<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5550" 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/5550?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T01:09:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15480">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ff0bbdf9a49b4cc7ac3aa9a7ae3b05b9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0f5db96c910dfd05d433d1354cd33b9e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18768">
                  <text>Redwomen hoops
open season
with win, Bt
IIC TEH STMDJMCS

Big Ten All Top 25
6-0 8-1 1-0
Wisconsin
5-0
8-0 1-0
Iowa
4-1
6-2 1-1
Michigan St. l-2
4-4 1-1
Northwestern 3-2
4-4 2-2
Minnesota
3-3
6-3 0-1
Purdue
2·3
5-3 0-2
Ohio State
2-3
5-3 0-1
Indiana
1-4
3-5 2-1
2-6 0-3
Pen n State
0·5
2-7 0-5
Illinois
0-6

PF
170
169
180
134
191
300
250
171
.198
129
193

Michigan

PA
184
68
131
102
213
190
115
148
232
123
273

C2004 Longwing Publicatio ns Inc.

G AM E OJ;' ·THE WEEK

Mlnaesota at Wlscoasln

TEAMLWERS

~JAN

Average per game

. . 240.6

Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . 227.8

Iowa

. . . . . . . .

. . 224.6

Michigan State . . . . . . . . . .

. . 221.0

Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . .

. 196.9

Illinois . .

. 1g2.J

.

. .. . _ . . . . .

• ......... OI'I'CNII:

Minnesota .
.
Michigap State . .
Wisconsin .
Northwestern . . .

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

Michigan
nunois
Purdue .

266 .2
232 .2
173. 1
164.8

. . . . . . . . 157.3
. .. .. . .
151. 0
. . . . . . . . . 136.6
~AioOII&amp;NU:

Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 463.1

Michigan State . . .

. ..... .. . 453.2

Purdue . .
Northwestern . . . .
·Michigan .

. . . . . . . . . 438.4
, .. . • . . . . 405.4
. . . . . . . 385.1

'Illinois . . . . . . .

. . .. . . .

. 343.3

Wisconsin . . . . . .

. . . . . . .

. 325. 0

PUIINODU'IDIU
. . . . . . ... 147.2
158.2
Penn State
Ohio State.
178.5
199.9
Michigan .
. . 208.1
Iowa .
Michigan State .. ..
. . 208.8
.. 22 5. 0
Purdue
••,..,.
.MIIItiiO
. DU&amp;NI&amp;
. .. 70.2
Iowa . .
Wisconsin
. . . . . . . . . 89.1
. . . . . . . . . . gg_8
Purdue ..
. . . - .... 104. 6
Michigan
Penn State
117.1
Ohio State. . . . . . . . ... . .. . 135.0
140.2
Northwestern .. . ..
1'01'AioDUCNI&amp;

Wisconsin .

Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . .
Penn State
. . . . . .

. 236. 4
. . 275. 4

Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . 278.4

Michigan . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . 304 .4

Ohio State ...... . ... . . . ... 31l.5
Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. 324.8
Michigan State . . . . . . . . .

. . 380. 1

JNDJVIDUAL LEADERS

•·•••uawUDaa

Kyle Orton, Purdue .. .. .. . .... 2,233
Chad Henne, Michigan
Brett Basanez . Northwestern
Drew Tate, Iowa. . . . . . .
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota . .
Matt LoVecchio. Indiana . .

.. 2,001
. . 1.919
. . 1,710
1,691
. . 1,366

. .
. .
.
. .

Zack Mills, Penn State . . . .

a•

. . 1.265

4NOYARDilOK

Michael Hart. Michigan. _ .. ..... 1.160
laurence Maroney, Minnesota .
. . 1,0 30
Marion Barber m. Minnesota .. . . . . . 881
Noah Herron, Northwestern .
. . . 863

BenJaiVUs Green-Ellis. Indiana . . . . . . 581
Pierre Thomas, lltinois . .. ... . . . . 577
Tony Hunt, Penn State . . . . . . . . . 562

UCUtutGYARDilOK
Braylon Edwards. Michigan .
. 995
Courtney Roby, Indiana . . . . . . .. . , 725

Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue .. .. ... . 647
Mark Philmore , Northwestern .
Santonio Holmes. Ohio State .
Kendrick Jones, Illinois . . . .
Ernie Wheelwright. Minnesota
Ed Hinkel, Iowa . . . . . . . .

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

. .
. .,.. . Oii&amp;NU:
Kyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . . . .
Brett Basanez. Northwestern .
.
Chad Henne . Michigan . . . .
.
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .. .
Drew Tate, Iowa . . . . . . . .
Drew Stanton, Michigan State
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana ... .
Zack Mills, Penn State . . . . .

.....,..

582 I
57 4
529

. . 527
. 2.325
. 2.09 5
. 1.896

. . 1.725

. .. 1.701
. . . 1.672
I ,510

Garrett Rivas. Michigan . . . . .
Dave Rayner, Michig an State . .

Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue . ,
Noah Herron , Northwestern .
Brayton Edwards, Michigan .. .
Mike Nugent, Ohio State . . . .
Marion Barber m. Minnesota .
Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota . . . . . .

6 33

.........,._

. . 1.256

nlustration by Bruce Plante c 2004

Battle for the .Axe
hree ~eek s ago. this )~ked like a gume that. would decide
the B1g Ten race . But alter &lt;I three-game los1n£ streak.
Minnesota has been reduced to fighting for bowl position
and playing spoiler.
Tout ing one of the nation' s toughest rushing anacks. with
Laurence Maroney and Marion Barber III . the Golden Gophers
st aned the season hot. But in the past three games. Michigan ,
MichigaaState and Indiana have gotten ahead of Minnesota and
forct:d them tu pass. Commg back from deficits has proven to be
Minnesota 's downfal l.
.,
On the other sideline, Wisconsin has remained unscathed
entering this weekend' s battle for Paul Bunyan's Axe. The
Badgers have had a bye week tn rest a banged-up defensive line
and art: ready to begin a full -till run toward a Bowl Championship
Series bid .
Defen sive end Erasmus James and tackle Jonathan Welsh have
battled injuries. but the y should return to match up with
Minnesota' s running game.
WiscQnsin has eluded the national spotlight , bein g ranked
below fellow unbc.!atens Utah. Oklahoma. USC and Aubum . Hut
losses last weekend from Florida State and Miami moved them
closer to a shot at a national champion ship .
The Badgers must win the remainder of their games and hope
for other teams to lose if 1hey are to earn 1he respect nf the national
voters.
Minnesota dropped out of the ran kings with last weekend 's

.T

J0-19lossto Indiana.
• Records: Minnesota 6-3 (3-3 Big Ten); Wiscon sin 8-0 (5-0 Big
Ten). • Series: Minnesota leads 59-46-S. • Coaches:
Minnesota· s Qlen

Ma~on

( I 08-107- 1); Wis~:on s in ·~ Barry Alvarez

( 107-67-4). • I&lt;ickoff: 2:30p .m. CT Saturday . • TV: ABC.
Key for Minnesota: Go back to the runnin g game. Minnesota
has been forced to pass with QB Bryan Cupito and haven 't been
highly s ucct:s~rul. Laurence Maroney and Marion Barher III
helped win the first six games and must become the offense's top
options.
Key far Wisconsin: Score early. The Badgers need ro prevenr
Minnesota from gaining confidence . They don 't play well from
behi nd and are hurting during their current losing streak.

'I'll• R•n of tb• Matabup•

While Wiscon sin plays for a BCS bid and Michi£an sits the
week
oul. the re ~t of the Big Ten will fight for lx1wl positioning .
.... 70 .
teams have already become bowl-eligible. while Ohio
Four
... . 66
State
will
be fighting lo win its sixth game th is weekend . The
. 66
.
Buckeyes
face a surging Michigan State team that might be
. . 66
wit
hout
lender
QB Drew Stanlon .
. . 63
Purdue
\\ti
ll
try to end its three-game losin g streak when it
. . 60
travels
tO
Iowa.
Since an earl y-season embarrassment at Ariwna
. . 60
. . . . 72

State . the Hawkeyes have played well,lo; ing only to Michigan

MaJkus Curry. Michigan .. . . . . . . . . . 3
Tracy Porter, Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .
Jason Harmon, Michigan State . .
. ..
Anwar Phillips . Penn State . • . . . . . . .
Ukee Dozier, Minnesota . . . . . .
.

3
3
3
3

Kelvin Hayden. nUnois

... . . . .

.3

Antwan Allen, Iowa .

. . . . . . .

. 3

since.
Penn State and Illinois are still looking for their first conference
w in ~ (they are a combined Q. ]] thi s conference season) as coaches
Joe Paterno and Ron Turner try to quell rumors of their firing.

The N1ttany Lions will host Northwestern , coming off a l3- l0
victory over Purdue . while the ntini will travel to Indiana .to face a
Hoosiers team that beat Minnesota last Saturday .
·

The Boilermakers, like Minnesota, dropped out of the rankings
this week and are now fighting for a postseason position.

Ohio State at Michigan State
• Records: Ohio State 5-3 (2-3 Big Ten); Michigan State 4-4 (3-2
Big Ten ). • Series: Ohio State leads 22- 12. • Coaches: Ohio
State' s Jim Tressel (173-67-2); Michigan State' s John L. Smith
( l23-69l. •Kickoff: Noon ET Saturday. • TV: ESPN.
Key for Ohio State: Improved passing. The Buckeyes have
good targets, but they need to find a passer, whether it be Troy
Smith or Justin Zwick , who can find the targets. Athletic freshman
kick returner/defensive bacld wide receiver Ted Ginn could get
more invol ved in the offense .

Key for Michigan State: The running game. Usually the
Spartans pass first and run second. but with QB Drew Stanton out
two to three weeks with an injured right shoulder . they will need.
to pin their hopes nn RB DeAndra Cobb . who ran for 205 yards on
22 carries in the 45-37 triple-overtime loss tu Michi~an .

Purdue at Iowa
• Records: Purdue 5-3 (2-3 Big Ten); Iowa 6-2 (4-1 Big Ten) .
• Series: Purdue leads 44-29-3 . • ·coaches: Purdue 's Joe Tiller
(99-65-l ): Iowa's Kirk Ferentz (49-l2). •Kickoff: 2:30p.m. CT
Saturday. • TV: ESPN .
Key for Purdue: Kyle Orton' s health. Orton blamed an injury
for another poor passing performance in last Saturday's 13-10 loss
to Northwestern . The QB must relurn and remain healthy for the
Boilennakers to end their three-game skid .

A

Key for Iowa: Maintain pressure on the leaders. Although the
Haw keyes had a tough stArt, they can become a factor in the
conference race if Wisconsin and Michigan lose games.

Indiana at Rlinois

SPORTS
• Pacers sneak past Cavs
in double overtime.
See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Thelma Sayre

INSIDE

~NESO"''A Entering last
1 • Saturday. the
1111'11'1"
Golden Gophers were third in the nation
in rushing offense. averaging 278 yards
per game. In the 30-21loss to Indiana, •
Minnesota was outrushed by the Hoosiers.
who had the second worst defense in the
Big Ten. The Golden Gophers managed 169
yards on the ground, compared to
Indiana's 238.

• Experts: Issue One
impact to be felt more in
homes than workplaces.
-- See-page 'A2 . ~
• Former Racine pastor receives award.
SeePageA3
• Deadline announced for
River Sweep posters.
See Page A3
• Community Olympics a
success. See Page AS

liiiiiiu:ITHWESTERN

When the
Wildcats
beat Purdue 13-10 last Saturday on RB
Noah Herron's late touchdown run, it was
Northwestern's second victory over a
ranked opponent in October. Purdue was
the only team that coach Randy Walker
had not beaten in conference play since
taking over as the Wilcats' coach iri 1999.
~

~

ST.'A':fE

In the Buckeyes'
21-10victory over
Penn State last Saturday, Ohio State once
again got help from freshman Ted Ginn.
For the second time this season. he
returned a punt for a touchdown.

"

WEATHER

.....,...n STATE

havin g ejther Brad Bower or Jon Beut~r catch fire . If the passing
game is contained, the Hoosiers can ~in .

Key for Illinois: Play for Ron . Colleh Ron Turner is again on
the hot seat. with his team on a 15-game conference losing streak .
and things have gotten ugly . The lllini need a win or Turner may

well get the boot.

Northwestern at Penn State
• Records: Northwestern 4-4 (3-2 Big Ten): Penn State 2-6 (O-S
Big Ten). • Series: Penn State lead~ 7-2. • Coaches:
Northwestern's Randy Walker (87-74-5); Penn State's Joe Paterno
(341-114-3J . • Kickoff: Noon ET -Saturday . • TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Northwestern: Score early. The Wildcats are worn
from a season that has included [hree ovenime games nnd a lastsecond victory last week . They must move the ball early and score

against Penn State's skilled defense.
.
Key for Penn State: Improved passing. The Nittany Lions
have one of the top I 0 defenses in the country , but _haven 't been
able to pass. QB Michael Robinson must avoid turnovers and

The Nittany Lions
have struggled on
offense all season. and last Saturday's
21-10 loss to Ohio State was no exceptiM.
Penn State managed only 69 yards
passing. and OB Michael Robinson threw
two interceptions. The Nittany Lions' lone
touchdown, on a three-yard run by Tony
Hunt, was their third offensive
touchdown in the conference season:
Early in the season,
.-n
Purdue QB Kyle Orton
looked like a Heisman Trophy contender.
In last Saturday's 13-10 loss to
Northwestern, he was pulled after going
15-for-33 for .143 yards with a touchdown
and an interception. Orton was replaced
by backup Brandon I&lt;irach.

-.....mDUE

~C:ONSIN This weeke?d's
IJIIIllfti:J
matchup wtth
Minnesota for the Paul Bunyan Axe is one
of two trophy games for the Badgers this
season. Last week. it was announced that
the Heartland Trophy will be given to the
winnet of the annual Wisconsin-Iowa endof-seasori clash.

/111"1'\l./ 1'/\0/ P/) "/'0\"tJINJ)In /f{//0/10\\1\l,l&gt;/ \/\1.\\/\:

Details

on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

A3

Calendars
Classifieds
1

83-4

-Comics
Dear Abby

·'

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MVDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

Bv BRIAN

J.

The provisional ballots
were cast by registered volers who moved between the
voter registration deadline
of.Oct. 2 and Election Day,
and allows the registered
voter to cast a ballot and the
local election board to
change the voter's address
and voting precincl.
Earlier this week, Board of
EJections Director Rita

DARWIN - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
has issued a safety advisory
to motori sts traveling the new
U.S. 33 between Darwin and
Athens. following last week's
death of unborn twins in an
accident on the new highway.
"Ohio 681 traffic is
required to stop at the intersection with the newlyopened-U.S. 33 . U.S. 33
fie is now traveling eastbound
and westbound through this
intersection area. Motorists
are advised to exercise
extreme caution," said Ohio
Department of Transportation
District I 0 Spokeswoman
Stephanie Filson .
The twin boy and girl died
as the result of an accident on
Oct. 26 involving their mother, Angela D. Shockev. 27 ,
Shade. Shockey was ~ne' of
three sent to different hospitals following the accidenl at
the intersection of 33 and
681. Stephanie E. Blake, 44,
of Syracuse, the driver of a
second vehicle, and Isabella
M. Shockey, 4, were treaied
and released.
ODOT has relocated stop
signs at the intersection and
will consider other measures
to increase safety, Filson
said. Last week's accident,
one of three, was the first
fatality on the new highway,
which opened to traffic on
Oct. 22.

Obituaries
Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohiu Valley Publi!ihing Cu.

boa rd conduch an offic ial
co unt of all balloh cast by
qu alified voter,_
Black wel l has c"i mated
between 175.000 and 250,000
un co unted prov isional ballots
ac ros~ the state.
Me igs Cuu my had nearreco rd voter turnout on
Tue sday. wilh 71 percent of
the co unty\ reg istered voters
vi siting the polb .

.I

I

Five members
are elected
to fair board
BY CHARLENE- HOEFLICH

J 1

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL. COM

POMEROY - Five members were elected for threeyear term s on the board of the
Mei gs County Agricultural
Soci ety when . th e annual
election look place Monday
in the Coonhunters Building
on
th e Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Ele cted from a slate of 12
candidate s
we re
four
incumbenh . Da,·id Burt and
Karen Werry each receivi ng
50 vo tes; Wes Karr. 47. and
Jim Watso n, 33: and
Thom as Pullin s with 23
votes . new to th e boa rd .
The other candidates
were Ronald
Hensley,
Wendy
Windon , John
Collins. Brenda Johnson ,
Ple•se see F1lr, AS

MHS ·Band
ranks high in
performance
(Beth Sergent;photo)

Brownie (left) is a calm and loving beegle with a unique chocolate co loring. He was discarded
by his owners because they got tired of him. Spot (right) is a Dalmatian who was neglected to
the point where he had a horrible case of ring-worm that was treated and cured by the dog warden and Meigs County Humane Society. Both dogs are available for adoption.

Adopt a shelter dog
BY BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NEL .COM

POMEROY- AI the Meigs
County Dog Pound there are
several dogs of all shapes.
sizes and loving disposiiions.
all awaiting adoption.

Currently, there are several
puppies, small to mediumsized dogs, beagles. a
Rotweiller. a Dalmatian. a yel low, Lab, and dogs with short
bait and shaggy hair just to
name a few . In short, there is a
wide variety to choose from .

Each year 2-3 million dog s
are turned into local shelters
and sadly 60 percent of these
good-natured animals are
needle ssly
eutham1ed
because there simply are noi
enou gh homes to meet the
PleiSe see Shelter,

As

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - A superior
ratin g was awarded to the
drum line and an excellem
rating to the Meigs High
School Band directed by
Toney Dingess at the state
fina ls of the Ohio Music
Educator' As,oc iation held
Salurclay in Columbu s.
The drum line has achieved
a ~ upe rior mting at every
competi tion
during
the
mar,· h i n~ season which will
Please see ~nd, A5

Bush claims victory, says he wants support ofall Americans
BY RON FOURNIER

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush claimed a reelection mandate Wednesday
after a record· 59 million
Americans chose him over
Democrat John Kerry and
voted to expand Republican
conlrol of Congress as well.
He pledged to pursue his
ageqda on taxes and Iraq

A4
As

Electi on_Day.
In light of the dose results
in th e Ohio presidenti al election , Secretary of State J.
Kenneth
Blackwell
has
ordered Ohio cuunlies tu
report their· total num ber , of
provi sional ballot s by 2 p. m.
Wedne sday. On Tu esd ay
night , Smith said those ballots will nol be counted umil
Nov. 15 . when th e electi on

u:ar:

A3

Editorials

Smith said the provisional
ballots will be counted along
with ove rse as military ballots whicll are mailed from
overseas . on or before
Election Day.
The coumy 's 1.301 absentee ballots were among the
I 0.813
ballots
counted
Tuesday night. They were
counted wiJh ballots cast ih
their respective precincts on

REED

Bs
B2

"""'H \ «I.IIh '-'' IIIHu ·l'"lll

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Places to Go

'()\1\IBII{ J.:! OO.t

Provisional ballots will wait until Nov. .15

Advisory
issued
following
accident

lil!ti.IL'HIGAN ST-

The Spartans'
heartbreaking
triple-overtime 45-37 loss to Michigan was
the longest game in MSU history. Only one
·other game had gone to overtime, when
MSU defeated Indiana 38-31 in two
overtirnes in 1998. The 82 total points in
the game were the most scored in the
series since the Wolverines beat Michigan
Agricultural College 119-0 in 1902.
Running back DeAndra Cobb's 205 yards
rushing were the second-most ever by an
MSU back against Michigan. T.J. Duckett
ran for 211 yards in 2001. ·

IIIII{~()\\

,•

POMEROY
While
absentee ballots cast through
Election Oay were included in
unofficial election results on
Tuesday. Meigs County
Board of Elections will
include 243 provisional ballots in the Nov. 15 official
count of Tuesday's election.

~I

• Records: Indiana 3-5 (1 -4 Big Ten); niinois 2-7 (0-6 Big Ten ).
• Series: Iilinois leads 40-l7-3. • Coaches: lndiana's G~rry
DiNardo (59-72-1); Illinois' Ron Turner (4l -59). • I&lt;ickoff:
Noon Cf Saturday. • TV: None.
Key for Indiana: Pressure the QB. The Illini 's main threat is

move the ball.

.• l l t i , I S • \ o l . •l '\c1

..,...::1

llllftiU

'Here we go again'~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Hoosiers were the team
that started great and could not hang on.
Last Saturday, they fell behind early but
then scored 23 straight points to beat
Minnesota 30-19 for a seventh straight
time in Bloomington. The victory snapped
a five-game losing streak. This is the first
time since 198 7 that the Hoosiers have
beaten two top 25 teams in a season. They
beat No. 24 Oregon on Sept. 11. '
-..w-A The Hawkeyes' 23-13 victory
.........
over Illinois last Saturday
was their sixth win, making them bowleligible for the fourth straight season.
After having lost their top three running
backs to injuries, their backfield took
another hit. Tailback Champ Davis is lost
to a knee injury and fullbac~ Auon
Mickens sustained a mild concussion and
was taken off the field in an ambulance.
iiiiiii:!HIGAN In Saturday's 45-37
..,...::1
(30T) win over rival
Michigan State, Wolverines senior wide
receiver Braylon Edwards proved he was
the best player on the field, catching the
game-winning touchdown. In his first
•
three-touchdown performance, Edwards
moved to second in career touchdowns
(35) and into first place in career
receiving yardage (3,206) at Michigan,
breaking Anthony Carter's record
(3,076). He added to the career reception
record he already held, now with 224.

PUliNG 6ii&amp;NU:
.. 301.8
Purdue
NQrthwl!Stern . . . . . . . . .

~NOIS When nlinms lost 23-13
~
to lowa last Saturday, it
marked QB Jon Beutjer'; final game
against his former team. After losing his
starting job to Brad Bower, however, he
was standing on the sidelines for most of
the game. Beutjer was sent in to start the
fourth quarter and led the nlini on their
lone touchdown drive.
~
Earlier this season, the

Day after 2004 election:

while seeking "the broad support of all Americans.'"
Kerry conceded defeat in
make-or-break Ohio rather than
launch a legal fight reminiscent
of the contentious Florida
recount of four years ago. "I
hope th&lt;U we can begin the
healing ," the Massachusetts
senator said.
Claiming a second term
denied his fath er. George
H.W. Bush, the president

struck a conciliatory tone ,
too. "A new term is a new
opportunity to reach out to
the whole nation,"' he said.
speaking directly to Kerry 's
supporters.
"To make thi s nation
stronger and better. I will
need your support and I will
work to earn it." he said. " I
will do all I can do to de se r v ~
your trust.''
It was a warm-and-fu zzy

clo'e 10 one of th e longest.
most negative presidential
races in a generati&lt;ltl .
Bu sh didn 'J use the word
mandate . bu t Vice President
Di ck Chen e:- did . and ih e
president's inlention was clear
as he ticked on a famili ar li st
of 'ew nd -Jerm goa ls: overhaul the tax code and Socia l
Securil y al home whi le waging war in Iraq and else where
Jo &gt;~em Jc rror.

Bu ,h ' tanch 10 res hape the
fede ral _i uJiciar,·. 'tartmg with
·an aging Sur reme Court that
\'Oied :\ --l lll award him
Florida fou r )e ar' ago. In afl
branches of ~o v e rnme nt. the
GOP nm\ hold, a ,nJid . if not
perm anent . ru1ing majnrity.
Bush \ vote Jotals were the
biggesl e' er and hi' sl ice of
ihe \o te. 51 pe rcent, made
him ihe fiN presidenl to
Ple.se see Bush. A5

fARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION

198 EAST SECIND ST. • POMEROY, 01

'992-3381

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Trying to Break the Habit?
~~Freedom

From Smoking"

Eight-Session Smoking Cessation Clinic

First Class · Tuesday, November 9 • 6:00 PM
Holzer Tobacco Prevention Center • 2881 Jackson Pike in Gallipolis

- -- - -- - -- - - ----:--------------- -

+

!o regist~r or for more

mformahon, please call

(740) 446·5940

�•

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Dutch police arrest eight suspected
Islamic radicals in filmmaker's killing
Bv TOBY STERLING
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AMSTERDAM. 1'\etherlands
Police arrested eight
more suspe.:teu Islamic radicals
Wednesday in the slaying of a
Dutch liln;makcr who criticized
Muslim cusloms. Lawmakers
que,tioned why authorities hadn't kept tab' on the alleged
killer, who hau a record of violem crime and contacts with a
group Llllder :-.urvcillan~.:e.

(AP) -

The ~rr~~b Wl..!re made in

the 24 hl}tfl'. since Theo van
Gogh was slain while cyding
uown an Amsterdam street
Tuesday - believed to be the
first Islamic terrorist attack in
the r\ethcrlands.
Six ol 1hc detainees are or
Moroccan ancestry. one is
Algerian and the last has dual
Sp&lt;L11 ish -M nroccan national ity. prosecution spokeswoman
Dop Knrimel said. The eight
&lt;Jre in .adtlttion to the suspect
arrested minutes after the
slaving.
a
26-ycar-o ld
resident
of
Amsterdam
Moroccan origin.
Their ethnic identilies
raised question ooof links to the
March II train bombings that
killed I'I I people in Madrid.
Spain . Twenty-nine suspects.
rnostl' Moroccans. have been
charged in those attacks: others arrested were of Algerian.
Spanish.
Tunisian
and
Egyptian origin.
The Netherland' has &lt;Jrrested more than 40 terrorism
,uspects sinc-e tile Sept. II .
2001 &lt;Jttacb ·on tile United
States.
irll'luding
many
an: used or pro\ id ing logi~ti­
cal 'upport for groups linked
to ai-Qaida. Muslim youths
are thought to have been

PageA2

r

Thursday, November 4•

2004

Community Calendar

Experts: Issue One
impact to be felt more in
homes than workplaces

Clubs and
organizations

S

ocial Events

Church services

Your choice of Two Style&gt; ...
Ad Only $7.00
(shown actual size)

..

In Honor Of

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Lol'e. Your FamilY

'

Ad With Photo: $ 14.00
(Shown actual size)

e

I

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

HOLIDAY

POMEROY - The United
Methodist Church Athens
District Superintendent Roger
L. Grace has been honored
with the Mount Award for
Specialized Ministry from
Methodist
Theologica l
School in Ohio (MTSO)
The Mount Award fo r
Specialized Ministry was created to recognize MTSO
alumni who have demonstrated distinctive achievements in
their ministry careers in a setting outside the local church.
The award program was created by MTSO founding
Board member John Mount

Your Payment to:

VETERAN SALUTE

I
C/0 The Dally Sentinel
I
111 Court Street
I
I
P.O. Box 729
I
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I
I
I In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates of Active Duty
Bran~h

•

••
•••

~!'.

I

1.

of Service

•••

12 Noon Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th t

I

Your Name:

I

Address:

I
I

I
I
I

L-----------------~
111 Court Street
P.O. Box.729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
. (740) 992-2155

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

·••••
~:

l:

••

•••

~!'.

--------------··-············-----------·------~

Name of pet:
·• Your Name:

)

I

•il
Add ress:
t~ .

~.

:,~·

'-

~ I

·

~
I

Phone:,_·_______ _ _ _ __ __

I
I .

I

I

:f

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

••

~~ ®allipolis Eatl~

[:ribune

•· 1

J:

4;

"Pet Calendar"
825 Third Avenue

~oint ~leasant

l\egister

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
200 Main St.

"Pet Calendar"
111 Court St.

:,

••

L
7'

:J_G_a~l!~o~~:. ~~ ~?~~!. !'! ~~e~~~~t~ ~-~5?~~ ~. ~~~~r~!·. ~~ ~~~~: ~:

.. •: ..• •. .. •. .. ......., .. •: ..

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

.;.,• .&amp;........ ·~ ••

:•

and his wife Ruth .
As a pastor in the West Ohio
Conference following his
1984 graduation from MTSO
with a Master of Divinity
degree. Grace has served as
assistant director of the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish:
West Ohio Representative to
Appalachian
Ministry
Network: a member of the
United Methodist Rural
Fellowship: a delegate to the
World
Methodist
Peace
Conference:
Chair
of
Evangelism of the Meigs
Cooperative Parish: and more.
Of his service as Athens

District Superintendent, a fellow pastor says. "Roger
knows the realities of rural
ministry because he has 'been
there and done that' When he
walks into a 20-member rural
church and talks with them
about their struggles, they
know that he knows their
.struggle. He's walked that
road and knows where the
potholes are."
Grace received his award
from MTSO President Norman
E. ··Ned" Dewire at the annual
banquet held on Oct. 18 during
Alum Days on the MTSO
campus in Delaware.

Deadline announced for River Sweep posters

~,.

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

Love , (Name relationship to veteran )

The Daily Sentinel

•·

•••••

Conflict/War

Phone :

In Honor 01'

THE

SEASOtt!

Former Racine pastor receives award

AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 5, 2004

Photo of
Your
Veteran

KICK OFF

rP;;~Fmo~A~iR~tu~-W;;,
I
I
I

Other events

Your source for news on the Net

.....
••• •• 'ill .. •••• .&amp;......:
,
•••

On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, The Daily Sentinel will publish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is currently
serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed.Forces.

2004

the Rev. Eddie Buffington.
Monday, Nov. 8
on Thursday. Arius Hart is
POMEROY
Meig' the pastor.
DEAR ABBY: I read your
DEAR ABBY: I agree v.ith
Thesday, Nov. 9
County Republican Party.
RUTLAND - A " Double column faithfully. The leuer
your ad1 icc about thinking
POMEROY Bedford 7:30p.m. at headquarrers.
Porrion meeting" will be held from "Devoted Mom m
twice before phasing out her
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
at 7 p.m. through Friday at the Livermore, Calif." really
older
relation ,hips.
the town hall.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
Rutland Freewill Baptist touched a nerve with me. She
Tomorrow her life could be
GALL1POLIS
Church, located on State said she wanted to end friendturned upside dov. n . .and
Dear
Wednesday, Nov. 10
Fibromyalgia Supp011 Group Route 124 · in Rutland . ships with her old "career"
those thing ' that 'he cherishes
Abby
POMEROY
Meigs sponsored by Holzer Medical Featured on Wednesday will friends because she no longer
and enjoys now might not he
County Board of Health meets Center
and
Arthritis be Joseph Woodall and Carl had anything in common with
there - including her spouse.
at 5 p.m., conference room of Foundation, 5:30 to !5:30p.m. Ward:
Thursday,
Bob them and would rather spend
child and " new mommv"
Health Department, 112 E. in the HMC Education and Thompson and Rick Barcus; her free time with her husfriend,. Wouldn't it b~ mce to
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
Conference Center. More and Friday, Thurman Johnson band and daughter. How sad. ter smacked of the attitude kno11 that you 'till have tho'c
information. call Missi Ross. and Donnie Johnson . Jamie
People use the word that I'm willing to het u., ed relationship' &lt;tnd the 'upport
446-5121
Fortner is the pastor.
"friends" too liberal ly. I to di ; gu .q her. Now that of those friend, 1 The combelieve a person is truly she's se ul ed down. she's plaint&gt; 'he·, hearing from
Wednesday, Nov. 10
Sunday, Nov. 7
ble~sed if he or she can eager to phase out her sin- them nn\,- \\err \ L'f! likel y
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
POMEROY - Enterprise name five "true friends." By gle girlfriends. Naturally. some or hers in the pa't. Were
Meigs Cou nty Fire Chief's United Methodist Church that I mean people who will sin ce she has a "real'' life I her, I might try to change the
Thursday, Nov. 4
Association will meet at 7 Heritage Day !30th year cele- be by your side throu gh · now. she doesn't want to be tone of the relation.ships. but
CHESTER - A speci&lt;tl p.m. at the Tuppers Plains- bration. Worship service, spe- thick and thin; back you up around people who don't. in no way would !-eliminate
meeting of the Shade River Chester Water Di"rict Office cial music by Lawrence Eblin and as k questions late r: and certain ly she and all her them. - KRISTIN K.. :\EW
Lodge #453. F &amp; AM, will conferenc.e room. All Meigs and communion service fol - someone you can call any mummy -track friends are CITY. N.Y.
take place at 7 p.m. with work County fire chiefs, EMA, lowed by carry-in dinner. time of day or night. sure that anything rem ote ly
DEAR KRISTIN : That 's
in
the
E.A.
degree. EMS, Sheriff's olfic·e and Pastor, Arland King.
Through childhood , mar- different from their c.xis- mature thinkin g. A reader in
Refreshments will be served. Commissioners
invited.
POMEROY- Laurel Cliff riage, children, divorce, tence is entirely fabe . It's Minne,ot:~ sent me the folTUPPERS PLAINS- The Questions call Jeff Newell. Free Methodist Church to whatever life throws your that very attitude th at keeps low ing . anti 11.., me,....~age
VFW Ladies Auxiliary, Post 740-591-7574 or Jon Burke, have ''H is Own," a Southern way, these friend s are there. us divided .
.ring!'. true : "Make 11C\\
9053 will meet at 7 p.m. at 740-985- 3459.
gospel group from Ashland, The common thread is the
Sure. she's tired of hearing friends . but keep the old/The
the hall . Dinner will be
Ky. at 10::1 0 a.m. service . CjUality that made you about single girls' money and worth of true friendship
Glenn Rowe, pastor.
served at 6 p.m.
friends to begin with. You boyfriend pnihlems. but let exceeds that of gold."
RACINE
Racine
may not see each other me assure her that potty trainFROM MY COLLECTION
American Legion Post 602.
Monday, Nov. 15
often, but when you pick up ing doesn't exactlY make for a OF LIMERICKS:
meeting. 6:30 p.m. followed
Saturday, Nov. 6
RACINE -A special pro- that phone or e-mail. it's like · riveting anecdote. Single lives
A wonde1iul bird is the pelican
by a dinner.
GALLIPOLIS - Sonlitc gram on women's health will you never left off.
are no less vaiLwble and real
His heak holds more than
POMEROY
Holzer recording artist Mark Bishop be presented at 6 p.m. at the
It's a shame "Devoted than hers.
his belic·an
Hospice Meigs County "di n- will appear in concert at 6 Mt. Moriah Church of God on Mom" doesn't understand that
"Devoted Mom" shouldn't· He u1n hold in hi' beak
ner with friends" o p.m. Boh p.m at the New Life Church Mile Hill Road. For more true meaning of friendship. - worry about letting those
Enough food l(&gt;r a week
Evans Restaurant in Mason . of God. Refreshments. Pastor information call 949-2985.
women down easily. The)
KATHY G.• BALLY, PA .
I don't see how in the helican.
W. Va. Call 992-7463 for is Rick Tnwe.
DEAR KATHY: I agree. may not be eager to be around
Dear Abby is written by
more information.
True friendship is a commodi- someone with suc h a smug- Abigail Van B11ren, also
ty so precious it should not be minded attitude anyway.
known as ]ea111re Phillips.
Friday, Nov. 5
discarded lightly. That letter WOMAr\- POSITIVE IN and wa.&gt; jinmded by her
HARRISONVILLE
Friday, Nov. 5
brought in some interesting COLUMBuS, OHIO
mother, Paulitie Phillips.
Meigs County Pomona
Friday, Nov. 5
POMEROY - Christian mail. Read on for a sample:
DEAR WOMAN-POSI- Write
Dellr Abby lit
Grange. with officers conferMIDDLEPORT - Revival rock band, Capstone, will perDEAR ABBY: Although TIVE: I'm sure they won't www.DellrAbby.com
ur
ence at 6:30p.m .. followed by services will he held at the form at Common Grounds "Devoted Mom " didn't say when they find out they're P. 0. Box 69440, Los
reg ular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Middleport Church of the Coffee Shop at 7 p.m.
it in so ·maf1y words. her let- expendable 1
Angeles, CA 90069.
at the Scipio Fire Station in Nazarene through Nov. 7.
Harrisonvill e. All members Services will
be held
Saturday, Nov. 6
POMEROY -A free straw
are
urged
to
attend. Wednesday through Saturday
Harrisonville Grange will at 7 p.m. with Sunday sc hool give-away for pet boxes will
www.mydallysentinel.com
,erve refreshn1ents following at 9:.10 a.m. Sunday morning take place from 10 a.m. to 2
worship at 10:30 a.m. and p.m. at Powell's Food Fair.
the meeting.
Sunday evening service. 6:30 The give-away is sponsored
Saturday, Nov. 6
p.m. The Rev. David E. by the
Meigs County.
SALEM CENTER - Star Brownfield will be the evan- Humane Society.
Grange #778 and Star Junior gelist. doing both preaching
'Grange #87S will meel with and singing. The Rev. Allen
Monday, Nov. 8
a potluck supper at 6:30 , Midcap is pastor.
SYRACUSE -Sy racu se
p.m. fo llowed by meeting at
POMEROY- The Forest Junior Girl Scout Troop 1204
7:30 p.m. All members are Run Baptist Church in the will collect canned and nonurged to attend.
Kerr's Run area will have perishable food items doorHARRISONVILLE
revival services at 7 p.m. to-door in Syracuse between
Harrisonvi lle Lodge 411 will through Friday . The Re,·. 5::10 and 6 p.m . Those who
meet at 7:30 at the hall. Calvin Minnis will 'peak wish to donate food should
Refreshments.
Wednesday and Friday and turn on a porch light.

on this issue illustrate~ distorted priorities."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Tl}f economy loomed
COLUMBUS - The .eco- large 111 a campa1gn ove1 an
nomic effect of Ohio's new ostensibly moral question.
ban on civil unions will be Exit polls conducted for
difficult or even impossible to The
ll.ssociated
Pre"
predict, business and legal showed the amendment ·
experts said Wednesday.
passing across· many demoOhioans amended the graphic groups. but the one
constitution to deny legal group reliably opposed was
statu s to all unmarri ed cou- those who said Ohio' s
pies with 62 percent of th e economy is "poor.
vote on Tuesday. The meaLost . t:onvention revenue
sure, which takes effect and other bu ., ine" in
Dec. 2, was the broadest of Cincinnati helped that cily
gay marriage ban s passed in repeal an 11-ycar-old charter
II states.
· provision banning laws pmThe states that ban gay reeling gay people from dismarriage will experience a crimination. Voters in the cit)
subtle bur hard to measure repealed that measure b)
"chi lling effect" from gay about the same n:mrgins in
and le sbian employees who w~1ich they approved the
leuve jobs or choose not to statewide amendment.
(AP Photo)
Mayor Charlie Luken said
People pause after bringing flowers to the house of Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam, Tuesday, Nov. take a job in a host ile envi2. 2004. Van Gogh, a Dutch filmmaker who received death threats after mak1ng a mov1e Criti- ronment. said Rene Petrin. voters thought " long and
cizing the treatment of women under Islam was sla1n 111 an Amsterdam street on Tuesday, po lice president of Boston-based hard." and distinguished
said. A suspect, a 26-year-old man witl1 dual Dutch-Moroccan nat1onalrty. was arrested after a Management Mentors Inc. . a between defining marriag~
shootout with officers that left him wounded, police said.
consulrancy that develops and outright discrimination.
such as firing people over
recruiteu here. and experts murder. but the invcst igat ion provocative movie criticizing the · business mentor programs.
"You don't know if some- their sexual orientation.
believe a number of cel ls in will determine it others may treatment of women . under
one
leaves because they're
The "side show'' of gay
Islam. received a death threat in
the Nctl1crlands provide fund- have been connected ...
The Dutch have rcact~d &lt;m e.-mail Wednesday that read gay or lesbian." he sa id . marriage only distracts from
ing to fore ign terrorist cells·.
"Most people are going tti dealing with a stru gg lin g
The country is home to 3 with outrage to the killing of "You're next."
educational system, an outThe Justice Ministry said quietly make a Wcision."
million first- or second-gener- the filmmaker. testing the
But
the
whole
dehate
over
dated tax code and relentle"
ation immigrants. almost 20 nation\ famed tolerance and the suspect in the murder of
impact; on employee recruit- globa l ccnnomit· pre.ssure.
p~rcent of the 16 mi II inn pop- straining alr~ady tense rela- the 47-year-old filmmakerulation. There are ahout tions with the Muslim immi - a distant relative of painter ing and so-called "brain Morrison said.
"We· vc lt&gt;st owr 200,00ll
Vincent Van Gogh - is · a drain" entirely mis.ses the
300.0(KJ Moroccan nationals grant population.
point
of
what's
wrong
with
jobs
. We 're just not preMainstream Dutch Muslim Muslim radical associated
in the Neihcrland,;.
condemned
the with Islamic fundamentalists Ohio's economy. said Ed pared ... he ,aid. "Domc&gt;tic
Kruimel said fi,·c of the SLJS- grnups
Morrison, director of the partner hcncfils arc rwt th e
pecls. who~.e identities were killing. A number of mosques on a terrorist watch list.
fur
Regional core issue whe n \1'e dea l
Interior Mini ster Johan Center
not released. were detained wcr~ closed Tuesday night for
Economic
Issues
at Case with gluballlatiun. "
and re leased during an fear of vandali sm, and politi- Remkes confirmed that the
Western Reserve University
The marrillge amendmen t
Octob~( 20m in ves ti g&lt;ttion cal figures were given adui' suspect was known to have
pa"cd in C\Cf) Ohio count\
associated with a group of in Cleveland.
into a potemialterrori't threal. tiona! police protection .
"The state of Ohio faces hut Athe1h . horne to Ohi"
Newspaper NRC Handclsblad 150 radic·als who are watched
"They were prev iousl y
very
seriOLI'\. fundamental Un iiTrsity. hut the margin
known to us." Kruimel said. rep011ed that conservative politi- day and night by the Du!ch
"As of now only one suspect cian Aylm Hirsi Ali, who wrote secret 'erv ice for fear they problems." he said. "The fact wa' SJilltlkr in urban centers
that we're spen~ ing any time lil-.c Collllnbus .
is being held for Van Gogh's the script fur Van Gogh's latest may commit a terrorist act.

Honor Our l
Heroes ·••••

Thursday, November 4,

True friends stick together
through all of life's changes

Public meetings

Bv CARRIE SPENCER

•· ••• .,A:.• ...

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Students
in primary and secondary
schools (public and private ,
K- 12) are invited to design
a poster for River Sweep
2005. The deadline for submitting posters is Dec . 13.
Fifteen priLes will be
awarded. The grand pri1e is
a $500 U.S. Savings Bond ,
and the school represe,nted
by the grand pr-ize winner
will als o receive an award.
The T-shirt design winner
will receive a $500 U.S.
Savings Bond. Thirteen $50
U.S. Savings Bonds will he
awarded 10 one winner at
each grade level.
The poster contest is open
to students living in or
atte ndin g schools in COtlllt ies bordering the Ohio
River. or counties participating in the River Sweep.
This inclLJdes all cot11ll 1es
a lon g th e Ohio Ri1cr ·in
. Ohio.
West
Virginia,

Indiana , Illinois, Kentucky. prevs:ntion. Posters submitted for ·the conte st should
and Pennsylvania .
The 2005 annual River relkct this goal and focus
Sweep will be held kon on encouraging volunteer
Saturday. June 18. River participation . .
Sweep is a one-day clean up
River Sweep is sponsored
project for the Ohio River . by the ·. Ohio River Valley
Sanitation
.tnd it s tributari es. The Water ·
Sweep covers nearly :1.000 C'nmmis,ion (0RSANC0).
miles of shoreline from ORSANCO is the water poiPittsbiJrgh. Pa .. lo Cairo. lution control agency for the
Ill. and average s more than Ohio Ri1·er and its tribu 22.000 volunteers a year. lanes . Other agencies Whl!
Trash collected during the partil'ipatc in the River
Sweep has inc Iudcd car,, Sweep • include
Ohio
tires. furniture. toys. a Department
of
Natural
piano. and a variety of other Re .soun:es and the Ohio EPA .
items. All trash collected is Voluntary contributi ons from
either recycled or placed in industrie, provide maJOr
approved landfill s .
funding for the Sweep .
River Sweep i., held tu
For further informatio)l
create an awarenes~ ~ of ahout the River Sweep
water quality pruble1i1s Poster C'ont.est. or for comcaused by litlc r .and illegal plete contest rules and reguJumping . ne poster contest. lations. ~ontact Jeanne !son
held in c'&gt;nJunction with at 1-K00-.159-3977. or the
River Sweep. i' one way to Commission\ website
at
spread the 1vord about litter \VWW.( 1r~a nco. {)rg .

With your business
advertised in the ~~~~

Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 24th

Reach Over l

5,000

l

Hogseholds ~
In Meigs ~
County!. ~
_,.

~

tl

~

Advertising D
. eadline
iJ
Mon day, Novem ber 22 nd
iJ
~
iJ
Call Dave or Brenda
~
iJ
.
992•2155
;;i
h~~~MUMM~~~~~U~M~
~

.,

�OPINION

. The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street o Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 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

VIEW

SPAN
Health care
Dear Editor:
If you arc struggling with the Jack or cost of health insurance. join with us. Single Payer Action Network (SPAN). Our
goal is universal health care for all Ohioans, whereby all medical bills. dental bills and prescription drugs arc paid for out
o·f a single fund (single payer). the Ohio Health Care Fund.
Funding is provided by a tax paid by employers of up to
three percem gross receipts and 3.85 payroll. State employers
such as schools pay only 3.85 percent. This is thousands of
dollars less than they now pay for employees ' health insurance. There is also an income tax on anyone making more
than $87,500.
This will be achieved by a &lt;:itizen-sponsored initiative petition where the issue comes to vote at the ballot box and passes into law. Citizens must do this since the legislature hasn't
the political will to overcome the powerful insurance lobbies.
The petition signature drive has already begun. The Ohio
Attorney General validated the petition summary in August.
We need petition carriers and signatures throughout the state.
Out-of-pocket expenses would no longer be an issue for
families. At least 27 industrialized nations have forms of this
system. They would not trade their system of payment for
ours. This is d10t socialized medicine. Medical facilities
remain private and choice of doctor is the patient's.
IT is a shame that good insurance is un·affordable for so
many and can cost more than a mortgage. We hope to bring
this to the ballot by 2005 or 2006.
Check out www.spanohio.org or call Southeast Ohio SPAN
at 592- I 879. You may also call Bob Smiddie at 698-3415 or
me at 698-6050. Meet with us at 6 p.m. on Nov. 4 at the
Pomeroy Library. This is a statewide organization.
UndaDye
Columbia Township

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letter.~ are subject Ia
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

s

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
·· . Correction Polley
Our main concem in all stories is to be
accurate. II you know of an error (n a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922156.

Our main number is .

(740) 992-2156.

(UsPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
PlJbtished every afternoon, Monday
througll Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the
OhiO Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections

Department ex1enslons are:

to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

News

Subscription Rates

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergant, Ext 13

By carrier or motor route
One mon\Jl ............'9.57
One year ............1114.40

Dally •.. • .•.........•..50'

Advertising

•

_Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ex1. 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Dav1s. E~~:t 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, EKI . 10

Circulation
Olatrlct Mgr.: Jason Patterson. Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

I

E-mal.l:
news@mydarlysentinel com

Web:
www.mydai!ysentinet com

Senior Citizen rates

One month .... : . ..... .'8.70
One year .............'96.70
Subscribers should remit in advance
direc1 to the Dally Sentinel. No subscrip.
tiorl by mail permitted in areas where
home earner service is a'llallable

Mall Subscrlpllon
lnalda Meigs County
13 Wee&lt;s . . .. .. ..... ..'30.15
26 WeeKS .... . .. . . . ... '60.00
52 Wee&lt;s : .... : ......'118.80
Outside Meigs

County

13 Weeks . . .......... '50.05
26 Weeks .
. ... ' 100.10
·s2 Weeks .
. .'200.20

Thursday, November 4,

Thursday, November 4, 2004

2004

Obituaries

Electoral College priferable to alternatives

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4 ·

If, as in 2000, the next
president gets elected without winning the popular
vote, there'll be a renewed
hue and cry to scrap the
Electoral College. But,
remembering
campaign
finance reform, let's be careful about it.
Change definitely would
be in order - and probably
already is - · if a so-called
"faithless elector" disregarded the judgment of his or her
state's voters and cast a ballot for someone else, making
a difference in the outcome.
It's possible, in a very tight
election, that electors could
be bribed. threatened .or
importuned to "exercise
their own judgment" - for
instance, to ensure that the
popular vote winner got the
presidency.
To prevent that possibility,
it's probably a good idea that
the states make electors'
voles automatic. Doing
away with them entirely
would reyuire a co'nstitutional iunendment. but legislatures could impose automaticity.
If 2004 produces a repeat
(or a reverse) of the 2000 situation, the demand for
wholesale scrapping of the
Electoral College could well
reach critical mass. Polls on
the subject indicate that sub. stantial majorities of voters
favor abolition and adoption
of a direct popular vote system of electing the president.
After AI Gore lost the
presidency despite
his
535,000-vote victory in the
popular vote, Democrats
introduced constitutional
amendments in Congress ..
but Republicans never held
committee hearings on them.
The closest the nation
came to abolishing the
Electoral College came in
the aftermath of the I-96R
ele&lt;:tion. when George
Wallace's third-party candidacy almost denied Richard
Nixon a majority, which
would have thrown the election into the House.
Even though Wallace
secured 46 electoral vote.\.
Nixon sti ll managed to win

Morton

Kondan:ke

the election. But the situation was close enough requiring a shift of just
60,000 votes in certain states
- that the House approved a
constitutional amendment
calling for direct election.
Nixon even endorsed it. But
it was filibustered to death in
the Senate.
If President Bush or John
Kerry wins the popular vote
but loses the presidency this
year. it's almost certain that
Congress would revisit the
Electoral College. While this
would be only the fifth
instance of a mixed result in
U.S. history, two "misfires"
in a row would make mnsideration of reform inevitable.
Direct election, however,
would be the wrong way to
go. In a hotly contested race
with a razor-thin margin as in 2000 and maybe in
2004 - demands for a
recount wouldn't be confined to Florida or other
states where the vote was
especially dose. Rather.
e.very ballot box in the country would have to be
reopened to ensure that the
count was accurate. Also,
charges of voter irreglliarity
anywhere in the nation could
engender outcome-delaying

rancor.
Another possible fix that
would
not .
require
Congressional action or a
constitutional amendment
would be national adoption
of the Maine/Nebraska system in which ele&lt;:toral votes
are allocated on a winnertake-all
basis
by
Congressional district.
But. this system also has
deep llaws. It would have
resulted in a victory by
Nixon over John Kennedy in
1960 and it would have
resulted in elector~! vote tics

in I 96S, 1992 and 1996,
throwing the election to the
House of Representatives.
And Bush would have won
in 2000, anyway.
Moreover, as Uhiversity of
Virginia professor Larry
Sabato points out. the district plan "would encourage
state legislatures to play
even more games with redistricting than they already do.
You'd have Republican-leaning slates with Democrat~\:
legislatures gerrymandering
to give their nominee the
advantage, and vice versa.
"It would be more i ncentive for the parties to draw
districts that limit competition . What we need is more
competition."
Indeed. my recommendation
l()r election reformers is to shift
their energies from campaign
linance to promoting creation
of an lmva-style independent
rcdistri c tin~ commission in
every stat~. charged with
ensuring th~t Congressional
Jistri&lt;:ts are compact, contiguous and as competitive as possible, encouraging candidates
to appeal to voters across party
lines.
An clppealing alternative
·to direct election or the district system for the presidential vote is national adoption
nt the system proposed this
year in Co lorado : awarding
each state\ electoral votes in
proportion to its popular
vote.
The idea has lost favor in
Colorado because ~~ would
make the state less important
to 1hc candiuates. But
applied nationally, that disadvantage would vanish.
The Colorado system
wou ld keep some of the
advantages of the Elector~)
College. such as encouraging federalism. while also
forcing candidates to compete nationally, and not
merely in eight to I0 battlegrounJ states . Pre:-.Limably. it
\VoulJ

also

encourage

turnout aero" the country.
as minority-party voters in
"safe" states would see more
rea . . on to go to the pulls.
The counter-argument is
that the candidates would

Thelma M. Sayre

still concentrate their time
and money - this time, in
the most-populous states,
hoping for marginal advantages
in
New
York,
California and Texas - and
would ignore rural st*s like
Iowa and Minnesota in the
process.
American
Enterprise
Institute scholar and Roll
Call contributor Norman
Ornstein ·says nationalizing
the
Colorado
proposal
"would be a nutty system.
It's not the Electoral College
anU it's IH'I direct voting. It's
like takin ~ the back end of a
donkey a~d the front end of
a ?.ebra and calling it a
horse."
Both he and Sabato also
think . there'd be a messy
tr~nsition, with some states
adopting one system and
others a different one. confusing voters ami politi&lt;:i~ns.
Both experts favor elimi nating "faithless electors,"
and Ornstein says that
Congress might consider a
"bonus plan" under which
the winner of the nationwide
popul~r vote got extra electoral votes.
Sabato, though, cautions
against change. "Remember
campaign fi nancc reform
and the rise of 527s." he
said. "Lots uf structural
changes get enacted for ide~ .
alistic reasons and good
intentions and end up having
unintended consequences.
I think
the
Founding Fathers had it
pretty right. They made
some mistakes, but it's generally foolish to mess with
what they invented. The
Electoral College has generally worked the way they
intended. It exaggerates the
popular vote to give the
winner a mandate. It
respects the principle of federalism. It didn 't wotk in
2000. bul that's the exception that proves the ru le."
l.cl's hope it's an e.xception
not soon repeated. especi~lly
this year.
!Morton Kmrdracke is
l'X&lt;'CIItire editor of Roll Call,
the neH·spaper r~j' Cap;rol
Hill J

Still undecided? Time for a reality check
What makes this presidential eledion so crucial isn't
merely that it's a referendum
on George W. Bush. It also ·
will test the fundamental
competence of the American
Gene
electorate.
Lyons
The Bush presidency hasn't merely failed: its failures
have been epic. To award
him a second term would be profits and concessions to
a bad indicator of our politically favored corporademocracy's health.
tions, the financing of the
By every rational measure, war by ballooning the deficit
the nation is worse off today to be passed on to the
than four years ago. Bush is n~tion's children, the ceasethe first president since less drive to cut taxes for
Herbert Hoover to preside those outside the middle
over a net loss of jobs. Tax class and working poor: lt is
cuts for plutocrats and heed- as if Bush sought to resLu-rect
less spending have turned every false 1960s-era leftbudget surpluses into run- wing cliche .about predatory
away deticilli, imperiling the imperialism and turn it into
nation's fiscal stability. After administration policy."
vacationing through 9/1 I ,
Now we learn that after
Bush not only bulldozed the forcing U.N. inspectors out
country into a needless war of Iraq , the United States
with. Iraq, but conducted it failed to secure ammo
with 'upreme incompetence. dumps. Some 380 tons of
"The fact is that today's high-grade explosives van.' Republican' Party is one ished into Iraqi insurgent
with which I am totally unfa- hands: 380 tons 1 It must
miliar." wrote retired Maj. have taken a convoy of ISJohn Eisenhower. the mili- whee lers to haul it. How
tary ,historian and son of the many Americ~n and Iraqi
fonner president, explaining lives that blunder has cost
his endorsement of Sen. &lt;:annot be imagined.
John Kerry. "(T)he current
The Bush administration
Republican Party leadership · reacted characteristically:
has confused confident lead- hiding the truth. then denyership with hubris and arro- ing resp&lt;msibility. It handled
gance."
9111 the same way. First.
· American Conserv~tive Bush denied receiving any
magazine thu s explained warning of AI Qaeda '' inten- ·
endorsing Kerty : "Bush has tions. After that alib i colbehaved like a caricature of lapsed , he fought ~gainst
what a right-wing president creating
the .. . 9/11
is supposed to be, and his CommiS&gt;iun.
Then
he
continuation in offi"ce · will stonewalled, refusing lo let
discredit any so11 of conser- Condoleezza Rice testily.
vatism for gener~tions. The After she tu lkcd, Bu.sh
launching . of an invasion refused. Eventually . . he
against a country that posed ·agreed to tes1ify only if Dick
no threat to the United Cheney \:!JUid hold his hand
States, the doling out of war and no transnipl was made.

And Bush calls Kerry a 11 ipilopper.
According to the commission report. Bush swore the
CIA briefings were "histori&lt;:al." th at nobody warned
him that AI Qaeda had U.S.
terrorist cells. Roughly 40
witnesses and stacks of documents contradicted him, but
the final report soft-pedaled
the president's fecklessness
for the sake of getting its recommendations heeded.
Substituting ideology for
fu&lt;:ts un many issues. the
Bush administration cati't
stand up to rational accounting. So President Junior. a hit .
like his once and future pal
Pat Robertson. the TV faith
healer. hinls coyly thai he
takes ins1r3ctions from God.
If we're to credit his latest
TV ad. the choices are vote
for Bush or be eaten by
wolves - pretty harmlesslouking wulves. a&lt;:tu~lly.
Without the voice-over narration. you'd mistake it for a
Nation~ ! Geographic documentary or a dramatization
of Little Red Riding Hood.
Does Bush think he's run-

ning in Transylv,mia?
Then come the falsehoods
Jbout Kerry's record. and it's
clear you 're in Bush World.
No. Kerry never proposed
slashing intelligence bl1dgets
after 9/11 . How dumb would
you have to be to believe
that"' The misleading reh:rence is to a 1993 effort to cut
funds that the National
Reconnaissance
Office
syuirrelcd away instead of
launching a spy satellite.
rormcr U.5. Rep . . Porter
Goss I R-Fla . ). Bush's new
CIA director. proposed d~ep­
er cut:-..

And ~o it goes. Americans
u~cd
~dvc&gt;.,

to congratulate them·
on their ·resistance to

dogma. Missouri called itself
the "Show Me" state: New
Jersey's unoflicial motto
ought to be "Oh yeah. who
says?" But the Bush administr~tion increasingly resembles
a religious-political cult. Facts,
are enemies: critical thinking
is suspect. Writing in the New
York Times Magazine, author
Ron
Suskind
recently
described a White House
insider chiding him for
belonging to what he disdainfully called the "reality-based
community." The fool told
him. "(W)e're an enipire now,
and when we ~ct. we create
our own reality."
Evidently so. A recent survey by the University of
Maryland's "Program on
International
Policv
Attitudes" found that majorities of Bush supporters hold
objectively fqlsc beliefs
about the world situation.
After the Duelfer Report, 72
percent believe either that
Iraq had weapons of mass
de.struction or strong WMD
programs: 75 percent think
Saddam Hussein assisted
Osama bin Laden . and 63
. percent, believe strong proof
of an Iraq/ AI Qaeda alliance
exists. Some 80 percent of
those who watch FOX News
regularly affirm thes~ delu~ions:.

In short. the stakes for the
"reality-based community"
couldn't. be much higher
come Tuesday. Remember.
the democracy you save
could be your own.
(A rkonslls
DemocraiG(c.efle columnisl Gene
Ly( •llS is (f IWtioua/ maxa·
:iue llll'tnd ~riw1er and coillllhor ~~r "The Huming

(!I

rJ;,, Prnidc111 " !St. Martin's
Pn'.\"1 , 2000). You can e-11wil
Lwms
f '.\".CIJ/11).

rlf

genr!yrms2@

The Daily Sentinel o Page As

· www.mydailysentinel.com

Community Olympics a success
BY BETH SERGENT

'

MASON, W.Va. - Thelma M. Sayre, 83, of Mason, W.Va.,
died on Tuesd~y. Nov. 2, 2004, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
She was born on Jan. 2J, 192 I, in Trenton, N.J. , daughter of
the late Henry Reitmire, Jr. and Lillian Woods Reitmire.
Her husband of 58 years, Hoyt Sayre, Jr., Mason, W.Va., survives.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Nov. 5, 2004, at
r:ogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va .• with
Pastor Donald Roach officiating. Burial will follow at Graham
Cemetery in New Haven, W.Va.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.

Local Briefs
Road closed
ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees have closed
Township Road 444 from Ohio 681 to T.R. 164 (Sunny
Hollow) until further notice, due to a slip.

Car wash set
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department
will have a &lt;:ar wash Sund~y from noon to 4 p.m. Donations
will be taken and any money given will benefit the department.

Thanksgiving dinner planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - · The Tuppers Plains Ladies
Auxiliary will have a public Thanksgiving dinner on Sunday
Nov. 14 ~t the firehouse. Serving will begin ·at 11:30 a.m.
Carryouts will be available. The cost is S6.50 for adults, and
$350 for children.

8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - Carleton
School and Meigs Industries
recently held their second
annual
"Community
Olympics" which are used
to benefit a different cause
each year.
This year the beneficiary
of the event's proceeds was
Meigs Industries employee,
Marvin Cooper who is battling cancer.
Cooper still works at
Meigs Industries where his
job is to take mentally
retarded clients out on work
crews to train them for
employment.
Seven teams from aero"
Meigs County competed in
events such as tug-of-war.
frisbee toss, sack races and
egg
relay
nices.
The
Southern Spanish Club took
first place for the second year
in a row. Second place went
to the Meigs High School
National Honor Society,
while third went to the Meigs
High School Band.
Other teams who participated this year were

Shelter
from Page A1

Omission
need.
At the Meigs County
TUPPERS PLAINS - The name of Tyler Winebrenner
was unintentionally omitted from a listing of senior football Dog Pound located on the
players in the final 2004 game at East Shade River Stadium fairgrounds. adoption fees
with Southern. Winebrenner has played with the Eastern are only $10 and puppies
are wormed ~nd given their
Eagles for six years.
first series of shots.
Adoption hours at the
accordino0
to
Debbie
Watson. fair board secretary. shelter are 3:30p.m. to 6:30
Watson stressed that all p.m. on Thursdays, and 9
from Page A1
meetings of the fair board a.m. to noon on Saturdays.
an
incumbent,
James are open to the public. However. Dog Warden. Tim
Parker. Steven Swat7.el , While meetings are usually Lawrence is willing to
held at 7:30 p.m. on the make other arrangements if
and Kciih Wood.
Responsibilities of the first Monday of each month these times do not fit into a
boarJ include planning and in
the
Coonhunters person's schedu le who
staging the annual Meigs Building, the next meeting wishes to adopt a shelter
County Fair. as well as main- will be held at 7:30p.m. on dog. Call him at the pound
lenancc and improvements to Nov. 29.
at 992-3779 to make an
Watson explained that appointment. If no one
the grounJs and buildings.
Eighty-three people of the new officers have to be · answers leave a r:nessage on
I 53 who had purchased elected before Dec. I, so the machine and your call
membership tickets, which the meeting date for the will be returned.
Vicky Beer of the Meigs
qualified them to vote, cast December meeting was
ballots in the election, changed to Nov. 29.
County Humane Society

Fair

Pictured are members of the"Southern High School Span ish &lt;;lub . the first place winners of- the
Second Annual Community Olympics held by' Carleton School and Meigs lndustnes. F1rst row.
Carl King, Avery King, Rowan Holsinger. Weston Counts. Middle row. Brittany Ph1 lson . Apr il K1ng.
Johnny Holsinger, Chris Tucker. Back row, Curt Crouch, Cody Lang.
Meigs High School French
Club. Weber Construction,
Carleton School and Meigs
County Special Olympics.
The event was sponsored
by several residents and
also wants the public to
know that her organization
offers coupons worth 50
percent off spaying or neutering at local vets.
Animal lovers are often
conllicted by the process of
going to the pound and feel
. overwhelmed, even guilty
that they c~n·t give all the
dogs a home. However, that
temporary diS&lt;:omfort c~n
be exchanged for the
tremendou' joy and companionship a shelter dog
can bring.
An animal rescue website postec.l a story by an
unknown au thor called.
"The Boy and the Starfish"
to highlight how one person
can make a difference. one
dog at a time. The story is
as follows:
"A man walked down
the beach noticing thousands of starfish on the
shore. He came across a
boy who recognizing that
the starfish would die out
of water, was one by one,

Bush

Band
from Page A1

from Page AS

conclude Saturday with a filial
contest ut Marshall University
in Huntington, W.Va. The
band will perform at 4 p.m.
On Oct. 24 the band took
part in the Governor's Cup
Competition
held
at
Summersville. W.Va. The ·
Meigs High School band was
selected as one of the top five
hands in the format preliminaries and final competitions.
Awards at that contest
included sewnd places for
~uard. field cuinmander. and

claim a majority since 1988
when his father won 53 percent
against
Democrat
Michael Dukakis.
Like Dukakis, Kerry is a
Massachusetts politician who
was labeled a liberal by a
Bush. This president also
called Kerry a !lip-flopping
opportunist who would fight
feebly against terror.
None of that rancor was
evident . Wednesday. when
Kerry called Bush to concede the race.

'

ICha~ono

Hoeftlch/pholo)

The Meigs High School Band will have their final competition
at Marshall University in Huntington, W. Va. Saturday.
percussion section: first place
for marching and maneuvering and horn line along with
show design, and first place

band in Class AA.
In the finals, the band was
second runner-up overall to
the grand champion.

Smaller doses of flu vaccine given in a new way
seem to work, but not for elderly, studies find
Bv MARILYNN MARCHIONE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRnBI

New research suggest~ that
giving tlu v~cCine in a novel way
can s1retch doses and protect
mm\! preple. hut it didn't work as
well in tl10sc over 60 and is tcxl
experiment;.tl to he used to ease
this yeur\.sh011age. ex pens say.
Scientists tested giving Slmtller
doses of vaccine into the skin
instelld of full do""' given as trJditional shots inlll a muscle.
Young people had comparable
immune sys_tem rcs1xmscs but
older people. who w·e most at
risk of dying from tlu. diJ tM.
Just measuring rcsponsc alone
ckJesn't pmve clltxtivcness or justify changing recommendation:-,
lor this llll season. saiJ Dr. Myn&gt;11
Levin of the l lnivcrsity of
Colomdo School of Medicine,
who ls &lt;:hainmUJ of the govem- .
n1ent's vaccine advisory p;Ulel.
.. What ·hobody knows is
whether o.r not they're going

to be just as protective." said
Levin, who had no role in the
two new pilot studie s.
Results were published online
Wednesday and will appear in
the New· England Journal of
Medicine's Nov. 25 edition.
The skin method is used for
tuberculosis test~ but isn't licensed
for t,~ving tlu or any other vaccine.
Because of the severe flu shot
shortage this ye&lt;~r, some doctors
may opt to usc it ;myway on some
people. such a~ health care and
day care workers, said Dr. Roben
Belshe of St. Louis University.
who led one of the studies.
His team gave full doscs of
Avcntis Pasteur llu shots to 119
people and 40 percent doscs of an
expe'rimental GlaxoSmithKiine
vaccine into tlJC skin of 119 others. The vaccine used in the
rcscarch contained strains fmlll
the 2()() 1-2002 SClNltl.
Antib&lt;~ l y responses were simiJw· in people ages 18 to 60, but
were 75 pcr&lt;:cnt lower in older

study pankipants. Belshe said.
Glaxo funded the study, and
Belshe and other authors have
been consultants for Glaxo,
Avent is and other vaccinerelated businesses.
The new lindings "are very
excitin g b~t they arc still very
early" and need to he tested in
larger studies th'lt include more
older people and those with
other health problems. said Dr.
Mitchell Cohen. director or the
Centers for Disea.sc Control
and Prevention's Cnordinaling
Center for Infectious Dise~se.
The second study was led by
Dr. Richard Kenney of lomai
Corp .• a Gaithersbli!Jli. Md..
company thilt is det·eloping
skin vaccination technology.
That cxperimcnin&gt;mpared traditional tlu shots to one-lifth
doses given through the skin in
I00 · healthy 18-to-40-ycarolds pnd found comparable or
better responses from skin.
That study was pm1Jy funded

by the National Jnstituk of
Allergy and Infectious Dise;ISes.
Its director. Dr. Anthony Fauci.
and another federal vaccine
expert. John LaMontagne. write
in an accompanying editorial
that the skin method is encouraging and merits more stuJy.
It seems to generate not just
antibodies to ilu. as trauitional·llu shots do. but also a sec-. ond response by specialized
immune system &lt;:ells -· findings that "raise provocative
issues· about whether the ,kin
method ultimately may prove
better for the c ldcrly. who
have a poor an\ipody response
to llu shots now. they. write .
Shortly after the editorial
was released. news came that
LaMontagne i1ad rollap,eu
and died late Tuesdav at an airport in Mexico City 11 here he .
had tmvelcd for a gtlwnunclll
health meeting . LaMontagne.
61. wa, deputy director nf the ·
allergy in&gt;titute.
·
.,

-.

businesses
throughout
Meigs County.
Kay Davis. director of
Education
at
Carleton
School s~id. "the turnuut
was e.xcellent and the teams

had a wonderful lime ...
Davi' ildd ed that the
Community Olympics will
be held ag ain next year with
a new cau ~ e benefiting from
their effuns .

,

[Beth Sergenl/ photo)

Little Joe is fully grown and pe rfect for a person looking for a
small house clog as a companion . He is one of many sm all to
medium-sized clogs at the Meigs County Dog Pound located on
the fairgrounds.
throwin g them back in the
water. He asked the boy
whal possible difference
his efforts could make,
given there were so
many starfish. The boy
paused, looked at the
starfish in his hand and

answered. ·11 makes a Jifference to this one . ···
Make a differe nc-e in
your life and in the life
of a shelter dog. Visit
the Meig s County Dog
Pound and adopt your new
best friend.

Cold Pop.
.20oz.
Candy Bars

OnlY 77¢

Res. 55¢

2/75¢

AmifY Billfolds
Mens &amp;Womens

1/2 Price

Women·s
Coloenes
&amp; Gift Sets

20°/o Off

JewelrY
comPlete.

1/2 Price

Stock
•

Hi Val
Ci~arettes

Carton EverYdaY

$11. I8

�OHIO

The Daily Sen.tinel

.

PageA6

Big 10 Notebook, Page 86

Thursday, November 4, :it004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Day after 2004 election: 'Here we go again'
BY AUEN G. BREED
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

NewsChannel

Thursday, November 4

to 56. Winds will be 15 MPH 2:00am. Skies will be clear to

cloudy with l 0 to 15 MPH
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
from the west.
It should be a cloudy mornEvening (7 p.m.-Midnight) winds from the northwest.
Friday, November 5
ing. Expect light rain. The
It 's going to be a cloudy
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
rain is predicted to end near evening. light rain is fore8:00am with total accumul a- casted. The rain should stan
tions for this event near 0.34 by 9:00pm. The rainfall will
inches. Temperature s will finish around IO:OOpm with
stay near 65 with today's high total accumulations for this
of 67 occurring around event near 0.04 inches.
9:00am. Winds will be lO to ~
Tempe ratures will drop from
15 MPH from the south turn· 5 earl y thi s evening to 45.
inds will be lO to 15 MPH
ing from the west as the
mommg progresses.
from the west turning from
Afternoon (1•6 p.m. )
the northwest as the evening
It's going to be a breezy and progresses.
cloudy afternoon. There is a Ovemiglzt (1-6 a.m.)
slight chance of rain . Temperatures will hold
Temperatures will dimini sh steady around 44 with today's
from 65 early this afternoon low of 43 occurring around

Temperatures will drop
from 43 early this morning to
42 by 7:00am then climb back
up to 49 late morning. Skies
will be sunny with I0 MPH
winds from the northwest.
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)

Temperatures will rise from
51 early thi s afternoon to 52
by 3:00pm then drop down to
46 late afternoon. Skies will
be sunny with 5 to I0 MPH
winds from the northwe st
turning from the west as the
afternoon progresses.

Local Stocks
ACI-33.48
AEP- 33.54
Akzo- 38.35
Ashland Inc. - 57.07
AT&amp;T-17.44
BLI-11.90
Bob Evans - 24.43
BorgWarner - 47.86
Champion - 3.58
Charming Shops -7.70
City Holding - 35.24
Col- 38.05
DG -20.12
DuPont- 43.21
Federal Mogul - .22
USB -29.01
Gannett - 83.25
General Electric - 34.33
GKNLY-4.15
Harley Davidson - 59.12
Kmart - 91.59
Kroger - 15.39

..

Proud to be apart of your. life.
Ltd.- 24.89
NSC- 34.19
Oak Hill Financial- 36.45
OVB- 31.25
BBT- 41.96
Peoples - 28.21
Pepsico- 50.14
Premier- 10
Rockwell- 41.99
Rocky Boots - .20.25
RD Shell- 54.85
SBC- 25.70
Sears - 35.40
Wai-Mart - 54.48
Wendy's - 34.51
Worthington - 20.26
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of G~llipolis.

,; .S,u~s¢\le \!Jday • 446~~~42.
"'.

"

Dow Jones
Industrials
Pet.~

- ·~~#1''
;·y _-

SEPT
l&lt;M
10,03743

OCT

~

'~
---·--··· -·-· - ~---·-------wv
.
-AUG
- - -SEPT

2 ,004 .33
Pet. c,_nqo

High

=~

$5.DGO-· D l'afl»•
u...,.·,,.,GIIILMifl
..,.,
over • twe.,..
l...., ....... u ...
D

,...,_ptttt&amp;&amp;..,~an ...

~bit •

Cent.r._IO•Iuoll lliii.,..diepley. 0111

period.

Frltrtd

·-·
DuiNNI'

.

~-~~ 1 d an

wll .,_

c.r. Ct( ttal Celt$ tltn '

In ......l cl

D Total
0 _
PledQe balanc:e In fiJI
_.2004
2005

low

_ _.200_

Collwtu rrnwet\• 8rfei' Don lb~t- $1,.,
Dunora· nw••C•) or mnuan wll t. p u;&amp;....,ily ttltfMtd 011 • \"d' pawr brtdt ptiiOICI In lie C• lin
oukloor lis aling Oerden

pttlh....,.. Ina

IJ;I t•,Cif up ID tne .,.. of lk111 c:ftlradln (mtlllmum) . .

2,200

pattiJIII.

2.000

1/'Ne Wish to ~~--PIPaw···-~ Bflck(a) 0 $100 each far I total gift tl $._ _

1'800
.

PI - ptitrt yovr in.oripf;on wildly • ,_, lllllh it to lw INd. UN~-,.,.,.., end OM~
lw pw ~· ~ l*wtan WUidl II aa ,.1 lwwd a Clhanldar; • iJ pundulllion. lrttOI'iplione&gt;ol up
·lo , _ liMa of lil1an di•Kiwl (lrNtlflmum) - potllble. F1bau endole infomuttion aa ~

•••
••

1,600

•

0

- - - - - - - - - -- - - 1200

.;_.;c.:....__ _______, ___ ... ,..

-----·SEPT

1,143.20

AUG

Pet. cllongo
trom..-loue: +1 .12

High
1,147.60

low
11 3054

UM1

1, 150

•

· ,_,00

-------·- 1,050

oc=-T----NO
""v-

'

LIM I

1'000

Record high : 1,527 46
MtWcl'l 24, .2000

•

AP

'

'
t

B-W men, Cap
women picked
to win OAC titles

a Wll lllil,ld lloalllltl'?idd Ill lie Cent«'.

lnl'orb ['Oft

Patn•&amp;

0

OCT
NOV
R0&lt;01d higl" 5,048 62

Standard &amp; - -- - -Poor's 500 ~w~

'

•

·

March 10. 2000
- ='"""
= -= =
IOU·--·~·-·--:=7~··-c-_
"'=
· =+O=.=ea= =2=.o20.o3 1.99no- ..---=------====:

~ i•.-

••

•
••
••
•
•••

••

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel. com

Ill • u rt Papnu toU
·"
.
ct 11' • , . , . ... tD: Pta•ru rauatldaa, W JnlliDR...., OrPIJ;ala; Ott 411a1

cr••••a11.
0 t.Wt.-tlnor.....,.tllllll,..

"u•• a: ,.,. '-~Jtoa.na ...... ,.

O Phm r.mo• fiiiJMIIWhla..,._ "llal malfrlp

· (;ANCER CAR.B

:
.
i.~..:!!.'••!.!.f.;;••!!!.~!!.~~-~~.'f!,9~:•........,........................................~................j

. TM

Ha?ar Foundltlon -.d Holar C.... llw C..O. C...lllllfMI" ywr I'"' art lnd ~a.
'

'

'

CINCINNATI (AP) Left-hander Gabe White
became a free agent
Wednesday
when
the
Cincinnati Reds decided not
to pick up his contract option
for 2005. ·
The Reds also released
right-hander Josh Hall. 23,
who missed all of last season
while recovering from two
operations on his shoulder.
White , 32. went 1-3 with I
save and a 6.94 ERA in 64
appearances last season for
the Yankees and the Reds.
The Reds got him from New
York on June 18 along with
money
for
left-hander
Charlie Manning.
White made $1 .9 million
last season. The Reds had ·an
option to keep him for the
same amount next year but
chose a $200.000 buyout
'
instead.

s~•:•:·~::::::::::~~~P~~~~=:

:-

Nov. 3, 2004

Reds decline to
pick up Gabe
White's option

~SV-r-t·-·--------------------------Phw•
••

NOV
Record high , 11 ,722.98
JM 14, 2000

'·&lt;ill

0- i

Sheraton Cleveland City
Centre, John Douglas wa s
ready to call it a Bush victory at I a. m.
"Thi s is Bush without
brakes," said Douglas, 41,
who ·had just finished a 14hour shift as a Democratic
precinct challenger and was
nursing a· stiff drink.
Douglas said those who
thought Bush willful and
arrogant after the narrowly
won 2000 election haven't
seen anything yet.
"Look at how he acted
when he stole the election, " he said . " Now that
he's won clear, whatever
his wildest dreams, whatever he can imagine, he
can claim a mandate. The
cloud that hovered over
his head is gone."
At least Ohio . wasn 't
being taken for granted, said
Bush
supporter
Sean
Fliehman, 21 , as he headed
to clas s Wednesday at
Dayton 's
Sinclair
Community College.
"I wa s wishing for a
blowout ," Fliehman said.
"Now, boom, here's Ohio
in the mix of things. I'm
glad to see my vote is
going to be part of the
election turnout."

~~~~.-.--------------~--------------------------------------------­
•

9.250

Nov. 3, 2004

Nasdaq
composite

Robert Kirk , 47 , a con struction work er from
Madi son.
About
two-third s of
Ohioans
cast
ballots
Tuesday on punch cards, the
voting method that led to
the infamou s dangling,
hanging and pregnant chad s
that delayed the outcome of
the Florida election four'
years ago.
When he went to bed,
Cleveland waiter Raymond
Triggs was worried about
Florida, not Ohio, delaying
the election re sults . He
voted fur Kerry. but he
doe sn't think counting provi sional ballots will change
much for Bush.
"I don't think he stole it
thi,s time," said Triggs, 50.
"I think it was just given to
him - just given to him." .
Before dawn Wednesday,
many in the streets were
unwilling to call Bush the
victor in Ohio.
"Never count your chicken s before your eggs are
hatched," said Jim J}Jown,
38, an accountant and firsttime voter from Garfield.
"He (Bush) has assumed too
many times already."
But at a Kerry party in
the ball room at the

&amp;

9,750

High
10.215.51

(AP Photo)

Jerry Etienne. left. from Hamersville. Ohio, and David Shea.
right, from Un ion Township, Ohio, make remarks on the presi·
dential election while having breakfast at Abbott's Family
Restaurant, Nov; 3. 2004 in Amelia. Ohio.

:Name

••
••
•

10,250

+101.32

lr&lt;&gt;m-- +1 .01

CLEVELAND (AP) First baseman Ryan Garko
and right-hander Adam
Miller were named the
Cleveland fndians ' minor
league players of the year
Wednesday.
Garko batted a combined
.333 with 22 home runs and
100 RBls at Double-A Akron
and Triple-A Buffalo to earn
the Lou Boudreau Award.
The 23-year-old also hit two
home runs in the postseason
to help the Bisons win the
International League title.
Miller went 10-6 with a
2.95 ERA in 27 starts, earning him the Bob Feller ·
Award. He struck out 152,
the most in the Indians' system and Miller averaged 10.2
strikeouts per nine innings,
In the . Carolina League
playoffs, Miller pitched 12 13 scoreless innings to help
Kinston win the title. He 'll
tum 20 later this month.

~··················

10,750

AUG

Pair wins
·Indians minor
league awards

Arnol.n

Nov. 3, 2004

10,137.05

Thursday, November 4. 2004

.................................................................*...................
...........................
i In P •• 1'011 ol CU' ccmrruily C8j 'tal c:allll I. Ji ID CIOnltruct and CCIIIIpllll lw Holzer C.W.
~tor Cancer car.. UV.. pledge a IIP-dldiCIIIJie doi Jticln.
.

A DAY ON WALL STREET

I

CLEVELAND - Alaina
Wyric k went to bed
Tu esday ni ght without
watching the news because
she "didn ' t want to fret. "
Bu t she awoke to find her
worst fea rs real ized - · that
Pre sident Bu sh had won
Ohio and re-election .
"I' m actually heartbroken
about it," the 32-year-old
Cleveland fin ancial analyst
said as she sipped coffee
and read the new spaper.
"It 's a sad day. "
Ohioans - and. the nation
- rose Wedne sday to a
repeat of the 2000 election,
not knowing whether Bush
or Democratic U.S. Sen.
John Kerry had won a clear
majority of the electoral
vote s. But before noon,
Kerry had conceded , sparing voters a repeat of the
pitched 36-day legal battle
between Bush and former
Vice President AI Gore of
four years ago.
"Like we told Gore: ' Be
a man , take your lo ss and
walk away, " ' said John
Rios , a tax auditor for the
city of Cleveland and
Bush supporter.
Bush led Kerry by about
135,000 votes in Ohio followin g
Election
Day
polling , but many more
absent ee and provi sional
ballot s were
as yet
uncounted .
Across Ohio, provisional
ballots were cast by up to
i 75,000 people who either
weren 't sure where to vote
or who se name s weren't on
li sts at their precincts.
Elections officials have 10
days to determine the va!idity of those provisional voters' registration, but Kerry
decided not to stretch thing s
out that long - much to the
dismay of his supporters.
"He should fight it all
the way and not stand and
let him just take it ," said

,

COLUMBUS (AP)
Baldwin-Wallace's men and
Capital's women were selected by the Ohio Conference
coache s as the preseason
favorite s in a teleconference
Wednesday.
Baldwin-Wallace's men
received seyen of the 10 firstplace votes \O beat out second-place Otterbein. John
Carroll was picked to fini sh
third.
"Even though expectations
are high this year, they don't
mean anything until we can
prove it on the court," B-W
coach Steve Bankson said.
"We had good chemistry last
year and hope that it continues over to this season."
The Yellow Jackets tied for
second a year.ago and return
all five starters.
On the women 's side,
Capital received eight first- .
place votes with Wilmington
and Baldwin-Wallace each
grabbing one and filling the
next two positions in the balloting .
The Cru saders also return
all five starters from a year
ago.
"I really enjoy this group of
kids and like what I see from
them in practice everyday,"
Capital coach Dixie Jeffers
said·.

Women's College Basketball

Redwomen hoops open season with win over Midway
STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailysentinel.com

MIDWAY, Ky: - The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen basketball tean;t
opened the 2004-0j..o campaign with an 82-59 triumph over Midway College
on Tuesday evening at
Midway College .
Rio
Grande
(1 -0)
stretched out the lead in the
second half to pick up an

Juni or swin g player
Jessica Worrell was a force
on the glass pullin g down a.
ca reer-hi gh. II re bo unds
(nin e in the first half).
Rio Grande led 37 -29 at
the half.
Midway (0- 1) was led by
Ashl ey Park er with 14
points. Natalie Dial added
12 points.
Rio .Grande shot a bli ste ring 56 percent (3 1-of-55)
from the field, 40 pe rcent

(4-of- 10) from the threepoint line and 7·1 percent
( 10-of- 1-lJ from the charity
' tri pe . Rio tu rned the ball
over 16 times.
Mid way wi ll make a trip
to Rio Grande. December 7.
Nex t
up
for
the
Redwo men: Sa turda y vs.
Carlow. Game time is at 2
p.m. at th e ~ewt Oliver
Arena.
WKOV will
broadcast the game beginni ng at 1':40 p.m.

National Basketball Association

Pacers sneak past Cavs in double overtime
BY

TOM WtTIIERS

Associated Press

CLEVELAND
They' re limping. They_'re
aching. They're weanng
casts. And somehow, the
Indiana Pacers are 1-0.
Ron Artest scored 31
points and Jamaal Tinsley
added 15 points and 14
ass ists as the banged-up
Pacers opened the season
with a I 09 - 104 doubleovertime win against the
Cleveland Cavaliers on
Wednesday night.
After initially planning to
rest hi s sore right knee,
Artest decided to play
shortly before tipoff, and
then gave the Pacers everything he 1 had, adding nine
rebounds in 50 minutes.
"Twenty-five
minute s
before the game I wasn 't
playin g," said Artest, who
knew the Pacers couldn't
afford to have him watch.
"I wanted to play. I can
play with pain ."
Zydrunas llgauskas tied a
career-high with 35 points
and added 18 ·rebounds,
while LeBron James added
28 points, eight assists and
five
rebounds
for
Cleveland, which was
unable to take advantage of
Indiana 's injuries.
The Pacers were without
starters Jermaine O' Neal
(sore left foot) ." Reggie
Miller (broken right hand)
and Jeff Foster (hip
surgery), as well as guard
Anthony Johnson (broken
right hand) .
Three of them sat on
lnd1ana' s bench in street
clothe s, well -dressed and
well-paid cheerleaders.
"Thi s was a big win
becau se we were without
so many guys ," Tinsley
said. "But we stuck together and made things hap-

..

pen ."

Austin Croshere added
20 points for Indiana and
sank a crucial 3-pointer
with 54.6 seconds' left in
the second overtime to put
the Pacers ahead 105-102.
After Fred Jones lost
control of the ball,
Croshere picked it up in the
corner and drained his 3.
"It just rolled to me,"
said Croshere , who was
interrupted by Jones.
"That was a pass, Cro, "
Jones joked.
The Cavaliers made two
turnovers before pulling
within a point on Robert
Traylor 's two free throws
with 13.9 seconds remaining. Jones then hit two free
throws to put Indiana up
107-I 04 with 12.1 seconds
to go.
Jame s, who forced overtime wi!h a 3-pointer late
in regulation . was short on
another 3 and Tinsley put it
away by making two free
throws with 4.8 seconds
remaining .
James felt like th e
Cavaliers let one slip away.
"We didn 't execute down
the stretch," he said . "We
gave up a lot of easy buckets. :roo many turnovers.
too many missed shots. It
was just a tough loss."
Scot · Pollard added I0
points and I0 rebound s and
Jonathan Bender, another
of the ailing Pacers. added
II points.
Cleveland got only four
point s and six rebound s .
from Drew Gooden. who
the Cavaliers are hoping
can fill the void left by
Carlos Boozer's departure
as a free agent.
Jame s sent the game to
overtime by draining a 3pointer with I. 7 seconds
remJining to tie it 85-all.

Please see cavs. B&amp;

AP Photo

Indiana Pacers' Stephen Jackson (1 ) tries to get past Cleveland Cavaliers' Eric Snow (201 during the second quarter Wednesday in Cleveland.

National Football League

Nextel Cup

Eury has been with Lewis refreshed, eager for work
Junior for every step
BY DAVID

GtNSBURG

Associated Press

BY

MtKE HARRIS

Associated Press

Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s career
was just tak:in~ off when his
father was killed in 2001 ,
leaving a big void in the
youngster's life. ·
Into that breach stepped his
uncle . Tony Eu ry, who also
ha)?.pens to be his crew chief.
'There's
a kinship,"
Earnhardt said . " We don' t
always see eye to eye on
everything, but l know he
cares about me as a person
and I know he isn't going to
send me out there in something that isn't safe or isn't
right.
"We have a connection that
not every driver has with his.
crew chief. because he's family."
Eury. whose own son, Tony
Jr., is Dale Jr.'s car chief and
· one of his best friends. has
been a fixture in Earnhardt's
life .
Eury was also crew chief

•
•

easy victory
T if fa n i e
in the seaHage r added
son opener.
12 point s
T
h e
(eight in the.
Red wo men
seco nd half)
placed four
w h i I e
pla yers in
so ph o more
doubl e fig·
g u a r d
ure s led by
Carles ha
s eniOr
'-----' C h a mb ers
Allen
guard Angel
Worrell
and fres hAllen with
man guard
18 points ( I 0 in the first Britney Walker chipped in
half). Junior po st player I 0 points each.

for the elder Earnhardt 's
Busch teams, then took over
as crew chief for Little E
when he arrived in the Busch
Series. helpin~ him win
championshtps m 1998 and
1999. When Junior moved up
to Cu~ in 2000, Eury came
with h1m.
Dale Sr. was not a warm .
cuddly guy. He had not
always been close to his chiI·
dren, but- Earnhardt left no
doubt he was proud of his
youngest son and was trying
to hefp him in hi s career.
Eury did everyth ing he
could· to fill the void lett by·
the death of the driver known
as The Intimidator.
"It wasn't always easy."
said Eury, known as Tony Sr.
"Sometimes, he didn 't want
to hear what I had to say and
sometimes he just had to do
something to see if he could
do it. There was times we
didn't like each other very
much, but that's the way fa m-

Piaase saa Eury, 86 .

OWINGS MILLS . Md. Jamal Lewis had a helpless
feeling last Sunday as he sat
in front of his televi sion and
watched the Baltimore
to
the
Ravens lose
Philadelphi a Eagles ..
, "It was real hard. ~ really
wanted to ,pl ay agamst
th,ose guys ... Lewi s said
V. ednesday. I got a ch ance
tn wa tch from the out side
look1n g 1n , and 11 was prett) tough be ca u.~e you want
to ge t 111 ther~.
.
Wh11 e Lewt s was stuck at
hom e completing a twogame suspension for viol ating th e league 's substance
abu se pol icy, the Ra ven s
fell to the unbeaten Eagles
15- 10. The All -Pro running
back has rejoi ned the team
and wil l nex t pl ay Sund ay
nig ht against the Clevel and
Brown,. a team · he shredded for 500 ya rd&gt; rushi ng
Jail Jear en route to becom-

+

an unex pected two- week
break in the middle of the
sea&gt;on. He wor ked with hi s
pers onal trainer to stay in
'hape during hi ' suspension and rid hi msel f of the
ac he&gt; and pain s that come
wi th gelling tac kle d up to
30 time s a game.
"] had to &gt;erve my susc
pe n,ion. but it was for fhe
. ing only the fifth pla~·e r in bener. to o. so I could get
NFL history to run for ~.000 some res t. " Lew is said.
yards in a'season.
'
"''m pre tty fresh . and my
Lewi s doe sn't cure who le!!"' art' g1 wd ."
lines up on the oppos ite &gt;ide
Lew i· .- 25. plead ed gui lty
of the line of scri mma 2 c. in Al lan ra on Oct. 7 to
He\ just ready .to dnk ,iu t using a plw ne to 'et up a
some puni shment wi th the dru~ hu\ . He must serv.e
football crad led untler hi' pri,'on ri~ne after rhe 'cason
arm.
but won·r ·miss anv more
"O h.. he's ,·oming. He football. anJ for th at he is
watched the fi lm this' morn · tha nkful.
ing and he couldn't · stop
"That\ the big thing. it ' s
shaking hi s leg... right tac k· done with and I can put it
le Orl ando Brown said . "I behind me now . " Lewi s
know he's ready. He' s got to saiJ . "l can mo.' e on with
play ca tch up now. He\ m; job and dn what I do
ready, and he's foc used ."
best. wh ich 1s come out
He 's re fres hed. too . After here. and pia) footbal l and
takin g a pounding for five
Ple•se see Lewis, Bi
straight weeks. Lewis. got
'

'

�Thursday, November 4, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

82 • The Daily Sentinel

Page

Thursday, November 4, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
We Cov•lllll'__,.
Melg•, Gallla,
And Mason
Countf.. Like
NoOne

l!lse can!
G.n;. Co:nml). 011

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

RICKY SKAGGS AT ARIEL NOV. 7
BY KEVIN KELLY ·
KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Reinforcing
a return to his roots in blue·
grass with the release of his latest CD, ··Brand New Strings,"
countrv sensation Rkky Skaggs
and Kentuckv Thunder are
coming to Galllpolis on Sunday,
Nov. 7 in two shows at the Ariel
Theatre.
Skaggs' special guest will be ris·
ing local entertainer Or. Joey
·
Wilcoxon.
The shows are at 4 and 7 p.m. All
seats are reserved for each show,
and are $28 in advance and $30 the
day of the show.
.
Ska~' appearance Is another In
a series of lOcal concerts brinlina
nuijor talent to the area which llaS

Ta Place
\!tribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To
992-2157
Word Ads

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

(Sweet AdellnH)

Third VAS .conGert of season stresses h~ony
'

'

AD

• Pleasant
. and
RIO GRANDE - .Featured In the Gallipolis/Point
~~}.=ds~ce"fcf~~
third · concert of the 2004·05 Valley Artist Hlllltington'Barb6ursvllle areas. Now in their
Tit
• 1a alb
released
Series at the .Fine and Perf~;~rming Arts lOth year, they entertain audiences with a variety
Sept.e~~ o:! ~~y, Skaggs
Ricky Skaggs
·Center at the University of Rio :Grande on of songs, remiolscent of those bygone clayiJ when
Family Records, as we I as a bUSy .
•
· ·
. S11nday, Nov. 7 at 3 p.m. will be two highly men .hannonlzed on street corners, In bprber·
concert schedllle have. drawn accolades all over the country, mcludlnll thk ·: reeogolzed and very popular · barbershop shops, In the parlors and on back pordtes.
endorsement from the Cincinnati Enquirer: "Music doesn't have to be eiectrlc ' 'm11sical groups, according to Gary Stewart,
To quote their director, James · L.
to be electrif)ing, as Mr. Skaggs and company decisively prove in concert."
McClelland, ''Barbershop harmony is a cappel·
Tickets for the Nov. 7 shows are now on sale by contacting the Ariel president of the Valley Artist Series.
Theatre, 426 Second Ave., Gallipolis, phone (740) 446·2787 or.
"We' are fortunate to have two of the finest Ia, four-part harmony, USII811y sung with at
www.arieltheatre.org
·
barbenhop groups in the Tri-State, perform. least one voice above the melody. ' The keys to
(The Associated PresS contributed to this story.)
log for our upcoming Sunday afternoon con- singing barbershop are to anticipate (hear) Cllr·
cert. They are the River City Magic Chorus rect placement of pitch within the chord, and ·
of Sweet Adellnes Inc., under the direction of emit the proper balance l'ith the other three
Beverly Miller, and the TrebleMakers, direct·
voices. Tbis provides the 'ring,' the appealing
ed by James L. McClelland," Stewart said.
aspect of this all-American style of music."
The River Magic Chorus is a dynamic
This special concert is being sponsored
group of women from the Tri-State, special·
lzing in four-part barbershop harmony. As a through a generous donation from Mr. and
chartered chapter of Sweet Adelines MrS. Eugene H. Gloss. The gratitude of the
International, they appeared as the feature entire Valley Artist Series Board for their genGALLIPOLIS - The football
performers for the Irish Association of erosity and support was expressed by Stewart.
field isn'.t the only place hosting fall
Valley Artist season subscribers have their
Barbershop Singers Convention in Dublin,
classics. Join the Ohio Valley
tickets for this third in the series of six con·
Ireland, in 2001.
Symphony on Saturday, Nov. 6 for
Their program will emphasize favorite certs Included in the 2004-05 series.
an evening of musical classics at the
patriotic music, so appropriate just before Additional tickets for this Nov. 7 perfor·
historic Ariel Theatre Jn downtown
mance will be available at the door for $10,
Gallipolis. ·
Veterans Day.
OVS Music Director Ray Fowler
The TrebleMaken are men from the or may be reserved by Clllling (740) 245-7364.
conducts the 8 p.m. concert, which
also features the violin-viola duo ·
Marcolivia.
,
The first half.of the program features three pieces inspired by the
classical ideals of proportion and
POMEROY - Rock fans who
balance between mind and emotion. ·
like to be challenged by high•
First up is the Passacaglia by
quality music that's not easily
George Frederick Handel in a robust minuet.
pigeonholed into one distinct cate·
famous arrangement for solo violin
Violinists Marc Ramirez and gory
want to be at the Court
and viola by the 19th-century Olivia Hajiorr form Marcolivia. Street Grill Saturday night.
Norwegian
violinist
Johan They have coocertized extensively
King's
X,
the
critically
Halvorsen. The combination blends throughout the United "States1 acclaimed, Texas·based hard rock
the best of the passcaglia - a com- Russia, and the rest of Europe trio of vocalist/guitarist Ty Tabor,
plex Baroque form
with including performances in New vocalist/bass
guitarist
Doug
Romantic virtuosity.
York,
Boston,
Chicago, Pinnick and vocalist/drummer
·Next is a world premiere of au Washington, Los Angeles, Moscow, Jerry Gaskill, who have spent
arrangement by Ariel Composer in London, Tokyo, an~ Mexico City.
nearly 25 yean together crafting
Residence Scott Michal of Mozart's
Their performances have been their own unique sound, will be
Ave Verum. The composition was featured on radio and television performing at 9 p.m.
commissioned in memory of Maj. broadcasts seen and heard throughTickets are available for $20 at
Bradley Abels, son of Dr. and Mrs. out North America, Europe and the Grill.
King's X is known for its abll·
Gene Abels.
Asia. They are also active chamber
Michal takes Mozart's material, music performers. The Fulbright· ity to fuse the power of hard rock
originally a choral piece, and works winning duo is on the faculty of and heavy metal with Beatles-like
it into an ethereal sonic landscape Sh
d h u ·
"t L v
pop melodies and the experimen·
that ends with a celestial statement
enan oa
mversl y, as egas tal traits of progressive rock.
Summer Music Festival and
of perfection as solo strings quote Darlington International Summer
King's X
Tabor says they don't really fit
. ·
fragments of the original work.
Festival, and are on the roster of the into any one music scene.
S
'
The duo then join the OVS in
"'We're not a hair metal baud, we're not a pure metal band; we're ·not an alternative
Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante for M1llennium tage at the Kennedy band, we're not a jam band and we're not a pure progressive rock band. We like to dab·
Violin and Viola, one of the most Center and the Touring Artists for ble in this weird gray area that encompasses all of those."
elegant solo pieces by one of histo- the Virginia Commission for the
The origin of King's X goes many years tq when Pinnick and Gaskill toured with the
ry's most elegant and tragically Arts.
Christian rock band Petra. They soon met up with Tabor and they all joined a Top 40
The public is encouraged to
short-lived composers. The two
attend rehearsals for free on cover bahd. Ultimately, they took the name Sneak Preview and spent five yea(s based in
soloists are balanced against each Friday, Nov. 5, from 7 to 10 p.m. the cullege town of Springfield, Mo., and quic!dy earned a devoted following on the local
other as gracefully as they are
d S tu d
N 6 r m 1 to 4 original music scene. They toured extensively and managed· to record one album by I983.
against the orchestra.
an on a r ay, ov. ' ro
In 1985, the band was offered a recording contract contingent upon relocation to
m
OVS . Saturday
dress
Roundin~ out the concert is P · •
Houston, Texas. The deal felt through. Tabor, Pinnick and Gaskill stayed In Houston, met
Georges Bizet's Symphony in c, · !"l'hearsals are an e~cellent way to Sam Taylor, who produced videos for ZZ Top, and he helped the band sign with Megaforce
one of the earliest works by the mtr~uce Y.oung children to sym- Records, an Atlantic Records imprint. Sneak Preview was then renamed King's X.
famed composer of "Carmen." In pbomc mu~1c.
.
King's X's 1988 debut album "Out of the Silent Planet" earned critical recognition, but
this piece, written when the preco·
The Oh1.o Valley Symph~ny IS wasn't a success. 1989's ''Gretchen Goes to Nebraska" was the band's real first attentioncious composer was only 17, he pays sponso.red m part by the Oh1o ~rls grabber. By 1992, King's X severed its ties with taylor, began more touring, and per·
tribute to Haydn, the other titan of Council, a. state ogene~ that sup- formed a highly memorable set . on the opening night of Woodstock '94. The band severed
the classical era. The symphony.fea- p,orts pu.bhc programs ,:n. ~he arts. ties with Atlantic and after signing with Metal Blade Records,
tures fleet, light-hearted move· . Marcobvia &amp; Mozart . IS funded
After signlrig witb Metal Blade Records, King's X released an album of songs last year
ments bookending a sweet, m !!art by. the Galha .County dating from before the band had signed its first record deal.
poignant slow movement and a Med1cal SoCJety and the .A nn C.
King's X was voted by VHl as one of the "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock."
Dater Foundation.

\'\\01 \(I 'II \1-.;

r

~

·

(Zf' Cl

t lOn

·

*
*

*

-Invite you to participate in
...,t'stmr~s
r'!.t'f1
1·
M
\..J l U. ml O/lportunity to make ft differet~ce in tire
~
CC. b
(U\ i t
lives oj' young boys mulgirls throughout the
(CJ ne I,.:J"Oe OX ;:,.;•\. n S l'!)
world ill wnr torn countries. -

C J1

-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~·

lniTA~U
FOLND

(7401742·2420

(740)992·7457

1-Biack lab mrx, Female
very lovable good w/kids
about 2yrs old (304)9373348 after 5pm

r~

2 tree spoiled kit1ensr litter
trained . wormed , wormed.
Health guaranteed. 'Call
(740)367·7574
3-Kittens to good home only.
!740)2347·2185

8 month old Black Lab.
male. neutered. al: shots,
very tnendly. (740)992-3973
8 pupp1es. 7 weeks old. mu&lt;
breed . cal l (740 )992·5237
Coal Appro11 2 Tons

(3041675·8894

r

Lu,,·ANv

YARil S.~LE·

74

Po~u-:nov/Mmou:
300 4th St . Pomeroy (Ewing
basement), 8· 4, Friday No11.
5th, Saturday Nov_ 6th,
clothing .. household items,
mattresses. computers &amp;
stand.

must be prepaid"

·¥ARD Sl\u:
YARD SALE·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

-rtte M"'IN
DIFf"•(l)(.:l

\N'I-t\f . IT'&gt; So
feAc:.t-1 A CAT TRIC.I&lt;''?:

!o

lwright@ic.net

I~·nuJCnoN
G.allipolls Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367,
1·800·214-0452
www gallipohscareercollege .~;om
Accredited Member Accred•t ng
Council tor 11depemJem Colleges
and Scrools 127·tB

0
0

www.comics.com

© 2004 by NEA, Inc .

ALIL"IlO~ ANU

2:00pm. 2135 SA 7N . above
Fl.EAMAKKH
110
Roads1de Rest . River of L1te
Ht-:1.1• " 'ANTEI)
HELP
WANTEil
Found Black Lab/Boarder \)nited Methodist Wome n.
1~..__ _
RIVERSIDE
AUCTION~..__ _ _ _ _ _. .
_ _ _ _. .
Coll1e Mix in the Letart area - - - - - - - - BARN R1. 7 South. 5 m1les ----.
'
(304 )882·2 161
Yard sale at 1939 Chatham below the Dam . EVERY Med1 Home Health A.gency,
St. 3rd thru 6th . Tools. SATURDAY
@
6pm. Inc see k1ng a fuiH1me RN
Found· young calrco k1nen videos, small applia nces,
Pat1en1 CarA Coordinator tor
(7401256·6989
on Crew Rd. (740)992-9467 jeans, what nots.
Gallipolis. Oh1o and surO'lO
WA~'ITJ)
Lost Black Cow !rom The 8
rounding area.
Dulles
milL..,.
M1le Creek area (304)675· Yard sale. Fn·Sat 112 m1le
mclude establishmg and
2347
out 588. lois ol m1sc . 1tems.
ma1ntarmng open hnes ot
Absolute Top Dollar: U S. comm un1cahon with area
POSITION
Silver and Gold Coins, phystcians and health care
Proofsets. Gold Rings. U.S. tac•lltleS in the delivery ot
ANNOUNCEMENT
4K4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Currency,·M T.S. Coin Shop. Home Health Services. We
Annauncement .................................. .......... 030
151
Second
Avenue, offer a competitive salary.
Post1ng Date· October 27. 2004
Antlques ....................... ................•............. .. 530
G If 1· 740 446 2842
E.O E. Please send resume
Apartments for Ren\ ................................... 440
to
Stephame
Rogers .
I \I PI 0' \II\ I
MAINTENANCE
Auction and Flea Market. ....................•....... 080
Director o f Marketing. 352
'I
Rill
I
'
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
WO.RKER
Second Avenue . Gallipolis.
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
OH 45631
110
Autos for Sale ..............................................710
The University of Ri o
HEI.I' W~N"Illl
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..........................•.. 750
Needed:. Part·time workers Grande mvites applications
Building Supplles ....... ......... ........................ 550
the
pos1tion
of
lor child care center. hours lor
An E11cellent way to earn llex1ble . HS or equivalent. 18 Maintenance WorKer
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
money. The New Avon.
Business Opportunity ........................... ...... 210
years of age. experience
Call Marilyn 304-882·2645
Bljsiness Training ...... ................................. 140
with pre-school chi ldren pre· Responsibilities of th1s lull
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............. :............. 790
lerred. Ma11 or fa11 cover 161· 11me 12 month position
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
ter &amp; resume to : D1 r'ector. include, but are not limited
Camping Equipment.. ......... ........................ 780
Sell. Sh1rley Spears. 304·
Children's Village . 2122 to, the performance ol main·
Cards of Thanks ................ .......................... 01
675·1429
Jellerson
Avenue_ Pt tenance duties such as
Child/Elderly Care •.. .•.................................. 190
Cashland m Gallipolis. full Pleasant WV. 25550, 304· servicing , updating and
Elect rica 1/Relr igeratlon ............................... 840
repainng of current and new
hme: Customer Se rv1ce 675·6575 EOE.
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
plumbing systems: repairs
Associate position available.
EKcavallng ................................................... 830
&amp;
EMT's and monitoring of current
excellent pay and benet1t Paramedics
Farm Equlpmen\ ............................ .............. 610
package
incl uded. needed. Apply at 1354 and new HVAC systems and
1 Farms for Aent ............................................. 430
pneumatic systems; rnain ·
Customer
se
rvice
and
cash Jackson PiKe , Gallipolis
Farms lor Sale ............ ~...............•.•............•. 330
tainmg control systems;
handlmg
exper1ence
For Lease ..................................................... 490
Pay and
1nstall1ng and servicmg heat
requn8d. please fax resume
For Sale ........................................................ 585
pumps, troubleshooting and
1o·
You Deserve
For Sale or Trade ................. .-....................... 590
repairing boiler systems:
740-441-8940
Earn
up
to
$9.25/hr
. Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
perform1ng var1o us building
OR
You choose :
Furnished Rooms ....................., .................. 450
repa1rs. paint1ng and snow
Stop by 13 12 Eastern Ave
Recru1t Volunteers for ma1or
General Haullng ................ ........................... 850
removal funct1ons General
for application.
Non·Profit
Health
Glveaway.............:........................................ 040
electncal background is
Organ1zattons or Help
Happy Ads ....................................................050
CUST SVC REP
required. May reqwe heavy
Protect you Gun A1ghts at
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
NEEDED!
lifting.
lnfoC1S1on m Gallipolis!
Help wanted ................................................. 110
Work From Home,
EnJoy·
Home lmprovemenls ..........,. ........................810
800·21 0·4689
Must have h1gh school d1plo·
--·weeKly Pay
Homes for Sale ......•.......•............................. 310
$~00-$1 ,500/Month
ma
or
eqUivalent.
'Paid VacatiOn every S1x
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Part·time
Applications wtll be reviewed
Months
Houses for Ren\ ................•......................... 410
$2.000·$8 ,000/Month
as received .
"Permane nt Schedule
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Full-lime
'Full Benei1IS Package
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Delivery/WarehOuse person '7 Paid Hol1days each Year All applicants must submll a
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .. ...................... 660
letter of 1nterest and resume
needed. full time. imrned1ate
'Protes!!_ional Office
Llveslock...................................................:.. 630
Including the names of three
openmg, must have excel·
Environment
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
references on or before
tent driving record , apply at
Come 111 u1 In
Lola &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Novemoer
12, 2004 to
Lifestyle Furniture. 856 3rd .
Downtown G1lllpoll1
Mlscollonooua......................................... ,.... 170
Ave, Gallipolis. 9-5 no phOhe
LOCIIId II
Miscellaneous Morchondlao •... .........••........ 540
Ms. Phyllis Mason. SPHA
calls please.
242 Third Avenue
Director of Human
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Or Coli;
looking
for
Resources
Mobile Homes lor Ren\ ............................... 420
1·877-483--8247 )C 2454
secretary/finance manager
University of Rio Grande
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
tor local car dealership, Reta il W ireless Consultant
Money to Lo•n ............................................. 220
PO. Bo&gt; 500
experience preferred but not Th is care1H cons ists of
Rio Grande OH 45674
Motorcycl" &amp; 4 WhHiera ..........................740
necessary (will train), typing ln&amp;lde eales In one of our Fax number: 740.245·4909
Mu•lcellnatrumanll ....................... ............ 570
Skills helpful, oase pay plus retail locations. The job 11
email: omaspnGriO ady
Personels ... .. .................................. ..............
oonus package. 11 interested goal oriented and requires
Pet• for Ball ...................... :......................... 560
call Ted (740)992·4443 or an Individual aee~lng the
EEOIAA Employer
Plumbing &amp; Hoatlng .................................... 820

110

o

Respect

9

WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
In Point Pleasant, wv .
~
WVVK/WMPO on Bradbury Rd"t
In Middleport, OH
Bob's Market In
MasonorGalllpolls.

oos

Prolta•ional Sarvlceo •...•......••••.......••••.......230
Radio, TV l CB Rtpalr ............................... 160
Real Estall Wanted ..................................... 380
Schools lnstruction ..................................... 150
BHd, P/snt l Fertlllz•r ............... :.............. 650
91tustlons Wsnted ....................... ................ 120
Space for Rlnt .............................................460
Sporting Goodl\1......................................... 520
9UV't lor 9111 ..............................................720
Truck a lor 5811 ............................................ 715
Uphol811ry ................. ,........ ..................... ,... 870
Vana For Sale ... :...........................................730
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 080
Wanted to Buy· F•rm Supplles .................. 820
W•ntod To Do ............ .................................. 180
Wsntld to Rtn\ •....•...................... .......•........ 470
Yard Solo· Galllpolle ................................:... 072
Yard Salo-Pomoroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Yard Salo·Pt. Pla.. ant .................... ............. 076

Joe (740)667·0000

Manager needed lor mobile
home gar~ In Shade. sand
rseume to : Country Park
Inc., PO 1033. LogQn, Oh

43138
Takin g applications tor iMe·
pendent con tractors. Earn
up to S1,500 a month delivering The Da lly Sentinel
Must be reliable and n.ave
dependable transportation
Must be available Monday
througl"r Fr lela.y Mornin gs
and early afternoon and
Saturday even ings If In terested contact Jason at The
Da11y Sentinel (740 )992·

2155

SUK101.~

150

•

DROP-OFF LOCATIONS: @

Work tor a stable company
who ne~ds 20+ people
immediately to fulfill client
needs
Call Now!

1-87H6H247 X 2659

56 Hilda Or_ Fri -Sat 9·6
76
YARD SALE·
HousehOld items, dishes.
baby items. warm clothes.
PI: l'lE~'i·\NT
for all, sewing machtne in
'
cabinets .
Yard Sa le Frrda.y &amp; Saturday
Typewriter.
Grandfa ther
Sew1ng·Machine.
Inside garage sale. 1616 Clock,
Jackson P ike . Thursday - Gas-Cook-Stove. Wringer
Washer (Maytag) Coffee
Saturday, 9-5
Table, Trarler H1tch parts ,
Lots of bargains yard sale. many other items 220 South
Saturday 11 16. 9·4 . 16659 Second St Mrlson

FOUND

We 'll match your current
Rat a-t

tools needed to become a
succeulul 11111 perton .
There Is very little supervl·
sion on the joe which
re(lulres
self·motlllltlon.
experience. and a proven
record of succtll . 1·year
previous true SALES e•perl·
ence required. Salary. tlul
comm 1ss1on baaed , with lull
benerits . V isit www.bull dogWireless .c om
for
more
details.

-----Want n d· Part -tl me
De11very Per~on . tor·local·
Florist
SenrJ·Inforr:na!IOn
TSC2 c/o· POint Pleasant
Reg1ster. 200 Ma1n St Pt
Pleasant. WV 25550

Treatment
Real.:l&amp;n1ill
Facility fer boy, now hiring
Youth Woi'ker poaltlort . Csl!
between
9 :00am·4 :00pm

(740)379·9083.
Rio Grandt Me Donalds now
hiring all shift .
Saleeperaon.
Llleatyle
Furniture. lull time poaltlon .
Apply In per&amp;On 10.5. No
phone calls plelle.
Th1rd Avenue. Galllpolil.

ese

TELEMARKETERS NEED·
ED- No Ell:perl ence OK. 51'·
9 Pet Hour. Eaay Work., 1·
888·~7 4-JOBS

110

HEIJ&gt; WA~"JTJ)

1
71J ML'Ll1.LANWUS
H1gh
School
Jun1ors,
Sen1ors and Pnor Ser111ce
you can fill vacant pOSitions
in the West Virg1ma Army
Nat1onal Guard . 11 you are
between the ages of 17·35
or have prior milnary serv·
1ce. you won' t want to pass
th 1s up. For Opportunities 1n
your area. call: 304· 675·
5837

2BR 1 bath, full basement.
newly remodeled. 1 car
garage , 1 acre. Located on
Birkhari Lane (740)441 ·

9816 .

VAN DRIVER

URYWALL
Install. Fm1sh Pa1n11ng,
Carpententry. Bathrooms.
Res1den11al. Commerc1aJ
INSURED

NOTHING TO SMALL
Flat Pnces
Steve-(740)388·8731
Georges Portable Sawm1ll.
don't haul your logs to the
m111 just call 304 ·675- 1957
Will haul Sand &amp; Gravel
Reasonably
Pr1ced

(304)675·8635

Will pay up to SSO each for
Gallia County Council on unwanted or JUnk veh1cles to
Aging/ Semor Resource haul away. (740 )992..0413 1f
Center is currently accepting no answer leave message
applicatiOns for van driller.
Excellent opportunity for
ret1red person looktng lor
IO
IlL SI~P.&gt;S
activ1\y. Must be h1gh school
01~~ lR'Il ""'
graduate or equivalent. must
have valid dr1vers license
and be an msurable risk.
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Must be able to pass med·
1cal examination Hours as
ou do bus1ness with peaneeded. par t ttme pos1t10n
le you know and NOT t
EOE.
end money thro ugh tr
Wanted Dayt1me Delivery
ail unttl y:~u have .l'westl
Dnvers. must have valid
a ted the offerin
L1cense . Auto &amp; Insurance
call (304)675·5121

NEW PURCHASES 1
REFINANCES

$0 DOWN/ SO DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENT S NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES
WELCOME 1

1.000-370-4965
CALL TODAY

STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

MB 5263
(Oh1o Loans Only)

(,&lt;n~

"'

2 acres on Ingalls Road
$15.000 740·245·0133.
Mobile home lo t tor rent.
Water and trash serv1ce pro·
v1ded. (740!44 1-4 540

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n'
1-888·582·3345
I{ I \ t I ..., I \II

E.o;nn:

6300
Kl \I \I"
All real estate advertising

in tnis newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makea it illegal to
advenise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race , eotor. religion. sex
familial status or national
origin. or any intention to
make any such
preference. li mitation or
disetiminstion."
This newspaper will not
know in gly sccept
advertisements tor real
estate which is in
violation of the law. Our
reeders are hereby
mtormed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

t:J

45631.

&amp;

Al'KFA&lt;;I.

By Owner US 35 1n Mason
WA~1l:l&gt;
County. 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bedrooms ). large SunRoom
12x32
all 'lew Want to ouy a 3 bearoorn 2
Carpet . Fun Baserilem 1 '2 bath home Garage base·
acre lot $38 .500 (304)675- rnent. 3·t0 acres 1S des1r·
able All ca sh Close m 2
2933
weeks Me1gs. Gat11a or
Athens Co unty. (740)992·

-·

WANTED : Part-t ime posit1on
available to aaauu with indl·
v1dual1 with mental retard&amp;·
tlon at a group home 1n
Bidwell 28 hrstwk : 3·9pm
Thura ; 2·11pm Fri. ,Oam.,
7pm Sat. Must have high
schOol diploma/QED. valid
dr iver a licenae and three
years good arlvlng eKptn·
ence S? .00/tlr. Pre· employ·
mant Dru g Test!ng . Send
resume
to
Buckeye
Commvnity Servtc es , PO.
Box 604 . Jackeon. OH
45840 Dndllne for appllcants
1119/04
Equal
Opportunity Employer

Stock mooel:c; at old p-1ces.
2005 models arr1vmg Now,
Cole's
Mobil e
Homes.
15266 U S 50 East , Atnans.
OhtO 45701 (7 40 )592·1972.
'Where Yo~.~ Get Your
Money's Worth"

MORTGAGE

Plu nl ::.••iSIO\ \I .

8160.

SAVE · SAVE·SAVE .

UNITED SECURITY

Wanted
Med1cal Olf1Ce
SEK\R·•~..,
House 3 S~.;Jroorr, 1 1 2
Ass 1st ant with experience for ~..__ _ _ _ _ __.1 Bath H~at PuMP. new
physic1an ott1ce A un1que
Caroet W1ndo .... s &amp; Root
pos1tion reqUJring knowl·
R1ver V•ev. 12 SM•th St No
edge of com puters and data
Money De"'" to ~uahfvu•g
ermy - also lCD and CPT
DIRECTV
Buye· SJ25 ·•1ontn w.ny f!ent
cod1ng. Reliable transporta(30416:"5·2-.. 9
tton needed. No weekends
up to
House ,,... 1\anauga 0 a
or
holidays
required .
12 Months Free
Farmers R.: Gall•poh s or.
Benef1ts available _ Salary
Programming . 130
$40 000 2 t•a1lers lo(rode 1
neQOtiable with experience.
Channels plus Free
Pa r ~
en
Nenl
Rc
A f l e~~:ib t e employer. Mad
Equipment, Free
S6~ 5 rnon''1
.nves tment
resu me to Box 558 c1o
Professional Installation up Botr
:ra ers
S35 000
GallipoliS Dally Tribune. PO
to 4 Rooms Free Ca ll 1·
(7 .101441 -5725
Box · 469 , Gall1polis, OH
800·523·7556 tor deia1ls
Wanted : Part time babysitter
1t1 Vinton area. Reterences
required . Call (740)388·

New Oakwood mega store
fealurmg
Ho mes
by
OaKwood
Fleetwood &amp;
Giles One stop shopp1ng
only at OaKwood Homes of
Barboursv lie WV t304)7363409.

RL\L

To Do

"'

HJKSALE

38R, 2BA 5.129 acres
Green Township close to
school. Pr1ced to sell. More Pnce Reduced located 1n
info (740)446-7377
Johnson 's Tra1ler Park ~985
W1ndsor. excellent condrt1on .
ATI'E:-ITION!
14x70 tra1le r w1th 141126
GET YOUR LOAN TO
add1!10n w1tn master bed·
BUY OR REFINANCE
room and bath New berbe r
carpet. diShwash er storag e
YOUR HPMEt
"FREE" APPROVED
building
S13.000
HOME LOANSt
Ca11(304 )593·3768

WAmlJ)
Substitute RN/LPN wanlecl
for the 'Meigs County Board
of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disab1l1!1es.
Hours 9:00 am-3 :00pm.
Must ha11e currem AN
license 1n the Stale ot Oh10.
Prefer experience in public
health nursing and or work·
1ng with ch ildren and adults
wilh developmental disab1li·
ties. Send resume by Friday.
November 12th to: MCBM·
ADD. 1310 Carleton Street.
PO Box 307. Syracuse, Oh
45779.

MoBILE Ho~n;s

Hom:'

mn SALE

fl.,£"A&gt;oN

tallow the signs

----Saturday 11 /6/04 . 9:00am-

10

Hiu•W.v.1UJ

w1th pitcher, bed clothing.
b1g gas heatmg stove. TV

St. AI . 7S . Old lools, 50's
Yard Sale Nov 4·5-6, 8:00~itchen table. variety of
4:00 oft At 87 on Spruce
items.
Run watch for s1gns

(.;:;r

110

with VCR and tots more. Out
tram the Racine Locks and
Dam at Drew Fisher's, just

GALUI.'tJI..l.';

Now you can have borders and graphics
lf.-11
added lo your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POUCIES: Ohio V•ll•y Publl•hlng reaervet the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Error~ muat be reported on the first day of publication and
Tr!bune·Sentlnei·Reglater will be responaible for no more than the coat of tha spece occupied by the error mnd only the first ina..-tion. Ws shall not b. liable tor
any loss or _
expenae that reeulta from the publication or omlselon of an advertiaement. Correction will be made in the lira! available &amp;dition . • Box number ade
ere •lwaye conlldentlel. • Current rate cerci applies. • Al l reel eatate adver11aementa are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • nile newepaper
I
ede meeting EOE 1tandards. We will not knowingly acc.j;lt 1nv edvertlslng In violation of the law.

Nov. 5th·61h· v1deos. couCh
&amp; chans, lamps, wash stand

:::;::;:::~

n

• All ads

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Af)~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~A@(
·

GIVI·:.\WAV

1-Male medium size mixed
Dog, very good w/k ids
(304)937·3348 at1er 5pm

will

Big Country 99,
, WBGS the Ministry Station,
K-92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88.1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.

~

Dally In- Column: 1:.0 0 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Monday- Friday for Insertion - Business Days Prior TO
In Next Day ' !l Paper
Publlc:•tlon
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display : 1:00 p .m .
For Sunday11 Paper
Thursday for Sundays PaPer

Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre!l!l When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day5

Lost-$500 Reward offered
for information leading to
1 app rox. B wk old female recovery of stolen items
kitten. not kept mslde, very from Arnold Sears residence
loving
gray
&amp; white. in
Harrisonvi,lle.
call

King's X coming to Court Street Grill

1t 's time To Gear Up For...

i
I

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword •

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

Ohio Valley
Symphony's Fall
Classic Saturday

·

Oear/11ire.f'

fl2ll

\(01\ll.f. HO\If5
ll&gt;R S\1 .1:

198... Schu t~ .z 3 BR 2 oatr
C A .,., e~~:oa njc , .. LR &amp;. Dr
(7 40 .a.o6-41'E

10

Hous1:'
F•&gt;n Rn&lt;r

0°b Dow n Payme nt and
lmancmg ava1lable With
approved cred1t.
Average
credn qualll1es you If down
payment has kept you trom
buy1ng. lh1s 1S your chance
to own your own hOme It
you have a down paymerJt
bul would like to conserve 1!.
we otter lbw down payment
programs also Great Inter·
est rates! local company.
Mortgage
locators.
{740)992· 7321
House
t
Bedroom
,.,., attached. 1 car Garage,
Ga l•pol•s ~=erry Bass Bend
Area S250 month t304 )5762201
2 story Coton1a 3 bdrm 1
bath Gas heat Cntr! AJC.
S600 mo ~~401446·3481 .
2 story ;? oedroom 1 5 bath,
1&lt;1tchen w1th stove &amp; ret11ger·
ator
233 Second Ave.
Conven1ent 1ocat1on . no
pets. $5 65 month plus refer·
ence &amp; Ot!POSit 1740, 446·
4926
!or
rent.
2br
hOuse
water a"''o
$350 month
trash pa1d roc pets DepOSit
and reference req~1r ed
17 40) 388-1100
3 bedroom Muse w1th basement Georges Creel!. Road .
Water &amp; lawn serv tce rclud·
ed $500 moiW'I (740)446·
4868
4 bed room llOJS e lor rent

1'11''11!"
....- - , 1990 1•h ~a 3 Dec·ooms 2 Porttano area totatlv remoa10 --:H~O':"M~DI
FOR SA.U:

S500
lull s.ze f."!aths rea; PuMO eled
1t ~ • O'J
"ev.1y oa•nt ea {740 )84,)-5546

oer

mo

i30o1 rSS2·&lt;:'3S5 - - 0"'0 Down Payment and
financing availaOie with
approved credit
A'ferage
credit qualifies you . II down
psymenl has kept you from
b~ylng . this Ia your eM a nee
to own your own home If
yo u ha11e a do~n payment
but would li~ e to coM11rve 1t
we offer low down payment
programs also. Great tnter·
est rates ' Local company
Mort gage
Locators
(740)992·7321

4BA
2 oath rou se ,,
199 5 CIA\ :o ·· RICh,...OOd Ge ilpOIIS
S65U month.
3Dr 2bsir&gt; Jct,c; E,ectr1c deoos1t reowed j~ 4 0) 441 24x52 (304\6 .. 5·2901 a'ter· s Qt94 or (740)441 ·11 64

2000 S. 2001 Oounlew1ae
bot'1 3 bed•oo~- 2 bat~ Cali
(740\7:)9 1166
.
~--

Fo r sale a· ·en·. 2 ::-ed-oomotu e rr::.-es &lt;&gt;ta·t1nQ a'
$270 pet '1"1:-~·~ Ca ~4 0

992·21E"
Mar..e 2 oeyme~'lS
years on 'lOfe

4tH
1n
Syracuse
OH
S800 morth
depoSit &amp;
3br •n·SyracJ se S4""5 mol\!~
H·ua Approved ootr -.,o Pe'ts
304)675·5332

seoo

CH ARM I~G

3 bedroom 1
t-at"' t.x eted 1n ~od n e)
!'love " 4 .v age DePOSit reQ UU'eO
1
1J4 ..,.3C· ca ,:"' 40 4.16·3128

34_0_
9 _To~u.--l Conao 3 oarm 2 bet ns w
2 br livrn groom 01nu,o r
room . lrl;ltcl"'en . 112 basement
!)fiS e'T'ent V•ew ol r1vec
c~tr
4 C: .S700 .mo
on 1 acre ground
1' 4 ol a mile on Bud CMM1n
~:;·:oo ' ,.,., 7401 446 .
Ac 304·675·3144

SHOP·.
CLASSIFIEDS

�Page 84 • The ·Daily Sentinel
8

t'~.,._.,;11Jil.~-Rmr--,.JirL--A·~-RENr--c_I
Ni&lt;:e 1, 2, &amp; 3 bedroom. BEAUTIFUL
APART·
ApartmentiSI retail space MENTS
AT
BUDGET
also lor rent. (740)992·3702 PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Rental 1n Point Pleasant Dn~Je from $344 to $442
$400/moo1h (3041675·5540 Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
or (304)675·4024 ask for 740-446·2568
Equal
Nancy. Homesteaa Realty Housing Opportunity.
• Broker

lM~~~

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE\
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
12x60 , 2 bedroom, total RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
electric, $300 per month, tor application &amp; information.
S300 deposit. (7401446·
Gracious \ivin~. 1 and 2 bed·
-'107
room apartments at VIllage
14x70, 2 bedroom. gas nat. Manor
and
Riverside
$350 per month , $350 Ap'artments i'n Middleport.
deposit. (740)446-4107.
From $295-$444. Call 740.

e

Thursday, November 4, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com
HotmlOU&gt;

Thursday, Nove!llber 4, 2004
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Thompsons. Appliance &amp;
Aepair-675-7388. For sale,

ACROSS

re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, tefrigerators, gas and electnc
ranges. air cortditioners,.,p.nd

Phillip
Alder

1 Young
preda1or

6 Pool
divisions

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulaville Pike, appliances,
dressers, twin , lull, queen,
king mattresses, dressers.
couches, dinettes, recliners,
grave monuments. much
more.
(7.40)446-4782
Gallipolis. OH. Hrs 11·3' (M·
S)

A~~""'
I H t ' l.....

"'y

Ir

Every
Sunday
1:00
Shot Only
~CHANIJISE

nished apartment. Deposit 992·2526 . . Russ Moore, _193_7_)55_9-=838~5=:-:--~
and references. No Pets. owner.
l.7_4_01:...9_92_·_01_6_5_ _ _ _ :_:.__:._______
REAL ARMY
Ebay, Ebay, Ebay
CAMOUFLAGE
One bedroom garage apart- Discount shipping Supplies, Sam Somerville's, Since 1964,
2 bedroom mobile home, ment, kitchen furnished . Save Big!!!
by Sandyv11e. Wv PO. Satellites.
'd f Po
"SO 00 $400 (7401992 3823
TV Sale:;Jinstallallon \304 )273outSl eo
meroy. ill' .
•
•
Bubble wrap, peanuts . bub- 5655
rent . $250.00 deposit, year _ _:.___:.___;___ _ _ bl
Pleasant Valley Apartment
e enve 1opes, t ape &amp; more. -:::::--~---lease. No Pe1s. (7401992· Are now taKing Applicat ions . a11(7401992·"276
BUJLI)ING
"'-'
or emat·1
5039
lor 2 BR , 3BR &amp; 4sR .. esatk.ins@charter.net
SUPPUES
2 bedroom trailer for rent , Applications are taken
MN:Eu.ANEous
(740)742-2014
Monday thru Friday, from ~ MERaiANDISE
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office is __
• windows, lintels, etc. Claude
2 bedroom.· NC . large yard . Located at 1151 Evergreen
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
very, very nice . no pets. Drive Point Pleasant , WV 2 6x8 dog kennels, good Call 740-245-5121.
Rodney, Ohio, (740)446· Phone No is (304)675 . 5806 condition, can be usedr
iiiio~~~~--...,
1409.
E
together. {jog house includPrrrs
0
.H.
FOR SALE
3Br. Trailer wfWasher &amp; :..._.:._ _ _ _ __ _
ed_.:...I:...74_0:_I2_S_6_
·6_64_7_ __
Townhouse
Dryer, Refridg &amp; Stove Tara
.
Dming Room Solid Pine AKC Bla.ck lab pups. Shots.
included Section 8 Approved Apartments, Very S pactous,
Table w!Hutch, Table-has 2- wormed, parents
HIPS
(304)576-2934
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
certified ,
NAFC
1/2 Bath, Newly carpeted. Armed Chairs, 4-Regular O.F.A
bloodline.
Beautiful Riverview idea! for Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Chairs. Good Condition champton
1 or 2 people, no pets, refer- Patio, Start $385/Mo. No :S9:::00::.e:l3:::04~)6:_75:.·:.27:...4:::.9_ _ (740)643-2001
•
ences. (740)441-Q181 .
Pets, Lease Plus Security Firewood- $30 pickup, mostAKC Golden Retriever pup·
Nice 2 bedroom mobile Deposit Req uired. Days· ty oak. (740)949-3061
pies, both parents on premhome. No pets . (740)446• 740·446-348 1: Evenings:
Ready 11 -16·04,
2003
740-367-0502.
For sate Fire Wood ises.
'$300, will hold with deposil.
(304)882·2537
(7401256· 1686
Trailer for Rent $400/month Twin Rivers Tower 1S accept·
Gray Couch &amp; Love Seat
ing
applications
to
r
waiting
plus deposi1 (3041576·?241
list lor Hud·subsized, 1· br. $150, Black Swivel TV "AKC lab Retriever puppies.
Stand $10, Green Glider English, blocky heads. yel·
apar tment. call 675-6679
Rocker $5 (304)882 -3129
low. Born 10/1/04, champion
EHO
bloodline_ Health guaran\ II IH II\ \ Ill "'I
Hot uo ~actory uutte
teed . EKperience breeder
1 and 2 bedroom apart· ,;;;;~;;......;._ _ _--t
Holiday Sale!
w/references.
$450 .
ments . furnished and unfur· i10
HOUSEHOLD
h-op quality. warranties, (3041372·4642 .
nished, sec urity deposit
GooDs
~~~on , WV, Flea Marke
required. no pets, 740-992·
~action c. Saturdays anc Beagle puppies for sale Wtth
2218.
papers. Call (740)388-8721 .
Sundavs.
r60616t5·0778
3 pc . bedroom suite
lBR apartment w/d hookup · Contemporary
excellent
JET
For safe- male Old English
$290 'per month + deposit condition .
$200 .
Call
AERATION MOTORS
sheepdogs, lovable, shaggy
Sun Valley Apartment. new (740)446·6428 after 4pm.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In dogs. 11 weeks old. price
ow ners. {740)339-0362
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- $200, (740)985-9823
800·537·9528.
-------~
2 bed room apt . Cen tenary
Golden Retriever, Ejoxer mix.
Call
for
appointment.
Road close to hospital, bath,
·
refrigerator,
Appliance
(740)379-2639
stove.
washer/dryer
hookup,
Kindlewood wood burner, 2 :..__:.__ _ _ _ __
$40Dfmonth,
security
. Warehouse blowers, 36 !&lt; 32 x17 sides Jack Russell pups, 5 weeks
deposit reQuired, reference
outside measurements. 8- old. adorable, $200/each ,
required , no pets. call
inch stove pipe. (740)446- (740 )742 -2803

r

I

Siders Jewelers
Willas Bible Bookstore
Mason Jar
Refreshments &amp; door
prizes

I \It \1 "'t 1'1 '1 II ..,
,\ ti\1 '-1\ 0th

r
Are you 65

or older?
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
. mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

•alllpolh' )Bail!' Qtrtbune
.toint .tlea•ant 1\.egi•ter
The Daily Sentinel

2-horses for sale. 1-walki ng
horse. broke good, 1-qut.
mare, broke good. 10·12 yr.
old. (7401379·2820.
Angus
Bulls·
Top
Pertdrmance Li nes 40 Years
Artilicial Insemination. Slate
Run Farm (740)286-5395.
www.slateruntarm.com
Club calves lor sale.
Reasonably priced. Contact
Baughman Show Cattle .
(7401256·6535 or (7401256·

French 500
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome
f!l'l!l""-----~ f!l'll!"'"-~----,

r,o

·------_..1 ·------_.J
A~ t&gt;-

15

FOR SALE

1986
Pontiac
Fir.ebird.
Clean. 67.000 actual m1les
1968 Volkswagen . res10 red
insidefout.
We liKe to buy a late mode l
4-wheel
drive
truck
(740)446-6464.
-------1988 Dodge Aries lE. must
see to appreciate. well
optioned , asKmg $1095
OBO. (740)949·2693

TRUCKS

FREE ESTIMATES

fi'OR SAL.E:

740-992-7599

2001 Dodge DaKota , quad
cab. blue. V-8. bug shield.
window guards. 4x2 bedliner. all power $14,000 . good
60.000 mtles.
conditi on.
(740)441-0712
89 Ford Bronco 4x4, V8 .
auto, new tires. exhaust . etc
$1 ,800 . (740)645·6195 or
17401379-2467.

96
Dodge
Dakota
1989 blue Dodge Aries lE , owner,Aed 72.000 orig.
33.000 miles. air. $800 miles , auto, 2 wheel dr , new
080. (7401256·t652.
tires, cle an truck 304·675·
7375 or aher 5pm call 3041997 Pontiac Grand-Am GT.
674·0098.
V 6, automatic , bucket
seals, air, sun root. power
windows. CD player, new
tires , 72,000K , excellent
condition $3.800.00
99 Chevy Cavalier, automat ic, ai r, new tires, new brakes,
good condition. 30MPG
$2,500.00
200 Gospel Sound tracks
$4.00 each .(7401992·3739

RESIDENTIAL

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

IT'S

,AI&gt; E-NOtJ6t-l

'\.

Of

,~IN6 Cli~ATfD OtJT
MY Llf~ SAVINGS, ru;

WtiAT J: ~fAL£. Y

·

Rocky~~·! ,

Hupj)

IMPORTS
Athens

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

GfT IT rACIC
IN SMA£.£.

'LAIM5 C..OtJ~i.
•

BARNEY
MY HUS6AND SAYS TO
TELL YA SORRY HE
MISSED
YORE

AN' WE'D LIKE YA TO
CONSIDER TH' FIGJ.IT·FRE£
RECEPTION HIS
WED'DIN' GIFT TO YA !!

WEDDIN',

~

i

I~

r J...-vl.~-""1

~~~~~~~~i~~~~

THE BORN LOSER

~"i ft."~ WE'RE MI\Kii'-IG "

"'l

tl\,i::,TI\1&lt;.( Gllllf'.IG \l\E NEW
PRDDUC.TTO QUIZ
IZE.,P~ e,E.f'OIZE:
LE.GI\L f% c;~

p-TRUS T f/\£, C.fi.IE..F-Tf\E:.RE.'S"'q
1-10 !2:£."-:'&gt;0I'l \0 WOI!RY
t\50U t Tf\1'.T r-IO'N ...

R1.68l Darwin . OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Re.ltocklt!&lt;J I .ate .\bdfl S..l•u9e
twrl Arter .\ltlrke( /'arts
Brian Whal ey
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
SaL 8:30-Noun
Sun. Closed
Brem or

Polled Hertr~lord Bulls &amp; 0101
Herefords call (304)882- ~F-orc.d_8_7_M_u~st-an_g__-2-.3-.-5 side doors. A1r, crUtse. tilt , ·expando . Excellen t condi·
9.200
miles
$2 1,500. lion . $11 .000 (7 40)256·
2426 after 6pm
Speed, wrecked , $500 080
(7401446·95 85 o• 17401446-6__
78:.:9_ _ _ _ _ __
call (3041675·8872
Ill\ \"'1'1 H ~ I \Ill 1\
772 4 . .
Hunter's Spectal
15
TRUCKS
40 MomRCYLl .H;/
1975 Camper. Newly remod FOR SALE
eled. a must see for $1.000.
4WIIEELER~
(7 401388·0578. •
1989 Dodge 1/2 ton pick up.
$5001 Honda's, Chevy 's, 8 ft. bed , 318, VB, 60,000 2000 Honda 4-wheeler. 4
._,II{\ I( I-._,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police miles, new rubber. towing wheel dr1ve. 3. 000 mi les.
excellent condition. $2.900 . .,.
,....-----Impounds! Cars lrom $500
10
package , new paint, excelHOME
for listings 800-391-5227 lent condition, 3 speed over· (7401446·31 t 7
bU•ROVf"1EN"IC";
EXT 390~
drive....
S3.000
Call
(740)446 -4514 8am -5pm .
1979 Cadillac Sevilla. Runs
Small Job Specialist
740·446·3248 after 5pm.
good $650. 1984 Buick
elec. pl~mbg . carpentery
Regat. runs $250. Phone 78 Ford F250 4 Wheel Dr.
repa1r.
(740)992·
(7401245·5812.
$3,200 OBO (304) 675·7195
4405Wayne Neff

YOU'vE SOLVED
EVER~ BRAIN'

SUSTER. Y01.iYE
BEEN A SKE D'

CHUCK CAN 5 E ; : )

llii!P.~ : Fli&lt;'~

•'
!lili:-=-=~~~~

PEANUTS
'(OU K~OW. '{OU DO~'r 14AVE
FL't' SOUTH FOR TJ.IE WINTER
IF VOU DON'T WANT TO ...

JlJST SECAUSE EVER'f'ONE
ELSE IS DOIN6 IT, DOESN'T
MEAN VO\J 14AVE TO ..

SUNSHINE CLUB
HE GAVE. ME. A PREEMf'!'IV£

HOW WA'&gt; &lt;,(XJR

DINNE.R II.JITI-111-IE.
RETIRED EAR,NOSE

AI-JD 11-lroA\ !XaOR,
FRAIIJ 7

H£1MU&lt;H MAIJU:Vf_R E3E.-

FORE. l.llE. AlE 1D M'*f.

WEIR[)

SVI¢ I Dl DIJI CHO!o$

I

I

M#fBf:., BUT
I (AI,)(E.l£D

M'&lt; DAlE WllH
THE RETJRf:D
~1R IC1Ml

AJ.JYWf+l

I

\

I

0

IF~r~w®®~

0

l.ocusl, Oak
Maple $45

Delivered

Blil Slack

740-992·2269

YOUNG'S

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTIUCnON

CARPENTER
SERVICE

'

' GE.NIUSo
SECTION~

SECTION'

I

Phone,_ _ _ _ _ _...;,.__ _ __

T HE

FLVE tXnEN APP?

50McnMe5 1 Eto.T so MUC.H
SOMETIMES 1 &amp;LeEP 50 MUCH
.I 1 C.t&gt;.N'T TeLL IF t 'M HUNGRY
1 CAN'T' TeLL IF IT'S l?t&gt;.~
l
OR FULL
OR NIGHT

City/State/Zip---- - - - -

Wfi.E.N WE. C.OME. TO IT I

'GENIU S"

GARFIELD

Address - - - - - - - - - -

Blii".N TI-\1\T BR.IC&lt;.E "'

HEI\R. THAT ,
GltJA. ":'

oRY THIS
ONE 1 IT'S
IN T HE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Subscriber's N a m e - - - - - - -

V'1-JE:'LL

BIG NATE

S! .

See

• Room AddiUona &amp;
Rtmodtllng
•New Gtrt~l
• Etectrlctl &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing a. Qutt~rt
• Vinyl Siding I Ptlntlng
• Pttla and Porch O.Ckt
We do It all except
furnace work

• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling
'

740·882-1611

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Yearsl.ocat b

rltnc:e

•
•

East
rasfl

+

Pass
All pass

3 NT
5

34
35

Teacher who touted
length points
It still surprises me how I uncover lacts
that I should have known . Often . this
comes from looking in "The Oflicial
Encyclopedia ol Bridge" ~.Ame rican
Contract Bridge League, 2001 ). This was
how I discovered thai Dorothy Hayden
Truscott dev1sed the splinter bid
(Although she has been a close friend for
33 years , _she has never mentioned it.)
There, I also learned that Fred Karpin
was the first person to popularize modi fy·
ing the 4·3·2·1 point-count by includin g
distribution points for long suits ..(Charles
Goren recommended adding points for
shortages. which is correct only when one
finds a fit.)
Karpin was an excellent teacher and
writer who died in 1986. In th1s deal at his.
you are in three no-trump. What would be
your plan after West's spade lead? Woul d
It make any difference if the dummy had
1-4-4-4 shape instead olt -4-5-3?
South's sequence shows a balanced 23
or 24 points. North uses S1ayman . then
settles !or three no-trump when he fails to
find a 4-4 heart fit. (It's hard to reach hve
- or sill! - diamonds.)
There are eight top tricks : one spade.
three hearts , one diamond and three
clubs . Should you play lor a 3·3 club split.
or take the diamond fi nesse? The former
IS only a 35.53 percent shot, whereas the
laner is 50-50. So, although it risks extra
undertncks when it loses, you should ptay
a diamond to the queen at trick two.
II the dummy had four clubs. you would
need only a 3·2 club split, wh1ch happens
67.8 percent ot the time. Now cashing
clubs would be the correct line, not taking

exception
Amateur

·squares

36 Discreet
summons
39 Prior to
40 Student' s
quarters
Low~lying

44 Modern
Perala

47 Be adjacent

23 Nile ci1y
lo
24 " lou Gran1'' 48 1899 gold·
lead
rush town
25 lmpa11en1
49 TakiH:harg&lt;
chuck
type
27 Drain.
50 Novelist
as energy
- Beattie
29 Canceled
51 Rural addr.
30 Venomous 52 lncan ,_,· ,
snake
treasure
32 Jus1 barely 53 Bas1e

win

54 Counterfeit

34 Dirty place
37 Hair-raising
38 - Diego
Chargers
41 Bishop's ha1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnt~

C•pher Ct)ll)tograms lite created tror- aumaooos OY 1amous pec1Jie
Eacn lener 1n 1he e&gt;pr~er stanos tor &lt;Vtolher

oa~ l

a"J prt$8&lt;\l

Today's Cltie E equals C

D V I P E ...

" LWIGFM
TYWVB
BXF

HWV

NXFZF

YMVFI

BFMM

LWPRL .

TZF
HWV

BFMM I

HWV

NXFZF

\

HWV

YWRW

TZF ."

the diamond finesse.

Whaley's Auto
Parts

8884
Must see Paint Mare $800.
Pal mare $1.200; 4yr. old
gelding $350. All oeautilul,
~;:~~y &amp; gentle. (740 )446 • 76 Suburban, 454/400 turbo.
All or part $700 (304)674·

~AVING

See

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

·················---------------

···········---------~----------

\

~.,____.,

29670 Bashan Road
Rac1ne. Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

1993 Town &amp; Country
Chrysler van , good gas
2000 Buick. LeSabre, V6 . mileage. satis factory lor
sedan.
4-door.
limited. work vehicle or family, ask·
80.000 miles, garage kept ing $1800, (7401992·6 t 59
$8 ,500.00. (740 )949-2217
2003 Chevy Express Cargo
7AM ·10PM
Van 3/4 ton . 2500 series
--- - ' -4;.:4
- -, -3.000
- - with side doors. 373 Vortex
2003
Tracker,
miles_ All electric, alum
OBO
wheel. $ 14,500.
(7_4..:0:..:13..:8.:.8·.:.8:...43::2:...
.
_
_
_
2

33

21 Super·
43 NASA
market area
milieu
22 Calendar
45 Feel sure o1

pro
- Mack
Story1efler
Role seeker
Capture
Tokyo,
formerly
Jazz
Instrument
n Pacino and
Unser
12 Treasure
holder
16 Pal in Dijon
18 Cobt:J6er's tool
20 Web-footed
mammal

Islands

i)(t:&gt; l\ 1 \

Hill 's Self
Storage

r

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

42

Tree Service

Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

bnely
4 Without

aunt
5
Feudal
1enan1
Unable to
6
sit s1ill
7
Porkers'
8
plainls
9
Sales pHches
Fury
10

29

FRANt&lt; &amp; EARNEST

JONES'

Yrs. Exp. •

2 Lillie chirper
3 Milan money,

28 Senorita's

31

Opening lead: •

TO

97 Dodge Ram, Delu xe Cab,
4x4. 89,000 miles: 94 Ford
F-, 50
60 .000
miles.
{740)446·0924.

26 Punsters

AK Q 5

Pass

JENNY

COMMERCIAL and

•

J '

DOWN

prefix
1 Two-piece
17 Tasty tubers
cookie
19 ln1erstate
23 Tabby or
calico

Pass

30

container

8 A Q3
•

56 Shrewdness

12 Shrllllnoec1 57 Bride's
13 Ogled
portion
14 Round
56 Impede

KJ 6J
• J 95 2
8 K 10 8

Box 189

Top • REmoval • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Windows • Roofing

•

Q8 754
10 7
J 6
10 8 74

2
3 "-

Let me doit for youl

• Rcpl acctmc nt

•
•

Pass

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New GaragL!:-.

6 3 2

and Financial Services

6unbap Qttmel-6enttntl

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy pf your photo 10 !o
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. Box 488, Galllpolla, OH 45631

55 Lavishly

15 SUbdel8clor
16 Flying

South
• 10 9 2
• AK Q

tiAH IS

BUILDERS IRC.

•

North

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

BISSELL

8 6 4 3
97542

West

Middleport
....0
0!-~o~+ 457eo

Fri-Sat-S.un
Nov. 5, 6, 7

•
t

~ast

•

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Main Street Point Pleasant
Saturday, Nov.. 6th

t 1 ll-1-04

West

•

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

on

t.------_..1

Registered CKC Pug puppies. 10 weeks old. lirst
shots/Wormed. BlacKs $500,
Fawns $450
(740)388·
9327
__:·_ _ _ _ _ __
AeQistered Min Plr puppies
lor sale. Black and Rust 5
weeks-old, 3 females . one
male $250 Will be very
small, lather 711bs mother
911bs. Mother AKC AND
CKC. Father CKC 576-2002

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Holiday Open
House

i

in Henderson. WV. Pre· 92 2
owned applicanes starting ar _o_
_ _______
2 bedroom . I bath, attacfied $75 &amp; up all under warranty.
1 car garage. St AI. 588. No we do service work on all NEW AND USED STEEL
pets. (740)441 -908 1
Make and Models (304 )675· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Angle ,
For
Concrete.
2BA, C/A, retrigeratorfstove 7999
-----~----- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
included,
washer/dryer Mollohan Carpet. 2Q2 Clark Grating
For
Drains,
hook -up.
10 min from Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Holzer. (740) 44 ,·0 194 or (740)446-7444 1-877·830· Scrap Metals Open Monday,
(740)441-1164
9162. Free Estimates, Easy Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
One bedroom apartment , fina ncing, 90 days same as Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed
no pets.
in Pomeroy. cash . Visa/ Master Card. Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
(740)992 -5858
Drive - a- little save alot .
Sunday. (740)446-7300

MONTY

Rocky Hupp Insurance

rAP~

(740)446·9442 after s:OO.

871-2487

Southern Band Boosters

1997 3bedroom. 2 bath . city
schools, $485 month, $485
deposl1. Close to lown .
(7401446·9116.

c

Henderson, WV

Doors open at 4:30 pm
Christmas Baskets
&amp; More

Pole Barn 30x50x 1OFT
$6395. Includes Painted
Metal. Plans, Instruction
Book, Slider. Free Delivery

.A

North

MYERS PAVING

BASKET BINGO
November 4th
6:00p.m.

MlscFJJ.ANEous

--

16x80, 3 bedroom, 2 full 992·5064 . EQual Housing ~-------.,.1
bath with garden tub, CIA, Opportunities.
sell. Riverine
Private lot, bin:. yard . Middleport, North
4th Buy or
(740)367-7745.
Antiques. 1124 East Main
Avenue . 2 bedroom , fur- on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 _

51 Roff-&lt;:allllsr

54 Chimp
coualn

11 Blow in

repa1rs on ma1or brands in
shop or at your home.

Bamboo

uter

wringer washers. Will do

r

46

ICSNORANCE 15 Bl-156

0
0
0

G

AstroGraph

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Come 1n and have some fned post-monems on
toast · - Adlai Stevenson to reponers after tHs deteat tor the pres1dency
(CI 2004 by NEA, Inc
11·4

WOlD
GA.MI

"'bur 'lllrthde,y:

Friday, Nov. 5, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
In a couPle of situations where you may
have previously been a loner, you are
likely to join up with o thers to a.cqu1re
team power in the year ahead. However,
each instance will be different and each
will ha\ie its own advantages.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) - Don't be
surp rised 11 you experience a bit of slage
fright before you spnng into aclion today.
Once you iealize you won 't lose what
you found yesterday, you 'll boldly move
forward .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) - Let
your consctence be your gu1de 1n all of
your deat1ngs today wi th olhers anCI you
won 't fall prey to using tactics or methods
that you wou ld condemn in thOse who
are greedy or insincere.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Don'!
get invotvad today in Siluallons where
you lack ~now-how, cloul or power. Your
goals can be furthered mora aa!illy by
a.ccepling your asstgned role and maKtng
th e mosl of tt.
' AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Thin gs
won·t work out tor you today as well as
th ey did yesterday 1! you divide the world
into the good guy s and ba d guys . Gtve
people credit for possessin g some n•ce
qualities
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Get your
head out of the douds and gel your muscles mov1n g today. Was11ng t1me on
whimsical musings Will not accomplish a
thtng : you nepd to concentrate on llle
tasks at hand.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) - Be ophmistic about the hand life deals you
today. Even if it isn't a grand slam. you
might be able to draw to an inside
stratghl that would make you a wtnner
among your peers
TAURUS (Apri l 20-May 20) - If you are
arrangmg a get-together at your place
today se lect your guests care lutly. ~
Second thoughts mtght have you .wtsely
pen cth ng out those who aren 't the easi~
est to get along with .
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Constderate
behevtOr on your part Ieday could turn
around the thinking of someone who
hasn't been sure it he or she flkes you or
not. Charm will lurn this persoR into an
ally.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Just
b~cause you're ta tr And lorthr1ghl 1n your
commercial .lransacttons today doesn't
mean othors are as wo\1 They're lew and
lar ootween. but you should watch OI,JI for
cheaters .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Cons1der whal.
the plans and arrangements are belore
involvtng yourseH 1n a social outtng w1th
friends today. You may want to meke your
own accommodations rather than use
theirs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Friends
and associates will be more than happy
to pitch In and help you out today, pro·
vlded they aee the! you ere truly trying to
help yourulf. Your ex•mpte w1U deter·
mine their lrwolvemer.t.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Bt tmart
and avoid becoming Involved with en
aoQue lntence today who hat e reputa·
lion of being e purveyor of go,.lp.
Remember. enyone wl"lo talkt tbout otl"l·

I

c AL u AT

I

VORGE

I

L E By E

1:,

As a

I•_.t/_s.....~I_.JI_..JIL-_;
.L

.

.

.

.

hobby

shows and anloque shops 10
f:nd old samolers One of my
favorite sayings sa id, ~vou can

.-

r~--T-R_Y_l_O_P-~~ ~~ -~-~~- !imes

I I 1 I, I
6

.

.

.

.

L.-l_..L_!_.J.:_L_

9

_

I go to crah

.

O

make

you bitler

Com;:~l e 1 e the c,uclde ou ~ re:C

b~· !dlti'IQ in fhe m•1S11'1Q wordl

~ou de ..-e lop from $t~p N o. 3 b~ i o- .

P~lr"'-.T NUMBfll'E O Lf1TE1t5 IN

i'"'!fSf

~OU.fi.R!S

VNSCR .a,M8Lf ASOVf
TO GE T ANSWER:

LE~lHS

SCRAM-LETS

I

ANSW~RS ! 1- l -

o'

Poous • Quirk · Fomerit · SPITE of IT
My ne 1ght&gt;or -, us:ered up enough neLYe to lake
skya1v1ng l e s so 'l~ Her 1nslruc t or 1o !d her that co urage
is no! !he absen c e of lear bul t:1e ab olily 10 carry on
wilh dign1ty 1n S PITE of IT.

Tarnd ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

AR LO'

1'5

f~URSDA'l
~~G~T '

YDUU&lt;;WTOliK~MY

DE.VIVM AY·CM1E. bl Df...'

' ere 11 likelY to ttlk about you .

SOUP TO NUTZ
- ~ .". ~ ·• :;,:;,1 ;.~ :1::0~~-

HI$

~

"'NeclloN .

I. lit&lt;.

'IN

l'l"IJI!i

I

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Cavs

Big 10 Notebook

Yet another Paterno loss
BY

RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press
It '~

been that kind of year
for the Paterno family.
Republican Scott Paterno.
son of the Penn State coach,
lost his bid for Pennsylvania's
17th Congressional District
· on Tuesday, losing by a wide
margin
to
incumbent
Democrat Tim Holden .
Joe Paterno- with son Jay
calling some of the offensive
plays - has watched hi s
Nittany Lions go 0-5 in the
Big Ten and 2-6 overall to
lock up their fourth losing season in the last tive years.
Scott is a Penn State graduate who is an attorney in the
Harrisburg area. The 17th
Congressional
District
includes Harrisburg and runs
through Schuylkill County
coal country.
Joe is proud of his son's
foray into politics. but isn't
sure what his own father
would think.
· ·•J woke up this morning on
Election Day thinking about
my dad," said the elder
Paterno, who turns 78 in
December. "My dad was a
die-hard liberai Democrat. I
had a younger brother who
died in infancy who was
named Franklin after Franklin
Roosevelt.
"If he (my dad) knew he
had a grandson nmning in the
Republican
Party
for
Congress. he would jump out
of that grave, call me up and
give me every dirty Italian
word you could ever think
f ..
0.
HAPPY TO BE HERE:
Penn State defensive end
Tamba Hali and his family
fled to the United States from
Liberia I0 years ago. Asked if
he were a U.S. citizen. he didn't know.
"Every time I get a job. I put
I'm a U.S. citizen. and I never
get in trouble for it.'' Hali said.

"I've been here since '94, so I
think I'm a citizen."
HOT/COlD: Poll voters
and oddsmakers must be
scratching their heads trying
to f1gure out the Big Ten.
- Minnesota won its 'first
tive games and rose to No. 13
in the nation , and has now lost
three of its last four.
-P~rdue won its tirst five
games to get to No. 5 before
losing its last three.
-Wisconsi n (8-0) never
rose higher than No. 20 in the
rankings until October but is
now fifth in the BCS rankings.
-Ohi o State won its first
three to climb to No. 7,
dropped three in a row and
has now won its last two.
- Indiana opened with two
wins for the first time since
1996. lost its next five and
then rocked No. 24 Minnesota
30-21 last week.
FAB TWO: People are
talking about Oklahoma
freshman Adrian Peterson as a
candidate for the Hei sman
Trophy. Yet No. 10 Michigan
has won seven in a row and
taken the Big Ten lead heading into an off week in large
mea,ure because of freshmen
Chad . Henne at quarterback
and Mike Hart at tailback.
In
conference games,
Henne leads the Big Ten in
pass efficiency and Hart is
No. I in rushing.
Henne i&gt; completing 62 percent of his passes and was
' terling down the stretch in
the Wolverines' 45-37 tripleovertime win over Michigan
State on Saturday.
Hart has gained more than
200 yards in each of his last
three •t·trts and has 1,160
yards rushing with two regular·season gmnes left. ·
Yet Carr said to forget the
freshmen when it comes to
Heisman talk.
"The Heisman Trophy candictate on this football team is
(wide receiver) Braylon
Edwards." Carr said. "I don ~ t

Thursday, November 4.

www .mydailysentinel.com

want to get into promoting,
I'm just making a statement
about one of our players that I
think deserves to have that
said about him. without going
any furt her. So don't ask me
anything more lfbout the
Heisman.''
NO PASSING GRADE:
In a 30-21 loss at Indiana last
week, Minnesota quarterback
Bryan Cupito completed just
II of 30 pa~ses for 182 YU!'ds
with one interception.
Golden Gophers coach
Glen Mason was asked if the
problem wa~ Cupito just miss· ing receivers or if'there was a
problem with the timing.
"Well, it's like being a little
bit pregnant: what's the difference?" Mason said, apologizing for the metaphor. "It's
either you are or you're not.
It's the way it is. If you throw
it out there what's the difference if it's an inch off being a
good pass, or the guy almost
caught it. It doesn't matter."
HEART
HEALTHY:
After almost 30 years,
Northwe stern coach Randy
Walker is taking a fresh
approach to hi s diet and his
schedule.
Walker was hospitalized for
two days last week with
intlammation ·Of the heart
muscle. He was on the sidelines for Saturday's upset of
Purdue.
"I've really taken my doctor's orders to heart. because
frankly. I want to see my
grandkids someday," the 50year-old said. "''m coming in
early in the morning, preparing our plan for the day. and
then going home midmorning
to rest. Then I come back
aboqt I :30 or so, meet with
the team and then have practice.
"I'm getting a little stronger
every d~, and I hope within
anothe~week or two. I'll be
back to full strength. Right
now, all the progress repons
are good."

from Page 81
Coming off a screen, James
made a small jab step to his
left. came right and nailed
his 3 over Anest, who tried
his best but couldn't rattle
Cleveland's forward.
Artest had a chance to win
it, but missed a 3-pointer at
the final horn .
James could have put
Cleveland up late in OT, but
missed the first of two free
throws with 2.9 seconds to

be with my team."
The Ravens (4-3) went II without him, beating
Buffalo 20-6 before stumbling
in
Philadelphia.
Backups Chester Taylor and
Musa Smith combined for

OSU poised to earn a
bowl berth with their
next win, Bt

Crash investigated, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Eury

from Page 81

.•

play. Again, Anest had the every move. "I'm moreo
ball with the game on the relaxed," James said, dressline but missed an eight- ing before the game. "I'~
still going to have jitters, bu~
footer from the left side.
The Cavaliers used a I0·0 now I know what to expect.'(
run to take a one-point lead ... Cavs G Eric Stfow had hj&amp;
in the second quaner, but streak of 225 consecutive
all with the
the Pacers countered by starts Philadelphia
76ers
scoring nine in a row to take
snapped .... Tinsley picked
a 46-40 lead at halftime .
NOTES:
Cleveland up his I ,SOOth career assist
dropped to 8-27 in season in the first quaner.... It was
openers. .. . Opening .night a big night for at least one
was much different for John Edwards. The Pacers
James than a year ago when rookie center went to high
370 media credentials were school in nearby Hudson,
issued in Sacramento and Ohio, and played at Kent
TV cameras followed his State.

level and I"m proud of him."
Heading mto Sunday's
Checker Auto Parts 500 at
Phoenix
International
from Page 81
Raceway, Earnhardt is tifth,
trailing leader Kun Busch by
ilies are sometimes. You get 98 points with three races
through it."
remaining in the champiAs Earnhardt has tumed into onship Chase.
a legitimate championship
Two
weeks
ago in
contender, Eury has gained Maninsville, Earnhardt had
respect in the Nextel Cup severe handling problems and
garage, as well as earning con- wound up finishing 33rd when
siderable credibility with the the rear end broke in his No. 8
· fans. They recently voted the Chevrolet.
quiet stocky man with the
Last Sunday at Atlanta,
snow white beard the 2004 Earnhardt appeared headed for
· crew chief of the year.
at least a to!"' five finish when
Junior said it's about time he collided late in the race
everybody else figured out with rookie Carl Edwards. He
w~at he already knew.
• wound up 33rd again, but still
Tony. Sr;, IS one h~~k of a '. gained ground on Busch,
crew ch1ef, he srutl. He has 11 ·whose blown ~;ngine relegated
been around t~1s sport for a him to a 42nd-place finish.
long t1me. He s kmd of old
"My job at the shop is to
timey, but he understands how keep the people we have
!btngs work and how to get the happy and pumped up," Eury
JOb done.
satd. "The hardest part of the
"He paid his dues like job is the people. Right now
everybody else Without ge~- we've got a good group of
tmg a lot of cred1t. He.s people and, hopefully, we can
worked hard to get h1s cred1' keep them all together.
bility and talent to a higher - "We had a blow last week,

Lewis

~004'

103 yards rushing against
the Eagles, but Lewis still
wonders how Baltimore
would have fared with him
in the starting lineup.
"The Bills game was all
right because we won,"
Lewis said, "but the game
we lost, you feel like we
could have done something
different.''
There really is no way of

but we've been pumping them
all week (and telling them)
that we can still do this and
that nobody should get down.
Hopefully we can pull it off."
Eury expects Junior and the
whole Dale Earnhardt Inc.
team to bounce back· in
Phoenix, where Earnhardt
won last fall.
"We thought last year would
be our year and we kind of got
disappointed," he said. "This
year, we kind of slumped in
the center and then we kind of
got back going again. So when ·
we got back into these last 10,
we started performing good
every week and got on racetracks that Dale Jr. liked and ·
had a lot of hopes of us pulling
it off.
"These last couple of races
put us under a lot of heat, but
we're determined to win a
Nextel Cup. We've got our
work cut out for us because
our goal now is to lead a~
many laps as we can and win
every race we can, because
that's the only way we've got
a chance.''
knowing if the Ravens
would have won with Lewis
in the backfield. But his
return can only help an
attack that features a passing
game ,that ranks last in the
NFL.
"He~s the starter for a reason," Baltimore center
Casey Rabach said. "The
offense is probably clicking
the best when he's in there."

SPORTS
• Cavaliers can't take the
Heat, 92-86. See Page 81

·

\\\\\LI11\d.l11~ ... ,-niiiH' I.( uut

Meigs Local begins work on Salisbury building
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
POMEROY -. .The first
phase toward a planned renovation of the former Salisbury
Elementary School has been
approved by the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
A contract in the amount of
$34,569 has been awarded to
Cardinal Environmental services, Inc. for asbestos haz-

ard abatement and related
Work on the reco mmendation
of Gandee and Associate s,
Inc .. ·the district 's asbestos
consultant.
The asbestos will be
removed in only the section of
the building to be used for
offices, said Superintendent
William Buckley. He noted
that there are areas where
there is no asbestos, and other
areas which will only be used

for storage and are not needed
to be asbestos free .
Buckley said that the goal
of the Board of Education is
to renovate a portion of the
building to be used for Meigs
Local ortices . Currently those
offices are on the second tloor
of Pomeroy Village Hall and
the di stri ct pays $6000 a year
in rent'for that space.
"That money can be used
for utilities and other expenses

of the di strict," ex plained
Buckley. "But besides that we
need to be in a facility where
we are handi capped acce"ible. The Salisbury building
provides us with that."
· The asbestos removal will
begin Monday and be completed in about two weeks,
according to the superintendent. After that phase is completed then Buckley said the
board will be better able to

see exactly what has to be;
done because ceili ng an&lt;l
other areas will be exposed. ·'
The areas where the offic~
are to be located will be reno'
vated and have new heating
and air conditioning equip~
ment i1Nalle&lt;.l.
·
As for the cost. Buckle'y
said that the original estimate on the project was

Please see Salisbury, A5

Surviving without health insurance
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• David E. Dunkle, Sr
• Marcia Keller
• Louise Smith

INSIDE
• Special meeting set.
SeePage AS
• Thanksgiving dinner
planned See Page AS
• Mail scam in Pomeroy.
See Page AS
• Avoiding deer and deer
accidents. See Page AS

OUR 8AVI~08 ,}

IJ&gt;IJI\\
·•
'
. "· ~'fl\1 ··~'''11'11'• . ',,, _oo...t

:;o(I·:\'IS•\ol.;•.:\o.-·1
·......
·•·

POMEROY
Gladys
Cross and Judy McGuire of
Langsville have been friends
for 50 years. They have shared
many things throughout their
friendship. including living
without health insurance.
"I pray that I stay healthy
until June when I turn 65 and
qualify for Medicare,'' said
McGuire who was diagnosed
with cervical cancer six years
ago thanks to a visit to the
Women' s Health Clinic at the
Meig s
County
Health
Department.
Six years ago McGuire 'till
had no health insurance for
annual examinations that
include pap smears that detect
cervical cancer. At the time.
McGuire had no symptoms of
the disease but luckily her
friend Cross "nagged" her
into going to the Women's
Health Clinic, resulting in a
stage-one cancer diagnosis.
Although the pap smear
was not free , it was affordable
for McGuire who paid fur the
test on a sliding fee scale. A
sliding fee scale determines

Tolerance program comes under fire

WEATHER

BY BRIAN J. REEO
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A program
teaching tolerance to high
school students is under fire
from a local pastor for content
relating to gays and lesbians .
Lamar 0 ' Bryant, pastor of
the First Southern Baptist
Church in Pomeroy. has writ·
ten letters to Meigs County

Oetallo on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECriONS-

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values

t6

what the patient can pay
based on their income.
Besides providing early
detection , health department
staff members Courtney Sim
and Norma Torres arranged
appointments for McGuire at
Riverside Methodist Hospital
in Columbus where she
received treatment that resulted in a full recovery for her
cervical cancer.
"They went above and
beyond the call of duty,"
remarked McG uire about the
care and concern she received
from the health departmem
statT. "They're like family.''
Besides the stall. McGuire
is thankful for her friend
Cross whom ~h.j! refers to as
her "guar.dtan angel."
Cross found the Women's
Health Clinic out of necessity
after her husband died and she
was unable to pay the health
insurance premiums. With little money to spend on health
care, she turned to the various
no cost and low cost health
screenings at the clinic.
These servi~cs include
Belli Sercenl/(llloto
gynecological exams, mam- (From left) Judy McGuire and Gladys Cross of Langsville sit in the waiting area of the Meigs
County Health Department where they receive low cost health screenings and exams. Both
women live without health insurance.
Please see Insurance, AS

Commissioners and Grants
Administrator Jean,Trussell to
express concern for content in
the "Teen Tolerance" program
used in the countv's three
high schools.
·
Earlier thi s month. Trussell
conducted a tirst public hear,
ing on a grant application to
expand the program into the
middle school classroom next
year. The $2,000 program is

paid
for
through
the
Communily
Development
Block Grant Fair Housing
allocation , and county commissioners approve CDBG
funding. It 'received a statewide award last year.
"While I did not see the
program, a pastor friend got
complaints from some of his

American Legion gives $6, 000
tofour county organizations

Please see Tolerance, AS

Cancer Care Center's community phase of fund-raising begins
PAGES

STAFF REPORT

.

'~ HOLZER

NEWS@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

A2-.3

~ovies

J\5

NASCAR
Obituaries
Senior News
Sports
Weather

BB

J\5
A6
B1
AS

© 2004 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.

a state-of-the-art cancer detec• · "'' · •· ·

: CANCER CARE

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio The Holzer Center for Cancer
Care
and
the ' Holzer
Foundation recently launched
the community· phase of the
fund-raising campaign for the
new Cancer Center:
The campaign, ·'Healing
Families
Sharing
Strengths,'' gives the public
opportunities to support the
new Center by purchasing a

. paver brick for $100. Donors ·
names or messages will be
permanent! y etched on a 4.
by-8 pav.er brick placed in the
center's outdoor Healing
Garden pathways.
The purchase of a paver
brick helps with 1he construction of the new Hol ier Center
for Cancer Care and allows
·the community to benefit from

tion and treatment center.
In addition to the paver
bricks. other donation levels
are available .
The Partner Gift level of
$5.000 to $9.999 may be paid
over a five-year period .
Included with this level will
be the permanent inscription
of the donors' name(s) on the
center's attractive Healing
Wall display.

Please see Center, AS

Charlene Hoelllch/ photo

A total of $6,000 was donated Thursday by Eli Denison Post

467 of Rutland to four Meigs County organ 1zat1 ons: The money
came from the l!lgion's fund-raising programs . Here center
Eugene Fink, Legion representative. hands a check for $4.000
to Danny Davis for the Rutland Fire Department to be used
towa rd the purchase of some new fire equipment. Others
receiving donations from the· left are Ma ry Birchfield for the
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church. $500 ; Linda Sommers. par·
ticipant. and Laura Stewart. habil itat,on coord inator. for Me igs ,
Industries, Consumer Counc il Fund for participant out111gs,
$1.000; and back, Amber Burton for the Meigs Girls basketball team. $500 .

8th Annual Lewis A. Schmidt, MD

.Memorial Cancer Symposium
Saturday, November 6, 2004 ·
9:00 am -,12 Noon
www.turnpikeflm.com

740;.1146·9800
, ·800·272·5179
+

$
LINCOLN
o l l t l o C •o

IU I J I Y

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 8:30am)
r!MC Education &amp; Conference Center • Gallipolis

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Topics will cover mesothelioma, breast cancer and cervical cancer.
Continuing Meclical Education credib will be given.

www .holzer.org

For more information, call{7 401 446-5057.

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="497">
    <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="9948">
                <text>11. November</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="18770">
            <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="18769">
              <text>November 4, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
