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                  <text>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

�NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2
Tuesday, November 9,

2004

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Bv JIM KRANE

trict'&gt; palm trees, minarets and
du;ty roofs. and a fire burning
on the city's edge.
Masked insurgents roamed
Fallujah streets throughout the
day. One group of four lighters, two of them draped with
belts of ammunition. moved
through narrow passageway s.
firing on U.S. forces with
small arms and mortars .
Mosque loudspeakers blared ,
"God is great, God is great." .
Just outside the Jolan and
Askari neighborhoods, Iraqi
troops deployed with U.S.
forces took over a train station
after the Americans fired on it
to drive off fighters.
The top U.S. commander in
Iraq. Gen. George Casey, predicted a "m~~or confrontation"
in the operat ion he · said was
called "ai-Fajr," Arabic for
"dawri." He told reporters in
Washington that 10.000 to
15.000 U.S. troops along with
a smaller number of Iraqi
forces 'Yere encircling the city.
Overall. the main force did
not appear to have moved
deeply into Fallujah on Monday.
the lirst full day of the operation. ·
Most U.S. units appeared to be
lined up at the edge of their
neighborhoods with some
scouts and perhaps special operators venturing inside.
The offensive is considered
the most important military
effort to re-establish government . control over Sunni
strongholds west of Baghdad
before elections in Janu ary.
"One part of the country
cannot remain under the rule

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq
- U.S. troop' backed by
thunderous air and artillery
barrages launched a ground
offensive Monday to seize
key insurgent strongholds
inside Fallujah. the city that
became Iraq's major sanctuary for .Islamic extremists
who fought Marines to a
standstill last April.
Two Marines were killed
when their bulldozer flipped
over into the Euphrates near
Fallujah. and a · military
spokesman estimated 42
insurgents were killed across
the city in bombardment and
skirmishes before the main
assault began.
Hou rs after starting the
offensive. U.S. tanks and
Humvees from the Ist
Infantry Division entered the
northeastern Askari neighborhood , the first ground assault
into an insurgent bastion.
In the northwestern area of
the city. U.S. troops advanced
slowly after dusk on the Jolan
neighborhood. a warre n of
alleyways where Sunni militants have dug in . Artillery,
tanks and warplanes pounded
the district\ northem edge. softening the defenses and try ing to
set off any bombs or boobytraps
planted by the militants.
Marines were visible on
rooftops in .lolan . This
reporter. located at a U.S.
camp near the city, saw orange
explosions lighting up the dis-

AP Photo

A nightscope image made from TV of US and Iraqi soldiers outside Fa\lujah hospital , Iraq , Monday. US forces stormed into
western districts of Fal\ujah early on Monday, seizing the main
city hosp ital and securing two key bridges over the Euphrates
River in what appeared to be the first stage of the long-expected assault on the rebel stronghold.

Thesday, Nov. 9
RUTLAND -Leading
Creek Conservancy District,
special meeting, 4 p.m.. contract negotiations.
-Chester
CHESTER
Township Board of Trustees
regular monthly meeting 7
p.m. , Chester Town Hall.
Wednesday, Nov. 10
POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners meet
at I p.m. Wednesday, instead
of Thursday. du e 10 Veterans
Day holiday.

Clubs and
organizations

AP Photo

Insurgents. using small arms and mortars, launch an attack on U.S. forces in Fallujah, Iraq, Monday. American troops fought
their way into the western outskirts of Fallujah on Monday, seizing a hospital and two oridges over the Euphrates River in the
first stage of a major assault on the insurgent stronghold.
of assassins ... and the rem- half that number left m
nants of Stoclt.lam Hussein's October, but many drihed back.
regime," Defense Secretary
Some 5,000 U.S. Marines
Donald H. Rumsfeld said. He and soldiers were massed in
predict.ed "there aren't going the desert on Fallujah's north be large numbers of civilians ·ern edge. They were joined by
killed and certa inly not by 2,000 to 4,000 Iraqi troops.
U.S. forces ."
Rumsfeld called reports of
A doctor at a clinic in some Iraqi recruits not showing
Fallujah, Mohammed Amer, up to tight "an isolated probreported 12 people were · lcm," and Casey said the nokilled. Seventeen others. shows "did not have a signifiincluding a 5-year-old girl cant impact" on the operation.
and a I0-year-old boy, were
Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad
wounded. he said.
Allawi, who gave the green
About 3,000 insurgent s . light for the offensive. also
were barricaded in Fallujah. ·announced a round-the-clock
U.S. commanders have esti- curfew in Fallujah and anothmated. Casey said some insurgents slipped away bm others
"have moved in '' U.S. military qfficials believe 20 percent of Fallujah's fighters are
foreigners, who are believed
to be followers of Jordanian
militant Abu Musab alZarqawi.
Casey said 50 to 70 percent
of the city's 200,000 residents
have fled . The numbers are in
dispute, however, with some
putting the population at
300,000. Residents said about

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT.

THE

, HOLIDAY
SEASOtt!

With your business
advertised in the ~~~~

BIG BEND

eomeroy

Daily Sentinel

U!I OL !I I

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' 1"11111

•••• THE PROOF ••••
GROCERIES
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SMALLER STORES -10.00
LOW OVERHEAD -11.00
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week siege. The length and
ferocity of the battle depends
greatl y on whether. the bulk of
the defenders decide to risk
the destruction of the city or
try to slip away .in the face of
overwhelmin g force . Foreign
fighters may .;hoose-to fi ght to
the end. but it's unclear how
many of the,m are in the city.
Rumsfeld said in,urge nts
would likely put up a tough
tight. "Listen these folks are
determined. These are killers.
They chop people's heads oil
They're getting money from
around the world. They're getting rem1its." he told reporters.

sm UP TO 40 !. ON
YOUR GROCERY BILL.

SAVE·A·L01
'It,.., ,.700 WestMaig ,St..

er nearby insurgent stronghold, Ramadi .
"The people of Fallujah
have been taken hostage ...
and you need to free them
from their grip," he told Iraqi
soldiers who swarmed around
him during a visit to the main
U.S. base outside Fallujah.
"May they go to hell' '' the
soldiers shouted. and Allawi
replied: "To hell they will go."
U.S. commanders have
avoided any public estimate
on how long it may take to
&lt;:apture Fallujah. where insurgents fought the Marines to a
standstill last April in a three-

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Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 22nd
Call Dave or Brenda
. 992-2155.

.

kYY~u~~uuuu~~~~~.d

Saturday, Nov. 13
BURLINGHAM
Burlingham
Modern
Woodmen
'Camp
Thanksgiving Dinner. 5 p.m.
Saturday, at the hall. Camp to
provide turkey and ham.
Bring covered dish . Friends
and neighbors invited.
CHESTER
- District
friendship meeting of District
13. Daughters of America. I
p.m. at hall. Potluck dinn·er at
noon. Members bring items
for auction.
Thesday, Nov. 9
GALLIPOLIS
Fibron1yalgia Support Group
sponsored by Holzer Medical
Center ~md Arthriti s Foundation,
5:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the HMC
Education and Conference
CenteL More information. call
Missi Ross. 446-5121
Wednesday, Nov. 10

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Meigs County Fire Chiefs
Association will meet at 7
p.m . at the Tuppers PlainsChester Water District OtTice
conference room . All Meigs
·county fire chiefs, EMA,
EMS , Sheriff's office and
Commissioners
invited .
Questions call Jeff Newell,
(740) 591 -7 574 or Jon Burke ,
985-3459.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastem Athletic Boosters will
meet at 6:30p.m. Wednesday
at Eastern 1-li gh School.
Thursday, Nov, II
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453. F&amp;AM will meet
at the hall. There will be election of ofticers. Refre shments.
POME,ROY - Alpha Iota
Mast ers, 6:30 p.m. at th e
home of June VanVranken .
She will present the program.
Friday, Nov. 12
POMEROY
The
Widow 's Fellowship will
meet at noon at the Wild
Horse Cafe.
Monday, Nov. 15
ATHENS - A Region 14
youth council meeting will be
held at 9 it.m. at the Athens
County Department of jobs
and Family Services on State
Route 13 in Chauncey.

Church services
Friday, Nov. 12
LONG BOTTOM - The
Glory land Bel ievers will be at
the Faith Full Gospel Church
at Long Bottom. 7 p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Revival
services will be held at the

Reedsville United Methodiq
Church through Sunday. Eri&lt;:
Ross will be the evangelist and
there will be special singing.
Sunday, Nov. 14
POMEROY
Community Thanksgiving
Service of Meigs Ministerial
Association, 7 p.m. Sacred
Heart Church. Rev. Jay
Tatum. Chaplain at Holzer
Medical Center will be the
guest speaker. Other pastors
in Ministerial Association
will pa11icipate in service.
Monday, Nov. 15
RACINE - A spe&lt;:ial program on women's health and
restoring your natural hormonal balance will be presented at. 6 p.m. at the Mt.
Moriah Ch.urch of God on
Mile Hill Road. For mo re
information call 949-8003.

Other events
Thesday, Nov. 9
POMEROY - T.ll . Clinic
will be open until 7 p.m. Fur
more infonnation C&lt;~\992-3722.

Birthdays
Sunday, Nov. 14
RACINE - Bertha Foster
will be 87 years old on Nov.
14. Cards may be sent to her
at her home. 34292 Sorden
Road. Racine, Ohio 45762
CHESHIRE Delmar
Quickel will celebrate his
90th birthday from I to 4
p.m. at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis . He has requested
there be no gifts.

Tuesday, November 9 , 2004

Harassment victim can fight
back by marshaling her facts
mg. hu1 not all do Rc·ad 1111:
DLAR AllllY: lllty la,hc'
"'th a 'Act nomlle lor '~"''fi·

DEAR ABBY: A kmale
reader.
" Humiliated
1n
Birmingham." wrote that a
vendor had come to her place
of employment and made
lewd &lt;:nmments to her. After
learning that the vendor
would be training her on ., oftware she'd be l"ing for her
recent promotion. she reported the incident to her superior.
Four days later, she was
demoted, publicly humil iated.
and felt 'forced to resign.
I am a former human
resources manager. Ahby. and
that woman should know thC~t
she was the victim of ho stile
environment harassmenl and
subjected to retaliC~tion b) her
employer for reportin g it.
Most harassment policies pmhibit third-part y hara"ment
aml retaliation .
"Humiliated" should creC~te
a timeline of the events that
occurred, and then consult a
lawyer or visit her state human
rights office. The documentation should include when the
harassment occurred, where it
occurred. and specifically
what lewd comments were
made by the vendor. It would
al so he helpful to note 1\hat
she did when it uccurred, 'uch
as telling the vendor that it
made her uncomfortable or
whether she walked away.
She may also want to locate
a copy of the company's
harassment policy and·any rel-

Gtll)
lttv.)

rl.'ul!llnll'IH.ltn~ d

cr

ltl

kmah:

" Humili.ttl'U

ill

Blrllli11gh;u11. .. You chopped
lhc hall. All) de&lt;:enl :IIIPI'IlC).
male 1&gt;r lcmak. ' hould he
empathetic ;llld hC~rd 11 or~ in~
in rw·-... uin~ tile L~t..,L' l nk..,...,

Dear
Abby

the

pcr~o,on

htrin!l

t ilL· .tl tornL· ~

ununnfort;:thk \\ ith a pantc
inrluding. if otn~ thing "'a" in
v. riting . It 'lmuld aho Pl! uotcd ular ~t.: rH..lt:r. tilt: gemk 1 pj tht:
if anyone witne,et.lthe hara"- HltllrtlL'J "huuiJ lllll ~ :t &lt;.:ritl'ment or the pub lic humiliation . rioll. - J)lc\'f\IS 1-ll'( iHES.
After documen ti ng her PLAINFIELD. 1\'D.
story. this agency will likely
DEAR DEN:--1\S : You·re
file a complaint on her hchall ri~ht: I wa~ \vrong. I dJ1lllogill·
with the Equal Fmpluymcn t for "ugg.L·...,ting that a fema le
0 pp()flll 11 j t y
( ' IJ Ill 111 j ...,~j l l ll lo.tW)t5 might ich:ntif~ !IHIIL'
I EEOC) and wi II ,·o nta&lt;:t her ..,tron~d) \\ ith lil'r \ltU.tllUII
cmployl:r to ohta1n tllc1r '-.to r~ than a m;tle \;111 ver. Rc·"d on
ahout what h ;,~pencd. Sin&lt;:e
DE.-\ R ,\BilY: I. IIH!. " ' ' '
it's dollbtful Hn im~"llgatinn h ~ tra, ,cJ h\ J \'enJnr &lt;II '" nrJ,.. .
h) the &lt;:OII]Jldll) '"'' complet- The receptionist - a m:~n -ed. and " llum i\i;JtcJ" ""' \\ilnl'...,..,cd it. !lc empo\'t.:rcLi
retal iated :H!Jin'L the a~cncv me . :~nd I c;dlcd the \endor\
'
'
will \on k unfa"1rahly upun ho" told told him whe~l h;,d
thi s. "Hum iliated" may cd"' happened . It tur11cu out there
want to con . ., itl er wh;tt rL'"olu- hac\ been other Cllm plalll i'
tJon ' he i~ took111g for. "uch ;1" C~huut the lllC~n . ·- C.-\~1\llb:
be'ing r~'llli·cJ to the prllnHII- 1\ I'ALIFORN .IA
·e J pnsition anJ heing traineJ
Df-:A" CAM\1lf: : Than~
hy " dilfer~n t individual. - you for rointing out .lhcll \\hen
SYMPt\THF.TJC IN LL\- h~If~l~"mcnt llCl"lll"'"-. it\ oftcn
WOOD. K,\:-.1
part ur a pollt~rn nf hl'll~J\ i( 11".
DEAR SYMP.-\THF.TIC
/Jear ;\bby is written !Jy
Thank ) uu for yllur helpfu l .'\bigail ~au Buren, also
letter. It \ one tha t shou ld he· known as .lem1ne Phillip,, and
c Ii ppcd and ""·ed h1 an) one was jinmded by her motl1er.
entering the wurkforc~ C~nd l'au/ine Phillips. Hrite IJear
anyone who own-. ;1 hu~inl·-.,...,. Ahby {1/ w•·w. IJearAhh1•. mm
NJ. Box fl9.J.JIJ.' /,m
eva nt in format ion re garding Mo:-.1 hu:-.ine:-.:-.e..; ha\"L' ~exual
hara:-.
.
.
ment
pol
iciL·~
in
writAngelel,
C'A 901169.
the promotion and demotion.
j,

o;

L!~~~~Zr Cl,~~ b~~~~~sw~~~~:r ~:E~~r~~hr~~~~l National HoJne Care and Hospice

L1ttle Fr1end by Donna Tartt
was reviewed by Ann Rupe at
a . recent meeting of the
Middleport Ltterary Club
held at the Pomeroy Library.
Rupe said the author was
born·and reared in Mississippi
and as a chid showed literary
talent. Her first book, "The
Secret'' wa; putilished in
1992 and was a novel about
the murder of a student by his
classmates at a small college
in Vermont. Nearly a decade
later she released her second
book "the Little Friend.
The long ·and complex
novel begins with a prologue
that describe s how nine-year
old Robin Dufresnes was
found hanging from a tupelo
tree in hi s family's front yard.
The cruel death of this little
boy virtually destroyed his
family. The rest of the book
takes place 12 years later,

Harn et. who was a baby at
Rupe described the atmosth e tihle of the murder. . phere of the town as evil, and
decides to avenge her brother. commented that the book was
She becomes convinced that lengthy and complicated andi
a ne'er-do-well redneck nvolved too many characters
named Danny Ratliff was and incidents for the reader to
re sponsible for the murder. remember easily.
and she and her friend Hely
Seventeen members were
Hull set out to avenge the present and answered roll call
crime. Their single-minded by describing an unlikely
plan involvessome highly friendship each had develbizarre and unlikely events. oped. A book exchange was
including stealing a cobra and held and the next meeting
ge tting into the Ratliff broth- was announced for Nov. 17
ers' drug activities. ·
· ad t the library with Olita
The author weaves togeth- Heighton as hostess. Bet sy
er the story of Harriet's self- Parsons and Jeanne Bowen
declared mission with the will present a program based
description of the life of her on "The Bronte Myth" by
ex tended family in the small Lucasta Miller (2001). "The
southern town . Because Bmntes" by Phyllis Bentley
Harriet's parents were emo- (1969 ), C~nd "The Life of
tionally removed by the death Charlotte
Bronte"
by
of their son. Harriet was Elizabeth Gaskell ( 1857).
raised by her matriarch grandPat Holter was the hostess
mother. a black maid. and her for the meeting.

Month z's declared z'n Pomer011)J
·

Free health clinic offered for uninsured women
ATHENS - Area women
without health insurance coverage are invited to register for
free Pap smear screenings and
clinical breast exams to be provided next month at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital's For
Women Only clinic.
O'Bleness will sponsor the
clinic Saturday froin 9 a.m.
until noon in O'Bieness
Medi&lt;:al Office Building
Suite B. Mi&lt;:hael J Clark ,
D.O .. Jack M. Ramey. D.O ..
or Jane Broecker. M.D .. will
perform the Pap tests and
clinical breast exam s.
Area women without
health insurance, including
Medicare or Medicaid, may
make an appointment for
the clinic by cal ling (7 40 )
592-9300. The For Women

Only clinic is by appointment only; no walk-ins will
be accepted.
According to coordinators of
the event, Susan Wakefield .
O'Bieness' nursing staff education and community healtl1 promotions coordinator and Karen
Robinson, R.N., C.E.N.-A ..
S.A.N.E., nurse manager of
O'Bieness' emergency dep&lt;mment and a coordinator of the
event, For Women Only supports O'Bleness' commitment to
Women\ Health Month by providing healthcare tO women wh(•
might not be able to alford it.
"Many women who do not
have health insurance coverage might not receive annua l
Pap test and clini cal breast
exams because they cannot
afford them. However. these

screenings are crucial in
detecting potentially fatal diseases such as &lt;:ervical and
breast cancer, " Robinson said.
Referrals for free mammograms will he issued to
women at the clinic based
individually on the atte11ding
physician's recommendation&gt; .
The mammograms wi ll be
performed in O'Bieness' radiology
department
by
Radiology A"ociates of
Athens and O'Bieness.
O'Bieness has offered the
For Women Only cl inic ,dur'
ing Women's Health Month
for the past Jour years. The
hospital has also provided
simi lar clini cs in previous
years. For mnre informatiilll
about For Wnmen Only. call
(740) 592 -9300.

--

Charlene Hoefllch / photo

National Home Care and Hospice Month recognizes health care professionals who prov1de tn ·
home health. hosp 1ce. and support1ve services to the nation·s elderly. disabled and 1nf rm and
works to heighten .public awareness of this alternative to institutlonalizatiOil. Pomero) Mayor
John Musser signed a proclamation Mond ay 8es1gnating November as National llOme Care
Month in Pomeroy. Pleasant Valley Home Health. Pr1vate Duty and Hosp1ce personne fro~'
Pleasa nt Valley joining him for the signing were from the left. Trina Hannan. director: T1a
Wooten, a·s sistant director: Jane Staley Ho me hea lth team leader. and Debb ie MitChell. pnvate
duty team leader. For more information on the programs call 992-6,916 or 1·800-7 46-0076.

I

Recovered
from Page A1
searc h warrant of hi s rc&gt;rdenc e and found 18 pounds
of
marijuan"
there.
Trussell said .
In addition to the DUI
charge. Stone. 4 7. of
Carpen ter Hill Road , was
c har ged with havin g &lt;.1
weapon under di sabilit y. a
fourth - d~ g ree fe lony: possession of a Sc·hedulc ' II
drug 12.1 and a htdf

Percocet tablets). a sec-· oelcd prescription hottle
ond-&amp; grce misdemeanor: with 83 mixed pill s inside.
two count s of possession according to the comof Schedule IV dru gs (22 pla in t against Stone filed
Valium tablets and I cl last week hy Deputy Don
• Xanax tablets!. second - \1ohlel'.
'
The
co mplaints filed
degree . misdemeanor; :
possession of' marijuana . a again~\ Stone in Mei gs
minor misdemeanor: two Count) Court shu\\ a pre cqunts of' tamperi1Jg with viou~ drug abu!--.e UJn\ i cdru"gs . a third -degree tion. Stone 1s o,c hcdu\cd tc1
fe lony. and t\Vo counts of appear at &lt;i preliminar)
escape.
fourth -deg ree hearing- on Friday heforc
.lu.dgc Stenn L. Story. He
felonies.
-The dru g tampering is free nn a personal ·reL" .charge relate's to St&lt;in,· oglll/ancc honLi" lhrnu gh
"llcgc dly hav ing an unla- the c ourt .

.. .

Chaise &amp; Sofa
Loveseat and Sofa
..l)llllJ.!,CI".\'

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5

�-

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Ccurt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress .shall make no larv respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of tire
people peaceq_bly to assemble, and to petition
tire Go1'emment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
TOll.ty ts Tue,d.ty. N"
day of 2004. There are
52 d.tys left 111 tlw
Tod.ty\ tg 1 t)!ht 111 History :
On No' \1. I\IK\1. ctHnmumst E.tst Gcrm,l\ly threw open liS
borders. aii\&gt;V.tllg clliLens to tr.tvel ftecly Ill the West: joyous
Germans Janced .ttop the Bctlin Wall
On tilts d.tle
In 1872. ftre destroyed nearly 1.000 butldmgs in Boston.
In 1918. Genmny\ Kaiser Wilhelm II announced he would
abdic.tle He then tled to the Netl1erlands.
In 1935. Untied Mme Workers Pres1dent John L. Lewis and
other l.tbor leaders formed the Committee for Industrial
Organ ll&lt;lliOn.
In 19.18. Nazi' looted .1nd burned synagogues as well as
Jewtsh-ov. ned stores and houses in Germany and Austria in
wh.tt became known as ""Kristallnacht.""
In 195.1. author-poet Dylan Thomas died 111 New York at age

:19
In I\163. twin disasters struck Japan as some 450 miners
\\ere killed 111 a coal-dust cxploston. and 160 people dted in a
train crash
In 1965. the ~recll Northeast bl.1ckout occu rred as several
states and parts "at Canada were htt by a series ol power fat lures lasting up to 13 112 hours.
In 19!\7. a Saturn 5 rocket carrying .tn unmanned Apollo
spacecraft bl&lt;tsted oft from Cape Kennedy on a successful test
lltght.
In 1970. former French president Charle' De Gaulle dted at
age 79
In 1988. former Attorney Gene1al John N. Mitchell, a major
figure m the Watergate scandal. dted in Washington at age 75.
Ten years ago A day after Republicans won maJoritieS m
both the House and Senate, President Clinton and the GOP
pledged cooperation. even as they started formmg bailie lines
over thetr irreconcllable differences
F1ve years ago. With fireworks. concerts and a huge party at
the landmark Brandenburg Gate, Germany celebrated the IOth
anmversary ot the fall of the Berlin Wall. The flight data
recorder from EgyptAir Flight 990 was recovered from the
Atlantic Ocean and shipped to a National Transportation
Safety Board laboratory in Washington.
One year ago: Japanese Pnme Mtmster Junich1ro Kotzumt 's
ruling bloc won a maJonly 111 the country's parliamentary
elections. Three-11me Top Fuel champion Shirley Muldowney,
63, ended her 30-year ractng career with a loss tn the second
round of the Auto Club NHRA Ftnals at Pomona Raceway in
· Cahforma Comtc actot At1 Carney died in Chester. Conn .. at
age 85
)
Thought for Today ""All hfe is an expenment." - Ohvcr
Wendell Holmes Jr. Supreme Court JUStice ( 1841- 1935).

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My po,l-election adv1ce to
Democrats is: Go to church.
Don't go to "get religion,"
althougb it mtght be good
for your soul. Just go. in the
first instance, to "get" reltgion, t.e.. understand what
goes on in the heads and
hearts of those who devoutly
believe in God and how it
affects their views of the
world. It will help you politically.
I have the dtstinct impression that many secular
Democrats bel1eve that hidin
most
den
away
Evangelical
Protestant
churches IS a secret room
filled w1lh whtte Klan sheets
or maybe even Swastika
armbands.
One very smart Jewish
friend of mine. ret1ecung on
Pres1dcnt
Bush's open
expression of religious faith,
said. "I feel for the first time
that I'm a stranger 111 my own
country. I'm scared '"
Similarly, New York
Titncs co lumm sl Thomas
Fnedman, next to Charles
"Krauthammer (the owner of
the highest I.Q on the
nal10n's op-ed pages), wrote
last week that "my problem
with the Chnsttan fundamentalists supporting Mr
Bush 1s not the1r spiritual
energy or the fact that I am
of a dtfferent faith. It ts the
way in whtch he and they
have used thpt relig1ous
energy to promote division
and intolerance at home and
abroad."
It's nul just Jews who ate
conv inced that Evangelicals
represent btgotry. repress ton
of women and gays. the tt illmph of faith over sc1ence
and the abolition of the separation of church and state. I
know lots of mainline
Protestants. secular human-

Morton
Kondarcke

ists and casual Catholtcs
who think the same thmg.
Now, tt's true , most
Evangelicals
probably
would reverse Roe v. Wade
and maybe outlaw abortton .
They certainly favor a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Many but certainly not all oppose embryonic stem-cell
research . Some kooks want
to ban evolution from
schoolbooks.
, I'm not for a mmute suggesting that Democrats
adopt these v1ews. Nor
should they stop being
appalled at the likes of Sen.elect Tom Coburn. R-Okla ..
who advocated the death
penalty for doctors who perform abortions, or Sen.-elect
Jim DeMml, R-S C., who
said gays and women who
are pregnant out of wedlock
should be barred from teaching school
What I am saying IS that
Democrats need to undetstand where Evangelicals arc
coming from. what George
Bush's lallh is all about and
stop bemg etthet ten ified by
ot (often) b1goted again&gt;!
wh;Jlthey unagme conservatiVe Christians are all about
A prime example of condescendmg bigotry was the
w1del~ read Oct. 17 New
York 'rimes Magazine hatchet-job
agatn st
Bush.
"Without a Doubt. " by Ron
Suskind, which ltkened

Bush's "faith -based presidency" to the Islamic
extremist movement.
If fatr-mmded secular
Democrats went to church
- they are open to the public, by the way - here's
some of what they'd learn :
Le sson No. I: Far more
than abortiOn, evolution or
homosexualit y, Evangelical
Christiamty is about love.
forgi veness.
redemption,
charity. humtlity. hope and
self-sacrifice.
The best Evangelicals I
know truly change lives they !Urn around people who
arc addtcled to drugs and
pornography They give the
despairing and the guilt-ndclcn 1cason to pe1 severe
Th~y
restore marriages .
They transform cnmtnals 111
pnson
They try to follow Jesus.
who. if they s!Udted him a
!tttk . 11 &lt;&gt; Democrat could
possibly be scared of. I think
tim is wh,lt Gush's faith IS all
about - not arrogance or
mtndless cettitude. hut
humility and a sense of duty.
Nu.
2
Lesson
Evange!icab dre scare.d. too
They are scared of the fruits
of seculansm imd the deteri"
oration ol the culture in
which they're tryin g to rai&gt;e
thci1 children. Ot hip-hop
Iynes that encuu1 age 1ape
and mut der Of PG-13
movies .1nd "'lam1ly hour"
Sitcoms that tell chtltlten that
tf thev're not h~l\ tng sex at
16, tliey're ou t ot 1t' Of the
scuzzy showbiz people who
olten surround Democrats.
I'd guess tha t most
E~c~ngcltc,tls are "homophobtc. ' Some are so tn the btgoted sense. hut many more
m the sense that wh,ll they
know of the "g,\y ltlc'iyle"'
scares them And they also

Tuesday, November 9, 2004

' ·-

•

are scared (!think, wrongly)
that the already-ballered
institution of marnage will
be demolished if committed
gay COL1ples are permilled to
share in it.
·
But. let's face it, the issue .
of gay marriage would not
have been on the national
agenda this year 10 help"
Republicans 1f Marg~ret.
Marshall. ch1cf JUStice ol the
Massac husetts
Supreme:
Court. and three of her col- .
leagues had not tried to over~
turn centuries of custom and
law by I" ' tct al tiat.
Amenc·. qs gradually were
becom11 1~ mote tolerant of
gay' In- " few yems, civil
unions v.ould have been no
btg deal. And in a few
decades, I think. "civil marnage" might have become
available to gays
But four at rogant judges in;
Sen John Kerry's home slate
dectded to leapfrog the '
democratiC ptocess, and they
created a mighty backlash. ·
A long with Kerry's mcoher-·
ence on the war tn Iraq, that
ktlled him
Lesson
No.
3
for
Democrats . Respect teligton .
by nomiiJ.tlmg a preSidential
c.1ndtdate who "gets 11."
Kerry gave the Impression of
takmg tt. Ylstting AfricanAmettcan churches only late
111 the cc~mpa1gn and. seemmgly. tor poltllcal putposes .
Sen Joe Lieberman, DConi1 . an Orthodox Jew:
dearly dtd "get" it.
And a !tn.tl le"on Don't•
Wt)l ry. Bush ~~ not going to'
turn this country mto a
theonacy. He JUst wants .
God\ help. And we should
pray he gets 11

Kor1&lt;tmcke "

( Mr11 1011
nectllll'f ed!)m

lire "''"
Hill. J

'1"'1"''

nf Roll Call.
of Capllal

Local Briefs

Howard W. Thoma, Sr•
POMEROY -Howard W. Thoma, Sr., 85, of Pomeroy,
passed away on Nov. 7, 2004.
He was born at Bunker Hill on Oct. 27, 1917, son of the late
George and Eas1er Ellen Hauck Thoma.
Surviving are h1s daughters and sons-in-law: Bernice (John)
Sarver of Hatfield, Ind., Sharon (Jerry) Roush of Pomeroy,
and Patricta (Richard) Wynn of Calhoune, Ga.; a son, Howard
William Thoma, Jr., Newark; 12 grandchildren and seven
great grandchildren
•
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by his wife,
Evelyn Thoma; a grandson, John Alan Sarver: brothers,
Charles and William Thoma, sisters, Dora Holley, Bertha
Tulga, Margaret Sinclair and Genevieve Ater
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at
Acree Funeral Home in Middleport. Services Will be held at I
p.m. on Wednesday, Nov 10,2004, with Rev. Sam Bayse officiatmg. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery.

Wilbur H. Rowley, Jr.
MIDDLEOPORT- Wilbur H. Rowley, Jr, 64, of Ironton
died at his home on Sunday, Nov 7, 2004 surro unded by his
family fo llowing an extended· illness.
The Middleport native was born April 2, 1940, the son of
the late Wilbur H. Rowley, Sr. and Matilda Hunt' Rowley of
Pomeroy. In addttton lo h1s Father. he was preceded in death
by a sister, Laura Harrison.
He was the husband of Charlotte Murray Rowley. who survives. He graduated from Middleport High School in 1958
and was a member of the Stale ChampiOnship Baseball Team
of 1957. He was a carpenter in the Lawrence County area for
18 years buildmg over 150 homes. In 1984. he began working for General Heatmg and Air Conditioning ,where he stayed
until illness forced him to retire in 1998.
In addllton to his w1fe and mother, he is survived by two
so ns and daughters-m-law, Michael and Denise Rowley of
Columbus and CW4 Roderick and Janice Rowley of
Kitzingen, Germany. one daughter and son-in-law, Angela
,md Keith Kettel of Tipp City. one s1ster and brother-in-law,
Kale and Jim Parker of Pasco, Wash.; ctght grandchtldren,
Heather (Jeff) Donahoe. Benjamm Rowley, Ashley Rowley,
Amber (Brian) Bellamy, Jordan Kettel, Seth Kettel, Jeremy
Rowley and Nicholas Rowley; two great grandchi ldren ,
Ethan Alexander and Tyler Donahoe, and two great-grandchi ldren to arrive m the spnng; and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be cond ucted at 2 p.m. on ednesday,
Nov. I0. 2004. at Ftsber Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
Pastor Art Marcum officiating. Bunal will follow 111 Beech
Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday, from noon until time of
service at 2 p m. at the funeral hoine.
Vis1tat1on was held at the Tracy Brammer Funeral Home in
Ironton on Tuesday. Nov. 9.
In lieu of llowers. memorial co ntributions are requested to:
Com mumt y Hospice. 1538 Central Ave .. Ashland, Ky 41101.
On-ltne condolences may be sent to www fisherfuneralhomes.com

Deaths
Dallas Walker

A victim if conscience
Many nations ate hells on
earth for political and reli . gious pnsoners Among
them: Iran . North Korea,
Cuba and - one of the very
worst - Uzbekistan und er
the ferocious rule of Islam
Karimov. Recently, Bntain
removed its ambassador to
that country. Cra1g Murray.
because of a leaked memorandum by Murray to the
Foreign Office protesting
brutahty so v1le two pnsoners were "boded to death "
The London edit1on of the
Ftnanctal Tunes - wtth
additiOnal reporting a nd
commentary in its Amen~an
edition - . broke the story on
Oct. II : "Uzbek offtctals are
tortun ng pnsoners to extract
mformation (about reported
terronst operaltons). which
is supp lied to the U.S. and
passed through 1ts Central
Intelligence Agency to the
U.K .. says Mr Murray."
The story then quoted the
former ambassador's confidential Foreign Office report
(seen by a Fmanctal Times
reporter) "' I ilave to . deal
with hundreds of individual
cases ot political or reltgtous
prisoners in Uzbekistan, and
I have mel very few where
torture , as del ined 111 .the
United Nations Convention
(agamsl Torture). was not
employed."
Responding to the memorandum, the Bntish gove rnment satd that ts has never
used torture to get mforma tion nor '"mcited others to do
so.' But - stmilar to v.hal
American defendets of torture have said about tts
alleged use 111 secret Cll\
mterrogation centers - Ton y
Blair\ gove rnment added:

ncrs 111 the war on terron~m

It ts not easy lLl rchut the
thai 1f Lo1ture (\lll
int'eed llht,lln tnfnrmauon
that Wtll sase iii'Cs&gt;11 would
be tncspLHl,blc not to use tt
Not alltesults ofturture ate
reltahle: espectally when the
pa1n ts so severe that the VICtim v.tll say .mything lL&gt; stop

argLttnent

Nat
Hentoff

it, but some torture . its ad\'0-

"We have to bear in mind
the need for mtelltgence for
counter-lerronsm to arrest
lhredts to Brittsh live s
Where th ere was reltable
mtelltgence with a dtrell
bearing on terrorist threah tl
would be trresponstble to
ignore 1t out of hand_"
On the B BC on Oct 15_
Steve Crawshaw, dtrector of
the London of ftce of Human
Rights Watch , evtsceraled
that rationale: "You can't
wash your hands and say we
didn't torture, but wi ll use
what comes out of torture."
The conneclton between the
of
torture
chambers
Uzbektstan and the contes"ons supphed to the CIA by
that govemment was underlined by Phtlip Stephens 111 the
Oct 19 Ftnancml Tunes·
"Uzbekistan provtdes a \ital
base for U.S. operauons 111
netghbonng Afgham stan U.S.
tinancial aid (to Uzbekistan )
provides a bulwark a~mnst
Russian mfluence "
Because
we
support
Pre,tdent Kar1mov"s govcmment. we - as an Oct 1!\
Financial Times ecli1onal
pot Ills out- have ""gtven lithe
confidence to

~II

a· long-11.111agam~t 111ternal

ning c~mpai gn
di»idents as pan or the campatgn agdmst AI Qaed.t ..
Uzbekistan .md the Un ited
States. accordingly. drc p.ut-

catcs claim. has produced
accurate vital mformat1on
Wurth considering - as
Repuhltcan le.tdershtp in the
House supports scndtng
detamees to countnes known
lor torturing pnsoners. proVIded thos~ countnes gtvc socalled "assullinces" they'll
re . . tl a in themsehes is
Fmanc1al Ttmes' Phtltp
Stephens' dllalysts of this
moral dtlemma. After having
been sacked as ambassador to
U;bektstan. Cr,ug Murray
described htmsell as "' a .vic11111 of conscience." What
Stephens has done " collnecl
con-.cience w1th what hi story
l1.ts sl1ov. n about the results
of pat tnerships wtth tort LIICrs ·
'" We has e been hete
belore. The same log1c (o f
the Brtttsh Fotctgn OllicCJ
saw th e U.S sup port the
Talibc~n 111 AJgl1,\lllstan cllld.
.tlong wnh the Europe.ms.
drm S.tdda Ill H ussc 111 ,Jgc~tns I
fran . How dearl y we ha ve
s1nce pdu..l tor ..,uch gcopoht -

IC d] re.tll'. m "
The war on tcrrun sm. he
CO!l (lllll l"\,
"het:OITlL'\ the
excu~e for a fo1'1.~1gn polit: y
that 11, a1 once 1tnmoral lind
ulttmatcly self-det"eattng Do
not the s,1111e po llltc,tl btde"
no\\
propp1ng LIP Mr.
K(_nllllll\ tttnd hi . . reg:1me 111
Uthck"t:n1) proclaim that
H.:rn.:...,..,lotl h tL'Iron'lm\

he"'

tncnd tneaung condntons
that le.td to lerronsm ) wht le .
ftcedum tis most lethal '
enemy' I could have sworn
Tony Bla1r ilas said as much
a dozen time . . '
So h,1s George W Bush
lm convinced the pres1de111
bcltcvcs that. and so do I
But it we ,ue to m.tke a credible c.tse for freedom in
C\lUntncs Wllllouttl. how can
we contllltte tu work With an

Islam Karimov "'
A February report by the
International lnslttule for
St1 .ttegtc Studies. according
to the Feb 17 Independent
111 London. conclttdes that ·
the Umted St.1tes has been·
ustng techmques outlawed .
under the I':lH4 Convention
Against Tortute'" ttl C IA
111terro g c~tton of AI Qaeda
det:nnces. And "U .S. dUlhorJilC 'I have IL.'turned 01 sent a
number of prisoners fot iur-·
thcr inte rrog.ttion to coutltnes where there are strong ·
gro unds to ""peel they wil l
be tortured.'"
As the lmtll ute for
Slr.ttcg1c Studte&gt; states. the
Untted States '" cc~n no longer
'"a" ume a htgh moral position'" or be credible about the
values' we wam - .md hope ,
- to sec take root 111 repres- .
.., j\IC ~OUlliJICS

lgnori ng th e screams of the
hot nl1 cally tortured doesn't
keep our hands from betng
'tat ned Wllh their blood
( Nm l-lem o!J ;, """'"'"'t!/, ~ 1enuHned

aurlwntr 011 th e ,
Ftnr Amuulmenf m1d tl1e

Br/1 of
\t'l

Rt ,'ilfl

eta!

and

hfJn/.. \,

11/tllror

oj

mdudmg

"The War un rh e /Jt/1

o/

Rtg/1!, u11d· rit e Ci&lt;lrhenng ·
R e.\1\ICIIIU!" rSet '{' /1

I-'m 1. 2003 ).

-~fo rt e\

MASON , W.Va. - Dallas Walker, 84, Mason, W.Va .. died
on Nov. 7, 2004, at St Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
He was born on Jan. 15, 1920. in Pittsburgh, Pa, son of the
late Stenl and Ora Wolfe Walker.
Ht s wife of 62 years, Ruth Walker, survives.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 10,
2004. at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, with
Rev. Ronda! Browmng officiatmg. Burial will follow at
Sunnse rvlemonal Gardens in Letart, W.Va.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home.

Veterans
from Page A1
of MaJor ind senior pilot. and
moved to Athens
He worked as the contract
admmi strator of and tlew test
tl ight s for the Av1onics
Engmeering Center at Ohio
Univer~1ty. and went on to
become administrator for the
villages of McComb and
Georgetown; Ohio. after
which he sersed as ge neral
manager of the Brown County
Rural Water Association.
He moved to Me1gs County
111 1999. dnd h.ts worked as a
substitute teacher at Meigs High
School for five yem&gt;. He and

his v.:•fe, Vicki, live 111 Chester
Thursday 's ceremony w1ll
honor veterans of all wars.
and is open to the public.
Church bells will ring for f1ve
minutes prior to the servtce,
and Jim Soulsby will open
the program by singing "The
Stc~r- Spangled Banner."
Drew
Webster
Post
Commander Mick Wtlliams
will make opening remarks
and will mtroduce guests.
Rev. Bnan Dunham of the
Pomeroy and Middleport
Heath United Methodist
Churches will offer the opening prayer and Rev Fr. Walter
Hemz of Sacred Heart Church
will offer the closing prayer
The Post Honor Guard will
close with a salute to all veterans.

ESC sponsors food
programs at Head Start sites
POMEROY - The Athens-Meigs Educaltonal Service
Center is sponsoring the USDA funded child and adult care
food program for enrolled participants at the Bradbury
Learning Center, Tuppers Plains, Clay, and Woodland Head
Start programs.
Meals _will be served at no separate charge to all enrolled participants of the centers in accordance with Federal law and U S.
Department of Agriculture policy without discriminatiOn on the
basis of race, color, natmnal origin, ge~der, age or dtsability.
The eligtbtltty guideltnes for free and reduced·pnced meals
effective through June 30 range from $12, I03 a year tor a free
lunch to $17.224 for a reduced-priced lunch for a family of
one; to $41,041 a year for a free lunch to $58,405 a year for
reduced lunch for a family of eight

Assemblies on abstinence
at local high schools
POMEROY - Youth communicator David Mahan will be
holding abstmence until marriage assemblies today at 10:45 a.m.
at Meigs Higb School, and later at I p.m. at Eastern High School.

For the Record
Arrested
POMEROY - A Racme man was charged w1th four counts
of theft and four counts of contributing to the unruliness of a
minor after the recovery of four stolen four wheelers.
The vehicles were reported stolen last week, and have been
returned to their owners, Shenff Ralph Trussell said Monday
Trussell satd hts department recetved mformation about a
stolen four wheeler bemg sold, and Sgt. Damel Leonard ·
recovered a stolen vehtcle from the Minersv111e ara Trooper
Robert Jacks of the Ohio State Highway Patrol pulled o~er a
truck hauling a four wheeler on County Road 28, and discovered the four wheeler was stolen after quest10nmg the dnver.
Worktng on information from Leonard. Jacks and Deputy Carl
Hysell. Deputy Andy Myers recovered two other four wheelers and returned them to their owners.
Those vehtcles were owned by Matthew Martm of
Reedsville, Dorothy Roseberry of Racine, Ke1th Bentz of
Ractne and Russell Burns of Portland.
A juvenile has also been charged in the thefts, Tru ssell said.

Pomeroy
from Page A1
school. In the agreement.
Team Jesus Mtntstrtes olferod
to purchase the property. as is,
for $35,000.
Team Je sus M1nistnes
would assume full responstbthty for removmg the
asbestos. Baer said he had
, already been in touch With the
Environmental
Protection
Agency and the Ohio
Department of Health and h1s
organization is ready to take
on the removal process.
"I can guarantee th1s is a
wm-win for us and the city,"
said Baer.
Councilman Jtm Stsson
replied that, "This might be a
chance to get rid of a big eyesore ..
Councilwomen
Mary
McAngus and Ruth Spaun
raised the possibtltty of getting the building appraised
although a motion was not
made or passed
"It's hard to sell somethtng
when you don't know what
it's worth," smd Spaun.
Council agreed not to make
a dectston on the late st offer at
this time . Even 1f council
agrees to accept the offer
by
Team
Jesus
made
Mtmstries, on Sept 28 they
voted to give the Commumty
Improvement Corporation
(CIC) the first option to match
imy bids on the property.
The contracts p&lt;tssed out to
council by Team Jesus
Mmistnes are valid for 30 days.
In open discussion Mayor
.John Mu,ser set leaf pick -up
for the week of Nov. 15
Spectfic dates wtl l be

announced later this week m
the Datly Sentmel.
In response to co uncilwoman McAngus' co ncern
about muddy streets and Sidewalks through town, Musser
1nformed counc1l that th e
mud along the walking path
will be cleaned up as a
FEMA funded project.
Councilman George Wnght
raised the 1ssue of repatnng
missing concrete on Main
Street outside the laundromat
as well as repainng the stdewalk outs1de the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Musser sa1d tt was the
county 's responsibility to
make repairs outside the
courthouse but added, "we
w11l probably have to fix 1t "
McAngus and Wnght
agreed with Musser, feartng
that if someone were inJured
on the sidewalk, the v1llage
could be !table.
Musser reported that the
village has collected over 200
surveys for the $300.000
Commu nity Distress Grant
that w1ll 1mprove neighborhoods Wtlhtn Pomero). More
feedback is needed from VIllage residents and they are
ava il able at the Water
Departnicnt in the Pomeroy
Municipal Budding .
The meeting ended upon a
request
by Cou nci lman
George Wnght to go tnto
executive session to dtscuss
personnel maners
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
P10ffitt was also in attendance
dunng the meeting. while
CounciImen Todd Norton and
Jack1e Welker were absent
The
next
Pomeroy
Village Council meeting 1s
Nov. 22. a\ 7 p.m

Immigrant workers stay on strike at dairy farm
MARSHALLVILLE,
Ohio (AP) - About 40
!arm
workers.
mo stly
imm1grants from Mex1c0.
stayed on strike al cl north east Ohto datry farm
Monday, and were seck1ng
support l"rom a nat1011al
farm labor organizatton.
They walked off their JObs
last week to support Caesar
Lopez , the e1ghth wo rker
fired at Stoll Farms in less
than two months . th e workers satd. Lopez satd he was
fired on his second day back
alter he broke hts dflll

- -----

because he was unable to
work fast enoug h.
Ed Stoll, owner of Stoll
Farms. declined comment
Monday and referred questions to hts lawyer. Mark
Skakun
"I think there 31e some
well meamng people trying
to help and there is a misunderstanding 011 what's causing the problems. I'm trying
to contact people to talk
wtth them and find out.""
Skakun sutd
A
W;iyne
Coun ty
Common Pleas Court order

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel .com

2004

Obituaries

Democrats need to get religion'

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA4-

re stncted picket s to two per
entrance. Some workers
were still on the JOb
The sinking workers said
they have formed their
own urt1on. Untted Datry
Workers ot Ohio . Local I .
to represent them at 1he
farm . tn
M,llshallvtlle.
about IS mtlcs southwe'l
of Akron .
Jeff Stewart. director of
the lmmi g1ant Wotkers
Project. ba,ed tn nearby
Canton, satd the workers
were hoping to alTtliate wllh
Farm Lahnr Org.tniting

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

Committee . A me ssage
seek1 ng comment was left
for the group 's president.
Baldemar Vei.N}liC7.
Stoll Farms dtd not have
a history of problems wtlh
11111111grant workers unul th e
hiring of a ne;v mana~er six
· months ago. Stew,lrt s.ttd
Stewart satd the companv was be1ng asked tor a
standard pa} scale 1\"tlh
wage tncreases for )ears
spent 111\ the .fnh He said
another demand 1s for
workers to be tre.1tcd v. iih
dtgn1t~

Riverfront walkway to have
a fountain and benches
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY -Soon those
who enjoy Pomeroy\ riverfront walkway will be able lo
get a dnnk of water at a fo untain or rest on a comfortable
bench along the way.
The fountain being g" en
as a memonal to the late
John Blaeltnar. form er mayor
of Pomeroy, by his family
will be installed next week. It
will be located on a 20-by- 12
foot ~lab and tlanked by two
of 28 park benche s be1ng
ordered tht s week by
Pomeroy Vtllage.
Mayor
John
Mu sser
described the benches as
bemg made of heavy recycled
plastic and of simi lar des1gn
to ' those on the parking lot
stage In addition to the two
bemg used beside the faun lam, he said four or f1ve w1ll
be placed along the walkway.
The other benches Will be
used on the parking lot promenade which is really an exten-

Traffic

"on of the new v.alkway
Two have been purchased by
Hank Cleland for use 111 front
of his Main Street reality busi·
ness and another one " being
given in memory of Audrey
Wood b) the boy scouts
F1ve large trash receptacles
are also bemg purchased so that
walkers w1ll·have some place to
throw thetr pop cans and other
debm rather than to'&gt;stng thmg'&gt;
over the nvcrbank or dropptng
them along the walkway
Twen ty -live ot the benches
are betng purchased wtth' a
gram
from
the
Ohto
Depanmem ol Transportation.
and accordmg to Musser the
required 20 percem match.
about $2.000. " bemg donated by Farmers Bank
·'These new benches are
practically tndestructtble.""
said Musset ""They come in
fullv' .1"embled. wet~h
about
~
275 pounds each. and when It
flood s we can move in with a
truck dnd tctke them out.""
They 'hould be in by the
ftrst of the year.
Collins noted that all the
people tmohed tn th e ,tcctdenh ell the llller..,eCtlUI1 ha ve
been local. and he re al11e s

from Page A1

L'hangmg Lralla: pattern" c.an

Factonng 111 weather dcLtyl.
the new configuratiOn should
he ready tn early spnng.
As repo1ted Monday in the
Datly Sentmel. tmmedtatc
actions will be taken to slow
motonsts down at the Intersection These act10ns include
engravmg rumble-stnps and
attachmg solar, tlashmg lights to
the stop signs already posied.
Collins also added that the message boards will stay tn plc~ce
and the Ohio Stale Htghway
Patrol have been monitonng the
area closely to deter speedmg

be confusing. He addeJ. -·~~ e
are tr) 1ng to dn everythmg to
address the sttuatton ..
Coll111s
"
othetw~Sc
pleased wnh the ne11 road.
say1 ng th&lt;ll w11h the exceptton of th e accidents at th e
llltersectton at Ohto 68 L ""tt
1s lunc\lonmg very v.ell ..
In a 2-+ hour period. tratfic
coumer, for ODOT tallied
-+ ..100 ve hicles using the nev.
U_S J3 west of Oh10 681.
and 5.200 using the new
road near County Road 2 I
&lt;~round Athens

Portland

uons of artt!acts to the Ci11l
War Museum as well as phofrom Page A1
tograph s or memordbtli a
from Portland Elementar)
to ut1hze the seven acres of School. and Southern Htgh
land surroundmg the center School teacher. Creed James
Schools are tradttlonall) the
by constructmg a walkmg
path, or possibly a heltcopter central hub of the communlly
pad for medtcal emergencies which make s the old Pottland
Though the future plans Elementary School localton
are all tentat1ve, right now still vtable. but butldmgs are
the center IS servmg the com- gtven hfe by the people that
munity with a food pantry mhabtt them and volunteers
and commumty dinners that are needed to help the commu·
happen once a week These nity center reach tts potential
""Some people thmk tim
dinners are open to anyone tn
surroundtng \tllages who can't be done:· satd Duhl
""But. we'll surpnse tl1em:·
want to touch base w11h
Portland restdents.
added 'olunteer. Mildred Krider.
Board meetings for the
The dinners and food
Port
lclnd Commumt) Cemer
pantry have resulted in help
from
the
Appalachian take pl.tcc e1 · er~ 'ecnnd
Nutritional Network. a non- Tucsda~ at the center. For
profit organization that wtll more mhJrnl.tllon on the fooJ
assist the center 111 creattn~ a pantr~. conm1untl) dtnners.
full service kitchen T!Je gym- Jon dtln g .llllfdct .... 11111e 01
nasium IS also now avatlahlc tdeas. c.tll Mtke Duhl at 8-+3to be remed out for events
:\-lS I. or Mtke W. Duhl at
The Portland Communl\v 591-9007.
Center ts lookmg fot dona -

"

All styles of carpet are inc:luded:
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CAkPET,LEVEL
LOOP CARPET and SC11LPT11RED CARPET.
No enra charge for moving fumlture
or removing old carpet.

.

Call us or stop in.

We'll eome to your home and measure
for a free no obligation quote.

Anderson's
FURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 9,

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
College basketball previews, Page 82
NFL Inks $8 billion TV deal, Page 82
8CS Standings, Page B6

Local Stocks
ACI- 32.72
AEP- 34.33
Akzo- 39.38
Ashland Inc.- 57.32
AT&amp;T - 17.88
BLI-12.35
Bob Evans - 24.91
BorgWarner- 49.79
Champion - 3.48
Charming Shops - 8.82
City Holding - 34.95
Col- 38.76
DG-20.40
DuPont - 44.12
Federal Mogul- .3100

NewsChannel

Baker
from Page A1

MPH winds trom tlhe northeast.
Tuesday. November~
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Monring (7 tLm.-Noou )
Temperature&gt; will ,;,e to .lJ
Tempe ratu res will hold
with todJy's low of J9 t'IL'(li!Ting ,teady around 35. Skies will
around 6:00am. Skie, will range he d ear to mostly clear with 5
· from ~u nn y to mu-.tl) '-.Uil!l) MPH winds from the east
with 5 MPH winds from the turni ng from the sout h t-a~t as
north turning ti·om the no nheast the eveni ng progress(;!:-,.
as the moming progrcs.-.c~ .
Ovenright (1-6 tLm.)
llftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will linger at
Tempet&lt;ttures wi ll tise lrom -15 30. Skies will be mostly clear
early aliemoon to tile high tl1r t11e with 5 MPH winds from the
day of -16 at J:OOpm a' they dmp -;outhea:-.1 n1rning from the south
back down to 38 later this atier- as the ovemigh t progresses.
noon. Skies wi II be sunny "ith :'i
Wl'rlnesday, November 10

Moming (7 tLII~·Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 30 to 50 by late thi s
morning. Skies will range from
partl y cloudy to cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the southeast
turning from the south as the
mommg progresses.

llftenwon (1-6 p.ltL)
It looks like a cloudy afternoon. Temperatures will rise
from 53 early this aftemoon to
55 by 3:00pm then drop down
to 46 late afternoon. Winds will
be 5 MPH from the south.

Pomeroy library receives literacy grant
POM EROY
The
Po meroy Library recei 1·ed a
$750 grant to fu nd the creati on of a li brary ed ucation kit
that will contain books and
instructional materials to edu cak Pre- K to grade eight stu~

~

de nts on li brary skill s.
The grant comes from the
Bttckeye Book Fair. The organization 's ce ntral offi ce is
located in Wooster and they
spp port literacy in Ohio .
Sponsors include the J.M.

Smucker Company and The
Wno,ter Book Company.
With thi s year's awards,
more than $190,000 will have
been distributed in proceeds
from 18 annu al book fairs
held in Wooster.

she was appointed to the post
in September. Baker is the
founder and owner of Ohio
River Bear Co .. and is active
in community affairs.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
read a letter from the FeeneyBennett Post, American
Legion . thanking village
agencies for assi stance with
the Sleepy Hollow Halloween
event at Middleport's lagoon
area. Nearly 2,000 attended
the annual event.
Counci I conducted a second
reading on an ordinance
allowing the village administrator to live outside of the
village corporation limits .
Fire Chief Jeff Darst dis-

Auto
from PageA1
Karr found his vehicle stuck
in the mud, and Craig Karr
in another vehicle.
"Wesley Karr got Craig Karr
out of tlhe vehicle and started
walking back to his residence
with him when he heard another person comi ng up behind
him," Trussell said Monday.
"He made both subjects start to
the house with him, but Legg
fled when he found out
deputies were on their way."

USB-29.65
Gannett- 84.26
General Electric - 35.12
GKNLY- 4.250
Harley Davidson - 59.03
Kmart - 95.41
Kroger- 16.10
Ltd. - 26.78
NSC- 35.24
Oak Hill Financial - 36.58
OVB - 31 .25
BBT- 42.57
Peoples - 28.42
Pepsico - 50.87
Premier- 10.95

Rockwell - 43.90
Rocky Boots - 20.52
AD Shell- 55.26
SBC-26.29
Sears- 43.13
Wai-Mart - 56.53
Wendy's- 34.97
Worthington - 20.95
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m . closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at
Advest
Inc.
of
Gallipolis .

cussed the general fund budget of the village tire depart·
ment. According to Darst ,
nearly $40,000 was spent last
year, and only $15 ,598 was
appropriated for the current
year. Darst anticipates several
expenditures for the remainder of the year, including tests
of pumpers and other equipment, and asked council to
review the department's
appropriation . The village 's
appropriation is used primarily for building and equipment
maintenance, Darst said..
Police Chief Bruce Swift
reported activity from the
police
department
for
October: II traffic arrests, 36
criminal arrests, 29 mayor 's
cases, 14 county cases. four
juvenile cases, four accidents
and 23 incident reports. Patrol
cars traveled $3,576, and the

jail generated $3.960 from
outside jail fees.
Councilman Jeff Peckham
said he had received a ·num ber of complaihts about junk
cars and trash on private
property. and vehicles with
expired tags on public streets.
All are against village ordinances and vehicle owners
are subject to fine s.
Council also:
• Approved the absence of
Councilman Roger Manley at
the Nov. 22 meeting, with
Councilman Stephen Houchins
voting in opposition.
• Approved payment of bills.
• Approved , the mayor's
report of fees and fines collected in October, in the
amount of $2,133.1 0.
Also present were council
members Laurie Reed, Bob
Robinson and Kathy Scott.

When deputies arrived, they
arrested Craig Karr and began
a search for Legg, on foot and
using the department's canine ·
unit, of the Karr property.
Royal Oak Resort, and the
surrou nding area. Patrol cars
from the sheriff's department
and
Syracuse
Police
Department were involved in
the search. Trussell said.
Officers
provided
a
description of the suspect to
Five Points gas stations, and
at 8 a.m. on Sunday, an
employee of the Twin Oaks
Convenience s·tore on Ohio 7
called the department and

reported that a suspect
matching Legg's description
had been dropped off there
and was in the store.
"Officers arrived and Legg
was arrested withoui incident. " Trussell said.
"I commendWesley Karr for
his courage in handling this
incident, but anyone who witnesses a crime should call the
sheriff's department immediately, and if possible, observe
the suspects from a safe distance until officers arrive,"
Trussell said. "Never intervene
in a crime unless your life m
tlhe life of another is in danger."

10200 4 SPECIAL U N I VERSAL ME DI A SYND I CATE" ADVERT I SE M ENT FEATURE

Holiday shoppers rush tQ get $2 bills at face value
Public release expected to run out by Christmas
By DANIEL COITRELL
1Jniversa.l AArY:Im

How to get them

extremely popul ar LD give as gi ft s for friend s and

s~'N:I!~:aiA

The U.S. Monetary Exchange is releasing the popular $2 bills to the general
public. Call the National Direct Hotline 1·800·242·8038, ask for Dept. 081865.
The standard $9 processing fee plus shipping gets you a vault sealed uncirculated pack of five $2 bills at face value .

family. They are the perfect gift for any occasio n .·· he said.

(SYNDICATED) - H llan.t . .
~ational Hotline

(lf

phone.., lo

jan tming
'i2 hill' fur L.JCc

pt:llpk an.:
1:!CI

valu e.

Many

)'(lUnge r

people have never eve n see n

one or the"c historically significant $2 bills that

Currency Value: Currency valUes always fluctuate. But, if parents or grandparents living in 1928
would have kept a pack of five uncirculated $2

feature Prc:-.iJcnt Thomas Jefferson on the front.

Some l.:ol ll'ctnP.- arc tr: in~ \l) -.natd1 up all they
can hecau~c it'.., the hn!.ll.::\1 Chn..,mw~ _:!i flthi.., year. .
The (.'ri..,r . un~,.·m.·ul atL·d ')2 hill.., ;tn.: being
, ht.Jndert 111 pacJ...,_ul !'ill' &lt;tnd . . en! Ji rcc tl} to
the ir honll: . .
I f part· nt .., anU grandpurcnt'- li\ ing in IY1H had
kept a pacJ... of lilt.: ttlll.: irc u l~ttcd %2 hill . . they
could _he V.11rth ~2.250 . 00 toda) Thm·._ why people wan! th C'-l' Ill:'\\ hdJ ..... o had h.
"O ur current pt·i\ah.' \:tUI! IT ... ~'J"\L'' of tht: new
S:1 hi II~ " i II . . (lOll ht.: gone. 'l'ho ... t.: .v. ho \I, an t to
get them . . huul d c~dl llP\\ ... ..,a1d John Thomas
\Vhitc. Ev..ecuti\L' Dirc&lt;.:to r of the United States
Mo n c t ~tl') E\cham.'l'.

Onginall~ '"""din IY2B. the l\\O Dollar Bill
h a~· largl!l:"- hcen locJ.,ed awa: 111 d&lt;tr k U.S.
L

'

A hi..,lom: cngr:w i ng of the si gning of the

Declaration of Independence is on the back.

Historic: Featuring a tribute to Founding Father
Thomas Jefferson painted by artist Gilbert
Stuart in the 1800's .

bills they could be worth $2,250.00 today.

The . . l' cri . . p, new $2 bills are do ... c ly controll ed
h.\ th e Treasury Department \ Bure;.~u or'
Engra\ i11g am~ Printing. ma ke rs o f th e na tions

The $2 hill makes Lip less I han I'7r of the $670
billion in ge nuine U.S. currency that circulates
wo rldwide, according to the U.S. Departme nt of
Si!c rett~ ry

John'"'· Snow.
in wriling ror 10
or more banded packs of 5 bills. But. the general
Deale r~ IIlli ~\ ~ ubmit reque st ~

public can now get whaL they need by calling the
"'ational Di rect Hotline now at 1-800-242-8038
and a'k for Dept. DR 1865. Dealer limit' will he
strictl y enfo rced. White said.

Federal Re:--.enC 'auh-.,. rarely di..,tributed by
nanb and almmt nen:r \een in circulation.

National Treasures: A detailed

That'~''

hy tt j.., ex tremely rare 10 actuall y fi nd
one of the:-.e hi ... toric 'hvo Dollar Bilb i n your
poc~e t ~.: hange lhe'e da:..,

"Wh..:n our

"ito~J...pik

The 'i&gt;2 Bill' are

engraving ofJohn Trumbull's
famous 1820 painting "The
Signing of the Declaration of
Independence." The original
hangs in the National Portrait
Gallery in Washington D.C .

i . . gone L·olkctors wi ll

ha,·c to ..,ort 1hrnu~h !I Hl llL' ~· 1lr go to thl' hank to
ge t them." he '-i.tid .
··The S I 00 . ~50. 'i::' ll. &lt;,Ill and )5 uo llar hi I h
have all recently undergo ne major new dc..,ign
changc'i. No\\. it\ feared thJI new lcgi.., latton
may he i ntrod uced to di..,continuc !he ht....tor ic
de~ign . . of the . . r.: TY..o Doll ar hilk Thai\"" h_v we
·Pave authori1ed the n:lca"L' o f a lim ited number
of the uncin.: ul~ttt:d ~2 Hlll.., !'rom our \J. ull
re,crve tn the gcnrr;tl puh lic." White "uid .
ht~hlv

'ought alter and

•

The first 10,000 people even get these
Official Cordovan Collectors Wallets with

• GIFT -

each Bill . Satisfaction is guaranteed.

Scramble

•

b~gins

Pope's secret prayer card
is Free to the general
public during this limited
time advance release

THE UNITED STATES MONETARY EXCHANGE IS A PRIVATE EXCHANGE NOT
AFFILIATED WITH THE U .S. GOVERNMENT OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY
P0013 OFOOJ6f'l- 1

f

' ·

J'

02004 USME

as Pope's health .fails

- postage. hand I ing and acknowledgement.
"The special Prayer Cards show the most
hymnal size prayer card
stunnmg photo of the Pope ever, as you have
shows a closely guarde&lt;J
never seen him before. It brought tears to my
pnvately taken official Vatican
' color photo of the Pope. The
eyes when I saw the full size color photo on the
enttre heart wrenching prayer
prayer card," said Kathy Tedeschi . Director of
is scribed below the magnifi·
Uni versal Museum Collections, which has the
~cent lull color photo. nts being
responsib.ility of releasing the Free limited edi.(SYNDICATED) - The Vatican has authorized
released Free on a first -comeL'nt\er...,a l Mu ... cum Co llec t ion.~ to release the tion prayer cards directly lo the general public.
first serve basis, to all who
With th e Pope's health failing , the
closely
guarded ··Prayer and Blessing of Pope
_ ......
send 5 first dass stamps to
prayer
that appea rs below hi s image
Juhn
Paul
W
Card
tn
the
ge
neral
public.
cover shipping of the spec1ally
upprupriately
" heg in ~ " I le ave yo u nuw
!'•'!'' fchn /'.w/ j J
· designed nat carton that · Readers·will actually get the cards free just
by ..,~ncl in g .fi ve s ! J. mp~ needed to cover lhc with thi s prayer. .. ·• These ; pccial devo,. •.•• , ..... ,... . .,, .), ~ •• ,.. •. ,1 " ,~. 1•.••. 1, .•• ,.,11 ~ protects rt from damage.
~--..-~ .................. _..---:;--""
;
pcci;il protective shipping canon plu s tiontll prayer cards are "iHCr ed becau\C they
./ " '
Secret Blessing: The large

Rio' Grande
.s ports
., _.. llllm..
Men.....~..
Rio GlW1de at~ College

Bevo Frands Classic

WIHMn'a &amp;aakltball
Sew Frailci8 Classie

'

·~

:·

~·~
Min'• Bllkltball

Francis Cl~c ·· .
WoiMI'I'I B~till

,e,vo Fflncls Classic

Eastern volleyball
banquet planned
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern's high school and
junior high volleyball banquet will be 7 p.m. Saturday
in the high school gym.
Each family is asked to
bring two covered dishes
(vegetable and dessert). The
athletic boosters will provide
meat, drinks and table service.

Eastern to hold
fall banquet
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern's fall banquet for
football, golf and cheerleaders will be 2 p.m. Sunday in
the high school gym.
Each family is asked to
bring two covered di shes
(vegetable and de ssert) . The
athletic boosters wilt provide
meat, drinks and table service.

Reds bring back
coaching staff
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Reds renewed the contracts
of their coaching staff on
Monday, giving manage r
Dave Miley conti nuity heading into his second full season runnin g the club .
·
Miley. 42. got his contract
extended an extra year
throu gh 2006 last month.
Pitching
coach
Don
Gullett, bench coach Jerry
Narron, batting coach Chris
Chambliss, third base coach
Mark Berry, first base coach
Randy Whisler. bullpen
coach Tom Hume and
bullpen
catcher
Mike
Stefanski will return for next
season.

are blessed with Holy wmer from Rome .
Heres how to get your Free PrayerCard
delivered

with infonnation about lamenation

and papal artifacts. Limit I per household:
l .Write your name and address on a piece

of paper.
2.Enclose along with 5 f! rst class stamps.
MONEY CAN NOT BE ACCEPTED.
Do Not staple, tape oi affix the stamps.
3.Mailto:
Universal Ml1'leUI11 Collection&lt;; Dept PE890
National Distribution Center
Box 3678
U.S. Postal Zip 44309-3678

BEREA (AP) - Browns
offensive guard Kelvin
Garmon and defensive back
Leigh Bodden are out for the
season
after sustaining
injuries in Cleveland's loss
on Sunday in Baltimore.
Garmon injured his medial
collateral. anterior cruciate
and posterior ligaments in
his right knee. Coach Butch
Davis said doctors will wait
until swelling subsides in the
knee before determining if
Gannon needs surgery.
He will need four-to-six
months to recover.
Bodden, the club's best
special teams player, tore a
chest muscle in the second
half. Davis said Bodden
stayed in for three or four
plays after being hurt.
Bodden didn't realize the
extent of his injury until he
· started to pump hi s arm s
while running.
Garmon .and Bodden are
the latest key players for th·e
Browns to be lost for the season, joining Kellen Winslow
Jr., Courtney Brown, Ben
Taylor and Brant Boyer.
Garmon's injury weakens
an offensive line that already
is having trouble opening
holes or protecting quarter- ·
back Jeff Garcia.
Wide receiver Andre '
Davis (toe) and punter
Derrick Frost (ank le ) arc
both day-to-day with injuri~ '
as Cleveland prepare s to host
Pittsburgh thi s Sunday .
- ----~---

\

men's College Basketball

Red men hoops open season with a pair of wins
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailysentinel .com

Frldey'agemn

Min'• Bllkelblll

Garmon, Bodden
done for season

parer currency.

Treasury um.kr

Tuesday, November 9, 2004

BRISTOL , Tenn.- The
University of Rio Grande
Red men basketball team
bega n the 2004-05 season
with a roaring start, scoring
two decisive victories in the
King College Tournament
over the weekend . Rio
knocked off Virgi nia-Wi se on
Friday night. 70-52, and
capped otr the weekend with
an 82-60 win over Indi anaSouth Bend on Saturday.
Rio Grande (2-0) broke
open a tted game wah a
strong_ second half agamst
Vtrgtm a- Wtse . The Redmen
out sc?red the_ Htghland
Cavalters 41:23 111 the second
half alter go mg to the locker
room tied at 29-29.

.

Rio placed three players in
double fi gures wit h se nior
ce nt er Sean Plummer leading
the way with 19 points.
Plummer shot 8-of- 11 from
the tleld and pulled down tlve
rebounds. Junior guard Kri s
Wil son added 14 poi nts (5-ofR shooting) on the strength of
four three-pointers and senior
forward Dawayne Mcintosh
chipped in II points and collec ted, a ga me-high. seven
rebounds.
Virgini a- Wi se was led by
Parker Gemmell and Blake
Mellinger with 14 points
each.
Mellinge r led the
Highland
Cavaliers
in
rebounds with six :
Rio shot an impressive 55.3
. percent (26-of-47) from the
field, including a blisterin g M
percent ( 16-of-25) i11 the secarid half. The Redmen shot
extreme ly well from beyond

. - - - - - - , the arc. con- Cla»ic at the Nc-' 1 Oliver
necting on 6- Arena. Tip-oil i' '"t fm X
o f - I I p.m. followin g the \\umcn·..,
at t empts game.
(54.5
perOn Saturda). the Redmcn
cent).
Rio ·put the game away early.
wa&gt; I~ -of- 24
(50 percent) 't ormin~ out to a 50-2X hctlffrom the free timc le &lt;td ol'er Indiana-South
Bend .
thro w li ne.
Plummer once again Jed the
UVA-Wise
· Plummer
c o u n t e r ed Rcdmcn in scori ng with 17
w1ih 30 per- points. He _,hot 6-of-7 from
cent shooting ( 16-of-53) from the field and pulled duwn fi1 e
Junior
guard
the field. 37.5 percent (6-of- rebounds.
Cedric
Hornbuckle
added
16
16 ) from three-point land and
82 percent ( 14-of- 17) frnm poinh off the benc h and corralled a gamc-htgh six carthe charity stripe.
oms.
Ri o held a 3 1 -~9 advantage
Senior post man Jarrod
on the glass and committed
Haines
and sophomore wing
four less tum overs ( 15 to 19)
man Jeromv Dishman aJ..,u
than Virgi nia- Wise. ·
ch ipped in JO poitm each off
The two teams will hook up the bench.
again on Friday in the tirst
Jeremy Herring led I USB
round of the Bevo Francis in scon ng with 14 po inh

whi le Larr~ Pridgen to"ed in
12. Both player' led the
Tit&lt;Jil s in rebounds wit h live
each.
Rcdmen
enjoyed
The
another hot ~.ohonting night,
nailing 2'.1-of-51 attempts (57
percent) from the field. 9-of17 (53 percent) from long
range and 15-of-23 (65 per~
cent I from the chari ty stripe ..
!USB shot 45 percent (26'
of-581 from the field. afte r a
' itLiing 'ecund half ( 14-of24).
The Titan' &gt;trugg led
from deep. nailing only 4-of19 (21 percent ! treJ attem pts.
The y a!"' struggle at the free
throw line 14-ot- II J.
Riu contro lled the boards
v.ith a .'H- 20 advantage . Rio
turned the ball over 19 times
to only 15 I(Jr !USB.
Ri o Grande travels to
Geneva for a 7 p.m. tip
ton ight .

national football league

Anothe.r tough call for Browns
BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BEREA Under the
bright light s. On national
TV. In Baltimore. With the
clock winding down. At the
goa l line.
The Cleveland Browns
knew a last-second interference call against Ravens
All -World linebacker Ray
Lewi s on Sunday ni ght
would be a long shot - at
best.
"They didn't ca ll very
many fouls in the last three
seconds
on
Michael
Jordan ," Browns coach
Butch Davis said .
No. thev didn't. And there
was little· or no chance that
the official s were goin g to
flag Baltimore\ No. 52 for
grabbing th e jersey of
Brown s ti ght end Aaron
Shea.
Was Lewis guilty"' It's
debatable .
But TV replay s did show
he had a handftil of Shea 's
white No. !l3 jersey as the
two went diving for Jeff
Garcia's pass. It was clear
was that Lewh' tug both ered Shea just enough that
the ball bounced off his
hand s and into those of
Raven s safety Ed Reed . who
picked it off and ran an
NFL-record I06 yard s to
cap Baltimore's 27- 13 victory.
As ha s happened to the
Brown s (3 -5) so manv tim es
over the past few seasons.
one play sealed their fat e.
And like other previous
times. it went against them.
However. the Brown s
whining _ on
weren't
Monday. They made enough
mistakes- nine penaltie s, a
di sastrous 7-y ard punt.
dropped pa sse~ - of the ir

own to guarantee their third
loss in four games.
''I'm not going to blame
that call," said kicke r Phil
Dawson. who made two
field goals and extended his
league-best streak to 26
straight. "We· ve got enough
things we can fix on our
own to worry ahout what the
officials are callin~ or not
ca llin g."
StilT. the late drama
between Lewi s and Shea
was pivotal in a -game that
Davis said came down to
.. ,ix play, , Th ree for them
and three for us .··
Unable
to
move
Cleveland\ offense most of
the night. Garcia co nverted
three thin.l-down passes and
drove the Browns down to
the Ravens' 5-yard line with
45 seconds left .
On seco nd down. Garcia
zipped hi s P"" ove r the
middle to Shea. who got
Lewi s to bit e on an outside
fak e and had inside leverage. But just as Garcia 's
throw arrived, so did Lewi s.
who was draped over Shea
and made contact.
Based on the league's
intent to clean up defensiv e
holding. Davi s thought
Lewis did enough to warrant
a yellow tlag.
"They made such an enormou s emphasis in the preseason about you cannot
breathe on anybod y." Davi s
said. '·It doesn't seem to be
ca lled that way in the reg u,
Jar season ...
As Reed sprinted toward
the end 1.0ne. Shea and
Garcia both argued their
case in vain. AL·t:un.Jing to
witnesses. Brown s defenst\'e coordinator Dave
Campo. who was in the
coaching box upstairs. c'1me
Please see Tough. B&amp;

AP Pholo

Cleveland Browns quarterback Jeff Garcia. left. is taken down by Balttmore Ravens defensive
end Marques Do uglas. bottonl right. and safety Ed Reed dunng the fo-urth quarter Sunday in
Baltimore . The Ravens won 27-13.

Colle,ge Cross Country
Rio Grande . Cross ~C9untry runs well at AMC Meet
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydai lysentinel.com
LATROBE . Pa. - Both
Uni vers it y of Ri o Grande
men's and women's cross
co untry tea ms produced
so lid etlort&gt; at the Ameri carl
Mideast Confere nce/NAIA
Region IX Cross Cotmtry
Meet o.n Saturday. .The
youthful Redmen fini shed
I Oth out of 14 team s and the
Redwomen were II th out of
15 sc hools.
Senior Matt Boyles fin ished seco nd in the men 's
race with a time of 26:17.
He ra n the five -mil e co urse
at a 5:15 clip . Leo Kormalik
· of Malone was the overall
men's champio n. outdi stancing Boyles by 21 seconds.
Boyles did ~ualify for the
NAJA Na tio nal Meet in two

week s
in
Lo ui sv ill e.
Ky.
Jttni or
Brad Gilders
was the next
Rcdmen harri er to fi ni sh .
crossing th e
line in 77t h
place wit h a
Boyles I
time
or
22.36.
Other Redmcn result&gt;:
Fre,hman
Ho ward
Hoisingto n. 93rd (30: 151:
fre,hman Cody Roc hu s.
!14th (32:01 ): fre&gt; hman
Chase Smith, !25 th (33:34):
freshman Scott Shipe. !30th
(34 :20): freshman Kyle
Wagner. 13-lth (35:421 and
sophomore
Jonathan
Humsberger. I -1 5t h (JR:44 ).
· There were 15-1 runne rs in
th e men ·, ra,·e .

\1 alone 11on the meet.
c Seto n Hill. 12th t32 .1t:" Point
T
h
13th 1.,~-1 1 and 'l'ortng
3_:\ ·
poin ts.
Red men fin - Park.
ished IOth Wilhc•rforce. t..fth i-16-1 I
Cedan i Ik 11 ' " runner- up
• On the "'"n,·n\ 'tck. R·i,, II ith 57 r•'int, . Roherts
~i\f ll t'l' lll ~
., 1..10
.
Grande fini,hcd lith 11 11h We,Jn.IH t"i nhhcJ thirJ tY II
_o o&gt; JlOllll,.
Mal(lnc .117 poinh .
1 lt,llo\&lt;cd h1 licne"' t ft1Urth)
Junior Da\\ n N;!~k kli tl1l' '' ith
won
the
I tl~
point- and
men·... m~ct R~,.·d\\ ' {llllC:tl. fi ni..,Jlin l! ~,~rd Sha11 nee St.tlL' 1 fifth I gar.wirh · -IX and ~,.·lnerin~ the J .. l-milc !ll'l'lng I6J point ....
c"ur'e in 2(i::C7 .
p {) i n t '
.Other \\U!ll~ll-.., rc.~u lts :
St,phLIIllorc
Hope Seton Hill. 'i\th t 191):
Shawnee
Nagle
State . fin- J a~odtin,ki "a' (12nd ll ·tth a Sallll
Vincent.
,n·en th
ished
2nd tirnr of 22 01
(21n l: \\ abh. eighth (2271; .
Other Rcdllt,·mcn re,ult' · Hough ton. nin th 12J5i:
with 73 points. followed b)
Cedan·ille (third ) with 89 Junior Billie Rnbithon. ~9th Daemen. lOth 12.'71: ~otre
'ophomore
points ,
Saint
Vincent 123:()0):
Dame Ct,llege. 12th (.14 1):
(fourth) "ith 98 points and Shannon · Snubh1. 96th
L1 ndon State. I Jth t 3-14 ):
Wals h rounded out the top (23 :09) and 'ophoti1ore Jana L/rsuline. l-Ith 1-122 1 and
fiv e. accumulating 140 Marshall. 102nd (23:271.
Malone \ La.:e1 \\'at~in' Point Par~. 15th (-12-+ 1.
point&gt;.
The 1'\A I.O. :&lt;Jational Meet
Other
team
scores ""' the indi1 tdual "inner
i,
up next "itll Rio Grande
Rohe rt s We&gt;lcvan. sixth 1\.ith a ume of I R. l ~ - Th ~
11 751: Lyndtlll St;tle. ,c,·'enth Ltdy Pioneer' clatmed the bein g repre,ented h~ Matt
BovJe, _ The meet i' schedI I%): Gcnc1a. 8th ·t257l: tllp three 'POl&gt; in the raCL' .
u
k.d f&lt;'r N 01 . 20 m
· Notre ·oame Co llege. ninth
Thae were 15 7 runner' in
L"''"' ilk . K) ,
t263J: Hou ghton. l ith t.111 t.

•
•.

�Tuesday, November 9, 2004
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 9.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

ijtribune Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

men's College Basketball

Kansas the preseason No.1 for first time in almost 50 years
BY JtM O'CONNELL
ASSOCiated Press

Sure, Kansas often grabs a spot m
the uppet half of the AP preseason
college ba sketball poll . but the
school hasn't been No I 'mce a
playct named Wtlt Chamberlmn
suited up for the Jayhawks 111 th e
1950s
Kansas stood atop The Assoctated
Pre ss' Top 25 on Monday, the 13th
stratght season the Jayhawks have
been ranked II th or higher m the
first poll.
The Jayha...,ks recetved 25 firstplace votes and I ,697 pomts from
the national media panel. edgmg
Wake Forest. which had 22 ftrstplacc votes and 1.680 pomts
The Demon Deacon s were the
first at three stratght Atl antic Coast
Conterence teams m the poll. and
stx team s ft om the league were m
the Top 25
~
Wavne Stmten leads four starters
back- for KdllS.Is. whtch lost to
Georgta Tech m the NCAA tournament's regtonal fmals last season
The Jdyh:tw ks were ranked Nu I
fo r one week last season and they
have l:;een ranked No 2 111 ltve of
the last 12 preseason polls.
"I hope we · re never gomg to be
sattslted and our veterans understand they'\e got to go play It\

mce. hut tt means nothmg in the bt g
scheme ot thtngs. " second-year
Kansas co.1ch Btll Self said
The Jayh,1wk- hope th ey can do
even better than the last time they
were Nu l m the prese,ISon In
1956-57. Ch,unberl.un led them to
the nattonal ch,unptunshtp game, ,\
triple-overtime loss to- North
Carohna.
As for Wake Fore st. it has all ftve
starters back from the team that lust
to Samt Joseph 's tn the round of 16.
"You see 11. you look at 11 . and you
shake your head , but you can't
waste one nanosecond to worry
about tt ,'' Demon Deacons coach
Sktp Prosser satd, refernn g to the
Iotty rankmg, whtch mat ches the
htghest 111 school ht story m any AP
poll
Georgta Tech and No rth Catulm a
were thtrd and fourth in the ballotmg. It ts the second ttme m thtee
years one confe tence has had th e
Nos. 2-4 m the preseason poll The
Btg 12's Kansas, Oklahoma and
Texas wete m that order m 2002
No I I Duke, No 15 Marvland
and No 19 Nort h Carohna 's tate
round out the ACC teams m th e
poll
''It' s a toug h. tough league ,"
Prosser satd " I don ' t thtnk that' ll
ever change "
llltnots. where Se lf coac hed

before headmg to Kansas. was tifth .
He succeeded Roy Willtam s, who
went to North Caroltna The two
LOdC hes have ties tO three of the tOp
ftve
"So. I've got a
I and a 5 and
Roy 's got a I and
a 4," Se~f satd.
"What are you
guys trym g to do
to us?"
Syracuse was sixth, followed by
Oklahoma State , de fend tng natiOnal
champton Connecttcut, Kentucky
and Arizona.
After Duke came Mtsstsstppt
State, Mtchtgan State, Loutsville,
Pittsburgh.
Maryland, Texas.
Alabama, North Carolma State and
Notre Dame.
The last ft ve temm tn the poll
Washmgton,
were Wtscon sm.
Flonda. Memphts and Gonzaga
Six of the team s m the fmal poll
last season were not ranked thts preseason . mcludtng Stanford and
Satnt Joseph 's, two schools that
reached No I dunng 200'1-04
Stanford. No I m the fma l poll.
18-year
co.tch
Mtke
lost
Montgomery and Ali-Amencan
Josh Chtldre ss to the NBA The
Cardma l mJssed the preseason Top
25 b) one place.
Satnt Joseph's. No. I m the next-

to-last poll and ftfth tn the final votmg last season , lost us backcourt of
semor Jameer Nelson , the consensus national player of the year. and
Delonte West, a junior who went to
the NBA
The Hawks dtdn' t get a smgle
vote 111 the preseason ballotmg
" It wtll be different, but we take
each team as a separate entity,"
Saint Joseph' s coach Phil Martellt
satd. "Last year wasn ' t JUSt about a
great team It was more about our
attempt to develop a great pro-

gram ,,

Georgta Tech and North Carolma
each recetved I0 ftrs t-place votes,
while Illinoi s and Oklahoma State
got two each, and Kentucky had
one.
ConnectJCUt was the preseason
No. I last year before wmmng It all.
the 24th ttme that happened si nee
the poll started for the 1948-49 season
Eight conferences were repre sented in the preseason Top 25 The Big
East and Southeastern Conference
followed the ACC wtth four teams
each. whtle the Big 12 and Btg I0
had three each Th~ Pac- 10 ,md
Confere t1ce USA each had tw o
teams, whtle Gonzaga ot the We st
Coast Conference was the on ly Top
25 team not from one of the powet
leagues.

Tennessee ts no' longer chasmg
Connecticut The Lady Vols are
back on top .
Pat Summttt's team took t h ~ No
I spot 111 The Associated Press'
preseason women 's basketball poll
Monday, the ll th tune tt has started the seaso n atop the rankmgs and ftrst smce 1998.
The Lady Vols recetved 20 of 45
ftrs t-place ~ote s from a natt onal
medta panel to edge Texas.
Southeastern Conference riv al
LS U and three-time defendmg
NCAA champton UConn for No
I
"I was a httle surpn sed, based on
the players we lost and the fa ct that
only three of o ur freshmen are
healthy right now," Summitt satd.
" But as I told our team, it certam ly
is a complunent to them and how
they ftntshed last year and also to
our newcomers "
Tennessee had 1.085 pomts m
the votmg, whtle, Texas had I ,056,
three more than LSU Con necti cut
was tourth with 1.01 7
Texas had seve n ftrst-place
votes, LSU 12. and UCo nn si~
Tennessee
retu rn s
starte rs

•

seasons final ranking
Record
1 Kansas (25)

24-9

Pis
1,697
1 680

2 Wake Forest (22) 21-10
3 Georgia Tech (10) 28-10
4 North Carolina (10) 18-11

1,556

5 Illinois (2)
6 Syracuse

26-7

1,457
1,452

7 O~ahoma 51 (2)
8 Connecticut
9 Kentucky (1)

31-4
33-6

~nzona

23-8
27·5

1,567

14

18
13

20

1 , ~2

4

1,281
1 177

7

1 061

22

981

12 MISSISiiPPI S l
13 Moch(gan Sl
14 Louievllle

26·4
18-12
2()..10

910

5
8

15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24

20-12
25-8
31-5
20-13
21 -10
19- 13
25· 7
19· 12
20 11
22 8

Maryland
TaltSS
Pittsburgh
Alabama
N c State
Notre Dame
W•sconsln
Washington
Florida
Memphis

25 Gonzaga

28-3

913

876
765

t9

671
596

9

510
490
429
378
355
337
283
215

12

10

with the grad uatwns of su pe rs tar
Diana Taurast ,md potnl guard
Mana Con lon . Coac h Geno
Aunemma ts hardl y wtthout talent,
thou gh. because stand outs Ann
Strother. Ba rbara Turner and
Jes stca Moore all are back
Texas returns fo ur starters after
tymg Kansas State tor the B tg 12
champ10n shtp last season LSU
has a star in Seimone Augustus and
a new coac h tn Pokey Chatman.
who ftlled tn for the atlmg Sue
Gunter last season and took the
Lady Ttgers to the Fmal Four for
the ftrst time
Chatman got the JOb on a permanent basts when Guntet rettred tn
April
A thtrd SEC team. Georgta. was
ranked ftfth . fo llo wed by Duke.
Stanford , Baylor • and North
Carolma. Ohto Stdte and Notre
Dame tted tor IOth
Then tt was Texas Tech 111 12th,

and Yanderbtlt 13 th. !allowed by
Mtnn esota,
Mtchtgan
State,
Purdu e, Rut gers, Boston Colle ge,
Kan sas State and DePaul
Penn
State,
Oklahoma,
Maryland, Anzona and LouiSiana
Tech held th e fmal ftve places
"I don't thmk there 's much differe nce m th e top teams.'' Summitt
said " I thtnk you could look at the
top ftve and say on a gtve n mght.
any team can wtn It probably goes
even deeper th an th at •·
Every team 111 the Top 25 exce pt
Maryland was ranked la st season
Maryland made the AP poll for th e
first ume smce the week ot Nov.
19 , 2001
The No
25 rankmg fo r
LouiSiana Tech was the lowest for
the Lad y Tec hste rs stnce the 1991 92 season, when they were
unranked tn the fmal 16 poll s
Some earl y ga mes could c&lt;~ u se
an tmmedtate shufflmg Ill the poll.
In a doubleheader at Au sttn,
Texas , on Sunday. Texas meets
Penn State , and LSU takes on
Baylor LSU also has to play tw o
ga me s before that , Minnesota ha s a
challengmg game agamst UNLV.
and Duke. Notre Dame, Ohto State
and Anzona all are 111 the preseason WNIT starting Fnday.

'-

NFL' agrees to six-year extensions
with Fox and CBS worth $8 billion
"

NEW YORK - The NFL
agreed Monday to $ ~ bt lhon
Ill contrac t ex ten s tons v. Jth
Fox and CBS to tele vtse
Sunday afternoon games lor
stx more years, deal s that
wou ld also allow th e league
to sho'-' better matchups late
Ill the season tn pn me ttme
.The current etght-) edr contract, wh tch expt res after the
2005 season. wa s worth
$ 17.2 btllt on, mcludmg th e
Sunday ntght (un ESPNJ and
Monday mght (o n ABC)
packages The exten stuns
wtll run through 20 II .and
rep resent a 25 percent
mcrease Ill n ghts fees
The league still ts tn talks
for the pnme-ttme packages
The exclustve negotiating
penod
for
ABC/ESPN
extends for nearly another
year
The deals gtve the NFL the
optmn to move seven late season game s from Sunday
to Monda) mght to feature
more attractive matchups.
accordmg to an offtctal wtth 111 the league who spoke to

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24

3

Others receiVIng votes Stanford 90, Mich1Q8n 74
Charlotte 37 Provtdence 32 S lihno1s 31, Utah 31
Cinc1nnat1 30, Oklahoma 28 , Boston College 7
UTEP 7, George Washmgton 6, UAB 6 Xav1er 5
ETSU 4, LSU 4, Tennessee 4 Toledo 4, UClA 4

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UNLV 4 Iowa St 2, Oregon 2, A1ce 2, DePaul 1
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Women's College
Basketball
Preseason Top 25

1. Tennessee (20)

2 Texas (7)
3 LSU (12)
4 Connectt&lt;:ut ~6)
5 Georgia
6 Duke
7 Stanloftl
8 Baylor
9 North Carolina
10 Notre Dame
10 Ohio S1

12 Texas Tech
13 Vanderbilt
14 Minnesota
15 Mlctngan St
16 Purdue
17 Rutgers

Recoro

Pis

Pv

31-4
30-5
27-8
31-4
25 10
30-4

1 085

2

1 OSil
1 053
1,017

4

838
827

10

26-9

794

15

24-7
2 1. , 1
21-10
25 8

12

635
635
633

21

14

525

13

489
426

29·4

423
407

24
23
3

19 Kansas St

25·6

20 DePaul

23·7
28·6

Oklahoma
Maryland
Arrzona
Lou1siana Tech

sse

26-8
25-9
22·9
2H2
27-7

22
23
24
25

16
1

27-7

18 Boston College
2\ Pann 51

887

19
6

24-9

18·13
24·9
29-3

376
358
248
217
182

18

8

to ha ve a game on Feb 4, 2007 , ,tnd
new
six- Fox wtll handle the ga me a
yea r deal year later The other Super
wtth NFL,'' Bowls tor the networks wtll
CBS
co- be &lt;tsstgned later.
The agree ments also
pre s t den t
tnclude
a commitment by
L e s I i e
Muunves CBS and Fox to phase m
satd ' Thts htgh-deftmtton coverage for
happened all games and tntroduce pew
ah edd of whe n '-'e thou ght 11 tnteractlve elemen ts to NFL
wou ld happen. but we .tre g.une telecasts
DirecTV televtses vra
th nll ed with the dedi we
' atel ltte every Sunday aftermade
"We made money on the noon reg ul ar-seaso n game
last deal and wtll m&lt;lke e~en to market s .that otherw tse
more on tht s deal."
wou ld be blacked out of'
CBS conttnues to televtse those games
'·Our DtrecTY partnershtp
AFC games, a package It
acquued m 1998 CBS han- comp lements and supports
dled NFL games from 1956 our broadca st telev iston
throu gh the 1970 merger, packages," Taghabue satd
then took over the NFC unt1l ''Thi s
new
agreement
1993 , '-'he n Fox outbtd CBS expand s our JOlllt commitfor that package. CBS then ment to the ongomg -develoutbtd NBC for the AFC opment of 111novattve ways
games
for fans to enJOY the NFL"
Commtss10ner
Paul
In addttton to some tnterTagltabue satd the re wtll be acttve servtces, DtrecTV
no changes m the tradt ttonal wil ) tnstttute a separate
Sunday afternoon kickoff "Red Zone"' channel devotttmes for regular-season ed to takmg vtewers from
games.
game to game when a team
Each network gets two ts tn stde an opponent 's 20Super Bowl; dunng the con - yard lm e and pot sed to
tr ac t penod CBS wt ll do the score .

E-mail your sr.orts news to:
sports@mydallysentinel.com

golden brown Very fr~ e nd ly
Found on 4th Ave GaU1po hs
Please call (740)441-0423

379 2639 or 379 9201
G1veaway to a good home
7 pupp1 es 5wks old 6 male
I
female
Ad orablel

1740)388 9238
Smail Corg1 m1 xed female
do g 1Omths o ld to g1ve
away Very tnendly beaut1

r

1ul (7401245·9690

Ul!&gt;TANU
FOUND

$500 Reward offered tor
1nformat1 on leadm g to recovery of stolen 1!ems fro m
Arnold Sears res1 dence m
Harnsonv1ll e ca ll (740!99 2·
4 129

5

Y•RI) S•t •.
I'

n

~ ~r

YARIJ SA! F-

EOE standa rd• We Will not

ada

1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lwr1 gh~lc nat

188

Others rece1111ng votes UCLA 96 V1nanova 55,
Chat1anooga 38, Utah 38, SW MI550Un Sl29 UNLV
14, AUburn 13, Okt Oomln•on 11 TCU 11, Vlrg1nla
Tech 9, UC Santa Barbara 8 Middle Tennessee 7.
Anzona St 4 New Mexico 4 Ronda 3, RIChmond 3,
Cre1ghton 2 M1am12, V•rgmta, 2 , W1s -Green Bay 2,
George Washington 1, Houston 1, Lou tsvlile t ,
MISSISSippi 1 MISSISSippi St 1, Montana 1

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the purchase and
installation of a Natural Gas Generator and
Electrical Supply Connections at the Racine
Volunteer Firehouse in·Racine, Meigs County Ohio

will be_ receiyed by the Metgs County Commrs~toner~
at the1r offtce at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 unbl 1:00 P.M, Thursday, November 18, 2004
and then at I: 15 P.M at sard office opened and read
,
aloud for the following ·
Purchase and Installation of A Natural Gas
Generator and Electrical Supply Connecttons at the
Ractne Volunteer Fire Department tn the Viltage of
Racine , Meigs County, Ohto Specrftcattons are
provided in bid packet.
Specifications, and b1d forms may be secured at the
offrce of Mei_gs County Commissioners, Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769. Phone # 740-992-2895
A deposit of 0 dollars 1!\'lll be requtred for each set of
plans and specifications
Eac~ bid must be accompanied by either a bid
bond tn an amount of 100% of the bid amount with
a surety ~atrsfactory to the aforesaid - Me igs County
Commtsstoners or by certtfted check, cashiers check
or letter of credit upon a solvent bank tn the amount
of not less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commisstoners. Brd
Bonds _shall be accompanied by Proof of Authorrty of
the offtcral or agent srgnrng the bond . Bids shalf be
sealed and marked as "Bid for Racme Ftre
De~artment Genera!or Project Bid" and mailed or
delivered to : Metgs County Commissioners
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
'
Attention of bidders is called to all of the
requirements contained in this bid packet, particularly
to the Federal Labor Standards Provisions and DavtsBacon Wages, various insurance requirements
various equal opportunity provisions , and th~
requ1rement for a payment bond and performance
bond for 100% of the contract price
No btdder may withdraw his bid within th irty (30)
days after the actual date of the opening thereof. The
Meigs County Commissioners reserve the nght to
reJect any or all bids.

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

~HI

FLEA MARKle"!

10

'

I \11'1 4)) \II ' I
"il In H I -.,
,.,.,,..._;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

110

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sate .. .... ...... ......
725
Announcement.. ...... ........................... .... 030
Antiques ... .......
530
A[1artments tor Rent .................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market ....
..080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ...................... 760
Auto Repair .. .
.770
Autos for Sale .............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate... ........ . .... 750
Building Suppl!as ......... .......................... 550
Business and Bulldmgs .
340
Business Opportumty..............................210
Business Tramlng
..... . . ..
.140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment
.780
Cards ol Thanks ................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care . . ... .... . . .. .... .190
Electricai/Relriger8tton ..............................840
Equipment for Rent ... . .... .......... ..480
Excavating ................................................ 830
Farm Equipment ...... ....
.610
Farms tor Rent. .......................................... 430
Farms tor Sale ... .. .... .. ... ...... .330
For Lease .............................................. ... 490
For Sale.... . ....... . ....
.585
For Sale or Trade ............................. ...... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .....
....... .. .. 580
Furnished Rooms .................. , .................450
General Hauling ...... . ... .. ..: .. .......850
Giveaway.......... . ........... ...... . .. ...............040
Happy Ada ....... ....... ........ . ..............050
Hay &amp; Grain.................... ........ .. ..............640
Help Wanted... ............ . ....... ................... 110
Home Improvements.............. .. ................810
Homea for Sola ................ ....... ................ 310
Houaehold Goode ....................................510
Houau for Ront.. ........................................ 410
In Memoriam ......................................... 020
lneurance . .................................. ................ 130
t.lwn &amp; Garden Equipment ................. ...... 880
Llve•tock ............................................. ,.......830

Loa! and Found ... ...................................... 080
Loto &amp; Acreage ................................... :....... 350
Mlacellanoouo ......... ............................170
Mlocallaneoua Merchandlae ..................... 540
Mobile Homo Repair... .. ............... .........880
Mobile Homea for Rent. . ..... .. .............420
Mobile Homao for Salw................................ 320
Money to Loan .. ........ . ..... .. ..............220
Motorcycl11 &amp; 4 Wheelero.......................... 740
Mualcet lnatrumenll ..... . ....... . ..... . . 570
Peroonalo .............. ,.................... ,................ 005
Pet a lor Sate ....... .. .. .. . ...... .. ....... . . 580
Plumbing &amp; Heating..... . ..... . ........ .. ... 820
Profelllonal Servlcoa ....... .......... .. ... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair....... .......... .. ... 160
Real Estate Wanted .... .............................. 360
Schoola Instruction.. ...... ................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............................. 850
Situations Wanted ....
.. ...... ..... 120
Space for Rent .. . ...... ........ ................... 460
Sporting Goods .. . ......
... 520
suv·a lor Sale ........................................... 720
Trucka for Sale
. .. .. ...
........ 7t 5
Upholstery ......... . ......... ....
.. 870
Vans For Sale .. .
. .. .. . . .. .. 730
Wanted to Buy .. ....... . ........ . .......... ..... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ..
..... 620
Wanled To Do .. . ....... .... . ....... . . 180
Wanted to Rent ....
. . .. .. ...... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ...... . ....... . ..... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
.. 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant . ....... .. ........... .. ... 076

An EKcellen t way to earn
mon ey The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882 2645
AVONI All Areas • To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304-

675-1429

~

110

Ht1l'WAN HD

Ply and Reapect You

DeHrvl
Ea rn up to $9.25/hr.
You ChOos e
Recrwt Volunteers for
mapr Non Profit Health
Orga ntza11 ons or Help
Protect you r Gun A1gh ts at
lnfoCISlOn In Gail1poi1SI
En1by
• Weekly Pay
• Pa1d VacatiOn every
Six Months
• Permanent Schedule
• Full Benefits Package
• 7 Pa1d Holidays each Year
•Pr ofessional OH1ce
Environm ent
Come eee u1 In
Downtown Galli poll•
Located at
242 Third Avenue
Or call

1-877-463-6247 X2455

110

H~J I' W l\:"fllD

Ill! I' WA'"IH'

-

Dt&lt;Sd Mechanic and

in Home Babys itte r nee ded
lor Infant &amp; Toddler Located WANTED CaShier e)(pen
Trallel T echnldan
close to P1 PI Intermediate ence reqUired apply In per
son
~Sign on Bonus
Schooi M F Holidays oH
Excellent R eferences &amp; THOMAS 00 -IT CENTER
G_A_LL_l_PO
_L
_I_S,_O
_H
__
One of Oh10 s leadmg mo tor LOlling Personality reqwred _ _
camers has an 1mmed1ate Please Call (304) 675 5160
openmg 10 our extremely
act1ve growmg shop lor both In ho me child care g1ve r
a D1e sel Mechanic and a Evemng hours Three young
References
Tra1ler Techn1c1an The sue Child ren
ce ss1u! applicant must have reqwred (740)44 1 0 102
a high level of mechamca l
apt1 tude and be able to wor~ Knuckle boom o perator w1th
w1!h dn11ers Three and a half expenence on de!lm be r
day work we ek pa id va ca Expenenced Sk1dder opera·
S&lt;.:HlKll}-i
10_r_:_l_
7 4_0_:_19_6_5 _4 _46_5_ _ _
tlon personal days health _
IN~-ml cno~

ope nmg, must have excel· store (304)675·5658 lor
lent dnvlng record apply at applications
L1lestyle Furniture 856 3rd - - - - - - - All&amp; Gathpotts, 9·5 no pMne
cans pleaae

Looking for a lnendly organIzed and energetic person
to ahara front oftlce receptionist duties An enthu&amp;IU·
tic attltud&amp; and liiJOOd cue·
tomer serv1ce SkillS are a
must Dental ~now l edge pre·
terred but not reqwed Mall
resume to I 058 State Aoule
7 South Gall lpohs. Oh io
45531 belore 11·15·04

•

fSI\11-.

110111·~,

•

3br 1n SyraCJSe S.J 75 mont I"
H u:J Approvea no Po s
1304 1675 5;332

4lm 2 bdth '0uSt; n
Gall 1pol•s
S650 month .
i4014411993
Ma ns•or
M ob1le depost requ red
Home 1 4X60 2 bedroom 1 0194 or {740)441 1184
bath total electnc gooo
Condo 3 bdrm 2 bJ1hS v.
cond1l10n cerotrat a1r SIO\€
basement V•Pw o t •v-" r
refrigerator and rn•c ro wave
Cntrl
A1C S700
'TIO
mclu ded
S8 500 00 Gall pol1s Ferry li ~ O 446
174019-l 9 9015
3~ 81

1996 t4x72 lndiF S Sulta n
mobile hoTe w1th app 1
&lt;:Jnccs White vmyl s1dm g
Shingled roof 1111 n u ndOIIS
Manogany tr1m throughout
heat purnp 2 bed1uor 2
ba th
lArge garden 'utl
Ask•nq S18 500 080 Call
(7&lt;10!1&lt;11 1547

----------=-----Houc"e 111 Rutl ano '1C pets
,

74 tl?.tL- 266 •
- · - - - --

HugP. Dup le• r. tear 3 ood
room 1 bath c rung stor
age No pets.smokmg 5595
Call Kelly 17401446 9961

N1ce t 2 &amp; 3 !,eJroo""
Apa11ments retall :soacf.
Far sale or rent 2 bearoom ' also for ent 17.1QJ992 3702
mob1le 110 nes starhng at
Rental 1n P01n t PleaSflnl
$270 per month Call 740
~400tmont"'
30o.l.!67::, 55 40
9922t67
or (3041675 4024 as~o- lOr
Homesteao Realt'y
Make 2 p&lt;iyrlents move m 4 Nancy

f! 0 o Down Pay ment ar.d
tmancmg a11a 1laltle w1t'l
approved cred1l
Average
crcd1t auahfuJs you If oow 1
payment tlas l&lt;ept ycu from
buysng th1s IS your chance ve~..rs on note (30&lt;1 736
to own y~,;ur own h.Jille It 1 ~09
you h&lt;~v e a Clown payment - - - -- - - -

Broke"r
~ 20

..

\1omu .B0 \11·~. .;

1··

Mov1ng m~st sell 14x65 t.---ll·m-R;;,;Lioi''.;,I_.,J
lro ter Must see to apprFCI
ale t740)44' 0819
clect1 c SJ0C :JC' ,.., ontn
t~e~' Oakwood 'lleg a stol\:: S l')O ceccst
··,11 4 .. 5
fRA t tn ng
Homes
tly 4 0~
Ua~wood
Fteetwooj &amp; - - - - - - - 2br House lor Sale m West GIIe~ One stop st&gt;app ng 1JOG 2 oearc0.n ..,ao::: 1'at
only at Oakwood Hom es of S35U 8~
-. , "
S ~50
Co!umb•a WV Approx
1 1 2 acres 13041773 5~4 O i3rbC~Jf$\llle WV t30.1 J73l'· deoos11 ,~,, c ~F. 4107
3409
2 beorcom ""~Ot:1le hemP
2BR 1 bath tu lt baseme nt
ne\\ IV remodeled
1 ~,;a r SAVE SAVE SAVE
:Jut~ de ot P • ~ V'. S25C X'
garage 1 acre Located on Stuck nodels a1 011 nrtc.Ps rf'nt sz::.o ill' ... rr )&lt;::, t ve&lt;~r
B 1r~ hart
Lane (740) 44 t 2005 modt!ls arr v1ng Nov, •ea se No Pe s
Co e s Mob1le Ho,...,es 5039
98 16
152 66 US !":! 1 Ens· A.th ens
~ed oorl'
• a er
\'1 '1 Ei'i 110:\'
01 o 4570 1 7JOt5 9.::: 1':r'2 2
stJ~e refr1gera1o •vr'll5"eC
W
~1e
re
Yot..
G(
t
rour
GET YOUR LOAN TO
S 10) "iOrl!'1 S 150 "F-p ~tt
M oney~ ~v cr h"
BUY OR REF INANCE
no J.;e\5 Nas roe --r 1"'r ,.. 01&gt;.
YOUR HOME '
350
UP
740J4 4o·90€1
Lot"&amp;

Lookmg

to r

we offer low dO'.~ I' pa,rmmt
programs also Great 1nter
est ratesl Local company
M ortgage
Loc ators
(740)992 732t

FREE

r..-..iiiiiiiiioilil--

secretaryllm ance manager Gallipolis Career College
lor local car dealersh iP
(Careers Close To Home)
exper1ence preferred bu t no1 Call Today 1 740 446 4367
necessary (wllllraln) lypmg
1 800 2 14{}452
sk1i15 helpful base pay plus
wwwgall oo~scareer college com
bonus pack ag e 1f Interested Accr ed ted Memba• Accrad•~&gt;riJ
cal l Ted (740)992-4443 or Councl kY 1noepenoent Colleges
and Schools 12746

Joe (740 )667·0000

Manager need ed lor mob1!e

1 70

co mmu nicat ion w1th area
physicians and health care
facilities In the dell11ery ol

\nu

REFINANCE S
SO DOWN SO DOW'\l

CRED IT ! BA.NKRUPTCI ES

WELCOME I

L.---"'!"--_.J
l"llstEIL\N~.Ol'S

VETERANS
MB 5263

·------_.J

Carpet Ful Basement

:~n

November
11th

'.Er~

,,'

"'rr;

,e'~

'&gt;~()

Qh

c

&lt;\1'\R'l'\11 '\"N

-

H &gt;HRf'l

.

, bedroom tr teve Sonn~
VallS) aree :&gt;eoos1t &amp; refe •
ences •eou1rea
i40!4o15
2957

tU\1\t.'

2

=

WANTEDtlt

s
g,g

2 ~o l

S3u0 ,,
1er. "~~•t Nc ;:. ' " c
~iter 9pn- 1-.l( .::J.S

Na nt to buv'a 3 bearoom 2
t:alh 110me Garage bAse 1 and 2 bedroom aoar 1
ment, 3-10 acres s des •r 'Tierts luP'ISheo a1J .1 rt ur
sec_ 'i' deoos 1
aole AI! casr Close 11 2 , s!'18Cl
weeh. s Me gs G a l a or req u red '0 ~ets 7&lt;!0 992
Atne n s Cour.tv , 740\992· ,2 18

f.5ii
83~7--=~---- Bedrooms) Large Suro
6300
\\'At"llJ)
Room
12x32
all new

To Do

:::.Jtl~

ca

1

T•

r, C

•

Roa.,e'1
1&lt;o09

1\ "n;n

between the ages of 17 35
or have pno r m111 tary serv
( 0 h1o Loans 0 nly)
1ce you won t want to oass _ __::::::::..:::.:.:.:~2:.­
th1s up For Opportun1!1eS u'l By Ow ner US 35 r Mason
your area can
.304 675 Cout'!y 5 Rooms &amp; Bat h !2

11M

e ec1

St Rt
t60 8 1 2 m.1es troll' t'1CIZ:e'
Hosp1tal ap:JrO )( \ 1 2 acre JB• ....,a € "" \".. as~"er &amp;
ots and approY 3 acre lot Dryer
Pel og &amp; Steve
lf"CiuCied SH, ('1'1 c .\;:JrornveCI
i7 40)o146·6865
(30 41576 2!13J
360
Rt 't ~:,-nn

Home Health serv1ces We
acre lot S38 500 (304 )675
oHe r a.J competltlve salary Elderl y care futf tim e dayst•'r 9
• 3•3_ _ _ _ _ _ _..,
E 0 E t-'lease send res ume
ni Qhtl Mon-Fn w/ ref call
~
to
Stephan ie
Rogers , Jan 304 _675 _7792
OR!· Dlrector of Marketing 352 - : - - - - -- - Second Avenue , Gallipolis Georges Por ta ble Sawm1U
OH 4563 1
don 't haul your logs to the
mil! 1ust cail3 04-e75·.1957
All r•al estate edvertls!ng
Paramed iCS
&amp;
EMT S
In thla n•w•ptplt II
needed Apply at 1354 WU I pay up to S50 each tor
VERB
sub lect to tht F•d•ra l
unwanted
or
1
unk
11ehicles
to
Jackson Pi~e Gall ipol iS
C A England Now Hiring
Felr Houalng Act ot 1988
haul away (740)992-Q41 3 II
Get training lor a career
wl'l teh mnk•• It lltegallo
Alo Grant1e MeDona lds now no an swe r tea11a message
th at paya we!/ 1
advartlae any
h1ri ng an shift
lne11perlencad &amp;
pr1terence limitation or
Wood l:i Ex tra Cere for your
Exper ienced Dn\18rs l
dlaerlmlnatlon baaed on
Sa lespe rson
Lifes tyle Loved one Pr!11a te room
COL TRAINING
race co lot rall gion, su
Furmture lull hme pOs1t10n beth 3 hOt meatS PhOne
tamlll at tlll tUt ot net lonal
AVAILABLE
Apply in perso n 10 5 No (740)388·0118 .
origin, or any Intention to
Pa1d on the JOb training!
856
phone c all s please
mske any su ch
Guaranteed lOb upon
Th1rd Ave nue Gallipolis
preterenct llm lhl l lon or
successful complet1on
duscrlm• nallon
Ta~mg appl1cet10ns tor mde
Ht~1Nl.."'\S '
Meet with Ou r Company
RecrUiters
pendent con trac tors Earn
OI"I.I(Jt&lt;TlNIII
Th lt ne w •pa pe r w ill not
~Thuraday,
up to Sf ,500 a month del1v · - - - - - - kno wmgly ac ce pt
. enng T he Da ily Sent inel
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
edvert l.. mtnta for retl
Must be reliable and have
60 vendmg mac h 1nes 1
10am 12 Noon
ealet• wh• ch Ia m
dependable transporta tiOn
axcet1ent locatl0ns all lor
violat1 on of the lew Our
2pm-4pm &amp;
Must be avail able Mon day
$1 o 995 {800)2 34 6982
readera tre h•reby
5pm-6 30pm
inrormed !hat ell
through F nd ay Mo1 n ngs r--;;;"'!ii!IT!f!&lt;;ol
Oualltv Inn
and early aft erno on and
aJ
(!JJ
dwelling• adver'l lud·l n
(Old Hol 1d ay Inn Expres s)
11'111 MIWipApe r I re
Saturday evemngs II 1n1er
H IO VALLEY PUBLISH
4708 W incheste r A.ve
avall llbie on an equ at
es ted cont act Jason at The lNG CO recommend s thA
Ashland KY
oppor'lunlly baae•
ou do bus1ness w•th peo
1 64 elut 191 5 miles north Da 1ly Sentmel (740)9922 155
le you know and NOT t
on US H 1ghway 23
end money throu gh th
1-800·6e8-3895
Must see 8eaut 1lul country
TE LE MARK ETE RS NEED·
at! unhl you have 1nvestt
Min Age 21
settmg 1 B9 acres J 4 bed
ED· No Expenence OK S7·
ated the otler n
www crengland net
9 Per Hour Easy Wor k 1 lii;!~~~~L-- room s I t 2 bath ''replace
Opportun ity t o open Clo· F utt basemer: sul"l oorch
888 974 JOBS
3y r O!Cf garage
Eld erly
Couple
n - - - - - - - - Bel s
Bakery
and 26 )( 32
Charles ton needs L1ve 1n Wanted Dayt1me De l very Res1aurent For •ppo lnt - 20x40 Jyr old lr'l•ground pool
Hel p
Private DrPJers must ha11e liB •d menla call (304) 525-8780 w1ttl 1750 sq It concrete
Accommod at iOn Free Time L•cense Auto &amp; lnsu 11\Pl or (740)894-3830
area
and ' ryl fence
5 12:"\ 000 "'.l Jl'l-"7 'Z 156•
call (304 )6'75-5 12t
(304 )925· 1804

r

ot 'or re1't
Waterand tlast "c'\CeQr,
111dec! t74 01 ~4 1 ::S.:lC

N1ce lots !or sale

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1 800 370 4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED B't' US

m the Wes t V rg 1n1a Army
Nahonal Guard II you are "

2 bejroc

M ob le !..orne

CASH OUT HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO

;:~~::;.:~;:.::..--_,..,

\I , F

2 acres 01 lnga s Rve\a
S15DOO 7402 4::. 0 1 33

NEW PURCHASES

home ~rk 1n S hade send
resume to Coun try Par k
H1gh
School
Jun1ors
inc PO 1033 Logan Oh
Senrors and Pnor Se r., ce
431 38
you ca n f1!1 vacant posit io ns
Med1 Home Health Agency
inc seeking a f ull t1me AN
Pat1e nt Care Coo rdin ator tor
Ga li 1polls OhiO an d surroundmg area
Dut 1es
mctude estab llshmg and
mamtammg o pen tmes of

APPROVED

NOM E LOANS•

2 beC,1•oorr

0°e Down =' ay'Tlen' and

8Pfl"'?1B '1 1 7C

V na
Street
74 01 357-7886

Ga1 pOliS

mancmg ave laDle w1tn 2 beCl•oorn apt up sta1rs
approved cred •
A11erage water •resr stove hJge
cred•t Qual l •es you 11 dow , ncl udeo $300 ~ele r e 1ces
payment haa ~eo! yo~.o from r eq um~d
3 mo.,tn •ease
buymg thiS 1S your cnance 17401446·"620 ( 1'4 0) 44 '
to own your own nome If 9872 1eave mess age
you h a11e a dov.n payment
2BR C A ·e' 1gerator s·o~e
~ut .,.,.otJid like to con se rve 1!
wtt s h~l' orve
we ot1er 10v. down payment
hpp o, UP 1
mw !•crorograrrs arso Great 1n ter
Hotze
~40.1 41 G19 .:l . _
est •a t1: 1 s Loca1 ...om pa r~
•7401 J4' 'Hi4
MOriQfl.,JA
LOCiH O•S
1

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740~992

2

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- - - - A-PA.ee: AUTt FUL
AT

7321

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Gas r,eat

oar~"

c~ •

•

AC

S600 11"0 ,/t!C 4·Hi 3Jol

2 storv 2 bearo:)'n • 5 oam

MEN TS
AT
BUD GET
PRI C ES AT JACKSON
ESTATES !i,' N~&lt;;•,o,o ~~
Dr veo ' rorr' S ,44 IO S442
wan, tc shVL' &amp; r'lov es Cal
~ 40 44 6 2568
Eoua1

'&lt; lichen w• t ~ sto~e B rel•,ger
ato·
233 Second ~ve
Conven erl locatiOn
no CONVENIEN Tl Y LO CAT
pe1s SS6':J "'O"lh j)•,•S rf'IE"
EO &amp; AFFORDABlE

ence &amp; oecC'"
&lt;1 926

~-.t 01 44 f

lo•
2b'
ho~se
535 0 mn'&lt;tr
WAlE'' ara
1rash oaroj nc pet s
Deoos,t
ar&gt;d r ef ~:! l' 1 1..!'! 'i:'JU el1
740)388

1

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Tra1ler 269 MeFcerv le
IJedroor- am C•own C t~ y, '&lt;. !c'•en A r~"l a"~..es b.C
V1llage
,1"4012S6 8132 ,, o, Plf'Asal' ,;.;~s "l;)'lt'"'
p c. Qe11." 10~~f- .. -.,2P.
174 0\645 fi ~Q8

I

'

HOI Sf.'
HJRRISI

but would like to conserve 1t
110

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED!

RECEPrtONIST

www com1cs com

2004 by NEA , Inc

Craflers neededl!l for more
lnfo rmat1 on call (304)675- rnsuran c e pa1d holidays
6230 1f no answer iea11 e a overtlme pay 401K plan an d
Message &amp; Phone-N umber uniforms are am ong the
many ben efitS ol wo rkmg
1mmed1ateiy Fax em a1ls or
In person appliCants are we!Wor~ From Home
come
800·2 10- 4689
Donver Fann1n
$500-$1 500/Month
Maintenance
Part t1me
Superinten dent
$ 2 000-$8 000/Month
4277 lyman Dnve
Full-!1me
Hilliard OH 43026
DATA ENTRY
Fax 6 14 527 4114
Work from home
Em a11 mfox@arct1cex
Flexible Hours•
press com
$$$Great Pay!$$$
E 0 E I Drug free workpl ace
Personal
Computer
Reqwred
Dommo s now h1rmg sate
1·800·913·2823 ext •1
dnvers
all
poSitio ns
Pomeroy
Pt
Ga
llipolis
Delivery/Warehouse person
needed , tun 11me tmmed1ate Pleasant &amp; Eleanor ca n

DeNTAl OFFICE

OIRECTV

m~ Slt.E

WANTtll

L.__,.:;ro~B;;;t;,:IY__,J
Abso lute Top Dol lar U S
S1 tver and Gold Cams
Proofse ts Gold Rmgs U S
Currency M T S C01n Shop
151
Second
Avenue
G U I 740 446 2842

14x70 87 Clayton 3 bedroom 2 bath C A new car
pet ce 1m1c t•le washer &amp;
dryer 510 000 1740)388
040t

No Fee Un less We W n
1-888 582 3345

AULilON AND

10

m~ S11 f

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC URITY ISS!?

RIVERSIDE
AUCT ION
BARN At 7 South 5 m1les
Garage sal e No11ember 11 ·
below the Dam EV ERY
12 9 ? 2993 State Route
@
6pm
SATURDAY
141 M ea t si1cer boys &amp; g1rls
(740
256-6989
clothes

my home some th1ng have to
go H 2 m•te on At 218 oft 7
Ler ge chest freezer roll top
desk reclin er glass do or
shet11es stereo &amp; records
, old record cab1 ne1 2 chest
drawers 2 w ood burmng
sto ves
old ro und one
tamps, dishes clothes lots
s ma II 1!ems
old
gun
houcks

20 Mollltl Hmn _,

up to
12 Months Free
Programm1ng 130
Channels plus Free
Eq u1pment Free
Proless 1o nal Insta llatiOn up
10 4 Room s Free Call 1
BOO 523 7556 to r details

0;&gt;p,...:=O..:..~--­

11

7

t:l

1

'" 1110lat1on ol the law

1

St ~VIU .,

GALUI~lU~

M ov1ng sale
11 ·12 13
Thurs- Fn Sat Havmg sol d

I &amp;ccepl

PHt )I ~...."i."'' IOI\ \L

lots more, Tues 9th Wed
10th Thurs 11!h

~

VISA

01" cance l any ed t~l t~ny time Error~ mu~t be reported on the hr ~J I cay ot pu blication ondtho l
Tr ibune-Senti nel-Reg ister will be reepona lb le tor no more than the coat of the space occupied by thl e rr o r end only the f1rat lnsert•o" We 5hall no l be
any loss or expense thet results from the publication or om1aeton of en advar11aement Correction w1 11 be mad e m tho t1rst ava11eble ed!llol"' • e 0 ,
are alway a conf idential • Current rate ct~rd appllea • All rea l ael~tle adveriiMmanta are subjec t to thl!l Fl!ldl!lra l Fa1r Housi ng Act ol 1968 • Th1a """ P'' P"

Syracuse
new clothmg
w /tags bought from store
that went out ol busmess
never 1n flood teenagers
designer ctoth1ng, JLO was
$98 00 now $20 des1gner
Jeans $49 69 now $10 00
fop $ 12 00 &amp; over now
$4 00 1ean overall bags was
$29, now $5 00 mens 1eans
des1gner (wa1st 40) was
$90 00 now $10 00 no try·
1ng on ali sa les f1nai no
return rrry loss your ga1n

rL.-------' r
70

bl
d bl k
ora e mlxe
ac pup
p1es mo!her AKC golden
retnever father AKC boxer
Ad

156
137

Zanesv11! e

Lost Male black &amp; wh1 te
Australian Shepa rd weanng
collar
Answers to ~ ou~e
good spaces m h Cemetery
recently and haven 1 con- Rodney BH:Jwetl area Call
firmed the purcha se may be (740}245 9469 or (740 )245
adv1 sed on January 1 2005 5029
lot pr1ces w111be advanced to Young dog med1um s1ze

Gl\1-=.,\\\~\\

The top 25 teams In The Assoc1atod Preas'
women's preseason co llege basketball poll. wtth
flrst·I'Jace votes In parentheses, 2003..()4 records,
torai potnts based on 25 points for a l•rst-place
vote through one po1nt tor a 25th-place vote and
last year's final ranki ng

Dutro Ford

(740!992-2697

•

POLICIES Oh io Va lley Publ lehlng re ..rvealha nght 1&lt;1 ed1t , reject

at Pohng local1on 1n Bediord ram or shme formerly Jo s
Fam11 1es Township Key r1ng IS from G1~ Shop 3202 Rd 124

Pu&amp;llc Notice
and/or IndiVIduals who have
reserved lo ts m se lected
location m Forest H1lls
Cemetery Those who have
called and wantl o purchase

CHARGE IT!

Now you can hove borders and graphics
tJ~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

DisPlay Ads

Dally In - Column : 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Imsertlon

JUST SAY

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Car keys to a NISsan found 819 Chr1stmas garage sale -

national football league

Assoctated Press

Offtee, llo~~

15

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

BY BARRY WtLNER

~ribune
l\egl~ter
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992-2157
675-5234
To Place

2

31-6

20-1 0

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

Pv
16
17

11 Duke

10

(' •II• • ( nunl) C!II

j

Shanna Zolman . Loree Moore and
Shyra Ely. plus foUl other veterans, from a 31-4 team that lost to
Connecttcut 111 the national champ!Onshtp game Ill April.
As if that ·weren't e nough,
Summitt stgned the natiOn's topranked recruttmg class, includtng
the No I prospect, Candace
Park er But Parke r and two other
fres hmen. Alex Fuller and Sade
Wtley-Gatewood, are tnjured .
Fuller ts out for the season
Still , the Lad) Vols have three
other talented newco mers They' II
be needed because Summttt has
put to gether ,mother brutal nonconference schedule that tncludes
seven teams from the preseaso n
Top 25
" I' ve turned to tht s veteran
group to really help us through the
process of teach mg our freshmen .'
satd Summitt, who has stx NCAA
tttles "Our expec tatio ns are
always ht gh here As vetera ns and
as leaders, they have to 1 atse the
bar for the yo un ger players ..
Connecticut led th e fmt poll m
four of the prevtou' !tve seasons
and .... ill try to become the hrst
sc hool to wm tour st rat ght NCAA
women's basketball tt tles
But the Huskt es had a m&lt;IJDr lo ss

The Assoc tated Press on con dtttun or anonym tt)
The NFL also can develop
late-season pnme-ttme satellite or cable packa ges of
etght game s, wht ch would be
telev tsed on Thursddy s and
Satutday s Or the· league
cou ld take those etght games
and show them re giOnally tn
pnme-tlmc te lecasts on
Sundays and Mondays.
"We gut some prote cttons.''
Fox Sports chamnan Davtd
Htll satd "The last several
weeks offhe season, the NFL
has the nght to pu ll d game
for Monday Ntgh t Football
and we re sttll 111 conversation on (detat ls)"
DtrecTV also extended tts
deal wtth the league throu gh
20 l 0 fo r the Sunday Ttcket
package The satel ltte dtstnbutor wtll pay $3 5 btllwn tor
the ftve-year extension
Fox wtll pay $4.3 btlltun,
or $712 5 mill ion per year for
the NFC games, the source
satd, whtle CBS wtll pay
$3 7 btllton , or $622 5 mtll!On a year In the current
deal, Fox ts paym g $550 mtllton a year and CBS ts paymg
$500 mtllton
"We 're extremely exctted

We Cove
Melga, Gallia,
And Ma50n
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

The top 25 teams m The Associated Press' men's

preseason college basketball poll, w1th first-place
11otes ln' parentheses, 2003-04 records, total
points based on 25 pomts ior a hrst•plece vote
through one point for a 25th-place vote and last

Summitt, Tennessee start No. 1 for 11th time
Assoc1ated Press

ter

Men's College
Basketball
Preseason Top 25

Women's College Basketball
BY CHUCK SHOFFNER

The Daily Senlin~l • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

• &gt;

..

�.
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

rL.-.··AP:; f:u-·~;:RFN~;IENii;:;.:. _.~I r
..'S.·

www.mydailysentinel.com

It

APAII1~1FNrS
n~ RJ.•'I{r

Gracious ltv~ng 1 and 2 bed·
room.apartments at Village
Manor
and
A1vers1de
Apartments m M1ddleport
From $295-$.444 Call 740-

Twm Awers Tower IS accept- For sale- WhirlpOol rerngeraIng apphcai!Ons lor wait1ng tor (white), e)lcellent condilist for Hud-subSIZed 1- br tion. $150 Tappan gas
apartment call 675-6679 ran9e (white). excellent conEHO
dition, S100 Call 6\o'91'11nQS
992·5064 Equal Housmg
1740)949·2660.
Opportun111es
\II IH II\ \ UI \ 1
One bedroom apartment ,
no pets , m Pomeroy.

HOUSF.HOlD

Gooo;

(740)992·5858
One bedrOom garage apart·
ment kitchen lurntshed.

$400. 1740)992-3823
Small 1br Apt $300/month
plus Depos1t No Pets. on Mt
Vernon Ave . Pt. Pleas.
(304)773·6061
Tara
TownhOuse
Apallments . Ve1y Spac1ous.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Bao~ Pool
PatiO. Start S3B51Mo. No
Pets. Lease Plus Secunty
Depostt ReqUirecl Days
'740·446·3 481 . Eventngs
740-367-0502

Appliance
Warehouse
m Henderson, WV

Pre·
owned appltcanes sta1!1ng at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do service work on au
Make and Models (304)6757999

erator-lreezer. 3 yrs. old.
$300 Call for
1740)949·9308.

details

door,

blocks above McOonalds.
Pomeroy, OH (740)99 2-

repa1rs on major brands in
3 Jack Russell Terrier
shop or at your home.
Puppies, Brown &amp; White,
Used Furniture Store t30 Ta1ts
Docked
$150
17 40)446-7398
Bulaville ~ike , appliances, 1304)675·7474
dressers, twm. lull, Queen,
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark ktng mattresses . drussers. AKC 7 week old Black Labs.
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio. couc hes. dinettes. recliners. Had ShOts &amp; Wormed $100
1740)446·7444 1-877·830· grave monuments. much Each (304)773·5103
9162. Free Estimates. Easy more _
(740)4 46-4782 AKC Black Lab pups. Shots,
financing , 90 days same as Gallipolis. OH . Hrs 11·3 (M· wormed. parents HIPS
cash. Visa/ Master Card. S)
O.F.A . certified, , NAFC
Drive· a· little save alot.,
·
bl oo dll'ne .
c hamp1on

r

SPORTING

740 367·7156

ANTIQLIF:&lt;i

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
~allipoU~ J9ad~

f!trtbune
t)otnt flea~ant )lell'i,ter
The Daily Sentinel

i&gt;unbap tn:imes -~entinel
p••····------------------------Subscriber's Name _______

Buy
or sell.
Riveri ne
Antiq ues, 11 24 East Main
on SA 124 E . Pomeroy, 740·
992· 2526 . Russ Moore,

ACROSS

DVD Player call (740)709·

1599

Holiday Sale!

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repairect. New &amp; Rebui lt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1800· 537-9528.

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Mail or drop off this coupon along

95-Pontlac
Grand
AM ,
AKC Schnauzers puppies. loaded, no rust. $2,750, 92·
Black. salt &amp; pepper. Vet Ford Ranger XLT 4114 ,
chec~ed .
S400
each. loaded, standard, no rust,

sso.

96 Chevy S-10 LS, manual
transmission . NC. alu·
For sale- male Old English
minum wlleels , tonnea u
sheepdogs, lovable, shaggy
cover. 91.000mileS. well·
dogs, 11 weeks old, price
maintained, $6 100 080
5200, 1740)985·9823
(937)532·6437 or 1740)2 45·
Q
Jack Russell pups. 5 weeks 9502
old, adorable. $200/each.
99 Jeep Wrangler Sport. 4 0 ,
(7 40) 742-2803
5
speed
tran smi ss ion.
Registered CKC Pug pup - (740)245~0356 or (740 )339pieS.· 10 weeks old, ltrst 0335
shots/wormed . Blacks $500.
Fawns $450 . (740)3 88·
SUVs
9327.
FORSAI.E

1740)388- 1520

I \1{\ISII'I'III· S
~II\ I.SIO( h

r

[,IWSIOCK

8884

Must see Paint Mare $800.
Pal mafe $1 ,200; 4yr. old
gelding $350. All beaut iful.
healthy &amp; gentle. (740)446·

0367.

r

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

r:

• Vinyl
Sidi ng • New Garages.
• Replace ment
WindmVs • Roofin g
COMMERCIAL and

I 995
Chevy
G-20
Rockwood conversion van,
350 engine. aluminum
wheels, rear heat and air, TV
&amp; VCR interior excellent
shape. body good shape,
(740)985·3673
2003 Chevy Express Cargo
Van 314 ton. 2500 series
w1th side doors. 373 Vortex
engine, air, cruise, tilt.
44 .000 miles. $ 16.500.
(740 )446·9585 or (740)4467724.

4 WHn:t.ER~

2003 100th Anniversary 883
$500! Honda 's, Chevy's, Hugger Harl ey Davidson .
Jeep's.
Eel .
Police 298 m11es. E:o:c. Condttion .
Impounds! Cars !rom $500 Lots of ex tr as _ $8,500 (last
to r listings 800·391·5227 ear made 304)773·51 03
EXT 3901
CA\II'ER~ &amp;

MoroRHo,u:-;

IMPROVEI\LEN'IS

2000 Bui ck LeSabre, V6,
CAMOUFLAGE
Small Jo b Specia list
4-doo r,
limited ,
Sam Somerville's. Since 1964, seda n.
elec, plumbg , carpentery
by Sandyville. WV PO. Satel~tes . 80,000 miles, garage kept. repair,
(7 40)992·
TV Sala!/lnstallahon (304)273- $8.500.00. 17 40)94 9-22 17
4405Wayne Neff
5655
7AM • 10PM

stzea ,5'x1QJ
Hours

740-992-7599

7:00AM· 8:00PM

Alll

At~PLANE

6UtTA~

BARNEY
OH,
,!.
BUT
SHE IS,
ELVINEY !!
r

EILEEN'S GOIN' 'ROUN'
SAYIN' SHE'S A NATURAL.

SHE GROWS THEM DYE
INGREDIENTS IN
HER GARDEN !!

i
I

BL.ONDE !!

1.11411 mo pd

l

-,/'1~1 i
'-":v-rl
!
•

~~~~~&amp;

THE BORN LOSER

17"1&gt;11&gt; YOU KNOW , YOUR. G.ll.£1&gt;.T· "'l
GR.( I\T· G~I&gt;F/&gt;..'ffit:.R JO:':&gt;It&gt;..f\
Tf\OR.~/&gt;..~~L( toUGf\T It-\ Tf\t.
CIVILWI&gt;.R "?

P"COOL 1 WfiiC.I-I.~II&gt;E..W"~fi.E.

0~, Tf\t:. ~R.\f\

"'

OR H\E: ~OIJifl'

BIG NATE

Hupp
93 Columbus Rd.

..Middleport's only
Self-Storage..

IMPORTS
Athens

FRANCIS~ TI&gt;-KE

HnMt:

fEW S&gt;iOTS ON ME

1

•

Whaley's Auto
Parts

IMPROH"Lf~~Ts
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING

St.

IS THERE . ANY'I"HING.
1'\0I&lt;.E PAINFUL THAN
G.ETI ING HIT IN THE
FACE WITH A FROZ.EN
SOCCER BALL?

A

0

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

'

0

0

0

_ ,_ _ -

I Darwm . OH
7-!0-992-701.1 or 740-99 2-555_,

llrslocMt!g Ia lr \ltK!rl So l•nse
urwl .4 fit •t' \ lu r·kd Pn rl~
See

Brent

ur Brian \Vh aley

Sat. H: .10- 0/oon

YOUR
BUSINESS .Advertise
IN THE
in this
CLASSIFIEDS
space
for
$50 per
month

PEANUTS
GUESS W~AT I I-lAVE FOR
LUNCI-4,MARCIE ... T!.liRT'f- FIVE
FORTUNE COOKIES!

M-Fn H:.10-5:00

,t

W~AT

DOES TI-IAT
ONE 5AV, SIR?

Wi-10 j:IXE5 YOUR.
LUNCi-1, KID? II

~'R~

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

740·992-5232

SUNSHINE ClUB
I/Jio!AT's "THIS
11-111\JG we 'Rt;:
rorNG10
TOIV/GHT,

IT'S A
.' SE.tv IORS'

SLAM

P€OR£ GH 10GETHER

A~D

SI-IARf. EXPERII:NCE.5

WITH EACH O'!}IER...

VE.Rr'

EDNA?
I

I~R:IRMAL

__..,.,;:

I

Hf.Y, t KNOW I'M FAT...
50 WHAT?

,.,

I

Locust, Oak
Maple $45 Delivered
Bill Slack
740·992-2269

'

992-2155
..

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addl1ion1 &amp;

Remodeling

ROBERT
BISSEll .
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages

Vinyl l
o Palio and
Oet kl
We do it all except
furnace work
o

•

• Complete

RemodeHng

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1871

992-6215

Slop &amp;,Compare

0
0

Rt.6~

Sun . ClmoL'd

l~ !

sian of the 2004 World Computer
Championsh ip, held during the Summer
Nationals in New York City last July. Eight
programs competed in a round-robin. from
which four advanced to the knockout
stage. lf you had been South in six hearts ,
how would you have planned the play
after a spade lead?
0 -Pius (from Germany) sat North and
Soufh . Nor1h's two -spade cue -bi d is

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnt; C1pl"ler etyplograms are created from QUOtations by lamou\ people
Each letter on lhe Cipher stands lor ai\Ottle1 .

GRIZZWELLS
ctD BUPPY, ! 1-\A\E io ASK '1tlU ~
A 5\\E CUT

or \HAT

\101~

I'M FAf. ANP
('M BeAUTIFUl.!

NARCISSISM .•• l.l5f. II

OR L05£: II

a "well played" from p~rtner,

G

AstroGraph

pfil &lt;~n= ore~1m:

Todays clue. 0 equals G

ZL

" RDPRC
TZNRZFM ;

LRDKMOBD
TZNRZFM

J

LBMLB."
" TKMRKLI

a spade . South ruffed in the dummy anC
discarded its fast club from hand - and

GARFIELD

.. 'd

PaSs

ing on the board, and cashed the spade
ace, discarding a club.
With the prelimina ries complete, declarer
continued with the ace and another club.
Bingo! West won the trick and had to lead

Rocky "RJ"

992-3194
or 992-6635

.. 'l:Jie
Q.a ily, ..
Seiitinel

PasH

Pass
Pass

ous _four-spade splinter bid, it foo~s as if
the programmer "told~ the computers that
North had to have the former hand-type.
Defend ing
was
Jack
(fro m
t he
Netherlands). The Westerly Jack led the
spade jack, approPriately enough. South,
at megahertz speed, saw the one chance
It finessed dummy 's spade queen. drew
trumps , took i ts three diamond tricks end-

See

10x10x10x20

r-A'"'D~V:-:::E:R:T::-:IS""'E::-"1

Pass

didn't wait for

Middleport, OH

Uncond1 t1onal lifetime gua r·
antee Local references fur·
nished . Establtshed 1975. q
Ca ll
24 H rs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

5•

servant
45 Main artery
46 Lowed
48 Beg
pardon !
49 Mask
feature
50 Allow
to use
51 Gradeschooler
52 Tucked
away
53 Craving
55 lett Bank
friend

game -forcing , usually sho wing e1ther
game-plus values in hearts, or a b1g bal·
anced hand lacking a spade stopper. But
since SoUth continued with an adventur-

you in

1o

Pass

East

mood
44 Junk e-mail
47 Cookieselling org.
49 !klnch o1 fish
51 Boling
victory
54 Aura
56 Sturgeon
product
57 Cato's
highway
58 Sultan 's
cousin
!jp Decimal
base
60 Lair
51 Decade
18 Declares
52 Recipe~
invalid
·
20 Pub order
DOWN
23 PHa treat
24 Pained cry
1' Napoleon's 26 " F,ernando"
Island
band
2 Chuckle
27 Indiana port
3 Divided
28 Ogden
country
locale
4 Chewing · 30 -Vegas
gum base
3t Distant
5 Optimistic 32 Cornelia
6 Leather
- Skinner
punch •
33 StraHord 's
7 Hidden
river
valley
35 Energy
8 - and yang 40 Geol.
9 Query
formations
10 Lock opener 41 Date
13 Feeling
43 .Horror-film

games without pos1mortems: when com·
pulers compete among themselves.
This deal occurred in the qualifying ses·

Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

MANlEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street •

l. 2
'"'.

Pass

No"rth

85

Brid~e is both a social and, occasionally,
an antisocial game. The interaction with
other playe rs is good, but when disaster
strikes, sadly sometimes an acrimonious
postmortem follows. However. there are

45771
740.949·2217

Advertise
·
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

Hunter's Special.

Chevelte 454 /400 $14 ,000 ._ 1975 Camper. Newly remodelect. a must see for S1.000.
Pole Barn 30x50x 1OFT 1988 S-10 VB project
$1
,800.
Phone
(304)773$639 5. includes Patnted
Metal. Plans. lns truct1on 5679.
Book,wSiider, Free Delivery 1989 blue Dodge Aries LE .
10
HOME
1937)559·8385
33.000 miles. air. saoo

Racine ,

to 10'x30'

ing $1800. 1740)992·6159

• name

31 Young horse
34 Flying
mammal
35 Killer whale
36 Oil-road
vehicles
'S1 Half a bikini
36 Admiring
sighs
39 Sugarloaf
locale
40 Rowdiness
42 Grumpy

There cannot be
a postmortem

29670 Bashan Road

RES IDENTIAL

1993 Town &amp; Country
Chry sler var1, good gas
milea ge. satisfactory for
work vehicle o r family, as k-

Public Notices inN,"·~:~:~;
Your Right lO Know, Dell"l'!d Right to

COURT OF COMMON
unknown spouse of recorded upon tria
PLEAS
Margaret Stark on
following deacrlbed
MEIQS
COUNTY, March 7, 1941, and real estate to wit:
Jennl Doe, unknown
Property Addreao:
OHIO
Mortgage Electronic
spouse of William
124 Mulberry Street,
Registration . Stark on Ma ~c h 7,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
last and being more parSystems, Inc. solely. 1941,whose
as
nominee
tor
known address are ticularly described In
Lender c/o Select
ADDRE.SSUNKNOWN . plaintiff's mortgage
Portfolio Servicing, and all of whose resi- recorded In Mortgage
Inc. and U.S. Bank dences are unknown
Book Official Recorda
National Association, and cannot by rea·
Volume 139, pogo 769,
as Trustee of CSFB
sonable diligence be
this
County
of
ABS Trust Series ascertained, will take
Recorder's Office .
2001·HE11 clo Select
notice that on the
All of the above
Portfolio Servicing , 19th day of July, 2004, named
defendants
Inc.
Mortgage Electronic are
required
to
Plaintiff,
Registration
answer within twentyVS
Systems , Inc. solely eight (28) days after
Pamela G. Bentz aka
as
nominee
for
last publication data
Pamel a l. Bentz aka
Lender c/o Select
Dec.
2004 , which
Pamela Bentz, et al.
Portfoli_o Servicing , shall be published
Defendants .
Inc. AND U.S. Bank once a week for six
Case NO. 04-CV·089
National Association , consecutive weeks,
Judge: Fred W. Crow
as Trustee of CSFB
or they might be
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
ABS Trust Series
denied a hearing in
FORECLOSURE OF 2001·HE11 c/o Select this case.
MORTGAGE
Portfolio Servicing , Jennifer K. Ross,
JSne Doe, unknown
Inc.
filed
its
Attorney
spouse
of
M.D.
Complaint in the LERNER , SAMPSON
Russell on March 7, Common Pleas Court &amp; ROTHFUSS
1941 , James Doe, 'of Meigs county, Ohio
Attorneys for Plaintiff
unknown spouse of
in case No.4 V 089, on
P.O. Box 5480
Cora Belle S. Russell
the docket of the
Cincinnati, OH 45201 ·
on March 7; 1941 , Court, and the object
5480
and demand for relief
Julie Doe , unknown
(513) 241-3100 .
spouse of Edward A .
of which pleading is
attyemail@ lsrlaw.com
Stark on March 7, ·to foreclose the lien
(101 5, 12, 19, 26, (11)
1941 , Jamie Doe, of plaintiff's mortgage 2, 9

liNDA'S PAINTING

New . Homc ~

V~NS

40 MumRCV(.USI

1972

let me do 1t for youl

29 "Wootworld"

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hill 's Self
Storage

BUILDERS InC.

FoR SALE

772 4.

$12 .000 .

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1994 Chevrolet Suburban .
All leather seating
All
power. Equipped tor tra1ler
towing. Can Oe seen at 136
First Ave., Gallipolis, Oh10.
Phone (740)446-256 t .

2004 Chevy Express Cargo
GRAIN
Van 3/4 ton 2500 series w1th
side doors_ Air. cruise , tilt,
Pure T1mothy Hay for sa le . 9,200
miles.
$21 .500.
Bright Wire Tied Straw tor
(740)446-9585 o r (740)446·

3501350,

BISSEll

Ta~e

r

HAY&amp;

1965 Plymoutll . 440 si~
pack, $12,000. 1923 Ford

¥K Q643
• A 8 f
• 10 53 2

West

FOR SALE

30

4'7

Opening lead: • J

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

S3.500 (304)675-5107 or

Border Collie mi.: pups.
Shots, wormed. ready to go.

South

Dealer: Nortll
Vulnerable: Both

Beagle puppies tor sa le with (304)675·6831
papers. Call (740)388·8721 .
15
TRUCK~

REAL ARMY

469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

I

• J 5 3
... Q J

Box 189
Middleport
4.4CO~-~••~~ 45760

$400 eac~. 1740)696-1085

080. 1740)256-1233

with a copy of your photo ID to

!

1

and Financial Services

black, brown (fema le), 1 leather, good tires . $3800
sable (ma te ) vet checked 080. (740)446·4336

MTD Yard Machine 22"-24 "
Snowthrower $325 .
36" Steel door and sc reen
with lock $25 740-245-5 160
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Fo r
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, WednesOay &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm . Closed
T hursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (7401445-7300

¥ ·a

Rocky Hupp Insurance

(740)388·8432 .

• 9 8 4 ' :J
• J 9
• 10 9 7 6
... K 6 4

. K J I 0652

WV Contractors Lie. #00"3506

95 Par k Ave , good condition ,

Armstrong free standing
Bulls·
Top
wood burner. $250. Heats Angus
hot water also. (740)245· Performance Lt nes _40 Years
Artificial Insemination. Slat e
1984 or (740)645 - 1984
Run Farm (740)286-5395
Dining Room Solid P ine
www.slaterunfarm.com
Table w/Hutch. Tabl e-has 2·
Armed Chairs. · 4- Regular Club ca lve s for
sa le.
Chairs, Good Cond ition Reaso nably priced. Contact
$900 (304 )6'75·2749
Baughman Stiow CatUe .
(740)256·6535 or (740)256o u acory ue

op quality. wa rrant ies,
ilton , WV. Flea Marke
action C. Saturdays an
unda s. 606 615-0778

2003 Pontiac Montana. 4dr,
·Power Windows &amp; Locks,
39.000 mites. Excellent
Condition ,
$13,900

AKC Pom9ranian puppies- 171.000 mJjes. All power,

1740)696-1085 .

MONTY•

A JO 5 2
K Q 2

o!o A 9 8 7
East

West

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

304-675-6024

2003 Tracker, 4x4, 3,000
miles. All electric, alum.
OBO
wheel $ 14 ,500.

$250. (740)446-3897
5 Piece Dining Room Set
Computer with CD Burner

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-~457

miles, fully equip. $6,500.

I I 00-04

4 A Q
•
•

871-2487

i

Nortb

Henderson, WV

2000 Grand am 4 dr., 58,000

AKC Golden Retriever pup·
pies, both parents on prem·
ises.
Ready 11·16 -04.
$300, will hold with deposit.

17401256· 1686

MYERS PAVING

3490,

(304)773-5103

1 North
Wood•
roamet
4 Jagged rock
8 Chatter
11 Southeaot
Asian
12 GrtHIIthe
moon
I 3 Shop tool
14 Prickly husk
15 -of Capri
16 Deep black
17 Bureau
19 Collar
21 Burglar'a
take
22 Engineering
toy
25 Bowling
a roup

Alder

"!

Pag~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Phillip

V6 , Ped loaded
$5,995. Riverview Motors, 2

1740)643-2001

16x8 ft. wh ite witll green
trimm ing building lor sale.
Has 4x8 tt. loft . Big double
door. on one end and child
play door on the other.
Linoleum flooring. porch and Registered· Min Pin puppies
lor sale. Black and Rust 5
$2,500.
Call
shingles.
17401367-7064 or 1740)367- weeks-old, 3 females, one
mal e $250 Will be very
5011.
small , father 710s mother
36in. wood fireplace insert 9lbs. Mother AKC AND
witr1 fl;ln S, au tomatic shut-of!, CKC , Father CKC 576-~2

NEW AND USED STEEL

~

i

The Daily Sentinel •
BRIDGE

PEl~
t'OH SALE

$45 n1ght stand S15.
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street

If so, you qualify for a

www.mydallysenti nel.com

Dodge
Dakota ,
wtndows lintels. etc Claude extended cab, V·6 , auto
Winters, Rio Grande, OH $3495. 1997 Blazer $4295
i 998 Neon $2895
Cook
Call 740·245·5121 .
Motors. 328 Jackson Pike.

dryer $300: T.V. $45: chair wrmger wasMrs . Will do 1000 leave message_

or older?

PUBLIC
NOTICES

nJRS.w:

Sui'I'Ufli

Appliance &amp;
(740)44&amp;0103
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
automatiC
1996 Ford Ranger XLT
Frigidaire refrigerator $95, re-corldilioned
Kenmore electriC range $95; washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- 2 male Pekingese AKC 7 Supercab 4x4, V6, auto, air.
old.
Beautiful tilt, CrUISe, P/W, Pll, $6,995
Kenmore dryer $95; Maytag tors. gas and electnc weeks
ranges,
air
congilloners,
and
(740)446·
Christmas
gift.
1999 Pontiac Grand Am 2
washer $95; GE washer/
Thompsons

Gooo;
New Broyhill couch with lour
accent
p1
llows.
Light
brown,
--------Dryer tor sale Good condi· asking $600 . must sell. Call Gun cabinet . 8 guns. etched
(740}446·6656 after 4pm .
glass. very nice $100.
t1on Call (7 40)446-0415.
Remington 870 Magnum
Expre ss. mod-imp tubes,
$225. Horton l egend XL
Crossbow with scope &amp; lot s
a~cessories
$350.
Thompson-Black Diamond
stainless in-Hne 50cal, with
Simmons 3)(9)(40 scope
plus accessories, $350.
Thompson Renegade 50cal,
He)(agon Oar rel, beautiful
wood , black powder plu s
accessories .
$200

Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box

Tuesday, November 9, 2004
ALLEY OOP
·,

ALJJUi

BUUJJING

Side by side Kenmore relng- Block. brick, .sewer pipes, 1994

Are you 65
i

Tuesday, November 9, 2004

aF

KWWZB

CKL

RF

HKYB

DFLRSM

RC B

ZL

RC K M

F MJ I

ROPRC ."

CFTTHKM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "My three best punches were the choke hold. the
rabbit punch and the head out1.' - Former heavywetght Mxer Chuct: Wepner
Ic) 20040y NEA. Inc t 1·9

'1bur &lt;JIIrthde,y:

Wednesday, Nov. 1 D. 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Several unproductive relationships that
have been hold1ng you back might be
finally severed in the year ahead. Once
they 're gone, )'Ou'll replace them with
friends w1th whom you'll have far more in
co mmon .
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even
though your common sense and better
judgment will direct you to do otherwise.
you co uld toss them aside today in favor
of repeating a past mistaKe tha t"! I put you
in the loss column .
·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 t ) - It
you are under obligation to a fr iend. save
yourself any embarrassment by taKi ng
ca re of your indebtedness today without
having to be asked. 11'11 make you look
like a b1g person .
CAPRtCORN (Dec . 22-Jar~ . 19)- Being
overly need ful of the approval ol friends
and associates today could ca usa others
to reject your good ideas. If they see you
as wea~ , they 'll equate your thinK1ng wi th
weakness .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 19) Difficu lties at work today ca n be resolved
by using your ingenuity for problem solv·
ing 1nstead of lor making up exc uses. It
takes the ~ me energy to do either, so
choose the former, not the la~t er
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcll 20)- Although
you'll be good a t stirring up benefiCi al
prospects which could meet yo~; r expectations, you m1ghl la1l to capitalize on
these early gams and efforts, and they'l l
end up. count1ng tor nil.
ARIES (March 21 ·Apnl 19) - Let your
unselfi sh 1mpulses motivate you today
mstead ot trymg to gnnd ou t a deal with
another that you know would favor you
instead o f that Individual _You'll get lurlher
by doing what's right
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) II yoU
spend all your 11me watching whelher
olhers do their ·robs 1nsteaa o r pay1ng
anen1ion to your own chores, you'll be
the one called on the: car pet for wasting
time . It'll be your own fault .
GEMINI ( May 2t-June 20)- By len1ng
your spending get out of hand today.
when you waht something badly tater.
you 'll not have the funds lor It and be
denied what you easiiy could have purchased o therwise.
CANCE R (June 2 1-July' 22)- Domestic
dulies will be Quite difficult to anend to
today if you schedule your time 1n such a
manner that you do your more deSirable
act1vities firs t. Reverse that and you 'll be
up to both.
LEO (Ju ly 23- Aug . 22) - An.,. lim1tation
placed on you to meet with fr iends lor a
good time today will be caused by a past
oDtiQation you made to others that you'll
now have to meel. You made that bed,
now lie In it.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) - You'll qnly
have yourself to blame today tor be1ng
Drok e il you let yoursel l be pressured 1nto
keep 1r19 up with the Joneses Res1st
prodalng and spend on ly whet your
" budget can bear.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Do not try to
over -steer situations that are presemty
running .smoothly and working In your
favor . lnetead of deri ving more benellts.
you cou ld 1oul thlnga up and and up wlth
1

tar tess .

SOUP TO NUTZ

I

GADAPO

~0-.E_,..G...,-E"'T'W-1
·

.~ I' I, I I .

~~:

I.

~ JW

.lt

0
/6

alwa~s

Granny
told us :ha:
certain ac!1v1ty can lea~ :o evil
. - - - - - - - - - , · bu: inac11v1ty would never··· -

; RJ
.
.
1

.

.

.

.:

I

p 0 cL yM
:o.... I
~-.,.,.:,,_:;,~:.,,r-..:,r,-'·r'-1 0 Col"'\ole1e the ch~.~dde o.~::·ed

I

b.,. ldlon g

L_....::L....l-..1..-L-.J..._J.
Pi 1~1

'r"OV

I"'

1r.e m1H "': words

d e..-~ lop Iro-n srep No

:f

~e lo w

NUM6Eito

lfl i£ RS IN SCVAHS .

SCRAM· LETS ANSWERS I!- a- c •

Dumbly ·Chick· Rainy· Oblong· LAUG.'1
I !htnK people have a valuable s.ense of humo: 1f tr,ey
know when it is no: safe lo LAUGH .

I

ARLO &amp;.JANIS

,.'

...,.;·.
W~~l , /~EI&lt;'t'~ UO

POIUf
iiJ H1ill iJC, Tflt ~01JI10R

YOU WAUTTO ~IT fH I6
DOWU~£R&amp;'

�•'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 9. 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Decline of Dolphins
results in Wannstedt's
departure, Bt

Utah slips one .big
spot in BCS standings
BY RALPH Russo

Associated Press

AP Photo

Cincinnati · Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis congratulates his players after they scored a
touchdown against the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday in Cincinnati. Cincmnati won 26-3. Halfway
through the season the Bengals are beginning to look more like the team everyone expected.

Johnson apologizes for outbursts
show frustration over a set- the field.
Even though he was covback .
"He brought attention to ered bv rookie cornerback
himself with his disappoint- Lance ·Frazier. Johnson had
C INCINNATI _ Recei"cr ment,
ami it 's over with,' ' only two catches late in the
Chad Johnson apL&gt;logizcd Lew is sa id Monday... He's third quarter, when the
Monday fo r lett in~ frustration lea rned to Jeal with this. No Bengals led 16-3. That's
get the-best Df hi1T\ Juring the big deal. He's done it before. when his frustrati·on spilled
Cincinnati Ben~al s' most
~The on ly thin g is, it's been out.
convim:mg- victor). . ' ·o f tht' "c-a- a problem around here lor
· a
Johnson tackled Frazier on
long time. It didn't just start one play when he was supson.
He promisecl it wun·t hap- ye"erday. So we're going posed to block him. His body
pen aga m.
bac·k and looking at history. language also made his mood
Johnson. one of the team·,
tr_virw to fix history a little clear for all to sec. drawing
most popular players. was bit. .. ·
Lewis over for their talk.
hars hl y critici1.ed by fans for
During his first three seaPalmer threw passes to
Jetting his frustration. show sons in the NFL. Johnson Johnson on the fir st two plays
durin eo a 16-:1 victor)' O\'er the
called attent ion to himself of the next seri es, which
Dallas Cowboys on Sunuay.
Fans imerpreted hi s out- with victory guarantees and ended when the quarterback
bursts - throwing a beverage repeated fines for exorbitant badly underthrew a pass to
cup on the sideline. angril y touchdown celebrations that him near the ·goal line.
Johnson angrily pulled off his
pulling off his chin st rJp Jl'ter annoyed Lewis.
chin
He
made
his
first
Pro
Bowl
strap as he headed for the
an incompletion -as annoyance that he wa~n·L gelting la~l :-.ea~on, when he ~et a side lin e, and Lewis had
enough passes thrown his Bengals record and led the another brief chat with him.
"The whole point to it is,
American Conference with
way.
Johnson said the issue was- 1.355 yards receiving . At we're going throu gh change
n't his number of catches. but Lewis' urging. he toned down (with a new quarterback).
Everything' s not going to be
the number of mistakes he his antics thi s season.
made in blocking and other
There was one relapse. He the way it was last year, so
assignments.
sent Pepto-Bismol to Browns I've got to be more patient ,"
· "It has nothin~ to do with defensive backs with , a note Johnson said.
At the season's midpoint,
what everyone -thinks it is. warning they'd get sick trying
what they're perceivi ng.'' to .cover him that week. The Johnson has 44 catches for
Johnson said. "It mi~ht have private joke hecame public. 624 yards - similar to his
been my bad lor con1ing nil the Bengal s got drubbed and numbers at the same point last
that way. You won't see that Johnson promised to check year - bllt only two touchagain. I made a mi stake...
wi th Lewis before he did any- downs. a dramatic decline
from his IOoverall.
His head couch let him thing like it again .
What happened Sunday
Johnson promised to hand le
know it right away.
Marvin Lew i.; went {J\·er to again-,t Dallas was much dif- frustration better from here on
Johnson on the bench and had fere~t than the good-nawred out.
a long talk late in the third Pepto prank.
..1 can't change me, but that
quarter. He ended it hy
The Bcngals decided to go wa,n·t me yesterday:' he said.
pulling hi., hand on th e Pro · with a low-risk passing plan .. I've never done it before. It's
Bowl recei,er's head and then a~ainst Dallas. havin~ Carson just that perfection. I'm lookpalling him on-the shoulde r.
P7tlmcr dump the b;ll off to ing for perfection and l didn't
Lewis hates when his pia)- running bac ks and tight ends have it yesterday, so it got the
ers celebrme a touchdown or instead of throwing it down hest of me ...
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press

College Basketball

Bearcats sink NKU in exhibition
Cll\iCINNATI (API - Eric
Hicks scored 29 points and
had 13 rebounds Monda'
night. leading Cincinnati to a
103-64 exhibition vic tory over
Northern Kentucky.
·
The 240-pound forward
went 12-of-1 5 from the fie ld
against a thinner front line,
and even made a 3-pointer
from the top of the key.
Bob Hugg ins. coaching his
first game si nce completing a
two-month suspension lor a
· drunken
driving
arre,t.
remained calm on th e bench
as hi s team made quick work
of an overmatched opronent.
Hicks played a big role as a·

Tough
from Page 81
down and confronted the
officials alterward.
He was.n·t . the only one
who wa&gt; up~t.
''Everybody
s.&lt;Jw
11.
Brown'. li11eback er r\ndra
Davis. . 'aid. ·'E,erybody
kn ows. it was pass. interference . We didn 't ~ct the call
and we lost. ·her)onc's s.aying that Ra) · Lewis grabbed

back up last seaso n. averag1ng
7 poims and 5 .H
rebounds as a
sophomore. TheBearcats
are
counting o·n him
for more of an
inside presence
this season.
Nohody on
Northern · Kentucky 's front
line could keep him· away
from the basket. Hicks had 17
points. going 8-of-10 from the
11eld . and seven rebound' in
the game\ first 13 minutes.
The Bearcats rulled ahead
22-3 in the opening 10 min-

him. If you have ~yes. you
wou iJ have seen it. He pulled
him to the ground . They' re. in
their home stadium. We didn't get the call. Game over...
And as a re sult. the
Brown'· season could be.
too.
After the Steelers (7 - I),
Cl eveland face' th e New
York Jet, (6-2), Cincinnati
(.1-5) and New England (7-1 ).
Ju s.t a' the odd' of gett ing the
call against Lewis were long.
so 1s. making the playoffs.
· Still. DJwson is encour-

------ - - -

utes, using its tight halfcourt
man-to-man defense JO rattle a
small er.
slower
squad.
Northern Kentucky went 1-of14 from the 11eld with six
turnovers during the run.
Northern Kentucky is in the
midst of a challenging exhibition season. It lost to No. 9
Kentucky 91 -73 at Rupp
Arena last Wednesday, and
will play at Ohio State on
Tuesday.
Cincinnati played without
freshman Vincent Banks, a 6fpot -2 guard who was voted
the top prep player in Georgia
·last season but has a~ademic
dct\ciencies.
aged by how hi s teammates
handled the latest heartbreaking loss.
"Guys are down. man," he
said. "But guys are taking
ownership. Nobody is pointing fingers or blaming the
coaches or blaming bad calls.
We're just not making plays
as players .
"I respect a guy when he
stands up and says, 'That's
my fault. · I appreciate that.
But at the end of the day,
we've got to .step up and start
making plays ....

Utah slipped one spot to
seventh in the Bowl
Championship Series standings Monday, a drop that
could cost the unbeaten Utes
a berth in one of the four
big-money bowl games.
The top five in the BCS
stayed the same, with
Southern
California,
Oklahoma and Auburn leading the way, followed by
California and Wisconsin.
The first- and secondplace teams in the final
standings will play in the
Orange Bowl on Jan. 4 for
the BCS national title.
Utah is trying to become
the first team from a nonBCS conference (Mou ntain
West) to play in a BCS
game. The Utes can guarantee a spot in what probably
would be the Fiesta Bowl-.
. which delivers a payout of
about $14 million - by finishing in the lop six. A top12 tinish makes the Utes eli·
gible for consideration, but
guarantee s nothing.
Texas jumped over Utah
this week to take sixth place .
The Longhorns' 56-35
comeback victory over
Oklahoma State on Saturday

boosted its BCS grade to
.7904. Utah's grade (.7511)
went up slightly after another lopsided victory - 63-3 t
over Colorado State. Utah
maintained its ·positions in
both The Associated Press
Top 25 (seventh) and coaches poll (eighth) this week,
but the Utes dropped in the
computer rankings from
sixth to eighth, while the
Longhorns moved up to No.
5 in that category.
The AP media poll andESPN/USA Today poll each
account for · one-third of a
team's BCS grade. A compilation of six computer rankings make up the other third
of a team's grade.
Utah is one of six unbeaten teams in Division 1-A,
along with USC, Oklahoma,
Auburn, Wi sconsin and
Boise State.
The Sooners increased
their lead on the idle Tigers,
by moving into the No. I
spot in the computer rankings.
USC, No. I in both polls
and second in the computer
rankings, has .a grade of
.9847. Oklahoma's grade is
.9664, and Auburn's is
.9097. The Tigers are third
in each poll and according to
the computers .

Country Music
Awards,A2

Ublh*lnlhl
BCS standings

e

Utah slipped one spolia seventh
in the Bowl Championship Series
standings Monday, a drop that ·
could cost the unbeaten Utes a
berth in one of the four bigmoney bowl games.
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Southern C.!

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Oklahoma

.9664

3

Aubum

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5
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Texas

7

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B. Georgia

9 MIChigan

.11808

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11 VIrginia

.5642

12 Florida Stale
13 Weal VIrginia
14 Louisville

.5t83

• Claret! accuses Ohio
State of improprieties.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

16 Arizona Stale
VIrginia Tech .
LoulllaM Stalltt
Iowa
TeKUAaltl
Oklahoma Stale

REED

MIDDLEPORT Last
week's failure of a levy renewal in the Village of Middleport
wilt not create an immediate
financial problem for the village, but Village Council plans
an aggressive campaign to
pass the levy in May.

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BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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10 . :! OOJ

Middleport levy will reappear on May ballot

SPORTS

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19
20
21
22

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Games through Nov. 6

BCS

ne

.3273
.3254

Ba~ed on unofficial election
results, voters in the village,
defeated the proposed levy
renewal for current expenses
by just 16 votes- 475 for. 491
against. Village Council will
make another attempt to pass
the levy.in the May primary.
"We won't see an immediate
effect of the levy's failure, but
voters need to he aware that if the

levy fail's in May, many service'
the village has provided will no
longer be provided because
funds will not be available.''
Mayor Sandy lannarelli told
council members on Monday.
'There will be no snow removal.
There will be no leaf pickup.111c
village will be able to provide
only the most basic services
without the bene lit of this levy...

Council Preside nt Stephen
Houchins sa id the second
attempt at passing the levy
renewal may be an opportlmi ty to 'eek additional levy re~· ­
enue to replace i1'11::ome tax
proceeds and other lost revenue which has placed a·
financial hardship on the village's operations.
..This may give us an oppor-

tunity to as~ for more money."
Houch in s saiu Monday:
lannarclli s;,id voters were
not aLie~uu tel y informed
about tile benefits of the onemill. ri\e·ycar levy, and its
importance to the village's
fimmcial well being . She said
she and village council memPlease see Levy, AS

.1956
.1237

23 BoRin College

.1064

24 UTEP

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25 NolreDeme

Disadvantaged children
to get Christmas dolls

SOURCE : The Natibnal Football
Founda1ion and College Hall of Fame Inc.

AP

Crosby, Bay named top newcomers
NEW YORK - Oakland
Athletics shortstop Bobby
Crosby was just a vote shy
of being a unanimous pick
for AL Rookie of the Year,
and Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Ja so n Bay won the
·
NL award Monday.
Crosby received 27 of 28
fir st-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers'
Association of America for
138 point s. Chicago White
Sox closer Shingo Takatsu

received the other fir stplace vote and finished second with 44 points, followed by Baltimore pitcher
Daniel Cabrera . with 29
points.
Bay, the first Pillsburgh
player and first native
Canadian to . win the NL
award, got 25 of 32 firstplace votes and 146 points.
San Diego shortstop Khalil
Greene received seven firstplace votes, 24 seconds and

one third for I 08 points,
and Padres reliever Akinori
Otsuka was next with 23
points.
Crosby, 24, took over
Oakland's shortstop job
from 2002 AL MVP Miguel
Tejada, who signed with
Ballimore. Crosby hit .239
with 22 homers . and 64
RBis , -his average the lowest for a non-pitcher given
the award.

I

Page AS
• Robert Lee Barrett
• Shelma Alyse Jones

Beth Sergent/pholo

• OAGC offers scholarship. See Page A3
• Meigs Elementary
receives award.
See Page A3
• Contest winner
announced.
See Page A3
• Meigs retired teachers
award ~olarship.
See Page A3

,.

,.

WEATHER

'

2005

2 SEcrtONS- 12 PAGFS

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

l:

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

•._ Your Name:
·~ A'dd ress:
~~

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

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2c4

Comics ,

Bs

Dear Abby

A:3
A4
As

Editorials
-~

&lt;

~I

~

· Details on Page A6

INDEX

Pet Calendar!

I

OBITUARIES

INSIDE-

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

/

Obituaries
Sports

'

Bt

~.

Weather

I-·

© 2004 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co,

A6

Jeff Fleck, business development coordinator for Pleasant
Valley Hospital spoke about the hospital's 1nterest 1n Meigs
County wh ic h includes bri nging Dr. Timothy Metzger to the
Middleport Clin1c. Pictured with him is Chamber Director
Jenny Smith.
Above:
Rev.
Brian
Dunham, pastor of the
Pomeroy Church, JOined
Un1ted
Methodist
Women. Joann Vaughan
of Pomeroy, Marcia
Arnold of Forest Run,
Nancy Willford and
Evalana Pauley of the
Hazel Churcl1, left to right,
at a final wor1&lt; session on
their Christmas project.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

POMEROY - Christmas
is coming and the Meigs
Cooperative Parish is busy
preparing 'for the annual
Christmas toy giveaway to
disadvantaged children.
Donations are being accepted at the Mulberry Community
Center for holiday giving and
church women across the
county are giving of their time
and talent to create gifts.
This week the United
Methodist Women of the Forest
Run, Pomeroy, and Hazel
Churches completed their
preparation of cradles with
dolls sure to make Christmas
bright tor 24 little girls.
All of the wooden cradles,
man y featuring a colorful
Christian scene at the top,
were made by Nancy Willford

of the Hazel Church.
The Forrest Run community
women made pillows, maltresses and quilts to be used in
the cradles. and pillow case&gt;

PVH discusses Middleport
branch at Chamber luncheon
•

Rockspring'
Rehabilitation
Center's 25tll ann i\'eN!I)' open
house. 2 to -l p.m .. Nov. 14:
POMEROY - The Meigs Senior Center annual cmti show,
County
Chamber
of Nov. 12 and 13: 'Tellabration"
Commerce held a business Storytelling Event. Nov. 20.
minded luncheon on Tuesday Meig&gt; Ekmentary: Middlcpon
Left: Dolls in 24 wood- at the Wildhorse Cafe featur- Holiday Open House. I p.m. to
en cradles made by ing keynote &gt;peaker Jeff Fleck -l p.m.. t\o·v. 28: Pomeroy
Nancy Willford will be
from Pleasant Valley Hospital. Parade "Christma' Along the
among the many toys
Fleck, business develop· Ri"er:· 1 p.m.. Nov. 28:
distributed by the
ment
coordinator for PVH . Middleport
Community
Me igs
Cooperative
Parish during the holi- spoke about the hospital's mis- Association Ba,ket/Snow Bear
sion to reach out to local com- Bingo. 6 p.m., Dec . 2,
day season.
munities. including those .in \1iddleport American Legion:
Meig' County. Fullllling this :\1iddleport Parade and Tree
and more quilts were made by mission is the addition of Dr. Lighting. 6 p.m.. Dec. 4.
the Hazel and Pomeroy Timothy P. : tzger to PVH's
Frank
Vau~hn
also
women . The dolls for the era- Middlepon Cli ·
announced that there will be a
:dies were provided' by the
MelLger. \\ ho did his Veteran' Day service at II
Pomeroy Church group.
internship,atthe University of a.m. Thursday at the Meigs
North Texas I Osteopathic County Courthouse. Church
Medical Center, will pra'ctice bells will ring in unison at II
fam ilv medicine and offer a.m .. there will he speakers ·
evening hours two day&gt; a &lt;llld the Meigs High School
week to accommodate people · Marauder Band wiH p'lay.
wh&lt;l work late. He i, curre ntIn other news.. the Brandi
ly pracll crng at PVH \ Thomas Memo~ial Scholarship
Mason. W.Va. branch wh'ile Fund ;, having a "Keep Your
waiting on his license to be Fork .. 5K road race at II a.m.
appro\'ed iri the state of Ohio. on NO\'. 27 beginning at Meigs
Fleck estimated that the High School. Registration is
Middleport Clinic will emp1oy from 9 a.m. to IOJO a.m. with
live people and that Metzger a 516 participation fee.
sl10uld 'have hb Ohio lid:nsc
The next business minded
by the end of November.
luncheon will he held at 12
Other announcements maue p.m. on Dec . 1-l featuring hoiat
the
luncheon
''ere iday entertainment:
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Tuppers Plaihs Farmers Bank
branch opens
.
The new branch of Farmers Bank is
now open in Tuppers Plains next to
the old bank building. Construction
began in the spring and the building
is nearly identical to the Mason.
W.Va. office. The Tuppers Plains
branch has a three-lane drive-thru,
ATM machine and is open Monday
through Saturday. The official rib· ·
bon cutting will be held later this
month. Here teller Becky Grate
assists a customer.

.,

'

~

Phone:

~

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Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to )•
~
.
I
~alltpolis :matlp
~oint fHeasan't
1
\!rrtbune ·
l\egister
Dally Sentinel ••

tJ

'• 1

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"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar" ·
825 Third Avenue .
200 Main St.
1~ 1 CQllrt St . 1'
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