<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5553" 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/5553?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T21:24:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15483">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/86fdb6f52a7f93cb6ede8d1f336534d6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>46d4737d9d68cb3b7f60dc5466886576</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18777">
                  <text>..
Page 06 • jj5.unbaP 11:tmr~ .jj5.rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, November 7, 2004

o more Port-a-Pottys:
with cam~gn over,

U.S.. fotms storm inlo
distr icis of
FaDagah,A2

HOLZER CLINIC

eooDODUC boon

goes bye bye, A6
~

lne
Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

ODOT director addresses accidents on U.S. 33 connector

SPORTS

Millimeters Matter

BY BETH SERGENT

• Bobcats down UCF
in OT. See Page 81

BSERGENT@M'r'DAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - George M.
Collins, deput y director of
Di strict
I 0,
Ohio
Department
of
Tran sport ation
(O DOT)
addressed concerns about
traffi c accident s on the new

BLOOD PRESSURE- CONTROL AND DOT
Up until recently. the standard for passing
blood pressure ( BP) to drive a commercia l truck
(DOT certi ticate) was less than or equal to 160/90
millimeters (mm) mercwy (Hg). Thi s number
was actually high for a BP reading, but thi s was a
"one-time" check on the day of the physical - not
an averaged va lue, which is how BP is normally
eva luated. If yoLt did average 160/90 over several
days, yo u would dctinitely have a pro bl em. The
BP standard for the community was to average
below 140/90. But times have changed.
A revised national classilication system
(from the Seve nth Report of the Joint Nationa l
Committee on Preve ntion, Det ection, Evaluation
and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC) and
published in the Joumal of the American Medical
Association in May 2003), toughened up blood
pressure guidelines. sayi ng even the familiar standard of 120/80 (systolic/diastolic) mm Hg is no
longer considered good enough to prevent seriou s
or deadly health consequences. In L1ct, that old
standard is now classified as prehypertcnsion .
Prehypertension is a systo li• pressure ranging
from 120 to 139 or a diasto lic pressure rariging
from 80 to 89. So, under this new classification,
if yo ur blood pr~ssure is nght at 120/80, yo u have
prehypertension -your blood pressure isn't normal
or optimaL And yo u can have prehypertcnsion ·
even if just one of the two numbers in your bl ood
pressure reading is elevated. For instance, if yo ur
systolic pressure seems fine at 118 but your diastolic pressure is 84, you have pre-hypertension.
Left untreated, pre-hypertension can progress into
full-blown hypertension and could lead to a heart
attack or stroke.
The result of this reassessment fo r· the
community was lowering the DOT BP standard by
21 (TW EN TY-ONE) points on the top number
and by I (one) on the bottom. To pass and recei ve
a two (2) year certificate you have to have a pressure less than 140/90. However, if you arc
between 140-159/90-99. yo u receive a one (I)
year certificate. The hidden catch is that upon
you r next DOT physical. even if you arc less than
140/90. you sti ll receive on ly a one (I) yea r certificate- and fro m then on- indefi nitely, even

though you remain below 140/90! Essentially, the
new rules treat yo u as if you had high BP (taking
medication) under the old mles - but for good reason.

one death in every nine people treated.

B Y BRIAN

Page AS

• Beatrice Fink
• Betty Jane Hawley

INSIDE

..•
• Arafat's wife lashes out
at top Palestinian officials
as they head to Paris to
consult with Arafat's
doctors. See Page A2
• Thomas receives
Eagle scout award.

See Page A3
• Suburban Columbus
school thrives as
alternative school.

See Page A6

A plaque was presented to Walt Manley by the Tuppers Pl ains Fire Department in appreciation for a boat he donated for use in
water rescue. W1th Manley, center, are firemen from the left, Lamar Lyons, Jason Rideno ur, Fire Chief Jeff Newell. (Manley),
president Jim Watson. Tim Showalter. and Bruce Hager.

Walt Manley donates boat to fire department I ~~~~~~:~~:~~~~!~:~~~~~
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
H0EFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

TUPPERS PLAINS
When the tlood waters came
up in late September. Walt
Manley looked at a boat he
had hoped to sell fo r a $1,000
and decided instead to donate
it to the TuRpc rs Plains Fire
Department for their rescue
work.
Manley has a way of looking around, seeing a need, ai1d

WEATHER

Dr. Popper is the Medical Director of
Occupational Medicine at Holzer Clinic. He may
be contacted at 740-446-5244.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Details on Page A6

Occupational Medicine is available in Gallipolis at the
Sycamore Branch by calling 740-446-5244 and at Holzer
Clinic Jackson by calling 740-395-8805.

POMEROY - With the
deadline fur appl i•at ions two
weeks away. the Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency
has · awarded
2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGI&lt;.:.S
$ 139.000 to Meigs County
homeowners who suffered
Calendars
damage in the Sept. 18
Classifieds
B3-4 noods, and $ 110,654 for
'
other needs assistance .
Comics
FEMA has approved more
Bs
than $27.5 mill ion in per·
Dear Abby
A3 . so nal assistance grants anu
low·interest loans to thou·
Editorials
A4 sands of f!bod disaster vic·
tim s. mostl y in Belmont.
Obituaries
As Jefferson and Washington
FEM A has provid·
B1 Counties.
Sports
ed re lief for l,764 people in
Belmont Count v. 959 in
Weather
A6 Jefferson
and · I .406 111
Wash ington.
In
Meig .1
© 2.004 Ohio Valley JlubliHhing Co .

INDEX

A3

'

•

I K&gt;LZl:R
CARDIOVASCUlAR
INST ITUTE

740.446.5000

taking action. For many years
he has been gathering up and
'recyc ling aluminum cans lo
raise money to se nd to the
Shriners·
Hospi tal
in
Cincinnati where children
receive free treatmen t.
Fur him doing for others is
a way o f life.
So when the torrential rains
came and the river began to
move ou t of its banks. Man ley
reali zed that area residents

Meigs flood relief nears $2SOK

.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Physicals
rug Screens
ployment Physicals
orkers Compensation

J. REED

POMEROY- For the first
time 111 month&gt;. Meig&gt;
Coumy\ JDbles&gt; rate has fallen
be low I5 percent. September
unemph') l!lellt fur the county
was reponed at 12.7 percent.
While \1eigs County's jobless
r&amp;e anu tho"" of surrounding
coumies were all lower in
September tl1&lt;Ul tl1ey were in
August. the unemployment rate
f(Jr Meigs County is still among
the s~1t e's highest. Only Morgan
County. with a mte of 15.8 percent. and Coshocton County,
w1th a rate of 13.5 percent,
reported more jobless residents
than Meigs. In '~1. six Ohio
counties reponed unemployment
l~lles of I 0 percent or higher.
AcTurding
to ·
the
Dcpanmcnt oof Job and Family
Sen·ices. which released the
latest unemployment figures
on Tuesday. 5.800 of the countv\ workforce of 6,700 were
without JObs in September
The coumy reported unemployment rates of 153 and
15.5 percent in August. ~004.
and September. 2003. respecti,el\ . The countv had an annu-

OBITUARIES

lished with a primary care provider (PCP) to take
care of your health care before you develop significant problems or damage. This is also tme for
those who don't drive commercially. Holzer
Clinic is dedicated to provide the best medical
care there is and continues to add services that
will benefit the community. Preventive health
care is a major focus and this approach will keep
you driving and your qualiiy of life the best it can
be.

..

into the highway to signal
mowri"s to slow down .
There are abo plans to
h'" e the ra mp coming off of
U.S . .1) to he changed 11110 a
ri ght turn only. Collin' said.
The plan will be in place
in 61! days. acL"Ording to the
dcput) director.

SREEU@MYO AILYS E'HI NEL.COM

The bottom line is: Get yourself estab-

Promoting a healthy workforce is what
we are all about

the accident' were due t"
. "fai lure to stop."
Collins also tuld the aLJdi cnce that "we' re gain!! to fix
it." He said although there
were already stop sign s posteel at the intersection . they
wi ll now have solar !lashing
ligh" attached to then1. and
rumble strips will be carved

rate drops

For those of you who drive commercial
trucks, this may have detrimental consequences to
your employment. The more medical problems
you have, the older you get, and the more unstable
(e.g., at higher risk for a catastrophic event) you
become, the greater the chance of being disqualified to drive.

Occupational
Medicine

nered the concern of local
residents who have conwued The D'aily Sentinel and
WSAZ, Huntington, W.Va.
expressing their concern and
soliciting hel p in getti ng
some corrective action at the
intersection.
Colli ns told the audience
at the chamber dinner thai

iir========~~:T~TI7
~ ===:===========JIIIM~e~ig.s jobless

Certain high-risk medical conditions need
to be even more aggressively treated to prevent or
control high blood pressure. If you have diabetes
· These new guidelines encourage establish- or chronic kidney disease, for instance, keep your
ing:healthy lifestyle habits, such as regular exerblood pressure below 130/80 mm Hg. Other highcise and limited sodium consumption, to help keep risk conditions include: heart failure; previous
blood pressure in che~. Left untreated, high
heart attack; high risk of coronary disease; and
blood pressure can cause a variety of .cardiovascu- previous stroke. These conditions themselves are
lar complications, including heart attack and
a major threat to your health. They can also make
stroke - two of the three leading causes of death
it difficult to keep your blood pressure low. But
among U.S. adu lts- as well as heart and kidney
controlling your blood pressure can help prevent
failure and vision loss.
these conditions from worsening or help you
avoid developing other cardiovascular disease.
The guidelines also recommend that docSome BP medication cim help protect your heart
tors treat high blood pressure more aggressively
and blood vessels from the damage these diseases
with medications. Only about one-th ird of people can cause. So you'll likely need to take them even
with high blood pressure have it efTcctively conif you don't have hypertension. Some are better
trolled - below 140/90 mm Hg. Yet the hi gher
for certain conditions than for others. For
instance, a diuretic may be a good choice if you
have heart failure, but not if you've had a heart
attack.

your blood pressure, the higher your risk ofhemi
attack, heart L1ilure. stroke and kidney disease. If
you're bet ween 40 and 70 years old, there is even
more reason to keep your blood pressure low. In
that age range, each increase of 20 mm Hg in systoli~: pressure and I 0 m111 Hg in diastolic pressure
doubles yo ur ri sk of cardiovascular complications,
stm1ing at 115/7 5 mm Hg. That means if your
blood pressure is 135/HS - technically considered
only prehypertension - your risk of a heart attack
or stroke is double that of someone with a blood
pressure of 115/75. On the other hand, doing
somethin g to reduc e blood pressure may save your
life or allow you to li ve longer, with better-quality
years. Main taining a reduction of 12 111m Hg in
systol ic pressure for I 0 years will prevent one
death in every II people treated for hypertension
according to the .INC report. In those with existing card iovascular disease or organ damage, that
reduction has an even bigger bei1efit, preventing

U.S. Rt. 33 Connector from
Darwin to Athens at Friday
night's dinner meeting of the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.
Since last month three
traffic accidems at the intersection of St. Rt. 681 and
U.S. Rt. 33 have occurred.
The accident s have gar-

County, 161 appl ication s
have been submitted. 78
grants have been approved
for housing ass istance. and
33 grants
have
been
approved for other needs
assistance.
FEMA wil l accept applica·
tions for assistance through
Nov. 18.
President Genrgc Bu sh
declared a federal disaster in
Meigs
and
20
other
Southern Ohio cmtnt ies after
d~vestuting tloous re"tlted
fmm Hurrica nes Charl ey,
France s and Ivan in August
and September. Since then,
8.367
individual s have
applied
for
assiqance
through FEMA's regi stration
number, (800) 62 1-FEMA.
Hous in n
c

a:-;'ii~lance
'

needed help getting out of its
way.
He looked at that boat
stored in a shed on hi s farm
and called up the firemen.
"Get over here and get this
boat. You need it. I don't." he
told them .
The firemen went immediately to Manley's home. just a
little ways out 68 1 toward
Reedsvil le. and picked it up.
That evening they put it to

on!\ fallen below 15 percent
good use for some water res- I once in 2(KJ.+ - in \1av. when
~ue work in the Lonn Bottom the rate'"" I }j percent.
and Reedsville comn~unitics.
. In . comparison.
Mei.gs
"The timin" was exactlv Coumv s ned1bonn~ cuunues
rig ht.'' said Je'h Newell. fire :~~~ ~~e~lt~J~~~t~Jn~~~~ ~:
chief. "It really came in Athen .s and
Washington
handy...
Counties show unemployment
After thin~ ' settled down r,ues 111 September at or below
and the flood water' receded. the natiunal average of 5. I perthe firem en presente~ a· cent - .\thens 4.5 percent and
pl aq ue of appreciation tu Wa&lt;hin~ton :11. Gal lia County
Manlq . who earlier thi ' year , howccC a (:f:9 percent jobless
tLJ rned YO.
1 rate. and \ inton 9.8.
1

Decorations
•
are go1ng up
in Pomeroy
Everywhere you turn holiday
deco rations are going up and
Pomeroy is no exception.
Here village employee Dale
Riffle hangs a Christmas
wreath on one of the many
period lights"in dow ntown
Pomeroy. Holiday banners
have been hung and all of
the light ·poles adorned whh
garlands of greenery. Nellie
and George Wright also
worked on the project of
making the village bright for
the holiday season.

Please see Relief, AS

Charlene Hoeflchlpholo

Diabetes Pa ograms
The HMC Diabetes Supeorf Graup will meet Sunday, November 14 frotn
2:00 pm · 4:00 pm at the HMC French 500 Room .
Diabetes Self·Manasemenl Program · November 15, I 6 and 17
9 AM · I 2 Noon • HMC French 500 Room
Please bring a fist of home medications to clos5 and have o prescriP;ion !Tom your physician
For more information on the~e FREE programs, or to register, call {740) 446·5080

lo

attend

Fibromyalgia Support Group
This FREL support group is sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation and Holter Medrc ol Center
Tuesday, November 9 • 5:30 PM · 8:00PM . • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Room AB
ToPc1 di~cu~sed wili'inCiudt'! pom con Trol e.-erc,-.e relo)(OIIOO , forigue depre\~lon and doctor/ pohenl relononsh1p

For more information, or to register, coli MJSsi Ross

at {7401446·5121

•.

or

1·8()()-816·5131.

MEDICAL CENTER

''Healtllcarc i11 Your
Own Bcidn·ard''
-·
~.holzer.org

�The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

Monday, November 8,

2004

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

•

Monday, November 8,

Community,Calendar
Public meetings
Thesday, Nov. 9
RUTLAND
- Leading
Creek Conservancy Di strict,
special meeting, 4 p.m., mntract ne gotiations.
CHESTER
-C hester
Township Board of Trustees
·regular monthly meeting 7
p.m., Chester Town Hall.

Group
s ponsored
by
Holzer Medical Center
and
Arthritis
Foundation,
5:30
to
8:30 p .m. 111 the HMC
Education
and
Conference
Center .
Mor e information, call
M issi Ro ss. 446-5 I 21

Wednesday, Nov. 10
TLJPPERS PLAINS Th e Meigs County Fire
Chiefs Association will
meet at 7 p.m. at the
Tuppers
Plain s-Chester
Water
Di strict
Office
Monday, ~m·. 8
conference
room . All
POMEROY
Meigs Meigs County fire chiefs,
County Repub k an Puny. EMA.
EMS, Sheriff's
7:30 p.m. at hendquarters .
office and Commissioners
invit ed . Quest ions call
Thesday, Nov. 9
Jeff Newell, (740) 591GALLIPOLIS
7574&gt; or Jon Burk e, 9S5Fibromyalgia
Support 3459.

Clubs and
organizations

Father-in-law is too eager
to know new granddaughter

Thursday, Nov. II
CHESTER ~ Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM will
Monday, Nov. 8
meet at the hall. There will
SYRACUSE
-Syracu'iC
be election of officers. JWJior Girl Scout Tmop 12()t
Refreshments .
will colla.1 canned and non-r.::rishable fOod ite1m ch)r-lfHlcxx·
Friday, Nov. 12
in Syr..::use between 5JO and 6
POMEROY
The p.m. lltu.e who wish h&gt; donate
Widow' s Fellowshp will fOod should tum on a porch light.
meet at noon at the Wild
Horse Cafe.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
POMEROY - T.B. Clinic
will be open lllltil 7 p.m. For
more infonnation call 992-3722.
Monday, Nov. 15
RACINE - A special
program
on
women s
health will be . pre sented
Sunday, Nov. 14
at 6 p.m. at the Mt.
RACINE - Bertha Foster
Moriah Church of God will be 87 years uld on Nov.
on Mile Hill Road. For 14. Cards may be sent to her
m0 re information call at her home. 34292 Sorden
Road. Racine . Ohio 457112
949 -2985 .

Other events

DEAR ABBY: I was married nine mnnth' ago to a man
I Jove dearly. It has hcen an
adjustment for all of u,. and at
time\ it has been stressful . We
have been working on 'ome
issues. but for th~ mmt part
we're doing we ll. I have a 12yea r-olu daughter I' ll call
"Gi nger. "
The prohlem is my new
father-in-law. ··Grant." .. He
lives alone a few states away
from us. We sec him only a
few times a year. I harely
know him. Grant has been
asking to take Ginger alone
tor a weekend at hi' secluded
home. I have a rea l problem
with that. Grant also asked to
take Ginger to visi t his mother - an even farther distance.
He planned on having my
daughter alnne with him in a
hotel for a week. I said no.
Abby. Grant plans these
outings in hi s head and then
ge ts up,et when I say no . J' m
not comfortable allowing my
innocent child to spend time
alone with a man in his 6Us
whom I don · t know very we II .
J' have invited Grant to our
home so he can get to know us
both. und he alway' has an

Church servi.ces

Birthdays

US Marines of the 1st Division take position on the outskirts of Fallujah, Iraq, Monday. (AP Photos)

U.S. forces storm into western districts of Fallujah as
Iraqi government declar-es 60-day state of emergency
'

Bv JIM KRANE

U.S. officers to allow doctors
and ambulances go inside the
main part of the city to help the
NEAR FALLUJAH.Iraq wounded bttt they refused.
U.S. forces stormed into the There was no confirmation
western outskirtS of Fallujuh from the Americans.
early Monday. seiling the
"The American troops'
main city hospital and sec ur- attempt to take over the hospiing two key bridges over the tal was not right because they
Euphrates river in what thought that they would halt
appeared to be the first stage of medical assistance to the resisthe long-expected assault on tance.'' he said by telephone to
the insurgent stronghold.
a reporter inside the city. "But
An AC- 130 gunship raked they did not realize that the
the city with 40 mm cannon hospital does not belong to
tire as explosions from U.S. anybody. especially the resisartillery lit up the night sky. tance."
Intermittent artillery fire hlastDuring the siege of Fallujah
ed southern neighborhoods of last April, doctors at the hospiFallujah, and orange tirehalb tal were a main source of
from high explosive oirbursts reports about civilian casualcould he seen above the ties, which U.S. officials
rooftops.
insisted were overblown .
U.S. officials said the tough- Those reports generated strong
est fight was yet to come pllblic outage in Iraq and elsewhen American forces enter where in the Arab world,
the main part of the city on the prompting the Bush adminiseast bank of the river. includ- !ration to call off the offensive.
Sunday's action began after
ing the Jolan neighborhood
where insurgent defenses are sundown on the outskirts of the
believed the strongest.
city, which has been sealed off
The initia l attacks on by U.S. and Iraqi forces, and
Fallujah began just hours after the minaret-studded skyline
the Iraq1 government declared was lit up with huge flashes of
60 days of emergency rule light.
Flares were dropped to illuthroughout most of the country
as militants dramatically esca- minate targets, and defenders
lated attacks, killing at least 30 fought back with heavy
people.
including
two machine gunfire. Flaming red
Americans.
tracer rounds streaked through
Several hundred Iraqi troops the sky from guerrilla posiwere sent into Fallujah's main tions inside the city, 40 miles
hospital after U.S. force s west of Baghdad.
Before the assault began,
sealed off the area. The troops
detained about 50 men of mili- U.S. commanders warned
tary age in.si de the hospital , but troops to expect the most bruabout half were later released. tal urban fighting since the
The invaders used special Vietnam War.
toob, powered by .22 caliber
Underscoring the instability
blanks. to break open door elsewhere in Iraq, severa l
locks. A rille-like crackle heavy exp losiors thundered
echoed through the facility. through the capital even as
Many patients were herded · governmen t spokesman Thair
into hallways and handcuffed Hassan
ai- Naqeeb
was
until troops
determined announcing the state of emerwhether they were insurgents gency, which appljes throughhiding in the hospital.
' out the country except for
Dr. Salih al-lssawi. head of Kurdish-ruled areas in the
the hospital. said he had asked north.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Iraqi interim Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi said the state of
emergency is a "very powerful
message that . we are serious"
about reinin g in insurgents
before elections set for late
January.
"We want to secure the
cou mry so elections can be
done in a peaceful way and the
Iraqi people can participate in
the elections free ly, without
the intimidation by terrorists
and by forces who are trying to
wreck the political process in
Iraq," he told reporters.
Allawi said nothing in public about the beginning of the
attack in Fallujah, although
U.S. commanders have said it
would be his responsibility to
order the storming of the city.
In surge nts,
meanwhile,
waged a second day of multiple attacks across the restive
Sunni Triangle north and west
of Baghdad, storming police
stations, assassinating government offlcials and setting off
deadly car bombs. About 60
people have been killed and 75
mjured in the two days of
attacks.
At dawn, armed rebels
stormed three police stations
in Haditha and Haqlaniyah,
140 miles northwest of
Baghdad, killing 22 policemen. Some were lined up and
shot execution-style , according to police and hospital officials.
Three attacks on U.S. convoys in and around Baghdad
killed two American soldiers
and wounded five others, the
military said. Residents report~d grenades setting police cars
allame on Haifa Street in the
heart of the capital.
A car bomb also exploded
near the Baghdad home of
Iraq 's tinance minister. Adil
Abdel-Mahdi. a leading Shiite
politician. Abdel-Mahdi and
his family were not home at the
time, but the U.S. militarv said
the bomb killed one 'Iraqi
bystander and wounded anoth-

er. A U.S. patrol came under
small-arms fire as it responded, wounding one soldier, a
statement said.
In a Web posting, the alQaida affiliate group of Abu
Musab ai-Zarqawi. believed
headquartered in Fallujah,
claimed responsibility for the
attacks on Haditha and
Haqlaniyah.
'The
lions
stormed
(Haditha's) police directorate
· killed
everyone
and
there,.. With thi s operation, the
city has been completely liberated. The lions have been wandering in the city until late
today," said the statement,
which could not be authenticated.
.
The widespread insurgem
attacks seemed aimed at
relieving the pressure on
Fallujah, where about I0,000

still possible, even if a largescale military action began.
Allawi, a secu lar-minded
Shiite Musl im. faced strong .
pressure from within the
minority Sunni community to
avoid an all-out assault.
U.N.
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan allCI others have
warned tnat a military offensive could trigger a wave of
violence that wou ld sabotage
the January elections by alienating Sunnis , who form the
core of the in surgency. About
60 percent ol Iraq's 25 million
people are Shiite.
·
U.S imcll igence estimated
about 3.000 insurgents have
dug in behind uefenses and
booby traps in Fallujah. city
of about 300.000 that has
become a symbol throughout
the Islamic world of Iraqi resistance to the U.S.-led coalition.

l

.

;!:,. e

~*

1.

en r

••
•••

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

•·

2005
Pet Calendar!

Bv LARA SUKHTIAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

excuse nnt to cnme . This

and it has caused

Brandon Thomas received his Eagle Scout awa rd in a recent Court of Hono r ceremony. Making the presentation
Hostottle, scout maste r.

COOLVILLE - Brandon
C. Thomas. son of Mike and
Lori Thomas of Coolville,
has achieved the rank of
Eagle Scout and was recentlv presented his award in a
troop 19 Court of Honor by
Larry Hostottle. scout master.
Thomas joined cub scouts.
Pack 52 . when he was in
the first grade. He complet-

ed his Ea~le project to qualify for hts Eagle Award in
September.
The Eagle project that
Thomas planned and completed was to design and
build a walnut display cabinet for
the
Coolville
Methodist
Church.
The
youth drew the blueprints,
starting with a pile of walnut
lumber donated by his

grandparents, Dorsey and
Jean Burkhammer, and completed the cabinet.
Thomas planed the lumber.
cut out the pieces. glued and
stained them. and then led
members of his Boy Scout
Troop in the assembly of the
cabinet. It stands approximately five feet high by four
feet wide and has glass
doors and shelves and inside

MARIETTA - District 18 Ohio Public Works
Commission Exec uti ve Committee will meet at I 0 a.m.
on Wedne sday at the Holiday Inn in Marietta lO rate
Round 19 Combined Subdivision applica tion s and review
all proJects and ask questions of the District 18 Liaison.
This is•ntll the meeting at which the fina!.project package i.&gt; se lec1ed and vo ted upon to send to the OPWC for
approval. A meeting of District 18 Executive Committee
witt be held at I 0 a .m. on Nov. 18 at the Holiday Inn in
Marietta to recommend projects for Round 19 funding
under the Ohio Public Works Commission State Capital
lmpro\'ement and Local Transportation Improvem ent
Programs .

POMEROY - Mike and
Julie Mayer announce th e
birth of their son Walker
William Douglas Mayer
born on Sept. II.
The infant has an older
brother, Matthew.
Paternal grandparents are
Donald and Linda Mayer
of Pomeroy. Paternal greatgrandparents are Pauline
Mayer of Pomeroy and the
late Roy Mayer, and II ~
Darnell of Middleport and
the late Paul Darnell.
Maternal grandparents are

-N~~~ ~t-p~t:-------- ~-----

-~
~.

• Phone: ________ _ _ _ _ __

Wettwis hers light candles at the makeshift shnne for ailing
Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat in front of the Percy Mil itary
Teaching hospital in Clamart outside Paris Sunday. Arafat was
clinging to life 111 intensive care. but a senior aide denied
,
Sunday he was in a coma.
A producer !rom AI-Ja1.eera had calleu their' Ramall ah
said they were confident it office from Ara{ai\ b~dside
was Suha Aralai and that she at a French military ho;pitul.

•· I

I

l\egtster

4::!

_Gene Triplett
Meigs County Engtneer

1

-"

f'

Fantily

Daily Sentinel ••

..• •:..., ..• ...

See specifications in bid packet.
Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs
County Commissioners, Courthouse , Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769- Phone #
740-992 ·2895 . A deposit of o dollars will be requ ired fo1 each set of

plans and specifications, check made payable to the full amount

Th: kcls Availnhlt' ul: Qualit;o.· l'l"int ShH(l.
Jtutht~ld lh·pt. S10n· • .lnt•"s &lt;. ' mmlr.\··
M.l'il' k('t . Hilltop (;n,\: ..· r~.
Ponlt•rn.\' · ·ln'"H'I' Shull

Cull992 -tthl7 Hr 7-U-2.\72 i\.,k

,

l~:il·=·u:r!1:;::rl):a:•~·is:·t:o:Kr:t·s~T~r·:·~··:r~i&lt;..·:k:&lt;t~,~~

'

will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt ot bids.
Each bid must be accompanied .by either a bid bond in an amount of
100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesa1d
Meigs County CommiSSIOners or by certified check, cashiers check, or
letter of credit upon a solvdnt bank in the amount of not less than 1OOk
of the bid am ount in fa vor of the aforesa1~ Meigs County
CommissiOners.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official
or agent signing the bond Blds shall be sealed and marked as " B1d for
Racine Ballfield Fenc ing Project" and mailed or delivered to ·
Meigs County Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 4 5769
Attention at bidders is call ed to all of the requirements contained m
this bid packet, part1cularly to the Federal Labor Standards Prov isions
and Davis -Bacon Wages, various msurance requ1rements. var 1ous equal
opportunity provis1ons, and the requirement for a payment bond and
perlormance bond for 1OO ~n of th e con tract price.
N,o bidder may Withdraw hiS bid within thirty (30) days afte r !he
actual date of the opening therE:of The Me1gs County CommiSSIOners
reserve the right to reject any or all btds.
Jeff Thornton, Pres1dent
Me1gs County CommiSSIOners

TIMOTHY ·P. METZGER, DO

L

To lk l..cK•nh'fl In Thl· :\l•ur 1-'utun.·:
The .\liddlcpll1 Clin1c
·ss \:nrth Second Sa·ect
\ liddlq~ 1rt, r 111 4 .'&gt;-r~ 1

..

--- "---·-·-- - · ·

'

•

~ledicine ·
Otlit•e II on rs:

"Pet Calendar''
"Pet Calendar''
"Pet Calendar''
825 Third Avenue
200 Main St
111 Court St.
.,.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 pt Pleasant, WV 25550 Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~:
·------------·-----------·-·····················-~
•• ••
•• •• JL..._ •• ••
•• •• JL..._ •• ••
•••

..••: ...••:..., ..• •:

grandparcnts
are
Roscoe and ~~=~
Betty
Fife I
William
f Douglas Mayer
0
Middleport
and the late Walter and
Marjorie June Roush.

RUII8Rd Vol. Fire DePI.

~:

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
- ~oint ~leasant

great -

Pleasanl Valley Jlospi/(J[ QJelcomes .. ,

I

jJ];)atlp
UJ:rlbune

Sealed proposals for the Purchase , Delive'Y and Insta llation of
Fencing and All materials to install at the Racine Ballfield in Racine,
Meigs County, Ohio. As per specificat ions in bid packet will be
received by the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at the
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until I :00 P.M, Thursday, November
18, 2004, and then at 1:30 P.M at said office opened and read aloud for
the following :

••
I

...

~~ ~alltpohs

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Sarvlnu Starts-5:00 p.m.
Tlcllels $8.00 Advance Onlv

~
:,

•• 1

AP Plloto

f

0

SATURDAY
NOV. 13 .. 200,4

--------------- --- ---

thai 1vhen I was 111 high
schooL He w;IS in I he Army in
California.
We met again after 41
years . fell in l01e. and began
what seemed like a dream
come true . I ga1c up a great
job and proximity to family
and fr iends to relocate to
Wash in gton . .\1 y
dre;trn
turned into a financial ly and
emotionally draining nightmarc. After" year and a half
of marriage thai volleyed
between cruelt) and reassurances of his lo1·c. I confirmed
my intuition that he had been
tyin g and cheating the whole
time .
I had based my trust in him
on that sv,eet h istory that was
decades in the pas!. I am writing to urge others to be cautious. Do not misplace your
trust as I diu. - BETRAYED
AFTER ALL THESE YEARS
DEAR BETRAYED: While
it's true th'at man) childhood
sweethearts
.suc ce&gt;Sfullv
rekindle that old !lame in later
life. it's also true that as people grow ol der they so metime s change - and not
always for the better. That's
why it's important to look
carefully before you leap into
anything and take nothing for
gran ted.
I' 111 .sorry your happy ending turned out badly and your
prince into a toad . Be glad
you know the truth and are
again in control of your future
because -believe me -it's
not over until you take your
last breath.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel .:.

Galloway
and Cheryl
Rou &gt;h
of
Johnstown .
Moternal

DINNER

~f.

Dear
Abby

Don Roush

MEIGS ELEMENTARY SCHOOl

... Your Name:
~
~~ Add ress:

;~

lighting. All hardware and
glass for the cabinet were
provided by his parents .
Thom as graduated from
Tri-County Joint Vocational
High School in May. He
enlisted in the United States
Army. and on Oct. 20 left
for boot. camp.
Thomas is also the grandson of Larry and Donna
Thomas of Rutland .

'tftTurkeyf;lt

/

.f:

Larry

between the two of u&lt; . I walll
to please my husband. but I
don't want to place Ginger in
a situation that I am not comfortable with. What sl10u lu I
do'' - WORRIED MOTHER
IN MASSACHUSETTS
DEAR WORRIED MOTHER: Stick to your guns and
insist that your father-in-la w
"get to know" you r daughter
on ly in situations that you can
supervise. There is a reason
why your alarm bell' are ringing, and frankly, after reading
your letter, they went off in
my head. too. Listen to your
motherly instinct and do not
allow yourse lf to be manipulated into doing otherwise.
DEAR ABBY: I have a
warning for your readers. It i&gt;
always touching to hear stories of long-lost loves being
reunited to then live happily
, ever after. I had a love like

Public works meetings set Mayers announce birth

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

!:

wa~

argument~

Thomas receives Eagle scout award.

••
•••

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calenda.'-. ·
,
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. .

i~

causing a rift between my
husband and me . Grant has
made my husband feel gui lt y.

a

~« ~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~

Arafat's wife lashes out at top Palestinian officials
as they head to Paris to consult with Arafat's doctors
CLAMART, France
Yasser Arafat's wife lashed
out at his top lieutenants
Monday, accusing them of
traveling to Paris with plans
to ''bury'' him ·'alive." .
·In a screaming telepho'iie
call from Arafa t's hosp ital
bes.ide. Suha Arafat told panArab AI-Jazeera television
that she was i"uing "an
appeal to the Palestinian people .'' She accmed hi s top
aides - who are traveling to
Pari s to be with Arafat later
Monday - of conspiri'ng to
usurp the role her husband has
held lor four decades as
Palestinian leader.
" Let it be known to the
honest · Pale stinian people
th at a bunch of those who
want to take over. arc com ing
to Paris tomorrow." she
screamed in Arabic over the
telephone .
"YotJ have to real i1e the
'ir.e of the .:Dnspiracy. I tell
you they are trying to bury
Ahu Ammar ali ve." she continued. using his nom de
guerre. He i' all righ t and he
i.s going home. God' is great.··

American troops- including
two Marine battalion s and an
Army battalion were
massed for the assault. Two
Iraqi brigades also stood by.
The emergency decree lays
the groundwork for a severe
crackdown in areas where
guerrillas operate. .
· Under the law, all traffic and
men between the ages of 15
and 55 were banned from the
streets of Fallujah and surrounding areas 24 hours ~ day.
All members of the Fallujah
police and security services
wer.e suspended indefinitely
and all roads into Fallujah and
neighboring Ramadi were
closed indetinitely
Government negotiators earlier Sunday reponed the failure
of last-minute talks for peace
even as Allawi had said diaIogue with Fallujah leaders was

2004

.

• Monda'"
• T ue,dai·:
• \\ 'e dnesdar:

• Thursda1·:
• Fridar:

q a.m. to 5 p.m.
II ;Lm. t•&gt; 7 p.m.

9 a.m. to)- p.m.
9 a.m. to- p.m.
II a.m. to:, p. m.

30-i-i7:-J-5195
.\t•t't"ptiug new pat.i enh.
('nil for , an tlppointnwnt.
.

' / ••.:•,;•., ,r,'i:r,; .,

, \;,,.,,(/imolNthR- ,..

!

,•'.',

\ ii 1

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Sometime Ill those rough ly
12
post-e lecllon
hours
between John Edwards
early morntng threat to open
Ltp Ohio to the lawyerlegions. and John Kerry's
concessiOn speech 111 the
afternoon. I went back to the
books, back to the 1960
election v-hen
Rtchard
Nixon was very, very narrowly defeated by John F.
Kennedy
What a dtfference 44 years
makes "I eased the tension
of the Wdtt (for election
retu rns) by dnvmg south on
the Po~ctliL Coast Htghway,"
N1xon wrote 111 his memOirs
On th,ll ElectiOn D,1y road
tnp. th1s Slltlllg Vtce president and Republtcan pres tdentt,II
candtdate
Wds
,tccompamed only by two
atdes and .r Los Ange les
pol tce dnver. One atde
remarked that he h&lt;Id never
been to TIJUana. 'o we conltn ued ,11\ the way to
Mextco," Ntxon wrote. 'We
we re back m Los Angeles by
the li me the results were

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make uo law respecting a11
establishme11t of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlte press; or tire right of the
people peaceabiJ' to assemble, a11d to petition
the Govermnent for a redress of grieva11ces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Tod,ty " Mond.ty. No' ~. th e 3\3th do~y ol 2004 Thete o11e
51 days lett m th~ year
Today\ Htg hh ght m Htstory.
One hundred years ago. on Nov 8. 1904. Pre'Ident
Theod01e Roose;e\t. wlw h.tJ succeeded Pne ,tssdsstnated
Wtllt&lt;Im McK111ley. was elected to a lctm 111 hts ow n nght dS
he dete.ued Demon,u Alton B Po~rkc1.
On thts d,ne
In 1837. Moum Holyoke Sem111&lt;1ry. a college exc lustvely
~or v- omen. opened 111 South H o~dley. rvl.tss
In 1889. Mont.tnd became the 4 1st state
In \\123. Ado lf Hulet lo~unched IllS lttst .tttempl at settt ng
powct wtth a f,u lcd w up 111 Muntch. Geunany.the "Beer-Ho~\1
Putsc· h ..
In \932. New York Gov Fr,111klm D Roosevelt def eated
meum be nt Herbert Hoover to r the prestdem:y
In 1933. Prestdent Rooseve lt created the Ctvtl Works
Admtntstratl on. destgncd to cre,ne JObs tot mote than 4 million unemployed
In 1942. Operanon "Torc h bcg,m dutmg World War II us
L' S o~nd Bnttsh forces \,mded m French North Alnc,t
In 1960. Mo~ ssac hu setts Sen John F Kennedy deleated Ytce
Prestdenl Rich.trd M Ntxon lor the prestdency
In 1966. Ronald Reagan w,ts elected gme tnor o\ C,IItforma
In 1983. Democrat W Wilson Goode was elected the lirst
black mayor ot Phtladelphta. Democrat Mo~rtha Layne Collm s
was elec ted the first lemal e governor ol Kentucky.
In 1988. Vtce Pre stdent George Bush won the prestdenltal
e\et:twn. defeat mg Massachusetts Go' Mtchael Dukakts
Ten years ago Mtdletm elect ions tesulted 111 Republtco~ns
wmmng a mdJOII t) 111 t h ~ Sen&lt;Ite whtlc a\ the same It me gal nmg control of the House for the fust ttme 111 40 yems
Ca1IIorn1a HJtets o1pprowd Proposition 187. destgned to deny
ed ucation ,md soctal servtces ,md no n-emetge ncy health cure
to Illegal aliens.
Ft ve years ago Israeli and Palesltman negotiators launched
landmark talks. gtvtn g themse lves an ambtttous 100-day
de,tdii ne to cr&lt;Ifl the broad outlmes of a peace agreement
Former Pres tdent Bush v-as honored m Germany for ht s role
mthe Iall oft he Berlin Wall I0 years earlier Premlent Clinton
pamctpated 111 a "vtrtual town h,tl! meetmg" on the Intern et.
answen ng quest tons from pre-screened online users
One year ago A sUiude car bombm g. of d housmg complex
111 Rtyadh Saudt Ar,tbta. kill ed 17 people Front-runner
Howard Dean became the ftrst Democral!c preSidentta l candidate ever to reject taxpayer money and o~Votd the accompanyIng spend111g hmt ls. so~y m g he h o~d to act to compete aga mst
Prestdent Bush's cash-nch campatgn
Thought for Today "Man ts botn to ltvc. not to p~cpare for
ltte · - Bon s Pasternak. Russ tan o~uthor ( 1890- 1Y60)

comm g 111 .

Such whumy belongs to a
pte-s,ttelhte ,tge But Nixon
sensed a new clty was dawnIng wnh "the wbstanttal and
tnfluenttal power that th e
emergence ot televiston ~1"
the pnmdty news medtttm
g~t'-'e reporters, commentators . and producers " He
conttnucd. "II was largely
they v- ho dectded v- hat the
pubhc would hear and see of
the c,unp:u gn " And you c,m
say that agam - at le&lt;ISI
unttl late ly The advent ot
talk 1ad to. Fox News and th e

Ohio Valley Publishing Co

VTt .barely recognize each other

Member The Assoc1 ated Press and the
Oh10 Newspaper AssoetatiOn

Department extens1ons are:

Postmasler Send address eo rrect1on s
to The Datly Sentt nel 111 Court Street
Pomeroy On1o 45769

News

Subscnpt10n Rates

Editor Chc:trlene Hoefltch E~&lt;l 12
Repor1er. Bnan Reed Ext 14
1 Aeponer Beth Sergent Ext 13

I

Da1ly

Advertising
Out stde Sales· Dave Hams, E~&lt;t 15
Outstde Sales Brenda Dav ts E~&lt;l 16
ClassJCirc Judy Clark bt 10

II

Circulation

Dtstnct Mgr. Jason Patters~n

I,
1

Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoelllch E~&lt;t 12

I
I

I

By carrier or motor route
5
One month
9 57
One year .
' 11440

news@mydatlyse'lltnel com

Web
NWW mydattysen ttnel com

.50'

Senior Ctttzen rates
One month
70
One year . . .
. '96 70
Subscrtbers should rem 1t m advance
dtrect to the Datly Sent•net No subscnp·
lton by matt permttted 1n areas where
home earner serv1ce 1s avatlable

•a

Matl Subscnptton
tnstde Metgs County
13 Weeks
' 3015
26 Weeks
' 60 00
52 Weeks
11880
Outside Me1gs County
13 Weeks
'50 05
1 100 10
26 Weeks
52 Weeks
' 200 20

l

•••

Our mam conce rn 1n all stones 1s to be Published every aftern oon Monday
accurate If you know at an error m a through Fr1day 111 Cour t Street
story can the newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy Oh1o Second class postage
21 56
pa1d at Pomeroy

(740) 992·2156.

In ternet has finally begun to
bust up that old mfo-nopoly
Ntxon went on to descnbe
a whtplashll1g elecuon n1ght.
trendm g. but barely. toward
Kennedy Only \13 .000
votes - includ ing th ousands of demons trab ly
fraudul ent ones - wou ld
ul lmMtely separate the two
cand tdates 1n th e populat
vote That's 22,000 ;otes
fewer than the margm separating George W. Bush and
John Kcny tn Ohto alone.
n's less than 5 percent ol the
3 5 mtlhon votes sepatattn g
Prestdent Bu sh and Sen
Kerry nattotMlly Too close
to caiJ 'I Not accordmg to the
medta. urea 1960. A&gt; N1xon
wrote, they h.td ,t\re.tdy predtcted a subst.tnlt,tl Kennedy
VICtory Whtch , 111 hght o\
the erroneous report s ol ,1
Kerry Jandsltde tht s week.
remmds us that some thmgs
re,tll y never ch.mge
'
Desert bt ng "It eme nclous
pressure' to concede from
reporte rs and pundns. Ntxon
made o1 bnel stdtement .tltet
m1dnt ght to Ltckno "' ledge
the sli ver of a Kennedy
edge Contrast that wtth the
tremendou s reluctance ol the
Kc rry-c hcenng mam strc&lt;Im
medta even to call Ohto lor

II

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

Diana
West

Prestdent Bush , prob,tb ly out American people managed
of fe.1r of vo~ltd.nmg hts re- to hear and see through the
election .md. qu tte tnadver- fuzz and the junk, through
Mmutes"
and
tcml y. torc111g some sort ol a "60
m1dmght concessiOn from "Night !tne," through The
New York Tunes and the,.
Sen Ke tt y
The 1960 mon11ng brought well. New York Ttmes They
a shrinktng margtn and also managed to see through·
mass1 ve Spnngsteen dnd Strctsand.
rep OilS • ot
Democrallc fraud 111 Texas through the mtl ltons ut
and 1\hnots But Ntxo n went George Soros and the mouth
of Mtchael Moore.
sto~tesnt.tn on hiS politica l
There IS somethin g close
,t\hes .tnd refused to dem,md
,I tecount. "The effect could to poetiC JUSI1Ce Ill th e
be dcvastaung to Amenco~'s creo~ky monoltth ot Old
lotetgn reldtlons," he wtole Mcd t.t showmg us advanced
patrioti c.t!ly, 'and I could age dnrJ 1otchety bws 111 a,
not subject the coumry to campatgu t!ldt now ends in.
such ,t slludtton " He o~l so the uetCdl of John Kerry.
dtdn't w,un lUbe known as u TIM! I' , 111 Important ways.
"sore loser." Gtven the eatl y the mo~tnstieam and John
Ketry ,1re kmdred creatures
m o~c hliMi tons ol the Ketry
of
tile Iar-away 1960s, botil
Cdmp,ngn. I doubt etlher reo~­
son moved John Kerry He setl! ng the u .mtt-est,tbl ishstmply tco~l t zed the tuu lny ol menl ·ways dunng both the
1m sttuauon and conceded Vtetn,un War ,tnd, sldtestde.
the tk L'liOn - 10 the 4UIIC the .t ntt-Vietnam War. You
ob vJou' tiJ..,tJe'\s ot the 1ll.lln- tmght eve n say that togeth er
they helped cteate ,md pet~lrcLtm tllt.::tkt
NBC s
Ka11e
Counc pet uo~t e the potsonou's myth
donned black. "It looks more ol the V1ctndm \oetcran dS'
and mote ltke the prestdent enemy of hum .tmty touchstone of the sel\-hatmg
ho~ s won." Ms Co unc satd
- ,lllet the ptestdent ho~d Amen can
And now. wnh th e te-elecwon "You t.tke my bre,nh
uun ol George W Bush , they
awo~y." ABC's Petet Jcnnm gs
told o~n election l.tw expert have been Jeteo~ted More
on heattng t~ a l Ohto w.ts out un po rt.~nt - ,md masstve
ol Keny's te&lt;Ich Rad1o t.tlk - th,mks to the e-scn bes ol the
ster Don lmu s s,ud NB C's hlogosphete .md John O'Neill
Tom Bro kaw greeted hun and hts Swt\1 Bo.tl Veterans
,uound dawn s.ty tng. 'Wh,H lor Tru th - tiley h,tvc been
expuseJ 111 v.o~ys once
a mghtnhl rc."
Wh,n ts most ext raorch - untmo~g m.tble Whtch could
n,u y .tbout Elellto n 2004 ts pt es.tge a trul y new er.t
th.tt the pres tdent dtd ~&gt;.tn
( Dwna We111' a w lumn11T
despnc the sh.unel ul ,ttlmny /ol 7/ie \V(II/tllt~ron ltllle&lt;
ol tile m ,u nst reo~m medta dnd ~/1e Ul/1 /Je COI ITOU&lt;'d \'Ill '
th e Ken y co~ m pa t g n The drmwa e,r @ \'ell::mln et)

Ill

Letters to the editor are vvelcome. Th ev should
be Ins than 300 H ord1. Allletlers are subject to
editm g and nwsl be 1igned and include addres.1
and telephone nwnba No unsigned leiters will
be puhlt1hed Letten ~ hou ld he in good ta1te,
addre11ing iiiUel, 110t penona!tties.
the opinion 1 e rpre11ed in tl111 column are the
wmen1us of' the Ohio Valin Publishing Co. :1
editonal board, unle\S othen~tse nrted.

·(usPs 213·960)

2004.

Obituaries

For the Record

Beatrice ·Jo' Fink

Divorces

MIDDLEPORT - Beatnce Carmollee "Jo" Fink, 68,
Mtddleport, passed away at her residence on Saturday Nov 6

POMEROY - An ac111
has been ftled tn
Metgs County Common leas oun by Mary E Dunkle,
·Je, Middleport.
Mtddleport, agamst Josh J
Dtvorces have been granted to Mat k S Lawson from
Amanda M. Lawson, Conme Dtane Lawrence from Bryan
Lee Lawrence. and Mathew 0 M Strong from Malinda
Strong
Cases tiled by Patncta A. Nutter agatnst Russell Nutter
and Victor Hoalcraft against Angela Hoalcraft have been
dtsmtssed

2004

.

'

Born on Sept. 19, 1936, 111 Cheshtre, she was the daughter
of the late Otho Cectl Maye and Besste Melinda Darst Maye
She was a graduate of Cheshtre Htgh School, and a homemaker She was lead to the Lord by Pastor Jamie Fonner
In addition to her parents, she was preceded tn death by a
grandson, Nath aniel Eugene Fmk
She ts surv ived by her husband, Wtlliam Thomas Fmk of
Mtddlepon , children , Wilham C (Paula) Ftnk of Mtddleport,
Joh n Paul (Ktra) Fmk of Chesapeake, and Charles Eugene
(Joyce) Fmk of Long Bottom, 10 Grandchildren: Wtlliam
James. Zachary, Corey. Codey, Cacy, Charley Ntcole,
Courtney Ann, Florence Amta, Emtly Dawn
and Travt s
Weston Fmk; a great-granddaughter, Audrey Hysell, and a
co usm, Mary Eilts of Mtddleporl
·
Servtces wtll be held at 3 p.m .. on Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2004, at
Ftsher Funeral Home 111 Mtddlepon Offictating will be
Pastor Jamie Fortner and bunal wtll be 111 Rtvervtew
Cemetery. Fn ends may call on Tuesday from I 30 p m until
time of servtce at 3 p.m at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donauons may be made to Fi sher Funeral
Home, P 0 Box 151 , Mtddleport, 45760 to help with funeral
ex penses
On-line condolences may be sent to www fisherfuneralhomes com

Betty Jane Hawley
MIDDLEPORT - Betty Jane Hawlev, 76, Mtddleport,
pa&gt;Sed away on Saturday, Nov. 6, 2004, ai Overbrook Center
111 Mtddleport
She v-as born on Apnl 28, 1928 in Hartford, W Va , daughtet of the late Charles Wtlltam "Btll " and Phoebe Loutse
Mahon Lee She was a graduate of Middleport Htgh School,
and retired alter many years from lmpenal Electric.
In oldditton to her patents, she was preceded m death by her
husband. Norman E Hawley, son Jeffrey Ray Hawley, grandson, Jeffery Notman Hawley, granddaughter Teresa Hawley,
ststers Ruby MaJors, Ova Douglas, and Carrie Bowser, brother Wilham Dame! Lee and a daughter-m-law, Laura Hawley.
She ts survtved by so ns, Jerry (Jane) Hawley of Pomeroy,
Randy (Darla) Hawley ot Chester. Tom (Karen) Hawley ot
Mtddleport, ,\lld Blllce (C mdy) Hawley of Pomeroy
Also survtvtng are grandson s, Randy Hawley, Jr., Shawn
Hawley. Ry an Hav-ley. and Todd Hawley. granddaughters.
Tammy Casto. Jen Lynn Hawley, Rachael Hawley, Tara
Hawley. and steP,- grandsons, Chnstopher Gtlkey, Greg
C.trpe nter, .md Roge t Carpenter, tour great-granddaughters,
live great-grandsons. ststers and brothers-m-law, Pat and
Denztl Ptoctor ol Mtddleport. Marge and Btddy Stewart of
Wes t Columbta, W. Va ; brother and stster-in-law, Larry and
Cora Lee of Hamsonvt!le. and severaf'meces and nephews
Services wtll be held at II am on Tuesday, Nov 9, 2004,
at Ftsher Funeral Home 111 Mtddlcport Otfictattng wtll be
Rev Steve Ltttle and burial wtll foll ow 111 Gravel Hill
Cemetery Fnend s may call on Monday, Nov 8, from 5 to 9
p m at the funeral home
Pallbearers wtll be Randy Hawl ey, Jr , Todd Hawley,
Shawn Haw ley. Chnstopher Gtlkey, Ryan Hawley. Bobby
MaJors, Buddy Whtllington
On-lme condolences may be sent to www.tisherfuneralhomes com

1

Ltke ot hers o~cross the
count! y I was huddled wt th
f11ends ,uound the telev tston
set on Election Nt ght , my
son press mg a blue-donkey
or red-elep hant stt cker on
e.tc h state &lt;Is th e ret urn s
ro ll ed tn As we held out
hope f01 Ohto. oue fn end
re \,ned ,, qot y th.tl , 111 1ell aspect, helped me underst.md
Bu sh's COnV!IlClllg VICtory as
we ll as any I ha ve he o~rd
A young man, my I n end
s.ud, Wds walkt ng door to
door on her street &lt;1 few
weeks ago to ratse money
lor the Kerry-Edwards .uckel When he knocked on the
door o\ one house, the ow net
responded to the youn g man
Ill u huff
"I'm a Republican! she
s,ud Dtdn't you 'ee my
flag" '
That. 111 th e end. Is what II
bo1led down to
Sumchow. as Bush ,tnd hiS
pdtly cui taxes to th e nch .
~e nt young Amencan..., to
thetr deaths 111 a war based
on untrut hs and mo~nag ed
'W tlh ~tu nmng Jn\.:ompctcncc.
re ne ged on th h ndnc ta l com-

mtlment
plunge d
crush mg
sy mbol'

tn educ.tll on, and
the natton tn to
l)cbt. they bec,un c
ol mor.dtty and
po~lrtolt'm They sold themselves ,Js th e party ot ( rod
.md coumry. ol tenng comJon to people who would n't
need comlortmg tf the Bush
~tdmJ il J\ II d iHlfl

IMJ no t

uedl -

cd the \ ety pto hle tm lor
v-htch 11 then offered sptnlu
al retug c

Joan
Ryan

Gtve them credtt They o~te
ltke the power company nahbtng the candle concess ton
for the blac kout c,tuscd by
ti s mismanagement
Watchtn g the telutn '
Elecuon Ntght, and !t sten 111g
to vote rs across the coumry.
I &gt;aw that John Edw drds was
ng ht
about
the
two
Amencas But the two
Amencus are not divtded by
money but by be !tel systems
that have dnfted so tar apalt
we bo~rely tecog nt ze eo~c\1
other .mvmore
In ex n polls Tu esd,ty
morals topped th e lts l ol
voter concern s. and dll m crwhelmtng lllaJOIII y bc\te\ CU
Bu sh ~:--. mo 1e 11101 ,ll th ~u l
Kerry Thus the re,o undmg
victory for th e 1ncumhc n1
Here tn the B&lt;Iy Arco1. we.
too, place a ht gh pnouty on
val ues dnd mOJ,tiiiY But
c!edf!y, many nl us de lme
moraltty dtlf ercntl y hom
much ol Amenca It s not
o~bout chutch mcmhct &gt;hlp
The C\ tdencc of mnt,i\ 11) 1'
tn one \ act Hm ~o.,. not on('\
Sund,t y-mot nln ~
n tu,t\ ,
Mor'-tllly mcdrh morc &lt;&gt; than
prayer ,md more th.tn procLummg ~1 per"on ~tlrc ldt ton -

'htp wnh God
It ts SI&gt;Ctal as we ll as relt~1o u s Is II moral to wage
~.tt on d LUu ntry that dtd not

fted to lead the Itee wor ld
I am puzz led. too by the
reo~ctton to th e b1 n Ltden·
ta pe. When btn Ltden

dtlac k U\, ~ md to \.\tdge Jt on

showell up on d \ 1Jeo JUst

lo~ls e

pret enses' Is II mor,tlto do~ys be l01 e the elec ti on. I
' tulf more money Into th e ftg uted 11 '"' uld 1c mmd
pockets ol th e weo~l th y while &lt;\mett c,ms th,tt Bu sh hdd vet
tco~chel' buy tl1 eu own to capture the m.m tcsp 01 ist -.
ct.tyons ,md patch theu own blc lo1 the Sep1 II ,!lldcks .
cl .tsstoom wa ll s. ,md while th o11 he got u' ' tdettdcked 111
people ~&gt;- t th. metlt ,t\ tllness !t.tq . wlm h h.td nothtn g to
lt' e on the sttects ,md tn do" tlh Sept II Instead. the
pnson ce lls lor Jack ,o\ ser- tape seemed to deepen many
v1ces'
Amen c.tns' be !tel thdt
Is tl muro~l to denv two what' Bu sh ts domg , uch d
people the I"Y nl co-mmn- good JOb on terronsm that
11ng then \1\e' lo nne ,moth- we slmuld te new Jm coner 111 nla lfi .Jge' Is 11 mor._II to t rc~ct'
pte1 cnt suclllts ls !rom purSome ho~ vc suggested that
'u tng cures to dcvastallng 'the Demou,tttc P.uty needs
dtse.tscs becdu'e ot out to reconnect wt th mtddlc
le,tders' person,tl relt g1ous &lt;\mc nc,t .md ns h tlu cs that
com tcllons'
we should t.tke a p.tgc from
Out coumry has .rlw.tys th e Republ1~ybook
mc!Lided a nllx ol rdtciOus ,md l,t\k mut e .tbout God o~nd
.md polntc,t\ bclic l' B~l we t,uth Yes the Democrat s
shated ,\ loundaltun ol cet - need to t e&gt; o~mp thclt s tro~t e­
loltll l!uth ' to he sel l C&gt;I- gy But \ wou\d l1a1e to thmk
dcm' tll:n .tllnv-cd us to meet \lc wou ld try to wtn next
on common uround Tndo~,. I It me ,uou1td by emu \,ttmg
Llon 't kn ln\ ,_Our behe t ~)~ ~- po l ttt chuh whu ge t dW.JY
tctm - "h.tt ts ttght .md wn h dest ru ctt &gt;e ,md amor&lt;Il
~&gt;. t on" 11 h.n ts p.ttltOllc o~nd acts by p&lt;isstng them oft us
Wild! I' not \\h,u ts lluth and dtrectt ves Itom God
wh,n ts not - .trc so dtllctF.11 1h ,mel fl ags won th ts
cnt .md "' dtamo~llcd ll y e\ectton But I haven! lost
'ho1pe how"" ulletpretnews my bcltet 111 ,mother 1-wo rd
o~nd 111 f01 m.lltllll tho~ I \\C I&lt;lets They re hound to
\Ct: lll no longer to he II \ m g.

cumc

\\ tthlll the \.tlllC l:lll t UIC

l.,llOT1 Cf 0 1 idlCJ

I Ld lll lot the !ti c of me.
l!lr lll..,LtllLC 11 g tt 1C out IJo'I.-V

tho...,c
th Jcc. pt c, td Cl' IJl!l dch.ttc...
&lt;lnd
C\Cil
~11 1 l' J I ,tt!l
the
,Lhnu gh t tlhtt Bu "h '" quttil Llll)OilC

LO Uid

\\ ctl c h

back

( t"""
._ /r11

tnto

l.1 s h10n

R1t111 11 " , olum 1111 r
r..;(/1/ Fl(flltl\co

th e

( hlrJfll( ft

St' nd

(11 11/IIWill\

In he1 lll r me of thl\ neH 'f](l 0 1 \l'lld he1 e~ I IICI// ar

fJl' l

JOWIJ\(11/ (ar ,Jt!um/1(/e(OIII

J

Trustees meet
CHESTER -Chester Township Board of Trustees wtll
hold thetr regular month! y meeting at 7 p m. on Tuesday at the
Chester Town Hall.

Foreclosures
POMEROY -Foreclosure acttons have been ti led in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by J P Morgan Chase,
Marlton, N J., agamst Pamela Bentz, New Vienna, and others, allegtng default on a mortgage agreement 111 the amount
of $42,093 .03; Home National Bank , Racine, agamst Terry
Ltttle. Rutland , and others. allegmg default m the amount of
$12,505 37; Bank One, Mtlwaukee, Wts. o~gatnst Mtchael
A Wtlltord. Mtddleport, and others, alleg mg defa ult in the
amount of $30,133 40, Beneftctal Ohw, Inc.. El mhu rst, Ill..
against Michael A W1llford , Mtddleport, .md others, allegmg default m the amount ot $57,254.80; and Home
National Bank agamst Joe's Coun try Market. Rutland . and
others, allegmg default m the amo um of $ 10.425 39
Foreclosures have been gran ted to The Provtdent Bank
against Rodney R Roush, and others, Home National Bank
agatnst Herbert Eugene Whal ey. Well s Fargo Bank
Mmnesota, N A against Gary A Jones. and others. and to
Home Nattonal Bank agamst Bruce Edward Cottnll
Foreclosures tiled by Home NatiOnal Bank agamst Davtd
G Banks, and others, and Deutsche Bank Nattonal Trust
Co., agamst Helen Tow nsend. have been dtsmtssed

Dissolutions
POMEROY -An actton for dtssoluuon of marriage has
been filed m Metgs County Common Pleas Court by Kelley
Anne Brooks, Washtngton. W Va , and Travts Ryan Brooks,
Reedsvtlle
Dissolutions have been granted to Jamt e Lambert and
Curtts Lambert and Vanessa Kay Jac ks and Charles V
Jacks, Sr

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marnage lice nses ha;e been tssued m
Meigs County Probate Court to Ralph Edward Cundiff, Jr ,
43. Charleston. W Va , and Joyce Ann Atha. 49, Charleston;
Gary G Basham , 62, Coolvtlle, and Pamela K Guthne, 50,
Coolville; Denver Maso n Hughes, Jr., 33. Langsvtlle. and
Jennifer Ann Gnmes, 24. Langs vtlle, and Aaron Shane
Hysell, 29, Middleport, and Donna Mane Lambert, 17,
Dexter.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Jerry Franklin, Jr, was sentenced to five
years of commumty control, a curfew restnctton, partlctpation m the Communtty Corrections progra m and was
ordered to seek full-ttme employment after pleadmg gutlty
to a charge of failure to appear after recogmzance release
The charge ts a fourth-degree felony
He is ,now se~ing a sentence for attempted assembly or
pos sesswn of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs, also
a fourth-degree felony, and the terms of hts sentence wtll
commence upon hts release.
Mtchael Laudermtlt and Stephamna Laudermtlt were sentenced to one year each m pnson on single counts of breakmg and entenng, a felony of the fifth degree. They were
ordered to pay restitution JOintly with co-defendant Scott
Autherson.

Meigs Girl Scout Diary,
POMEROY - November
actt vtttes for Meigs County
Gtrl Scouts , tnclude the
'annual servtce utut's food
dnve
Tht s year's actt vtttes wtll
be led by C.tdette Troop
1208 wtth le aders Jerrena
Ebersbach, Ten Hockman.
Dawn Rom111es. and Shtrley
Cogar
The event wt\1 be held
from 10 am unttl 2 p m
on
Nov
20,
at th e
Church
ol
Mtddleport
Chnst's Famtl y Ltfe Center
Admtsston to the eve nt wtll
be non-pen shable Items to
gtve to needy fam1hes in
the area
The troop whtch brings
the most will wm a spectal
prize. Cover charge ts $ 1
for event patch and each
gt rl ts to hnng a "nose bag"
(lunch) .Dnnks wtll be provtded There wtll be games,
crafts, and a co \onng conte't. Co lored pt ctures will
be donated to semor Citizen s
throu ghout
the
cou nt y.
InformatiOn ts a&gt;atlable
from Jerrena Ebersbach at
992-7747.
Scouts wtll also parttct pate 111 the Samnanan 's
Purse Opcrallon Chn stmas
Cht!d Plans are bemg coordlllated by Apnl Smnh
Metgs Dm sy Troop 5851
The troop ts led by
Chns t111e Br,t£g and Btlhe
Jo Butcher The troop meets
on Wedn esdays .tfter school
at Me1gs Elcmcmary.
Eo~stern Datsy Tt oop 1334
The 'scou ts ,tre planmng a
tnp to o1 local nu rst ng home
tn Deccmbe t to pass out
hand made gttl s to all rest dent s.
Our
troop's
ln vestnure Cctemony wt\1
be held on No&gt; 16. wtth
famtl y mv!led to attend
Refreshments wtll be served.
Several of us .tttended the
Juliette Celebration on Oct.

-- - ----· - -

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Local Briefs

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Monday, November 8 ,

Monday, November 8,

Election Day reflection

The Daily Sentinel

Our mam numt)er ts

PageA4

30. Plans are also be111g
made to attend the Food
Dnve Game Day to be held
on Nov 20.
Leaders are Brenda and
Steve Grady and the meetings are from 6 to 7 p m ,
every other Tuesday, at the
V F W Building m Tuppers
Plams Information is available by calling 667-39 17.
Reedsv ille Datsy Troop
5206
·The troop has met twtce
on Sunday s tht s month at
the Reed sv ille Church of
Chnst Taylynn Rockhold
attended our meeting and
went to work earntng a
petal for her new umform.
She bega n learning th e
Gtrl Scout Promtse to earn
her center and then 111 the
afternoon she helped pick
up trash and earned her rose
petal for "Make the World a
Better Place." Tht s week we
welcomed · a new Datsy.
Grace Ad.tms
The
Cadette
Scouts
planned
a
Jult ette
Lowee/Halloween Party for
the gtrl s and along wtth
good food had a craft and
games . The next meettng
wtll be held from 3 to 5
p m on Nov. 14
Metgs Browme Troop
101 5
Thi s troop mee ts from
5.30 to 7 p.m. every other
Monday at the Mtddleport
Church of Chnst We had
om ltrst meetmg on October
25 We are workmg on th e
G1rl Scout Ways Try-tt.
We are learnmg our Girl
Scout Promt se and Law. and
have learned the Fnendshtp
Squeeze and Cn cle, Girl
Scout handshake, Gtrl Sco ut
Motto. and how to be prep,tred 111 dtfferent sttuattons
We are also learmng the
song "Make New Fnends"
Troop leader IS Jerrena
Ebers bach

Southern Browme Troop
1120
Scouts partt ctpated tn
nut/candy sales 111 October
and di scussed and set go&lt;~ l s
for money evrned.
At the October II meetm g
at Syracuse Commumty
Center, girls earned the Gtrl
Scout Ways Try-it , by Jearntng about the Gtrl Scout
Law. dtscuss mg how to be
prepared 111 dtfferent snuatton s. makmg stt-up-ons.
learning the Girl Scout
Handshake. Gtrl Scout sign,
Fnendshtp
Ctrcle.
and
Friendship Squeeze, and
makmg s' mores over th e
camplire
On Oct. 23, gtrl s parttctpated 111 a Gtrl Scout event
called
the
Underground
Railroad. at the Farmer's
Castle
Museum (Belpre
Hi stoncal
Soctety )
in
Belpre Gtrls met a greatgreat grandson of two slaves
who were part of th e
Underground Ratl road and
leat ned about how they
made thetr JOurney to "sa le"
ground Gtrls also got to
parttc tpate m loom rug makmg and took a wa\kmg tour
by htstonca\ homes
A wtener roast
and
haynde were held at the
home of Bud and Elt z,tbe th
Wolfe, tor the Oct 25 meet· ·
mg. A Mo~kmg Mu,tc Try-tl
was earned by expe nmentmg wtth pla ymg Wdter
glasses, stng111g dtftetent
songs. and movtn g to the
mustc
The gi rl s .ltt end ed the
Jul tette Gordon Lowe E\ ellt
(Founder's Do~y) Oct JO
ReedS\ til e Brov-nte Troop
1067
The t10op met at the
ReedS\ til e Church ot Chrhl
on Oct 31 Cadettes !tom
Troop 1254 bad pl.mned o1
Jult elle
Lowe
.tnd
p~rty
\\ tlh
Hallo wee n

games. a craft and great
food
Hannah Marcmko attended We wtll meet again
from 3 to 5 p m on Nov
14.
Eastern Jumor Ttoop 1290
Troop 1290 met at the
Eastern Ltbrary on October
4 and October 18
Members attendmg v-ere
Jamtee
Balke.
Lauren
Boggess. Nettte Brook s,
Emtly Davts. Kn sun Ftck.
Nikkt Gtlbnde, Catherine
Grady. Kayla Hawthorne,
Rachael
Markworth.
Re ed,
Shee na
Ravenne
Rtttle . Jenmter Spencer. and
Shanda Welch
Fall nut orde rs \\ere
turned 111 and e&gt;cnts to
,\ttend were discussed Gtrls
voted on badges to work on
dunng the year and started
the Pet Care Badge Gtrls
were remmded to bnn g photos fo r scrapbooktng to ne xt
meeun g and they dt sCitssed
next month's tood dnve and
eve nts.
On Oct 30. for Juli ette
Lowe Founders Dav e'ent.
Ra1en ne Reed. Knsim Ftck.
Cathenne
Gr.tdy
and
R.IChae l Mat kworth attended
the eve nt at Syracu&lt;e
Reedsville Jumor Troop
1042
Troop members have meet
.tl the Re~dsvtlle Church of
Chnst. hold tn g t"o meetmgs
111 October.
We ha ve Jec)dcd on the
new h,tdges .md skill s we
"til be worktng on lor the
C0111I I1 g yed t and abo dt scussed troop bus tness and
some lttps we wt\1 be look111g 111111
Those present for the
month
were
Btooke
John,nn. H,mn,th Adams.
.md Shuv- n,J \&lt;tutphy
The gt rb ,tbo en joyed a
Juliette Lowec/ H:tllowcc n
party the C.tc.leues h&lt;&gt;Sted

Relief
from Page A1
mcludes grant funds to
dtsa,ter-damaged .
repatr
umnsured homes and tor
tem porary rental a" tstance
to famtltes unable to occupy
the tr homes Other need'
assistance ts granted for
medtcal, dental, funeral,
personal property and tranposrtation costs associated
wt th the dtsaster
Townshtps, vtl lages and
cou nty government have

a\,o 4u,thlied for assi"ance
tn repatrin g damage to
pnmanly
tnfra"ru cture.
road&gt;. bndge&gt; and culverts
Emergency
Metg .,
Management
Agency
Dtrector Robert Byer estimate' damage to publtc
Infrastructure at $2 million
Loca l busmess owners
who;e shops and 1mentory
were damaged or deqruyed
tn the flood will a!'" qualt fy lor Jow-mtere't lo,tn&gt; to
recover from the worst Ohto
Rt ver flood
to stnke
Pomeroy's dowmo"n shupptng d l'lrict s mce 1964

Land Transfers posted
POM EROY
- Metgs
County Recordet Judy Kmg
reported the lollowmg transfe rs of real es tate
~
Vtrgtnta Anderson to John
E Blake, shertlt's deed.
Vtllage ol Mtddleport
Arthur W Nease. Jr.
Arthur W Ne,"e , Arthur W
Nease, Sr. Donna Jean
Nease. Ada L Nease, to Jtll
L. Kallam. deed. Sutton
Marvm Euge ne Althouse to
Bonme Althouse. afttda~t t.
Sctpto.
Phtlhp I Jones, Lots Jones,
to Franstco Eugene Althouse.
Ttmothy W Althouse, deed
Sctpto.
James D Searles. Judy A
Searles, to Edward E. Stgler
deed. Sctpto.
Robert Caldwell , Tern
Caldwell. to Tuppers Pl umsChester Water Dt stn ct, tight
of wa), Olive
~
Ltl!te H,1rt to TP-C WD
n ght ol way. Sctpto
Jan M Ko stt va\ , Tam ,trol L
Kosttval. to TP-CWD ng ht
of way. Sctpto
Ralph
Tru sse ll ,
Je,m
Trusse ll. to TP-CWD. ng ht
of way, Chestet
Harry L Spencer. Avtce E
Spencer. to TP-CWD, nght
of way, Chester
Steven E Trussell to TPCWD. nght of way. Chester
Van A Wtlltord, V1ckte C
Wtllford. to Raymond A
Willford ,
Kimberl y
S
Wtllford, deed. Rutland
Phtlltp J Jones. Lois Jon es
to Barbara A Marttn, deed.
Sctpio
John Scott, Jr.. Margaret
M Scott, to Leadmg Creek
Conse~ancy Dt stnct, nght of
way, Columbta
Ttm Hood, Hetdt Hood, to
LCCD. nght of way. Sctpio
Jeffrey Workman , Lmda
Workman. to LCCD, nght of
way, Sctpto
Jamte Barrett Lambert to
LCCD, nght of way, Rut land
Harold Rose, Jr.. Mollte D
Rose, to LCCD , right of way.
Rutland.
Sam Darst, Sherry Darst. to
LCCD, nght
of
v-ay.
Columbta
Paul Mu sser, Mtchelle
Musser. to LCCD. n ght ol
way, Salem
'
Jame s
Schuler.
Altce
Schuler. to LCCD, nght of
way. Rutland
M.trk Warner to LCC D.
nght of ,v-ay. Salt sbury.
Mason County E Corp to
LCCD. n ght
of wa) .
Salisbury
Sandro~ Kathrvn lann.u ellt
Susan Mane Baer. to Sandrd
Kathryn lann,u el!t. deed
Vtll age of Mt ddl eport
John
H.
Andet su n
Gretchen G Anderson to
Andrea F Shutt lnsorth
Bno~n E Shullleworth. deed
Vtllage of Pomcrov
Ed~ ard Om 'I. Ruth DuN

J&lt;tmes Reed. Phvllts Re ed.
J,uncs Mo~rttn Reed Hele n
Clara Reed. to James W.
Durst. Julie &lt;\ Durst. deed.
Saltshu ry
Cynthta F Young to Noel
W H.tnnsm.tn Lillian C
Hannsma n. Charles T Young.
c.leed S uti on
Rtchard N Warn ~r to
Ctlilens B.mk. &lt;.leed. Rut land.
Kerm 1t
E
Stalnaker.
Brenda J Stal naker. to Kell t
R Hubb.trcl deed, Let,trl
Martha Fox . &lt;.leceased. to
Shel ly White ,tlltdo~vtt
Shell y Whne to Harley E
McDonald. deed. Vt llage of
Mtddlepon
Ca \vm R Dowdl Le; \ey
R Gtbbs Sheryl E Gtbbs to
&lt;\mte Hart. deed. Rutl ,md
Deborah
S
Ad.tms .
Deborah S Blazer. Ttmothv
P Ad.uns. to Ron G Scheei.
Dotothv
Sc heer.
deed
Salt sbu ry
Denver B1gg". M.trgaret
B1ggs. Janet ML~ne B1gg~.
Chery l A McPher,on Eddte
McPherso n. \lltllord D
Btggs. Jud y Btggs Florence
Schlotterbeck
Joh n
R
Schlotterbeck. Jt . to TPCWD. nght ot way. Bedford
Chmtopher K Hamng.
Jess tc,t Renee Hamng , to
Be verly June Hamng. deed.
Bed lord
Inc .
Beneftctal Ohto
Beneltctal Mortgage Co. to
Ron,tld Ray B,1chtel. deed,
Chester
Denms
L
Facemyer,
Cynt hw F.tcemyer. Wtlltam
L
Facemyer
Cheryl
Facemyer. to Farmers Bank
and Savmgs Co, agreement,
Bedford.
John Earl Werrv. deceased,
to Margaret J Werry. a!ft·
da\lt, Bedford
Margaret J Werry to
Margare t Jean Werry. Mark J
Werry , deed. Bedford
Mobex :'1/etwork Sen tees
Ltd ,
Waterway
Commumcauons.
to
Dewayne
Good ,
deed,
Lebanon
Russe ll C Parker. Tma R
Parker. to Monongahela
Power Co ea,ement Oln e
Harold E Htll. deceased. to
Lmd.t K Hill. Harold E Hill .
H,1ro ld E Hill Tru st cerllfic.tte. Bedlord
S,llllllel A Eblen to H.trrv
Mc:-J ,ur. Peggy
McNatr.
deeJ Vtll.tge ol Mtd&lt;.l lepnrt
Wo~rren
B Ra\ burn to
SanJt ,J A R,tvbu-rn deed.
Vtl\,tge of M1Mleport
Green Tree Sen t u n ~.
Con,eco Ftn.tnce Sen ,,·mg.
to Mat y J Murray. deed.
Vtl\,tge of Pomero'
El tL,Ibetil L Lpt(&gt;n to Scott
V Up ton Chery l M Upton.
deed. Olt\e
Roger L ~hmen . 1\ anda
June ' Mm1 et1 Ill Ttinoth&gt; R
Ncutz ltn ~. Lon K :--Jcullimg.
deed . S.llt,hun
'

Trial to begin for man accused
of raping, killing young girl
CA LDWEL
tA P!
Seven-year-old
Brttl &lt;~n:
Hendn ckson dted .titer be1n~
st uff ed tnt o an .tbandoneJ
we ll and t O\ere&lt;.l "tth hc,t\ \
rocks
The It tal ol lhc man
accused nl rapmg and he.tlmg the gtrl ts sd1edulcd w
begm Monda) 111 tile ftt 'I
death-penalty case he.ud Ill
rural Nob le Count\ 'ITJce
Ohto rcuht uted cu ptial pun
tshment 23 ) ears &lt;~go
" It \ c.ltlltcult to th tnk
we're

201111.!

h)

he

rcl1\ l ilt!

th at ag~ttn . ' but vou ila\e t;,
ha\e ji.J,uce d&lt;me ... ,tre.t rc'
1dcm Dehhte Tewanger , .nd
"There i' a lot ol pam Ill
people's he,\rt' It lh ts "'llleth mg )&lt;llt'd nner thtnk
cou ld h.tppen ..
Defend,mt 'Fred Mundt Jr
30. !t sed \\llh BntiUil\ '
mother Mtsty Hendnck,;,n
27. and her two other chtldren tn Lebanon south ol
Cald\\e ll The communm of
200 people ts otbout RO nitle'

'outhea't of Col umbu'
Hcndnckson reported her
{tJUghtcr m~:-....,1ng MLu~.~ h (},
telling aut h&lt;ltttte' she d lett
het
threc·
chtldren
tn
\1uncJt·, c,ue lor a tcvlwur' at th etr home \1 hi\e
'he "em to pl,t\ htngn.
.tuthonue' ,,ud
~1 unJ t

tol d t n\l',tJ~ a t Pt"'

he
\\a...
~~..,J~ep
\\ h~n
Rnntn) , mother kft ,tnd
\\hen he
I\\ U

111

~m

\llllll ~l'l

uke

Cllll\

th~

lhtldrcn \\ l'l~

th(' hnu'c
The tlt'\1 d.n

\lllurltt~\.'J'

111 the \\e ll .tbuul .1
mile trnm till' g1 rl..., hnu . . ~
.mJ found ,\ tlnat1n g p.11 r nl
lno~cd

"dlCdl-.t?! "'

Allliwr 1t1c' ....ud tlw .ll!tnp") trH.h~.atcd .t ht . .tOI\ t1l
ph: "ll .tl .md 'l'\u,tl dhtht"

Thc- St.u"- Count: 1..llfll!lt'f
louml the gul ho~d dtu\\n
,md th.n had ht·c·n be.ne n
.md her "'"u l l " ~•' h1n"en nn
lh(" n~ht "'de

�I

PageA6.

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 8, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep football pairings, ·Page 82
Bengala defeat Cowboys, Page 86

Monday, November 8, 2004

College Basketball

APTop 25

COIIUifoolball DOl
How the top 25
teams in The
Associated
Press' poll fared
through Nov. 6

Redwomen beat Carlow in home opener

(first-place ~Jotes)

R1nk

Record Pta. ~· -

1. Southern Cal

AP Pholo/Jay LaPrele

Bill Reynolds. president of Rent-a·John. a bipartisan supplier of portable toilets to several
Kerry-Edwards and Bush-Cheney events the past six months , poses in the storage lot of his
business Friday in Columbus.

(~2)

9-0 1,611

2. Oklahoma (10)

9-0 1,555

3. Auburn (3)

9-0 1,512

3

4. Wisconsin

9.() 1.384
7-1 1,341

5

5. California
6. Texas

2

•

7. Utah

8-1 1,259
9-0 1,245

No more Port-a-Pottys: with campaign

8. Georgia

8-1 1.210

8

9. Michigan

10

10. Virginia

8-1 1.133
7~ 1
971

over, economic boon goes bye bye

11. Florida St.

7-2

887

12. Louisville

6-1

BY ANDREW

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS Relief
that the campaign is finally
over'' No wav.
··we &lt;:ould- have a fe"
more vtsits.
sa id Bill
Re ynolds. president of Renta-John. a bipartisan supplier
of portable toiler- to several
Kerry-Edwards and Bu,hCheney event&gt; the pasl six
momhs. "'If 'l&gt;mcboJv calls
for a restroom. we [e,pond
to whoeve r vou arc."
TV viewers sick of commercials . lawn care wmpanies tryi ng 10 negotiate,
sign-,l udded yards and dri "
vers hoping to avoid candi date-generated grid lock may
not be sorry to sec it all
end .
But business owners and
othe" who made an allArnerican huck nut of nne
of 1he longest and most
expensive presidential campaign s in his tory were a
touch wistful this week as
the election came to a
close.
''That's a little bit of
whipped cream on lop of a
pie we work on &gt;o nstamly,"
said Purr Peter&gt;on. whose
company provided plastic
·'pedestrian barriers" for a
Kerry stop in Springfield
and an appearance by
President Bush with Arnold
m
Schwarzenegger
Columbus. " It' s nice to
have a few things like
that."
~
Ohio was the center of
the election storm. with 46
combined trips to the state
by both candidates. often
including multiple stops on
a single day. Four years
ago. Bu sh and AI Gore
combined for only 20 trips.
At the end. Ohio's 20
electoral votes were the fat
prize both candidates wai ted
for. and not until midmorning Wednesday did they go
In Bush . By lhat time, sate!-

lite trucks from all the
major net works ringed the
Ohio Stmchouse in downtown Columbus and hoteliers w~re in a frenzy of
anticipation.
Kerry's midday concession speech shattered those
hope s. but couldn't take
hack a good election season
and banner October. especially
in
the
Akron.
Cleveland, Columbus and
Yuung~tuwn arens.
"Let's just say if the hotel
community in Ohio could
band together and change
the constitution for an election next year. they would.''
said
Keith
Stephenson,
executive vice pre sident of
the Ohio Hotel and Lodging
Association.
In a campaign so saturated with TV ads that the
first sign of a Bu sh or
Kerry commercial cou ld
trigger a family room fight
for the remote, TV stations
were the real winners.
Spending by campaignsand independent groups
topped $570 million, mainly
in about 20 battleground
states. according to PQ
Media. a Connecticut custom-media research company. That's up from about
$ 160 million four years ago.
· "If you owned a TV station
in
Florida,
Pennsylvania or Ohio _
especially Florida or Ohio _
you made out gangbusters
this year." 'said PQ Media
vice president Leo Kivijarv.
In Roseland. N.J., Internet
campaign button businessman Chris Daniels filled
more than 400 orders this
campatgn season.
three
times more than a non-election year. After Nov. 2. he
sa id. about the only people
conwcting him were collectors and those looking for a
"Hill ary 2008" button .
In Louisville. Ky.. the
Spalding Group took advantage of Internet marketing
and the fierce competitive-

ness of the campaign to sell
everything
from
BushCheney signs that could be
delivered to customers by
mail _ bypassing the usual
distribution through poli tical
parties to ··w 2004
Cufflinks."
Business continued strong
even after the election with
a new Iine . of products
trumpeting Bush's victory.
The company is a designated vendor for the BushCheney campaign.
"Obviously it would be
great to have a business
that continued at the pace
that thi s did," said Spalding
founder and owner Ted
Jackson. "Nothing equals a
presidential election
nothing , not the Super
Bowl.
not
the
World
Series."
Then there were the political analysts, the commentators prized for their ability
especially on deadline
- to put the latest development in context, the wittier
the quip, the better.
"You miss the chase. you
miss the heat of the battle,
you miss being in the thicket watching it, commenting
on it," said Saint Louis
University political analyst
Ken Warren, who estimated
he did I0 to 15 interviews
a day · with reporters from
the United States, Australia,
England and Japan.
Even marriage counselors
kept busy. Some couples
fought over politics whi le
individual spouses - often
women - took advantage
of an ear they were paying
to fill.
Four years ago. "I don·t
recall even hardly discussing the election with
my clients.'' said Columbus
marriage counse lor Laura
Meers.
"'This has .been
.
umque m my expenence
having people who want to
come in and actually spend
a therapy session discussing
their political choices."

Suburban Columbus school
thrives as alternative school
(Af"l COLt:MBUS
Students sit in law chairs . read
existential li teratu re and hear .
lectures in rooms painted with
cartoon murals.

Lin worth Alternative High
School
111
suburban
Wonhington has continued to
thrive while other schoo ls that
adopted informal and se lfguided learning methods in
the 1970s have folded .
·
The school\ 180 students,
each who applied from other
Worthington high schools. can
help determine in a democratic process which clas.scs are
offered and when.
• "We were always foc used
on what's essential in education - it's never heen a fad."
said Larry Gay. who tcache.s
social studies in room fi lled
wit h hanging plants. "''ve
always been uneasy that people thought we were doing
somelhing unusual. We're not.
But it's not for eve ry &gt;.id. and
not for every teacher...
Lin worth's program director Wayne Harvey sa id the
school prepares its stude nts
fo r college b&gt; ma•ing them

responsible for their own
learnin g. Further, classes
encou rage debate and criti cal
thinkin g with their small size
and semi nar-style discussions.
The school maintains the
type of structure and cou rse
w,ork required by state education laws. but does so in an
environment like few other
high school s. Clawooms ate
populated wi.t h law n chairs,
ca.stoff living-room furniture
and folding tables. A mural of
cartoon characters from "The
Simp&gt;nns'' television show
splashes across the wall of one
cla~~room .
-""'
Student' have an average
1190 SAT 'core and 26 ACT
score. About 85 percent of students say they're going on to
college. including such elite
schools as Amherst College.
Harvard ' unive rsit y and
Vassar College.
A lot of "hools started
during the 197(ls heyday of
se lf-guided and alternative
learning haven't survived.
This year. a district near
Lin col n. Ncb ... changed the
format of an open cl as., mom-

style school built in 1974.
Waverly sc hool s superintendent Dan Ernst said the district added walls to the elementary schools because the
open forrnat wasn't working.
Before, only wheeled supply
carts marked the boundary
between rooms.
·•we just wanted to enclose
that and provide a more
focused learning atmosphere," Ernst said.
New York University education expert Diane Ravit ch
said changing times led to the
downfall of the schools.
" Mainly, these school s
haven ' t survived because
many are not successful teaching kids the skills and knowl edge that society expects," the
fellow at · the Brookings
Institution said in an e-mail.
However, one Linwonh student explained why the con- .
cept is still appealing:
· "Thi s looks . much more
attractive · than your home
school when you're in eighth
grade." said senior Michael
Petrick. 17. "High school
seems more frightcnin(·

Keep a
check on

your local
wea-ther
Mnnday, November 8
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatllres will rise from
38 to 45 by late this morning.
Skies will range from sunny
to mostly sunny with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the north.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
46 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 46 at 2:00pm as
they drop back down to 37
later this afternoon. Skies will
be sunny to mostly sunny with
I0 MPH winds from the north.

E1•ening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will remain
around 33. Skies will range
from clear to mostly clear with
5 MPH winds from the northwest turning from the north as
the cvcni ng progresses.
Ovemiglrt (/·6 a.m.)
Temperatures will stay near
29 with today's low of29 occurring around 6:00am. Skies will
be mostly clear to partly cloudy
wilh 5 MPH winds from the
north turning from the southeast
as the ovemight progresses.

Thesday, November 9
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 29 to 45 by late this
morning . Skies will be partly
clot1dy with calm.
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
46 early this afternoon to 47
by 2:00pm then drop down to
39 .late afternoon. Skies will
be partly cloudy with calm
turning from the southwest as
the afternoon progresses.

KICK OFF
THE

HOLIDAY
SEASOti!
With your business
advertised in the rr~~~

Dail Sentinel
Wednesday, November 24th

Reach Over

5,000
Households
In Meigs
Coantyl·
Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 22nd
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

6
7

13. West Virginia

8-1

B·O

788

16

15. Tennessee

7-2

16. Virginia Tech

1·2

654
631

9
18

17. LSU

6-2

628

17

18. Miami

6-2

593

19.1owa

7-2

522

20

23
24

7-2

345

6-2

254
160

6-3

143

25. Oklahoma Sl.

6-3

131 ,

6-3
6-2

148

building a 14-point
halftime lead 13 ~24) &lt;:lespite making
only 2-of its lirst II
shot s from the field.
Sophomore guard
Car lesha Chambers
led the team in scoring with 12 points (eigh t in th-e
second half). She also topped the reboundin g
chan with seven. Junior wing player Marcia
Smoot also scored in double figures with I 0

point&gt;.·
Senior Alkia Fountain and sophomores Lauren
Fox and Jamie Kin g all chipped in nine points
each coming oil the bench. Foumain wa&gt; playing
in her first game of the season after mi~&gt;ing the
opener with an injury.
Carlow f0 - 1) played well early hut struggled in
the second half hoth shooting and handling the
ball. The Celiics shot J 4.5 percent I I0-of-29) in

Please see Redwomen, Bl

13
14

14. BoiSe St.

21. Boston College
22. Te.~eas A&amp;M
23. UTEP
24. Notre Dame

RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio
Grande women's basketball team made it two -fortwo on the season winning their home opener in
impressive fashion over visiting Carlow College.
76-58, Saturday afternoon at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grande (2-0) used a balanced attack in

12

866
862

20. Arizona St.

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydai lytri bun e. com

15

"

22
25
19

Olher1 r.ceiving votes: Te,;as Tech S4,
N lltino1s 77, Alabama 52, Ohio St. 28,
South Carolina 24. Southern Miss. 12.
Bowling Green 4, Georgia Tech 3, Oregon
3, Toledo 3, Clemson 1, Navy 1.

AP

State cross
country champs
crowned
COLUMBUS (AP)
Middletown , Salem and
McDonald captured team titles
at the boys state cross country
meet, with North Bend Taylor
and Minster winning girls
crowns Saturday at Scioto
Downs.
A computer failure delayed
results in girls Division I until
late Saturday night when officials, who reviewed videotrape
of the meet and checked handheld times to contirm the order
of finish , declared Bowling
Gteen as the team winner..
Middletown captured its tirst
state title in cross country With
11 3 points, beating nut secondplace Cincinnati L1Salle's 144.
The Middies. second a year
ago, were led by senior Jeff
See, who defended his individual championship in a time of
15:25 on the 5,000-meter
course.
Salem's 61 points easily
bested Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Jesuit's 109 for the boys
Division II title. It was the
fourth state title for the
Quakers, who won their other
championships in 1930. '31
and '93. Delta's Evan Gaynor
was the individual champion
Ill 15:54.
Second the past two years.
McDonald had 92 points to
win the boys Divtsion Ill
crown
over
runner-up
Middlefield Cardinal. which
had 127 points. It was
McDonald's tifth state championship, North Lima South
Range's Dan Nemcrgut was
the individual champion in
16:13.
In the girls competition.
Taylor captured its second
Division [I title in three years
after fmishing second a year
ago. The Yellowjackets had 77
points to edge Kettering Alter,
with 83 . Two-time defending
champion Emily Thompson
was the top finisher for Taylor,
placing seventh in 19:04. The
mdividual
winner
was
Lewistown Indian Lake's
Brittany Tinsley in 18:08.
See complete results on B2.

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

•••

Winter varsity spans coaches are also reminded to send us
their schedules as soon as possible.
Youou may e-mail or fax
them (please see above).
- ~ --

•---- -- --------

Ohio State fianker Ted Ginn Jr., right, os congratulated
by teammate offensive guard Doug Datish (50) and
. Anthony Gonzalez. lett. after his go-ahead touchdown
against Michigan State in the fourth quarter at
Spartan Stadium 111 East Lansing, Mich .. Saturday. I.Afl

Ohio running back Kalvin McRae breaks thmugh the Centra l Florida defensive line during the second
half in Orlando , Fla. Saturday. Ohio won 17-16. (AP)

Ohio downs UCF in OT
'

. STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune .com
ORLANDO. Fla. - A 21. yard touchdown pass from Ryan
Hawk to Stafford Owens in
overtime gave ·Ohio a 17- 16
Mid-A merican Conference vic ·
tory over Central Florida at the
Citrus Bowl Saturday.
Following the Bobcats· overlime score. the Golden Knights
scored a touchdown of their
own but missed the extra point,
handing
UCF
its
first

Homecoming loss since 1994.
"Our guys came up with hig
plays at the end of the game,"
said Ohio coach Brian Knorr.
·'Stafford Owens and a lot of
seniors stepped up. I thought
Chip Cox played well all day. l
don't know how many plays
Chip Cox and Dion Byrum
played but I'm sure it was close
to 90 or I00."
The Golden Knigl)ts (0-9. 0-6
MAC) put points on the board
first with a 49-yard tield goal by
Matt Prater with 9:46 left in the
..seco nd quaner. On the last play

of the half. Ohio answered with
a .19-yarder by freshman Brooks
Rossman to make it .1-.&gt; at the
break.
In the third quarter . •th e
Bobcats (4-fi. 2-5 MAC) had an
11 -play. 48-yard drive come up
empty when a .:12-yard tield goal
attempt by Rossman sai led wide
left.· On the second play of
UCF's ensu'ing possession.
however. redshirt freshman linebacker Taj Henley intercepted a
Steven Moffett pass at the

Please see Ohio, Bl

Tour Championship

Goosen rallies to win finale
8Y DOUG FERGUSON

Associated Press
ATLANTA - A clutch shot
and tlawless performance by
U.S. Open champion Retief
Goosen.
A rare collapse by Tiger
Woods.
In a fitting end to the PGA
Tour season, the unflappable
Goosen closed with a 6cunder
64
to
win
the
Tour
Championship by four shots
and become only _ the third
player to overtake Woods in
the final round .

. Goosen made up a four-shot
deficit on the front nine at I:ast
Lake. took the outright lead
with a 35-i'oot birdie ~ putt on
the 13th and ended all the sus pense with the best shot or the
tournament.
From 195 yards in the rough.
he hit a S-iron into 3 feet for
the only birdie of the day on
the 481-yard 16th hole .
"I wasn't trying to hit it dead
at the flag. just a touch left. "
Gansen said . "But th()se things
happen ...
·
l. t"ing a 54-hole lead almo't
ne''&lt;'r happen' to Woods.
although this has been a )Car

like no other for him .
He lost a 36-holc kad in l'llil ~ecutiH~ \H'ek~ in Mav fo r the
first time in five yeitrs. And
now he ends the season with
only one victory. ma tching his
lowest output in nine year&gt; on
tour. He also won onlv once in
1998.
•
Woods· only \'ictory this year
Pia~
was
the
Mat ch
Championship in late February,
and he nnw has gone 20 strok eplay tournament&gt; withoul winning. the longest drought uf hi'
career.

Please see Goosen, Bl

Ginn's three
TDs lead
Ohio State
BY lARRY lAGE

Associated Press
EAST LANSI'.:G. \lil'h. - Look&gt; like it was
wi .sc to mo,·e Ted Ginn Jr. to offense.
Ohio State recruited Ginn to be a defensi\'e
back and punl relurner. hul Juring pre,eason
praclices he hecamc a I"Cl'Ci,·cr \\.- ht&gt;nco&lt;.H:he ... saw

how spec ial he

11

a' \\ith the hall in his hands.
Nuw. t'\erybody else

i:-.

~ecin2 hi!-~ Lalent.

Ginn ~cored on a run.
catch and punt return
and the Buckeves rallkd - after losing a
17-point lead - by
'coring the las t 15
point&gt; in a 32- 19 victon over \1ich i ~an S1a1e on Salurdav.
·"We ' re gettirl~ the hall. to him ou·t in the open."
Oh1o State wach Jnn Trcs,el said . "When he 's
out in the open. he can go ...
\1ichigan Slate found that l&gt;Ut.
Hi s 17-yard rc,crsc and 60-yard pun't return
helped the Bu,ckc~cs build a 17-() lead in the ftrst
quarter. A t'ta the Spanan' went ahead 19-17 late
in the fourth. Ginn c· au~ht a shon slant and turned
it intn a 5K-\ ard TD 11 ith I :.17 left.
"It "a' a ·"""d d;i\ . hut the da' is owr." Ginn
.\aid .
,
·
~' hik

Ginn d1n\ nplaycd hi ... performance -

wh1ch •m·ludcd f,&gt; ur &lt;"a lchc' fllr 77 \ard' - he
was happ~ ln t'nd a t\\O -~ alllL' ..,J...jJ a~' j,iwr ....
"It 's real hi~ he,·dlhC C\,'1'\bL&gt;J\ ,aiJ 11c c·an 't
11·in un the r&lt;&gt;~J . " Ginn 'aid.·
·
Ginn. 11 hn h;h &gt;ix tt&gt;uchdnwns in the last fi\e
came,, bw•e an Ohio State ,in~le-&gt;eason record
;-..ith hi, third punt return for a scLJre and tied the
mark Jeff Gr;lham and Garcia Lane ,et during
thei r careers .
"We had our e,·e on Ginn. but we had no idea
that he \'ll' goi1ig to do that to us." Michigan
State safet) Jason Harmon said .
Though Ginn might be mentioned along with
true freshmen qars sud1 as Oklahoma's Adrian
Peter~on and ~1 ichi£an\ Mic· hae l Hart. Tre»cl i1
not worried ahmll ~ lhe attention getting to his

Please see

Ciln~,

Bl

�Page B2 • TI1e Daily Sentmd

l0040HSAA

Football Playoff
Pairings
COLUMBUS (AP)- Par ngs tor the 2004 Qh o Htgh

School AthletiC Assoc•at on football payoffs
ngs and records Reg anal Se

wtt1 seed

Ina s

DIVISION I

A.ll Games at 1 p m Saturday unleu noted

Region 1
(8) La"ewood St Edward (6 5) vs (5) C e GlenVIlle
(10 1) at Pa ma Byers Fed
(2} Solon (10 1) vs (3) Cte St !gnat us (9-2) at

Lakewood Stad um
Region 2
(8) Can GlenOak (8 3) vs (5) Can McK n ey (8 3) at
Canton Fawcett Stad urn

Monday, November 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

STATE SEMIFINALS
All games at 7 p m Tuesdl')l

Carroll (18 3 0)
Stote Final
At

Columbus

Crew

Weslerv1lle N 3 Thomas Worthington

0
Stad1um

Westlake 1 Strongsvolle 0 20T
DIVISION II
Day Carroll 2 Con lndoan Holl 1 OT

Saturday 11 a m
Dlvlal0f1 Ill
Pataskala Wa tkins M emonal 3
At Ravenna HS Cuy Falls CVCA (17
Warsaw Rtver Vtew 0
AI Cedarvrlle Untvers ty Westerville 2 1) vs Ft Jennongs (21 0)
N (1 6 t 4) vs W Chester Lakota W AI Dublm Scioto HS Chollocothe Rochheld Revere 2 Akr Hoban 1
Unooto (17 2 2) vs Con Holls Chrostoan Youngs Mooney 2 Cuy Falls Walsh
(1541)
Jesun 1
Acad (1 2 7 2) State Fonal
State Final
At Co lumbus C rew Stad1um Frtday 3
DIVISION Ill
At Columbus Crew Sladtum Frrday 7
Chtlhcothe Untoto 2 Bloom Carroll 0
pm
pm
Con Holls Chroslra n 3 Yellow Sprongs 1
DiviSIOn II
SATURDAYS RESULTS
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 2 Wellington
At Can Cent Cath HS Youngs
Regional fmals
Mooney (1 9 t t) vs Rochfleld Revere
DIVISION I
1
Ft Jennongs 3 Tot Maumee Valley 0
Cle St lgnal1us 3 Massillon Jackson
(13 5 2)
DIVISIOn I

At Lyndhurst Brush HS Cle St
lgnatous (17 2 2) vs Westlake (t4 4 2)

{7) Brunswck (8--3) vs (6) Tot Whtmer (8 3) at Huron

R&amp;gton 3
(9 2) at Upper Ar ngton Moorhead Memor at Stad urn
(2) Westerv lieS (10 I) vs (6) H I ard Oavdson (10

1) at Dubl n Cottman F e d
Region 4
(1)Cn St Xavter(110)vs (4)Cm Moeler (92)at
Un vers ty of C nctnnat N ppert Stad um 12 p m
(2) Cenlerv te (1 -Of vs (3f C n Cole an (11 0) at
M am1 Un vers1ty Yeager Stad um
DIVISION II
All Games at 7 30 p m Fnday
Reg on 5
(4) Maple Hts ( 10 1) vs (1) Tallmadge ( 0 1) at SolOn
Stewart F eld
(3\ Copley (9 2) vs (2) Macedon a No don a (10-1) at
Bedford Stewart F eld at Bearcat Sad um
Reg ion 6
(4) Amherst Sree e (10 ) vs (1) Avon Lake ( O) ar
Lakewood Stadium
(7) T If n Columb an (9 2) vs (3) Maumee (9 2) at
Foster a Memor al Stad um
Reg ion 1
(8) Lou svr ie (9 2) vs (5) Unromown Lake (9 2) at
Canton Fawt::et1 Stad1um
(3) P cker ngton Cent (10 11vs (2 ) Cols 8 ookha..en
(11 0) at Gahanna L nco n Stad um
Reg ion a
(8) Jat::kson (9 2) vs (5) C n G en Este 1to t) at Wash
C H M am T ace Panthe Stad um
(3) Sprngboro (10 1) vs (2) Dayton Carrol (10 1f at
Dayton Welcome Stad um
DIVISION lU
All Games at 7 p m Saturday
Reg on 9
(1) Akron Hoban (9 2) vs {4) Cle Bened1ct ne (B 3) at
Ravenna S1ad um G tcrest F eld
(2) Mer'ltor Lake Cath (9 2) vs \3) Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesu I (8 3) at Tw nsburg Tiger Stad urn
Region 10
(8) Pembe v tie Eastwood ( 10 1) vs (5) Cots OeSates
(7 4) at Wapakoneta Haman F1ed
(2) Bellevue (10 1) vs (3) Cols Watterson (9 2) at
Mar on Hard ng Stad um
Region 11
(1 J S eubenv I e (11 0) vs (4) Tho nv lie Sher dan (10
1) at Dover Cra e Stad um
(7) Allance (9 2) vs (3) Canal Ful1on Northwest (10
1) at Baber on Rudy Sharkey Stad urn
Region 12
(1) Cn nd an Hll {10 1) vs (5) St Marys Memora
( 10 1) at Clayton North mont Sta d um
(2) Ketter ng Alter (9 2) vs (3) Dayton Chamlnade
Jul enne (8 3) at Dayton Welcome Stad urn

DIVISION IV

Afl Games at 7 30 p m Friday
Region 13
{81 You ng s Ursu rne (7 4) vs (4) Youngs Lrberty ( 10
1) at Youngs Austintown F tch Falcon Stad um
(2) Chagr n Falls (9 2) vs (3) Youngs Mooney (8 2) at
Beton West Branch Heacock Stad urn
Region 14
14) Tontogany Otsego (10 1) vs ( 1) Huron (11 OJ at
Fremont Ross Harmon Stad urn
(6) Delta (9 2-) vs 12) Coldwate r (1 1 0) at L1ma Sen10r
Stad urn
Region 15
(4) New Abany {10 1) vs (1) renton (10-1) at Oh o
Un varSity Peden Stad urn
(3) Bella e (8 3) vs (2) Mart ns Ferry (10 0) at
Steubenv lie Hard ng Stad urn
Reg1on 16
(4) Readrng (7 4) vs (1) Pfa n Crty Jonathan Alder (9
1) a Xen a Cox Stad um!Vete an s F efd
(7) Ve sa tes (8 3) vs (3) Spr ngf eld Kenton Ridge
( 0 1) a Troy Memor a Stad urn
DIVfSIONV
All Games at 7 p m Saturday
Regton 17
(1) Gates M1lls G lmour ( 11 OJ vs (5) Smthvlfe (10 1)
at Stow Mun oe Falls Bulldog Stad um
(7) Dalton (9 2) vs (6) N Lma S Range (10 1) at
Canton Cent a CatholiC Stadium
Regron 18
(5) F ndlay L berty Benton (1 1 0) vs (1) Pat ck Henry
(11 0) at L rna Bath Stad urn
(2) Bluffton (11 0) vs (3) Lberty Cente (10 1) at
F ndlay Donne! Stadrum
Region 19
(1) Amanda Clea creek (11 0) vs (4) W Lafayet1e
A dgewood (10 ) at Zanesv le Sutsberge Memor a
Stad1um
(2) Wheelersburg (10 1) vs (3) Johnstown Northndge
(11 O}arCrclevlleTge Stadum
Regton 20
(a) St Henry (10 1) vs (4) Cos Hartley (8 2) at
S dney Memor a Stad um
(2) West L berty Sa em ( 11 0) vs 3) Lees Creek Eas
Cl nton (1 0 1) at Spr ng N Panthe Stad urn

DIVISION VI

All Games at 7 30 p m Fr day
Reg1on 21
(5) Leeton a (9 2) vs (1) Monroevlle ( 0 I) at
Brunsw ck Judy K rsch Freid
(6) Cle Cu,.ahoga Hts (9 2) vs (2) Norwalk St Paul
(9 2) at Loan George Dan el Sad um
RegiOn 22
(5) McComb (8 3 vs ( 1) Bascom Hopewell Loudon
(1 t 0 a F nd ay Donne Stad um
(3) Hdsvlle 110- l vs (2) Cots Grove (10 1) a
Del ance F ed Brown Stad urn
Reg1on 23
(8) Danv lie (9 2) vs (5) Lancaste F sher Cath (8 3)
at Newark Wh 1e F.eto
/2) W llow Wood Symmes Valley (9 1) vs (3) Newark
Cath 9 2) at Ch II cotha Hernste n F eld
Reg•on 24
(4) NewBemen 8 3)vs (1) Mechancsburg (10 1) at
P qua A e~ander S adrum/Purk Fed
(6) Sp ngf e d Ca h Central (7 4) vs (2) Dola Hardin
Northern (9 ) at Bel etonta ne Dodd F eld
Oh1o H gh School Football Playoff Scores
Reglanal Ouarterftnals
Saturdays Results

DIVISION I

Brunsw ck 22 Hudson 14
Can G enOak 25 Tol St Francs 7
Can McK nley 34 Greensbu g G een 7
Cente v le 34 MaSOfl 7
C n Calera n 38 C n Elder 3
C n Moetle 38 W Chester Lakota W 7
Cn St Xaver 14 Cn LaSalle3
C e G env lie 29 Youngs Aus1111own F tcl'l 21
C e St 1gnat us 48 Strongsv I e 2
Dubl n S6oto 30 Dub n Colfma'l 0
H II ara Dav dson 2B Lancaster 25
Lakewood St Edwa d 27 War en Hard ng 24
Solon 17 Shaker Hts 14
Tol Wh tmer 28 Mass I on Jackson 24
Waste v lie S 20 T O'f 0
Worth ngton K lbou ne 33 Wooster 27

DIVISION Ill
Akr Hoban 35 Akr Buchtel 33
All ance 19 L sbon Beaver 16
Bellevue 52 Cots Eastmoo 14
Canal Fulton NW 45 ~cArthur V nton County 0
Cn lndan Hll45 Cr cleviP- Logan Elm 7
Ce Benedctne 31 HuntngValleyUnvesity7
Cots [;)eSates 20 L rna Shawnee 10
Cots Wanerson 38 Clyde 10
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu t 24 Chardon NOCL 16
Day Cham nade Jul enne 42 Washmgton C H M am
Trace 14
Kener ng Alter 21 C rctev I e 7
Mento Lake Ca1t1 42 Hubbard 4
Pembe v lie Eastwood 17 Napoleon 0
St Marys Memor a 28 Bellbrook 20
Steuoenv lie 19 Belo t W Branch 13
Thornv 1e Sheridan 34 Cambr dge 7

DIVISIONV

Amanda Ctearcreek 43 Netsonv lie York 6
Bluffton 56 Sycamore Mohawk 0
Cols Hartley 45 Anna 21
Dation 14 M neral Ardge 1t
F ndlay L berty Benton 45 Ashland Crestview 7
Gates Ml Is G lmou 45 Wa ren JFK 30
Hamler Patr ck. Henry 42 De l ance T no a 13
Johnstown Northrrdge 33 Crooksv e 7
Lees Creek. E Cl nton 52 Ch If cothe Zane Trace 7
L be ly Center 47 Sherwood Fa rv ew 28
N L rna S Range 27 Rootstown 21
Sm thv I e 28 Co umb ana Crestv ew 21
St Henry 2B Maron Pleasant 19
w Lalayene A dgewood 33 Chesapeake 14
W L berty Salem 19 M1ddletown Fenw ck 13 OT
Whee ersburg 42 Steubenv lie Cath Cent B

m:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

0

tngs l or lhe Oh10 H1gh School AthletiC
Assoctatton boys soccer tournament

2004 high school volleyball regional pairings
Wolllamsport Westlall (24 2) vs
Ohto H 1gh School Athlettc Assocrat1on Newark Cath (24 3) Orrvolle (27 1) vs
Rocky Rover Lutheran W (27 0)
gtrls state volleyball tournament
STATE SEMIFINALS
State Final
Saturday Nov 13 7 p m
AU games at Nutter Center Wr ght
State Untverstty Second game Will beg1n
Division IV
a half hour after the completion of the
Friday TBA
Frankfort Adena (23 4) vs Norwalk St
f rst game
Drvls10f1 I
Paul (23 2) Kaloda (26 0) vs St Henry
Froday 11 am
(24 3)
State Final
Tot St Ursula (27 0) vs Con Seton
(21 6) Wooster (20 7) vs Con Mercy Saturday Nov 13 4 p m
(19 B)
SATURDAYS RESULTS
State Final
Regional finals
Saturday Nov 13 1 30 p m
DIVISION I
Con Mercy1222253 t 15 Con
Dlvoslon II
Thursday 6 p m
Ursulone 25 25 22 29 6
St Bernard Roger Bacon (25 2) vs
Con Seton 25 25 25 Westervol e S 14
Cop ey (23 5)
22 21
Cols DeSales (23 4) vs Mollersburg Tot St Ursula 25 25 25 Eyroa 18 18
W Holmes (24 3)
23
Wooster 25 25 25 Solon 20 21 21
State Final
Saturday Nov 13 11 a m
DIVISION II
DIVISIOn Ill
Copley 10 25 25 11 16 Chagnn Falls
Friday 6 30 p m
Kenston 25 22 23 25 14
COLUMBUS lAP) - Par ngs for the

Cols DeSales 25 25 20 20 t 6
Sunbury Bog Walnut 12 22 25 25-t 4
Mollersburg W Holmes 25 25 26
Olmste&lt;:l Falls 20 20 24
St Bernard Roger Bacon 25 t 2 25
22 26 24
DIVISION Ill
Newark Cath 25 25 25 Versa lies 15
15 22
Orrvolle 25 25 25
Columboana
Crestvoew 17 t 6 10
Rocky Rrver Lutheran W 26 25 1B 25
Huron 24 22 25 17
Wolllamsport Westfall 25 21 20 25 15
Zoarvolle Tuscarawas Valley 22 25 25
23 7
DIVISION IV
Frankfort Adena 25 25 30-25 Beaver
Eastern 20 17 32 16
Kalrda 25 26 25 Lrberty Center 23 24
17
Norwalk St Paul 25 22 25 25 Cle
Cuyahoga Hts 15 2518 14
St Henry 25 t 9 25 25 Sodney
Lehman 17 25 20 15

Goosen

hope He closed wrth a 65 to frmsh mnth hrs 18th ume rn the top 10- and was sorry to
see the year end
I can t walt to get out there agam ' Smgh
from Page B1
sard ' It would have been mce to get 10 wrns
but I II take mne
Very drsapporntmg Woods satd I felt
The 4I year old Ft]tan earned $10 905,166
hke I had a golden opportunrt) to wrn a tourJerry Kelly, who could face shoulder
nament
surgery next week, had a 65 to fimsh thud
It was only the thrrd tune th at \~ oods has
farl ed to protect a 54 hole lead Ed Fron beat Stephen Ames (70) Mark Hensby (67) and
Mrke We1r (70) were another shot back
hrm rn the 1996 Quad Crty Class1c and Phtl
Wood s rs the best closer on the PGA Tour
Mrckelson beat hrm at East Lake rn the 2000
He
had a 30-2 record when he had at least a
Tour Champronshtp
share of the 54 hole lead and had won the last
Woods played rn the group behmd Goosen
14 limes from that posmon, datmg to East
and sunplv co uldn t keep up
Lake m 2000
Two shots behrnd when he got to the 16th
Everything appeared to be tn ht s favor
Woods three putted for bogey from about 25
Records astde he was playmg hts be st golf of
feet and then htt mto two bunkers to take the year and shared a four shot lead wrth a
anot her bogey on the 17th He closed wrth a
man who had not won m II years
72 and frn rs hed second
But Woods struggled from the start
Jay Haas at 50 the oldest player e~e r m the
He
had to hole a 15 foot par putt on the
Tour Champ10n shrp was tred wtth Wood s
openmg hole, three-putted from 30 feet on the
go mg rnt o the trnal round but struggled wrth
seco nd for bogey and dropped another shot
hr s putter and tell apart down the stretch He
with
a three putt from 80 feet and JUSt off the
closed wrth a 75
green at No 5 When hrs chrp from the steep
Goosen f111tshed the year wrth multrple vrc
tones to r the h"t tune on the PG A Tour He bank ot a bunker popped out hrgh and 40 feet
short - leadmg to hrs thrrd bogey rn seven
was at II under 269 and earned $ 1 08 mtllron
'It was a great round Goosen sard ' I m holes - Woods angnly swung at the grass and
looked as rf he was losmg hrs composure
surpns ed to wrn by four strokes
The only thmg that helped IS that no one else
Goosen won the U S Open 111 Jun e stealing
made
a btg move
the thunder from Mrckelson when Le fty took a
Whtle Woods never had a decent look at
double bogey from the bunker on the 71 st hole
brrd1e Haas had se\eral of them and couldn t
at Shrnnecock Hrll s
Thrs trme , the Goose drdn t need anyone to convert Kelly surged mto contentron wtth SIX
btrdres on hrs ftr st II holes Goosen, playmg
m&lt;~k e a mrstake on the back nrne
111 the group ahead of Woods and Haas, got
I looked up at the leaderboard Goosen rs
makrn g br rdr e after brrdr e I was lrke, Where rnto the mtx qurckly and took the lead by gettmg up-and down from the bunker for a brrdre
are ) ou gorn g bro 0 ' Woods sard He play ed on No 9
well I )U S! wrsh I could have played a httle
That set the stage for a dramauc back nrne
better
Vl)ay Srngh fa rl ed rn a btd to wm for the wrth four guys battlmg for a sweet frm sh to
I Oth tune thrs year but he went out on a post the season
It all ended wrth a smooth 5 rron from
uve note
Goosen
out of the rough tor a rare b1rdre, and
Eleven shots behrnd to start the frnal round
a rare occas10n when Woods was the last gu)
S mgh made erght brrdres through 15 holes
untrl back lo hack bogeys ended hrs tamt to walk up to the 18th green- wrth the trophy
already rn someone else s possessron

Redwomen
from Page B1
the second hall ami commrtled 14 of therr 25
turn o1ers 111 the second 20 mmute sessron
Chn s1ttl.t Cost.J led the Celt res "'rth 12

Ginn
from Page B1
head
I don t thrn k he gets too ca ught
up rn hrs excellence Tressel sard
He s one ot those great krd s
Ohro State (6 1 1 3 Brg Ten)
yualrlred fo r a bo"' I wrth the v1c
tory and has two games left - al
Purdue and ag,u nst Mr chr gan - to
rmprme the qualtt) of us postsea
son destrn atro n
The Spartans (4 5 3 31 wr ll be

pornts off the bench Vaness,t Banal added II
pornts Kasey Hatfield led Carlow tn rebounp
rng pullrng down seven caroms
Rro shot 42 percent (30 of 71 ) from the
treld 20 percent (2 of 10) !rom three pornt
land and 58 percent ( 14 of 24) from the free
throw Ime ( 12 ot 16 111 the second hall)
Carlow countered wrth 39 6 percent (21 of
51) from th e !reid 45 5 percent (5 of II ) from

home tor the holrdays unless they
wrn !herr trr1.1l three games ag arnst
Wrsconsrn and on the road agamst
Penn State and Hawarr They have
to wrn seven games to earn abowl
brd because \hey have 12 scheduled games
Mrchr gan State mtght want to
otfer counselrng to rt s players after
rts second strargh t heartbreakmg
loss
Dave Rayner s 29 yard freld
goal gave the Spanans a 19 17
lead wrth 3 06 left after trarlmg
Ohro State by 17 only to watch
Grnn score agarn
Last week the Spartans blew a

Ohio
from Page B1
Golden Kn rght s 27 and returned It 20 yards to
the UCF 7 yard lrne
· I thought TaJ Henley s rnterceptron was a
btg play sard Knorr It ga'e u; a short held
and our offense came rn and knocked it rn It
was dr sapporntrng to have them come 11ght
back wrth a brg play but we respo nded and
moved the ball pretty well rn the second half
Two plays later se nror runnrn g back Justrn
Roush scored tram the one to record the frrst
rushrng touchdown of hr s cnll eg rate c&lt;~ree r
Ohro ; I0 3 lead wds short l11ed though as
Mot lett fou nd Mrke Walker lor" 70 )ard scor
rng stro ke on UCF s ve ry nex l pl.ty to make rt

COLUMBUS (AP) - Results from the 2004 OHSAA

wecov'~_,

boys and g1rls state croSB country meet

BOYS
DIVISION I
TEAM SCORES

Melg•, Gallla,
And Ma.on
Countle~ Like
NoOne
Else Can!

1 Middletown 113 2 C1n LaSalle 144 3 Cln St
Xavier 153 4 Beavercreek 154 5 Massillon Jackson

t6t 8 Wooster t69 7 Tot St Johns 176 8 Tot St
Lal&lt;t 233 11 Reynoldsourg 237 12 Strongsville 247

Francis 1B6 9 Sylvania Northvlew 217 10 Uniontown
13 Hilliard Davidson 251 14 Medrna 266 15 Gahanna
Llnooln 297 16 Upper Arlington 337

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
1 JeH See Sr Middletown 15 25 2 Levi Fox Sr Troy
15 32 3 Luke Beuorleln Sr Crn Momler 15 34 4 Ben
Engelhardt Jr Weste rville N 15 42 5 Nlk Schweokaro

G•ll • Co,.n) OH

Fr Beavercreek 15 51 6 Darre n Flickinger Jr
Defiance 15 54 7 Chris Thurbe r Sr
Th omas
Worth ington 15 56 8 Tony Jordanek Sr Lexi ngton
t 5 58 9 Joe Parker Sr Reynoldsburg 16 03 10 Taylor
Candella Sr
Chester lakota W 16 04

w

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

DIVISION II
TEAM SCORES

1 Salem 61 2 Cuy Falls Walsh Jesu1t 109 3 Mmerva
139

4 Aurora 150 5 Hunttng Valley University 155 6

Kettering Alte r 157 7 Chill Unloto 193 6 Peninsula
Woodridge 204 9 Eaton 222 tO Milan Edoson 231 11
N Bend Taylor 256 12 C.rclevllle logan Elm 272 13
Galkln 279 14 Wauseon 289 15 Cots Bexley 303 16
Canal Winchester 372
INDIVIDUAL RESULtS
1 Evan Gaynor Jr Delta 15 54 2 Ryan Crocker Sr
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 15 57 3 Paul Krebs Jr

Your Ad,

--------------------~-

HOW IQ WRITE AJI!_ AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS

1 Oan Nemergut Sr N Llma S Range 16 13 2 Kevin
Somerville Sr Mogadore 16 19 3 Andrew Hangs Sr
Sherwood Falrvtew 16 274 Jason Ordway Jr Holgate

GIRLS
DIVISION I
TEAM SCORES
1 Bowling Green 81 2 Cln Coleram 152 3 Mason
155 4 Massillon Jackson 159 5 em St Ursula 164 6

Upper Arlington 170 7 Cle St Joseph 172 8 Cin
Marcy 172 9 Hudson 201 10 Cln Tu rp1n 209 11 Tot
Notre Dame 235 12 Can GlenOak 287 13 Rocky River
Magnlllcat 301 14 Modrna 308 15 Dublon Coffman 330
16 Hllhard Davidson 399
INDIVIDUAL SCORES
1 Angela Bluarr1 Jr Mason 18 19 2 Christy Titus
Soph Bowling Green 18 23 3 Kelly Schwieterman Jr
Springboro 18 32 4 Erin Ragouzls Jr C ln Colerain
t8 37 5 Vanessa Gtll;le rt Sr Kettering Fairmont 18 44
6 Emily Macleod Jr Cm Mt Notre Dame 18 48 7
Mellssa Green Sr Brecksville Broadvtew 18 51 8
Alhson Krupka Soph Alliance Marltngton 18 53 9
Meredith Jaworek Sr Cm Turpm 18 53 10 Amy
Sanders Sr Ctn Sycamore 18 56

1 N !lend

DIVISION II
TEAM SCORES
Taylor n 2 Kellering Mor 83 3 Con

McNicholas 125 4 Napoleon 138 5 Mmerva 158 6
Chagrin Falls Kenston 182 1 Cuyahoga Falls CVCA
218 8 Cle Hts Beaumont 219 9 Mantua Crestwood
225 10 Rocky River 231 i1 Defiance 255 12
Zanesville W Musklngum 270 13 New Albany 27 1 14
Van Wert 305 15 Delaware Buckeye Valley 322 16
Tltfm Columbian 360

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS

1 Brittany T 1nsley Sr Lew rstown lndmn La ke 1S 08 2
Bridget Frank Jr Mantua Crestwood 18 14 3 Emily
lnfeld Fr Cle Hts Beaumont 18 18 4 Cassandra
Schenck Soph Mantua Crestwood 18 45 5 Jordan
Stafford
Fr
Sprmg
Gre enan 1 8 45
6
Julia
WeisenbOrn Sr Tontogany Otsego t 8 52 1 Em1ly

Thompson Jr N Bend Taylor 19 04 8 Annie Beecham

Jr Granv1Ue 19 10 9 Claire Leatherwood Sr Ashvrlle
Teays Valley 19 22 10

Lmle Miami 19 32

Stacy Goode

So ph

\\'\Ol '\( 1· "1 '\IS

r

YARD SALE

Giii~\1&gt;\Y

AUCTIONANll

2 tree spo ted k t1ens I tter
I a ned wo med wur med
Health g aranteed
Ca
(740)3 67 7574
Coal Approx 2 Tons
(304)675 B894
G veaway ro a good home
7 pupp es Swks old 6 male
1
fe mal e
Ado able

(740)388 9238
Small Corg m xed temale
dog t Om hs old to g ve
away Very endly beaut
tul (740)245 9890

fl FA MARKEr
RIVER SIDE
AUCT ON
BARN At 7 South 5 m es
below the Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm

(740)256 6989

Abso u e Top OoUar U S
S lver and God Co ns
Prootsets Gold R ngs U S
Cur ency M T S Con Shop
151
Second
Avenue
I 740 446 2842
G II

1· \11'1 0\ \II\ I
~H~\

110

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS

behrnd the three porn t u c tnd ,rn rmpr essr&gt;e
79 percent (II ot 141 trom the ch,rrrty strrpe
Both team s pull ed down 4 I rehounds &lt;~nd
Rro held a consrderable ad1&lt;tn1agc 111 turnover
margrn The Redwomen we r ~ plus 12 111 the
category ( 11 to 25)
Rro wrll tr.tvel to Lrnd se) Wrlson on
Monda} rn whIt wrll be rts t uu~hest ch rllennc
e
to date Trp off rs set tor 7 10 p m
Coaches deserve 1he credrt tor
thrs loss nol the krds Smrth
sard
Te,tg ue tn ed to t,rkc lhe blame
off Smrth s shou lde rs
I aon t thrnk 11 s hrs fdult
bec.ruse we h,11 e gul to make
pia] s Teague sard
After Grnn s thrrd TD A J
Hawk's d~&gt;m g rnterceptron at
mrdtreld wuh 45 seconds remarn
rng sealed the outcome
Tre sse l sa rd th e rnt erceptron
was rn credrble
From where I was standrn g he
loo ked lrke he landed 111 therr
bench he sard

perrods ol practrce They went out enJoyed rt
and competed therr taris off '
Ohro ga med possess ron tr rst and Ha wk
found Owens tor the score on the Bobcats sec
ond play After Ro ss man co nverted the PAT
the score was 17 I0
The Golden Knrghts needed only three plays
to frnd the end zone when Moffetl hrt Luther
Huggms from nme yards out The extra porn!
attempt by Prater - who mrssed three freld
goals durrng the ~arne - was JU St outsrde the
post though g1vmg Ohro tts frrst ever wm m
mertrme
The Bobcat s reiUrn to Athens
pm
Saturday lace Akron The season !male for
Ohro wrll mark Football and Chee rleader
Alumnr D,r) and Ihe trrst 2 000 lans through
lhe g,ttes wrll recerve a free commcmoratrve
poster honorrng 75 year; ol Bobc.11 lootb,t!l at
Peden Stddrum

H IS

Car keys to a N ssan lou )d
at Pol ng tocar on n Bedlo d
Townsh p Key r ng s 1 om
.
Ou t o Ford
Zanesv lie
An E 11ce1ten way to earn
(740)992 2697
money The New Avon
Los Black Cow from The B Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Mtle Creek area 304)675
AVON All A eas To Buy or
2347
Sel
Sh rley Spea s 304
575 1429
for nfor ma on ead ng to
recove y or stolen ten~
from Arnold Sea s res dence
call 6230 I no answer leave a
n
Ha rr sonv I e
Message &amp; Pho 1e Number
(740)992 7457

HII ,. w \NTF.ll

Manager needed to mob le
ho e pa k n Shade send
resume ro Coun y Park
Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh

DIVISION Ill
TEAM SCORES

1 Sarah Sch ulze Soph Ann a 18 52 2 Audra .Brown
Soph De1rance Ayersv1ll e 19 07 3 Ca tlln Thomas
Soph Cardtngton Lmcoln 19 15 4 Laura Drocton
Soph Ktrtland 1916 5 Lrsa Ortiz Sr Old Fort 19 20
6 Kns Schuerle Sr B arne sville 19 26 7 Bng1tte
Sherman Soph
Minster 19 29 8 Elyse Velte Jr
Waynesvrlle 19 30 9 M1chelle Cra ne Sr Mansheld Sl
Peters 19 33

Word Ads
Dally In -C olumn

43138

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 s For Sale

725
Announcement. ................ .. ....
030
Antrques
530
Apartments lor Rent ......... ......................,..... 440
Auctoon and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts

&amp; Accessones

760

Auto Repair
Autos for Sale
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
Butldong Supphes
Busrness and Burldrngs

770
710
750
550
340

Busmess Opportunity

210

Busrness Tralnong
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
Camprng Equopment
Cards of Thanks
Chold!Eiderly Care
Electrrcai/Refrlgeratlon
Equopment for Rent
Excavatong

140
790
780
010
190
840
480
830

Farm Equrpment

610

Farms for Rent

430

Farms for Sale

330

For Lease
For Sale
For Sale or Trade
Fruots &amp; Vegetables
Furnrshed Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Grain
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homes for Sale
Household Goods
Houses lor Rant
In Memoriam

490
585
590
580
450
850
040
050
640
110
810
310
510
410
020

Insurance

Lawn &amp; Gordon Eq~lpmant
Livestock
Lost and Found
Lots &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous
Mlscallaneous Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mobile Homes for Rent
Mobile Homes for Sale
Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Muslcallnstruments
Personals
Pets for Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Professional Services
Radio TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Estate Wanted
Schoole Instruction
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Situations Wanted
Space lor Rent
Sporting Goods
SUV s tor Sale
Trucks lor Salo
Upholetory
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies
Wonted To Do
Wanted to Ront
Yard Sale· Galllpollo
Yard Sate Pomoroy/Middlo
Yard Sale Pt Pleasant

Display Ads
1 00 p m

Monday-Friday for Insertion

All Display 12 Noon 2
Buslne&amp;s Days Prior To

In Next: Days Paper
Sunday .In-Column 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays Pap•r

Publication

• Alt ads must be prepard'

• Start Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

110

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
HFLI' wAN"Il'"

10

lwright&lt;mlc not
0 00 o Down Payment and
I nanc ng ava table w th
approved cred t
Average
cred qua! f es ~ou II down
payment has kept you from
buyng ths s ~our chance
to o 'In you ow'"l home I
you have a down payment
but wou d 1k.e to conse ve 1
we offer low down payment
pmgrams also Great rnter
est ates Local company

Work From Home
BOO 210 4689

$500 $1 500/Monlh
Part 1me

$2 000 SB 000 Month
FuU t me

130

680
630
06cf
350
170
540
860
420
320
220
740
570
005
560
820
230
160
360
t 50
650
t 20
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
180
470
072
074
076

Work from home
Fie~ ble Hours
$$$Great PaytSSS
Pe sona\
Compu er
Req u red
1 BOO 913 2823 ext Itt

Mortgage
17401992 7321

GET VOU A LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE

YOUR HOME

llteel Mechanic and
Trailer Todlnlclan
$300 Sign on Bonus

DRI

FREE

APPROVED
HOME LOANS

www com1cs com

Hit I' \hNil-ll

Med Home Health Agency
nc seek ng a full t me AN
Patent Ca e Coord nator tor
Gall pols Oh o and sur
round ng area
Out es
nclude establ sh ng and
ma ntamrng open ( nes of
commu n ca t on w th area
phys cans and health care
tacrlrt es n the del very of
Home Health Serv ces We
of fer a compel! ve salary
E 0 E Please send esume
to
Stepha n e
Rogers
D recto of Market ng 352
Second Avenue Gal polls
OH 45631

tor ch d ca e center hours
I ex ble HS or equ valent 18
years of age exper a nee
w 111 p e schoo ch ldren pre
fe ed Ma I or fa:o~ cover let
re &amp; esume to 0 rector
Ch ldren s V lage
2 122
Jelfe son
Avenue
Pt
Pleasant WV 25550 304

ItO

HH 1'~\Nilll

CDL TRAIN NG
AVAILABLE

Pad on the jOb tra n ngl
Guaranteed JOb upon
successful completron
Meat wrth Ou Company
Recru tars

Thursday November
11th
lOam 2 Noon
2pm 4pm &amp;
Spm 6 30pm
Qua( ty Inn
(Old Hoi day Inn Express)
4708 Wmchester Ave
Ashland KY
164 e:o~ t 191 5 m es north
on US H Qhway 23

1 8Q0-888

3695

Mn Age2t
www crenoland net
In Home Babys tter needed
lor Infant &amp; Toddle Located
close to Pt PI lntermed ate
School M F Holidays oft
E:o~cellent
Refe ences &amp;
Lov ng Personal ty requ red
Pease Call (304) 675 5 60
l&lt;nuck e boom operator w th
exper ence on del mber
E~per enced Sk dde opere
tor (740)985 4465
Looking
l or
secretary/hnance manager
tor loca l car dealersMip
exper ence preferred but not
necessary (will tra n l)lp ng
ski Is helplu oase pa)l plus
bonus package 1 nt erestEid
calf Ted (740) 992 4443 or
Joe (740)667 0000

CASH OUT HOME
IMPROJEMENTS NO

170

Mrsu Ir INtOl'

GALLIPOLIS OH

Wanted
Ass stan w th e~per e 1ce for
phys can off ce A un que
pos t on requ ng I&lt;. no&gt;' 1
edge of compute s and data
entry also lCD and CPT
cod ng Re able transporta
ton needed No weekends
or
hotaays
requred
Bene! ts ava lab e Sala y
negot ab e wrth expe ence
A f ex be employer Ma I
esume to Bo11 558 c/o
Gall polls Oarly Tribune PO
Bol( 469 Gall pols OH
45631

E de ly care iu I t me days/
nrghts Mon Fr w ref call
Jan 304 675 7792

Rl 'SI~Il&lt;S

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE
v dua s w tl'l menta retarda
1 on a a group home n
Brdwe I 26 hrSiwk 3 9pm
Thurs 2 11 pm Fr
oam
7pm Sat Must have h gh
schoo drplo maiGEO ~aId
o tJer s 1cense and three
years good dr v ng expen
ence $7 OOJhr Pre emp oy
ment Drug Te st ng Send
esume
to
Buckeye
Commu n t)l Serv1ces PO
Bok 604
Jac~son
OH
45640 Dead ne tor appl
can i s
119/04
Equal
Opportun ty Employer

60 vend ng mach nes
e11cel enllocat ons all lo
S10 995 (800)234 6982

0"0

I:!II

, -,

I'RorniSIONAL
SERVIL'ES

a

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS I?
No Fee Unless We W n
1 888 582 3345
IU \1 I ' I \ I I
.

)310

l'\....ffiVl llON

888

JOBS

DIRECTV

up to
12 Months Free
Programm ng 130
Channa s plus Free
Eq pment Free
Proless on a 1stallal on up
to 4 Rooms Free Cal 1
800 523 7556 fo Cleta Is

, ••

SCIK&gt;OI'

'"

~

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends Tha
ou do bus ness wrth peo
le you lo.now and NOT t
end money thro ugh th
a 1 un I you have nvest
a ted the offenn

1877 483 6247 X2659

TELEMARKETEAS NEED

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1 800 370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY US

VETERANS
MB 5263
(Oh o Loans On y)

All real estate advertts ng
n this newspaper s
subject to the Federal
Fair HoUSi ng Act of1968
wh ch makes 11 tllegat ta
8dver11se

W II pa) up to $50 each fo
unwanted or 1unk vel'l cles to
haul away (740)992 04 13 f
no answer leave message

Ot,lKil '""

483 6247 X2455

Pa t 1me Sa les Ass stant
wanted mmed are ly Norr s ED No Expe ence OK $7
No thup Dodge 252 Upper 9 Per Hour Easy Work 1
974
Aver Rd Gall po s

WELCOME

5837

~ 10

Wanted Someone ro clear
and/or sa I 1300 ft of s de
walks followrng a snowta I
Oownlown Gallipolll
Sma 1 parking tot w I also
Located 1t
need clear ng dependmg on
242 Third Avenue
the amount ol snow II mer
Or clfl
ested please contact Wate s
877
Edge Apa tments at 740
Rio Grande MeDon ads now 99264 19 or 7409923343
hlr nQ aU sh f1
to more nlormat on
--------- --------We II match your current
Rate!
Work to a stable co mpany
who needs 20+ people
Immediate ly to fulfil
client needs
Call Now

dependable transportal on
Must be ava able Monday
through Fr day Morn ngs
and ee y alta noon and
Saturday even nQe If nter
ested contact Jason at The
Oa ly Sent net (740)992
2155

CAED T BANKRUPTCIES

son

Come see us In

1

SO DOWN SO DOWN

Wan ed Oayt me De very H gh
SchOol
Jun ors
Or vcrs must have val d Senors and P o Serv ce
you can hl1 vacant post ons
n the West Vrgna A my
Nat anal Guard
I you are
between the nges of 17 35
or nave pro mlta y sev
ce yo u won 1 want o pass
THOMAS DO JT CENTER rh s up For Oppor1un res n
304 675
your area call

Paramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply a t 1354
Jackson P ke Galllpo IS
Pay and Respect You
Deserve
Earn up to 59 25/hr
You Choose
Recru t Vo unteers for
maJO Non P ol t Health
Organlz at ons o~ He p
Protect your Gun A ghts at
IniaC son rn Ga hpo lsi
Enjoy
•Weekly Pay
•Pard VacatiOn every
Sr.: Months
•Permanent Schedu e
• Fu I Benelrts Package
•7 Pad Hoi days each Year
•Profes sional Otlte e
Env ronmenl

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES

© 2004

675 6575 EOE
VERS WANTED!!!
C A England Now H r ng
Get tra n ng lor a career
that pays well
lne~per anced &amp;
Exper enced Or vers

Locato 5

\I II N 1101': 1

110

MomLE Ho•w:s

HoMt~

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models a old pr ces
2005 models a r v ng Now
Co e s
Mob le
Homes
5266 US 50 East Athens
Ot'lo45701 (740)592 1972
Whe e You Get Ycu
Mone)l s Wo th

r

IAJ1~ &amp;
..\LRL\GI

L,___,.;,iiiiiiiliiiii;,_.l
2 acres on llgalls Road
$15000 740 245 0 133

2BR 1 bat h lui basement
newly remodeled 1 car Water and t ash serv ce p o
garage 1 ace Located on vded (740 ]441 4540
8 rkha t Lane (740)441
9816

open ng must have e:o~cel
lent dr v ng record apply at
Lfestyle Furn tu e 856 3rd
Ave Gall pols 9 5 no phone
calls please

Denver Fann n
Ma nlenance
Super ntendent
4277 Lyman Dr ve
H II ard OH 43026
Fax 6 14 527 4114
Em a I mfo:o~@a ct cex
press com
E 0 E t Drug t ee workplace

Moun t

mw s.n

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED'

One ol Oh o s tead ng motor
carr ers t as an 1 med ate
open ng n o 1r e~neme y
act ve g ow ng shop to both
a D eset Macha 1 c and a
Tra ler Techn can The sue
cesstu appl cant mus have
a h1gh level ol mechan cal
apr tude and oe able to work.
w th d vers Three and a halt
day work week oa d vaca
t on persona days he~lth
nsurance pad hoi days
overt me pay 401 K plan and
un fo rms are among he
nany benet ts of work ng
mmed are ly Fax ema fs or
n person app cants are wet
come

Now you con hove borders and graphiCs
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
Jr1',
Borders $3 00/per ad
l,!.oirlll
GraphiCs SOC for small
$1 00 for Iorge

POLICIES Ohio \lal.y Publlthing eM vel the nght to ad I reject or cancel 1ny ad at any I me Erro 1 mutt be reported on tha l1r11 day of pub lcatlon tnd
Trlbun• Seflllnel Regltter wm be re•pon1lble for no more than the coal of lhe tpace occup ed by the error and only ll'le flrll ntertlon We 1hal not be liable
eny Iota or expense thl!lt retulta from th e publ ication or omits on of en advartlaement Correction will be made In tl'le 1\rat aval able ed tlon Box number
are alway• &lt;:onlld•ntl at • Current rete card applle• • All ••le1tate edvertl1ement• a e subjecllo the Fed•ra Fa~r Housing Act of 1968 • Th s M•~•••l*• l
accepts
I wanted ads
EOE •tanda d1 We w1!l not
I
accept any advert sing n v alation of lhe law

DATA ENTRY

WANill&gt;
IUBn

D9J

Morrow

1 Minster 71 2 Versailles 76 3 Flnctlay Liberty Benton
85 4 Burton BerkShire 172 5 Ft Lora mie 177 6 Olct
Fort 188 7 Bellatre 221 8 Cardington L nco\n 227 9
Attlca Seneca E 233 1 0 Co ldwater 246 1 1 McDonalct
249 12 Cortland Mapl ewood 257 13 Van Wert
Llncolnvlew 294 14 Centerburg 298 15 Bellatre Sl
John 308 16 N R obinson Col Crawford 3 69

Oearllfir~

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

Crestview 203 8 Fredencktown 204 9 Mt Gilead 221
10 Kansas Lakota 228 1 1 Versailles 245 12
Johnstown Monroe 246 13 Cortlanct Maplewood 255
14 Bella.re St John 266 , 5 Havrland Wayne Trace 275
16 New Bremen 327

Robinson Col Craw1ord 16 408 Sam Borchers Soph
Yellow Springs 16 40 9 Seth Darrell Sr Lemon Monroe
16 4010 Derek Carter Sr Caldwell 16 41

-~----------~~----~~

Of{tee !lowe-~

DIVISION Ill
TEAM SCORES
1 McDonald 92 2 Middlefield Cardinal 127 3 W
Lafayette Ridgewo od 149 4 Uma Cent Cath 151 5
Yellow Sprongs 158 6 Old Fort 203 7 Ashland

16 325 Jim Kong Sr Gates Molls Gilmour 16 366 Jeyce

l\egister

Sentinel

446-2342 (740) ~92-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740)
Or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

1628

Watson Sr Millersport 16 387 N1ck McQuillen Sr N

m:ribune

To Place

Kettering Alter 16 09 4 Nathan Blatt Jr Pepper Ptke
Orange 16 1D 5 Scon Lasch Sr Huron 16 12 6 Chns
Dennison Soph Aurora 16 13 7 Aaron Melhorn
Soph
Navarre Fairless 16 18 8 Kev in S live r
Beachwood 16 19 9 Tony D lpre J r Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit 16 26 10 Jeff Meinert Sr Milan Edison

27- 10 fourth quarter lead 111 a
tnple ovemme loss at Mrchigan
Jason Teague sard the mood 111
Mrchrgan State s locker room "'as
a lot lrke 11 was at M rchr gan
Stadrum
Sad
Everybody rs hurtrn g n ght
now ' he sard
Durrng a news conference that
drdn t last a mrnute John L Smrth
was more angry than he's been rn
hrs two seasons as Mrchr gan
State s coach Smith made a bnet
statement and after bnstlrn g at one
question he walked out of hr s
news conference

I0 I0 wrth 34 seconds remarnm g m the thrrd
quarter
The fourth quarter saw three punts from each
srde before the Bobcats took over at the UCF
43 wrth I 49 to play Ohro then moved the ball
31 yards rn seven pla) S to set up Ross man wtth
a 29 yard attempt to wm lhe game m the frnal
seconds of regulation
The krck went wrde nght however sendmg
the Bobcats to therr frrst overtrme game smce a
30 23 loss at Northern Ilhnms on Oct 4 of last
year
It was the most unbelrevable thmg I ve ever
seen satd Kn orr on hrs team's response to the
mr s&gt;ed freld goal On our srdelme there was
no hesrtatron when they satd no good They
bounced up and were ready for overlrme
We ve been practrcmg so well that \.\e chal
lenged them thrs Week to go out ,md play hke
they practrc e so rt was JUsl lrke a couple extra

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004 high school boys soccer regional pairings Ohio State High School
At Ohoo State Unoversrty Pataskala
COLUMBUS (AP) - Regional pair
Cross Country results
Watkons Memonal (19 2 1) vs Dayton W Chester Lakota W 2 Centervolle 0

Memo at Stad um
(1) Oubl n Sc oto (9 2) vs (4) Worth ngton Kt bourne

Monday, November 8, 2004

Ho'lt"l;
mRSAU"

t~ny

prell!!rence limitation or
d1scr1m nallon based on
race color relig1on sex
hunt! al sta tu s or nat onat
origin or any ntenf on to
make any such
preference hm•tat1on or
d scnmmat on
Th s newspaper w1tl not
know ngly accept
adver1sements to eal
estate wh ch s n
v olat1on of the law Our
readers are he eby
mtormed that ell
dwellings adverttnd In
1h1s newspaper are
available on an equal
oppor1unlty bases

2933

2 oedroom mob e home
outs de of Pome oy $250 00
rent $250 00 depos t 1 yea
lease No Pets (740)992

5039
2
bedroom
Ira er
stove e! ge am fu n shed
$300 momh S 50 depos t
no pe s washer drye hook
up (740]446 9061
3Br Tra e w Washe r &amp;
Dryer Ae1 dg &amp; Stove
nc tuded Sect on B App oved
304)576 2934
1 or 2 people no pe s refer
ences (74044 1 0181

N ce 2 bedroom mob te
Hosptal aooo:o~ 11 /2 ace home No pets (740)446
lo ts and approx 3 ac p o 2003

1740)446 6865

I"""

Al'\l{f\U"'TS

Rt\1 Esr:.n

FOR Rt ~l

w.~m&gt;

Want to buy a 3 bedroom 2
bath home Garage base
ment 310 aces s desr
abe AI cash Close n 2
weeks Me gs Gall a or
Athens COU:l!y 740)992

6300

Hl,.lll'

1 and 2 bedroom apa 1
menrs tur n shed and unfur
n shed
secur ty depos t
equ ed no pets 740 992
2218
2 bedroom aoa tment 76
V ne
Street
Ga p~ s
(740 367 7886

2 bedroom apt Centenary
Road close to hasp tat bath
stove
re1 ge ator
~10
washer/dryer
hOokup
$400 mon th
secur ty
depos 1 equ ed e e ence
0°o Down Payment and requ ed
no pets
call
1 lane ng ava abe w h 740)446 9442 a1re 5 00
Ave age
approved c ed r
c edt qua tes you It down 2BR C A relr gerato stove
washe dryer
payment has ~ept you J om ncluded
10 m n from
buy ng tn s s you chance 11001&lt; up
(740)44 0194 o
to own you own home I Holze
you have a down payment (7401441 1184
but would ke to onsP rv e
we oiler low down paymen t
programs also GreaT nte
es ates Loca co-,pany
Mortgage
Loc a o s
('40)992 7321

BEAUTIFUL

APART

MENT S
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes wood
Dr ve !rom $344 to $442
Wa lo.. to shop &amp; moves Ca
Equa l
2 story Colon a 3 Dd m 1 740 446 25o8
bath Gas hea Cnrr A..C
$000 mo (740)446 348
CONVEN IENTLY LOCAT
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE
2 story 2 bedroom 5 Oath
apar1men1s
Townhouse
k tche w th s ove &amp; efr ge
and o small houses FOR
ato
233 Second Ave
Conven ent
ocat on
no RENT Cal (7 40)441 1111
pets $565 month pus refe
ence &amp; depos t (740}446
4926
2b

hcuse
tor
rent
11onth
.. a e
and
ash pad no pets Depos T Grac ous I v ng 1 and 2 bed
and
ele ence requ red room apa tments ar \ lage
( ~40 )388 1100
Mane
and
R ve s de
Apa tments n M ddleoo t
3b n Sy acuse $4 75 month
From S295 $444 Call 7 40
Hud Approvea no Pets
992 5064 Eq ~.. a t Hous ng
(304 675 5332
Opportuf" es
48R 2 ba!li hOuse n
N ce
Apartment
$650/month
Ga I po s
w K tchen Appl ances AC
House n Kanauga 0 d depos requ red (740)44
n P1 PteasaJ"&gt;T S275 month
Farmers Rd Gall pol s Oh 0194 or 1740)441 1184
plus Oeposr (304 )675 7628
$40 000 2 rra e s Krode
Park
on
Neal
Ad Conoo 3 bdrm 2 baths N One bedroom apartment
$675 month
nvestment basement V e" ol r ve
no
pets
n Pomeroy
AC
S'OO
mo (740)992 5858
Bo!n
1 Alers
53:&gt; 000 Cntrt
Galt po s Fe y (740)446
(740)44 1 5725
348
One bed oom garage ape t
ment k tcnen turn shea
Must see Beautlu count y
Huge Oup e:o~ clean 3 bed
$400 ('40)992 3823
sett ng 1 89 acres 3 4 bed
oom 1 bath d n ng sto
rooms 1 1 2 bath I replace
Townhouse
age No pets smok ng $595 Tara
Full basement sun po Ct'l
Cal Ke ly (7.10 )446 9961
Apa tmen s \ e )I Spec ous
26:o~32
3yr old garage
2 Bed ooms 2 Ftoo s CA 1
20~40 3yr old n ground poo
Nee 1 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
1 2 Bath Newly Car~tea
w th 1750 so ft conc rete ApartmenTs
e a space
Adu lt Poo &amp; Bab~ Pool
area
and v nyl fence a so to rent [740\992' 3702
Pet o Sta t $385 Mo No
$125 000 [7401367-7156
Rental n Po nT Peasant Pe s Leese Pl us Secur ty
Reou ed Days
S400 month 30.4 67:~ 5540 Depos
HOIII:~
740
446
3481
Even ngs
or
(304
6
5
40
:24
ask
fo
r
IUH S.r.F
Nancy Homestead Rea ry 740 367 0502
~350

""' M&lt;&gt;HII I

14~ 70 87 Cayton 3 beo Broke
room 2 bath C A new ca
~IOHII f
pel ce am~ Tie wast-e &amp;
mR RI ~C(
dryer $10 000 740).446
apa tmenr
4233
EHO
12:o~60
2 bedroom
oat
\liiH II \'111'1
e ectr c SJOO pe month
For sale or
5300
deoos
t
(7
40)446
mob le homes sta t ng at
$270 per month Call 740 4107

HO'IES

Hoi.SEHOID
Goot:t!i

992 2167
Gallipolis Career Col lege 2br House for Sa e n West
Co umb e WV App 011
(Careers Close To Home)
t 1 2 aces (304)773 5284
Ca t Today 740 446-436 7
1 BOO 214 0452
www o~ oo SCI Bl co eg• com
Ace ea rea Memoe Ac~ ed "g 8)1 Owne US 35 n Mason
Co~;nc
o I"'CCIIP&amp;noen1 Col eges County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
1no Sct\oo • 12HB
Bed rooms
Large Sun
Room
2x32
Alt new
Ca pet Fu 1 Basel"f"ent 1 2
acre lo\ $38 son 104)675

&gt;DR R FJ\'T

Ma;,;e 2 pa~m6nts move n 4
yea s on note (304)7 36
3409

t 6~taO 3 bedroom 2 tu
bath w 'i garder tub C A
or va e 01 o g ~a a
(7 40)367 7745

New Oakwood mega sto e
tearur ng
Homes
by
Oa~wood
Fleetwood &amp;
G 1es One stop sl"ropp n~ 2 Ml1room AJC large ya o
on y at Oa~woOd Homes or very ve y n ce no pe s
Ba bou sv lie WV 3041736 Ao011ey Oh o (740)446
409
3409

New BrO)Ih 1 couch w tr tour
accent p 1ows L ght o own
ask n~ $600 mus1 sel l Call
740 a46 665E alter 4pm

740)949 2660

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 8, 2004
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OON·T

'fllaUl'f. OOOI.A!

I'M

H-N MINUTE; NOW'

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Appliance
Warehouse

aren't only for
buying or selling
items. you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday.
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

•n Henderson. WV
Preowned app!lcanes startmg at
$75 &amp; up all urlder warranty
we do serv•ce work on all
Make and Models {304)675-

7999
Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark

Chapel Pf;ad . Porter. Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877-8309162 Free Est1mates. Easy

financ•ng, 90 days same as
cash . V1sa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save a lot

S•de by s1de Kenmore relngerator-freezer. 3 yrs. old .
$300
Call for details
(740)949-9308.
Thompsons Appliance

For more information, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

&amp;

Repa•r-675-7388 . For sale,

re-conditioned automahc
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators. gas and electric
ranges , a1r cond1ttoners, and
wringer wasllers. Wi ll do
repa1rs on ma;or brands in

r

(7 40) 992-2155

t)oint t)leasant 31\egistei·

ANHQUES

r

MISCH.LAI\~:oJJS
M£RCIIANiliSE

Dining Room Solid Pine
Tab le wiHutch, Table-has 2·
Armed Cha1rs, 4-Regular
Cha1rs . Good Condil1on
S900 (304)675-2749
~o. ac ory. uut e1
Hol1day Sale!
frop quality. warranties.
M11ton. VI/V. Flea Marke
~ect1on C. Saturdays an
~ndavs. (60616 15-0776

Ot

st.·hcduling.

Henderson, WV

r

10

LtVESIUCK

r
'

AKC Golden Retnever pupREAL ARMY
pies. both parents on prem·
.CAMOUFLAGE
Ready I 1·16-04,
Sam Somerville's. S1nce 1964. 1Ses.
IJy S¥n dyv1lle, WV PO. Salelhtes. $300. will hold with deposit.
TV SaleS/Installation (304) 273· (740)256-1686
5655

Ruu .niNG

Buy or sell.
Riverine
JET
SUPPLU.:';
Ant1ques. 1 124 East Ma1n
AERATION MOTORS
on ,SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- Repairecl , New &amp; Rebui lt In
992·2526. Russ Moore. Stod. Call Ron Evans, 1- Block brick. sewer pipes,
w1ndows. lintels, etc_Claude
owner
800·537-9528.
Winters , Rio Grande . OH
Call 740-245·5121.
!&gt;40 \1L"-"EIL\:-IEOUS
MTD Yard Machme 22'-24 .. iiii~;.;..;~Pl~
.:-lo;."S;...._ _,
MERCHAI\DL'I:
Snowthrower $325.
...
36" Steel door and screen
FOH. SALE
36in . wood tireolace insert with lock $25 (304 )67 5with tans . automatic shut-off. 2499.
2 male Pekingese AKC 7
$250 (740)446·3897
old
Beaut1ful
wee ks
NEW AND USED STEEL Christmas gilt . (740)446·
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar t 000 leave me ~s age
5 Piece Dining Room Set
For
Concrete.
Angle.
Computer With CD Burner. Channel. Flat Bar. Steel AKC 7 week old Black Labs.
DVD Player call 1740}709· Grating
For
Ora1ns, Mad Shots &amp; Wormecl $100
t599
Driveways &amp; Wal~ways . L&amp;l Each 1304 }773-5 103
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Armstrong free stand1ng Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; AKC Pomeranian pupp1es·
wood burner. 5250. Heats Fnday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed black, brown (female). 1
hoi wate r also. (740)245· Thursday.
SaiLJrclay
&amp; sable (male) vet ·checked
1984 or (740)645-1984
· Sunday (740 )446-7300
$400 each, (740)696· 1085

Are you 65
or older?
If,so, you qualify for a

$5001 Honda's, Chevy 's,
Jeep's.
Ect.
Poli ce
Impounds! Cars from $500
fo r listings 800·391·5227
EXT 3901

.

AIJfOS

2001 Dodge Dakota. quad
cab, blue. V·8, bug shield,
window guards. 4)(2 bedlin·
er, all power. $14,000. good
condiiiOn
60.000 miles .
(740)441 -0712

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

98 Chevy S-10 LS, manLJal
transmission. A/C, alu·
mlnum wheels. tonneau
cove r. 9 1.000miles. well·
main tamed, $6 100 080

~~u~~J-:

I

liNDA'S PAINTING

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Sidi ng • Nt.'\\ Gara g-:.,
• R-:pl ,lo..:mc nt
WinJow~

• Roofing

COMMERCIAL and

RESIDENTIAL

F.REE ESTIMATES

IN PLAGf Oil SPINNING
YOllll W~fELS7

2000 Grand am 4 dr., 58,000
Small Job Specialist
AngLJs
Bulls Top mile s, fLJ IIy equip. S6.500. elec, plumbg, ca rpentery
Perlormance lines. 11.0 Years 304·675·6024
(740 )992Artificial Insemination State 2003 Tracker. 4x4. J,OOO
Run Farm (740)286·5395.
mileS'. All electric, alum
www.slaterun farm .com
wheel. $ 14 ,500 .. 080
- - - - - - - - (740)388·8432.
Club ca lves for sale.
Reasonably priced . Contact 95 Park Ave. good condition,
Baughman ShOw Cattle. 171 .000 miles. All power.
(740)256·6535 or (740)256· leather, good tires , $3800
8884
080. (740)446-4336

~

I'"

,,_____________
f~i\1'-KLi',

. C.ot-\GI&lt;E~r--\1&gt;--t-&lt;, TO Wf-\1'\T

00 'IOU 1\TW\I'&gt;UTE: 'IOUI'l
\JI'I:)UC.C.E~:)fUL I)ID \0 B£
R(E Lt.c.TE\&gt;...

/o-.t--1\)

See

,

Rocky "RJ~'
Hupp
93 Columbus Rd.

LIKE THI 'S&gt; .,-----"'

IMPORTS

Athens

SJ. RUiR I Darwin. OH
7-l0-492-70 I :l m 740-992-555:1
HP.~Iockit'f} /11 It• .\lnrkl Sa l~tt,ge
and .\flet· Uu·kd R•rf-•

See Brent

1l r

.

fPEANUTS
ANOTHER ONE OF
TI405E IAi~O DOESN'T
TAKE TilE 6i&lt;.OCERI'
CART flACK ..

Brian Wh;_dcy

M -Fri X:10-5:00
Sal. S::JO -Noon
Sun. Closed

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
" Middleporfs only
Self-Storage"

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Subscriber's Name _______

~~~
High 8l Dry

Self-Storage

SUNSHINE CLUB
/-leY, SUI\TTY, CAN '-,{)()

LOAN ME l;FN BUCKS

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

'TIL NEXT WEEk?

I

740-992-5232
!

I
ORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-44"6"-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

f~~~\W.~~~
Locust, Ollk

Maple $45

Delivered
Bill Slack

Address _ _ _ _.:___ __ _ __
City/State/Zip - - - - - - , - - - -

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltlon1 &amp;

Phone_~-------~---

Remoeletlng

• New Gar1ge1
• Electrical &amp; Plumblnn
• Roofing I Gutters

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
'

.

'

992-2155
.

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo end Porch Oeckt

Wa do It all except
furnace work

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON
·New Homes
• Garages

·'Complete
Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

140-992-1811

I

992·6215

Stop &amp; Compare

······-------------------------·

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local El erlence

ll /8/04

-... 'lllrlhd&amp;,y:

Tueeday, Nov. 9, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Substantial improvements in both your
mental outlook and your physical efforts
lie ahead for you. Their combined effects
will do much lor ma~ing you a more bal·
anced and better-rounded person
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Lucky
you! You could be qu1 te fortunate today in
situations that are not of your making
You 'll be included in th e arrangements of
others and share in all th e benefits.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - A
friend could be the purveyor of some very
happy news today tha t wi ll buoy up your
spirits considerably. It's a chance for
something for which you've been hoping
would come your way.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) -You
shouldn'I have to se ttle for second best
o r mediocre terms today where your
important interests or objectives are con·
earned. espec1 ally those tha t relate to
your finances or career
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20·Feb 19) - Use
your talents and abilities to the fullest and
1n as many worthwhile ways as possible
today. All creative endeavors that you
have a personal hand in have eKcett ent
chances tor success.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Someone
in particula r with whom you team up
today. either individually or as a group.
w1ll be looking out fo r your interests. This
person is sk1!1ful at manag1ng money
matters.
ARIES (March 2 1·Apri11 9)- With you m
charge, agreements that you negotiate
today should work out to be quite tortu ·
nate for everyone involved . You'M• ma~e
sure all parties gel what they 're hoping
tor.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It could
pay special dividends to take eKtra pa1ns
w1th your work today, because chances
are the boss will be in a generous mood
Instead ot merely giving praise. the boss
may issue a raise.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Thare isn't
too much that can easily rattle you today
and th1s quality wilt be adm1red py all your
associates But what will impress them
the most 1s your philosophica l way of
deali ng with a crisis.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) By
accepti ng cond itions as they exist today
and not gettmg overly arJ)(ious about tl1 e
• outcome ol events. 11 opens the door tor
Lady Luc~ to walk in and escort you to
the finish line.
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22' - Do be support ive. but stay quietly in the backgroutid
when it comes to negotiating the issues
involved today. You 'll be far luckier w1th
your cohor t doing most of the wheeling
and dealin g.
VIRG,O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - If you have
anyth1ng good g01ng tor you financially at
th is time . today 1s the day to 91"'e
progress a b1g push lntensifymg your
efforts could yield larger returns· than
usual.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - Your charm ing, Ingratiati ng manner will make you a

r---::::::=:::::--r-.--..-"i:::::-1

any

1

1

G

AstroGraph

welcome addition to
socia l gathenng
attend today. The more you en1 oy
l~~~~~~~~~~~~~J you
yoursell, the more you are apt to ca ptl·

740-992-2269

YOUNG'S

All pass

3-4
35
36

40

GRIZZWELLS
· ~ ~'$ALL 1\C\&lt;,\;:'D CfF AT. M~ 6fLI&gt;U~E
. ~~~tAR!&gt; ~~~ ~
:YfA~ ~\tJ.CE 1.
· T~ \-1~ CUT
\0.\~ .
Rt?rAU~HT

as clay

41 Dread

23 Momlng
moisture
24 Hair curler

25
26
27
28

30
32

34
35
37

38
40

42 Ricky .
Ricardo
43 Handy swab
Pitchfork
(hyph .)
tooth
44 Microwave,
Unctuous
slangily
Wedding
45 Layover
46 Chair part
confetti
Tumult
47 Tummy
Daring
muscles
Promolional 49 JFK visitor,
pieces
once
Gator kin
Maintains
Up and
about
One ,
ior Pierre
Ballroo'm
number '

,..--,-----,.,.-

CELEBRIT¥ CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C1pher eryptograms are created from qiKitatlOns by famou! peDple past and presenl
Each lette r 1n ftle Cipher stands lor aooliler

TQday's clue . J equals V

" RL

PZB HH

YHBH

PZH

BIEECP

KSOWZHM

WZAXHZATO ,

KSOWZ

·e s P P . "
EAGHB

EHMP

100

NABRHB
WZSWX

P ZH

PZH
Z HI 0

ZHIJLYHCFZP

YHK 0 H 8

Supplies. Call (800) 525·4718 to order

.•. BUT THAT STILL !XJEStfT
MEAN YOUR GOALIE
C.AN HAVE A PORTABLE
~PACE HEI'.TEI'. .

NOT I'IUCH FUN PLAYING
50CC.EJ&lt;. ON !'. DI'.Y

Whaley's Auto
Parts

on
lowas
S2·5~oo. peF m~nth!

r••••••••••••··--••••••••••-••••

1

BIG NATE

GARFIELD

~unbap tll:ime~ -~enttnel

t OOt--1'1 C.l&gt;..~

i
•

UR

The Daily Sentinel

L t&gt;Ot-&lt;'1 Kt--ION

1, t4/l mo . pd

1· \1(\JSI 1'1'1 JJ .S
~X; I 1\ LSIO( 1\.

2000 BUick LeSabre. V6.
sedan . 4-door. lim1tec1.
2·horses for sa le. 1-walking
80,000 m1les. garage kept.
horse. broke good. 1-qut.
$8.500.00. (740)9 49-2217
mare. broke good. 10·12 yr.
?AM· 10PM
old. (740)379-2820.

THE BORN LOSER

;

Hours

7:00AM- 8:00 PM

East

3 NT

Bird has West leading the spade three,
which I think is an unwiSe seldction
around to a b1g balanced hand .
You win trick one and advance the club
queen, West covermg with his king.
Because a finesse has finally worked,
there is a naJufal reaction to win with
dummy's ace. but then you ge11hree club
tric~s instead of fi\le. Calmly duck at tric~
1wo and everything is under con1rol.
Handle blocked suits and en tri es with
great care.
The book is available from C &amp; T Bridge

.t

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

North

Pass

play?

Hill's Self
Storage
Racine , Ohio
4 5771
740·949·2217

22
23

ly to no-trump contracts. This is because
they are relatively straightforNard, developing into a race between the declarer
and 1he defenders. Now, though, we have
"No-Tr ump Co n tracts~ by David Bird (0 &amp;
8 Publishing, 2004). You can tell that i1 is
good because it was awarded the
American Bridge Teachers' Association 's
award for the best book of 2004.
Each of the 12 chapters covers an important aspect of the subject and concludes
wi1h a Qt.Jiz so that the reader can chec~
that he has assimilated the key poin1s. My
main regret is that, except for the quizzes ,
the reader sees all 52 cards . Although it
would .have lengthened the book well
beyond its 160 pages, giving first only two
hands , 1hen showing the full layout, would
have made i1 a bener leaching tool .
Here is a problem from the ... well, I will
not tell you what topic. South is in, as you
already guessed , three no-trump. West
leads the hean two, Easl punlng up the
queen. How should declarer plan the

~

29670 Bashan Road

21

41 S&amp;L
pro1ector
Climb e 'ope 43 Face cards
Skipper's OK 46 Robert E.
!Madtong
and Spike
Elvia'
47 Banking
daughter
convenience
Total llop
48 Muddy
State at
tracks
Two
511 Effortlessness
semesters
G&lt;&gt;-aheads 51 Apron part
Now hear - 52 Bout enders
WaHle
53 Saucy look
topP.ings
54 Workout
Pohle
locale
55 Equinox mo.
address
Rudder's
place
DOWN
Wager
Likewise
1 Wily
Shoot-'em2 Goes quickly
ups
3 " By Jove! "
A Great Lake
(2 wds.)
Ten-speed
4 Tell a story
Give - 5 Vote
to accept
chance
Was
6 Hearty
victorious
laughs
Merry old
7 Mag e•ecs
king
8 Spin around
Etching fluid 9 -Khan
Almost
10 Slender
Net surfers 11 " - So Shy "
Curtain
19 Roswell
hanger
crasher
MD
20 Dole out
assistants 22 Harden,

There are almost no boo~s devoted sole·

GROAN!! OOOF!IGROAN

740-992-7599

"~-------....

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
b~low and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
~aUtpoU&amp;Jlatlp' t!tribune
ttotnt ~lea~ant ltegtster

re1 f(UNNING

BISSELL

99 Chevy Cavalier. automat·
CAMPERS &amp;
ic. air. new tires. new brakes
Maroa HUMES
good condition, 30MPG
$2,500.00
HLJnter's SpeciaL
~::;:--------, 200 Gospel Soun d tracks
1975 Camper. Newly re mocl·
LIVESIIJCK
$4 ()()each . 1740)992-3739 eled, a mLJst see for S1 ,000.

on your home delivered
subscription!

W~IC:t-1 t;/IL/, IT

PAW!!

Vinyl

West

2 NT

The no-trump trickle
has another drop

MORNIN',

N~w H1 ~1 11 t:s •

20

39

.BARNEY

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

17

18

38

JONES'

Tree Service

BUILDERS IRC.

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Let me do it for youl

16

33

Opening lead: • 2

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

Ta~e

13
14
15

29
30
31

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

FOR SALE

r

8

26

"'QJIO

I.

Box 189
Middleport
-~.:!.~.~ 45760

7 5
A98763
East
• Q 10 6 2
• Q 10 5
• Q. J94
• 4 2

South
• K 54
• AK7
t AK62

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

1965 Plymouth . 440 six ~~~r32-6437 o, (740 )245pack. $12.000. 1923 Ford
350/350 $ 12,000. 1972
Chevelle 454/400 $ 14,000.
AKC Lab Retr iever puppies. 1988 S-1 0 VB project
English. blocky heads, yet· $ 1,800. Phone (304)7731994 Chevrolet Suburban .
low. Born 10/1 104, champion 5679.
All leather seatmg . All
bloodline. Health guaran·
1979 Ca dillac Seville Run s power. Equipped tor trailer
teed. Experience bree der
good $650. 1984 Buick towing . Can be seen at 136
$450.
w/references.
Regal. run s $250. Phone First Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh10
1304)372-4642 .
Phone 740 446·256 1.
(7 40)245-58 12.
AKC Schnauze rs puppies.
JO
VANS
Black, salt &amp; pepper. Vet 1986
Pontiac
Fireb m:t
FuR
SALE
checked.
$400
eaCh. Clean, 67,000 actual miles .
(740)696-1 085
1968 Vol ~ swag on , restored
.11ns!de/out. (740)446-6464. 1993· Town &amp; Country
Beagle pLJp!:&gt;1es for sale with
Chrysler van. good gas
papers Call (740)388·8721 1989 blue Dodge Aries LE. mileage, sa t1slactory lor
work vehicle or family, ask·
Border Collie mi)( pups. 33,000 m1les. air. $800
ing $1800, (740)992-6 t 59
080
(740)256·
1233.
Sho ts. wormed . mady to gci.
$50. (740)388· 1520
1994
Dodge
Dak:ota , 2003 Chevy Express Cargo
For sa te ~ male Old English e)(tended cab. V-6 , auto Van 3i4 ton . 2500 series
sheepdogs. lovable. sha ggy $349 5. 1997 Blazer $4295. w1th Side doors 373 Vortex
dogs. 11 weeks old , price 1998 Neon $2895. Cook engine. air, cruise. tilt.
Motors. 328 Jackson Pike 44.000 miles. $16.500.
$200. (740 )985-9823
(740)446·9585 or (740)446·
(740)446-0103
JacK Russell pups 5 weeks·
7724 .
old. adorable, $200 /each , 1996 Ford Ranger XLT, - , - - - - - - - (740)742 -2803
Supercab 4x4 . V6 , auto. air. 2004 Chevy Express Cargo
tilt, cruise , P/W, P/L, $6, 995 . Van 3/4 ton 2500 .series with
Regi stered CKC Pug pup· 1999, Pontiac Grand Am 2 side doors. Air, cruise, tilt .
pies. 10 weeks old, first door.' V6 . Pec;l loaded 9 ,200
mites _ 521 ,500.
shots/wormed . Blacks $500, $5.995. Riverview Motors. 2 (740)446·9585 or (740}446·
Fawns $450
{740)388· blocks above McDonalds, 7724
9327.
Pomemy, OH (740)99240 MaTORCYLlE&lt;i/
3490.
4 WHEELER~
Registered Mm P1n pupp1es - - - - - - - - ......iltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio--"
for sale. Black and Rust 5 1997 Pont1ac Grand-Am GT.
wee~s-olcl . 3 females, one V 6, aLJtomatic, bu cket 2003 1DOth Ann1versary 883
mate $250 W111 be very seats, air. sun root . power Hugger Harley David son
sm all , father 71bs mother windows. CD playe r, new 298 miles. EKe . Condition
91bs, Mother AKC AND tires , 72.000K
excellent 'lots ol extras: $8,500 (last
ear macle) (304 773·5 103
CKC Fa ther CKC 576·2002 condition 53.800 00

Senior Discount* r

• AJ 83
• J 942
• 10 8 3
• K5

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

89 Ford Bronco 41C4 , V8 ,
auto, new tires, exhaust. etc .
$1,800. (740)645-6195 0'
(740)379-2467.

MERC'HANUJSE
AKC Black Lab pups. Shots,
wormed
parents HIPS
0 FA
certi tied.
NAFC
champ1on
blooclline,
(740)643-200 1

long·

mRS,\LE

HAY&amp;

1.---GiiiiRAINiiiiioo_....

West

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

Must see Paint Mare $800. Ford 87 Mustang, 2.3. 5
Pal mare $1,200; 4yr old Speed, wrecked. $500 080
gelding $350. All beautiful, call (304)675-8872
healthy &amp; gentle. (740)446·
15
0367
ThLIO&lt;S

""" M L'iCELI AI\Wl:S

Pole Barn 30)(50x1 OFT
$6395 includes Paint ed
Metal, Plans, InstructiOn
Book. Slider. F1ee Delivery
(937)559-8385

vacation,

•
.

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

1crm disa hi(i(y and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleusunt Vnlley Hospital
% Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
AA/EOE www.pvallcy.org

IJ.()8·G4

• as 3

MONTY

171-2497

C1i:Ccllent

dental plan. life insurance,

North
• 9 7

MYERS PAVING

salary,
hol idays, hca hh insuram.:c !'lingle/famil y plan.

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY!

(304) 675-1333

Gun cabmet. 8 guns, etched
glass, very n1ce $100 .
Remin-gton 870 Magnum
Express. mod·1mp tubes,
$225. Horton Legend XL
Crossbow with scope &amp; lots
accessorieS
$350
Thompson-Black D1amond
stainless in-line 50cal . with
Simmons 3&gt;:9)(40 scope
plus accessories. $350
Thompson Renegade 50cal.
1-leKagon barrel beautiful
wood . black powder plus
accessones.
S200.
1740)367-7156

r

Flexibl~

The Daily Sentinel

G0005

\:urrently

license . BSN req uired.

(740) 446-2342

SPORTINt;

is

managcrncntlsupcrvisory
experienCe
in
clinical :;;ervicc areas required. Gradua1c of a
schoo l of nursing. Current West Yirgioi&lt;l

®aUipohs tJBailp m:ribune

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulav•lle P•ke , appliances.
dressers, twin , full , queen ,
king mat1resses. dressers.
couches. cl1nettes , recliners.
grave monuments, much
more.
(740)446-4782
Gallipolis. OH Hrs 11 -3 (M5)

Hospital

accepting resumes for a Critical Care Services
Coordinmor
in
lhe ICCU
and
ER
Departments. A minimum of three years
expe ri ence in an acute ~:are ~tting . Previous

.,

shop or at your home.

Valley

1
5

12

CRITICAL CARE
SERVIC.;S COORDINATOR
Pleasant

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

lkJRe C0C WfLl. RUJ..IZ-l:. TH~
~ISTN(l. AND MJNG US Bot&lt;X

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

vate the group

SOUP TO NUTZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "W,ite's believe they can f1x lhe wm!d w1th a
sentence. But 1t's always the next sentence " - Pl aywright Mttt h AI bam

(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 11-6
THAT PA.ILY
,UZBIIt

.

s©"R~lA-at-~s·.. :~;:

- - - - - - - fcfil1d by QAY

0 lour

Reo rr o.,~l! letl en of
5cram b l ~d wordJ
low 10 lo•m four ~ i mpll! w~rd'

t} PRIN~

NUM8EtfD lETTERS IN

tHESE SQUARES

€)

UNSCRAMS Lf A8 0 VE lfJTERS

TO GET ANSWEQ

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 1- 5&gt; ·0 •
Defile · Crush -World · Cygn et · YOURSELF .
Grandma was 3lways g•ving me advice when f was
a kid . She told me that happ• ne ss was like perfume, .
you couldn"t give 11 away with o ut getting a liM ie on·

YOURSELF .

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR: Nextel Cup

National Football League

Bengals lasso Cowboys Earnhardt wins;
points battle tightens
BY JoE KAY

Assoc1ated Press

CINCINNATI - The onl y
thing bold about thi' ntTense
was-the jer,ey,.
Playing it &lt;:lose to the ve't in
their new orange thread ,. the
Cincinnati Bengals pulled otl
the game "s only big play - a
76-yard to uchdown pass "to
Matt Schobel - and beat the
bumbling Dallas Cowboys 263 on Sunda v.
It was titiing that a t i~ ht end
who 'P'-'nt most of the sc:Nlll
blocking bmke open the game .
Neither team wanted to open it
up with their qu:uterbacks one about to tum -l I. the otl1cr
still a novice.
·"With a young quanerback.
we ' ve been staying in a lot and
protecting:· said Schobel. who
had only II cati1tes in the tlrst
seven games. ··we always say
that when we have a &lt;.:hance.
let" s 1Hake the most of it.""
.
Neither team &lt;.:arcd to take
many chances in this one.
The Ben2als (3-5) turned
four field g oals by Shayne
Graham and the one big play
by Schobel into a soothing win .
It was the type of game defensive-minded
heaJ
coach
Marvin Lewis wouiJ love to
see more often .
Instead of relving on tlrstyear quartcrbac~- Carson
Palmer to win it with rainbow
throws. the Be n~a l s -g round it
out with shon passes unci lot' or
handoffs. Palmer was 21-of-32
for 212 yards without a sack.
interception or long pass in a
slog-it-out game plan th:n tested his patience.
'"It\ extremelv difficu lt.""
said Palmer. who ·had a 2-yard
touchdown run in 1he clo."ing

minutes. '"The fans want to see
you go deep, and you want to
go deep. get the ball to Chad
!Johnson) and see him do
something funny."
It was another unsettling setback for ~he Cowboy s (3-5),
who have Jbst four of their last
live and fumbled away most of
their hope for a second straight
playoff appearance.
"That"s about as bad as you
can get."" coach Bill Parcells
said. "'I" m really embarrassed
for that kind of peti"ortnance.
There"s no explanation for it,
excert we're · poorly coached
and we played bad. I don't
kn ow where we go from here,
·
tf anywhere.
··1 really don't have much to
say, fellows. except we were
poorly prepared , we played
poorly. we were inefticicnt and
we were just awfu I."
For the lirst time in franchise
history. the Bengals came out
in gaudy orange jerseys reminiscent of the XFL. The two
otfenses looked like something
out of the '40s.
Vinny Testaverde, who tu rn s
4 I next Saturdav. had his worst
game with the Cowboys.
Throwing to an injury-depleted
receiving corps. Testaverde
was 1 ~-of-30 fo r 207 yards
with three interceptions and a
fumb le.
·· 1 fe&lt;!l it's my job to generate
ene rgy for our offense." said
Testa verde. who has thrown six
mterceptions in the last two
games. ··1 didn't do that today.
It's hard to put a linger on it."
Owner Jerry Jon es was
already pondering changes for
the nex t game agai nst
Philadelphia.
"Vinny's been a real surpri se
of our season so far:· .Iones
said. ··He had been our most

postttve surprise for us going
into this game. Now we may
have to look at what our other
possibilities are as to any personnel changes. I won "t speak
to that right now."
.
Testa verde wasn "t the only
culprit. The Cowboys failed to
take advantage of the NFL"s
softest run defense, l)tld finished wi th their worst offensive
showing since a 12-0 loss to
New England last Nov. I6.
"The way we performed as a
team is pitiful." tight end Jason
Whitten said.
Graham connected from 35.
47 and 45 yards in the tlrst half
- two of the kicks were set up
by fumbles - and had a 30yarder in the founh quaner.
The Cowbovs tried to set the
tone early, going on fuunh-andinches from the Bengals 22 on
the opening drive. Testaverde·
lost inches, and the Cowboys
went into a shell.
Not even the war of words
between
chatty
cousins
Keyshawn Johnsori of the
Cowboys and Chad Johnson of
the Bengals was much to talk
about. Keyshawn had a fumb le
and four catches for 5R yards,
failing to make much of an
impact.
' 'We need to make changes.
whatever they might be," he
said. "But it definitely has to be
somethin g.''
Hi s cousin got so frustrated
by Cincinnati's slog- it-out
offense that he tackled cornerback Lance Frazier at the end
or a play late in the third quarter. Lewis had a long talk with
him on the bench, and Johnson
had six catches the rest of the
way. finishing with eight overall for 74 vards.
'Twas 'tine," he insisted. ""I
didn't have any problem."

Ravens use special teams
to defeat Browns, 27-13
BY .DAVID GINSBURG

Associated Press
BALTIMORE - An incredibly shon kick and the Jonge~t
interception return in NFL history were the key elements in a
harrowing victory for the
Baltimore Ravens.
Jamal Lewis scored the decisive touchdown with 7:03 lett
following a 7-yard punt. and Ed
Reed sealed a 27 -I 3 victory
over the Cleveland Browns by
nmning an :--JFL-record I 06
yards with an interception in the
waning seconds Sunday night.
The win was panicularly satisfying because the Ravens fell
behind 7-0 when Ridmd
Al ston returned the opening
kickoff 93 yards for a score.
·'We stuck to2ether. We didn" t
blink,"' sa.id Tr~vi ~ Taylor. who
had seven catches. "That \ what
this team is all about." "
Back from a two-game 'uspension for violating the NFL
substance abuse policy. Lewis
ran for 81 yard.s on 22 carries.
But his 2-yard burst into the end
zone was set lip by two outstand ing plays by Baltimore's
speci al teams.
First. rookie B.J . Sams made
api ving save in the end zone to
enable Baltimore (5-3) to down
a punt at the Cleveland I. Then,

'·

&lt;efter the defense yielded only I
yard on three plays. the Ravens
pressured Deni&lt;.:k Frost into a
wobbly kick that made the
touchdown dri ve easy.
·•J was tryi ng to get 1t off
quick. I saw the guy coming up
the middle," Frost said. "It"s all
about timing. ... I knew it was
going to be bad. but not that
bad."
A 2-point conversion gave
Baltimore a 20- 13 lead, but Jeff
Garcia brought the Browns (35) to the Ravens 5 before a pass
deflected off Aaron Shea into
Reed\ anns. Reed then took
otf down the right sideline and
rea&lt;.:hcd the end zone with 26
seconds left.
··He seems to always be
around it when you need it.'"
Baltimore c0ach Brian Billick
said. ··He kind of waited to the
end to do it. Might have saved
my hem1 a little bit if he'd of
done it earlier."
A' Garcia deftly moved the
Browns downtield. Billick was
already thinking the worst.
·· Jt was just a matter of
whether they could go for two." '
he said.
But Shea was hit by linebacker Ray Lewis as the ball
&lt;mived. and Reed did the rest.
"'I thought it was pass interference . 1 thought they would
make the call. but they didn't,"

Shea said.
"'I knew exactly the play they
were going to try to run:"
Lewis said . " I told Ed it was
com mg.
Said Reed: "'I really saw it the
whole way. You didn't know il"
he was going to tip it or not. I
just reacted.""
Matt Stover kicked four lield
goals for the Ravens, who wore
black uniforms for the tirst
time.
"The defense time and time
again . stepped up to the challenge. We put it on the 5-yard
I ine and they still somehow got
it done," Stover said.
Alston stunned the Ravens
and the crowd of 69.78 I by
putting Baltimore in a hole with
I4 seconds elapsed. He shook
off an attempted tackle by Chad
Wi IIiams, then de ked kicker
Wade Richey around midfield
before veering right and sprinting down the sidel ine into the
end zone.
It was the first time the
Browns scored on the opening.
kickoff since September' 1990,
when Eric Metcalf went the
distance against the New York
Jets. Alston was act ivated on·
the practice squad to replace
Andre King, who sprained his
left ankle against Philadelphia
before Cleveland's bye last
week.

BY MIKE HAR!IIS

Associated Press
AVONDALE, Ariz. - Dale Earnha.rdt Jr.
lost the argument but won the race.
Earnhardt's crew chief ordered the driver
to stay on the track ·and pass up a ti re change
late in Sunday's NASCAR Ncxtel Cup race
at Phoenix International Raceway
Following orders reluctantly, Juni or st ill
pulled away from Jeff Gordon in a pair of
overtime laps to win the race. His 15th
career victory tightened up the championship chase with two races to go.
Kurt Busch ove rcame .a couple of mistakes to finish lOth and held on to the series
lead. But the top four drivers are separated
by just 48 points heading into next Sunday's
event at Darlington with Busch Jeadjng
Gordon by 4 I.
The victory came a week after Earnhardt
lost grou nd in the title chase by cras hing
through hi s own carelessness late in the race
at Atlanta Motor Speedway. This time, he
was steady when it mattered mos t.
Earnhardt , who had a dom in an t car
through most of the Checker Auto Parts
500, leading a race-high I 18 laps. was in
third place. trailing Gordo n and Casey
Mears when a caution &lt;.:ame out on lap 282
of the racescheduled to go 3 I 2.
Junior arg ued with crew chi ef Tony Eury
over the radio. lobbying to pit for tires, but
Eury made him stay on the track and maintain his position.
Eury, known as Tony Sr.. sa id he insisted
Earnhardt stay out because it was so hard to
get past lapped cars on the 1-mile oval and
"it was just belter to keep track position.""
Earnhardt was a bit sheepish when asked
abotit the verbal battle with hi s crew chief.
"Yeah, I was just ge ttin g worried man,"' he
said. gri nnin g. . ··1 cannot control mysel f
inside a race ca r. I want tires. thi s that and
the other. I didn't want to lose.
" I told Tony S~ .. "The car's wvering the
field the best we eve r did.' We've had good
race .cars and won races but nobody cou ld
run with this car today and I didn't want to
lose thi s race."
Juni or had a top-five finis h all but
wrapped up in Atlanta the previous Sunday
whe n he collided with rookie Carl Edwards
and wound up 33rd there to f&lt;tll to fifth 98 points· out - in the I 0-race champi onship chase.
He was determined there would be no
repeat of that.
"I told my guys I was going to try to make
up for that thi s week."" Earnhardt s-aid . ''I"ve
been feeling bad about it all week and really wanted to co me back and do something
fon hese guys today:·
After sta yin g out during the ca ution.
Earnhardt wound up passing Mears for second place on lap 298. moments before
anoth e r caution came out for Jami e

L

nators heck trying to figure out
what .we· re going to do, with
weapons all over the ti~ld and a
quanerback who just keeps gettmg better.\"
How much better can Big Ben
get than this" Roethlisberger is
6-0 as a staner- the tirst rookie since the I970 merger to do
that si_nce Pittsburgh 's Mike
Kruczek tilled in for an injured
Terry Bradshaw in 1976.
Here's
the
difference:
Kruczek didn '.t throw a TD pass
all season on a team that won
behind the Steel Cunain;
Roethlisberger (II of 18, 183
yards, two touchdowns) has
thrown for I I touchdowns while
playing with the polish and
growing confidence of a much
more experienced player.
"He 's remarkable." Eagles
linebacker Mark Simoneau said.
·'Look at him on the field and he
doesn't look like a rookie, he
looks like a guy who's been
around four or five years. Give
the guy credit. he made plays all

day long."
Roethli sberger drove the
Steelers to a 21-0 lead on their
first three possessions with the
help of Bettis' 149 yards. his
55th career I00-yard game. The
1978 Steelers were the only
other team in . franchise history
to start 7-1, en route to a 14-2
record and a Super Bowl title.
Ward scored on the first two
dri vcs, a I6-yard reverse and a
20-yard reception, then playful1y mocked the Eagles (7 - I ) and
star receiver Terrell Owens by
napping ltis anns Owens-like in
the end zone each time.
No wonder Owens was
screaming instead of strutting a
week "after celebmting a touchdown by imitating Ravens star
Ray Lewis' pregame dance.
Owens, coming off five consecutive 100-yard games, didn't
catch his first pass until
Pittsburgh Jed 2 I -0 and could be
seen yelling at quarterback
Donovan McNabb on the sidelines:
···-·-

-----

--

A, B

0

II I ~ll \\ . '\0\ I \lBI

,) o ( I ' \ I"" • \ ul. ,) l - ' " · .-,_-,

• Another tough call for
Browns. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT_@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

POMEROY - During a
phone
int erview
on
Monday ,
George
M.
Col lin s, deputy director of
ODOT District I 0, elaborated on pla.ns to alter traf-

fie configurations at the
intersection at Ohio 68.1
a nd the new U.S. 33 connec tor.
Since the road opened iast
month. there have been three
tratTie accidents aj that partieular intersection .
Collins said he is current ly

meetin g with consult ant' to
determine whether or nul to
reopen the road that run'
undernea th · th e hrid gv- near
Ohio 681 to thru -traffi c. Thi s
traffic pattern is the same one
used du rin g the recent U.S ..l1
con,truction .
Anoth er aspect of the plan

is to close th ~ median on tile
four-lane ncar Ol1io 6KJ to
eltminatc cro ss -traffi c. and
ramps off of U.S . 33 would
he a ri ght tllrn onl y on or otl
th e road.
Th ere is al" ' a pl an to put a
tempor:try tu rn lane for left
turns coming otT U.S. 33 onto

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Howard W. Thoma, Sr.
• Dallas Walker
• Wilbur H. Rowley, Jr.

INSIDE
• ESC sponsors food
programs at Head Starl
sites. See Page AS
• Assemblies on abslinence at local high
schools. See Page AS
• Riverfront walkway to
have a fountain and
benches. See Page AS

PORTLAND - Volunteers
at the Portland Community
Center have big plans to usc
the ir building as a bridge
between the past and present.
The Portland Community
Center is located in the old
Portland Elementary School
which is undergoing renovations , includin g a roof
replacement.
Mike Duhl, board president
of
th e
Portland
Communi ty Center, estimates
that the roof alone wi II cost
$23 ,000. Al thou gh they do
not have the entire $23.000.
thanks to donations and grants
they have received enough to
at least start replac ing the roof
in sections.
The new roof will provide
she lter for a Civil War
Museum loc ated withi n a
room in the Co mmun i·ty
Center. Duhl estimates the
price tag for the museum to be
around $36.000 and hopes to
have funding in place from
the Ohio Historical Society
within a year.
The museum wi II contain a
large. elaborate wa ll mural.
Civil War anifacts, photographs,
and a map of Meigs County

jOQ ha~

INDEX
SEcrtoNs- 12 PAGES
Calenqars
A3
2

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley PublishlnR Co.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

P0\1cROY Pomeroy
Village Co uncil met on
Monday ni ~ hl with the yuestion
of wh:tt to do with the old
Pomeroy Junior High School
haunt ing the agenda once again.
Eddi e Baer of Team Jesus
Mi 1\i , tri e' presented council
v. itll a tentative purchasing
agree ment for the high

.i

. t"

\\'··

Please see Pomeroy, A5

Baker appointed
new fiscal officer

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED@MYDAILY SENTI NEL.COM

Both Sergenljphoto

Board members and volunteers of the Portland Community Center stand in front of a large ban·
ner that asks. "Do you have suggestions for the Portland Community Cente r?"" From left. Mtla
Raymond, Mike Duhl . Mildred Krider. M1ke W. Duh l and Janet Krider await volunteers a nd ideas
to make the center a bridge between Portl an d·s past and present .
with the path of Morgan \ Kuid
painted on the tloor.
··we want visitors to feel
like they have stepped back in
time in this room:· said Mila
Raymond. a community cen-

tcr volunteer who is al ' o
excit ed about an authent ic.
186.1 Civil War saber used by
the Cal\"ary that ha.&gt; be e n
In the futu re. volunteer&gt;

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

HARRISONVILLE - A
Rutland man was arrested and
charged wit h driving under
th e influence. having a
weapon under di ., abi lit y.
escape , and dru g-re Ia ted
charges last week after sheriff's deputies executed a
search warrant of his home.
Jerry
Stone.
47,
of
Carpenter's Hill · Road. wits

Please see Portland. A5

weeks after

Please see Baker. A8

BR EED@MYDAIl YSENT INE L.COM

POMEROY - r\ Pomeroy
man cau ght t\111 \\o uld -be
auto thieve s in the act on
Sunday and held tnem at gunpoint. Both m~n are nnw in
jail.
Lawrence R. Legg. 20. and
Craig M. Karr. 21. both of
Chillicothe. were Jailed in the
Southeast Re gional J:til in
Nehpnville Sunday morning
and were arraigned Monday
in Mcig, County CourL after
Wes ley Karr caught the two
men att empting to ~ tea l hi~

1

2003 Ford Expedition from
hi s Flatwoods Road home .
Crai ~ Karr is unre lated lo
Wesley Karr. ac&lt;.:ording to
Sheriff Ralph Trussell.
Legg was c· harged wi th
grand . theft auto. a fourth degree felnny. and comp licity
to agg ra vated bu rg lar-y. a firstdegree felon y. Karr W&lt;h
chargt::d with aggravated burglary. a fi rst -degree fe lony.
and grand theft auto. AI a
Monday arra ig nment hearing.·
County Coun Judge Steven L.
Story set hnnd for · both at

Brtan J. Reed/ photo

Deputy Sherif f Scot\ Trussell esco rts Craig Karr. foreground.
and Lawrence Legg. back to Jail after t he~r appearance in
Me1gs Co unty Court on Monday.
$50.1100 c·as ll. anJ apptll ntcd \\"c, Jn Karr disco,·ered hi s
Ch ri . . t np h~r TL·nogl ia h) r~p re ­ \ e hil· l ~ mi-.. -., i ng fro m his
~c nt L ~.!gg itJH..l C h a rk· ~ Knight ~ a rage ear l: Sun day r'n ornto r~prc .., cm Karr.
i n ~ . and th en hea rd an
:\ L·L·nrJ i ng to .-\ -.,.., J..,tant L' nginc rc\ \ i ng at the foot of
Pn,,ccu ting .·\ tt&lt;&gt; rnc) Rtc hard ili ' dmc11a \ . Whe nl1e went
H cJ~c-. . I . L·g~ h:1-. a p ~ ht crim - I n in \ ('-. tiga tt' th e m i~~ in g
in ;tl rec ll rli . i u d ud111~ a Sl "V. 11 ith a g un in hand.
c h a r~e PI ·r~ l oll~ tlccin ~

Tr u"ell . rcpmtt' d

tl l. tl

'

FREE
Parking
Tue ·Sat 9 to 5
Mon &amp; Friday 9-6
to be

-~

,.

tW~)

BY BRIAN J. REED

Please see Veterans, A5

Please see Recovered, A3

re . . i g n ~ d ju-.;1

Armed Pomeroy man catches ·auto thieves in act

in the U.S. Air Force in I 955.
and served in th e enli sted
ranks for three year, . after
which he received his commission as a second lieutenant, ratin g as a nav igator
and radar intercept officer. He
then entered pi lot training.
and served as a pi lot for the
remainder of his career. He ,
retired in 1975 with the rank

arrested for DUI following a
traffic stop on Ohio 143 near
Harr isonv ille on Oct. 3 I.
according to Sheriff Ralph
Trussell. Deputies found O\"cr
$ 1,000 in cash and plastic
bags containing marijuana
and pills on Stones person
during a search at the scene.
and over $1.500 and a large
quantity of pill s in hi s vehi cle .
Deputies then exe c uted a

hope to otTer computer training cla"e' ancl "ill uppl\ for
an NRA grant to hold hunter
safety cla5'es. They also pl an

MIDDLEPORT - Susan
Baker wu' named the new
fi ,cal officer fo r the Vtllage
of
Middl eport
when
MiJJieport Village Council
met Mond ay evening.
Baker. of MiJJieport . will
repl ace k anene Beers. who

donateU to the m.,u ~ cum.

Drugs, cash recovered in traffic stop
BY BRIAN J. REED

B3-4

old::~~ :~~~ol

Legion post sets
Veterans Day service
POMEROY
-Drew
Webster American Legion
Post 39 of Pomeroy will conduct a public Veterans Day
se rvi ce at the Meigs Cou nt y
Counh ouse on Thursday.
Delmar Pull ins of Long
Bottom will be the keynote
speaker at the event, to begin
at 10:55 a.m. Pullins en li sted

recetves cjfor on

.

BSERGENT@MYDAIL YSENTINEL.COM

Classifieds

----

Please see Traffic. A5

Big plans for Portland Community Center I Pon_1eroy council

Details on Page A6

Closed

Ohi o 6K I.
ODOT ha., (\()days to get ·a
pl:m in place 10 chmige the
w nfi gura tion of the intersecti o n. Aft er those (\() days,
Collin' e'timates that work
woul d begi n in January.

--~-----------------------------------

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.......

' ' ' "" ln\tl,,i h-.l·n t nh·l \IIIli

I{ l) , :.! 00-J

ODOT director discusses new traffic configuration for U.S. 33 connector

SPORTS

BY BRIAN J. REED

......

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

y·

Hurry in NOW for Great
Savings on these and
other select La-Z-Boy·
Styles! Mix or match
them! Irs your choice!

..
en 1ne

\..

WEATIIER

Anderson

Steelers kriock off ·another unbeaten
PllTSBURGH I AP I - The
Pittsburgh Steclers made cenain
there's nobody unbeaten now in
the NFL except for Ben
RoethJisberger.
The Steelers combined their
still-nawless new quarterbac k
with a tou&lt;.: h of the old - a
Jerome Bett is of ye;terye:ir and
a defem.e that was Steel Cuttaintough to dommate the
Philadelphia Eagles 27-3
Sunday and leave the NFL without an undefeated team.
The Steelers (7 - I ) ended the
Eagles" sev en -~ame winning
streak a week atter halting New
England's record 21 -garne winning streak with an equally
impressive 34-20 victory.
Pittsburgh is the only team m
NFL history to stop unbeaten
teams in con,ecu tive wee h
after each had won at lea., t six
games.
··Nobody ever thought we·d
do this:· said Hines Ward, who
'cored the tiN two touchdowns..
"'We're giving defensive cobrdi-

McMurray's wreck.
On the restart on lap 303, Earnhardt
swung his No. 8 Chevrolet to the inside of
Gordon's car, pulled alongside and shot into ·
the lead.
"Gordon was a sitting duck there at the
end," Earnhardt said. "His car was terrible.
He was lucky just to get what he got."
Gordon agreed.
•
"'Junior had a dominant car all day long
and we needed it to go· green the whole way
to have any chance." he said.
Earnhardt began to pull away when
Mears. with a tire going flat, spun into the
wall , bringing out yet another yellow flag
on lap 307.
Moments later, Robby Gordon's engine
blew. NASCAR stopped th e cars on track on
lap 310 as safety workers cleaned up the
debris from Mears' crash and the oil from
Gordon's engine failure .
Once the race resumed, NASCAR ordered
one ex tra lap of cau tion, then fi ni shed with
only the second green-w hite-c hecker overtime since the rule was adopted earlier this
year to assure fans of seeing a racing finish.
Earnhardt easily pulled away once the
green fl ag waved. running off to his sixth
win of the season and second straight
Phoenix victory. Ryan Newman, who struggled most of the day after starting from the
· pole, came on to grab second pl ace from
Jeff Gordon.
Kev in Harvi ck finished fourth , followed
by roo ki e Kasey Kahne, Jimmie Johnson,
Rusty Wallace. Tony Stewart. Bobby
Labonte and Busch.
Earnhardt is now third in the standings, 47
points behind. Johnson. whose string of
three straight -victori es ended, is 48 back.
Most of the title con tenders struggled during the race. Newman and Johnson lost laps
when they pitted for what they thought were
tl at tires. Busch. who rebounded from an
engi ne failure that left him 42nd at Atlanta,
also had to bounce back Sunday after a spinout and crew error.
" I made a mistake ear ly on with traffic
and then the crew made a mi stake running
us out of fuel."" he said . '"Then , at the end,
th ere were lapped cars running side-by-side
on th is tigh t oval. Jt "s not what we expected,
but it was a good day.""
Harvick and Kahne bumped several times
after the last restart and Kahne ran into
Harvick"s car on pit lane as they drove
toward the garage after the race. Harvick
got out of hi s ca r and said something to
Kahn e before being shooed back into his
car.
" He pu shed me all over the track," Kahne
said. " I didn't even get close to him . I don't
know why he was mad ."
Harv ick didn ' t see it quite th at way.
" He started running into us after the (last)
&lt;.:aution," Harvick said. ··1 just wanted to
stop and ask him what the problem was."

Proclamation declares
national hospice
month,A3

Redmen hoops open
season with a pmr of
wins;Bt

''

••

· Please see Auto, A6

�</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="18779">
            <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="18778">
              <text>November 8, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="941">
      <name>fink</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="114">
      <name>hawley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4567">
      <name>maye</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
