sett gs
s 0 g ve ba a d w e n ny Sa espe son w be
Send esume o
wga age uppe s P ans o
omm un ca on
5 ~ s expec ed o rna n an cu en
nte est ette to
Ches e a ea P eapp o ed
Mad a d
Med ca e and cu s ome sa es and e a 10n
G een Acres Reg ana
nanc ng 740 949 2 94
MDS kno w edge LSW w h sh ps
Center Inc
expe ence n ong e m ca e Sa espe son w be equ ed
Attent on Personnel
PO Box 240
0 cfe ed but no eq u ed o es ab sh new custome s
Qua f ed ca nd da es pease n he
s ate a ea
Lesage WV 25537
on ac
Cha a B own Fu me post on
Fax 304 762 2862
4x4
s
For
Sale
..
:::::::::::::::::::::::
725
Announcement
.................. 030
McGu e Ad m n s a 0 a Good company benef s and
Emal
~~~
333
Page
ee Curr r1 ss o pay based on
garc@dlrecwav com
Apartments for Rent
440
M dd epa Oh 45760 EOE sa es Va d d ve s censed
EOE
Auction and Flea Market
080
and anspo a on equ ed
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor es
760
EMT s Send es me to CLA Box
&amp;
Auto Repair
770
p0
BO)C 469
354 54 8
Autos for Sale
710
Ga po s Oh o 4563
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Wa ned
Med ca
Bu ldmg Supplies
550
Pa T me
s
an
w
h e~pe ence fo
Ass
Busmess and Buildings
340
Techn c a s
n
phys c an off ce A un que
Busmess Opportumty
210
Ga po s a ea Mus ha e
e ab e an spa a on Pay pas 1 on equ r ng ~ no w
Busmess Tratnmg
140
ed ge o compute s and da a
based o e)(pe e ced Mus
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
en y a so CD and CPT
have know edge n a ope
Campmg EqUipment
780
cod
ng Re able an spo a
a g sys ems &amp; ha dwa e
Cards of Thanks
010
on
needed No weekends
con gu a ons Ap p ca n s
190
Chlld/E der1y Care
o
ho days
equ ed
cal
us
be
ougo
g
ha
e
a
p
ease
Electrlcai/Refngerat•on
840
Bene s ava ab e Sa A y
e11 2458 o app y on ne!Qhod pe son a ty Pease
Equ1pment for Rent
480
ne go ab e w h e)(pe ence
'!f!:!W n Q_c;; son co m
subm esume o C A Box
Excavatmg
830
A exb e empoy e Ma
572 co Ga po s Da y
Farm Equipment
610
Loca company seek ng a
esu me o 8 0)( 558 c c
T bu e
PO Box 469
Farms for Rent
430
d e w h a C ass B COL
Ga po s Da y T bun e PO
Ga
po
s
OH
4563
Farms fo Sale
330
w h HAZ MAT o ha
Box &lt;169 Ga po s OH
ForLease
490
p apa e and bu k ues Ia
45631.
For Sale
585
hOme 'lea g o Two yea s
150
For Sale or Trade
590
expe ence s pe e cd
Up o $9 25 h w h
FrUitS &amp; Vegetables
580
L'&lt;~TRUCTION
Bene s c ude hOa h den
qua ed e:&lt;pe ence
Furn shed Rooms
450
a and e nsu ance 40 K EKce e pay a d be ne s
General Hauling
850
Ga pols Career Co ege
G1veaway
040
(Ca ee s C ose To Home
Ca Now
Happy Ads
050
Ca Today 740 446 436 7
1 an-463 6247 ask for
Hay &amp; Gra1n
640
1 BOO 2 4 0452
ext 2659
BARN A
Sou h 5 m es
be ow he Dam EV ERY
SATU RDAY
@
6pm

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

m

s

DRYWALL
nsa FnshPan ng
Ca pen entry Ba h ooms
Residen a Comma c a

Personals

110
810
310
510
410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170
540

860
420
320
220
740
570
005

Pets for Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Professional Servlcos
Rsd1o TV &amp; CB Repair
Reel Estate Wantod
Schoota Instruction
Seed Plant &amp; Fertlllzar
Situations Wanted
Space tor Rent
Sporting Goods
SUV s for Sale
Trucks for Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies
Wan ted To Do

560
820
230
160
360
150
650
120

Wanted to Rent
~ard Sale Galllpo s
~ard Sa e Pomaroy/Middle
~ard Sale Pt Pleasant

470

460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
180
072
074
076

.

POSTAL JOBS
S 4 62$2092'l'i Nowh
g Fo app ca ons 6 ee
go e nmen ob o ca
Ame can Assoc o abo
9 35998042 24 h s

Housec ean ng $10 00 pe
h (740)446 3385

11\1\1111

By Owne US 35 n Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bed oo ms) La ge Sun
Room 12x32
a new
2
Ca pe Fu Basemen
ac e ot $38 500 (304 675 Oh o 45701 740)592 972
2933
Whe e You Ge
You
Moneys Wo h

r

ealestlte edverllling
n this newspape •
subject to the Fede al
F•l Houa ng Act or 1968
which makes It egal to

W[l; &amp;
ACREAGE

count y P vate env on
ment
Phone (7d0 446

3897

advert se any

60
Abso ute Go dm ne
vend ng mach es
exce
ent oca ons a 0 $10 995
BOO 234 6982

"'

PUBL SH

o g n o any ntent on to
make any such
prehtrence m tatlon o
d scr m nat on
Th s newspaper w I not
know ng y accept
advert sements ro eal
estate which 11 n

v olerlon ot he ltw Our

PRoFES'iiON-\.1

eade 1 a e he eby
Info med that a
dwell nga advert sed n
th s newapape a e
ava able on an equa
opportun ty bases

SER\ ll."'ES

1..,---iiiliiliiiii--'
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Un ess We W n
888-582 3345
1{:1 \1 1-..1 \II

1 ana 2 bed oo m apa
Want to buy a 3 bed oom 2 men s lu n she d and unlu
bah home Ga age base n she d secu ty depo s
equ ed o pets 7 40 992
men 3 10 aces s des
able A cash C ose n 2 22 8
weeks Me gs Ga a o
A hens County 740)992

6300
h:l\1\1 ....

Homes
om
Fore osu e VA Hud o
ng 800 749 8 06 eJI

House 3 Bed oom
2
Sa h Hea
Pump new
Ca pe W ndows &amp; Roo
(310
Ave Vew 2 Sm h S No
Mo ey Down o qua fy ng
Buye $425 man why Ren
0
Down Paymen a d (304 675 2749
f na ncng ava ab e w h
House n Kanaug a 0 d
app oved c ed
Ave age
c ed qua f es you
down Fa me s Ad Ga pols O h
paymen t has kep you f om $40000 2 a es K ode
Nea
Ad
buy ng th s s you chance
nves men
o own you own hOme
135 000
you have a do wn paymen
bu wou d ~e o co nserve
we offe ow down paymen
p og ams a so G ea
e
es a es Loca ompany
oca o s
Mo g ~g e

H()t1;l"
FOR Rf.l\T
0
Dow
Paym e
and
f na c ng a a ab e w h
Ave age
app oved c ed t
c ed t qua es you
down
paymen has kep you om
buy ng th s s you chance
o own you own home
s ave
you t1a e a down paymen washe dye
bu wou d ke o conse ve
$400 monl h
we offe ow down paymen
p og ams a so G ea n e
es a es Loca company
Mo gag e
Loca o s
740 992 7:l2

May ake
home o

ess o
ade o moo
ock 740 992

2306

wwworvbcom
Home L 5t ngs
s you home by ca

ano SchOOls 12748

g

1740 446 3620

ML..O.LIAM OlJS

n he Wes V g n a A my
you a e
Na ana Gua d
be ween he ages of 7 35
o have p om tay serv
ce you won wan to pass
hsup Fo Oppotuntes n
you a ea ca I
30~ 675

Seeklnjf 39 People
Locally
who want to ea n money
wh e os ng we gh show ng
othe shOw
740 441 t9B2

FREE SAMPLES

EOE AA MF

l'S'CHOI Uto!S r
We a e a we
espec ed
na ana p ec ce de a ng
wth ge a cs We a e n
need o a cens ed psycho o
g s who s n e es ed n
wo kngpa
me We ofe a
good s a g s~ a y and he
ao y o pa c pa e n ou
40 K Ca
Psych o og s
T an s ons a 877 734 203
o ax esume o 877 734

2030

TELEMAR KETERS NEED
ED No EKpe ence OK $7
9 Pe Hou Easy Wo 1c
888 974 JOBS

BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes woo c
0 ve om S344 o $442
Wa k o shop &amp; m oves Ca
740 446 568
Eaua
Hous ng Oppo u ty

Fam
Rnom
Base en G s hea &amp; a
A ached G A ag e 2 C a
Ga age n ba clo: w n u nace
Aeeluceo
Phone
P ce

13041773 9561
38A 2BA 5 129 aces
G een Townsh p c ose to
schoo P cad o se More
nto 740 446 7377

Home For S1~
Hand bu og home 6 yeas
a d P va e w h 10 ac es
D ve Needs Wo k C BBS A
112
COL A Endo semen s Ca Sunn ng v ew 3 B
bath
Ope
n
oh
740 367 7899
Flnenc ng evlllbll with

Wa ed ve n Cae Gve
o
E de y
Lady
Hou sekeep ng
Cook ng
equ ed ca 30 4 675 55 8 Reasonab y
304 675 8635
0 304 675 2 78

hookup
secu y
e e ence

oed oom
house
Au and ou o wa e &amp; 2
bed oom hou se n Porne oy
App ca o s be ng aken o
740 992 7546
bed oom n
e y c ea n
OtJ n ry sen ng ye c ose o
ow wasne a ye s ave
oge nc ded Wa e and
ga bage nc uaoo To a e ec
c w hAC enan payeec
c 5300 depos $375 pe
ao
men n No pe s No smok
Conven en
o a on
no
ng
~ 0 446 2205 o
40
pe s S565monhpus e e
446 958 5 ask to
enc e &amp; depos 1
40 446

4926

5837

e ge a o

740 992 7321

H gh
Schoo
Juno s
Sen as and P o Se v ee
you can
vacan pes I ons ::;.:_;::::.;.:__ _ _ __ _

Coun y
Ac on
nc w be ak ng
app ca ons o a Pa t tme
Cooks He pe
Mus be
c ean
nea
po e and
dependab e
Mus have
expe ence cook ng o a ge
g cups o peo p e App y by
Wednesday Oc abe 27
2004 b~ 3 00 p m a he
Pe sonne Dep a men
D
Seco nd
S ee
Po n
P easan WV 8 am o 4
p m No e epho ne ca s

I

p ete ence I mltat on o
d aerlm nat on baaed on

ga po s a 9 (1 o ege com
ed ed Membe
A ed ng
or
dapenda
Col ega

170

740 379

AI

WWOA.

A
C

740 446 6865 0

2923

r

INSURED
NOTH NG TO SMA L

ScHoots

Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homes for Sate
Household Goods
Houses for Rent
In Memonam
Insurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equ pment
Livestock
Lost and Found
Lots &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous Merchandise
Mob te Home Repa r
Mobile Homes for Rent
Mobile Homes for Sale
Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Muslcallnstruments

992 2167

0

Oh o Loans On y

cs com

mob e homes s a ng a
$270 pe man h Ca 740

Nee 2 BR house S A 60 4
m N of Ha ze $400 mo
sec
depos 1 no pe s

New Oakwood mega so e Na cy
B olo;e
ea u ng
Homes
by ~;F-~--":":---""'1
Oakwood
F eetwood &amp;
!\10111UFORo~?T\IFS
G es One stop shOpp ng
IUJ"
on y a Oakwood Homes of
Barbou sv e WV (304 736
2 bed oom a eect c 4
3409
m es no h o Hoze $350
SAVE SAVE SAVE
month
sec dep os &amp; e
Sock modes a o d p ces e ences 740 446 6865 o
2005 modes a v ng Now 1740 379 2923
Mob e
Home s
Co e s
15266 U S 50 Eas A hens

MB 5263

Wo k Fom Hom e
BOO 2 0 4689
$500-S 500 Mo h
Pa
me
$2 000 $8 000 Mon h
Fu tme

Persona Computer
Requ ed
1 SOQ-.913 2823 ext f:1

1740 245 5157

NEW PURCHASES
REF NANCE S
$0 OOWNI $0 DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
MPROVEMENTS NO
CREO T BAN KRUPTC ES
WELCOME

www com

::ma:

997 28)(52 Oo ub ew de Condo 3 bd m 2 ba hs w
(co nverted o ea es a e 3
ve
be d oom 2 ba h ea
k chen Ba n shed ca po
5 ac es Adamsv e Road
P vate sett ng $77 000 m

t\:1 rt.N liON!

$$$HUGE WEEKLY
INCOMESSS

DATA ENTRY

-

~l·.o. ..-R"•&gt;~.s.:.~. .~ ~..~.~o.~.~.RE.~.:.:.m.s~ ~r.·o.....~.~.~.~.~--~

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Ht t r WANTF.Il

Work from home
F exlble Hours 1

JUST SAY

CHAfJGE II1

How you con hove borders and Qrophlcs
added to your classified ads
Borders $3 00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$ t 00 for larQe

o l s p l a v Ads

All Dl•pl•v
1 :z. Noon 2
Bu• n • • • D • v • Pr or To
Publlc•t:lon
Sund•y Dl•pi•V 1 00 p " '
Thur•day t'or Sund•y•

-..IIHIIIS

Fee k ens 8 weeks a d
to
a ned
ndoo
0 d anyone whO a ended wo med 3 abby 2 wh e
he F anc s E Sha u te s o ange 740 367 7574
Auc on on 9
04td an
ns uc on book and acces
s o es o a Man gam e y
Wa d sew ng
ma ch ne
wou d
Mod e UHT 980

Browns

(740) 992-2156

Oeacl'~~ecs-

Mondav t:hru Friday
8:00 a.rn. t:o 5:00 p.rn.

W&lt;J \NNOIJN( UI1·NI'

31\.egtster

Or Fax To (740) 992 2157

Otftfee //dar.-.s=-

r

Sentinel

m:rtbune

To Place

ter

NO DOWN PAYMENT111

1740 388 0 64

1 2 Bah
u Basemen
ad epo OH Code
17 o ca (740 992
743

3.

Bed oom

House
End S

Bed oom 3 Sa h
ocateel n Ga po s ove
oo kn Q he Oh o R \le
ve 3000 sq f1 on 3 94
c es Code 825 o ca

740)44 0323

Moun£ HoMFS
lllR SAu:

4b
n Sy acuse
OH
$600/month $800 depos &amp;
3b n Sy acuse $475. man n
Hud App oved bO n no Pets

4x70 87 C syton 3 bed 1304 675 5332
oo m 2 beth C A new ca
pet ceem c a Wli.She &amp;
dye $0000 740)388

040

Ape men s
ea
space
a so o en 740 992 3702

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE
ownhouse
ap a men s
and o sma houses FOR
RENT Ca
1

�Page B4 • Th'e Daily Sentinel
0

r..__
, ..~
FOR
- ·Rmr
- ·1)·· _.1r ~ 1r
. .~.--·~-IJfOS.SAu:-·......l r
One bedroom apartment , NEW AND USED STEEL
no pets, 1n Pomeroy, Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
(740)992-5858
Angle,
For
Concrele
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
One bedroom garage apart- Graung
For
Drains,
ment, kitchen furnlsheel , Onveways &amp; Wal~ways . l&amp;L
i400, (740)992-3823
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
fl'leasant Valley Apartment
Fnday, Sam-4 30pm. Closed
Are now tak1ng Appllcahons
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
fo, 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR.,
Applications are take n Sunday. (740)446-7300

)

Monday lhru Friday, from
9 :00 A.M .--4 P.M. Office is
~ocated at 1151 E\lergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No is (304)675·5806.

i'.HO

Pole Barn 30x5011.1 OFT
$6395. includes Painted
Meta l, Plans. Instruction
Book, Slider. Free Delivery
(9371559-8385

Rascal Scooter R230 3·
Tara
Townhouse Wheeled, New Batteries
Apartments, Very Spacious. $900 (304)675-1542
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA., 1
1!2 Bath, Newly Carpeted. Sears pull behind dump
Adult Pool &amp; Baby PoQ~. €art. Amana 18ft. refrigeraPatio, Start $385/Mo. No tor. mob ile home steps
Pets, Lease P l u~ Security 30"•27". (740)388-8997
Deposit Required. D.ilys:
Vent Free. 3- Piaque Gas
740·446·3481 ; Evemngs:
Heater. (propane or Natural)
740-367·0502 .
Manual Control $143.95
Twin Rivers Tower IS accept· Vent Free, 5·Piaq ue Gas
(Aulomatic
ing appllcations for waiting Heater.
Control)
list for Hud-subsized. 1· br, Thermostats
apartment. call 675 -6679 $239.95
aluminum Fiberatad .Paint
EHO
(Great for Mobile Homes)
\ IIIH II \'\IJI..,I
S.ga1. Bucke t $29.95

r

":w I

....

~,

.-----~-

Paint =~~~rdwara

r:

~

BIOGk, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels. etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Call 740-245-5t21.

Appliance
Warehouse
in He nd e"on. WV. p,e.
Owned applicanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty.
we do service work on all
Make and Models (304)6757999

r

Monday, October 25, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

2000 Dodge Dakota Ex. Cab
$5495;
99
Mercury
Mountaineer $5295; 97 Jeep
Gr. Cherokee $4195; 2000
Ford Ranger $3695; 96
Dodge Ex Cab $4595; 2000
Dodge Caravan $3195; 98
Dodge Caravan $2895;
2000 Dodge St,a1us 52595;
2001 Gr. AA4 $4500; 98 Gr.
AM $2195: 97 Chev S- 10
Blazer $4500; 96 Dodge
Dakota 4x4 $3500; 99 Pont.
Suntire $2195; 95 Ford F250
w!lift gate S31 00; 96 Dodge
work van $895; 94 Jeep
Wrangler 4x4 sharp $3195;
96 Geo Tracker $1395; 99
Escort ZX2 5 sp. $2795; 98
Monte Carlo $2495.

8 8. D Auto Sales
Hwy . 160 N.

(740)446-6865.
2002 Buick Century· Special
Edition. Color· light sanddritt
metallic, mileage· just under
53,000 miles, interior- Cloth
seats, loaded· concert
sound system II, e)(ceptionally clean car. (740)4460925.

Monday, October 25, 2004

4x4
FOR SALE

1998 GMC Jimmy SLS,
great cond1t1on, pwr seat.
windows , locks, sunroof,
new transmission, 106K
miles,
asking
$7,000.
740)446-8910.

f1JU

m~~
~~---riiiiiiiiiiiiiii--'

ACROSS

95 Ford Aerostar XLT.
44 ,000 miles, one owner,
excellent condition,. $6,(X)O
OBO. call (740)985-3571

I

2002 Honda 400 Ex., good
condition, $3,500 080. Call
(740)256-1 526. 740-645·
0446.
2003
Custom
Harley
Davidson Sportster. 3,000
miles,
$7,000.
Call
(740)645-3331 '

MYERS PAVING

Whaley's Auto
Parts

-

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and FinanciaiServices

on2ndAvt
Middlepor1. Ohio
145N. Second Ave.

Box 189

Open Daily 10:00-5:00

Middleport
4. ~ 11 3 45760

Sun. 12:00-4;00
Closed Tue~ .
992 -5152

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

MlscEuANro!Js - ~
MEROiANDiliE

For Safe· 1200 lb. Round

' bales of milced hay. Call after

42 inch Craftsman snow
blade with all anachments.
plus wheel weights &amp; 2 sets
of cha1ns. Like new $125
Phone (740)446-9484. .
Country Flame wood burnfireplace
insert.
ing
Automatic control and fan.
$400. (7 40)446-7692
Dell lap top computer like
new, 6 hrs. use, anti virus
sohware, case, $700, 1.740508-0060 after 5 740-992·
0958
For sale
Fire
(304)882-2537

$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
Impounds! Cars from $500
lor listings 800-39 1-5227
EXT 3901
- -- - - - - 1960 Corva11. Runs good.
good body. needs interior
_w_o_
, k_(,_7_
40_:)_
44_6_-7_9_
1o_._ _

1991 Pon tiac Grand AM.
Good
Condi tion. 4 cyl ,
Wood
$500/0BO (304)675-2822

1998 Explorer lor sale
Galilee telescope, new
$2,0QP
OBO. (740)441-152 1
never used. $350, 1·740·
ask for Tim
508-0060 atter 5 740-992·
0958.
1998 Oldsmobile "Cutlassw
GLS. V6 , Auto, PS, PB, AIC
JET
Pwr Seats. Windows. Or
AERATION MOTORS
locks, T1lt. Cru1se. AM I FM
Repaired, New &amp; Rebui~ In
Stereo. Tape and CD.
Stock. Call Ro n Evans, 1Leather
Interior. Alu m
800-537-9528.
Wheels.
Keyless entry.
Excellent CondiliOn mside
and out 101 ,000 m1les
REAL ARMY
$4,000 (304)882·2796
CAMOUFLAGE
Sam Somerville's. Sfnce 1964 .
by Sandyv1ll&amp; WV PO . Satellites. Ford 87 Mustang, 2 3, 5
TV Sale$'lnstattat1on 1304)273- Speed, wrecked. $500 OBO
5655
call (304)675-8872

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley

•

Help_Wanted

Hospital

Home Medical

Equipment is currently accepting resumes fo_r
full ti me. Day shift Respiratory Ther apist.

COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR

1997 Prowler, 24ft., Sleeps
6. Mint Condition, $6000.

or

Certified Respiratory The ra pist.

M ust be

a graduate of an approved Respiratory
Therapist program. Must be lice nsed or
eligible for licensing in the states of WV and
Ohio.
Excellent" salary. holidays, health insurance
single/family pian. dental plan, life insurance.

vacation. long-term disabi lity and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
% Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Reviled Code, electiona 3501.11 (G) ,
5705.18.5705 .25
Notice 11 hereby
given that In pursuance
of
a
Ralolutlon of the
Board . of Town1hlp
Tru1teas
ol
lha
Townahlp of Orange ,
Reedavllle
Ohlo1
paiHd on the 41h day
of May, 2004, there
will be IUbmltlad to a
vote of lhe people of

L1\;Ull:NA!-lT ~
LETS HUSTLE!

West
• 8 5

Eas t

•

J 6 32

•

•

A 6 4

South

I

I

moll brllllll. hl:ltld 1111t l Qllas

IUISIH PIRIII'IV, IIIII

Tree Service

45Th~

pha iOIT&amp;ot

North

East

4•

Pass
All pass

2. 3.

.BARNEY .
h.~-r:~

IF

WE'D A STUCK

WIF BASEBALL,
WE COULDA

MEBBE.
BUT IT

WE'D B E

AIN'T ALL

NOO YAWK

ROSES,

LIVIN' IN

!!

LUKEY !!
THINK

'BOUT

~mtette's

IT •• •

Rouse Cfeaning Service
THE BORN LOSER
f\1&gt;-1/£ 'IOU £~£R """

"'I

C~SlOCI(.(C&gt;WAAt

Tf-\ilo.\'1'()1,) I&gt;,LW/'&gt;,'(~
WEAR OUt t f-\E

lt ~/&gt;-'IS ABOUI

t.I'A~K WD O!'

1·7 4-0·84-3·5382

'(OUR, WORK ...

YOU~':.

PO\CIL."'&gt;

Terry's &amp;Jglnes
X20 b :-.1 \ l a111 St.
1\ l ll WI'll\'

ht"' ltk l . &lt;ll"t'~ · ~ Fi-ui1 S1anJ

1•

+Q

What do bridge card·play themes and
London buses have in common? If you
can work that out. were reading this col·
umn exactly two weeks ago. and (the
hard part!) can remember the key p01nt of
that deal, you wi ll -have no trouble with
this one.
~
How should· East defend to defeat four
hearts after West has led the diamond
queen?
When partner opens the b1dding. you
have a good fit for his suit. and the next
player makes a takeout double, you may
act with fewer values than usual. Hence
West's two-diamond ra1se. Also, it's fun to
bid when wea~! North's lhree·diamond
cue-bid announces a strong hand, one
with which he expects to make a game.
East migh t put on the pressure by jumping to five diamonds, but he has too much
defense. (Note that five diamonds doubled costs 300 I
East could hope tor three red-suit winners, but a black-suit trick was unlikely.
Then the bus arrived. PuHing his hand out
to make sure that he boarded it, East
. overtoo k the diamond queen w1th the
kin g and shifted to his singleton club,
which South ran to dummy. He played a
trump, but East won immediately with his
ace, underled the diamond ace to put his
partner back on lead, and received a club
ruff to defeat the contract .
A card-play theme is not seen for months.
then two or three deals highlighting that
topic appear in quick succession. If you
have ever wa ited for a London bus, you
· will know that you won't see one for an
hour or more, then two or three will come
in a row.

&amp; Pan .,

:\ ( 11

said subdivision at a
General Election to
be held In the
Township of Orange,
Ohio, at lhe regular
places
of
voting
lhereln, on the 2nd
day of November,
2004, the question ol
levying a ta~ , in
excess of the ten mill

limitation, for the benalit
of
Orange
Township for the pur·
pose of Fire protaclion
Said tax being: 2 A
renewal of a tax of 2
mills at a rate not
exceeding 2 mills lor
each one dollar of valuatlon,
which
amounts to twenty
cents ($0.20) for each
one hundred dollars
of valuation , for live
(5) years. The Polls for
said Election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o"clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N. Ihle
Chairperson
Alia D. Smllh
Direclor
Doled Sept. 5, 2004
(tO) 41 -11 , 18, 25
- - - - -- - Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, eleclions 3501 .11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice fs hereby
given thai In p_ur·
auance
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Townahlp
Trustees
of
the
oi
Township
Columbia,
Albany
01\Io, paosed on the
7th day of June. 2004.
there will be lubmll·
tad to a vote of 'tha
. people of said 1ubdl·
vl1lon at a General
Election to be held In
the Townahlp of
Columbia Ohio, at lhe
ragular placee of vot·
lng therein, on the
2nd day of November,
2004, the qut11Ion of
favylng a tax , In
exceao of the ten mill
llmllatlon, for the benalit of Columbia
Townahlp lor the purpoae of Maintaining
and operating ceme·

(il'TWr.tl

Si ,mdh\

(j~' llC1\II i11 :2 S\'~ 1 .: 111 -: :1i1c1
R.l l[ .\ir . \i~ c ·omprl' ... \1\r~
Opt'n ~ : JU .(d i O !\J.f':

Sat. K: .W-2 :110902- IOJJ
l'1d.·ur ;md ddiiO:I) •n1 i~c­
~1 1\1 l.c'l\i(i n ~ KLw-lnL Hl'ala'

terles.
Said tax being: 2 An
additional lax of 1 mill

at a rate not

exceedw

ing 1 mlfl for each one
dollar of valuation ,
whlc:h amounts to ten
cents ($0.1 O) for each
one hund red dollars
of valuation, lor five
(5) years. The Polls for
said Election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of lhe Board
of Elections. of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N.lhle
Chairperson
Rita D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. s. 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18,25
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, alec·
tiona 3501 .11 (G),
5705.19. 5705.25
Notice Is hereby
given that in pursuance
of
a
Resolution ol lhe
VIllage Council of the
VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio, passed on the
2nd day of August,
2004, there will be
submitted to a vote of
the people of said
subdivision
at a
General Election to
be held In the Village
of Middleport. Ohio,
at the regular places
of voting therein, on
the 2nd day of
November, 2004, the
question of levying a
tax , In excess of the
ten mlfl limitation, for
the
benefit
of
Middleport VIllage for
the
purpose
of

Current

expenses.

Said tax being:
A renewal of an exlstw

lng tax of 1 mlfl at a
rate not exceadlng 1
mill for uch one dof·
lar of valuation, which
amount&amp; to ten cents

($0.10) for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation , lor live (5)
yeara. The Polls lor
uld Election wllf
open at 6:30 a.m. and
ramafn open un1ff
7;30 o"clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of 1he Board
of Elections, of Meigs

County, Ohio

~'R~

John N. lhfe
Chairperson

Rita D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept s. 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18, 25

PUBLICNOTICE ,
A road viewing wfff
be held Thursday.
October 28th at 10:00

a.m. to vacate a portion of T-327, Shee1s
Road.
in
Salem
Township. The por·
tion to be vacated is
beginning at the junction
with
T·326.
Pilgrim Ridge Road,
thence in a northerly
direction 0.36 mile.
The viewing will be
held at the road site.

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
74()-949·2217

Siding • New Garages
• Repl acement
f

Wi n dow~ • Rontl n~

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740~992-5232

regular

meeting .

Everyone interested
is Invited to attend
both the viewing and
the hearing.
10118.25

Public Notice

PEANUTS
IT' 5 YOUR MOM .. 51-!E
WANTS TO KNOW WI-lEN
I{OU'RE COMING I-lOME ...

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

tendent's

office

at

740-667-6079 . Bids
will be opened in the
treasurer's office at
noon
on
Friday,
November 12, 2004.
The board res e r ves
the rfght to reject any
or any part ol the bid.
Bids
should
be
labeled
" Bfd
for
School Bus" and
mailed t o:
Eastern local School

District
Trea s urer 's Office

BID FOR SCHOOL
BUS
50008 Slate Route
681
Reedsville .
Ohio
45772 .
(1 0) 25. (11)1

LEASH ..

New&amp; Used

HOWARDL.

• "-''" South Church St.

WRITESEl

Ripley, WV 25271

SUNSHINE CLUB
1-!0W OLD
IS HE.?

1-800-822-0417

•ROOFING
•IIOME
MAINTENANCE
.SEAMLESS
GUTTER
*Free Elllmaleu

I

"W V's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac, Buick , Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"'

Eastern Local School

District, 50008 State
R®te
681 .
Reedsvlffa .
Ohio
45772 is accepling
bids for a 71 passen·
ger
school
bus.
Spaclflca1ions for bus
can be obtained by
calling the superin·

SOMETIME~
11M Ot-.1 A

CALL.. .
I FEEL LIKE

'

949-1405

Bid lor Bus

I KNEW

Dean Hill

The hearing for the

vacation will be held
at
the
Commissioner ' s
olfice at 1:00 p.m.,
October 28th , during
the Commissioners '

IMPORTS
Athens

BISSEll

BUILDERS InC.

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

Public Notice

93 Columbus Rd.

GARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE
252 Upper River Ro11d • Gallipolis
740·44"6"-o842 • 949· 1155 Evenings
800-446·0842

YOUNG'S

Barnhart
Builders

CARPENTER
.SERVICE

30 ~'ears ex perience'
· ~t.·w H o m~s

• Log u,,mes
• t•n'i l Frame
•Cnmplt•ti' R~modl?lin~
•ltt.'J)htl'l'IIH:nt \\ indm'"'
·l~unr~

( 'nmnll'n i.tl mu1
Ht·.. idcnl ial

Fret· E!'\timat~s
740-61o7 -611XO

·

• Room Addltlon11:
Remodeling
• New G1r1~1
• Electrlce ll: Plumbing
• Rooting 1: Gutter•
• Vlnvt Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decke
We do It all except
furn{l ce work

. ROBERT .
BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1811

992·6215

Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Yu r~ Local Ex rlence

!WI" I HEAR HIS

~IAL SEaJRITY

WMBER IS "'!WavE

51
53
54
55

Janis 17 !rem to
dunk
(2 wds.)
19 Perry 's

Sprite
Goal
Cheap heal
Dundee
refusal

57 All dads
58 Dollar bill
18 Beg pardon! 41 Calliope or
20 CPR pro
melodeon
22 Barn colors 42 Decorate

DOWN

1 Clown's
23 Enjoys
ge1up
a siesta
22 Crater edge 2 What Hamiel 24 Falco or
23 When pigs
snoflad
Brickell
fly
25 Metal rooster
12 - )
26 Ladybugs
3 Valley
26 Afrikaner
30 Rodin
4 Compansale 27 Gayle's sis
scu lptu re
5 Take down 28 Long time
31 lns1BII a lawn
29 Move to
32 Ouch'
6 Lair
and rro
33 Brooch
7 Hard labor 3t Cats do it
,34 Guys and
8 Eurasian
35 Senior cit.
fellow s
range
group
35 To lstoy
9 Wa rr ior
· 37 Chromo·
heroine
princess
some
36 Mora
1t Spud
•
material
run-do wn
12 Murphy or 38 Wee bits
39 Bright flower
Rabbin
39 Earlier

gill s
43 Next in line
44 Oscar's kin
45 Ceramic

piece
46 Late-nfght
hos1
·
47 Zest lor fife
50 Tattoo wore
52 Docl or's
payman1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos .

Celeottty C•l)her Crym~rams ate aea1ea !rom ouotanc ns ~v lamous :JeO:lle o11s: a ~c crrlS!!rl
Each lenet 1n t'le c1p1er &gt;lands IOI!!rlother
TodayS due E equals 1

" IMWWSif
OX·

Z E GBPMG

MXISOIPXSA

IOGEIDR
ZPX ' G

GO I GS

BPXP F

AEf B ;

RPIIF

WPOWB

EG

El
ZEK K

BM XL SF , JMG

EG

LPPA ."

UPS

HOG SF XP

~~~~:t~;y '0©~4ti1A-~t~~·
Edil•d

&lt;Your &lt;JIIrthdool :

HOW N!C.E. I '

IUINi lJ

friand

16 Songwriter 56 Lever

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

49 Juan's

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "An actress I met assured me her reel! amoltiOI'l was
10 be a waitre ss at a coHeehouse " - Woody Allen

Wamtl ll ~

lh·pair •
Ltwn Tr:.u:h11· &amp; Pu..;h
MuwL'I"\. Chain Saw ....
C'hain SharpL'ncd

10 A Gershwin
11 Pla ins
dwelling
13 Raw melal
t 4 Gas pump
qly. .
15 Overturn

sec retary
21 " Yo!"

Same theme,
different guise

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

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

A 10 9
K 9 8 7

Opening lead:

BEEN RICH!!

'

t AK9 7 4
... 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(formerly Dave's Small Engine Repai r.}

• Bucket Truck

West
Pass

We hill 1.n1nd ICCIIIIOI'Ia far

JONES'

5 2

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neither

Let me do 1t for youl

Is giving 10% ALL CUINSIW
IIEPIIIIS 1111 OCTDBEII

•

25.Qt

• 83
... K Q 6 4

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1-800-822-0417

JU

K Q1 4
QJ105

4
•

Ta~e

. YOUR BEST DEAL ON A
NEW OR USED CAR
Ty Hill

BLIC
NOTICES

Public Notice

48 Oraom

3 2
t Q J tO 6
... 10981 5
Soulb

Licensed in Ohio and

1

r

~

MONTY

740-843-5264

ranges. air conditioners . and
wringer washers. Will do 12 HP Graveley with Saukie 2001 GMC Sonoma Quad
repairs on major brands in 40" mower 4' snow plow. Cab, Shor t Be d, lots ol
shop or at your home.
ex tras, 88,000 Hwy miles,
(740)446-7910.
one
owner,
$10,500
SPOKilNG
2001 John Deere 790. 4x4 , (304)895-37 10 after 6 pm
Gooo,;
30 HP tractor with front end
loader. 3 pt. hitch &amp; PTO,
hours.
$12,000.
'Remington 1187 12 gauge 460
(740)245-9044.
with deer barrel. $400.
Remington 870 Wingmaster
John Deere A 1948 2 slick
12 gaug"e 28" vent fib, modi·
Puller. rebu1lt. very competi! ied. $250.
tive. $3.750. (740)742-3020
Serena BL4 12 gauge over
and under 30" full $800.
Franchi 48 AL 28 gauge,
LM$IOCK

r

42 Grain

dude!
7 Wedding

... A J 3

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Antiques

Get A ump
on
SAVINGS

~
a w;n~e~'-------~~

4 Awesome,

.

4

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

Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. C losed

ris

r

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

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

~

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code , aloelions 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice Is hereby
given that In pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the
VIllage Council of the
Village of Racine,
Ohio, passed on the
2nd day of August,
2004. ther.e will be
submfned to a vote of
the people of said
subdivision
at
a
General Election to
be held In lhe VIllage
of Racine. Ohio, at the
regular places of vot·
lng · therein, on· the
2nd day of November,
2004. lhe question ol
levying a tax, In
excess of the tan mill
limitation, for the benalit of Racine VIllage
lor the purpose ol
Current
expenses.
Said tax being:
A replacement of lax
of 3 mills at a rate not
exceeding 3 mills for
each one dollar of val·
uatlon,
which
amounls lo thirty.
cents ($0.30) lor each
one hundred dollars ·
of valuation, for live
(5) years. The Polls for
said Eleclion will.
open at 6:30 a.m. and
remaln open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N. Ihfe
Chairperson
Alia D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18, 25

875-2497

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Resto~kln9 f-a te Mode l Sa h u9e .
and Arter Ma r ke t Parts

r~o

Angus
Bulls·
Top
Performance Lines. 40 Years
Artilicial Insemination. Slate
Buy or
se ll . Riverine Run Farm (740)286-5395.
www.slaterunfarm .com
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
ltw &amp;
992·2526. Russ Moore,
GKAIN

Alde r

Nortb

Henderson, WV

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH

· 1 93 Buicll Skyla,k, 3.3L, V6,
auto. 145,000 miles. Needs
AKC Beagle puppies s; 125 . some transmission work.
can see al 1473 Hannan $450 060. {740)446·8516.
HOME
Trace Rd ., Patr1ot, or call
,
IMPROVEMENIS
(740)379-9063. No Sunday 99 Vo ltswagon Beetle. Red,
Sales.
5 speeid. CD changer,
BASEMENT
Full mattress/spring. drop
62,000 miles. $6 ,5oo O BO.
WATERPROOFING
leaf table w/chairs, coffee! AKC Black fernie Lab pup- (740)256- 1618 ar (740)256Uncondi tional lifetime guarend tabl e, living ~om suite. pies. Shots, worm ed &amp; dew 6ZOD.
&amp;tghans. (740)44 6-0897.
claws
removed . $200. 1;:;;;,-~---'""""1 antee. Local references fur·
nished. Establishe d 1975.
Good Used Appliances. &lt;
.7_4_0'-14_4_1-_0_130_
.--TRUCKS
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
ffiRSALE
Reconditioned
and AKC Black Lab. puppies "---tiiiiiirliiiiiiiiiro-" 08 70. Aog ~ rs Basement
Guaranteed.
Washers. Male &amp; Females, must go
Waterprooling.
1972Chevy TowTruck, 1 112
Drye rs.
Ranges,
and $150 each (304)n3-5103
ton. excellent wo rt&lt;~ng condi- r---=-:--:--:-----,
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95. Skag gs Appliances. 76 AKC male Shih Tzu, 9 li on, wench works oH P TO.
new.
over
Vine St., (740)446·7398
weeks, liver &amp; whi te, $350. everything
(740)441- 1602 0' (740)44 1- $13 ,000.00 mvested. will
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark 8842 evenings.
ta ke
$8,500.00
OBO
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio c.:__::_:._:__:::__ __
(740)992-0622
(740) 446·7444 1-877-830· CKC Registered, 1 male
91 62. Free Estimates. Easy Jack Russell pup· 8 weeks
financing , 90 days same as old· first shots· wormed· vet 1985 Ford Ranger XLT. V6.
cas h. Visa! Master Card checked. Ready to go, $175 automatic, new tires, tool
box. $595 OBO
Call
Drive- a· little save atot
each (740)379-2834.
(740)4461451.
I \In! Sl 1'1'111 S
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
,\II\ I "'ill)( k.
Repair-675-7368. For sale,
1992 Chevy S- 10, V-6 Auto,
re-conditione~
automatic
Low Miles $2,000 OBO
FAI!M
washers &amp; dryers. relrigera(304)593- 1200
EQuJI'MiiNT
tors, gas and electnc

r.

Phillip

Jl) Orowse oil
1 1 fee hockey
1 Crumple up
graa1

rental

1995 Chevy Astro Van. 3
seater, front/rea r AJC $4,700
OBO. Call (740)446-1714.

rM~~~

N EA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

VANS
FOR SALE

r:4~=w.v

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

ALLEY OOP

98 Sharp Ultra Classic.
Loaded with chrome, 103
Big Bore, 4,000 miles on
engine, luggage rack, side
2003 Tracke r, 4x4, 3,000 racks. 740446-8972 or 740miles. All eiectric, alum. 367-0502.
wheel. Will ' sell below book 99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,000
value. (740)338·8432.
miles, new tires, lots of
chrome. Asking $15,000
93 BMW 325i. Custom OBO. (740)446-9954 ..
cover. new tires &amp; extra
wheels, Priced to sell under
blue
book.
$3,500.
(7401446-9555.

www.mydailysenlinel.com

Tueaday, Oc t. 26, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oeol
You could be el(tremely lucky in making
helpful connections in the year ahGad
where you r work or ca reer is concerned,
but it will be up to you to take advan tage
of these Contacts. They'll make your
climb to th e top easie r.
SCOR PIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Working
conditions will be far mare convivial
today if yo u're not so quick to blame coworkers the minute somethmg goes
awry. When you point a finger. three are
pointed back at yo u.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -0ec . 21) - A
disagreement wi th a good pal can easily
be rectified today it you don ·t let your
poise desert you and react in ways you
wou ld regre t later. To have a /nand, you
have to be a friend.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) -You 'll
have ample opportunities to fulfill your
personal ambition today, but you must be
guarded not to be too sell ·serving. Bring
others along w1th you as you r1se to the
top of you r game.
AQUA RIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19! - The way
to sway others to your thinking today is to
play up to them. not ta lk down to them
The former wi ll draw people to you. the
lattEir wil l make you look like a dictator to
be shunned.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) - II might
be hard for you at times tOday to be diS·
clpllned with the handling of your funds,
so you must be di ligent. Your potential tor
prof1t is prom ising so long as you don't
throw it all away.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)- Once you
decide upon a co urse of action today,
believe in yourse lf and pursue it wlth
tenacity Indecision or self-imposed
delays co uld lead to fa ilure in things
where you should lind success
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) · People who
like you and are loya l associates wi ll help
you all tha t they can today where your
work or career is concerned. but tha t
doesn't mean you can m!ri\e unreasonable requests of them.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20) - A fne nd
might want to share someth1ng with you
today that she or he !eels has been hurt·
lng you r chances for success in some·
thing important to you , but you must be
ready to accept the facts .
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) -'fm portant
objectives are reachable tOday. but only
if you don't throw in the towel should
somethin g go wrong along the way. A
second effort Wi ll bring you the success
you're seeking .
LEO tJuly 23-Aug. 22) - Subdue a ten
dency today to argue .with othe rs 1f they
are not in to tal agreement Wi th your
views. Be open to the1r sugge stions and
Ideas. becau se something good rs try1ng
to get through 19 you .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- Others wilt
be w 1llmg to share with you today. but
only it you l1rst show an mdication to
share w1th them as well It you display
sellish tend encies, they will follow your
example .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - An 1mpor·
tant relationship might not run as
smoothly as usual today, but that should·
n"t be allowed to create a wedge. If fnc·
11on occurs . be the first one to douse it
wlttl torg1vencss

'y CLA.Y' I . POUAN

WQRO

;&amp; MI

~eorrOI'IQe letters of the
four ~ro"TTbled words be·
low to fcrM'I fovr words.

0

·

I

Nu c E D
~
1 3 :. ,.;:_:,.1I,~
I _

I
r

-------,~ ~

l

H E WL I

Our son had gotten hrs feei-

~ ings hurt. His gra"dpa Iold him.
~ ·rambuildscourage.Youcan't

I' I / /

6

learn to be brave 1' ycu·ve ha:i
~ ---:,..,--:--:----,~ on ly good things ------ to _
r
7

.

R[ E ~~ p[9OIR
.

.

.

.

PRINT NUMBeRED
lETTc&lt;S

I ·c; "co~cl••• cnuokle
I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
.

.

1he
quotod
by ld !!l'l; i"' th e m1s~ 1 n9 words
you d~ .. elcp fro,, \tee No 3 b!-iow.

•

I I I I I I lroi I I .I
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1 o-; 2- o4
AdJUSt- Wip~r- Lousy- Nodule - WOUND. .
A guod time to f1nd ou: what rnakes a person t1ck rs
vhen they are all WOUND up•

ARLO &amp; JANIS
!X&gt; OOUfJf&gt;. &amp;AID€&gt;Hf; WOULD ~O~Hl WO!o\UJ CAkl TALK
BUT OllLY IF Pll'I'L L I~ CAll
AIJDTH hJRU&amp;RA~
THE-MO€&gt;T
JAfJ AIJD A€&gt;KW IF KIM,.
WUJTT
11&lt;1VIAl1HIIJGf&gt;.1

r·ve. &amp;or ro CHmue.

THE- 5UBJUT WH IL£. f 511L~

HAVE- AFW ~IIJ CEll~WF

SOUP TO NUTZ
-~~-~··--~-

_ __

.....:_·~
:...::
::::
'·

T&gt;t,;(

' -

f

�Monday, October 25,

www .mydailysentin~l.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 86 •

2004

Marshall blasts
It's decision time for Tressel this week Buffalo, 48-14
~-

Ohio state Football Notebook

BY

RUSTY

MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Jim Tre"cl. who will
alread~ be preoccupied with preparations for Penn State. rnu;t mak~ several
huge personnel decisions in th e next I'~\\
days.
The suspension of Lydcll Ross. the
pecking order at tailback with or without
Ross and th e hrewing controversy at
quarterback will take up the Ohio State
coach's time thi s week.
Ross was suspended from the team for
Saturday\ J0-7 win aga in q Ind iana fur
allegedly handing nut a f;ll,e currenL·!
used at a local strip dub in the h&lt;1urs
shortly after the Buckeyes lust at lu\\a a
week earlier.
With Ross out of the lineup. Ohi o Swte
went to true freshman Tony Pittman .
who responded with 144 yards and a
touchdown on 20 can·ies. The Bu c ~e ycs
had 282 rushing yards. almost as many
as they had in their fou r pre\ ious games
(287) with Ross as their lead bed.
"The more Antonio plays. the better
he's going to be." said Tres,cl - ll'ord.'
that mi ght just end up being the epitaph
to the remainder of Ross' col kg~ ,·arccr.
Tressel also mu't tack le the que,t ion
of who will start at quarterhack ;tgai nst
the Nittan y Lions on Satu rda).
Troy Smith. who ne ver got on the tield
in three of the last four games. qat1 ed in
place of the injured Ju sti n Zwid and
showed Hashes nf brilliance . Smith completed 12 of 24 passes for 161 y;trds and
touchdowns of 59 'itrds tn Ted Ginn Jr.
and 5 yards to Santt1nio Hulrnes. He did"n' t have a turnove r. And \\' hen Ind iana's
infrequent rush got to him . he sc· r:tmblcd
away for 58 yards on I I carries.
"Troy was juiced up toda) ... Holmes
said. "Maybe he was a little too juiced

and that's why he overthrew some pass- other direction .
•
cs."
One play after a video review disalln other words. just like Pittman lowed an Ohio State fumble, Troy Smith
maybe Smith will only get better with threw a pass under heavy pressure to the
more playing time .
ri ght sideline toward Ted Ginn Jr., a forZwick sustained a partially separated mer teammate at Cleveland's Glenville
right shoulder on his throwing arm at High School.
Iowa and would not have been able to
Indiana cornerback Buster Larkins
play in Saturday's game. Tressel hasn't stepped inside Ginn; leaped and got a
hidden the fact that Zwick is his hand on the pass. He had nothing but
favorite.
upen grass in front of him for 50 yards.
A'ked if Smith had done enough to
But the ball rotated in the air and landke~p Zwick on the sideline. Tresse l said ed in Ginn's hands. The freshman broke
he hadn't given it much thought. The four tackles while cutting to the middle
dec ision. he said , would be based on and back to the comer to complete a 59Zwick's health and how things shake out yard touchdown play.
in practice this week.
"It happens ," Indiana linebacker Cleo
"I'll have to see that day-to-day,'' Harbison said. "You just have to eliminate the breakaway plays.' We missed a
Tressel said.
• BUSY MAN: Maurice Hall estab- lot of tackles."
li shed an Ohio State record with his
Hoosiers safety Heran-Daze Jones
62 nd career kickoff return in the second added, "Ginn made a good play by
quarter.
keeping his eyes on the ball. Then he
The sen ior gained 25 yards on the had blocking in front of him."
ret urn to su rpass Carlos Snow for sec• QUICK-HITTERS: Ohio State
ond place with I ,393 yards. Ken- Yon kicker Mike Nugent needs 35 points to
Rambo hulds the record with 1,410 pass Pete Johnson's 348 points and
yards in 61 tries.
bec&lt;&gt;me Ohio State 's leadi ng career
All Hall cou ld talk about after the scorer.... With his third catch of the
game was the Buckeyes· win .
game, Courtney Roby passed Thomas
"Today reall y helped us,'' he said. Lewis (1984-87) to become Indiana 's
"Now I beli eve we're back on track and leader in career pass receiving yardage
I think we wi ll be better. "
· with 2.382 ... . The Buckeyes had not
• HOMECOMING KING: During a scored on their opening drive all year
prega me· ceremony, junior linebacker until Ginn pulled in Smith's tipped pass.
Chihundu Nnake was named Ohio .. .Fullback Dionte Johnson, offensive
State's humecoming king. Nnake is a tackle Steve Rehring, linebacker Chad
wa lk-on from Missouri Ci ty, Texas, who Hoobler each played for the first time
has neve r playeu a down for the for Ohio State, making it 12 true freshBuckeyes. He wore his No. 96 uniform men who have played for the Buckeyes
The H0 o Sl·er S hOS t
\\ ·llt.l"&lt; ·loc·kt·no_ arms. wt.th the hlJmecom- tht·s• season
•
•
...
ing queen and singing the alma mater.
Minnesota o n Saturday.... Game time
• PLAY OF THE DAY: One fli ck of for Ohio State's home game against
th~ finger and Ohio State's 30-7 win Penn State on Saturday is again 12:10
m·er Indiana might ha ve just tilted the p.m.

BY JOHN RABY

Associated Press

HUNTINGTON - Stan Hill
rebounded from a poor performance with one of his better
games to keep Marshall unbeaten in the Mid-American
Conference.
Hill threw four touchdown
passes and Josh Davis had 12
catches for 132 yards to lead the
Thundering Herd to a 48-14
victory over Buffalo on
Saturday night.
"We were just clicking," Hill
said. "This week we finally put
a game together."
Hill, Marshall's career leader
in completion percentage, felt
little pressure from Buffalo's
defense. He threw TD passes to
four different receivers and
went 19-of-26 for a season-hi gh
269 yards.
"It is as good of a performance I have seen a~ any quarterback lately,'' said Buffalo
coach Jim Hofuer. "He was
almost flawless."
Hill and Davis talked all
week about hooking up to rejuvenate Marshall, whose offense
ranks last in the conference and
sputtered a week ago in a 27- 17
win at Kent State.
The Thundering Herd (4-3, 40) compiled 478 yards against
Buffalo.
Davis ti ed a personal best for
catches. He moved within eight
of the conference career mark
of 272 set last year by former
teammate Darius Watts.
"The coaches said they were
going to get me the ball a lot

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

NO

RAIN
CHECKS

.

1

early," Davis said. "I told Stan
to be patient because I have to
be pattent. I get double teamed
a lot."
Hill, plagued this season by
bruised ribs. a sore throwing
thumb and elbow ·tendinitis,
completed seven of his first
nine passes, all to Davis.
"Tonight was the first night
Stan has played within the
offense," said Marshall coach
Bob Pruett. "On top of that.it is
the first time he has been
healthy this season."
Davis said he was shocked to
see Buffalo in a man-to-man ·
defense. He had I0 catches for
115 yards in the first half alone,
including a 21-yard TD catch
for a 28-7 halftime lead.
Freshman
Ahmad
Bradshaw's 40-yard punt return
set up Hill's 5-yard TD pass to
Brad Bates early in the third
quaner.
Marshall's
Ivan
Clark
blocked two punts. One of them
was recovered in the end zone
by teammate Dennis Thornton
fur a 42,7 lead.
Buffalo ( 1-7, 1-5) is 0-24 in
MAC road games since joining
the conference in 1999 and
went 0-6 overall agai nst
Marshall . which leaves for
Conference USA next season.
The only offansive highlights
for Buffalo were Dave
Dawson's 83-yard TD run in
the first quarter and P.J.
Piskorik's 61 -y;u·d scoring pa~s
to Matt Knueven in the founh.
"I was disappointed in the
two big plays we gave them.
But they give scholarships,
too," Pruett said.

. .

Prices GoOd Tue. 10/26, .~ed~ 10/27,

Fried Chicken

5

S 99 8 pjeces

GE Extra Soft

Light Bulbs
4Pc

ggc

40, 60'
75,100
watts

Triple
Coupon for
5 Coupons,
Up To SOC
Full Value
Not Ciood On

Advertised
Items
See Store
For Details!
740-992-S::&amp;S::&amp;
STORE HOURS

Mon.-Sun. 7ain·IOpm
7DaysAWeek
Why Pay More?
Everyday Low Prices!!!

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.c•( I '\.1'-,•\nl. . ,l

'\ 11

1.,

Ill '-.ll\'

2°/o or
Broughton lOJo, 1Ofo,

Skim Milk

s

49

()t

IC,Hil~ :..."'h .. 'OUJ

H~~H nnd .!ll , ...

tl\111•1,, 1111

Council says ODOT to vacuum sewers on Main Street

SPORTS
• Monday Night Bengals.
SeePageB1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A few road
problems on Lincoln Hill.
vacuuming sewers on Main
Street and debris on Butternut
Avenue were all on the age nda for Monday night 's meeting of Pomeroy village counci l.
James Kitchen of Lincoln
Hill brought several issues to
council's atte ntion, including

a dip in the road near his
home, a need for a stop bar
painted on the road and hi s
desire tu have th e street
cleaned frum Central School
up.
.
Kitchen contenued the dip in the road sti II
persists even after the rece nt
paving on Lin co ln Hill.
Mayor John Musser said the
village could possibly build
up around the dip to correct
tb e problem.
Kitchen also requested that

council pai m a stop har acro&gt;S
the road ncar his horne
because drivers often ignore a
nearby stop sign. Co uncil
agreed to pai nt the stop bars.
Co un cil
also
infor med
Kitchen that the road cleanup
was already under way and
should happen soo n.
During "open di"ussion:·
Councilman George Wright
asked when the new water
treatment plant is du e to be
finished. Mu sser replied that

the plant will be fini,hed on
Nov. 7 and go online later in
the week .
Jack Krautter represented
th e street department and
in for med co un cil th at the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation will be in town
on Thursday with specia l
sewer vacuums that will dean
the sewers on Main Street.
including 'ewe" at Court and
Lynn streets.
Krautter also told Wright

that the salt trud ";ts ~etting
ready lm \1 itttcr anJ 11 as currentl y ha\ ing the clu tch
repaired in \1arictta ...
Krauttcr ' also · notified
council th at the street department' . , main fucu ... right now
i ~ repairing roaU -. before winter.
Both Councilwomen Ruth
Spaun and Mary McAng u'
said the) had recei,ed wm-

Piease see Sewers, AS

Middleport
to refinance
payroll loan
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BR EED@MYDA!L'I' SE~T!" EL. CO M

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

49clb.

AK S~eel picket, A6

~

Page AS
• Charles Norman lhle
• Margie Peck
• Terry Boyce

Chicken
Leg Quarters
Fresh Deli

Toogood
to be true? Red Sox
halfway home, B6

·-

• Time out for tips.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness relocates
services to Castrop
Center. See Page A3
• Collisions between
vehicles, deer up nearly
5 percent in 2003.
See Page A6

Fairgrounds get spruced up on Make a Difference Day
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Wall s were
painted in several buildings.
lighting fixtures replaced.
new fixtures install ed in
restrooms. and so me plantings done on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds as a pan of the

WEATHER

Gal.

MIDDLEPORT
- The
Vi II age of M iJdlep11rt wi II
rell natKe a loan from Peoples
Bank . N.A .. made to meet
payroll for the street and
pol ice departments in 2003.
At their meeting on Oct. II .
co un cil voted l&lt;l app ly
$21.500 from the sale of modular classroom unit&gt; on the
Middl eport High School property to the unpaid loan balance
of $53.000 borrowed last vear
from Peoples Bank to help
make payroll expenses.
Meetin g Monday e\·ening.
counci I entered in to a loan
agreement with the bank to
make intere,t-onl) payments
Above: Beautification of the fairgro~nds for anothe r year. The \ill age
Left: Josh Parlier was one of several youhg people who turned out was one of several projects carried out in has been making interest paythe Historical Society's Make a ments fo r the past year, but
to help paint the interior of the
Difference Day project. Here Patty
senior fair bu tlding done as a part Grossnickle, left , and Joyce Davis, plant the principal reduction will'
signi ficantl y reduce the
of the Make a Difference Day
azaleas at the 1828 restored tog cabin on monthl y payment. Finance
the grounds.
project of the Historical Society.
Committee C hairman and
Council Pr.esident Stephen
Houchin' said l&lt;bt night.
Prior to the 521.500 payment. the 'illage·, mon thly
Meigs Co unt y Hi sturi cal Ohio Hill Country Heritage one rema ining barrack. the installment pam1en t was
Society's Make a Difference Area and su111e luc&lt;tl match- historic spring house and the S I -ln. hut the nc\1 pa) ment
has not )et heen Jc term meu.
·
Day project.
ing fumb.
I X29 lng cabin located on the Mayor Sand) l;umare lli sa id.
The work was carried out
Another fa cet of the project grou nds.
Saturday by members of the pet1ain s to sec urin g an Ohio
Margaret Parker. president.
Othcr' husiness
hi storic al group join ~ d by Hi storical Society marker rec- announced at the annual
Pa\'mg of sc1c ral \'i ll age
Meigs County Fair Board ognizing the hi story of the mee ting held mid-afternoon streets, includin ~ North Second
members. and other volun- fairgrounds. the grandstand.
during th e work session th at Avenue. Vine - Street. Pearl
teers. It was .financed through the 1930s Civil Conservation
Street. Art Lewis Boul c\'ard
a $2,000 mini-grant from ihe Corps enc ampment and the Please see Difference, AS
and a number of alleys will
begi n with milling wol'k on
Tue,d&lt;J\.
l annC~re ll i
said
\1onda; ..\1ill ing and paving
II"Ork 11 iII l1e~ in ;It H ud,on
Street &lt;Jnd co~llmuc to Mill
Street as the 11 ork ~et s under
\\'a). nlc paving project will be
funded throu~h Issue II State
Capital lmpn;,,·mcnt Funds.
Council also:
• Apprmc'd transfer, for
L·nn~ulting ft•c, for Floyd
Bnn\ ne .~ "'"IIL'J;tlc ... and &lt;.1 village audit.
• AcL·eptcd the rl' ... ign:.:~tion~
of Kath) h &lt;~ns. a part-time
cook and L'Ustod ian. and
Fi"al Offi~cr Je-anette Beers.
• Eliminat~d the \'illage\
cha rge for hrush pic~-up and
dispo,al .
• Appmved pavmcnt ,,f
bills in the amount of

Fear itself: Most people can get along just fine without a flu shot
BY JOSEPH B.
VERRENGIA
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Dlitatto on Page A6

INDEX

Maxwell House
Regular Coffee

.s

99
3901.

• 2 S EcrJONS -

Calendars
Community
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
A2

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

DENVER - Public health
officials say · Americans
should roll up their sleeves
for a dose of rcali ty: For most
of us. getting a flu shot is not
a life-or-death matter.
The tlu vaccine wi ll not
necessaril y prevent you from
experienci ng the flu' s mi serable symptoms, like fexer,
hacking cough,,~runny nose
and "hit-by-a-truck " body
ac hes.. Studies show the shot
generally works well, but its
effectiveness can range from
52 to 90 percent depending
on the strai n of virus and a

S2~.~5 .l99 .

• Ex.c u"J
Ru~er

person's age.

If yo u are elderly or chronically ill , the vacci ne can help
jump-start your body 's weak-

Please see Shot. AS

Councilman

\1anle\ ·.., ab . . cncc.

Present.

(AP Photo)

Dozens of people wait in li ne at the Bossier Parish Health Unit to receive flu. vacc rnattons
Monday in Shreveport. La.

, -- - - - -- - - - - - --·-·

-----

i'n addittnn to
l annar~lli
and H&lt;ntchins.
were cnu th'il members Kathv
Scc,tt. Bnb Rnhinson. Lauric
Reed and Je ff Pc·ckham .

-

Together we can change your body.
And your life.
700 East Main .Street
POMEROY, OHIO

ToLL
FREE (866) 821 -4541
.
'

Prices Good October 26 thru October 28 Only.

.,.

'

·WWW.CCWL.INFO
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="496">
    <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="9947">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18743">
            <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="18742">
              <text>October 25, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3886">
      <name>beha</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2966">
      <name>o'brien</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
